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William Hobson

Captain William Hobson (26 September 1792 – 10 September 1842) was a British Royal Navy officer who served as the first Governor of New Zealand.[1] He was a co-author of the Treaty of Waitangi.[2]

William Hobson
1st Governor of New Zealand
In office
3 May 1841 – 10 September 1842
MonarchVictoria
Preceded byOffice established
Succeeded byRobert FitzRoy
Lieutenant-Governor of New Zealand
In office
30 July 1839 – 3 May 1841
MonarchVictoria
GovernorGeorge Gipps (Governor of New South Wales)
Preceded byOffice established
Succeeded byOffice abolished
Personal details
Born(1792-09-26)26 September 1792
Waterford, Ireland
Died10 September 1842(1842-09-10) (aged 49)
Auckland, New Zealand
Resting placeSymonds Street Cemetery
SpouseEliza Elliott
Children5
Military career
Allegiance United Kingdom
Branch Royal Navy
Service years1803–1842
RankCaptain
Commands held

Hobson was dispatched from London in July 1839, with instructions to take the constitutional steps needed to establish a British colony in New Zealand.[3] He was sworn in as Lieutenant-Governor in Sydney (under George Gipps) and arrived in New Zealand on 29 January 1840.

On 5 February 1840, Hobson met with Māori chiefs at Waitangi, and the following morning they signed a treaty by which the chiefs purportedly voluntarily transferred sovereignty to the British Crown in return for guarantees respecting their lands and possessions and their rights as British subjects. Three months later, Hobson proclaimed British sovereignty over the islands of New Zealand. He also selected the site for a new capital, which he named Auckland.

In May 1841, New Zealand was constituted as a separate Crown colony, with Hobson promoted to Governor and Commander in Chief. In his final months Hobson was dogged by poor health which left him detached from political affairs. He died in office in September 1842.

Early life edit

William Hobson was born in Waterford, Ireland, the son of Samuel Hobson, a barrister and Martha Jones.[1] He grew up in an Anglo-Irish Anglican family.[4] He attended a (barely) private school, but despite this disadvantage he joined the Royal Navy on 25 August 1803 as a second-class volunteer. He served in the Napoleonic wars and was later involved in the suppression of piracy in the Caribbean. He became a midshipman in 1806 and some seven years later was a first lieutenant.

In September 1822 merchants at Nassau equipped two sloops to cruise against pirates, with HMS Tyne proving officers and seamen to man the sloops. One sloop, with 23 men under the command of a midshipman, encountered a pirate schooner and felucca. The British repulsed the schooner and captured the felucca. Those of the felucca's crew who were not killed jumped overboard and were drowned. British casualties amounted to two men killed and seven, including the midshipman, wounded.[5] The second sloop had a worse fortune. The sloop Whim was under the command of Lieutenant William Hobson and two midshipmen from Tyne when on 29 September a pirate schooner captured her at Guanaha. The pirates held the British captive for several days, treating their prisoners badly, but all the British survived.[6]

Between March 1823 and May 1824 Hobson commanded the schooner HMS Lion, in which he captured several pirate vessels, earning himself the nickname "Lion Hobson".[7] He was promoted to commander on 18 March 1824 and commanded HMS Scylla between 1826 and 1828. In December 1834 he obtained a commission from the First Lord of the Admiralty - George Eden, 1st Earl of Auckland - to the East Indies on HMS Rattlesnake.

Australia edit

In 1836, he was ordered to Australia, arriving at Hobart on 5 August 1836, and at Sydney 18 days later. On 18 September 1836, HMS Rattlesnake left for Port Phillip District (later Melbourne) conveying Captain William Lonsdale and other officials to the new colony. During the next three months, Hobson and his officers thoroughly surveyed Port Phillip, the northern portion of which, by direction of Governor Sir Richard Bourke, was named Hobsons Bay, after him. (Thus the local government area of the City of Hobsons Bay is indirectly named after him.)

His ship was involved in the founding of the port of Williamstown. He was offered the position of Superintendent of the Bombay Marine at a salary of £2000 a year, but he had taken a liking to Australia and was a candidate for the governorship of Port Phillip, although the salary was not expected to be more than £800 a year.

New Zealand edit

On 26 May 1837 Hobson sailed to the Bay of Islands, New Zealand, in response to a request for help from James Busby, the British Resident, who felt threatened by wars between Māori tribes. For three months in 1837 Pōmare II (Whiria) fought with Tītore until a peace agreement was negotiated by Tareha.[8] On his return to England in 1838, Hobson submitted a report on New Zealand, in which he proposed establishing British sovereignty over the islands in small pockets similar to the Hudson's Bay Company in Canada.[9]

Lieutenant-Governor edit

 
1839 document appointing Hobson as Lieutenant Governor of New Zealand. The title "Lieutenant Governor" signifies that Hobson was actually deputy to another Governor.[3]

At the time, the British government recognised the sovereignty of the Māori people, as represented in the Declaration of the Independence of New Zealand of October 1835. Hobson was appointed lieutenant-governor under the Governor of New South Wales, Sir George Gipps—ratified on 30 July 1839[3]—and British consul to New Zealand—confirmed on 13 August 1839.

On 14 August 1839, Constantine Henry Phipps, 1st Marquess of Normanby issued Hobson with detailed instructions, giving the British government's reasons for intervention in New Zealand and directions for the purchase of land "by fair and equal contracts". The land was later resold to Pākehā settlers at a profit to provide for further operations.[10]

Hobson arrived in the Bay of Islands aboard HMS Herald on 29 January 1840 with a small group of officials, including an executive council consisting of Colonial Secretary Willoughby Shortland, Colonial Treasurer George Cooper and Attorney-General Francis Fisher. The legislative council comprised the above officials and three Justices of the Peace. Hobson appointed as three Magistrates, Messrs. Shortland, Johnson, and Matthew.[11]

Treaty of Waitangi edit

 
Retro Pattern Crown: Tāmati Wāka Nene shaking hands with Hobson at Waitangi on 6 February 1840
 
An extant copy of Hobson's treaty

The Treaty of Waitangi was first proposed by Hobson on his return to Britain from his first visit to New Zealand. Upon arrival in New Zealand, Hobson almost immediately drafted the Treaty of Waitangi together with his secretary James Freeman and James Busby. Busby had previously drafted the Declaration of the Independence of New Zealand.

Hobson headed the British signatories. Of the 40 or so Māori chiefs, the Ngāpuhi chief Hōne Heke was the first to sign the treaty. As each chief signed, Hobson said "He iwi tahi tātou", meaning "We are [now] one people".[12] To enhance the authority of the treaty eight further copies were made and sent around the country to gather additional signatures. After obtaining signatures to the Treaty at the Bay of Islands (6 February 1840), he travelled to Waitematā Harbour to obtain more signatures and to survey a suitable location for a new capital (he also sent the Deputy Surveyor-General, William Cornwallis Symonds, to other areas to obtain more signatures). After suffering a stroke on 1 March 1840, he was taken back to the Bay of Islands, where he recovered sufficiently to continue work.[13]

On 21 May 1840, in response to the creation of a "republic" by the New Zealand Company settlers of Port Nicholson, who were laying out a new town under the flag of the United Tribes of New Zealand,[14] Hobson asserted British sovereignty over the whole of New Zealand, despite the incompleteness of the treaty signing.[15] He sent Willoughby Shortland and some soldiers to Port Nicholson on 25 May 1840, and the council of the settlers was disbanded. Their leader, William Wakefield, later travelled to the Bay of Islands to pledge allegiance to the Crown. His suggestion to make Port Nicholson the capital was rejected in favour of Hobson's plan for a new town on Waitematā Harbour, to be named Auckland after the Earl of Auckland.

 
Grave of Captain William Hobson

On 11 July 1840, the French frigate L'Aube arrived at the Bay of Islands on its way to Banks Peninsula as part of the settlement plan of the Nanto-Bordelaise Company. Hobson immediately sent two magistrates to Akaroa to establish the British claim to sovereignty by holding courts. Near the end of 1840, the Port Nicholson settlers sent a petition to Queen Victoria calling for Hobson's dismissal over his treatment of them. Hobson responded on 26 May 1841 to the Foreign Secretary.

Governor edit

In November 1840, the Queen signed a royal charter for New Zealand to become a Crown Colony separate from New South Wales. Hobson was sworn in by the Chief Justice as Governor of New Zealand on 3 May 1841.[2] On the same day, the General Legislative Council came into being, with Hobson in charge of appointing its membership.[16]

Hobson travelled to Wellington in August 1841, where he heard the complaints of settlers and selected magistrates. He then visited Akaroa to settle the French claims. Back in Auckland, he had some difficulty with the Māori, and his government was ridiculed by journalists in Wellington and Auckland. He responded by closing down the New Zealand Herald and Auckland Gazette. With his government low on funds, he resorted to issuing unauthorised bills on the British Treasury in 1842. Hobson faced opposition from the "Senate clique" radicals who sent a petition to the Foreign Secretary to have Hobson recalled. One of Hobson's last actions was to declare an Auckland Anniversary Day, to mark the anniversary of his arrival in the Bay of Islands.

Hobson suffered a second stroke and died on 10 September 1842, prior to being recalled from office. He was buried in the Symonds Street cemetery in Auckland. The West Auckland suburb of Hobsonville is named after him.

Notes edit

  1. ^ a b Serle, Percival (1949). "Hobson, William". Dictionary of Australian Biography. Sydney: Angus & Robertson. Retrieved 8 April 2019.
  2. ^ a b "HOBSON, William (1793–1842) - An Encyclopaedia of New Zealand". Te Ara: The Encyclopaedia of New Zealand. 1966. Retrieved 8 April 2019.
  3. ^ a b c "Hobson's Appointment 1839 [1839] NZConLRes 1". New Zealand Legal Information Institute. 30 July 1839. Retrieved 6 April 2019.
  4. ^ Simpson, K. A. "Hobson, William". Dictionary of New Zealand Biography. Ministry for Culture and Heritage. Retrieved 8 April 2019.
  5. ^ "The Marine List". Lloyd's List. No. 5758. 12 December 1822. hdl:2027/uc1.c2735032. Retrieved 23 September 2021.
  6. ^ "The Marine List". Lloyd's List. No. 5762. 24 December 1822. hdl:2027/uc1.c2735032. Retrieved 23 September 2021.
  7. ^ Lambourn, Alan (1988). The Treatymakers of New Zealand: Heralding the Birth of a Nation. Lewes, Sussex: Book Guild. pp. 123–124. ISBN 9780863322679. Retrieved 23 April 2020.
  8. ^ Ballara, Angela (1 September 2010). "Pomare II - Biography". Dictionary of New Zealand Biography. Te Ara - the Encyclopedia of New Zealand. Retrieved 12 December 2011.
  9. ^ Paul Moon, ed. (2010). New Zealand Birth Certificates – 50 of New Zealand's Founding Documents. AUT Media. ISBN 978-0-9582997-1-8.
  10. ^ "Lord Normanby's Instructions to Captain Hobson 1839 [1839] NZConLRes 2". New Zealand Legal Information Institute. 14 August 1839. Retrieved 6 April 2019.
  11. ^ Carleton, Hugh (1874). "Vol. II". The Life of Henry Williams. Early New Zealand Books (ENZB), University of Auckland Library. p. 22.
  12. ^ Orange, Claudia (2004). An Illustrated History of the Treaty of Waitangi. Wellington: Bridget Williams Books. ISBN 1-877242-16-0.
  13. ^ "View Te Tiriti o Waitangi Online". National Archives of New Zealand. Retrieved 6 April 2019.
  14. ^ "New Zealand Company / United Tribes flag". Te Papa. Retrieved 6 April 2019.
  15. ^ "Proclamation of Sovereignty over the North Island 1840 [1840] NZConLRes 9". New Zealand Legal Information Institute. 21 May 1840. Retrieved 6 April 2019.
  16. ^ Wilson, James Oakley (1985) [First published in 1913]. New Zealand Parliamentary Record, 1840–1984 (4th ed.). Wellington: V.R. Ward, Govt. Printer. pp. 25–28. OCLC 154283103.

Further reading edit

  • Hobson, W. Papers, 1833–1846. MS Papers 46. WTU
  • Lambourn, Alan (1988) The treatymakers of New Zealand: heralding the birth of a nation. (Lewes, Sussex: Book Guild). ISBN 9780863322679
  • Moon, Paul (1998). Hobson: Governor of New Zealand, 1840–1842. Auckland. ISBN 9780908990542.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  • Orange, Claudia (1987). The Treaty of Waitangi. Wellington: Allen & Unwin. ISBN 0868616346.
  • Scholefield, G. H. Captain William Hobson. London, 1934
  • UK Parliament. Correspondence and other papers relating to New Zealand, 1835–1845. In Irish University Press series of British parliamentary papers. Colonies: New Zealand. Vols 3 & 4. Shannon, 1970

External links edit

william, hobson, professional, wrestler, powerhouse, hobbs, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news, ne. For the professional wrestler see Powerhouse Hobbs This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources William Hobson news newspapers books scholar JSTOR March 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message Captain William Hobson 26 September 1792 10 September 1842 was a British Royal Navy officer who served as the first Governor of New Zealand 1 He was a co author of the Treaty of Waitangi 2 William Hobson1st Governor of New ZealandIn office 3 May 1841 10 September 1842MonarchVictoriaPreceded byOffice establishedSucceeded byRobert FitzRoyLieutenant Governor of New ZealandIn office 30 July 1839 3 May 1841MonarchVictoriaGovernorGeorge Gipps Governor of New South Wales Preceded byOffice establishedSucceeded byOffice abolishedPersonal detailsBorn 1792 09 26 26 September 1792Waterford IrelandDied10 September 1842 1842 09 10 aged 49 Auckland New ZealandResting placeSymonds Street CemeterySpouseEliza ElliottChildren5Military careerAllegiance United KingdomBranch Royal NavyService years1803 1842RankCaptainCommands heldHMS ScyllaHMS RattlesnakeHobson was dispatched from London in July 1839 with instructions to take the constitutional steps needed to establish a British colony in New Zealand 3 He was sworn in as Lieutenant Governor in Sydney under George Gipps and arrived in New Zealand on 29 January 1840 On 5 February 1840 Hobson met with Maori chiefs at Waitangi and the following morning they signed a treaty by which the chiefs purportedly voluntarily transferred sovereignty to the British Crown in return for guarantees respecting their lands and possessions and their rights as British subjects Three months later Hobson proclaimed British sovereignty over the islands of New Zealand He also selected the site for a new capital which he named Auckland In May 1841 New Zealand was constituted as a separate Crown colony with Hobson promoted to Governor and Commander in Chief In his final months Hobson was dogged by poor health which left him detached from political affairs He died in office in September 1842 Contents 1 Early life 2 Australia 3 New Zealand 3 1 Lieutenant Governor 3 2 Treaty of Waitangi 3 3 Governor 4 Notes 5 Further reading 6 External linksEarly life editWilliam Hobson was born in Waterford Ireland the son of Samuel Hobson a barrister and Martha Jones 1 He grew up in an Anglo Irish Anglican family 4 He attended a barely private school but despite this disadvantage he joined the Royal Navy on 25 August 1803 as a second class volunteer He served in the Napoleonic wars and was later involved in the suppression of piracy in the Caribbean He became a midshipman in 1806 and some seven years later was a first lieutenant In September 1822 merchants at Nassau equipped two sloops to cruise against pirates with HMS Tyne proving officers and seamen to man the sloops One sloop with 23 men under the command of a midshipman encountered a pirate schooner and felucca The British repulsed the schooner and captured the felucca Those of the felucca s crew who were not killed jumped overboard and were drowned British casualties amounted to two men killed and seven including the midshipman wounded 5 The second sloop had a worse fortune The sloop Whim was under the command of Lieutenant William Hobson and two midshipmen from Tyne when on 29 September a pirate schooner captured her at Guanaha The pirates held the British captive for several days treating their prisoners badly but all the British survived 6 Between March 1823 and May 1824 Hobson commanded the schooner HMS Lion in which he captured several pirate vessels earning himself the nickname Lion Hobson 7 He was promoted to commander on 18 March 1824 and commanded HMS Scylla between 1826 and 1828 In December 1834 he obtained a commission from the First Lord of the Admiralty George Eden 1st Earl of Auckland to the East Indies on HMS Rattlesnake Australia editIn 1836 he was ordered to Australia arriving at Hobart on 5 August 1836 and at Sydney 18 days later On 18 September 1836 HMS Rattlesnake left for Port Phillip District later Melbourne conveying Captain William Lonsdale and other officials to the new colony During the next three months Hobson and his officers thoroughly surveyed Port Phillip the northern portion of which by direction of Governor Sir Richard Bourke was named Hobsons Bay after him Thus the local government area of the City of Hobsons Bay is indirectly named after him His ship was involved in the founding of the port of Williamstown He was offered the position of Superintendent of the Bombay Marine at a salary of 2000 a year but he had taken a liking to Australia and was a candidate for the governorship of Port Phillip although the salary was not expected to be more than 800 a year New Zealand editOn 26 May 1837 Hobson sailed to the Bay of Islands New Zealand in response to a request for help from James Busby the British Resident who felt threatened by wars between Maori tribes For three months in 1837 Pōmare II Whiria fought with Titore until a peace agreement was negotiated by Tareha 8 On his return to England in 1838 Hobson submitted a report on New Zealand in which he proposed establishing British sovereignty over the islands in small pockets similar to the Hudson s Bay Company in Canada 9 Lieutenant Governor edit nbsp 1839 document appointing Hobson as Lieutenant Governor of New Zealand The title Lieutenant Governor signifies that Hobson was actually deputy to another Governor 3 At the time the British government recognised the sovereignty of the Maori people as represented in the Declaration of the Independence of New Zealand of October 1835 Hobson was appointed lieutenant governor under the Governor of New South Wales Sir George Gipps ratified on 30 July 1839 3 and British consul to New Zealand confirmed on 13 August 1839 On 14 August 1839 Constantine Henry Phipps 1st Marquess of Normanby issued Hobson with detailed instructions giving the British government s reasons for intervention in New Zealand and directions for the purchase of land by fair and equal contracts The land was later resold to Pakeha settlers at a profit to provide for further operations 10 Hobson arrived in the Bay of Islands aboard HMS Herald on 29 January 1840 with a small group of officials including an executive council consisting of Colonial Secretary Willoughby Shortland Colonial Treasurer George Cooper and Attorney General Francis Fisher The legislative council comprised the above officials and three Justices of the Peace Hobson appointed as three Magistrates Messrs Shortland Johnson and Matthew 11 Treaty of Waitangi edit Main article Treaty of Waitangi nbsp Retro Pattern Crown Tamati Waka Nene shaking hands with Hobson at Waitangi on 6 February 1840 nbsp An extant copy of Hobson s treatyThe Treaty of Waitangi was first proposed by Hobson on his return to Britain from his first visit to New Zealand Upon arrival in New Zealand Hobson almost immediately drafted the Treaty of Waitangi together with his secretary James Freeman and James Busby Busby had previously drafted the Declaration of the Independence of New Zealand Hobson headed the British signatories Of the 40 or so Maori chiefs the Ngapuhi chief Hōne Heke was the first to sign the treaty As each chief signed Hobson said He iwi tahi tatou meaning We are now one people 12 To enhance the authority of the treaty eight further copies were made and sent around the country to gather additional signatures After obtaining signatures to the Treaty at the Bay of Islands 6 February 1840 he travelled to Waitemata Harbour to obtain more signatures and to survey a suitable location for a new capital he also sent the Deputy Surveyor General William Cornwallis Symonds to other areas to obtain more signatures After suffering a stroke on 1 March 1840 he was taken back to the Bay of Islands where he recovered sufficiently to continue work 13 On 21 May 1840 in response to the creation of a republic by the New Zealand Company settlers of Port Nicholson who were laying out a new town under the flag of the United Tribes of New Zealand 14 Hobson asserted British sovereignty over the whole of New Zealand despite the incompleteness of the treaty signing 15 He sent Willoughby Shortland and some soldiers to Port Nicholson on 25 May 1840 and the council of the settlers was disbanded Their leader William Wakefield later travelled to the Bay of Islands to pledge allegiance to the Crown His suggestion to make Port Nicholson the capital was rejected in favour of Hobson s plan for a new town on Waitemata Harbour to be named Auckland after the Earl of Auckland nbsp Grave of Captain William HobsonOn 11 July 1840 the French frigate L Aube arrived at the Bay of Islands on its way to Banks Peninsula as part of the settlement plan of the Nanto Bordelaise Company Hobson immediately sent two magistrates to Akaroa to establish the British claim to sovereignty by holding courts Near the end of 1840 the Port Nicholson settlers sent a petition to Queen Victoria calling for Hobson s dismissal over his treatment of them Hobson responded on 26 May 1841 to the Foreign Secretary Governor edit In November 1840 the Queen signed a royal charter for New Zealand to become a Crown Colony separate from New South Wales Hobson was sworn in by the Chief Justice as Governor of New Zealand on 3 May 1841 2 On the same day the General Legislative Council came into being with Hobson in charge of appointing its membership 16 Hobson travelled to Wellington in August 1841 where he heard the complaints of settlers and selected magistrates He then visited Akaroa to settle the French claims Back in Auckland he had some difficulty with the Maori and his government was ridiculed by journalists in Wellington and Auckland He responded by closing down the New Zealand Herald and Auckland Gazette With his government low on funds he resorted to issuing unauthorised bills on the British Treasury in 1842 Hobson faced opposition from the Senate clique radicals who sent a petition to the Foreign Secretary to have Hobson recalled One of Hobson s last actions was to declare an Auckland Anniversary Day to mark the anniversary of his arrival in the Bay of Islands Hobson suffered a second stroke and died on 10 September 1842 prior to being recalled from office He was buried in the Symonds Street cemetery in Auckland The West Auckland suburb of Hobsonville is named after him Notes edit a b Serle Percival 1949 Hobson William Dictionary of Australian Biography Sydney Angus amp Robertson Retrieved 8 April 2019 a b HOBSON William 1793 1842 An Encyclopaedia of New Zealand Te Ara The Encyclopaedia of New Zealand 1966 Retrieved 8 April 2019 a b c Hobson s Appointment 1839 1839 NZConLRes 1 New Zealand Legal Information Institute 30 July 1839 Retrieved 6 April 2019 Simpson K A Hobson William Dictionary of New Zealand Biography Ministry for Culture and Heritage Retrieved 8 April 2019 The Marine List Lloyd s List No 5758 12 December 1822 hdl 2027 uc1 c2735032 Retrieved 23 September 2021 The Marine List Lloyd s List No 5762 24 December 1822 hdl 2027 uc1 c2735032 Retrieved 23 September 2021 Lambourn Alan 1988 The Treatymakers of New Zealand Heralding the Birth of a Nation Lewes Sussex Book Guild pp 123 124 ISBN 9780863322679 Retrieved 23 April 2020 Ballara Angela 1 September 2010 Pomare II Biography Dictionary of New Zealand Biography Te Ara the Encyclopedia of New Zealand Retrieved 12 December 2011 Paul Moon ed 2010 New Zealand Birth Certificates 50 of New Zealand s Founding Documents AUT Media ISBN 978 0 9582997 1 8 Lord Normanby s Instructions to Captain Hobson 1839 1839 NZConLRes 2 New Zealand Legal Information Institute 14 August 1839 Retrieved 6 April 2019 Carleton Hugh 1874 Vol II The Life of Henry Williams Early New Zealand Books ENZB University of Auckland Library p 22 Orange Claudia 2004 An Illustrated History of the Treaty of Waitangi Wellington Bridget Williams Books ISBN 1 877242 16 0 View Te Tiriti o Waitangi Online National Archives of New Zealand Retrieved 6 April 2019 New Zealand Company United Tribes flag Te Papa Retrieved 6 April 2019 Proclamation of Sovereignty over the North Island 1840 1840 NZConLRes 9 New Zealand Legal Information Institute 21 May 1840 Retrieved 6 April 2019 Wilson James Oakley 1985 First published in 1913 New Zealand Parliamentary Record 1840 1984 4th ed Wellington V R Ward Govt Printer pp 25 28 OCLC 154283103 Further reading editHobson W Papers 1833 1846 MS Papers 46 WTU Lambourn Alan 1988 The treatymakers of New Zealand heralding the birth of a nation Lewes Sussex Book Guild ISBN 9780863322679 Moon Paul 1998 Hobson Governor of New Zealand 1840 1842 Auckland ISBN 9780908990542 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Orange Claudia 1987 The Treaty of Waitangi Wellington Allen amp Unwin ISBN 0868616346 Scholefield G H Captain William Hobson London 1934 UK Parliament Correspondence and other papers relating to New Zealand 1835 1845 In Irish University Press series of British parliamentary papers Colonies New Zealand Vols 3 amp 4 Shannon 1970External links editWilliam Hobson at Wikipedia s sister projects nbsp Media from Commons nbsp Texts from Wikisource nbsp Data from Wikidata E J Tapp Hobson William 1793 1842 Australian Dictionary of Biography Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title William Hobson amp oldid 1192873935, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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