Edward John Eyre
Edward John Eyre | |
---|---|
Governor of Jamaica | |
In office 1862–1865 | |
Preceded by | Charles Henry Darling |
Succeeded by | Henry Knight Storks |
Lieutenant-Governor of New Munster, New Zealand | |
In office 1848–1853 | |
Governor | George Grey |
Preceded by | None, position established |
Succeeded by | None, position abolished |
Personal details | |
Born |
Whipsnade, England, UK | 5 August 1815
Died |
30 November 1901 86) Devon, England, UK | (aged
Occupation | Explorer of Australia, Colonial Administrator, Grazier |
Edward John Eyre (5 August 1815 – 30 November 1901) was an English land explorer of the Australian continent, colonial administrator, and a controversial Governor of Jamaica.
Early life
Eyre was born in Whipsnade, Bedfordshire, shortly before his family moved to Hornsea, Yorkshire, where he was christened.[1] His parents were Rev. Anthony William Eyre and Sarah (née Mapleton).[2] After completing grammar school at Louth and Sedbergh, he moved to Sydney rather than join the army or go to university. He gained experience in the new land by boarding with and forming friendships with prominent gentlemen and became a flock owner when he bought 400 lambs a month before his 18th birthday.<ref oepplinger">Kevin Koepplinger. "Hero and Tyrant:Edward John Eyre's Legacy".</ref> When South Australia was founded, Eyre brought 1,000 sheep and 600 cattle overland from Monaro, New South Wales to Adelaide and sold them for a large profit.
South Australian expeditions
With this money, Eyre set out to explore the interior of South Australia, with two separate expeditions north to the Flinders Ranges and west to beyond Ceduna.
In addition to exploring inland South Australia and New South Wales, Eyre was instrumental in maintaining peace between white settlers and Aborigines along the Murray River.
Overland to Albany
Eyre, together with his Aboriginal companion Wylie, was the first European to traverse the coastline of the Great Australian Bight and the Nullarbor Plain by land in 1840-1841, on an almost 2000 mile trip to Albany, Western Australia. He had originally led the expedition with John Baxter and three aborigines. On 29 April 1841 two of the aborigines killed Baxter and left with most of the supplies, and Eyre and Wylie were only able to survive because they chanced to encounter, at a bay near Esperance, Western Australia, a French whaling ship Mississippi, under the command of an Englishman, Captain Thomas Rossiter, for whom Eyre named the location Rossiter Bay.
Colonial Governor
From 1848 to 1853, he served as Lieutenant-Governor of New Munster Province in New Zealand under Sir George Grey.[3] He married Miss Adelaide Ormond in 1850. She was the sister of the politician John Davies Ormond.
From 1854 he was Governor of several Caribbean island colonies.
Colonial Governor in Jamaica
As Governor of the Colony, Eyre, fearful of an island wide uprising, brutally suppressed the Morant Bay Rebellion, which was sparked when Baptist preacher and rebel leader (and future National Hero of Jamaica) Paul Bogle encouraged and led a rebellion, and occasioned the death of 18 militia or officials. Up to 439 black peasants were killed in the reprisals, some 600 flogged and about 1000 houses burnt down. General Luke O'Connor was directly responsible for those who inflicted excessive punishment.[4] Eyre also authorised the execution of George William Gordon, a mixed-race colonial assemblyman who was involved in the rebellion, and was tried for high treason by Lieutenant Herbert Brand in a court-martial. The controlling European element of the Jamaican populace — those who had most to lose — regarded him as the hero who had saved Jamaica from disaster.[4]
Eyre's influence at this point was so strong that he was able to convince the House of Assembly to pass constitutional reforms that brought the old form of government to an end and allowed Jamaica to become a Crown Colony, with an appointed (rather than an elected) legislature, on the basis that stronger legislative control would ward off another act of rebellion. Before dissolving itself, the legislature passed legislation to deal with the recent emergency, including an Act that sanctioned martial law and —all-importantly for the litigation in Phillips v Eyre — an Act of Indemnity covering all acts done in good faith to suppress the rebellion after the proclamation of martial law.[4]
These events created great controversy in Britain, resulting in demands for Eyre to be arrested and tried for murdering Gordon. John Stuart Mill organised the Jamaica Committee, which demanded his prosecution and included some well-known British liberal intellectuals such as John Bright, Charles Darwin, Frederic Harrison, Thomas Hughes, Thomas Huxley, John Tyndall, Herbert Spencer and A. V. Dicey.[4] A rival committee was set up by Thomas Carlyle for the defence, arguing that Eyre had acted decisively to restore order. His supporters included John Ruskin, Charles Kingsley, Charles Dickens and Alfred Lord Tennyson.[4]
Cases against Lieutenant Brand and Brigadier Abercrombie Nelson were presented to the Central Criminal Court but the grand jury declined to certify either case. Eyre resided in Market Drayton, which was outwith the jurisdiction of the court so the indictment failed on that count. Barrister James Fitzjames Stephen travelled to Market Drayton but failed to convince the Justices to endorse his case against Eyre. The Jamaica Committee next asked the Attorney-General to certify the criminal information against Eyre but was rebuffed. Eyre then moved to London so that he might bring matters to a head and offer himself up to justice. The magistrate at Bow Street Police Court declined to arrest him, due to the failure of the cases against the soldiers, whereupon the imagined prosecutors applied to the Queen's Bench for a writ of mandamus justified by the Criminal Jurisdiction Act 1802 and succeeded. The Queen's Bench grand jury, upon presentation of the case against Eyre, declined to find a true bill of indictment, and Eyre was freed of criminal pursuit.[4]
The case went next to the civil courts. Alexander Phillips charged Eyre with six counts of assault and false imprisonment, in addition to conversion of Phillips’s ‘goods and chattels’,[4] and the case was eventually brought to the UK Court of Exchequer as Phillips v Eyre (1870) LR 6 QB 1, Exchequer Chamber. The case was influential in setting a precedent in English and Australian law over the conflict of laws, and choice of law to be applied in international torts cases.[5][6] Eyre was exonerated in the Queen's Bench, a writ of error was submitted to the Exchequer, whose judgment affirmed the one below, and an important precedent was thus set by Willes J.[4]
Later life
Eyre's legal expenses were covered by the British government in 1872, and in 1874 he was granted the pension of a retired colonial governor. He lived out the remainder of his life at Walreddon Manor in the parish of Whitchurch near Tavistock, Devon, where he died on 30 November 1901. He is buried in the Whitchurch churchyard.[2]
Recognition and legacy
Eyre Peninsula and Lake Eyre were named after him, a statue of Eyre is in Victoria Square in Adelaide as well as Rumbalara Reserve in Springfield NSW on the Mouat Walk, and in 1970 an Australia Post postage stamp bore his portrait.[7]
South Australia's Lake Eyre, Eyre Peninsula, Eyre Creek, Eyre Highway (the main highway from South Australia to Western Australia), Edward John Eyre High School and the Eyre Hotel in Whyalla, and the electoral district of Eyre in Western Australia, are named in his honour, as are the villages of Eyreton and West Eyreton in Canterbury and the Eyre Mountains and Eyre Creek in Southland, New Zealand.
Eyre Road, Linton, Palmerston North also thought to be named after him as well as a few streets in Canterbury, New Zealand.
See also
Notes
- ↑ Steve Pocock (2000). "History". Great Australian Bight Safaris. Retrieved 2006-04-08.
- 1 2 Geoffrey Dutton, 'Eyre, Edward John (1815–1901)', Australian Dictionary of Biography, National Centre of Biography, Australian National University accessed 14 May 2013. This article was first published in hardcopy in Australian Dictionary of Biography, Volume 1, (MUP), 1966
- ↑ Standish, Michael Wordsworth. "Eyre, Edward John". The 1966 Encyclopedia of New Zealand. Te Ara. Retrieved 16 November 2014.
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 Handford, EDWARD JOHN EYRE AND THE CONFLICT OF LAWS
- ↑ G. Dutton, In Search of Edward John Eyre (1982, MacMillan), p.115-42
- ↑ J Michener, Caribbean (1989, Random House), 402-42
- ↑ Australian postage stamp honouring Edward John Eyre
References
- Geoffrey Dutton, (1967) The hero as murderer : the life of Edward John Eyre, Australian explorer and Governor of Jamaica 1815-1901 Sydney : Collins ; Melbourne : Cheshire, (paperback reprint: Penguin, 1977).
- Catherine Hall, (2002) Civilising Subjects: Colony and Metropoloe in the English Imagination, 1830-1867. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
Further reading
- Dutton, Geoffrey (1982) In search of Edward John Eyre South Melbourne: Macmillan. ISBN 0-333-33841-3
External links
Wikisource has original works written by or about: Edward John Eyre |
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Edward John Eyre. |
- Short biography
- Eyre's Journals from his 1840/1 expedition
- Works by Edward John Eyre at Project Gutenberg
- Works by or about Edward John Eyre at Internet Archive
- Biography in 1966 Encyclopaedia of New Zealand
Government offices | ||
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Preceded by Richard Graves MacDonnell |
Lieutenant Governor of Saint Vincent 1854–1861 |
Succeeded by Anthony Musgrave |
Preceded by Charles Henry Darling |
Governor of Jamaica 1862–1864 (acting); 1864–1865 |
Succeeded by Sir Henry Knight Storks |
Awards and achievements | ||
Preceded by John Murray |
Clarke Medal 1901 |
Succeeded by Frederick Manson Bailey |