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Frederick Maning was one of the first Europeans to settle in Aotearoa, marrying a high-ranking Ngāpuhi woman, and writing two books filled with colourful anecdotes of his time living alongside Māori. But attitude to his adopted land – and its people – twisted and turned over time, leaving a complicated legacy. Maning was there for key moments in the early years of cross-cultural contact. He witnessed the signing of Te Tiriti o Waitangi at Māngungu, and allegedly counselled Māori against signing it; he took up arms in the Northern War (including the infamous Battle of Ōhaeawai); and was one of the first judges on the Native Land Court. But while his books painted a romantic picture of his early life among Māori, Maning's private letters from later in life described Tangata Whenua using racist language, and advocated extreme violence against those who resisted colonisation. In this two part episode of Black Sheep, we look at these two lives of Judge Frederick Maning. For further reading: White Chief: the colourful life and times of Judge F E Maning of the Hokianga by John Nicholson Pakeha Maori: the early life and times of Frederick Edward Maning by David Calquhoun History of the War in the North of New Zealand by Frederick Maning Old New Zealand by Frederick Maning

The Best of RNZ's Podcasts. The shady, controversial and sometimes downright villainous characters of New Zealand history, presented by William Ray. RNZ's multiple award-winning podcast Black Sheep has returned with a new cast of characters from the murderous to the misunderstood. Legislation, issues and insights from Parliament. The House is produced for RNZ with funding from Parliament.

  • 1[The House] The ways of Parliament’s committees This week on The House we focused on aspects of the processes of select committees and their outcomes. The Sunday show is a collation of this content. In Thursday’s story, Johnny Blades looked at the Therapeutic Products Bill which this week passed its second reading, when the debates committee recommendations upon its returns to the House from select committee. The Health Select Committee which examined this legislation digested a vast amount of public feedback, much of which took issue with the Bill. This in turn informed a robust debate between MPs. Unusually, the Health Committee is one without a governing-party majority, so the outcomes of committee were more fraught, and left unagreed amendments to be incorporated in the next (committee of the whole) stage. The bill’s still nascent form left much more space for Second Reading politicking, as opposition MPs claimed the committee outcome demonstrated failure, a climb-down. Instead, what they showed was what happens when coalition parties do not have the majority in a committee, which was itself instructive. [Committee machinery] In Wednesday’s story, Phil Smith talked with Ingrid Leary, the chairperson of the Finance and Expenditure Committee, about what happens behind a committee’s closed doors. Particularly, what advice they seek from experts and how they track and use it. This story was prompted by the recent unprecedented report back from that committee that noted that the bill drafters had received some instructions that were not the committee’s own. Among other things, Leary shared how committees attempt to balance advice from a bill’s original policy-setters (who are part of a government’s ministerial staff), with independent advice. Those two stories are compiled for this week’s Sunday programme, the audio of which is linked to above.

Primary Title
  • Features Hour | The House
Secondary Title
  • Black Sheep
Episode Title
  • Double Life: the story of Judge Frederick Maning - Part 1
Date Broadcast
  • Sunday 2 July 2023
Start Time
  • 07 : 00
Finish Time
  • 08 : 00
Duration
  • 60:00
Channel
  • Radio New Zealand National
Broadcaster
  • Radio New Zealand
Programme Description
  • The Best of RNZ's Podcasts. The shady, controversial and sometimes downright villainous characters of New Zealand history, presented by William Ray. RNZ's multiple award-winning podcast Black Sheep has returned with a new cast of characters from the murderous to the misunderstood. Legislation, issues and insights from Parliament. The House is produced for RNZ with funding from Parliament.
Episode Description
  • Frederick Maning was one of the first Europeans to settle in Aotearoa, marrying a high-ranking Ngāpuhi woman, and writing two books filled with colourful anecdotes of his time living alongside Māori. But attitude to his adopted land – and its people – twisted and turned over time, leaving a complicated legacy. Maning was there for key moments in the early years of cross-cultural contact. He witnessed the signing of Te Tiriti o Waitangi at Māngungu, and allegedly counselled Māori against signing it; he took up arms in the Northern War (including the infamous Battle of Ōhaeawai); and was one of the first judges on the Native Land Court. But while his books painted a romantic picture of his early life among Māori, Maning's private letters from later in life described Tangata Whenua using racist language, and advocated extreme violence against those who resisted colonisation. In this two part episode of Black Sheep, we look at these two lives of Judge Frederick Maning. For further reading: White Chief: the colourful life and times of Judge F E Maning of the Hokianga by John Nicholson Pakeha Maori: the early life and times of Frederick Edward Maning by David Calquhoun History of the War in the North of New Zealand by Frederick Maning Old New Zealand by Frederick Maning
Classification
  • Not Classified
Owning Collection
  • Chapman Archive
Broadcast Platform
  • Radio
Languages
  • English
Captions
Live Broadcast
  • No
Rights Statement
  • Made for the University of Auckland's educational use as permitted by the Screenrights Licensing Agreement.
Genres
  • Documentary
  • Feature
  • History
  • News
  • Politics
Hosts
  • Catriona MacLeod (Presenter, RNZ News / Features Hour)
  • William Ray (Presenter / Writer, Black Sheep)
  • Johnny Blades (Presenter, The House)
  • Phil Smith (Presenter, The House)
Contributors
  • Tim Watkin (Executive Producer, Black Sheep)
  • William Saunders (Sound Engineer, Black Sheep)
  • New Zealand Parliament's Office of the Clerk (Funder, The House)