New Zealand In 1839 he accompanied Captain
William Hobson, the first governor of New Zealand, to that colony, which had not then been
annexed by the
United Kingdom. Lieutenant Shortland was appointed colonial secretary and a magistrate. An early court case related to the murder of European shepherd (Patrick Rooney) by
Ngāpuhi known as Kihi, who was discovered and delivered up by other
Ngāpuhi to the authorities at
Kororāreka. Shortland was in the act of a magisterial examination of the charge against Kihi on 20 April 1840 when Haratua, a chief arrived with about three hundred armed warriors and began a
haka. Shortland, believing the warriors had hostile intentions, sent for the troops.
Edward Marsh Williams, who was present as a witness and who spoke Māori and understood Māori culture identified that Haratua and the warriors did not have any hostile intentions, having come over to make a public display of their abhorrence of the murder. Edward Williams persuaded Haratua and the warriors to leave and explained in a quiet way that it was ignorance of Māori culture on Shorthand's part that made him call for the troops. Shortland proceeded to
Port Nicholson,
Wellington, and the English living there very willingly acknowledged
Queen Victoria's authority and Shortland's nomination as their police
magistrate. Shortland was appointed the first colonial secretary on 3 May 1841 and a member of the
General Legislative Council courtesy of his post. On the death of Captain Hobson on 10 September 1842, the lieutenant administered the government of New Zealand until the arrival of Captain
Robert FitzRoy on 31 December 1843.
The Tauranga Campaign of 1842 In 1842, soon after Governor Hobson's death, Acting Governor Shortland sought to interfere in an intertribal war of ancient origins at
Tauranga and
Maketu,
Bay of Plenty, to put an end to such perpetual wars. A military force under Major
Thomas Bunbury,
80th Regiment, was transported from Auckland to Tauranga by the Colonial Brig
Victoria, under a pretext of the two tribes having respectively seized two boats belonging to Englishmen trading there. They disembarked at
Mount Maunganui and built a camp at Hopukiore / Mount Drury. The warring tribes objected to the Government's right to interfere in their wars, and Shortland, finding intervention questionable and that his military force was very small, prompted some kind of mediation and withdrew the troops. No actual fighting took place. This was the first occasion on which the troops were called out on campaign in New Zealand, and perhaps the last occasion in which Māori ate some of their prisoners.
The Wairau Affray During Shortland's temporary government the
Wairau Affray took place on 17 June 1843, and in his dispatches to the British government he expressed his disapproval of the conduct of the settlers, to which he attributed the massacre. This action made him unpopular, and, when a report of his nomination as Governor of New Zealand was circulated, a petition was sent from Auckland praying that he might not be appointed. On 31 December 1843 he was dismissed from the colonial secretaryship by FitzRoy.
Nevis and Tobago In 1845 became
President of the island of
Nevis in the
Leeward Islands. After that, he was
Governor of Tobago from 10 January 1854 until 1856, and then, returning to England, resided on his property, Courtlands, Charleton,
Kingsbridge, Devon, until his death. ==Family and death==