Putahi


title: "Putahi" type: doc version: 1 created: 2026-02-28 author: "Wikipedia contributors" status: active scope: public tags: ["volcanoes-of-the-northland-region", "far-north-district"] topic_path: "general/volcanoes-of-the-northland-region" source: "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Putahi" license: "CC BY-SA 4.0" wikipedia_page_id: 0 wikipedia_revision_id: 0

::data[format=table title="Infobox mountain"]

FieldValue
namePutahi
photoStorming of John Heki's pah, New Zealand, on the 8th. of May 1845.jpg
photo_captionThe storming of Hōne Heke's at Putahi, on the 8th of May 1845. Watercolour is by an unknown artist and held in the State Library of New South Wales.
map_image{{#tag:mapframe
aligncenter
textPutahi (red marker) and its rhyolite (violet), with nearby lava fields of the Kaikohe-Bay of Islands volcanic field.
width260
height240
latitude-35.37
longitude173.81
iconno
zoom10
map_altMap of North Island surface volcanic features
elevation_m381
coordinates
typeRhyolite cone
agePleistocene
geologyRhyolite
::

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Putahi is a 381 m high rhyolite dome, in the Kaikohe-Bay of Islands volcanic field in New Zealand. To the north of Putahi is Lake Ōmāpere. To its north east are the volcanoes of Tarahi and Te Ahuahu.

History

It was the site of the first, successful for the British, battle of the Flagstaff War of 1845–46 against Hōne Heke's Ngāpuhi tribe fraction. Lieutenant-Colonel William Hulme and his force of about 200 soldiers, marines and volunteers having destroyed a coastal at Ōtuihu moved on Hōne Heke at his new pā (Te Mawhe Pā) on the Lake Ōmāpere side of Puketutu which they arrived at on 7 May 1845 before its fortifications were fully complete. However the next day, they were attacked on the flank by a force of 140 fighters led by Te Ruki Kawiti and as the British dealt with this, Hōne Heke attacked from the pā defences. In the fierce running battle that ensured the Ngāpuhi withdrew initially to the pā, and then abandoning it, after the British realised they could not take it without artillery, so withdrew themselves from continued confrontation. The Ngāpuhi had lost 28 warriors to the British death toll of 15 by the time of the British occupation of the now empty pā, that never again was used by the Ngāpuhi. The Māori learnt an important lesson at Puketutu: that the British were a formidable foe in open battle and changed their tactics towards using fully prepared pās in future clashes.

References

References

  1. (2002). "Field Trip Guides, GSNZ Annual Conference "Northland 2002"".
  2. (3 April 2009). "Puketutu and Te Ahuahu - Northern War". Ministry for Culture and Heritage - NZ History online.

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volcanoes-of-the-northland-regionfar-north-district