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Edward John Eyre

Edward John Eyre (5 August 1815 – 30 November 1901) was an English land explorer of the Australian continent, colonial administrator, and Governor of Jamaica.

Edward John Eyre
Governor of Jamaica
In office
1862–1865
MonarchVictoria
Preceded byCharles Henry Darling
Succeeded byHenry Knight Storks
Lieutenant-Governor of New Munster, New Zealand
In office
1848–1853
GovernorGeorge Grey
Preceded byNone, position established
Succeeded byNone, position abolished
Personal details
Born(1815-08-05)5 August 1815
Whipsnade, England
Died30 November 1901(1901-11-30) (aged 86)
Devon, England
OccupationExplorer of Australia, Colonial Administrator, Grazier

Early life edit

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 the colonial settlement of Sydney, Australia, 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.[3]

In South Australia edit

In December 1837, Eyre started droving 1,000 sheep and 600 cattle overland from Monaro, New South Wales, to Adelaide, South Australia. Eyre, with his livestock and eight stockmen, arrived in Adelaide in July 1838.[4] In Adelaide, Eyre sold the livestock for a large profit.

 
Expeditions of Eyre

With the money from the sale, Eyre set out to explore the interior of South Australia. In 1839, Eyre went on two separate expeditions: north to the Flinders Ranges and west to beyond Ceduna. The northernmost point of the first expedition was Mount Eyre; it was named by Governor Gawler on 11 July 1839.[5] On the second expedition, he spotted what was later named Lake Torrens.[6]

In 1840, Eyre went on a third expedition, reaching a lake that was later named Lake Eyre, in his honour.[6]

Overland to Albany edit

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 3,200-kilometre (2,000 mi) trip to Albany, Western Australia. He had originally led the expedition with John Baxter and three aboriginal people.

On 29 April 1841, two of the aboriginal people killed Baxter and left with most of the supplies. Eyre and Wylie survived only because they chanced to encounter at a bay near Esperance, Western Australia, the French whaling ship Mississippi, under the command of an Englishman, Captain Thomas Rossiter, for whom Eyre named the location Rossiter Bay. In 1845, he returned to England on board the Symmetry, leaving Port Adelaide on 16 December 1844,[7] and sailing via Cape Town, under Captain Elder.[7] Upon reaching England, the Symmetry called first at Deal, Kent on 11 May 1845, before anchoring at London on 12 May.[8] He brought with him two aboriginal boys, one of whom was Warrulan.[7][9]

Once in England, he published a narrative of his travels.[10]

Colonial Governor in New Zealand edit

From 1848 to 1853, he served as Lieutenant-Governor of New Zealand's New Munster Province (Wellington and the South Island) under Sir George Grey.[11] He married Adelaide Ormond in 1850. She was the sister of the politician John Davies Ormond.

Colonial Governor in Jamaica edit

From 1854 Eyre was Governor of several Caribbean island colonies, including Saint Vincent and Antigua.[12]

As Governor of Jamaica, Eyre mixed only with the white ruling class, to whose interests he was sympathetic. Instead of trying to relieve the unemployment problems or the unfair tax burdens on the poorer classes, he busied himself with the passing of bills to provide punishment on the treadmill for certain offences, and flogging as the penalty for stealing food. George William Gordon, a mixed-race member of the Assembly of Jamaica, criticised Eyre's draconian measures, warning that "If we are to be governed by such a Governor much longer, the people will have to fly to arms and become self-governing."[13]

Baptist preacher and rebel leader Paul Bogle encouraged and led a rebellion, and occasioned the death of 18 militia or officials. Fearful of an island-wide uprising, Eyre brutally suppressed the Morant Bay rebellion of 1865. Up to 439 black peasants were killed in the reprisals, some 600 flogged, and about 1000 houses burnt down. General Luke Smythe O'Connor was directly responsible for those who inflicted excessive punishment.[14]

Erroneously convinced that he was one of the leaders of the rebellion, Eyre authorised the execution of Gordon, who was tried for high treason by Lieutenant Herbert Brand in a court-martial. On 23 October, Gordon was hanged two days after his hastily-arranged trial, and Bogle followed him on to the gallows two days later, when he was hanged along with 14 others.[15]

The controlling European element of the Jamaican population, those who had the most to lose, regarded Eyre as the hero who had saved Jamaica from disaster.[14] Eyre's influence on the white planters was so strong that he convinced 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. That move ended the growing influence of the elected free people of colour Eyre distrusted, such as Gordon, Edward Jordon and Robert Osborn. 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.[14]

Those events created great controversy in England and resulted 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 English liberal intellectuals such as John Bright, Charles Darwin, Frederic Harrison, Thomas Hughes, Thomas Henry Huxley, Herbert Spencer and A. V. Dicey.[14] Other notable members of the committee included Charles Buxton, Edmond Beales, Leslie Stephen, James Fitzjames Stephen, Edward Frankland, Thomas Hill Green, Frederick Chesson, Goldwin Smith, Charles Lyell and Henry Fawcett.

The Governor Eyre Defence and Aid Committee was set up by Thomas Carlyle in September 1866 to argue that Eyre had acted decisively to restore order. The committee secretary was Hamilton Hume, a member of the Royal Geographical Society with whom Eyre had explored in New South Wales. His supporters included John Ruskin, Charles Kingsley, Charles Dickens, Lord Cardigan, Alfred Tennyson and John Tyndall.[14][16]

Cases against Lieutenant Brand and Brigadier Alexander Nelson were presented to the Central Criminal Court but the grand jury declined to certify either case. Eyre resided in Market Drayton in Shropshire, which was outside 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.[14]

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",[14] 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.[17] 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.[14]

Later life edit

 
Eyre circa 1890

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 edit

A statue of Eyre is in Victoria Square in Adelaide as well as Rumbalara Reserve in Springfield NSW on the Mouat Walk. In 1970, an Australia Post (then Postmaster-General's Department) postage stamp bore his portrait.[18]

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, the Eyre Hotel in Whyalla, and the electoral district of Eyre in Western Australia, are named in his honour. So too are the villages of Eyreton and West Eyreton, and Eyrewell Forest, in Canterbury and the Eyre Mountains and Eyre Creek in Southland, New Zealand.

Eyre Road, Linton, Palmerston North also is thought to be named after him as well as a few streets in Canterbury, New Zealand. Closer to the Monaro, New South Wales, Eyre Street, in Kingston, Australian Capital Territory, and Eyre Street in Bungendore, New South Wales, are named for him.

Eyre's 1840 expedition was dramatised in the 1962 Australian radio play Edward John Eyre by Colin Thiele.

In 1971, the Australian composer Barry Conyngham wrote the opera Edward John Eyre (opera)|Edward John Eyre, using poems by Meredith Oakes and extracts from Eyre's Journals of Expeditions of Discovery.[19]

Works edit

  • "Expeditions of Discovery in South Australia". Journal of the Royal Geographical Society of London. 13: 161–182. 1843. ISSN 0266-6235. Wikidata Q108704393.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Steve Pocock (2000). . Great Australian Bight Safaris. Archived from the original on 18 February 2006. Retrieved 8 April 2006.
  2. ^ a b Geoffrey Dutton (1966), "Eyre, Edward John (1815–1901)", Australian Dictionary of Biography, Volume 1 (Australian National University), accessed 25 October 2018.
  3. ^ Kevin Koepplinger. "Hero and Tyrant:Edward John Eyre's Legacy". University of Michigan. Archived from the original on 15 December 2012.
  4. ^ Foster R., Nettelbeck A. (2011), Out of the Silence, p. 32-33 (Wakefield Press).
  5. ^ Manning, Geoffrey H. (2012). "Names - E" (PDF). A Compendium of the Place Names of South Australia. State Library of South Australia. Retrieved 25 October 2018.
  6. ^ a b Painter, Alison. . Professional Historians Association—South Australia. Archived from the original on 12 October 2020. Retrieved 9 October 2020.
  7. ^ a b c Anonymous (17 December 1844). "Sailing of the 'Symmetry'". The South Australian: 2. Wikidata Q105993968. {{cite journal}}: |author1= has generic name (help)
  8. ^ Ian Henderson (2 January 2014). "Planetary Lives: Edward Warrulan, Edward John Eyre, and Queen Victoria". English Studies in Africa. 57 (1): 66–80. doi:10.1080/00138398.2014.916910. ISSN 0013-8398. Wikidata Q105946608.
  9. ^ Sari Braithwaite; Tom Gara; Jane Lydon (June 2011). "From Moorundie to Buckingham Palace: Images of "King" Tenberry and his son Warrulan, 1845–55". Journal of Australian Studies. 35 (2): 165–184. doi:10.1080/14443058.2011.560576. ISSN 1444-3058. Wikidata Q105946256.
  10. ^   One or more of the preceding sentences incorporates text from a publication now in the public domainChisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Eyre, Edward John". Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 10 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. pp. 101–102.
  11. ^ Michael Wordsworth Standish (1966). "Eyre, Edward John". The 1966 Encyclopedia of New Zealand. Te Ara. Retrieved 16 November 2014.
  12. ^ Chisholm 1911.
  13. ^ C.V. Black, A History of Jamaica (London: Collins, 1975), p. 191.
  14. ^ a b c d e f g h Peter Handford (2008). "Edward John Eyre and the Conflict of Laws". Melbourne University Law Review. 32 (3): 822–860.
  15. ^ Gad Heuman, The Killing Time: The Morant Bay Rebellion in Jamaica (Knoxville: University of Tennessee Press, 1994).
  16. ^ Thomas, Donald (1974), Charge! Hurrah! Hurrah! : a life of Cardigan of Balaclava, London: Routledge and Kegan Paul, pp. 318–320, ISBN 0-7100-7914-1
  17. ^ Geoffrey Dutton (1982) In search of Edward John Eyre South Melbourne: Macmillan. pp. 115–42. ISBN 0-333-33841-3
  18. ^ Australian postage stamp honouring Edward John Eyre. australianstamp.com
  19. ^ Radic, Thérèse (2002) [1 December 1992]. "Edward John Eyre". Grove Music Online (8th ed.). Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-1-56159-263-0.

Further reading edit

  • "Eyre, Edward John (1815–1901)", Dictionary of Australian Biography (Angus and Robertson, 1949).
  • "Papers Relative to the Affairs of South Australia—Aborigines", Accounts and Papers 1843, Volume 3 (London: William Clowes and Sons), pp. 267–310.
  • 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).
  • Julie Evans (2002), "Re-reading Edward Eyre—Race, resistance and repression in Australia and The Caribbean", Australian Historical Studies, 33: 175–198; doi:10.1080/10314610208596190.
  • Catherine Hall (2002), Civilising Subjects: Colony and Metropoloe in the English Imagination, 1830–1867. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
  • Ivan Rudolph (2013), Eyre, the forgotten explorer. Sydney: HarperCollins.
  • Journals of Expeditions of Discovery into Central Australia, and overland from Adelaide to King George's Sound, in the years 1840-41, sent by the Colonists of Australia, with the sanction and support of the Government; including an Account of the Manners and Customs of the Aborigines, and the state of their relations with Europeans. By E. J. Eyre, Resident Magistrate, Murray River. 2 volumes. London (1845). Available at the Internet Archive: Volume I, Volume II.

External links edit

  • Short biography 15 December 2010 at the Wayback Machine
  • 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
Preceded by Lieutenant Governor of Saint Vincent
1854–1861
Succeeded by
Preceded by Governor of Jamaica
1862–1864 (acting); 1864–1865
Succeeded by
Awards and achievements
Preceded by Clarke Medal
1901
Succeeded by

edward, john, eyre, august, 1815, november, 1901, english, land, explorer, australian, continent, colonial, administrator, governor, jamaica, governor, jamaicain, office, 1862, 1865monarchvictoriapreceded, bycharles, henry, darlingsucceeded, byhenry, knight, s. Edward John Eyre 5 August 1815 30 November 1901 was an English land explorer of the Australian continent colonial administrator and Governor of Jamaica Edward John EyreGovernor of JamaicaIn office 1862 1865MonarchVictoriaPreceded byCharles Henry DarlingSucceeded byHenry Knight StorksLieutenant Governor of New Munster New ZealandIn office 1848 1853GovernorGeorge GreyPreceded byNone position establishedSucceeded byNone position abolishedPersonal detailsBorn 1815 08 05 5 August 1815Whipsnade EnglandDied30 November 1901 1901 11 30 aged 86 Devon EnglandOccupationExplorer of Australia Colonial Administrator Grazier Contents 1 Early life 2 In South Australia 3 Overland to Albany 4 Colonial Governor in New Zealand 5 Colonial Governor in Jamaica 6 Later life 7 Recognition and legacy 8 Works 9 See also 10 References 11 Further reading 12 External linksEarly life editEyre 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 nee Mapleton 2 After completing grammar school at Louth and Sedbergh he moved to the colonial settlement of Sydney Australia 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 3 In South Australia editSee also Eyre s 1839 expeditions In December 1837 Eyre started droving 1 000 sheep and 600 cattle overland from Monaro New South Wales to Adelaide South Australia Eyre with his livestock and eight stockmen arrived in Adelaide in July 1838 4 In Adelaide Eyre sold the livestock for a large profit nbsp Expeditions of Eyre With the money from the sale Eyre set out to explore the interior of South Australia In 1839 Eyre went on two separate expeditions north to the Flinders Ranges and west to beyond Ceduna The northernmost point of the first expedition was Mount Eyre it was named by Governor Gawler on 11 July 1839 5 On the second expedition he spotted what was later named Lake Torrens 6 In 1840 Eyre went on a third expedition reaching a lake that was later named Lake Eyre in his honour 6 Overland to Albany editEyre 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 3 200 kilometre 2 000 mi trip to Albany Western Australia He had originally led the expedition with John Baxter and three aboriginal people On 29 April 1841 two of the aboriginal people killed Baxter and left with most of the supplies Eyre and Wylie survived only because they chanced to encounter at a bay near Esperance Western Australia the French whaling ship Mississippi under the command of an Englishman Captain Thomas Rossiter for whom Eyre named the location Rossiter Bay In 1845 he returned to England on board the Symmetry leaving Port Adelaide on 16 December 1844 7 and sailing via Cape Town under Captain Elder 7 Upon reaching England the Symmetry called first at Deal Kent on 11 May 1845 before anchoring at London on 12 May 8 He brought with him two aboriginal boys one of whom was Warrulan 7 9 Once in England he published a narrative of his travels 10 Colonial Governor in New Zealand editFrom 1848 to 1853 he served as Lieutenant Governor of New Zealand s New Munster Province Wellington and the South Island under Sir George Grey 11 He married Adelaide Ormond in 1850 She was the sister of the politician John Davies Ormond Colonial Governor in Jamaica editFrom 1854 Eyre was Governor of several Caribbean island colonies including Saint Vincent and Antigua 12 As Governor of Jamaica Eyre mixed only with the white ruling class to whose interests he was sympathetic Instead of trying to relieve the unemployment problems or the unfair tax burdens on the poorer classes he busied himself with the passing of bills to provide punishment on the treadmill for certain offences and flogging as the penalty for stealing food George William Gordon a mixed race member of the Assembly of Jamaica criticised Eyre s draconian measures warning that If we are to be governed by such a Governor much longer the people will have to fly to arms and become self governing 13 Baptist preacher and rebel leader Paul Bogle encouraged and led a rebellion and occasioned the death of 18 militia or officials Fearful of an island wide uprising Eyre brutally suppressed the Morant Bay rebellion of 1865 Up to 439 black peasants were killed in the reprisals some 600 flogged and about 1000 houses burnt down General Luke Smythe O Connor was directly responsible for those who inflicted excessive punishment 14 Erroneously convinced that he was one of the leaders of the rebellion Eyre authorised the execution of Gordon who was tried for high treason by Lieutenant Herbert Brand in a court martial On 23 October Gordon was hanged two days after his hastily arranged trial and Bogle followed him on to the gallows two days later when he was hanged along with 14 others 15 The controlling European element of the Jamaican population those who had the most to lose regarded Eyre as the hero who had saved Jamaica from disaster 14 Eyre s influence on the white planters was so strong that he convinced 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 That move ended the growing influence of the elected free people of colour Eyre distrusted such as Gordon Edward Jordon and Robert Osborn 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 14 Those events created great controversy in England and resulted 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 English liberal intellectuals such as John Bright Charles Darwin Frederic Harrison Thomas Hughes Thomas Henry Huxley Herbert Spencer and A V Dicey 14 Other notable members of the committee included Charles Buxton Edmond Beales Leslie Stephen James Fitzjames Stephen Edward Frankland Thomas Hill Green Frederick Chesson Goldwin Smith Charles Lyell and Henry Fawcett The Governor Eyre Defence and Aid Committee was set up by Thomas Carlyle in September 1866 to argue that Eyre had acted decisively to restore order The committee secretary was Hamilton Hume a member of the Royal Geographical Society with whom Eyre had explored in New South Wales His supporters included John Ruskin Charles Kingsley Charles Dickens Lord Cardigan Alfred Tennyson and John Tyndall 14 16 Cases against Lieutenant Brand and Brigadier Alexander Nelson were presented to the Central Criminal Court but the grand jury declined to certify either case Eyre resided in Market Drayton in Shropshire which was outside 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 14 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 14 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 17 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 14 Later life edit nbsp Eyre circa 1890 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 editA statue of Eyre is in Victoria Square in Adelaide as well as Rumbalara Reserve in Springfield NSW on the Mouat Walk In 1970 an Australia Post then Postmaster General s Department postage stamp bore his portrait 18 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 the Eyre Hotel in Whyalla and the electoral district of Eyre in Western Australia are named in his honour So too are the villages of Eyreton and West Eyreton and Eyrewell Forest in Canterbury and the Eyre Mountains and Eyre Creek in Southland New Zealand Eyre Road Linton Palmerston North also is thought to be named after him as well as a few streets in Canterbury New Zealand Closer to the Monaro New South Wales Eyre Street in Kingston Australian Capital Territory and Eyre Street in Bungendore New South Wales are named for him Eyre s 1840 expedition was dramatised in the 1962 Australian radio play Edward John Eyre by Colin Thiele In 1971 the Australian composer Barry Conyngham wrote the opera Edward John Eyre opera Edward John Eyre using poems by Meredith Oakes and extracts from Eyre s Journals of Expeditions of Discovery 19 Works edit Expeditions of Discovery in South Australia Journal of the Royal Geographical Society of London 13 161 182 1843 ISSN 0266 6235 Wikidata Q108704393 See also editMount Remarkable Water WitchReferences edit Steve Pocock 2000 History Great Australian Bight Safaris Archived from the original on 18 February 2006 Retrieved 8 April 2006 a b Geoffrey Dutton 1966 Eyre Edward John 1815 1901 Australian Dictionary of Biography Volume 1 Australian National University accessed 25 October 2018 Kevin Koepplinger Hero and Tyrant Edward John Eyre s Legacy University of Michigan Archived from the original on 15 December 2012 Foster R Nettelbeck A 2011 Out of the Silence p 32 33 Wakefield Press Manning Geoffrey H 2012 Names E PDF A Compendium of the Place Names of South Australia State Library of South Australia Retrieved 25 October 2018 a b Painter Alison 1 May 1839 Edward John Eyre Professional Historians Association South Australia Archived from the original on 12 October 2020 Retrieved 9 October 2020 a b c Anonymous 17 December 1844 Sailing of the Symmetry The South Australian 2 Wikidata Q105993968 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a author1 has generic name help Ian Henderson 2 January 2014 Planetary Lives Edward Warrulan Edward John Eyre and Queen Victoria English Studies in Africa 57 1 66 80 doi 10 1080 00138398 2014 916910 ISSN 0013 8398 Wikidata Q105946608 Sari Braithwaite Tom Gara Jane Lydon June 2011 From Moorundie to Buckingham Palace Images of King Tenberry and his son Warrulan 1845 55 Journal of Australian Studies 35 2 165 184 doi 10 1080 14443058 2011 560576 ISSN 1444 3058 Wikidata Q105946256 nbsp One or more of the preceding sentences incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain Chisholm Hugh ed 1911 Eyre Edward John Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 10 11th ed Cambridge University Press pp 101 102 Michael Wordsworth Standish 1966 Eyre Edward John The 1966 Encyclopedia of New Zealand Te Ara Retrieved 16 November 2014 Chisholm 1911 C V Black A History of Jamaica London Collins 1975 p 191 a b c d e f g h Peter Handford 2008 Edward John Eyre and the Conflict of Laws Melbourne University Law Review 32 3 822 860 Gad Heuman The Killing Time The Morant Bay Rebellion in Jamaica Knoxville University of Tennessee Press 1994 Thomas Donald 1974 Charge Hurrah Hurrah a life of Cardigan of Balaclava London Routledge and Kegan Paul pp 318 320 ISBN 0 7100 7914 1 Geoffrey Dutton 1982 In search of Edward John Eyre South Melbourne Macmillan pp 115 42 ISBN 0 333 33841 3 Australian postage stamp honouring Edward John Eyre australianstamp com Radic Therese 2002 1 December 1992 Edward John Eyre Grove Music Online 8th ed Oxford University Press ISBN 978 1 56159 263 0 Further reading edit Eyre Edward John 1815 1901 Dictionary of Australian Biography Angus and Robertson 1949 Papers Relative to the Affairs of South Australia Aborigines Accounts and Papers 1843 Volume 3 London William Clowes and Sons pp 267 310 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 Julie Evans 2002 Re reading Edward Eyre Race resistance and repression in Australia and The Caribbean Australian Historical Studies 33 175 198 doi 10 1080 10314610208596190 Catherine Hall 2002 Civilising Subjects Colony and Metropoloe in the English Imagination 1830 1867 Chicago University of Chicago Press Ivan Rudolph 2013 Eyre the forgotten explorer Sydney HarperCollins Journals of Expeditions of Discovery into Central Australia and overland from Adelaide to King George s Sound in the years 1840 41 sent by the Colonists of Australia with the sanction and support of the Government including an Account of the Manners and Customs of the Aborigines and the state of their relations with Europeans By E J Eyre Resident Magistrate Murray River 2 volumes London 1845 Available at the Internet Archive Volume I Volume II External links edit nbsp Wikisource has original works by or about Edward John Eyre nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Edward John Eyre Short biography Archived 15 December 2010 at the Wayback Machine 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 Preceded byRichard Graves MacDonnell Lieutenant Governor of Saint Vincent1854 1861 Succeeded byAnthony Musgrave Preceded byCharles Henry Darling Governor of Jamaica1862 1864 acting 1864 1865 Succeeded bySir Henry Knight Storks Awards and achievements Preceded byJohn Murray Clarke Medal1901 Succeeded byFrederick Manson Bailey Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Edward John Eyre amp oldid 1216561489, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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