Author Topic: Magical Mystery Tour: The Rediscovered Life of Thomas Fellows WALTON (1833-1884)  (Read 51908 times)

Offline spades

  • Global Moderator
  • RootsChat Marquessate
  • ********
  • Posts: 6,489
    • View Profile
Re: Magical Mystery Tour: The Rediscovered Life of Thomas Fellows WALTON (1833-1884)
« Reply #18 on: Monday 28 February 11 08:28 GMT (UK) »
The New Zealand Armed Constabulary

The second unit WALTON served in was, to use its correct title, the New Zealand Armed Constabulary. If as he stated in his medal application, WALTON served in the Mounted section of the Armed Constabulary, his correct rank would have been Mounted Constable.

New Zealand’s first national army in all but name, the Armed Constabulary was created by Act of Parliament in 1867 in response to the urgent need for a permanent force with better discipline than the variety of volunteer units whose members often begrudged the time for drills and the frequent alarms. With its creation many of the volunteer units were disbanded, with many of their members joining the new organisation. Both the present New Zealand Army and the New Zealand Police can trace their origins to the Armed Constabulary.

Although WALTON stated that he was wounded at Te Ngutu o te Manu on 21 August 1868, I will show that he actually received his injury during a second attack on the same place mounted on 7 September 1868. Was WALTON present at both actions, hence his later confusion about the date of his injury?

In my next post I will discuss the Second Battle of Te Ngutu o te Manu and WALTON's role in it. It's an exciting story.

Spades
ELLERKER - Beverley ERY ENG
HEALEY - IRL?
MURDOCH - Wigtownshire SCT, Otago and Westland NZ
PALING - Nottinghamshire ENG
RILEY - Flamborough; Cottingham; South Dalton ERY, Manitoba CAN, & London ENG
STURTON - Arnold, Nottinghamshire ENG
SUTTRON - All, NRY & DUR ENG
TAYLOR - London ENG
TYLER - London ENG
TERNAN/TIERNAN - Dublin IRL

Offline majm

  • RootsChat Marquessate
  • *******
  • Posts: 25,385
  • NSW 1806 Bowman Flag Ecce signum.
    • View Profile
Re: Magical Mystery Tour: The Rediscovered Life of Thomas Fellows WALTON (1833-1884)
« Reply #19 on: Monday 28 February 11 08:29 GMT (UK) »
 :)

I am wondering if the names of the Volunteers are listed on that Scroll ... I can't seem to get it big enough to read though  ::)

Cheers,  JM
Some of my NZders arrived as Fencibles, others in 1865 and later...  on both my lines, there's a keen interest, my Nana's ashes are scattered in Taranaki.

PS, where were the horses from?  Could the Mounted Units have been on NSW bred horses? (Walers, I think these were called)  
The information in my posts is provided for academic and non-commercial research purposes. 
Random Acts of Kindness Given Freely are never Worthless for they are Priceless.
Qui scit et non docet.    Qui docet et non vivit.    Qui nescit et non interrogat.   
All Census Look Ups Are Crown Copyright from www.nationalarchives.gov.uk
I do not have a face book or a twitter account.

Offline mare

  • RootsChat Aristocrat
  • ******
  • Posts: 1,723
    • View Profile
Re: Magical Mystery Tour: The Rediscovered Life of Thomas Fellows WALTON (1833-1884)
« Reply #20 on: Monday 28 February 11 08:30 GMT (UK) »
Just joined the tour ... interesting reading and approach Spades  :)

Offline spades

  • Global Moderator
  • RootsChat Marquessate
  • ********
  • Posts: 6,489
    • View Profile
Re: Magical Mystery Tour: The Rediscovered Life of Thomas Fellows WALTON (1833-1884)
« Reply #21 on: Monday 28 February 11 08:34 GMT (UK) »
Hi Majm,

I was wondering the same thing. I'd love to know what it says. Thanks again for finding it.

I don't have any military connections but as you can probably tell I enjoy military history. This study has given me a bug for New Zealand colonial military history in particular.

Spades
ELLERKER - Beverley ERY ENG
HEALEY - IRL?
MURDOCH - Wigtownshire SCT, Otago and Westland NZ
PALING - Nottinghamshire ENG
RILEY - Flamborough; Cottingham; South Dalton ERY, Manitoba CAN, & London ENG
STURTON - Arnold, Nottinghamshire ENG
SUTTRON - All, NRY & DUR ENG
TAYLOR - London ENG
TYLER - London ENG
TERNAN/TIERNAN - Dublin IRL


Offline spades

  • Global Moderator
  • RootsChat Marquessate
  • ********
  • Posts: 6,489
    • View Profile
Re: Magical Mystery Tour: The Rediscovered Life of Thomas Fellows WALTON (1833-1884)
« Reply #22 on: Monday 28 February 11 08:42 GMT (UK) »
I've prevaricated for weeks about whether to post this at all. I finally decided people might like to just sit back and read a story for a change and not feel they had to contribute, especially given the circumstances in Chrishchurch when genealogy is the last thing on most people's minds.
ELLERKER - Beverley ERY ENG
HEALEY - IRL?
MURDOCH - Wigtownshire SCT, Otago and Westland NZ
PALING - Nottinghamshire ENG
RILEY - Flamborough; Cottingham; South Dalton ERY, Manitoba CAN, & London ENG
STURTON - Arnold, Nottinghamshire ENG
SUTTRON - All, NRY & DUR ENG
TAYLOR - London ENG
TYLER - London ENG
TERNAN/TIERNAN - Dublin IRL

Offline johnbarr

  • RootsChat Aristocrat
  • ******
  • Posts: 1,608
  • I need a little help along the way !!
    • View Profile
Re: Magical Mystery Tour: The Rediscovered Life of Thomas Fellows WALTON (1833-1884)
« Reply #23 on: Monday 28 February 11 20:14 GMT (UK) »
Hi spades,

I'm enjoying your story, and insight into the amount of detail that is available once we start digging in a particular direction.

Have you requested a better quality image (i.e. one that can be read)  of the scroll from Puke Ariki ?

John B
Barraclough, Barron, Hunter, Marsden, Pawson, Sowden, Street, Vowless,

Offline spades

  • Global Moderator
  • RootsChat Marquessate
  • ********
  • Posts: 6,489
    • View Profile
Re: Magical Mystery Tour: The Rediscovered Life of Thomas Fellows WALTON (1833-1884)
« Reply #24 on: Monday 28 February 11 21:32 GMT (UK) »
Morning John,

I have sent a general enquiry asking for any information on JFW and his connection to the Taranaki Mounted Volunteers and await a reply. Once I get one I'll definitely ask!

Seeing that scroll, even in miniature, showed me that the citizens of Taranaki (who must have subscribed money for its creation) were very proud of the Taranaki Mounted Volunteers. The unit and its members must have carried significant mana given the quality of the scroll.

Spades

ELLERKER - Beverley ERY ENG
HEALEY - IRL?
MURDOCH - Wigtownshire SCT, Otago and Westland NZ
PALING - Nottinghamshire ENG
RILEY - Flamborough; Cottingham; South Dalton ERY, Manitoba CAN, & London ENG
STURTON - Arnold, Nottinghamshire ENG
SUTTRON - All, NRY & DUR ENG
TAYLOR - London ENG
TYLER - London ENG
TERNAN/TIERNAN - Dublin IRL

Offline spades

  • Global Moderator
  • RootsChat Marquessate
  • ********
  • Posts: 6,489
    • View Profile
Re: Magical Mystery Tour: The Rediscovered Life of Thomas Fellows WALTON (1833-1884)
« Reply #25 on: Tuesday 01 March 11 02:31 GMT (UK) »
The Second Battle of Te Ngutu o te Manu (Ruaruru)

Te Ngutu o te Manu (now indicated by a historic site situated on Ahipaipa Road, halfway between Kapuni and Matapu in the southern Taranaki) was the subject of three expeditions in 1868 by colonial forces during the period known as Titokowaru’s War. The result of the third expedition on 7 September 1868 was a disastrous defeat for the colonials. The commander, Lieutenant-Colonel Thomas ‘Fighting Mac’ MCDONNELL, a highly experienced and well-respected combat veteran, was completely outsmarted by his opponent, the brilliant strategist and tactician Riwha TITOKOWARU, chief of the Ngāti Ruanui's Ngaruahine hapu (sub-tribe), a very experienced warrior who four years earlier had lost an eye during an attack on the Sentry Hill Redoubt.

The expedition began at 3 a.m. on 7 September when MCDONNELL left Waihi Redoubt (now the town of Normanby) and headed west with 360 men of the Patea Field Force in three detachments.

The first of these was commanded by Maj. von TEMPSKY and comprised No. 2 Division Armed Constabulary (16 men) and the Patea Rifle Volunteers (14) under Capt. PALMER; No. 5 Division Armed Constabulary (59) under Sub-Inspectors BROWN and ROBERTS; Wellington Rifles (45) under Lieuts. HASTINGS and HUNTER; Taranaki Rifle Volunteers (26) under Lieut. ROWAN; and Waihi Volunteers (2).

The second detachment was commanded by Maj. W. HUNTER and comprised No. 3 Division Armed Constabulary (32 men) under Sub-Inspectors NEWLAND and GORING; Wellington Rangers (65) under Capt. G. BUCK, Lieut. FOOKES and Ensign HIRTZEL; and the dismounted Patea Cavalry (11) under Capt. O’HALLORAN.

The third detachment comprising the Maori Contingent of Wanganui kupapa, (e.g. pro-government Maori) was commanded by Capt. William MCDONNELL (the brother of Thomas), Maj. KEPA (Kepa te RANGIHIWINUI) and other chiefs (110 men).

No cavalry were involved, so Thomas WALTON and any other Mounted Constables of the Armed Constabulary fought as infantry. As a mamber of No. 3 Division Armed Constabulary WALTON was in the second detachment and despite his statement that his commander was a Col. O’NEILL, no officer of that name was present or later made a medal claim. Did WALTON mis-identify Maj. W. HUNTER or Sub-Inspector NEWLAND, perhaps?

The party crossed the Waingongoro River about 5 a.m. and skirted the river for three hours before moving north through dense rata forest. The plan was to attack Te Ngutu o te Manu through the village of Te Ruaruru situated one mile to the east but they missed the village, retraced their steps and approached Te Ngutu o te Manu from the north. The element of surprise was lost when the occupants of outlying huts fled to raise the alarm and were fired on. The colonists quickened their pace and entered the northern end of the large clearing in front of Te Ngutu, featuring broken ground with stumps and felled trees. It was now a little after 1 p.m.

In front of the colonial force at the southern end of the clearing was the pa, to the north and west was the shallow Mangotahi Stream and to the east was the bush (see Forest Rangers (1996), map, p.181). The defences visible to the attackers were a low earth rampart encircled by a wooden stockade and a trench which did not look very strong. MCDONNELL directed the group led by von TEMPSKY to attack south across the clearing while KEPA’s group was ordered to carry out a flanking move east through the bush to get around the pa.

Alerted by the first shots, TITOKOWARU was already aware of their presence (warned by lookouts at Waihi Redoubt, he was expecting them) and sent most of his men out into the bush while he remained in the pa with 20 men. Another 40 men, in small groups, were hidden in prepared positions around the edge of the clearing and in the trees bordering it.

Thomas WALTON and his mates walked into a killing ground. The pa was a straw man, the anvil to the Maori sniper’s hammer.

After entering the clearing MCDONNELL’s men started falling immediately. One group of eight Maori warriors shot ten soldiers in only a couple of minutes, several more than once. Eyewitnesses described the Maori fire as ‘terrific’, ‘fearful’, ‘something awful’, with ‘men being knocked over like ninepins.’ MCDONNELL found he was under fire from all directions but could see no enemy except within the palisades to his front. He ordered Major HUNTER’s No. 3 Division of the Armed Constabulary to assault it, but so many men were hit in quick succession that MCDONNELL cancelled the order.

MCDONNELL had lost the initiative, and unable to do anything decisive he made the wise decision to retreat. But his men’s ordeal was far from over. TITOKOWARU sent most of his men after them and the colonists were pursued all the way back to the Waingongoro River, several miles to the east. The government force was split into several groups, but the pursuit concentrated on MCDONNELL with 80 men who acted as rearguard to protect Major HUNTER and a larger party carrying the wounded.

It took 24 hours for the last of the demoralised force to cover the twelve miles back to Waihi Redoubt.



ELLERKER - Beverley ERY ENG
HEALEY - IRL?
MURDOCH - Wigtownshire SCT, Otago and Westland NZ
PALING - Nottinghamshire ENG
RILEY - Flamborough; Cottingham; South Dalton ERY, Manitoba CAN, & London ENG
STURTON - Arnold, Nottinghamshire ENG
SUTTRON - All, NRY & DUR ENG
TAYLOR - London ENG
TYLER - London ENG
TERNAN/TIERNAN - Dublin IRL

Offline spades

  • Global Moderator
  • RootsChat Marquessate
  • ********
  • Posts: 6,489
    • View Profile
Re: Magical Mystery Tour: The Rediscovered Life of Thomas Fellows WALTON (1833-1884)
« Reply #26 on: Tuesday 01 March 11 04:15 GMT (UK) »
Appraisal:

The result of the battle and eight terrifying hours in the bush being foxes to TITOKOWARU’s wolves was 50 Europeans killed and wounded; the disintegration of the Patea Field Force; the mutiny and subsequent disbandment of No. 5 Division Armed Constabulary whose men blamed MCDONNELL for von TEMPSKY’S death; the dissolution of six of the eight European units involved; and bitter personal and political recrimination.

The Government was forced to abandon its camp at Waihi and withdraw to Patea. Te Ngutu o te Manu, to quote Belich, ‘deserves to rank as a brilliant victory’. Te Ngutu was one element of TITOKOWARU’s wider military strategy, while tactically it resembled an earlier military disaster for the government forces fought in June 1860, the Battle of Puketakauere, where the Maori also used a pa as a false target while the battle was won from concealed rifle pits.

So where was WALTON during the battle?

If he was in No. 3 Division of the Armed Constabulary he was amongst the group who entered the clearing and who attempted the aborted assault of the palisade.

So when was he wounded?

This is only a guess, but WALTON may have provided a surprisingly literal description in his medal application when he wrote that he “...was wounded in the thigh at the attack on the pa...” Was he referring explicitly to the frontal assault?

Since he was wounded in the thigh he probably couldn’t walk, and I suspect he was amongst the wounded men carried back to the Waingongoro River by Major HUNTER’s party.


ELLERKER - Beverley ERY ENG
HEALEY - IRL?
MURDOCH - Wigtownshire SCT, Otago and Westland NZ
PALING - Nottinghamshire ENG
RILEY - Flamborough; Cottingham; South Dalton ERY, Manitoba CAN, & London ENG
STURTON - Arnold, Nottinghamshire ENG
SUTTRON - All, NRY & DUR ENG
TAYLOR - London ENG
TYLER - London ENG
TERNAN/TIERNAN - Dublin IRL