MAORI WAR EPISODE RECALLED
Gate Pa Engagement
CEREMONY AT CHATHAM DOCKYARD
1 luring the years of the .Maori Wars a stout part was played by officers and men of two British Naval corvettes, the Esk and the Eclipse. That New Zealanders have not altogether forgotten the excellent service rendered in Ihose early days was shown when Sir James Grose, general manager of the National Bank of New Zealand and president of the New Zealand Navy League, visited the newly commissioned <lq.stro.yer 11.M.5. Esk at Chatham Dockyard, and presented a bronze plaque commemorative of the warship’s namesake and predecessor. Heavy rain drenched the dockyard when Sir Janies Grose, accompanied by Rear-Admiral G. O, Stephenson, general secretary of the British Navy League, made an informal inspection of the destroyer, and presented the plaque to Captain R. P. Selby, commanding the Esk. “With this go and will remain our fervent good wishes,” said Sir James. “It is perhaps not 100 much to call it symbolic of the bravery of pakeha and Maori in their war, of the unity between them to-day, and of the goodwill of the Navy League to the Navy.” The bronze plaque, mounted on mottled kauri, bore an inscription of similar purport. . The twenty-one gun corvette, alter which the new destroyer has been named, was a vessel of 1169 tons, under the command of Captain John Hamilton. Some of her officers and men, part of the Naval Reserves, reinforced the land forces, and participated in the hard lighting at the Gate Pa near Tauranga, where after desperate hand-to-hand lighting the Maoris repulsed Urn attacking forces . with heavy losses to both sides. On that day, April 29, 1564, many of the officers of the attacking side were, shot down in the initial charge; in the melee that ensued the Europeans were hampered by restricted space and a maze of entrenchments, -while at that type of warfare the Maori was at his best. Although the Reserves, under Captain Hamilton, fought heroically to save the day, their effort failed; the commander was shot down from the top of the outer parapet, whence he was calling his men to advance, and the Maoris were left in possession ol the pa. They abandoned it, however, during the following night. It was in that engagement that a Maori woman brought water to a wounded European, who was calling for it, under fire. To-day those two corvettes, so intimately associated with the Dominion’s history, have passed on their nam.es to a new H.M.S. Esk, and a new 11.M.5. Eclipse. To each of these two destroyers the Navy League is presenting a commemorative plaque.
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Dominion, Volume 28, Issue 97, 18 January 1935, Page 8
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436MAORI WAR EPISODE RECALLED Dominion, Volume 28, Issue 97, 18 January 1935, Page 8
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