Australasia 1849: Settlement of the South Island
30 August 1849
30 Aug 1849
Settlement of the South Island
26 Jan 1788 First Fleet
28 Apr 1789 Mutiny on the Bounty
7 Feb 1794 Australasia and the French Revolution
23 Jul 1801 Napoleonic France in Australasia
17 Oct 1803 Expanding from New South Wales
26 Jan 1808 Rum Rebellion
18 Feb 1811 Interregnum in the Dutch East Indies
7 May 1815 Settling the Australian interior
29 Feb 1820 Australasia after the Napoleonic Wars
3 Dec 1825 Colony of Van Diemen’s Land
18 Jun 1829 Swan River Colony
1 Jun 1832 Musket Wars
28 Dec 1836 Province of South Australia
6 Feb 1840 Treaty of Waitangi
16 Nov 1840 Colony of New Zealand
17 Feb 1846 Colony of North Australia
30 Aug 1849 Settlement of the South Island
1 Jul 1851 Colony of Victoria
3 Dec 1854 Eureka Rebellion
1 Sep 1855 Tongan Intervention in Fiji
6 Jun 1859 Colony of Queensland
Early colonial New Zealand saw a number of clashes between settlers and Māori over dubious land deals. These issues were most easily resolved in the sparsely populated South Island, where the British Crown was able to cheaply purchase extensive and overlapping tracts of land between 1847 and 1860 to ensure that all Māori stakeholders were compensated (however, promised reserves and other conditions of the deals were often ignored by the Crown). This opened up almost the entire South Island to settlement, allowing it to become the ‘mainland’ of New Zealand’s settler population for much of the rest of the nineteenth century.