Te Raumoa Balneavis


Henare Raumoa Te Huatahi Balneavis was a New Zealand interpreter, private secretary and public administrator of Māori descent. Through his mother Te Rina Matewai he was connected to Ngai Tamanuhiri, Ngati Kahungunu, and Ngati Rakaipaaka; through his father he was connected to Te Whakatohea iwi.

Early life

In 1895 Balneavis attended Te Aute College. After he left, Balneavis was employed by William Lee Rees at his office in Gisborne. Balneavis then trained as an interpreter, graduating in 1903. He was then appointed as a clerk and interpreter in the Native Land Court at Gisborne.

Life as a public servant

Balneavis indispensable skills and talents would eventually lead to his promotion to higher office. In 1909Apirana Ngataemployed Balneavis as his private secretary. Marking the start of his 28 year long career as private secretary to the Minister of Native Affairs in 1912; serving under Apirana Ngata, William Herries, Gordon Coates, George Forbes, and Michael Joseph Savage. Balneavis ensured that where ministers could not be influenced that there were aware of Maori issues and concerns.
Balneavis had an interest in all forms of Maori cultural activity, and became the first secretary to the Maori Ethnological Research, which then merged into the Maori Purposes Fund Board and at one stage he became a secretary for the Polynesian Society .

Awards

In July 1927, to mark the visit of the Duke and Duchess of York to New Zealand, Balneavis was appointed a Member of the Royal Victorian Order.

Marriage

Balneavis married Irma Leah Wallace in 1928, they had no children, she died nine years after his death in 1949