Pre-colonial times According to
Te Tai Tokerau tradition,
Kupe and
Ngāhue, the legendary Polynesian navigators and explorers, settled in Hokianga in approximately 925 AD, after their journey of discovery from
Hawaiki aboard their waka (canoe) named
Matahorua and
Tāwhirirangi. When Kupe left the area, he declared that this would be the place of his return, leaving several things behind—including the
bailer of his canoe. Later, Kupe's grandson Nukutawhiti returned from Hawaiki to settle in Hokianga. In the 14th century, the great chief Puhi landed just south of the
Bay of Islands. The tribe of Puhi,
Ngāpuhi, slowly extended westwards to reach the west coast and to colonise both sides of Hokianga. Māori regard Hokianga as one of the oldest settlements in
Aotearoa, and it remains a heartland for the people. Rahiri, the 17th-century founder of the Ngāpuhi
iwi, was born at Whiria
pā to the south of the harbour, where a monument stands to his memory. to the left and Hokianga Harbour to the right In the course of expansion, Ngāpuhi created and maintained over centuries a complex network of walking tracks, many of which evolved into today's roads.
Pā sites More than a dozen
pā sites lie close to the Hokianga, among them notably Motukauri Pã, located on a headland at the end of a
tombolo between the Motuti River and Whangapapatiki Creek mouths.
The arrival of the Europeans Wesleyan (and, later,
Anglican)
missionaries were guided along the Ngāpuhi walking tracks to make their own discovery of Hokianga and its accessible timber resources. Their reports soon reached merchant captains in the Bay of Islands. Captain James Herd of the
Providence responded first, and with missionary
Thomas Kendall as guide and translator, crossed the bar and entered the harbour in 1822. His was the first European ship to do so, and it sailed away with the first shipment of timber from the Hokianga. His success inspired a strong following—the deforestation of Hokianga had begun and would be complete by the turn of the century. The only disincentive to Hokianga's exploitation was the harbour bar. Among the hundreds of ships that successfully negotiated it, 16 were recorded as being lost. Most came to grief when leaving fully laden, becoming caught in the wind shadow cast by South Head, where deep water lay. A temporary lull or change in wind direction could cause a sailing ship to lose steerage way and be swept onto the rocky shore. In 1828, the missionary
schooner Herald, built by
Henry Williams and sailed by
Gilbert Mair, foundered while trying to enter Hokianga Harbour. The last recorded shipwreck was of the schooner
Isabella de Fraine, lost with all eight crew in July 1928 after capsizing on the bar. In 1837, a French adventurer, the self-titled Baron
Charles de Thierry, sailed with 60 settlers into this hive of export activity to claim an immense tract of land that he believed he had purchased 15 years earlier in exchange for 36 axes. He was eventually granted about at
Rangiahua where he set up his colony, declaring himself "Sovereign Chief of New Zealand", a title that failed to endear him to Ngāpuhi. His project collapsed, but it highlighted to the Colonial Service the need to protect against rival European powers. The year after de Thierry arrived, another Frenchman, Bishop
Jean Baptiste Pompallier, arrived, with the aim of establishing a Catholic mission. He found the southern shores firmly in the hands of Methodist and Anglican missionaries, but the northern side was ripe for conversion. His remains, recently claimed by Ngāpuhi, lie buried where the mission began. Today the harbour, like the
Reformation itself, stands between Protestant and Catholic. The lawyer and naturalist
Sir Walter Lawry Buller was born in Hokianga in 1838. Within six days of the
Waitangi signing,
Governor Hobson, keen to secure full Ngāpuhi support, trekked across to the
Māngungu Mission near Horeke where 3000 were waiting. The second signing of the Treaty of Waitangi took place on 12 February 1840. With the appropriate signatures (and a few inappropriate entries) Hobson could immediately claim support from the biggest tribe in the country. While the fate of the country was being signed into history, the axemen of Hokianga scarcely missed a beat. At any one time, as many as 20 ships could be loading Hokianga timber. Whole hillsides, suddenly bared of vegetation, began to slip into the harbour, choking its tributaries with mud. The relationship between Māori and
Pākehā (European) settlers was frequently tense, never more so than during the
Dog Tax War of the 1890s, which was largely centred around Hokianga. By 1900, the bulk of the forest had sailed over the bar and the little topsoil that remained was turned to dairy farming for butter production. Most of the cream delivered to the Motukaraka Dairy Factory was carried there by a fleet of about fifty locally-built launches that criss-crossed the harbour daily, creating in the process a service for both passengers and freight. For half a century, the communities on both sides of the harbour were linked internally by sea transport, before improved roads in the 1950s finally displaced this energetic flotilla and the harbour once again divided the community. By 1914, a rustic telephone system linked some of the Hokianga communities with each other and with the outside world. A government-subsidised, weekly coastal shipping service ran between
Onehunga and Hokianga, bringing in freight and taking away butter. The communities of Horeke and Rawene are the second- and third-oldest European settlements in New Zealand. Rawene is still the most important of the coastal settlements in the Hokianga and is where the base of Hokianga's community owned health services (
Hauora Hokianga) is located, on top of the hill at the Hokianga Hospital.
1918 influenza pandemic The
influenza pandemic reached Hokianga in September 1918, and remote
Waiotemarama was one of the first settlements to succumb. A soup kitchen was organised in each community. On the instructions of
George McCall Smith, the Surgeon Superintendent of Rawene Hospital, mounted and armed guards stood at all crossroads to turn back would-be visitors and thus restrict the spread of the disease between settlements. Travellers wishing to enter Hokianga were stopped at the boundary. The rule was simple: anyone could leave, but no one could enter. The local epidemic lasted six weeks and a significant number died. Each community attended to its own, and mass burials were commonplace. Few Maori deaths were recorded; the true impact of the epidemic on Maori is unknown. ==Industry==