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Marmaduke Nixon

Marmaduke George Nixon was a soldier in the New Zealand Wars. Born in Malta, he joined the British Army in 1831, spending most of his career as an officer in British India with the 39th Regiment of Foot. He left the British Army in 1851 and shortly afterwards emigrated to New Zealand to take up farming in South Auckland. In 1860, during one of the main phases of the New Zealand Wars, he formed and led a cavalry unit in defence of South Auckland. He later participated in the Invasion of the Waikato as commander of Nixon's Horse, another cavalry unit. He was one of the highest ranking casualties of the New Zealand Wars when he died on 27 May 1864 from wounds received in an attack earlier in the year on a village at Rangiaowhia. He was also a Member of Parliament, representing the largely rural electorate of Franklin from 1861 up until his death.

Early life
Marmaduke George Nixon was born in Valletta on the island of Malta in either 1813 or 1814. He was one of at least three children of Henry Nixon, an officer in the British Army, and his wife Elizabeth . Marmaduke attended the Royal Military College at Sandhurst, from which he graduated in 1831 before he was posted to the 39th (Dorsetshire) Regiment of Foot as an ensign. ==British Army==
British Army
Nixon spent a number of years in British India with the 39th Regiment, serving in the Coorg War of 1834 and was involved in the Battle of Maharajpore during the Gwalior campaign of 1843. At this stage of his career, he was the brigade major of the 5th Brigade. In 1851 Nixon resigned from the British Army, having reached the rank of major. He was finding it difficult to support his two sisters on his income while serving as an officer in India. ==Life in New Zealand==
Life in New Zealand
bordering Pukaki Creek in 1853. The European buildings shown are likely Nixon's farm During his service in British India, Nixon made the acquaintance of Theodore Haultain, a fellow officer of the 39th Regiment who later moved to New Zealand. At Haultain's suggestion, Nixon travelled on the ship Cresswell to settle in New Zealand, arriving in 1852. He began farming at Māngere, south of Auckland. Te Ākitai Waiohua, who lived across Pukaki Creek from Nixon and other Manukau Harbour tribes, assisted Nixon building his farmhouses. Soon, along with other landowners in the area, he sought access to Māori land in the Waikato region. He was one of the highest-ranking soldiers to have been a casualty of the New Zealand Wars. Buried at Symonds Street Cemetery, he was survived by his two sisters. Nixon's death resulted in the 1864 Franklin by-election, won unopposed by his friend from his days in the British Army, Haultain. ==Nixon monument==
Nixon monument
Soon after his death, discussions began in relation to the erection of a monument in his memory. By May 1865, land at Ōtāhuhu, south of Auckland, had been acquired for the monument, which was to be based on the Wallace Monument in Scotland. The monument, which stands at the intersection of Mangere and Great South roads, was completed and formally unveiled in 1868. Several compromises had been made in its design and construction; it was now much simpler in appearance and stone from Hobart, in Tasmania, was used instead of being sourced from Oamaru, as originally intended. It was suggested that some of the funds raised for the monument go towards the care of his sisters. The following year, the New Zealand Government granted the sisters an annual pension of £150. ==Notes==
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