Mary Constance Tautari (, died 2 January 1906) was a MÃÂori schoolteacher, interpreter, and postmaster in New Zealand. She was the founder and head teacher of the TaumÃÂrere Native School. The school developed a good reputation as a day school and boarding school, primarily serving MÃÂori girls. Born in MÃÂhia Peninsula, she married the trader HÃÂmi Tautari. They lived in TaumÃÂrere, where they were the primary drivers for the construction of a MÃÂori church.
Perry was born in MÃÂhia Peninsula to Harieta Haumu, a Hokianga MÃÂori woman, and Robert Perry, a British officer with George Grey. Her date of birth is not known. She had an English governess and learned French, piano, literature, history, and "all the refinements of the English gentry". She also knew MÃÂori and identified with her mother's people. She married the trader and sea captain HÃÂmi Tautari in 1861. He owned schooners and transported goods between the Bay of Islands and Auckland.
Tautari ran a private school with 30 to 40 students in Kawakawa. In 1875 she opened the TaumÃÂrere Native School, a day and boarding school in TaumÃÂrere next to the general store owned by her husband. She was the school's head teacher. The school quickly grew to accommodate 20 students, 12 of whom were boarders.
TaumÃÂrere Native School was primarily attended by MÃÂori girls between the ages of seven and 14. Some boys also attended the school, which gained a "high reputation" with some students being sent long distances to attend. Pupils at the boarding school learned English, household duties, singing, and instrumental music. They also gave musical recitals at the Taumarere Hall. Despite financial difficulties in 1877, the school continued to operate. When the PÃÂkehÃÂ George Grey visited the school in 1876, he praised the assimilation of the students, remarking that the girls were "Europeanised as much as possible, and in all respects rendered fit to become the wives of settlers". Despite Grey's characterisation of Tautari as Europeanised, records identified her as MÃÂori and she lived in a MÃÂori community, married to a MÃÂori man.
Tautari and her husband owned property in TaumÃÂrere, where she was employed as a postmaster and an interpreter. They made a claim to a recreation area that was disputed and were the main initiators of raising a MÃÂori church there. In 1872, they hosted a hui in their home to discuss the Puhipuhi gumdigging levy.
In 1883, Tautari's husband died and the boarding school closed by the end of the year. She was given a subsidy to open a children's day school and continued teaching. The school's teaching standards received positive reports from school inspectors. The school had 29 students by 1901.
Tautari attended hearings of the Native Land Court and was a witness before the Rees-Carroll Native Land Laws Commission in 1891. She argued that title determination for land in the Puhipuhi block was influenced by the unfair allocation of advances. She described the Native Land Court system as being unfair, expressing her preference for a rà «nanga-based system and saying "I have actually seen people who ought to have the land absolutely lose it." She successfully petitioned the House of Representatives to discharge a mortgage in 1894.
Tautari continued to run the day school until her death on 2 January 1906 in Rawene. The school closed after she died.