Foreword 1. The Ambitions of the Father 2. The Tenacity of the Son 3. ‘I Am To Take Charge’ 4. Destitute in London 5. Convergence 6. Landed 7. Trouble at Home 8. Independence 9. ‘Destroy Busby at All Costs’ 10. A Career and Life in Tatters 11. Enemies with Everyone 12. An Embittered End Epilogue
The first full-length biography of James Busby, British Resident of New Zealand 1833-1840, and his role in the early history of colonial New Zealand.
Paul Moon is Professor of History and Head of the School of History at Auckland University of Technology, New Zealand. Among his twenty-five published books are This Horrid Practice: The Myth and Reality of Traditional Maori Cannibalism, A History of New Zealand in the Twentieth Century, a trilogy of volumes on the Tuhoe tohunga (expert) Hohepa Kereopa, as well as biographies of Governors Hobson, FitzRoy, and the Ngapuhi chief Hone Heke, and Encounters: The Creation of New Zealand, which was shortlisted for the 2014 Ernest Scott Australasian Prize in History.
Paul Moon’s biography succeeds in rescuing James Busby from the
condescension of posterity. It does so by situating Busby in the
larger contexts—Scottish Enlightenment, religious, British
imperial, Maori, settler colonial—necessary to understand his
controversial career.
*John Stenhouse, Associate Professor of History, University of
Otago, New Zealand*
In The Rise and Fall of James Busby, we encounter the British
Resident who for seven years maintained relationships between the
chaotic Colonial Office, the mercurial New South Wales government,
a lawless pre-treaty New Zealand and the nascent state which
emerged after Te Tiriti o Waitangi. Through Paul Moon’s incisive
research we meet the obsessive, prickly, land-hungry Busby of
historic renown, but we also encounter the lesser-known stories of
the friend to Hone Heke, the administrator who could be generous,
thorough and principled, and the loyal husband and father. Busby’s
central place in the early colonial history of Aotearoa New Zealand
is at last detailed in these pages.
*Lloyd Carpenter, Senior Lecturer in Maori Studies, Lincoln
University, New Zealand*
[Paul Moon] has done both Busby and us a service by rescuing him
from historical marginalisation and providing a fuller portrait of
the man whose efforts laid the groundwork for the Treaty.
*Australian Historical Studies*
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