Sophia Hinerangi
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Sophia Hinerangi (c.1834–4 December 1911) was a New Zealand tourist guide and temperance leader. Of
Māori Māori or Maori can refer to: Relating to the Māori people * Māori people of New Zealand, or members of that group * Māori language, the language of the Māori people of New Zealand * Māori culture * Cook Islanders, the Māori people of the C ...
descent, she identified with the
Ngāti Ruanui Ngāti Ruanui is a Māori iwi traditionally based in the Taranaki region of New Zealand. In the 2006 census, 7,035 people claimed affiliation to the iwi. However, most members now live outside the traditional areas of the iwi. History Early his ...
iwi Iwi () are the largest social units in New Zealand Māori society. In Māori roughly means "people" or "nation", and is often translated as "tribe", or "a confederation of tribes". The word is both singular and plural in the Māori language, ...
.


Early life

She was born in Russell, Northland,
New Zealand New Zealand ( mi, Aotearoa ) is an island country in the southwestern Pacific Ocean. It consists of two main landmasses—the North Island () and the South Island ()—and over 700 smaller islands. It is the sixth-largest island count ...
c.1834 to a Māori mother (Kōtiro Hinerangi, of
Ngāti Ruanui Ngāti Ruanui is a Māori iwi traditionally based in the Taranaki region of New Zealand. In the 2006 census, 7,035 people claimed affiliation to the iwi. However, most members now live outside the traditional areas of the iwi. History Early his ...
from
Taranaki Taranaki is a region in the west of New Zealand's North Island. It is named after its main geographical feature, the stratovolcano of Mount Taranaki, also known as Mount Egmont. The main centre is the city of New Plymouth. The New Plymouth D ...
) and a Scottish father (Alexander Grey or Gray). She was baptised "Mary Sophia Gray" in 1839, and it is believed that she left home to be raised by Anglican missionary Charlotte Kemp at the Kerikeri
Mission House The Mission House at Kerikeri in New Zealand was completed in 1822 as part of the Kerikeri Mission Station by the Church Missionary Society, and is New Zealand's oldest surviving building. It is sometimes known as Kemp House. Samuel Marsden est ...
then sent to school at the Wesleyan Native Institution at Three Kings in Auckland. She married twice but little is known about her first marriage, sometime in 1851, to Koroneho (Colenso) Tehakiroe with whom she had 14 children. She married for the second time in 1870 to Hōri Taiāwhio and moved to Te Wairoa where they had three children together.


Entrepreneurism and Tourism Businesswoman

Especially since 1870 with the visit to New Zealand by
Prince Alfred, Duke of Edinburgh Alfred (Alfred Ernest Albert; 6 August 184430 July 1900) was the sovereign duke of Saxe-Coburg and Gotha from 1893 to 1900. He was the second son and fourth child of Queen Victoria and Prince Albert. He was known as the Duke of Edinburgh from 1 ...
, the popularity of tourists visiting ideal locations such as the Lake Country of the
Waikato Waikato () is a Regions of New Zealand, local government region of the upper North Island of New Zealand. It covers the Waikato District, Waipa District, Matamata-Piako District, South Waikato District and Hamilton, New Zealand, Hamilton City ...
grew. Local Māori leaders developed tourism industries alongside public accommodations and eventually allowed for surveys by railway companies to increase the tourist traffic. For example, a reporter from
Rotorua Rotorua () is a city in the Bay of Plenty region of New Zealand's North Island. The city lies on the southern shores of Lake Rotorua, from which it takes its name. It is the seat of the Rotorua Lakes District, a territorial authority encompass ...
in 1885 proclaimed that while the Cambridge line of coaches was suitable for invalids coming to the hot springs and spas there, a national effort to extend a
Rotorua Branch The Rotorua Branch is a railway line from Putāruru to Rotorua, in the Waikato and Bay of Plenty regions of the North Island of New Zealand. Construction of the line was commenced by the Thames Valley and Rotorua Railway Company and finished b ...
Railway was needed. He went on to explain that the Māori were busy building public accommodation houses at
Whakarewarewa Whakarewarewa (reduced version of Te Whakarewarewatanga O Te Ope Taua A Wahiao, meaning ''The gathering place for the war parties of Wahiao'', often abbreviated to Whaka by locals) is a Rotorua semi-rural geothermal area in the Taupo Volcanic ...
"where a more varied and extensive field for bathing opens out." Hinerangi had become one of the most prominent guides of the
Pink and White terraces The Pink and White Terraces ( and ), were natural wonders of New Zealand. They were reportedly the largest silica sinter deposits on earth. Until recently, they were lost and thought destroyed in the 1886 eruption of Mount Tarawera, while new hy ...
near Te Wairoa, New Zealand. She and another bilingual guide, Kate Middlemass, had been selected by the local
hapū In Māori and New Zealand English, a ' ("subtribe", or "clan") functions as "the basic political unit within Māori society". A Māori person can belong to or have links to many hapū. Historically, each hapū had its own chief and normally opera ...
, the Tūhourangi, to handle the tours there. These most popular guides, traditionally women with much knowledge of local culture and geography, could receive 15 shillings from each tour party. Hinerangi organized the tours and settled accounts.


Christian Mission and Temperance Leader

She was involved with the missionary presence there, which by the time she arrived was growing under the guidance of the
Wellesley Street Wellesley may refer to: * People Dukes of Wellington * Arthur Wellesley, 1st Duke of Wellington (1769–1852), British soldier, statesman, and Prime Minister of the United Kingdom * Arthur Wellesley, 2nd Duke of Wellington (1807–1884), Briti ...
Baptist Church in
Auckland Auckland (pronounced ) ( mi, Tāmaki Makaurau) is a large metropolitan city in the North Island of New Zealand. The List of New Zealand urban areas by population, most populous urban area in the country and the List of cities in Oceania by po ...
. Rev. Alfred Fairbrother, who was sent from England as missionary to Te Wairoa in 1882, was a controversial figure with some local people complaining to the church in Auckland about his brusque manners. Hinerangi was an important leader in the Baptist mission of Rev. Fairbrother since he would lead his church services in her house.
Mary Clement Leavitt Mary Greenleaf Clement Leavitt (September 22, 1830 – February 5, 1912) was an educator and successful orator who became the first round-the-world missionary for the Woman's Christian Temperance Union (WCTU). Setting out on virtually non-stop wor ...
, a World Woman Christian Temperance Union (WCTU) missionary, wrote a letter describing her interaction with Hinerangi, and why she agreed to wear the WCTU white ribbon badge along with the New Zealand blue ribbon badge. Leavitt wrote for the WCTU's ''Union Signal'': :"Sophia, the Maori guide who conducted our party through these wonders, donned the blue before I left Wairoa, the native town nearest the spot. The blue ribbon is always offered, and generally donned, on taking the pledge here. I have sewed it underneath my own bit of white, and have advised all members of the unions I have formed to wear both, as a token that we are in homony with this gospel, total abstinence. After I had pinned the blue on Sophia, she asked me what the white was, and what it meant. I explained, and she said somewhat sadly, "Then I cannot put it on, for there in no union here." I said, 'Yes you shall have it, if you will take it in its deepest meaning, which is, I will live every day as Jesus wants me to. I will do nothing that will displease him and all that will please him'." "Can I do that?" she said more to herself than to me, and I answered, "Jesus will always help you." Sophia said, "Yes, yes, that is what Fairbrother says. Pin it on, I am not afraid." ... Sophia is a very influential woman in the tribe, reads and speaks English well. She was not a drunkard like many of these women but up to this time has failed to refuse when urged by tourists to take a little drink when tired, or wet, or cold, and sometimes the little has produced bad results. It is most painful to consider the evil effects produced by tourists giving money to the natives for dancing the old pagan, lascivious Haka, and also giving drink. All Mr. Fairbrother's efforts are weakened, some entirely defeated in this way. For example, Mr. Fairbrother had asked me to speak to the people, himself interpreting, had visited each wharie (house) and all had promised to come. Three hours before the appointed time, a party of tourists arrived, offered money for a dance, and all the young men and women, all the drinkers, all except the real Christians and children too young for the dance went to the building where these gatherings take place." This interaction with Leavitt probably cemented Hinerangi's role in championing the temperance mission in this area. In 1896 a report by
Annie Jane Schnackenberg Annie Jane Schnackenberg ( Allen; 22 November 1835 – 2 May 1905) was a New Zealand Wesleyan missionary, temperance and welfare worker, and suffragist. She served as president of the Auckland branch of the Women's Christian Temperance Union New ...
, Superintendent of the WCTU-NZ department of Maori Missions, in ''The White Ribbon'' lists Hinerangi ("Sophia, the well-known guide") as president of the
Whakarewarewa Whakarewarewa (reduced version of Te Whakarewarewatanga O Te Ope Taua A Wahiao, meaning ''The gathering place for the war parties of Wahiao'', often abbreviated to Whaka by locals) is a Rotorua semi-rural geothermal area in the Taupo Volcanic ...
Union. Hinerangi might have started the branch earlier, since the report mentioned that the Union was growing and in 1896 currently boasted 30 members. Others in the Union chapter listed were Herena Taupopoki, Vice-president; Isabella Thomas, secretary; Annie Walker, treasurer - with superintendents leading the following departments: social purity, Sunday-school, Band of Hope, sewing class, and Bible class. Schnackenberg quoted Hinerangi as saying: "I don't know which is the greater work, Sabbath observance or Temperance. Before Mrs. Hewitt came here and told us about your society, we had no Sabbath and everybody drank. Now the Sabbath is a holy day with us, and, with one or two exceptions, all our women are abstainers." The WCTU Pledge that Hinerangi would have taken and offered to others in Māori read as follows: :''He whakaae tenei naku kia kaua ahau e kai tupeka, e inu ranei i tetahi mea e haurangi ai te tangata, kia kaua hoki ahau e whakaae ki te tamoko. Ma te Atua ahau e awhina''. (Translated in English as follows: I agree not to smoke or drink anything that makes people drunk, and I do not approve of smoking. God help me.


Prediction of and eruption of Tarawera 1886

In late May 1886, while Hinerangi was leading a tour group along
Lake Tarawera Lake Tarawera is the largest of a series of lakes which surround the volcano Mount Tarawera in the North Island of New Zealand. Like the mountain, it lies within the Okataina caldera. It is located to the east of Rotorua, and beneath the pea ...
, the waters receded then rose up again accompanied by a strange sound. She told the local
Tohunga In the culture of the Māori of New Zealand, a tohunga (tōhuka in Southern Māori dialect) is an expert practitioner of any skill or art, either religious or otherwise. Tohunga include expert priests, healers, navigators, carvers, builders, teache ...
that they then saw a
waka Waka may refer to: Culture and language * Waka (canoe), a Polynesian word for canoe; especially, canoes of the Māori of New Zealand ** Waka ama, a Polynesian outrigger canoe ** Waka hourua, a Polynesian ocean-going canoe ** Waka taua, a Māori w ...
with ghostly men that vanished as it came toward them - the elder explained that this was a sign that their ancestors were angry for the way the land was being abused by the tourists. On the night of the eruption of
Mount Tarawera Mount Tarawera is a volcano on the North Island of New Zealand within the older but volcanically productive Ōkataina Caldera. Located 24 kilometres southeast of Rotorua, it consists of a series of rhyolitic lava domes that were fissured d ...
on 10 June, over 60 people took shelter in Hinerangi's home at Te Wairoa. Because of its high-pitched roof and reinforced timber walls, everyone in her house escaped being killed. With their homes and gardens buried in volcanic ash, all the displaced Tūhourangi people moved to the nearby village of Whakarewarewa (under the care of the Ngāti Wāhiao). There she continued to organize and lead the local tours, and she encouraged other women there to become guides. In 1895 Hinerangi toured Australia as part of a theatrical performance about the eruption, and in 1896 was appointed official Caretaker of
Whakarewarewa Whakarewarewa (reduced version of Te Whakarewarewatanga O Te Ope Taua A Wahiao, meaning ''The gathering place for the war parties of Wahiao'', often abbreviated to Whaka by locals) is a Rotorua semi-rural geothermal area in the Taupo Volcanic ...
.


Death and legacy

Hinerangi died at Whakarewarewa on 4 December 1911. Rotorua’s tribute to her i
Sophia Street
Hinerangi was also known under the name Te Paea.


References


External links


Sophia Hinerangi, Guide Sophia

Whakarewarewa Thermal Village Tours


Additional resources

* * * * * {{DEFAULTSORT:Hinerangi, Sophia 1830s births 1911 deaths People from Russell, New Zealand New Zealand Māori women New Zealand women in business Ngāti Ruanui people New Zealand temperance activists 19th-century New Zealand people Woman's Christian Temperance Union people New Zealand Māori feminists 19th-century New Zealand women 1886 eruption of Mount Tarawera