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Elsdon Best

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Elsdon Best
Elsdon Best, 1931
Born(1856-06-30)30 June 1856
Tawa Flat, New Zealand
Died9 September 1931(1931-09-09) (aged 75)
Wellington, New Zealand
NationalityNew Zealander
RelativesMadeline Best (sister)
Awards
Scientific career
Fieldsethnography

Elsdon Best (30 June 1856 – 9 September 1931) was an ethnographer who made important contributions to the study of the Māori of New Zealand.

Early years

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Elsdon Best was born 30 June 1856 at Tawa Flat, New Zealand, to William Best and the former Hannah Haynes Nibbs. When his father obtained a position at the Colonial Treasury, the family moved from its farmstead at Grasslees Farm to Wellington, where Best, now aged 9, went to school. After completing his formal education, he took and passed the Civil Service examination and became a clerk in 1873. Within a year he found the work uncongenial and moved to Poverty Bay, where he worked in farming and forestry.[1]

In 1881 Best joined the Armed Constabulary. Based in the Taranaki at a time of increased tensions between the Māori and the colonial settlers in the area, he became involved in the arrests of protesters. Through the influence of his brother-in-law, Walter Gudgeon, he transferred to a Māori contingent and later that year he participated in the raid on Parihaka[1] (November 1881). He left the Armed Constabulary after two years of service to travel to the United States of America, where he worked for three years, first in Hawaii and then in California, mustering cattle and doing forestry.[2]

Best returned to New Zealand in 1886 and entered into a timber venture with his brother, using sawmilling equipment he had purchased in the United States. He also came into increasing contact with the Māori and, encouraged by Gudgeon and other notable settlers from the Taranaki, including Percy Smith, studied their language and culture.[1] His timber business failed in 1891 and Best moved to Wellington, where he found work as a storeman.[2] When Smith established the Polynesian Society in 1892 with the intention of promoting interest in and discussion of Polynesian history and culture, Best became a foundation member.[1] For the Society's first edition of its Journal he wrote an article on the people of the Philippines. He also began a series of publications concerning the history of Wellington Harbour.[2]

Work among the Tūhoe

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In 1895, when the Urewera district began to be opened up for European settlement, Best took a position as quarter-master with the road works, beginning in Te Whaiti. For the next 15 years, he worked in the district, using his presence in the area to build up a relationship with many Tūhoe elders and record the facts of the culture and traditions of the Tūhoe, which were still relatively intact. He recorded his observations in field records and note books that he kept now for the rest of his life. His relationship with Tutakangahau is the subject of a 2010 book by Jeffrey Paparoa Holman.[3]

Best's devotion to his study, together with his facility in Māori, allowed him to win the confidence of the Tūhoe, whose traditions he published in a series of articles in the Transactions of the New Zealand Institute and the Journal of the Polynesian Society. In 1897, he published the monograph Waikaremoana, the Sea of Rippling Waters, With a Tramp through Tuhoe Land, in which he presented the lore of the district.

Ethnologist

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Elsdon Best with fellow ethnographer Percy Smith, 1908[4]

In 1910, Best was appointed ethnologist at the Dominion Museum which allowed him to pursue his research in a more focused manner. In 1912, he published The Stone Implements of the Maori, which was followed four years later by an accompanying bulletin on Māori storehouses. In 1919, his The Land of Tara appeared, a history of the Māori of Wellington Harbour. A systematic survey of traditional Māori culture, The Maori, appeared in two volumes in 1924, and in 1925 Best's Tuhoe, the Children of the Mist. This a monumental study in 1200 pages of the traditional history and culture of tribe with which he had spent so much of his life. From 1919 to 1923 Best took part in each of the four Dominion Museum ethnological expeditions.[5]

In 1914, Best was awarded the Hector Medal of the New Zealand Institute, and in 1919 he was made a fellow.[1]

Best died in 1931 in Wellington, survived by his widow Adelaide (née Wylie). They had no children.[1] His grandniece was Alison Drummond.[6] His ashes lay buried beneath a monument, erected in 1960, in his birth town of Tawa at Grasslees Reserve. The nearby suburb of Elsdon, Porirua was named in his memory.

Notes

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  1. ^ a b c d e f Sissons, Jeffery. "Elsdon Best". Dictionary of New Zealand Biography. Ministry for Culture and Heritage. Retrieved 30 October 2017.
  2. ^ a b c Bagnell, Austin Graham (1966). "Elsdon Best". In McLintock, A. H. (ed.). An Encyclopaedia of New Zealand.
  3. ^ Holman, Jeffrey Paparoa (2010). Best of Both Worlds: the story of Elsdon Best and Tutakangahau. North Shore, N.Z.: Penguin. ISBN 9780143008422.
  4. ^ Photograph by kind permission of the Alexander Turnbull Library, Wellington, New Zealand, reference number: 1/2-028237-F
  5. ^ Wayne Ngata; Arapata Hakiwai; Anne Salmond; et al. (November 2021). Treasures for the Rising Generation: The Dominion Museum Ethnological Expeditions 1919–1923 (in English and Māori). Te Papa Press. pp. 1–368. ISBN 978-0-9951031-0-8. OL 33957253M. Wikidata Q124738173.
  6. ^ Taonga, New Zealand Ministry for Culture and Heritage Te Manatu. "Drummond, Alison Edith Hilda". teara.govt.nz. Retrieved 2 June 2021.

References

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  • Encyclopedia of New Zealand, vol. 1, pp. 199–200.
  • Journal of the Polynesian Society 41 (1932)
  • Man of the Mist – a Biography of Elsdon Best by E.W.G. Craig (1964)
  • Best of Both Worlds by Jeffrey Paparoa Holman (2010)
  • Elsdon Best, l’ethnographe immémorial by Frederico Delgado Rosa (2018)

Bibliography

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