Signing
Signature | Sheet | Signed as | Probable name | Tribe | Hapū | Signing Occasion |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
14 | Sheet 8 — The Cook Strait (Henry Williams) Sheet | Mohiroa | Te Ropiha Moturoa | Te Āti Awa | Te Matehou | Port Nicholson 29 April 1840 |
Te Ropiha Moturoa signed Te Tiriti at Port Nicholson on 29 April 1840.
His two brothers came to Te Whanganui-a-Tara with Ngāti Mutunga in 1827. Moturoa held land near Aro Street and at Pipitea Pā but he mainly lived on a section in Moturoa Street in Thorndon, where he had a weatherboard house and grew potatoes. He took the name Te Ropiha (Hobbs) after his baptism.
Moturoa and his first wife Ahinga had one daughter, who married a whaler and lived in England.
See also Wellington City Council, Nga Tupuna o Te Whanganui-a-Tara: Volume 1, Wellington City Council & Wellington Tenths Trust, 2005, p. 13
Contributed by Jacquie Morris
Te Ropiha Moturoa (1790?-1874) is buried in Bolton Street Cemetery, Te Whanganui-a-tara.
His later wife was Ramari (1788?-1886). They were both Te Matehou hapū, Te Atiawa.
Ramari was the daughter of Te Atiawa chief Hoani Te Matahiwi and Takuaiterangi Takahu. Ramari died in Puketotara, Taranaki. She had two sisters: Huhana Te Autoroa (1810?-1890) who married Te Manihera Taukare; and Harena Kawanui Kauamo (1818?-1846) who married a whaler, Joseph Henry Robinson (1814-1879). Waiwhetu people.
Source: Nga Tupuna o Te Whanganui-a-Tara (Vol. 1) . Wellington City Libraries, accessed 12/02/2024, https://wellington.recollect.co.nz/nodes/view/4038
Community contributions