Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-vdxz6 Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-30T01:56:38.908Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Imperialism, Atheism, and Race: Charles Southwell, Old Corruption, and the Maori

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  21 December 2012

Abstract

Image of the first page of this content. For PDF version, please use the ‘Save PDF’ preceeding this image.'
Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © North American Conference of British Studies 2005

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

1 For Southwell's British career, I have relied on Royle, E., “Charles Southwell,” in Biographical Dictionary of Modern British Radicals, vol. 2, 1830–1870, ed. Baylen, Joseph O. and Gossman, Norbert J. (Brighton, 1984), 474–78Google Scholar; Stein, Gordon, “Charles Southwell,” in The Encyclopedia of Unbelief, ed. Stein, Gordon (Buffalo, NY, 1985), 636–37Google Scholar; James A. Secord, “Southwell, Charles,” in New Dictionary of National Biography (forthcoming). I would like to thank Jim Secord for kindly allowing me to see a copy of this article.

2 Southwell, Charles, “The Jew Book,” Oracle of Reason; Or, Philosophy Vindicated, no. 4 (1841): 2527Google Scholar.

3 See, in addition to the works cited in n. 1 above, Smith, F. B., “The Atheist Mission, 1840–1900,” in Ideas and Institutions of Victorian Britain: Essays in Honour of George Kitson Clark, ed. Robson, R. (London, 1967), 205–35Google Scholar; Royle, Edward, Radical Politics, 1790–1900: Religion and Unbelief (Harlow, 1971)Google Scholar.

4 Bolt, Christine, Victorian Attitudes to Race (London, 1971)Google Scholar; Stocking, George W. Jr., “The Persistence of Polygenist Thought in Post-Darwinian Anthropology,” in Race, Culture and Evolution, ed. Stocking, G. W. (New York, 1971), 4268Google Scholar, and Victorian Anthropology (New York, 1987)Google Scholar; Lorimer, Douglas, Colour, Class and the Victorians: English Attitudes to the Negro in the Mid-Nineteenth Century (Leicester, 1978)Google Scholar, and “Science and the Secularization of Victorian Images of Race,” in Victorian Science in Context, ed. Lightman, Bernard (Chicago, 1997), 212–35CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Stepan, Nancy, The Idea of Race in Science: Great Britain, 1800–1960 (Hamden, CT, 1982)CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Richards, Evelleen, “The ‘Moral Anatomy’ of Robert Knox: The Inter-Play between Biological and Social Thought in Victorian Scientific Naturalism,” Journal of the History of Biology 22 (1989): 373436CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

5 Desmond, Adrian, “Artisan Resistance and Evolution in Britain, 1819–1848,” Osiris, 2nd ser., 3 (1987): 77110CrossRefGoogle Scholar, and The Politics of Evolution: Morphology, Medicine, and Reform in Radical London (Chicago, 1989)Google Scholar; Desmond, Adrian and Moore, James, Darwin (London, 1991)Google Scholar; Small, Helen, “Medical Reform and the Disillusionment of the Radicals in Nineteenth-Century England,” Historical Journal 36, no. 1 (1993): 225–31CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Topham, Jonathon, “Beyond the ‘Common Context’: The Production and Reading of the Bridgewater Treatises,” Isis 89 (1998): 233–62Google Scholar; Secord, James A., Victorian Sensation: The Extraordinary Publication, Reception, and Secret Authorship of Vestiges of the Natural History of Creation (Chicago, 2000)Google Scholar.

6 Hall, Catherine, Civilising Subjects: Metropole and Colony in the English Imagination, 1830–1867 (Chicago, 2002)Google Scholar; Thorne, Susan, Congregational Missions and the Making of an Imperial Culture in Nineteenth-Century England (Stanford, CA, 1999)Google Scholar; Comaroff, Jean and Comaroff, John, Of Revelation and Revolution: vol. 1, Christianity, Colonialism, and Consciousness in South Africa (Chicago, 1991)CrossRefGoogle Scholar, vol. 2, The Dialectics of Modernity on a South African Frontier (Chicago, 1997)Google Scholar.

7 Smith, “The Atheist Mission, 1840–1900,” and “Southwell, Charles, 1814–1860,” in Dictionary of New Zealand Biography, vol. 1, 1769–1869, ed. Oliver, W. H. (Wellington, 1990), 401–2Google Scholar. Smith's interpretation of Southwell is scarcely less hagiographical than the accounts written by rationalist historians who depict Southwell as a saint. For Southwell's New Zealand career, see Harry Hastings Pearce, “Charles Southwell in Australia and New Zealand,” which appeared in monthly installments beginning in New Zealand Rationalist 18 (May 1957): 1–4, and concluding in ibid., 19 (September 1958): 5–8. See also Wood, H. F., “Charles Southwell, Freethinker and Humanist,” New Zealand Rationalist and Humanist 38 (August 1977): 910Google Scholar.

8 Southwell, Charles, Confessions of a Freethinker (London, [1850]), 6Google Scholar.

9 Ibid., 14–16, 19–21.

10 Copy of the Warrant for the Arrest of Charles Southwell, for Blasphemy, Bishopsgate Institute, Holyoake Collection, envelope no. 1. I would like to thank Jim Secord for this and other sources from the Bishopsgate Institute.

11 Secord, Victorian Sensation, 307; Royle, Edward, Victorian Infidels: The Origins of the British Secularist Movement, 1791–1866 (Manchester, 1974), 75, 77Google Scholar.

12 For the evolutionary arguments that Southwell and coeditor William Chilton deployed to attack Christian notions of creation and design, see Desmond, “Artisan Resistance and Evolution,” 80, 87–88, 96.

13 [Southwell, Charles], “Theory of Regular Gradation,” Oracle of Reason 1 (1841): 5Google Scholar; Secord, Victorian Sensation, 307–13.

14 Fredrickson, George M., Racism: A Short History (Princeton, NJ, 2002), 47, 66Google Scholar.

15 Scholarly distinctions between racial and religious “othering” probably meant little to Southwell, particularly in the case of Jews.

16 Southwell, Confessions, 97.

17 Age, 28 August 1855. For Southwell's Australian career, see Pearce, “Charles Southwell in Australia and New Zealand.”

18 Argus, 8 August 1855.

19 Argus, 14 August, 24 October 1855.

20 Age, 22 October 1855.

22 Age, 23 October 1855.

23 Age, 31 October 1855.

24 Ibid.; Herald, 31 October 1855.

25 Ward, Alan, A Show of Justice: Racial “Amalgamation” in Nineteenth-Century New Zealand (Auckland, 1995), ixGoogle Scholar. Ward argues that although official amalgamation policy was not racist, it was ethnocentric and could and did damage Maori society.

26 See further Belich, James, Making Peoples: A History of the New Zealanders from Polynesian Settlement to the End of the Nineteenth Century (Auckland, 1996), 212–28Google Scholar.

27 Proceedings of the Church Missionary Society for Africa and the East, 1838–39, British Library, London, 142–46.

28 Burns, Patricia, Fatal Success: A History of the New Zealand Company (Auckland, 1989), 96Google Scholar.

29 On the close links between the New Zealand Company and the Radicals in the House of Commons, see Temple, Philip, A Sort of Conscience: The Wakefields (Auckland, 2002)Google Scholar.

30 For a fuller discussion of the differences between the Maori and English versions of the treaty, see Orange, Claudia, The Treaty of Waitangi (Wellington, 1987)Google Scholar.

31 Alfred Domett to W. B. D. Mantell, 3 January 1856, MS 0161, Alexander Turnbull Library, Wellington; Domett, Alfred, The Diary of Alfred Domett, 1872–1885, ed. Horsman, E. A. (London, 1953), 16, 18, 24–25Google Scholar; Nelson Examiner, 6 July 1844.

32 McClintock, A. H., Crown Colony Government in New Zealand (Wellington, 1958), 286–87Google Scholar.

33 Parliamentary Debates, 3rd ser., vol. 45 (1847), 13 December 1847; this debate was summarized in Colonial Intelligencer; or, Aborigines Friend 1 (1847): 5–11, from which the quotations are taken.

34 Tamihana's letters, dated 5 and 11 January 1851, originally appeared in the New Zealand Spectator and Cook's Strait Guardian. The Aborigines Protection Society reprinted them in the Colonial Intelligencer; or, Aborigines Friend, 3 (1851): 243–51.

35 Head, Lyndsay, “The Pursuit of Modernity in Maori Society,” in Histories, Power and Loss: Uses of the Past—a New Zealand Commentary, ed. Sharp, Andrew and McHugh, Paul (Wellington, 2001), 97122, quotations on 103, 111, 113CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

36 Cannadine, David, Ornamentalism: How the British Saw Their Empire (Oxford, 2001), 10Google Scholar.

37 For Southwell's New Zealand career, see Pearce, “Charles Southwell in Australia and New Zealand”; and Wood, “Charles Southwell.”

38 New Zealander, 23 April 1856; Daily Southern Cross, 1 July 1856.

39 Daily Southern Cross, 1 July 1856.

40 Auckland Examiner and People's Voice (hereafter Auckland Examiner), 11 December 1856.

41 Auckland Examiner, 11 December 1856, 29 October 1857.

42 Auckland Examiner, 25 December 1856.

43 Auckland Examiner, 8 January 1856.

44 Auckland Examiner, 19 March 1857.

45 Auckland Examiner, 1 January 1857.

46 Auckland Examiner, 18 December 1856.

47 Auckland Examiner, 23 May 1860.

48 Southwell, Charles, “New Zealand, Its Missionaries and Its People,” The Reasoner: journal of free thought and positive philosophy, 1 March 1857, 34–35, 8 March 1857, 38Google Scholar.

49 Auckland Examiner, 2 April 1857.

50 Auckland Examiner, 9 September 1858.

52 Smith, “Southwell,” 401.

53 Ballantyne, Tony, Orientalism and Race: Aryanism in the British Empire (London, 2002), 160, 162CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

54 Auckland Examiner, 12 February 1859.

55 See, further, Stenhouse, John, “Churches, State, and the New Zealand Wars: 1860–1872,” Journal of Law and Religion 13 (1998–99): 483–507CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

56 G. A. Selwyn to H. J. Tancred, 28 April 1860, in Great Britain Parliamentary Papers (GBPP), 1861, [2798] XLI, 48–53. This and subsequent references are to the Irish University Press edition.

57 Hadfield, O., One of England's Little Wars (London, 1860), 22, 2426Google Scholar, and A Sequel to One of England's Little Wars (London, 1861), 67, 12–13Google Scholar. See, further, Stenhouse, “Churches, State, and the New Zealand Wars,” 491–93.

58 GBPP, 1861, [2798] XLI, 60–61.

59 Hawkes Bay Herald, 8 November 1860.

60 Hadfield, O., The Second Year of One of England's Little Wars (London, 1861), 7590Google Scholar.

61 Auckland Examiner, 28 March, 4 April, 11 April 1860.

62 Auckland Examiner, 11 April 1860.

63 Comaroff and Comaroff, Of Revelation and Revolution, 1:32.

64 Taylor, Richard, Te Ika a Maui, or New Zealand and its Inhabitants, illustrating the origin, manners, customs, mythology, religion, rites, songs, proverbs, fables, and language of the natives. Together with the geology, natural history, productions, and climate of the country; its state as regards Christianity; sketches of the principal chiefs, and their present position; with a map, and numerous illustrations (London, 1855), 111Google Scholar; on Taylor, see Owens, J. M. R., The Mediator: A Life of Richard Taylor (Wellington, 2004)Google Scholar.

65 Auckland Examiner, 14 April, 9 May 1860.

66 Auckland Examiner, 18, 21 April 1860.

67 Auckland Examiner, 2, 5 May 1860; Taranaki News, 26 April 1860; New Zealand Advertiser, 15 September 1860.

68 Auckland Examiner, 18 April 1860. Southwell probably borrowed “Quashee” from Thomas Carlyle and coined “Boshee” in imitation.

69 Sinclair, K., The Origins of the Maori Wars (Wellington, 1961), 206Google Scholar.

70 Auckland Examiner, 21, 28 April 1860.

71 Auckland Examiner, 9, 12 May 1860

72 Auckland Examiner, 9 May 1860. For similar views, see letters from B. Turner in Auckland Examiner, 16, 19 May 1860.

73 Auckland Examiner, 30 May 1860; Drummond, Alison, ed., The Auckland Journals of Vicesimus Lush, 1850–1863 (Christchurch, 1971), 222Google Scholar.

74 T. Gore Browne to Mr. Gardner, 28 April 1860, T. Gore Browne Letterbook, Alexander Turnbull Library, Wellington.

75 Daily Southern Cross, 24 April 1860; Auckland Examiner, 13 June 1860.

76 Jane Maria Atkinson to Emily Richmond, New Plymouth, 15 May 1860, ed. Guy H. Scholefield, The Richmond-Atkinson Papers (Wellington, 1960), 1:582; Canterbury Standard, 10 May 1860, 4.

77 Turner, Frank M., Contesting Cultural Authority: Essays in Victorian Intellectual Life (Cambridge, 1993), 4CrossRefGoogle Scholar.