Supplement to the London Gazette, Juke 22, 1898. 3853

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Supplement to the London Gazette, Juke 22, 1898. 3853 SUPPLEMENT TO THE LONDON GAZETTE, JUKE 22, 1898. 3853 REPRESENTATIVES OF COLONIES. Sir W. F. Hely Hutchinson, G.C.M.G., The Honourable Sir Robert Herbert, G.C.B. Governor of Natal. late Under Secretary for the Colonies. Sir Henry Blake, G-.C.M.G., Governor of Sir John Bramston, K.C.M.G., C.B., late Hong Kong. Assistant Under Secretary of State for Sir Hubert Jerningham, K.C.M.G., Gover- the Colonies. nor of Trinidad. General Sir Henry Norman, G.C.B.,. Lieutenant-Colonel H. E. McCallum, R.E., G.C.M.G., sometime Governor of Queens- C.M.G., Governor of Lagos, land. Sir Marshal Clarke, K.C.M.G., Resident Montague White, Esq., Consul - General, Commissioner, Rhodesia. South Africa Republic. THE FOLLOWING AGENTS-GENERAL. Sir Daniel Cooper, Bart., G.C.M.G., Agent- Honourable W. P. Reeves, Agent-General,. General for New South Wales. New Zealand. Lieutenant-General the Honourable Sir A. Sir Westby B. Perceval, K.C.M.G., Agent- Clarke, G.C.M.G., C.B., C.I.E., Agent- General, Tasmania. General for Victoria. Honourable Sir David Tennant, K.C.M.G.,. The Honourable T. Play ford, Agent-General, Agent-General, Cape Colony. South Australia. Sir Walter Peace, K.C.M.G., Agent-General,. The Honourable Sir H. Tozer, K.C.M.G., Natal. Agent-General, Queensland. Honourable F. G. Vernon, Agent-General, Sir Malcoln Fraser, K.C.M.G., Agent - British Columbia. General, West Australia. John Howard, Esq., Agent-General, Nova Scotia. DELEGATES FROM CONSTITUENCIES WHICH RETURNED MR. GLADSTONE TO PARLIAMENT AT VARIOUS TIMES. Newark.—Thomas Earp, Esq. Greenwich.—J. R. Jolly, Esq., J.P. F. Cooper, Esq. Robert Green, Esq. Oxford University.—(otherwise represented). Ebenezer Davis, Esq. South Lancashire.—Alderman W. B. Bow- Midlothian.—Messrs. Gibson, Gray, Wood,. ring, J.P. Todd, and Durie. H. Yates Thompson, Leeds.—W. Beckworth, Esq., J.P. Esq. J. S. Mathers, Esq., J.P. John Edward Taylor, J. W. Williams, Esq., J.P. Esq. Leith.—Messrs. Stewart, Crawford. CHAIRMEN OF RAILWAY COMPANIES. London and North Western Railway. Metropolitan District. South Eastern. District. Great Western. London, Brighton, and South Coast. South Western. Bur on E. de Rothschild represented the Nord Great Central. du Paris Railway. Midland. Monsieur Georges Mallet represented the Great Western. Paris, Lyons, and Mediterranean Railway North British. Company. FRIENDLY SOCIETIES, &c., REPRESENTED. Odd Fellows. National Union of Teachers. Foresters. Co-operative Union. Hearts of Oak. Trade Union Parliamentary Committee. Young Men's Christian Association. MEMBERS OF THE CIVIL SERVICE AKD PRIVATE SECRETARIES TO MINISTERS. Captain William de W. Abney, C.B. Henry H. S. Cunynghame, Esq. A. W. Anstruther, Esq. Lionel Gust, Esq. Honourable Eric Barrington. Cornelius N. Dalton, Esq., C.B. F. A. C. Bergne, Esq. C. S. Dickson, Esq. Honourable Francis L. Bertie. Kenelm E. Digby, K.C.B. Ernest Edward Blake, Esq. Major-General Sir John F. D. Donnelly^ Sir Courtenay E. Boyle, K.C.B. K.C.B. Edward W. Brabrook, Esq., C.B. L. C. Dowdall, Esq. Honourable Reginald B. Brett, C.B. C. Locke Eastlake, Esq. W. C. Bridgeman, Esq. T. H. Elliott, Esq., C.B. E. J. Ruggles Brise, Esq. Sir .Gardner Engleheart, K.C.B. Edward R. Cave-Brown, Esq., C.S.L Major-General Edward R. Festing. E. Grant Buries, Esq. Almeric Fitzroy, Esq. Major Maurice A. Cameron. Sir William H. Flower, K.C.B. James J. Cardin, Esq., C.B. H. St. George Foley, Esq. William H. M. Christie, Esq., C.B. Sir Archibald Geikie, D.C.L. C. Purdon Clarke, Esq., C.I.E. George E. Y. Gleadowe, Esq., C.M.G, W. John Courthope, Esq., C.B. W. G. Greene, Esq. Sir Henry Craik, K.C.B. Honourable Sidney R. Greviile. Honourable Hamilton J. A. Cuffe, K.C.B. L, N. Guillemand, Esq. C 2.
Recommended publications
  • Evolution of the Ipswich Railway Workshops Site
    VOLUME 5 PART 1 MEMOIRS OF THE QUEENSLAND MUSEUM – CULTURE © The State of Queensland (Queensland Museum), 2011 PO Box 3300, South Brisbane 4101, Qld Australia Phone 61 7 3840 7555 Fax 61 7 3846 1226 www.qm.qld.gov.au National Library of Australia card number ISSN 1440-4788 NOTE Papers published in this volume and in all previous volumes of the Memoirs of the Queensland Museum may be reproduced for scientific research, individual study or other educational purposes. Properly acknowledged quotations may be made but queries regarding the republication of any papers should be addressed to the Editor in Chief. Copies of the journal can be purchased from the Queensland Museum Shop. A Guide to Authors is displayed at the Queensland Museum web site http://www.qm.qld.gov.au/About+Us/Publications/Memoirs+of+the+Queensland+Museum A Queensland Government Project Typeset at the Queensland Museum Evolution of the Ipswich Railway Workshops site Robyn BUCHANAN Buchanan, R. 2011 Evolution of the Ipswich Railway Workshops Site. Memoirs of the Queensland Museum – Culture 5(1): 31-52. Brisbane. ISSN 1440-4788 The decision to build the first railway in Queensland from Ipswich to the Darling Downs meant that railway workshops were required at Ipswich. The development of the Ipswich Railway Workshops site began with the original Ipwich Workshops site of 1864 which was adjacent to the Bremer River at North Ipswich. The first two major workshop buildings were iron and zinc structures imported from England in pre-fabricated form. Over the next few years, additional buildings including a brick store were constructed by local contractors.
    [Show full text]
  • The Calendar University of Queensland
    The Calendar O F T H E University of Queensland PART I. FOR THE YEARS 193.2-1936 N O T E .— Every Student should provide himsell with the current issue of each part of the Calendar. Editor: T. E. JONES. B.A. The matter in this book has been wholly set up and printed by the Government Printer, Brisbane Year of Publication, 1932 BRISBANE: By Authority: F R E D E R I C K P H I L L I P S . Government Printer. Price 2/. QUEENSLAND U V . il Y LfoHARY TABLE OF CONTENTS. A TAGEV Table of Contents . - • • • • 3 Preface .. .. .. .. .. •• •• • • 5 The University of Queensland Act of 1909 . 9 Officers of the University— Senate .. • .• •• 22 Standing Committees . • • 23 Teaching Staff . • . • . 24 Faculties .. ' . .. • . 26 Administrative and Clerical Staffs . .. 27 Statutes of the University— Standing Committees . • • . 29- Faculties . .. .. .. • • . 31 Board of Faculties . 34 Boarding Places of Undergradutes . 38- Admission ad Eundern Gradum . 39 Matriculation— Arts . .. 42 Science . .. .. 43 Engineering . 44 Commercial Studies . 45 Agriculture . 45 Adult Matriculation . 46 Degree of Bachelor of Arts . 47 Degree of Bachelor of Science . 54 Degree of Bachelor of Science in Industrial Chemistry 60 Degree of Bachelor of Engineering . 68 Degree of Bachelor of Commerce . 69' Degree of Bachelor of Science in Agriculture . 73 Diploma in Mechanical and Electrical Engineering . 76 Diploma for Journalism . .. 80- Commerce Certificate and Diploma in Commerce . 82 Master of Arts .. .. .. .. 84 Master of Science . .. 85 Master of Engineering . 86 Master of Commerce . 88 Degree of Doctor of Science . 88 Robert Philp Scholarship . 89 Sir Thomas Mcllwraith Scholarships . 90 Election of Members of Senate .
    [Show full text]
  • SIR SAUL SAMUEL Papers, 1837-1900 Reel M875
    AUSTRALIAN JOINT COPYING PROJECT SIR SAUL SAMUEL Papers, 1837-1900 Reel M875 Sir John Samuel, Bart. Birchwood Beech Close Cobham, Surrey National Library of Australia State Library of New South Wales Filmed: 1973 CONTENTS Page 3 Biographical note 4 Correspondence of Charles Cowper and Saul Samuel, 1865-70 4 Letters of Lord Belmore to Saul Samuel, 1868-85 4 General correspondence, 1837-73 5 General correspondence, 1873-1900 12 Letters of Sir Henry Parkes to Saul Samuel, 1872-90 12 Undated letters 13 Invitations 13 Samuel Family papers, 1889-98 2 BIOGRAPHICAL NOTE Sir Saul Samuel (1820-1900), 1st Baronet, was born in London. His father died before he was born and in 1832 he accompanied his mother to New South Wales, where his uncle and his brother were already living. He was educated at Sydney College and in 1837 he joined the Sydney counting-house of his uncles. With his brother Lewis, he later formed the Sydney mercantile company of L. & S. Samuel and in time became a director of several companies based in Bathurst. Samuel was the first Jewish parliamentarian and the first Jewish minister of the Crown in New South Wales. He represented the counties of Roxburgh and Wellington in the Legislative Council in 1854- 56. In the Legislative Assembly he represented Orange in 1859-60, Wellington in 1862-69 and Orange in 1869-72. He returned to the Legislative Council in 1872. In 1865-66 and 1868-70 Samuel was Colonial Treasurer in the ministries led by Charles Cowper and John Robertson. He was postmaster-general in the ministries led by Henry Parkes in 1872-75, 1877 and 1878-80.
    [Show full text]
  • Pursuing the Complete Story: Interpreting Queensland's Old
    Pursuing the complete story: interpreting Queensland’s Old Government House Katie McConnel, Curator Old Government House In June 2009, as a key event in Queensland’s 150th celebrations, the fully restored Old Government House was re-opened to the public as an important historical site complemented by interpretative print and multimedia exhibits. The structure itself is an historical artifact that offers a fascinating insight into Queensland’s early colonial life; bringing to light the cultural and historical significance of each part of the building, within its nineteenth century social and political context, is the key objective of the museum which is based in three of the ground floor rooms. Government House, 1908. Image courtesy of the Elliot collection, Museum of Brisbane 1 The overriding aim of the interpretation project was to research and develop a range of interpretative displays that would tell the remarkable story of Old Government House and the story of all the people who lived and worked in the House during its time as a vice-regal residence from 1862-1910. Well, this proved rather challenging. Although designed and constructed purposely as a vice-regal residence, the building was used for a number of different functions during its post vice-regal period from 1910-2002. It housed a university, the Queensland music examination board, the Queensland Institute of Technology, and the National Trust of Queensland. Yet, despite almost a century of other uses and even calls for its demolition, the original structural design of the house remained almost totally intact. This in theory provided us with a unique opportunity to tell the often under told domestic side of the House’s story.
    [Show full text]
  • The History of the Queensland Parliament, 1957–1989
    1. Inside the Queensland Parliament Before Queensland was established as a separate colony in 1859 ‘separationist settlers’ in the Moreton Bay region had pushed for independence and self-rule. Ideas about self-government and the establishment of a local parliamentary democracy were important inspirations in the formation of colonial Queensland. Early settlers in the territory then known as ‘Northern Australia’, the ‘Northern Districts’ or ‘Cooksland’ showed a strong preference for separation from Sydney and New South Wales and campaigned vigorously for recognition as a new colony. Although nine representatives from the Moreton region sat in the NSW Assembly, separation from the ‘tightly-drawn’ strings of New South Wales became the subject of much local political activity and petitioning to the monarch after 1856 (Pugh 1859). The desire to create a local parliament was not, however, just a philosophical commitment to regional democracy and self-rule. Rather, it reflected an economic desire to manage their own interests, attract additional settlers and develop the northern lands themselves without waiting for the NSW governors to determine their fate. And, the emerging colonial political leaders were prepared to take on the risk of forming a new colony. They knew they would have to make a substantial material commitment over time and impose a major financial burden on the new colony to establish its embryonic political institutions. They also had to inherit a large public debt of some £20 000 as part of separation—the so-called ‘Moreton Bay Debt’, which was transferred from New South Wales to Queensland. Although the issue of forming a further colony in northern Australia had been as contentious in London as it was in New South Wales, Queen Victoria signed the Letters Patent establishing ‘Queensland’ as a new colony in June 1859.
    [Show full text]
  • First Premier of Queensland
    Factsheet 7.2 First Premier of Queensland Robert George Wyndham Herbert state aid to religion and with regards to land, (1831-1905) the concern of settling the land and promoting agriculture. Herbert determined that government Born on 12 June 1831 in Brighton, England, should keep pace with settlement, and, indeed, the only son of a barrister, Algernon encourage it. Another high priority of Herbert’s Herbert, Robert Herbert attended Eton government was the expansion and diversification from 1844 until 1849 and then entered of Queensland’s production. Herbert was impressed Balliol College, Oxford. He graduated with with the suitability of Queensland for tropical Honours in 1854 and was elected a fellow produce, and had high hopes for the colony as a of All Souls. Graduating in law in 1856, producer of cotton, but along with many others he Herbert was called to the Bar in 1858. lost his own investments in the crop. In June 1859, Sir George Ferguson Bowen In February 1866, Robert Herbert turned the was appointed Governor of the new colony premiership over to Macalister and sat as a Private of Queensland. He was authorised to Member until August 1866 before returning to select a private secretary who could also become Colonial Secretary of Queensland, ‘independent of local influences’. Bowen chose Herbert and on the 10 December 1859, Robert George Herbert was commissioned as Colonial Secretary. He was only 28. In the 1860 elections for Members of the first Legislative Assembly in the Parliament of Queensland, Herbert was invited to contest three seats and was returned unopposed in the electorate of Leichhardt.
    [Show full text]
  • Contessa Diamantina Roma, Lady Bowen
    CONTESSA DIAMANTINA ROMA, LADY BOWEN by Dr Owen Harris Chairman, Diamantina Health Care Museum Association Inc Abstract: Contessa Diamantina Roma married Sir George Bowen on 28/04/1856 at Corfu, Ionian Islands. He was appointed first Governor of Queensland and they arrived in Brisbane on December 10, 1859 and declared Queensland a separate state. Lady Bowen was a beautiful, caring, conscientious lady who stimulated the formation of benevolent and charitable organizations in Queensland (eg Lady Bowen Lying-In Hospital, Diamantina Orphanage). The Orphanage became run-down and a new one opened at Woolloongabba, Brisbane. Then in 1901, it was translated into the Diamantina Hospital for Chronic Disease, 1943 the South Brisbane Auxiliary Hospital and ultimately the new Princess Alexandra Hospital in 1956. On her departure in 1868 she was given a very special and exuberant farewell. 2 Lady Bowen was born in Zante (Zakynthos), an Ionian Island in 1833, tenth of eleven children and the only surviving daughter of Count Giorgio-Candiano Roma and his wife (the former Contessa Orsola di Balsama, daughter of another Zantiot nobleman).(Ref 1). Count Roma was President of the Ionian Senate (1850-6) and titular head of the Ionian Islands Republic; also Queen Victoria appointed him the Island’s Poet Laureate. The Roma family origins can be traced back through Crete and Venice to 13th Century Rome. Premarriage she led a gracious, civilized and highly privileged life, when the Ionian Islands were a British Protectorate (1815-1864). In another Ionian Island, Corfu, the Contessa met and fell in love with an Englishman – George Bowen, a first class honours classics graduate from Oxford, and a man with a love for Greece, its culture, and both ancient and modern language – a real philhellene.
    [Show full text]
  • AUSTRALIAN CURRICULUM HISTORY P-10 and RELATED Queensland Parliamentary Resources
    AUSTRALIAN CURRICULUM HISTORY P-10 AND RELATED Queensland Parliamentary Resources NOTE: This information is based on the National Curriculum therefore the focus is a National one with reference to National events such as Federation. Where possible, links have been made between the National Curriculum and the Queensland Parliament and are listed in the following document. April 2013 YEAR HISTORICAL KNOWLEDGE AND UNDERSTANDING RELATED RESOURCES LEVEL (AUSTRALIAN CURRICULUM) Resources on the Parliament’s website are classified as follows: P= Primary S= Secondary T= Tertiary available at www.parliament.qld.gov.au 5 THE AUSTRALIAN COLONIES FACTSHEET 3.1 QUEENSLAND ELECTORAL AND PARLIAMENTARY HISTORY (S,T) Reasons (political, economic & social) for Possible teacher reference- includes a timeline of what was happening in the establishment of British colonies in Queensland and New South Wales from 1859 onwards. Australia after 1800. (ACHHK093) FACTSHEET 3.2 QUEENSLAND PARLIAMENT CELEBRATING 150 YEARS IN 2010 (P,S) Includes a simplified timeline of what was happening in Queensland and New South Wales from 1859. FACTSHEET 2.2 GOVERNOR OF QUEENSLAND (P,S,T) Governor of Queensland. Includes information about the role of the governor as the Queen’s representative. INFORMATION BOOKLET LEVEL1 (P) PAGE 5 The role that a significant individual or group Queensland Parliament – A short history played in shaping a colony; for example, explorers, farmers, entrepreneurs, artists, FACTSHEET 7.2 writers, humanitarians, religious and political THE FIRST PREMIER OF QUEENSLAND (P,S,T) leaders and Aboriginal/ Torres Strait First Premier of Queensland: Robert Herbert. This material can be used as Islander peoples. (ACHHK097) a possible reference to a significant individual in Queensland.
    [Show full text]
  • AUSTRALIANA February 2019 Vol 41 No 1
    AUSTRALIANA February 2019 vol 41 no 1 RESEARCHING, PRESERVING AND ​​COLLECTING AUSTRALIA’S HERITAGE Australiana 41 – 1 FEBRUARY 2019 Trust the women:1 women lead the way in preserving Queensland’s heritage One of the first events organised by the Australiana Society’s Queensland 1. Chapter was a visit to Miegunyah, the historic house museum owned and Miegunyah in 1886, soon after it was operated by the Queensland Women’s Historical Association in Bowen Hills, built for the Perry family, well-known Brisbane ironmongers. The house is Brisbane for the past 50 years. For the visit in June 2018, local member on the Queensland Heritage Register as a fine example of a substantial Judith McKay acted as a guide, giving members a snapshot of the association single-storey timber residence. and its extensive museum and archival collection; recently she undertook Photograph: John Oxley Library, State Library of Queensland, neg no 41592 a significance assessment of the collection under the National Library’s Community Heritage Grant program.2 Here she tells the story of the association and its pioneering efforts to preserve Queensland’s heritage. 28 Australiana FEBRUARY 2019 2. Miegunyah dining room. Photograph: Queensland Women’s Historical Association archives JUDITH McKAY others were notable in their own right, Preserving places such as medical scientist Dr Josephine Among Mrs Young’s initiatives as Mackerras, medical practitioner Dr president was a scheme, begun in Eleanor Bourne, educationalist and 1961, to mark places of outstanding The Queensland Women’s Historical philanthropist Josephine Bedford, significance to Queensland by fixing Association (QWHA), established in nursing administrator Eunice Paten, plaques explaining their history (plate 1950, is one of Queensland’s leading federal politician Senator (later Dame) 3).
    [Show full text]
  • GEORGE ELPHINSTONE DALRYMPLE Problems of Early Queensland [By MRS
    697 GEORGE ELPHINSTONE DALRYMPLE Problems of Early Queensland [By MRS. JEAN FARNFIELD, M.A.] (Given at the monthly meeting of the Society, 22 May 1969) Self-interest, financial necessity, versatUity and an en­ thusiastic, restless temperament impelled George Elphinstone Dalrymple, the son of a Scottish baronet, to participate in many aspects of the history of early Queensland from 1859-1874. GEORGE ELPHINSTONE DALRYMPLE In the course of his life in the colony he was explorer, pastoralist, Government official and Parliamentarian. Other outstanding men of his time in Queensland, such as Robert Herbert, Arthur Macalister, WUliam Pettigrew, John Douglas and Augustus Gregory combined politics with pastoralism or land settlement with exploration, or local government with entrepreneurship, but no other man took part in so many activities over such a wide area. Dalrymple's activities carried him from Brisbane to Cape York and the islands of the Torres Straits. 698 UNIQUE CONTRIBUTION Indeed, his identification with so many phases of early Queensland history was unique: it is probably true to say that no one in the colony had a practical knowledge of the country to compare with that which he had acquired during fifteen years of residence. His enthusiasms were short-lived and the value of his activities to the development of Queens­ land may be debatable. My own opinion, which I have already stated in Frontiersman, a biography of Dalrymple in Queensland, is that they deserve more recognition than they have been given hitherto. But no one wUl deny that the diversity of his activities and the wide area they covered give the historian great scope to study the developmental problems of early Queensland.
    [Show full text]
  • Business and Politics in Queensland 1859-1895
    Business and Politics in Queensland 1859-1895 PROFESSOR H. J. HANHAM has recently drawn attention to the importance of the study of company investment in New Zealand during the last thirty years of the nineteenth century.1 The purpose of this paper is to give a brief account of company investment and examine the role played by business interests in politics during the same period in Queensland, where there were close parallels with the New Zealand situation. The subject is a particularly important one because of the close connection between business and politics that resulted from a situation where the main political issues and fields of business activity both concerned the utilisation and develop- ment of the land. The economic development of Queensland passed through several well-defined stages after its establishment as a separate colony in 1895. Until the late eighteen-sixties it was little more than a vast sheep run, although there were pockets of agricultural settlement in the south-east, around Brisbane, where production of sugar cane had begun, and Ipswich, where cotton-growing was stimulated by the worldwide shortage resulting from the American Civil War. There was little demand for loan funds in the colony at this time, since the pastoral industry was still organised on a basis of extensive use of leased land, and required capital for stock purchase only, while agricultural development was on a very small scale. Most of the pastoral and agricultural enterprises were conducted by individuals or partnerships who raised whatever capital they needed through personal loans. These were obtained by means of bank overdrafts, or by loans from banks, private financiers, or mortgage companies, raised through liens on wool and stock.
    [Show full text]
  • Celebrating 150 Years of the Queensland Museum 1862
    1862–2012 CELEBRATING 150 YEARS OF THE QUEENSLAND MUSEUM QUEENSLAND MUSEUM FOUNDATION ANNUAL REPORT 2011–2012 THANK YOU HELLO AND THERE APPLAUSE We’ve had a great year and this report is a The following individuals were instrumental in development of this report: wonderful way for us to show you – our valued Dr Robert Adlard, Margot Andersen, Deborah Bailey, Dr Alan supporters – what we have achieved as a Bartholomai, Mij Bricknell, Kathy Buckley, Scott Carlile, Jason Elliott, Jo Forsyth, Dr Scott Hocknull, Dr John N.A. Hooper, Janelle Insley, result of your gifts. Fleur Lewis, Meg Lloyd, Dr Geraldine Mate, David Mewes, David To avoid something akin to Tolstoy’s War and Peace, and in the Milne, Sarah Perrott, Sonya Peters, Baden Phillips, Glenn Price, interests of environmental sustainability, we have chosen not to Dr Andrew Rozefelds, Michelle Ryan, Dr Kevin J. Tilbrook, Peter Volk, include our financial statements in this report. If you are interested Cathy ter Bogt, Dr Deborah Tranter, Dr Sue Turner, Vicki Warden and in the facts and figures, please visit: www.foundation.qm.qld.gov.au Dr Michael Westaway. where our full financial statements are available for download. Queensland Museum Foundation Annual Report 2011–12 As an institution that prides itself on providing authentic, accurate Words: Sally Anna Hamilton and timely information, please rest assured that the timeline Photography: © Queensland Museum. Contemporary photographs component of this report has been rigorously researched using by Bruce Cowell, Gary Cranitch, Peter Waddington and Jeff Wright credible sources. A full reference list is available upon request. Illustration: Geoff Thompson Design: Laura Cantrell © Queensland Museum Foundation Trust 2012 This report is printed on environmentally responsible paper.
    [Show full text]