April 4, 2025 - The History of New Zealand through a Libertarian Anarchist lens. Please enjoy the ideas and let me know what you think.

1875: Jackson Bay

January 19, 2025

By AHNZ

The Jackson Bay debacle was yet another government scam, perhaps the most cruel, perpetrated by the Vogel Ministry in the 1870s. Squandering New Zealanders’ money was just the start. Add to this indebting us, and turning our recession into an economic depression so bad and so long historians call it The Long Depression. Worse yet, the evils of the Jackson Three extended beyond a national self-inflicted wound. The crazy government project to build a town in the remote South Westland wilderness reached out to hurt, our outright kill, about 400 deceived settlers from Ireland, Poland, Italy, Scotland, England, Germany, Scandinavia, and beyond.

Prime Minister Julius Vogel (left) was the chief moron in command. Borrowing billions of dollars on  London money markets (with us as collateral) this economic crackpot had 250 agents all over Europe who earned a commission for every adult they could send to Enzed at our expense. Vogel associated a growing population and infrastructure with the now-ended Maori Wars and gold boom but got his cause-and-effect wires totally crossed. Instead of jobs attracting migrants he pitched the notion that shipping in unemployed people would create more jobs and economic prosperity. Instead, his Assisted Migration scheme brought in 75-100 thousand new people into a country that was already struggling to carry its own population.

Westland Superintendent James Bonar (center) was one of the many politicians at the local level who had to go along to get along with the Vogal madness. Central Government was offering power and money but locals on the ground were going to have to dispose of surplus foreigners they did not want nor need. What to do? Westland came up with a plan so cunning it would pay for the facial hair care products for each of the Jackson Three for the rest of their crooked lives. They would volly the migrants Vogel sent them into the southern border wilderness and call it a new town settlement! At Jackson Bay, it was to be called Arawata or Seacombe. In private life Bonar had food to sell and part-owned an otherwise underemployed steam ship in need of work; Servicing the scheme was money in his pocket.

Our third and final member of the Jackson Three was Duncan Macfarlane (right.) After the Dreamer and the Businessman a person was found in Duncan who would get his hands dirty by wrangling the migrants and living with them at Jackson Bay. As Commissar he was responsible for the day-to-day misery of the polyglot settlers which was run like an open air labour prison. Macfarlane dolled out government money on his dubious projects including crazy beach roads made of trees and rocks (spent half a million pounds) that washed away when it rained. He took over houses and decided who got to eat. For pay the workers didn’t see money but vouchers to be redeemed at Macfarlane’s distribution hub where Bonar’s produce was sold. This was allegedly reduced to clear stuff that wouldn’t sell in Hokitika so transported off to the captive market suckers at Jackson Bay on Bonar’s ship Waipara. Macfarlane was accused of all sorts by his effective captives such as kicking them out of their houses and even beating up their wives.

Eventually the Jackson Bay Special Settlement (ie Government Project) was abandoned. Even on 19 January, 1875, which was the day the first settlers were landed, the West Coast Times wrote: “Experience of special settlements, as they are called, does not encourage anyone to be very sanguine as to the results of such an enterprise as this..” After all, similar government failed attempts at Jamestown (1870) and Karamea (1874) were fresh. Yet our silly government decided to reiterate the definition of insanity yet again.

Historians are fortunate for a brief break in the government of the Continuous Ministry which Julius Vogel usually headed. George Grey left his retirement on Kawau Island and succeeded in becoming Prime Minister for a spell to derail the misguided Vogel Boomers. It was during this time, in 1879, that at Royal Commission conducted hearings and wrote a damning report full of details about the Jackson Bay debacle. Whereas the Mangatapu Murderers were hanged, the Jackson Three escaped unpunished. However, they probably had to expend some political capital to achieve that result!

As a record of human foolishness, “of petty jealousies and back-biting of a small and isolated settlement, there is little to equal it in New Zealand historical documents” Ref. p1180, NZH (1971) Entire script is online at Papers Past. James Bonar defends himself, saying that immigrants were pouring into New Zealand and he was simply trying to facilitate the influx. It is recognised that the ‘settlers’ were “only a lot of paupers” or “certificated scum” as John Hall said in the House. Not only did they not speak English, the groups didn’t speak the same language as one another. At least the polyglot of Babylon had a tower to keep their feet dry!

“They arrived with hope, fuelled by the promises of the government’s advertising pamphlet. They left, often destitute, their efforts thwarted more by an unpredictable and unreliable bureaucracy than anything the terrain or climate threw at them.” – Barbara Scrivens, Polish History NZ

“Many of the settlers from Poland, Italy, Ireland, Scotland, England, Germany, Scandinavia and other places, had left hostile homelands looking for a better life.” – Marjorie Cook, Grey Star (28/12/2004)

“Their dreams and aspirations turned into nightmares. They would have had no idea they would be dropped far from civilisation and would need to contend with the most atrocious of rainforest environments. They quickly discovered the government of the time was not following through on promises of payment and had pretty much abandoned them to their own devices. Poverty stricken and ill-equipped for the task of building a settlement in a sandfly swamp, some resorted to dressing in sugar bags, starvation was common, and health care did not exist. Settlers drowned in the sea and rivers, died at birth or giving birth, or were felled by all manner of disasters and illnesses.” – ibid

“Italians were recruited around Leghorn by resident Englishman John Glyn, a restaurant manager and theatrical agent there. He signed up 230 sculptors, locksmiths, cabmen, porters, clerks, waiters, telegraphists and organ grinders under false pretenses..” – p102 McGill (1982)

“..the Government communicated with me relative to sending some Italians, who had, I believe, been several months in the Immigration Barracks in Wellington, unable to find employment. When first communicated with, I replied that I did not consider the Italians would make suitable settlers in a new bush settlement such as this, but the Government decided to send three of the Italians themselves to the Bay to report on the settlement to their countrymen.” – James Bonar, Jackson’s Bay Royal Commission, AJHR (1879)

“Further particulars are in a letter. Negotiations were opened by myself, shortly after being elected Superintendent, at a time when a large number of immigrants were pouring into the colony, and the Government considered it desirable to establish settlements as outlets for influx of population. ” – ibid

“…800 Venetian families on his hands after another settlement scheme had fallen through. He offered them to the New Zealand Government as ‘skilful agriculturalists’…Government sent them to Jackson’s Bay..to grow grapes and mulberry trees in a swampy, sodden forest.” – McGill (1982)

The Jackson Three threw the migrants under the bus in the 1879 report which was most unfair. A kinder way of saying it from the report was that “Exceptionally bad seasons have been experienced, and a class of men not adapted for the class of settlement was sent in the first instance.” The immigrants did resemble the Hoopleheads in 1870s Deadwood (2004) or the Europeans on the wagon train to Oregon in 1883 (2001) and came from a Europe in crisis. Rather than offer empathy, or even sympathy, our politicians exploited the miserable for what they could get out of them.

The local public believed in the immigration scams and Vogel’s Ministry had to keep up the pretense throughout the election year of 1875 by pumping people and money to Jackson Bay. The desperate Europeans believed what they had been told by their local agents that New Zealand wanted them and they could do well here even though our economic ship was really sinking. Think of the poor Italian artisans (eg telegraphists, locksmiths) and service industry professionals (eg waiters, cab drivers) who were scammed into coming only to be sent into government hard labour camps in the wilderness. Then, the Jackson Three denigrated the poor sods by saying they were “a burden upon the country” and “not fitted for the hard work required.”

The Jackson Bay Debacle actually out-lasted the Province that created it. James Bonar’s Westland, despite complicity in Central Government’s voodoo economic plan, was abolished by Vogel having only existed between 1873 and 1876. The Jackson Bay Gulag started in 1875 and was abandoned after 1880.

The Dreamers’ idea was that the first intake would know how to pioneer and lead those to follow yet this was never implemented. Nor was the requirement of a sawmill or wharf which might have created an economic basis for the ‘town’ rather than a Commisar Macfarlane’s penal colony. However, even this dream was up against the reality of an economic depression in the timber trade. And, perhaps, anti-competitive behavior from Hokitika that did not want their own business or communications to Australia compromised. Westland had created the Jackson Bay colony to dispose of unwanted guests not to share their cake. The would-be settlers wanted a church, instead they got a gaol.

Toward the end the victims were catching on to the scam. In 1876 Polish migrants on Shakespeare were quarantined at Somes Island (Wellington) apparently for disease. However, at this point don’t we know the government well enough yet to suspect it was because they didn’t know where else to put the “influx?”  Next these Poles were sent to Hokitika but transferred to James Bonar’s Waipara without even a chance to set foot on New Zealand soil. A witness said “women and children were crying and wishing to go on shore” but were not allowed. A few lies later about where they were going (‘just another part of the province’) and what they were going to get (’50 acres of land waiting for each of you’) they were off. But, upon arrival, they finally met someone in New Zealand who would tell them the truth- their fellow countrymen who had preceded them! The earlier intake “spoke to us, and said there was no doctor, and that they could not do more than pay for their provisions. […] It was impossible to live there […] those who were working there gave it a bad name – that everything was very dear, and that they must live like wild beasts. […] When we got there we saw that it was not good for us. We expected to see a town or a village, and, on account of not seeing one, we got frightened.” The Shakespeare Poles turned the ship around and got out of there. Ref. Ofsoski Family History, West Coast Times (1876,) Papers Past

Government history doesn’t tell stories about government failures which, of course, leaves a very large part of our history untold. Most of the Jackson Bay history comes across in a sanitised tone of hard-working ancestors who did it tough etc etc with “difficulties” etc etc. In fact it was a horror show of human misery and the fruits of the unethical Jackson Three. Because of the Grey Ministry’s Royal Commission we know about this one. However, there are plenty of other episodes of the Provinces buckling under the weight that Vogel carelessly flooded the country with when it could least afford to bare it. For history and justice these stories from all over New Zealand need to be told too.

The Government History of Jackson’s Bay (a confusion of Aristotelian Causes) is something like: ‘The Government decided to start a settlement at the Bay but it didn’t work out..‘ The true history is that the government decided to fix a surplus-people problem they had created by disposing of people into the wilderness and in this it succeeded just fine.

At some point we must learn, as I hope the Anarchist History of New Zealand is showing, that we must find another way to live that doesn’t include The State.


Image ref. Monument, Kathryn Bennie (2020)

However the Jackson Three, the men behind the travesty, also ripped off and devastated or indirectly killed

Ref. The Other New Zealanders, David McGill (1982)

Ref. New Zealand’s Heritage (1971)

Ref. Consultants/bureaucrats evidently made bank out of Jackson’s Bay too. Crown Lands Department – Jackson’s Bay settlement, Archives NZ

 

4 thoughts on "1875: Jackson Bay"

  1. max allen says:

    We were taught none of this shameful past only dry dates of office and names, Puhoi was a success story and English feudal system I recall. A bit on maori wars and lots of dryball dates, long forgotten. I have worn a Sugarbag vest and they are not warm but better than wet clothing. Three of us caught out in fog on the Ruahine tops in sleet and snow for two nights.We finally found a Hut with lots sugar bags from fixed wing Airplane food drops.We were young and very lean so two of us only just fitted a sugar bag but mate Headman Ross Cullen was too big so had to have a sort of cloak tied on his upper half and the rest naked as were Hoey and me, a shrivelled sight we all were. We had no dry matches and would have died that night but saved by a visit from a mate who was doing a duty check of the huts before going on a winter break. Never seen anyone so welcome as Woody. We were inside shivering, drssed in sugar sacks and the door slowly opened, it was like a miracle and soon had a big fire going, we walked out to the road the next day in knee deep snow.NZFS Hunter 1959, age 18 yrs. Max allen.

    1. AHNZ says:

      Crikey. That’s one Crump didn’t convert into print.

  2. max allen says:

    It gets better, at the end of the second day out on the Tops in fog I recognised the area we were in but we were too buggared to carry on and got into wet sleeping bags and lay down on rocks. We had no food for two days and Hoey went into shivering uncontrollably. Ross lay on top of him and I lay beside Hoey, it rained/sleeted all night.Next morning Hoey wouldnt get out of his bag and told us to leave him. We pulled him out, Ross and I put him on his shoulders, so Ross had his own Pack and Rifle with Hoey on his back and climbed out of a very steep side of the ridge to the top of the ridge. I took Hoeys pack and Rifle and struggled up the side of the ridge behind Ross.Only I had been there before and told them a track led up the ridge to the Hut, well, we missed the track at first, then despair turned to joy as the snow was covering the track and I was right after all. We soon got to the Hut with no food or matches there, Ross found a tin of Pears that had been hidden by someone, Truly tasted like nectar of the Gods. Ross was older than us, in his mid twenties, a Bushman from The King country, he came up with this idea to get a fire going from a 303 cartridge.We removed the bullet, put the cordite type explosive on some paper on the table. I held the cartridge and he hit the primer/cap with an old nail we found, it exploded violently and sent the cordite everywhere, it missed me but Ross was close and got these multiple cordite tiny pieces imbeded just under the skin of his Prodder, Balls and Belly. It was a real fun time as he jumped around swearing. Except Ross didn’t swear like us, his top oath was “Wouldn’t it gap your Axe”.

    1. AHNZ says:

      Just started listening to the podcast about those times. Don’t think that story made it in.

      Ref. https://www.rnz.co.nz/podcast/deer-wars

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Anarchist History of New Zealand: The battleground of empires; the siege of Troy was the Gallipoli adventure of 1194 b.c. - Durant