Thank you for correcting the text in this article. Your corrections improve Papers Past searches for everyone. See the latest corrections.

This article contains searchable text which was automatically generated and may contain errors. Join the community and correct any errors you spot to help us improve Papers Past.

Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image

THE NATIVE INSURRECTION IN NEW CALEDONIA.

(Abridged from the. Sydney Morning. Herald, , ' r. {September 8.) , ; ..-,.. „ '„ , . With reference |to the native war in ..New Caledonia,; ,we"giy,e ,tKe, f pllowirig cx r tract from a private t letter ' received'' from our special commissioner, who has! been three weeks at." the front." At present he declines to express any decided opinion on the many varied and presumed causes ■of the - revolt, : and '•, the , , action., .taken in suppressing the same •;, but the following facts speak for themselves." Writing from Noumea on Augu'st;2B, he says :— '•'■ - '•■ . " The revolt is spreading in the; neighbourhood of Moindon, to the north of Boulapari, and where, until, now, the natives have been ostensibly friendly. More massacre of whites have taken place. Now, as regards this, I was on the spot at the commencement of the, trouble, and knbw the truth of what I write. On the lpth or the 11th of August a cow or a pig (some sajr the one, some the other) was speared dnthe, station of M. Boyer, near Moindon, 90 miles from here. The proprietor is at present in Noumea ;. but. his men, freed ' convicts : (liberes), made a : refio'nnaisd7ice } ; ' ' and ' falling across some natives,, the 'presumed, perhaps the real, authors of die outrage, they shot : two, a man and a ;woman. —Act 1. On August 12th I rode from the' camp atFouwhari with Oapfcairi'ljLuthriois/ ithe governor's aide-de-caiup',' to Moindon,. intending to visit the native village,;, and the* chief.'Baptista, until- this itime.momiri^lly; a friend of the Government ; Moindon is the iaead quarters of the ■* agriGul- , tural centre '; of tie craicgsi^i'ons allotted. to ; liberes, who are Here, all smaii^uitivalors. M. de Laubarede is.the civil .director, land mayor of the communel; ■■'} It hasfbeen<the policy, arid 1 1 believe ."'the 'wise, poHcj,' of the present , , Admiriisiratipni' ' to/ preserve' friendly. relations with all tlte/ natives f'.fiut- 1 sidethe immediate. scene okreypltl !, -Npwy ; although iriariy of Bap tiste's .young: men It were.!pupppsed" to 'bb 'withJ'the 1 rebel' leader Atai, stilLh^^^ Some sayatfiaLhe/^ a chief of a > small tribe^. is joo&ed' iip , ' to, as a ''pair o£ Jl great "■ ability) and- influence j-rhad' 'sent his^"fi^Hting men to aid Altai;' whilst he" .stopped behind .-"to .watcH 'eveiits f .'; i: ' J^isdri heads have told me that many of the 1 Moidon natives left their, villages because the. liberes around told them they would all be shot by the troops. ;■ . ;| ; : . ■ "But the ;killing;^of jKe 'man and woman by Bpyer's men^wl^rtti^e beginning, of what follows. . When^Wfi "yawived- at. Moindon we found > all ? excitement. \ A. } libere, named' Briere^ha"df?that' mornjng J been killed by the natives, and his : lbgs cut off, for supposed Vanthroppphagy, the first case yet known, and which shpwa i that 1 : thw ; was done as the -act of deadly re? yehge. Act 11. A scouting partyi sent , to Baptiste's village, ''discovered.' that it was deserted. He Jbad ; pasied lover "ip the enemy. The next day five natives who had been imprisoned in. the calaboose at Terpiaba, since 'the commencemeni^E the troubles,.,' 'for.; presumed ' compli|il3f| were to have ; been. tried .b^.^^t-maflii^i." But:., after Briere's murder' the^trialiwas dispensed with, and ; the \ Oanaques* ware. marched out to th* 1 , spdt where « the ■, librere was killed, guardea by' & large number of soldiers arid arm ed ,f rarictirfeurs, and shot, after being informed by. tlie i'-commandaiik/ M. Vanauld, chief i ofithe arrondissemerit ■'of Uarai, ' that they were executed' for ,th_e ; , suas ' of their .chi^ff ' Three ct; of these men hadbeen empJb^ed/aß'labourers^/repairing{ ?thei teleg^raph^, linei'in^d^two.^ *w.eve f boatmen ■at < Teremba. >„ One ; was a petty chief, and^ another thei 'son:; of as chiefs They^i^d'without^a V^inufm&ry ; ''aii.(i ".feheir^ bodies were afterwards ! cn^&V'Vm^rc\xidL: ;6ut '-iWitji, the \\4TPQ^\^^"^6^d^^i^miki) meet their ifate^withfmOT&^ililo^cian^ *Tliis h ;waß : Act "U (.*■"-'' Since ; [then;Jrwe! Bear r jbiiai' tKj£trib/esC^ and imenjhayj been;killed jins.theMp^ • actsHiri feth'w r <ttrag^y{?fwlxi6tii^ f^oy^^ >kuo'w4wh¥re jdistuct*isf*beiDg|ssurroundeaftby#brockS mouß^ej^Tb4s|wU^^t|KrancejE^^m^^^

amount of money, although perhaps nofcsJ bo much as the Maori war did New Zea- I landJL- _ ..„...: ,„ ,_ _ y''4 | The " special correspondent ' >:: of- : the I [Sydney Evening- News gathers from a ■'s. jnumber of letters received from Ner4 Caledonia "that th^geneW belief is that i ithere will be a general rising; of th©^u'u-l .christianized: native^ population. * gentleman, expresses;" the /belief that. even. (0 among the supposed J&ghting friendlies | an understanding exists j with the rebels^ 1 which i is. interfering much with , the' -'-i mo' ements of the : troops.. For '•• in-. , ? stance, there.; is language, only /knowfli X to the chiefs, and .there" are :cer-Vf tain signs and counter - Bigns knoW'st I only to/ the chiefs, so that ; even i when in combat the troops can be com-vf; pletely frustrated- by ; the signs and con-; ]■ versations carried on between the sup-;> posed frien'dlies and the rebels, "it id -A aupppsed that, with the exception of the\# Mission Kanakas, the entire, native popu^ lation about Kanala, Nakety, Oualou, anii, Vi even Gomen, will j oin Atai. Moindon is.' ';;■, in insurrection, and poor Monsieur Honr daille, a settler some. 70 miles north of ; Bourail, is not at all pleasantly situated, j being completely surrounded. The na- | ti ves attacked La Foa .in, the open day iv j great force. They were well received by ; the troops, and it is said 100 natives were • i killed ; butj curiously, no loss Tof V the , j troops is mentioned. This omission^ couplied with news received from another quarter, conveys the impression; that, the ~\ Government admit of no losses. The number of white settlers and gendarmes, etc., killed amount to 156, but of the . soldiers and sailors killed there is no official or anynews, and the number of natives; killed must be received alspwith caution. .The killing of the natives imprisoned afc Teremba without trial or court-martial has been much commented on in .Noumea as a very bad stroke of policy on the part of the Government. It will certainly only tend to exasperate -the entire native population. The natives are fighting with great pluck. They bury their dead attherisk of many lives. The authorities, as a rule, in New Caledonia leave the dead as food for pigs and dogs." ' , , , .

Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/CL18781004.2.20

Bibliographic details

Clutha Leader, Issue 221, 4 October 1878, Page 5

Word Count
1,002

THE NATIVE INSURRECTION IN NEW CALEDONIA. Clutha Leader, Issue 221, 4 October 1878, Page 5

THE NATIVE INSURRECTION IN NEW CALEDONIA. Clutha Leader, Issue 221, 4 October 1878, Page 5

Help

Log in or create a Papers Past website account

Use your Papers Past website account to correct newspaper text.

By creating and using this account you agree to our terms of use.

Log in with RealMe®

If you’ve used a RealMe login somewhere else, you can use it here too. If you don’t already have a username and password, just click Log in and you can choose to create one.


Log in again to continue your work

Your session has expired.

Log in again with RealMe®


Alert