James Cowan was a New Zealand non-fiction author, noted for his books on colonial history and Māoriethnography. A fluent Māori speaker, he was able to interview many veterans of the New Zealand Wars and his book The New Zealand wars: a history of the Māori campaigns and the pioneering period was considered the definitive account until recent times.
Although born in Auckland, Cowan spent his childhood in Kihikihi, on the border of the King Country. The farm was on land confiscated from the Waikato Māori, and contained part of the site of the battlefield of Orakau. Settler militia were based at a military blockhouse close to his home, while there was a considerable Māori community in the area, and the young Cowan grew up speaking both English and Māori. He never lost his fascination with Māori culture and the Land Wars.
Journalist and author
From 1887 to 1902, James Cowan was employed as a journalist for the New Zealand Herald in Auckland. His first books were published in 1901, a guide to Taupō and a catalogue of the Māori paintings of Gottfried Lindauer. In 1903, he began work for the Department of Tourist and Health Resorts in Wellington, writing magazine articles and books to promote tourism. New Zealand, or, Ao-teä-roa : its wealth and resources, scenery, travel routes, spas, and sport was written during this period. By 1909, Cowan was a freelance writer. The Maoris of New Zealand, written in 1910 was a general survey of Māori and in 1911 he wrote The adventures of Kimble Bent an American who deserted the colonial forces during the land wars and who lived alongside their Māori foes. From 1918 until 1922, Cowan was paid by the Department of Internal Affairs and worked on the publication The New Zealand wars: a history of the Maori campaigns and the pioneering period. Other books on colonial topics included The old frontier: Te Awamutu, the story of the Waipa Valley, Tales of the Maori coast, Tales of the Maori bush, and Hero stories of New Zealand. Cowan also wrote on Māori ethnography for the Journal of the Polynesian Society and The Maori yesterday and to-day, and co-wrote Legends of the Maori with Maui Pomare. The First Labour Government granted James Cowan a pension in 1935, one of the first two New Zealand writers to receive state support. The deputation asking for this pension said of Cowan that he 'had never made any money out of his historical books but had done very good work for the country'.