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James Busby

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Preceded by
  
Office established

Spouse
  
Agnes Dow (m. 1832–1871)

Name
  
James Busby

Succeeded by
  
Office discontinued


James Busby httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsdd

Born
  
7 February 1801Scotland (
1801-02-07
)

Died
  
July 15, 1871, Anerley, London, United Kingdom

Books
  
A treatise on the culture of the vine and the art of making wine

Siblings
  
George Busby, Alexander Busby, Katherine Busby, John Busby, William Busby

Parents
  
Sarah Kennedy, John Busby

School spec audition 2015 james busby high school


James Busby (7 February 1802 – 15 July 1871) is widely regarded as the "father" of the Australian wine industry, as he took the first collection of vine stock from Spain and France to Australia. Later he became a British Resident who travelled to New Zealand, involved in the drafting of the Declaration of the Independence of New Zealand and the Treaty of Waitangi. As British Resident, he acted as New Zealand's first jurist, and the 'originator of law in Aotearoa', to whom New Zealand owes almost all of its underlying jurisprudence'.

Contents

James Busby James Busby arrives in the Bay of Islands NZHistory New Zealand

Minister James Busby Bible Study on Patience Part 2


Life

James Busby ArtStation James Busby

He was born in Scotland, the son of English engineer John Busby and mother Sarah Kennedy. His family emigrated from Britain to New South Wales in 1824.

On his arrival in Sydney, Busby was appointed a teacher of viticulture at the Male Orphans School at Bald Hills near Liverpool. The school closed in 1850. Busby served out his contract and taught the stipulated two hundred days at the Male Orphans' Farm. Busby then received a Grant of Land from the Governor and after much careful deliberation he chose a block in the Coal River area of the Hunter Region.

In 1828 Busby returned to England, before visiting Spain and France to further his study in viticulture. Busby returned to Australia in 1828.

In New Zealand

Busby married Agnes Dow at Segenhoe, in the Hunter Region, New South Wales on 1 November 1832. In March 1833, he was appointed to the position of British Resident of New Zealand and went to the Bay of Islands in May that year, taking with him some of the vine stock he had collected in Europe. Agnes followed him, arriving in July.

A house was completed for him at Waitangi where he planted a vineyard from which wine was being made before his vines were productive in Australia.

His duties were to protect British commerce, control, and mediate between the unruly Pākehā settlers and Māori in New Zealand. However, he was not provided with any resources to impose this authority.

James Busby proposed that New Zealand should have a national flag, after an unregistered New Zealand ship was seized in Australia. A selection of three or four designs was sent from Australia, and one was chosen by the Māori chiefs at a meeting at his residency on 20 March 1834; see United Tribes of New Zealand.

Independence and Treaty of Waitangi

In 1835, Busby learned that Baron Charles Philippe Hippolyte de Thierry, a Frenchman, was proposing to declare French sovereignty over New Zealand. He drafted the Declaration of the Independence of New Zealand and at a meeting in October signed it together with 35 chiefs from the northern part of New Zealand.

After the arrival of William Hobson, he co-authored with him the Treaty of Waitangi. It was signed on 5 and 6 February 1840 on the lawn outside his residence. Busby and his family left Waitangi that year. He declined an offer for a position in the new colonial government, and instead focused on farming interests, but became entangled in litigation over his land titles: the New Zealand Banking Company seized his Waitangi property without giving Busby's debtors an opportunity to pay what they owed, and Governor Grey expropriated Busby's land at Whangarei. He also edited a newspaper and served as a member of the Auckland Provincial Council. He contested the 1860 general election for a seat in the House of Representatives for the Bay of Islands electorate, but was unsuccessful.

Later life

He died in 1871 in Anerley, England after travelling back for an eye operation, and is buried at West Norwood Cemetery in London. His wife returned to New Zealand where she died, at Pakaraka in 1889, and is buried at Paihia.

The Waitangi property, on which the Treaty was signed, was derelict until the 1930s, when it was purchased by the Governor-General of the day, Viscount Bledisloe and donated to the nation.

Published writings

  • Treatise on the Culture of the Vine (1825)
  • A Manual of Plain Directions for Planting and Cultivating Vineyards and for Making Wine in New South Wales (Sydney 1830)
  • Journal of a Tour through some of the vineyards of Spain and France (Sydney 1833)
  • References

    James Busby Wikipedia