The Te Pōrere Redoubts were fortifications of the New Zealand Wars, located at Te Pōrere, to the southwest of the current site of Tūrangi, in New Zealand. Built by the Māori warrior Te Kooti and his Ringatū followers in September 1869, they were the site of the Battle of Te Pōrere, between Te Kooti's forces and those of the New Zealand colonial government's Armed Constabulary and Māori aligned with the government—known as kūpapa. The site of the redoubts, which were restored after it was designated as a National Historic Place in February 1961, is administered by Heritage New Zealand.

Te Pōrere Redoubts
Te Pōrere, near Tūrangi, New Zealand
Map
Map including fortification features of upper (west) and lower (east) Te Pōrere redoubts (brown markers). Key is:
  Lower parts of redoubt
  Upper parts of redoubt
Clicking on the map enables mouse over that allows zooming and the display of more information. This data is not intended for navigation or recreational purposes. A rifle pit is known to have existed to the south east of the lower redoubt near one of the banks of the Wanganui River but the location is uncertain. Map based upon mapping data from multiple sources, ARCIShybid for orientation, a simplified sketch by museum worker James McDonald, and drone imagery.[1][2]
Coordinates39°2′47″S 175°35′10″E / 39.04639°S 175.58611°E / -39.04639; 175.58611.
TypeRedoubt
Site information
Controlled byHeritage New Zealand
Open to
the public
Yes
Site history
Built1869 (1869)
MaterialsEarthworks
Battles/warsNew Zealand Wars
Designated3 March 2006
Reference no.7652

History

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Te Kooti's War, one of the conflicts of the New Zealand Wars, spanned the period from July 1868 to May 1872. It involved Te Kooti, the Māori leader of a religion called Ringatū, and several of his followers who had escaped to mainland New Zealand from imprisonment on the Chatham Islands in July 1868. Pursued by local militia, he raided Matawhero and instigated a massacre of local Māori and settlers. Engagements with the government's Armed Constabulary and kūpapa—allied Māori—followed and Te Kooti's forces suffered a major defeat at Ngātapa in January 1869. They subsequently fled to the Urewera ranges. He perpetuated further raids on the civilian population and with government forces still after him, Te Kooti and his followers gradually moved to the Central Plateau.[3]

Te Kooti ambushed a party of Armed Constabulary near Lake Taupō in June and the government began to move troops to the area. Te Kooti skirmished with kūpapa in September in an attempt to disrupt the build up but his efforts were relatively ineffective. The redoubts at Te Pōrere were constructed later in the month, most likely by Te Kooti and his followers. Alternatively, it is possible that they were constructed by the local tribe, Ngāti Tūwharetoa. In the Battle of Te Pōrere, government forces attacked Te Pōrere on 4 October, inflicting a major defeat on Te Kooti. While Te Kooti, who was wounded in the hand in the fighting, was able to escape, 37 of his followers were killed. Their bodies were buried in the main fortification at Te Pōrere.[3][4]

Description

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Te Pōrere is a locality situated about 10 kilometres (6.2 mi) to the west of Lake Rotoaira and southwest of the current site of the town of Tūrangi. The defensive works there were consisted of three distinct fortifications: the main (hillfort), also known as the 'upper redoubt', the 'lower redoubt', which was actually a series of trenches, and a rifle pit.[5]

Upper redoubt

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A view, looking north, of the upper redoubt at Te Pōrere

The main was built in the style of a redoubt, as commonly used by the British Army during the New Zealand Wars.[6] A redoubt is a type of fortification which, since it did not require timber elements, could be constructed relatively quickly by troops in the field. Usually taking a square or rectangular plan form, they were prepared by excavating a ditch to define the perimeter of the redoubt. The dug out earth was piled up on the inner side of the ditch to form a parapet.[7]

The upper redoubt was built on an elevated site with its western side close to the bush line. The east side faced a swampy plain leading towards Rotoaira Lake.[5] It is about 20 metres (66 ft) square with bastions extending from the northwest and southeast corners. At the time of the battle, the earthen walls ranged from just under 2 metres (6.6 ft) to about 3 metres (9.8 ft). A ditch surrounded a substantial portion of the walls, most noticeably about the portions lowest in height. The bastions in theory offered defenders the ability to fire down onto the ditch but in practice were poorly angled. Loop holes were provided at regular intervals along the wall. The main entrance/exit point, which coincided with a break in the ditch, was midway along the western wall which, due to its proximity to the bush, offered a line of escape for its occupants. A major flaw in the redoubt was the construction of the loop holes; these lacked any declination such that the defenders needed to fire their weapons over the top of the parapet when shooting at attackers sheltering in the ditches.[8][9]

A low wall, running along a west–east axis, separated a large portion of the interior of the upper redoubt into two distinct halves. This wall is unlikely to have fulfilled a defensive function and may have been used to separate the defenders; Te Kooti and his followers from the East Cape in one half, while the local Tūwharetoa who had joined Te Kooti since his arrival in the area in the other half.[8][10]

Lower redoubt

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A view of the lower redoubt

The lower redoubt, located to the east of the upper redoubt, is positioned on a knoll on the west or left bank of a stream which flowed from the western side of Tongariro mountain to the Whanganui River.[5][11] This was a complex of several trenches and while providing cover nearly all round, the position lacked depth and had a limited field of view.[6]

Rifle pit

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The rifle pit, southeast of the lower redoubt, was located on the east or right bank of the Wanganui River; some distance to the southeast from the main redoubt, it may have served as an observation post. The main portion was about five feet deep, with a wall thrown up on its eastern front for protection.[6][12]

Site

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When Te Pōrere was declared a National Historic Place a plaque, to those followers of Te Kooti who were killed in the battle and buried at the site, was unveiled

Te Pōrere was abandoned after the battle but remained in generally good condition although with some growth of vegetation along the walls over time. The historian James Cowan, writing in 1923 described the fortifications as being in a "fair state of preservation".[13] The land on which the battle took placed remained in Māori ownership until 1958, when it, and around 120 acres of the surrounding forest, was transferred to the Historic Places Trust, the predecessor of Heritage New Zealand.[14] Shortly afterwards, Ormond Wilson, the chairman of the Historic Places Trust, commenced efforts to restore Te Pōrere.[15] The site was declared a National Historic Place on 18 February 1961 by the Governor-General of New Zealand, Viscount Cobham, in a ceremony at the site, which also included a dedication to the 37 followers of Te Kooti killed in the Battle of Te Pōrere and buried within the upper redoubt.[16]

As part of the restoration work, vegetation was cut back, the breastworks of the redoubts reconstructed, and a pathway constructed between the site and a car park located off State Highway 47.[15] Te Pōrere is considered to be the best preserved site in New Zealand, although not the best example.[12][17] The fortifications at Te Pōrere were designated as a Category 1 Historic Place by Heritage New Zealand in March 2006, with the list number 7652.[2]

Notes

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  1. ^ "Pourere [sic] Redoubt". Museum of New Zealand Te Papa Tongarewa. Retrieved 9 November 2024.
  2. ^ a b "Te Pōrere Redoubts". Heritage New Zealand Pouhere Taonga. Retrieved 19 March 2024.
  3. ^ a b "New Zealand Wars: Pursuit of Te Kooti, 1868–1872". Te Ara – the Encyclopedia of New Zealand. Ministry for Culture and Heritage. Retrieved 19 March 2024.
  4. ^ Wilson 1961, p. 36.
  5. ^ a b c Wilson 1961, p. 63.
  6. ^ a b c Wilson 1961, pp. 67–69.
  7. ^ Prickett 2016, p. 5.
  8. ^ a b Wilson 1961, pp. 64–66.
  9. ^ Belich 1998, pp. 282–283.
  10. ^ Binney 1997, p. 187.
  11. ^ Cowan 1956, p. 376.
  12. ^ a b Prickett 2016, pp. 94–96.
  13. ^ Cowan 1956, pp. 379–380.
  14. ^ Wilson 1961, pp. 9–10.
  15. ^ a b Johnson 2019, p. 91.
  16. ^ "Te Kooti's Fortifications National Historic Place". The Press. New Zealand Press Association. 20 February 1961. Retrieved 3 April 2024.
  17. ^ McGibbon 2000, pp. 382–383.

References

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