Government Notices and Regulations




Attorney-General's Office,
Auckland, 13th January, 1862.

HIS EXCELLENCY has been pleased to accept the resignation of

J. H. HARRIS, Esquire,

of his office of Resident Magistrate.

HENRY SEWELL.

Office of Commissioner of Customs,
Auckland, 13th January, 1862.

HIS EXCELLENCY the Governor has been pleased to appoint

THOMAS WINDLE PARKER, Esquire,

to be Sub-Collector of Customs at the Port of Oamaru.

REIDER WOOD.

(From the New Zealand Gazette, Jan 20, 1862.)

AT THE GOVERNMENT HOUSE AT AUCKLAND, THE 16TH DAY OF JANUARY, 1862.

Present :-

HIS EXCELLENCY THE GOVERNOR.

THE HON. THE COLONIAL SECRETARY.

THE HON. THE ATTORNEY-GENERAL.

WHEREAS by an Act of the General Assembly of New Zealand, intituled "The Militia Act, 1858," it is enacted that it shall be lawful for the Governor in Council from time to time to make, vary, and abolish Regulations under which the services of Volunteers shall be accepted in any Militia District; Now, therefore, His Excellency the Governor, with the advice and consent of the Executive Council of the Colony, and in exercise of the powers in this behalf vested in him by the said recited Act, doth hereby make and ordain the following Regulations under which the Services of Volunteers shall be accepted in any Militia District within the Colony :-

  1. All such Regulations heretofore made are hereby abolished.

  2. There shall be no limit to the term of service of any Volunteer. Provided that any Volunteer shall be entitled to be discharged at the expiration of One Month’s notice in writing given by him to the Officer Commanding the body of Volunteers to which he may belong of his own desire to be so discharged; and, in case such Officer Commanding shall be satisfied that urgent necessity exists for the discharge of any such Volunteer before the expiration of the said Month’s notice, he may give him his discharge accordingly.

  3. Every Volunteer shall attend to be trained and exercised at such time and places as shall be appointed by notice in any Gazette or Newspaper, or by verbal order issued by or by the authority of the Officer Commanding the body of Volunteers to which he may belong: Provided always that no Volunteer shall be compelled to attend more than one hundred and sixty-eight hours in any one year.

  4. No Volunteer shall be absent during any part of any time appointed for training and exercise; and every Volunteer who shall offend against this Regulation shall for such offence forfeit and pay any such sum not exceeding One Pound, as shall be fixed by the Officer Commanding, as aforesaid, which sum so fixed shall be recoverable in a summary way by any Officer of the body of Volunteers to which the person so offending may belong.

  5. No Volunteer who shall, previous to the issue of a Summons under the foregoing Regulations, produce to such Officer, commanding as aforesaid a Certificate signed by a duly qualified Medical Practitioner that such absence was unavoidably caused by illness, or satisfy the Commanding Officer of his illness, and no Volunteer who shall be absent, having duly obtained leave of absence from such Officer Commanding as aforesaid, shall be liable to the penalty set forth in the foregoing Regulation.

  6. If any Volunteer’s Arms or Accoutrements shall, in the opinion of the Officer Commanding as aforesaid, be in a defective or dirty state, he shall forfeit and pay any sum not exceeding two shillings and sixpence, to be fixed and recoverable in manner as aforesaid.

  7. If any Arms, Accoutrements, or other Government property shall be lost, destroyed, or injured in any way other than on service, a fine not exceeding the value of the Arms, Accoutrements, or other Government property shall be paid by the Volunteer in whose charge they were. Such fines shall be fixed by a Board of Officers appointed for that purpose by the Officer Commanding as aforesaid upon consideration of the circumstances, and if not paid to them on demand, may be recovered by the Officer Commanding as aforesaid, on behalf of the Government, in any Resident Magistrates’ Court in the colony.

  8. If any Volunteer shall not deliver to the Officer Commanding as aforesaid, the Arms, Accoutrements, and other Government property entrusted to him as a Volunteer, within three days after an order to that effect shall have been given to him by the Officer Commanding as aforesaid, he shall be liable to a penalty of Ten Pounds, to be recovered in a summary way.

  9. All Commissioned Officers shall be appointed by the Governor, and names for that purpose shall be submitted to him (through the Officer Commanding as aforesaid, for his approval,) by the troop or company to which they are proposed to be appointed. No Commissions will be issued (unless to Officers who have held Commissions in the regular service) until the candidates are found fit after examination.

  10. All Non-commissioned Officers shall be elected by the Volunteers of the troop or company to which they are to be appointed, and shall be examined by the Senior Officer of such troop or company, and if passed as competent, shall be appointed by the Officer Commanding as aforesaid.

  11. All Volunteers shall be subject to the provisions contained in the following sections of the "Militia Act, 1858," viz.:-1, 3, 5, 6, 7, 9, 18, 19, 20, 22, and 24, and in the following sections of the "Militia Act Amendment Act, 1860," viz.:-10, 11, 13, 14, 16, and 18.

  12. General Parades of all the Volunteers in each district shall be held on a day in each quarter to be fixed by the Governor.

  13. Each Troop or Company which shall consist of sixty Volunteers or more, shall receive from the Government annually the sum of seventy-five pounds.

  14. Each Volunteer, after four years’ service as such, shall be at all times thereafter exempt from attendance for training and exercise in the Militia; half the period of service of Volunteers under former Regulations this day abolished, shall be allowed to reckon.

  15. Every Volunteer shall take the following Oath, to be administered to him by the



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Online Sources for this page:

VUW Te Waharoa PDF Otago Provincial Gazette 1862, No 168





✨ LLM interpretation of page content

⚖️ Resignation of Resident Magistrate

⚖️ Justice & Law Enforcement
13 January 1862
Resignation, Resident Magistrate, Auckland
  • J. H. Harris (Esquire), Resigned as Resident Magistrate

  • Henry Sewell

🏭 Appointment of Sub-Collector of Customs

🏭 Trade, Customs & Industry
13 January 1862
Appointment, Sub-Collector, Customs, Oamaru
  • Thomas Windle Parker (Esquire), Appointed Sub-Collector of Customs

  • Reider Wood

🛡️ Regulations for Volunteer Service

🛡️ Defence & Military
16 January 1862
Regulations, Volunteers, Militia, Service, Training
  • HIS EXCELLENCY THE GOVERNOR
  • THE HON. THE COLONIAL SECRETARY
  • THE HON. THE ATTORNEY-GENERAL