Tamati Pirimona Marino

 

Ngāti Rārua, Ngāti Tama, Te Ati Awa, Ngāti Toa (? - 1887)

Iwi map -Tamati Pirimona MarinoIWI / HAPU AFFILIATIONS

Tamati Pirimona Marino died at Nelson in December 1887 and according to the Nelson Evening Mail, he was aged around 80 years1. Tamati Pirimona Marino used several names including Thomas Freeman and Tamati Freeman.  For part of his life he lived at Aorere (Collingwood) and kept a cultivation of potatoes at Cape Farewell south of Aorere. A diary entry of a Mr Barnicoat offers this account of Aorere.

At the Ouriri (Aorere) Pah we found Chief Arino (Marino) a very intelligent native... Arino took us to a nice house provided with a good chimney and hearth and clean sleeping berths which he told us was for our own use... Arino is building a large weatherboard house...They employ an English carpenter whom they pay in pigs and potatoes.2

Another visitor, Meurant recorded this account:

When I was there in 1856... there were several Māori whares, and the land was covered with Cape gooseberries bushes...loaded with delicious fruit, showing that the Māories had cultivated it...3

In March 1847 Tamati Pirimona Marino was appointed an assessor for the courts to settle disputes between Māori and settlers to do with roaming or trespassing cattle.4 He owned at least two coastal ships that operated between the upper half of the South Island and lower half of the North Island for much of the 1840s and 1850s.5

Although he did not travel to England, his name was on the list of Māori chiefs eligible to travel to England in 1853 with missionary William Naylor Jenkins to commemorate the Wesleyan Missionary Jubilee and to visit Queen Victoria.6

NM

  1. ‘Death’, Nelson Evening Mail, vol XII, issue 2, 2 January 1877, p 2, Papers Past, accessed 28 January 2010.
  2. Hilary and John Mitchell, Te Tau Ihu o te Waka: A history of Māori of Nelson and Marlborough Volume 2, Te Ara Hou : The New Society (Huia Publishers in association with the Wakatū Incorporation, Wellington, 2007), p 64.
  3. Hilary and John Mitchell, Te Tau Ihu o te Waka: A history of Māori of Nelson and Marlborough Volume 2, Te Ara Hou : The New Society (Huia Publishers in association with the Wakatū Incorporation, Wellington, 2007), p 64.
  4. Advertisements Column 2, Nelson Examiner and New Zealand Chronicle, vol VI, issue 262, 13 March 1847, p 5, Papers Past, accessed 28 January 2010.
  5. Hilary and John Mitchell, Te Tau Ihu o te Waka: A history of Māori of Nelson and Marlborough Volume 2, Te Ara Hou : The New Society (Huia Publishers in association with the Wakatū Incorporation, Wellington, 2007), p 64.
  6. ‘Exhibition of New Zealand Natives in England’, Nelson Examiner and New Zealand Chronicle, vol XXI, 6 December 1862, p 3, Papers Past, accessed 28 January 2010.
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  • Caroline McBride

    At 7pm on 16 October 2010

    Kia ora Mark, I am one of the members of the team who put together this website. Please take a look at the FAQs (frequently asked questions) at the bottom of this page to get details of how to go about requesting a reproduction.

  • Mark Chamberlain

    At 10am on 4 October 2010

    Hi, My name is Mark Chamberlain and I am on a committee publishing the 150th anniversary history of the Anglican Diocese of Nelson. We want to include the picture of Tamati Pirimona Marino in the book and I ask how much this would cost and the process to recieving the digital image. Thanks - Mark Chamberlain.

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