Background
Wi Pere was born in Turanga-nui-a-Kiwa ("The place where "Kiwa" - of the Tākitimu waka - stood"), now called Gisborne.
Wi Pere was born in Turanga-nui-a-Kiwa ("The place where "Kiwa" - of the Tākitimu waka - stood"), now called Gisborne.
Pere himself was an outstanding figure amongst the Poverty Bay and East Cape Māori, and one of Poverty Bay"s most illustrious sons. He gained a wide knowledge of Māori traditions and customs, and proved an able spokesman in proceedings before the Native Land Court, was an outstanding orator in the use of the Māori language within the House of Representatives. Pere served for some years in both branches of the Legislature, fighting for the rights of his Maori people, particularly in Land legislation.
Even in boyhood, he was noted for his shrewdness.
As a youth Wi Pere was selected by the elders as a young man of special intelligence and was carefully taught and trained in Māori history and genealogy, which information was handed down through the generations by word of mouth. He described the influence of his mother as follows: "My mother was a woman of great mana over the whole of the district.
Her name was Riria Mauaranui, a chieftainess of great influence of Te Aitanga-a-Mahaki and Rongowhakaata tribe". But he lost the seat to James Carroll in 1887 and in 1890.
However, in 1893 Carroll stood down in order to contest the Gisborne (European) seat.
In 1905 though Pere lost the Eastern Maori seat to Apirana Ngata. He was appointed to the Legislative Council on 22 January 1907, but lost it because of absence on 27 June 1912, a technicality beyond his control. Upon the death of Wi Pere, 9 December 1915, Judge Jones of the Gisborne Native Land Court, made reference as follows.
"A great Chief and one whose name was a household word among the Māori.
Number one loved the Māori people more than he did". Apiraana Ngata stated: "Wi Pere was one of the great chiefs of the East-Coast.
Number man ever did more for his people". The Native people and Government of New Zealand, as a final tribute to Wi Pere, erected a monument along Reads Quay, Gisborne in 1919.
Rongowhakaata Pere Halbert was a grandson of Wi Pere.
Quotations: "My mother was a woman of great mana over the whole of the district. Her name was Riria Mauaranui, a chieftainess of great influence of Te Aitanga-a-Mahaki and Rongowhakaata tribe".