Following the Ngāpuhi raids of the 1820s and 1830s, tensions persisted between
Waikato, Auckland, and
Hauraki tribes, and the land between the Wairoa and Tāmaki rivers had not been reoccupied since the 1821 exodus, due to fear of conflict. The Christian Missionary Society, who desired to establish a mission station somewhere within the Tāmaki isthmus, sought to find a resolution. In 1836, a group of missionaries travelled from the Bay of Islands to Puriri, a previously established mission station, to gather individuals to travel into the isthmus. Henry Williams led this expedition, and two Ngāpuhi chiefs, Rewa and Moka, were also present, to act as mediators. In January 1836, at
Puriri, the land transaction known as the 'Fairburn purchase' took place, upon suggestion by Williams to the present chiefs. This land, which totalled , was sold to Fairburn, as it was seen as the most agreeable option at the time, largely in part to Fairburn's promise to keep the land in a trust, and for the land to act as a neutral area for the tribes. Therefore, while the iwi sold the land, there was an understanding that they could continue to live and work there, This understanding was confirmed by Fairburn when he promised to return one third of the land in 1837. The Fairburn purchase was considerably the largest pre-treaty land sale in the Hauraki region. The chiefs that sold the land ‘received as return for that land Tamaki, ninety blankets, twenty-four axes, twenty-four adzes, twenty-six hoes, fourteen spades, eighty dollars, nine hundred pounds tobacco, twenty four combs, [and] twelve plane irons’, followed by a payment in instalments of £902. The boundaries of this land stretched from the
Tāmaki River to the
Wairoa River, from
Ōtāhuhu out to
Howick and
Clevedon, and as far east as Maraetai. According to the deed of sale, which was completed by Fairburn, the sellers were 'Turiri, the chief and his people called Ngatitawaki, Herua, the chief and his people called Urikaraka, Hauauru, the chief and his people called Matekiwaho'. Signatories included Ngāti Paoa, as well as other Thames iwi, and also Te Akitai and Ngāti Whātua. In 1854, a section of the purchased land, between Maraetai Beach and
Umupuia, was designated as a reserve for Ngāi Tai. It was on this block of land where Fairburn established the Maraetai Mission Station. == Establishment ==