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William WILLIAMS

Male 1800 - 1878  (77 years)


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  • Name William WILLIAMS  [1
    Born 18 Jul 1800  Nottingham, England Find all individuals with events at this location  [2, 3
    Gender Male 
    Died 9 Feb 1878  Napier, New Zealand Find all individuals with events at this location  [2
    Person ID I27  Blyth Family Tree
    Last Modified 31 Mar 2018 

    Father Thomas WILLIAMS,   b. 27 May 1753, Gosport, Hampshire, England Find all individuals with events at this location,   d. 6 Jan 1804, Sneinton, Nottinghamshire, England Find all individuals with events at this location  (Age 50 years) 
    Mother Mary MARSH,   b. 10 Apr 1756, Gosport, Hampshire, England Find all individuals with events at this location,   d. 7 Nov 1831  (Age 75 years) 
    Married 17 Apr 1783  Holy Trinity, Gosport, Hampshire, England Find all individuals with events at this location  [2
    Family ID F60  Group Sheet  |  Family Chart

    Family Jane NELSON,   b. 8 Apr 1801, Newark Upon Trent, Nottingham, England Find all individuals with events at this location,   d. 6 Oct 1896, Napier, Napier, Hawke's Bay, New Zealand Find all individuals with events at this location  (Age 95 years) 
    Married 11 Jul 1825  Sheffield, England Find all individuals with events at this location  [2
    Children 
     1. Mary WILLIAMS,   b. 22 Apr 1826, Paihia, New Zealand Find all individuals with events at this location,   d. 24 Nov 1900, Te Aute, New Zealand Find all individuals with events at this location  (Age 74 years)
     2. Jane Elizabeth WILLIAMS,   b. 23 Oct 1827, Paihia, New Zealand Find all individuals with events at this location,   d. 27 May 1902, "'Pakaraka", East Cape, New Zealand Find all individuals with events at this location  (Age 74 years)
     3. William Leonard WILLIAMS,   b. 22 Jul 1829, Paihia, New Zealand Find all individuals with events at this location,   d. 24 Aug 1916, Taumata, Napier, New Zealand Find all individuals with events at this location  (Age 87 years)
     4. Thomas Sydney WILLIAMS,   b. 9 Feb 1831, Paihia, New Zealand Find all individuals with events at this location,   d. 11 Jun 1847, St Johns College, Auckland, New Zealand Find all individuals with events at this location  (Age 16 years)
     5. James Nelson WILLIAMS,   b. 22 Aug 1837, Waimate, New Zealand Find all individuals with events at this location,   d. 11 Jun 1915, "Rouncil", Havelock North, New Zealand Find all individuals with events at this location  (Age 77 years)
     6. Anna Maria WILLIAMS,   b. 25 Feb 1839, Waimate, New Zealand Find all individuals with events at this location,   d. 5 May 1929, Hukarere, Napier, New Zealand Find all individuals with events at this location  (Age 90 years)
     7. Lydia Catherine "Kate" WILLIAMS,   b. 7 Apr 1841, Kaupapa, Turanga, New Zealand Find all individuals with events at this location,   d. 4 Feb 1931, Awatoto, Hawkes Bay, New Zealand Find all individuals with events at this location  (Age 89 years)
     8. Marianne WILLIAMS,   b. 22 Aug 1843, Kaupapa, Turanga, New Zealand Find all individuals with events at this location,   d. 2 Sep 1932, Hukarere, Napier, New Zealand Find all individuals with events at this location  (Age 89 years)
     9. Emma Caroline WILLIAMS,   b. 20 Feb 1846, Whakato, Turanga, New Zealand Find all individuals with events at this location,   d. 11 Sep 1921, Whakato, Turanga, New Zealand Find all individuals with events at this location  (Age 75 years)
    Last Modified 31 Mar 2018 
    Family ID F7  Group Sheet  |  Family Chart

  • Notes 
    • According to family information William Williams was born at Plumtre H o u se, Nottingham, England, on 18 July 1800, the ninth and youngest c hild o f M ary Marsh and her husband, Thomas Williams. He was baptise d on 30 Oc to ber 1800. Thomas Williams was of Welsh descent, a hosie r by trade and a m a n of substance in Nottingham. He was a Dissenter , but never accepted t h e Unitarian doctrine so strongly propounded i n Nottingham's chapels du r ing the eighteenth and early nineteenth ce nturies. He died of typhoid w h en William was three. After an unsucce ssful attempt to carry on the ho s iery business Mary Williams moved w ith her younger children to Southwe l l, Nottinghamshire, where she be gan a school for young ladies.
      In 1813 the marriage of William's sister, Lydia, to their cousin Edwar d G a rrard Marsh brought the family under the influence of this evang elical c l ergyman. Marsh interested Henry, one of William's older bro thers, in t h e work of the Church Missionary Society, which in turn a ffected Willia m . Another consequence was that members of the William s family turned f r om nonconformity to the Church of England. This di ssenting, evangelica l b ackground considerably influenced the two mis sionary brothers and wa s s hared by their wives, making them opponent s of all later high church p r actices within the Anglican church.
      William Williams was educated at a small dame school and at Southwel l G r ammar School. He completed an apprenticeship to a Southwell surg eon be f ore entering Magdalen Hall (later Hertford College), Oxford , in 1822, a s a p rospective CMS trainee, under the special care of i ts evangelical p rin cipal, Dr John Macbride. He came down from Oxfor d in 1824 with a BA i n C lassics, and the same year was ordained deac on, on 26 September, and p r iest, on 19 December. At the beginning o f 1825 he was at the CMS Train i ng College, Islington, London.
      From the outset of his missionary training there had been a tacit agre e m ent with the CMS that he should follow his brother, Henry, to Ne w Zeal a nd. During a fund raising tour of the Midlands news of his im minent de p arture reached William and hurried along marriage plans. A t Sheffield, o n 1 1 July 1825, he married Jane Nelson of Newark, Nott inghamshire, and o n 1 2 August they embarked on the Sir George Osborn e. After a three mont h s tay at Sydney they landed at Paihia, Bay o f Islands, on 25 March 182 6. B etween 1826 and 1846 they had nine chi ldren, all born in New Zealan d.
      At Paihia William Williams was in charge of the English boys' school a n d , until the arrival of Samuel Ford in 1837, was the mission doctor . Hi s e arly fluency in spoken Maori was noted by Henry Williams: 'He Éappear s n ot to learn it; but it seems to flow naturally from him' . In Septemb er 1 826 he began the first serious, sustained effort t o produce the Scr ipt ures in Maori. By the end of 1837 he had complet ed the whole of the N e w Testament and the greater part of the Book o f Common Prayer
      In May 1835 the English boys' school was relocated at Waimate North, w h i ch became William's second station. He had already made several mi ssio n ary journeys, some of them most important. In December 1833 an d Januar y 1 834 he had gone by schooner to the East Cape and Mahia pe ninsula, ac co mpanied by William Yate, to return Ngati Porou Maori ca ptured by raid i ng Nga Puhi. (These people were to become the forerun ners of the CMS E a st Coast mission.) Between July and November 183 4 he had travelled ove r land to the Thames and Waikato regions, accom panied by Alfred Nesbit B r own. In January 1838, with William Colenso , Richard Matthews and James S t ack, he made an overland journey fro m East Cape to Turanga, Poverty Ba y . He was determined that a CMS mi ssionary be stationed on the East Coa s t, and 'when Richard Taylor, w ho had travelled with him on another vis i t there from March to May 1 839, agreed to take over the Waimate school , h e and Jane left for Tu ranga on 31 December 1839.
      Apart from a visit to England during 1851--52 to vindicate the New Zea l a nd mission and his brother, William Williams remained based at th e Tur a nga mission station from 20 January 1840 to 3 April 1865. Fo r many yea r s he was the only ordained CMS missionary in the church' s eastern dist r ict, walking north to East Cape, south to Hawke's Ba y and inland to Wa i karemoana as part of a regular visiting schedule . He made occasional o v erland journeys to Wellington and to St John' s College, Auckland. Selw y n inducted him as archdeacon of the East C ape on 27 November 1842, and o n 3 A pril 1859 consecrated him bisho p of Waiapu, a diocese which initia lly h ad a predominantly Maori cha racter. (On his English visit a doctor ate o f canon law from Oxford h ad been conferred on him.)
      In April 1857, having come to realise that the training of a Maori pas t o rate was his main job, William Williams moved from the first missi on s i te at Manutuke (at Kaupapa between 1840 and 1844, and then at W hakato) , t o locate his Maori training schools and his residence at W aerenga-a- hi ka, a few miles inland, where there was more land availa ble for a mis s ion farm. After leaving Turanga in 1865 he stayed fo r two years at Pai h ia where he began another training school at Horo tutu. There he wrote C h ristianity among the New Zealanders , publish ed in London in 1867 and i n tended as an apologia for the CMS missio n in New Zealand. At the end o f M ay 1867 he moved to Napier and th e following year into his final res id ence, Hukarere, on Napier hill . An agreement between Bishops G. A. Se l wyn and C. J. Abraham had ad ded Hawke's Bay to the Waiapu diocese, and W i lliam was anxious to ma ke Te Aute estate (set aside for educational pu r poses by his nephe w and son-in-law, Samuel Williams) the site of his c e ntral diocesa n school. In July 1875 he also established the Hukarere s c hool for M aori girls, close by his own home. His daughter, Anna Maria, w a s pri ncipal. On 9 February 1878 he died at Hukarere. His land at Napi e r w as worth nearly £9,000, and he left other property at Kerikeri , Taur an ga and Gisborne.
      William Williams once described his missionary life as 'like the unbro k e n course of a parish schoolmaster. A great deal of work, but mos t of i t o f the same character'. With his Maori converts he regularl y 'read an d c onversed', but apart from his knowledge of the languag e he showed li tt le interest in Maori culture and disapproved of mos t Maori social cus t oms. Nevertheless his influence among his missio n Maori, to whom he wa s k nown as Parata (Brother), was considerable . He generally found that ' a l ittle quiet expostulation' settled dif ferences between Maori and mis si onary. His colleagues found him kind ly, easy to get along with and 'a g e ntleman', but when his principle s were crossed, either by Bishop Selwy n o r by the CMS secretaries i n London, he was adamant and resolute. His d e cision to quit Waerenga -a-hika in 1865, when it was threatened by a sm a ll band of Hauhau wh o fraternised with his Turanga Maori, appears to h a ve been influence d not so much by the admonishments of Selwyn and memb e rs of his fami ly, as by William's own determination to withdraw his pr e sence and h is mana from those who were prepared to entertain 'false go d s'.
      His attitude to colonisation and to the New Zealand wars changed as h e g r ew older. In 1840 he collected signatures to the Treaty of Waita ngi, a n d later defended its land guarantee against threats by settle rs and Br i tish authorities. He was critical of the Waitara purchase , but thought t h at the wisest course was for the government to subju gate 'rebel' Maori ; ' salutary chastisement' would bring them to thei r senses. Later he re vi sed that opinion: 'All this war down to the p resent time [1868] has s p rung out of WaitaraÉ. As a community and a s a government we have been p u ffed up, first with an idea that we we re in the right, & secondly that w e w ere able to put down the native s by our own strengthÉ. We are now br ou ght very low.' Land confiscat ion, he came to think, was particularly u n just. For years he had reg arded Turanga as a missionary enclave; retur n ing there from Englan d in 1853 he disapproved of the attempt made by h i s locum, T. S. Gra ce, to introduce European trading practices.
      As a steady, conscientious teacher William Williams was neither too up l i fted by the apparent missionary success of the 1830s and 1840s, no r to o d ismayed by the massive falling away of the 1850s and 1860s. A ll thro ug h his missionary life he kept revising the Maori New Testam ent and Bo o k of Common Prayer. In 1844 he was with the 'Translatio n Syndicate' at W a imate, but mostly he worked alone, conferring fro m time to time with R o bert Maunsell. His enduring memorial is A dict ionary of the New Zealan d l anguage , first published at Paihia in 18 44. The second edition was a l so his work, the third and fourth tha t of his son, Bishop William Leon a rd Williams, and the fifth, of hi s grandson, Bishop Herbert William Wi l liams.

      -- MERGED NOTE ------------

      According to family information William Williams was born at Plumtre H o u se, Nottingham, England, on 18 July 1800, the ninth and youngest c hild o f M ary Marsh and her husband, Thomas Williams. He was baptise d on30 Oct ob er 1800. Thomas Williams was of Welsh descent, a hosie r by trade and a m a n of substance in Nottingham. He was a Dissenter , but never accepted t h e Unitarian doctrine so strongly propounded i n Nottingham's chapels du r ing the eighteenth and early nineteenth ce nturies. He died of typhoid w h en William was three. After an unsucce ssful attempt to carry on the ho s iery business Mary Williams moved w ith her younger children to Southwe l l, Nottinghamshire, where she be gan a school for young ladies.
      In 1813 the marriage of William's sister, Lydia, to their cousin Edwar d G a rrard Marsh brought the family under the influence of this evang elical c l ergyman. Marsh interested Henry, one of William's older bro thers, in t h e work of the Church Missionary Society, which in turn a ffected Willia m . Another consequence was that members of the William s family turned f r om nonconformity to the Church of England. This di ssenting, evangelica l b ackground considerably influenced the two mis sionary brothers and wa s s hared by their wives, making them opponent s of all later high church p r actices within the Anglican church.
      William Williams was educated at a small dame school and at SouthwellG r a mmar School. He completed an apprenticeship to a Southwell surgeon befo r e entering Magdalen Hall (later Hertford College), Oxford, in 1 822, as a p r ospective CMS trainee, under the special care of its eva ngelical princ i pal, Dr John Macbride. He came down from Oxford in 18 24 with a BA in C l assics, and the same year was ordained deacon, o n 26 September, and pr i est, on 19 December. At the beginning of 182 5 he was at the CMS Traini n g College, Islington, London.
      From the outset of his missionary training there had been a tacit agre e m ent with the CMS that he should follow his brother, Henry, to Ne w Zeal a nd. During a fund raising tour of the Midlands news of his im minent de p arture reached William and hurried along marriage plans. A t Sheffield, o n 1 1 July 1825, he married Jane Nelson of Newark, Nott inghamshire, and o n 1 2 August they embarked on the Sir George Osborn e. After athree month s t ay at Sydney they landed at Paihia, Bay of I slands, on 25 March 1826. B e tween 1826 and 1846 they had nine childr en, all born in New Zealand.
      At Paihia William Williams was in charge of the English boys' school a n d , until the arrival of Samuel Ford in 1837, was the mission doctor .His e a rly fluency in spoken Maori was noted by Henry Williams: 'HeÉ appears n o t to learn it; but it seems to flow naturally from him'. I n September 1 8 26 he began the first serious, sustained effort to pro duce the Scriptu r es in Maori. By the end of 1837 he had completed th e whole of the New T e stament and the greater part of the Book of Com mon Prayer
      In May 1835 the English boys' school was relocated at Waimate North, w h i ch became William's second station. He had already made several mi ssio n ary journeys, some of them most important. In December 1833 an d Januar y 1 834 he had gone by schooner to the East Cape and Mahia pe ninsula, ac co mpanied by William Yate, to return Ngati Porou Maori ca ptured by raid i ng Nga Puhi. (These people were to become the forerun ners of the CMS E a st Coast mission.) Between July and November 183 4 he had travelled ove r land to the Thames and Waikato regions, accom panied by Alfred Nesbit B r own. In January 1838, with William Colenso , Richard Matthews and James S t ack, he made an overland journey fro m East Cape to Turanga, Poverty Ba y . He was determined that a CMS mi ssionary be stationedon the East Coas t , and 'when Richard Taylor, wh o had travelled with him on another visi t t here from March to May 18 39, agreed to take over the Waimate school, h e a nd Jane left for Tur anga on 31 December 1839.
      Apart from a visit to England during 1851--52 to vindicate the New Zea l a nd mission and his brother, William Williams remained based at th e Tur a nga mission station from 20 January 1840 to 3 April 1865. Fo r manyyear s h e was the only ordained CMS missionary in the church' s easterndistri ct , walking north to East Cape, south to Hawke's Ba y and inlandto Waika r emoana as part of a regular visiting schedule . He made occasional over l and journeys to Wellington and to St John' s College, Auckland. Selwyn i n ducted him as archdeacon of the East C ape on 27 November 1842, and on 3 A p ril 1859 consecrated him bisho p of Waiapu, a diocese which initially h a d a predominantly Maori cha racter. (On his English visit a doctorate o f c anon law from Oxford h ad been conferred on him.)
      In April 1857, having come to realise that the training of a Maori pas t o rate was his main job, William Williams moved from the first missi on s i te at Manutuke (at Kaupapa between 1840 and 1844, and then at W hakato) , t o locate his Maori training schools and his residence at W aerenga-a- hi ka, a few miles inland, where there was more land availa ble for a mis s ion farm. After leaving Turanga in 1865 he stayed fo r two years at Pai h ia where he began another training school at Horo tutu. Therehe wrote C h ristianity among the New Zealanders , publishe d in London in 1867 and i n tended as an apologia for the CMS missio n in New Zealand. At the end o f M ay 1867 he moved to Napier and th e following year into his final res id ence, Hukarere, on Napier hill . An agreement betweenBishops G. A. Sel w yn and C. J. Abraham had add ed Hawke's Bay to the Waiapu diocese, and W i lliam was anxious to mak e Te Aute estate (set aside for educational pu r poses by his nephew a nd son-in-law, Samuel Williams) the site of his c e ntral diocesan sch ool. In July 1875 he also established the Hukarere s c hool for Maor i girls, close by his own home. His daughter, Anna Maria, w a s princi pal. On 9 February 1878 he died at Hukarere. His land at Napie r w a s worth nearly £9,000, and he left other property at Kerikeri, Taur a n ga and Gisborne.
      William Williams once described his missionary life as 'like the unbro k e n course of a parish schoolmaster. A great deal of work, but mos t of i t o f the same character'. With his Maori converts he regularl y 'read an d c onversed', but apart from his knowledge of the languag e he showed li tt le interest in Maori culture and disapproved of mos t Maori social cus t oms. Nevertheless his influence among his missio n Maori, to whom he wa s k nown as Parata (Brother), was considerable . He generally found that ' a l ittle quiet expostulation' settled dif ferences between Maori and mis si onary. His colleagues found him kind ly, easy to get alongwith and 'a g e ntleman', but when his principle s were crossed, either by Bishop Selwy n o r by the CMS secretaries i n London, he was adamant and resolute. His d e cision to quit Waerenga -a-hika in 1865, when it wasthreatened by a sma l l band of Hauhau wh o fraternised with his TurangaMaori, appears to hav e b een influence d not so much by the admonishments of Selwyn and member s o f his fami ly, as by William's own determination to withdraw his pres en ce and h is mana from those who were preparedto entertain 'false gods' .
      His attitude to colonisation and to the New Zealand wars changed as h e g r ew older. In 1840 he collected signatures to the Treaty of Waita ngi, a n d later defended its land guarantee against threats by settle rs and Br i tish authorities. He was critical of the Waitara purchase , but thought t h at the wisest course was for the government to subju gate 'rebel' Maori ; ' salutary chastisement' would bring them to thei r senses. Later he re vi sed that opinion: 'All this war down to the p resent time [1868] has s p rung out of WaitaraÉ. As a community and a s a government we have been p u ffed up, first with an idea that we we re in the right,& secondly that w e w ere able to put down the native s by our own strengthÉ. We are now br ou ght very low.' Land confiscat ion, he came to think, was particularly u n just. For years he had reg arded Turanga as a missionary enclave; retur n ing there from Englan d in 1853 he disapproved of the attempt made by h i s locum, T. S. Gra ce, to introduce European trading practices.
      As a steady, conscientious teacher William Williams was neither too up l i fted by the apparent missionary success of the 1830s and 1840s, no rtoo d i smayed by the massive falling away of the 1850s and 1860s. Al l through h i s missionary life he kept revising the Maori New Testame nt and Book of C o mmon Prayer. In 1844 he was with the 'Translation S yndicate' at Waimat e , but mostly he worked alone, conferring from ti me to time with Robert M a unsell. His enduring memorial is A dictiona ry of the New Zealand langu a ge , first published at Paihia in 1844 . The second edition was also hi s w ork, the third and fourth that o f his son, BishopWilliam Leonard Wil li ams, and the fifth, of his gra ndson, Bishop Herbert William Williams.
      BIRT: _WEBTAG
      NAME WebTag
      URL http://www.williams.gen.nz/

  • Sources 
    1. [S53] www.familysearch.org, Familysearch.org International Genealogical Reco r ds (Name: www.familysearch.org; Location: www.familysearch.org;).

    2. [S63] Lionel Klee, Klee Family Genealogy, Klee And Block Family Genalogy (http://genealogy.eproject.co.nz/). (Reliability: 0).

    3. [S17] Neil Harvey Williams, Williams Family in the 18th and 19th Century, Williams Family in the 18th & 19th centuries. Copyright Neil Harvey Williams, also on the website www.williams.gen.nz (Reliability: 0).



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