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John Pascoe Fawkner

John Pascoe Fawkner (20 October 1792 – 4 September 1869) was an early Australian pioneer, businessman and politician of Melbourne, Australia. In 1835 he financed a party of free settlers from Van Diemen's Land (now called Tasmania), to sail to the mainland in his ship, Enterprize. Fawkner's party sailed to Port Phillip and up the Yarra River to found a settlement which became the city of Melbourne.

John Pascoe Fawkner
Portrait of John Pascoe Fawkner, founder of Melbourne, by William Strutt, 1856: oil on canvas; 61.3 x 51.2 cm. National Library of Australia.
Born(1792-10-20)20 October 1792
Died4 September 1869(1869-09-04) (aged 76)
NationalityBritish
Occupation(s)Businessman, pioneer, politician
SpouseEliza Cobb
Parent(s)John Fawkner, Hannah Pascoe

Early years

John Pascoe Fawkner was born near Cripplegate[1] London in 1792 to John Fawkner (a metal refiner)[1] and his wife Hannah née Pascoe, whose parents were Cornish.[2] As a 10-year-old, he accompanied his convict father, who had been sentenced to fourteen years gaol for receiving stolen goods, being transported on HMS Calcutta, alongside his mother and younger sister Elizabeth,[3] as part of a two ship fleet to establish a new British colony in Bass Strait in 1803. His reminiscences[4] describe the time leading up to departure, the voyage and their arrival at Sullivan Bay, near modern-day Sorrento, the day before Fawkner turned 11. For several months the colony struggled to survive. There were some 27 convict escape attempts, including that of William Buckley:

"Wm Buckley, Charles Shore and two other prisoners, attempted to leave the Camp at Sullivans Bay on Christmas eve. The Police laid in wait for them, and as they Attempted to pass and refused to halt when called upon three of the Police men fired. Charles Shore fell shot in the Groin the Other three escaped, And William Buckley was found alive in August 1835 nearly 32 years after his escape. He had fallen almost into the condition of the Aborigines, he did not teach them anything but adopted their ways and manners."

[5]

Lack of wood and fresh water eventually persuaded Lieutenant-Governor David Collins to abandon the colony in 1804 with the settlers and convicts departing for the new town of Hobart in Van Diemen's Land.

In 1806 the family obtained a farm, upon which he worked without horses, without capital, and with scarcely any other appliances than a spade and a hoe. At eighteen years of age he apprenticed himself to a builder and a sawyer, and laboured for some years in a saw-pit.[6] In Hobart the young Fawkner assisted his father (who had obtained a conditional pardon) in his bakery, timber business and brewery, taking charge of the bakery in Macquarie Street.

In 1814 he fell into trouble, "aiding and abetting", in an attempted escape from Van Diemen's Land to South America, seven transported convicts; Antonio Martinio, Forteso De Santo, Patrick McCabe, Vissanso Boucherie, Antonio Janio, Montrose Johnson and William Green.[7] The group secretly went to Recherche Bay to fell trees with which they built a lugger. When the lugger was completed, Fawkner was put ashore and made his way back to his farm. After sailing some distance out into the open ocean, the remaining men on the lugger returned to Van Diemen's Land because of leaks in the water tanks. The vessel was sighted at the entrance to the Derwent by a government ship, and taken in charge because of her 'singular appearance'. Fawkner and Santos were the only ones of the group tried and in August 1814 were each sentenced to 500 lashes and three years hard labour.[8] In a letter dated 19 October 1814 from Lieut.-governor Davey to Lieutenant Jeffreys instructs him that he is to receive on board John Fawkner:

"one of those persons who lately absconded from the settlements after committing some most atrocious robberys and depredations, and is under sentence of transportation for five years; he proceeds to Sydney for the purpose of being sent to the Coal river during the period of his sentence, and also to break the chain of a very dangerous connection he has formed in this settlement".

Fawkner's account of this incident was that "a party of prisoners, determined to escape, sought his assistance and that in a moment of foolish sympathy he undertook to help them".[9][10] He wrote the following account of the incident later in life:

"The important night fell, the clouds of evening set on the night of the 15th of April 1814 when I with the seven men, the four named foreigners and William Green, Patrick McCabe and Montrose Johnson took our places in the boat, five as oarsmen, myself as steersman and without noise or show we pushed off, passed the guard boat and soon took up sail and away with a fair breeze. Fixed on Recherche Bay in D'Entrecasteaux on a fresh water stream and set to, to cut timber to build a lugger; this work was completed by the end of June 1814 we had no rope sufficient and set up a rope walk and from bark supplied our wants. Wooden tanks were made to hold fresh water, and the course to be taken was to make out South America when the lugger was launched. I got these men to land me near Hobart Town and they then put to sea. After sailing some 100 miles they found the tanks unsafe and returned to get water casks and whilst five men were away on this Service the two left in Charge ran the lugger into the Derwent on their way to Hobart Town, the Government Vessel, the Estramadiera caught sight of the strange lugger rigged craft, sent a boat and took her to Hobart Town, these base men told that I had found the means to build and victual the Lugger and the result was I had to meet the charge and suffered for my quixotism".[11]

In December 1819 transported convict, Eliza Cobb, and John Pascoe Fawkner loaded up a cart and moved to Launceston. They were married on 5 December 1822, with a permit from Governor George Arthur. They established a bakery, timber business, bookshop, a newspaper The Launceston Advertiser in 1829, nursery and orchard. Soon after Eliza had received a pardon, Fawkner obtained a licence to run the Cornwall Hotel in 1826.

 
William Strutt. Eliza Fawkner 1801–1879. State Library Victoria, Melbourne, Australia. H32027

Settlement of Melbourne

 
The Enterprize, Fawkner's ship. State Library Victoria, Melbourne, Australia. H36536

Fawkner became increasingly frustrated with a coercive and restrictive government, focused on controlling the convict population, with free settlers and the contribution they could make, an afterthought:

"It was to get rid of these evils as well as the Tyranny of Gov Arthur, and in hopes to open out a wide field of energy and in this Immense scope of Country lying between Bass Straits and Port Jackson, that tempted me to cast about to find some few countrymen to accompany me and assist to open up these fresh fields and pastures new. Free Laws for free men, on Freeholds, where land was plentiful and a wide choice, unburthened either with A Felon coerced population or a Govr with power to enact laws fitted only for the desperate and doubly convicted criminals that pervaded."

[12]

Reading of reports back from the Hentys at Portland and Charles Sturts journeys further north and the good country to be found, encouraged Fawkner's resolve to head to Port Phillip and search for a suitable settlement site. In April 1835, he purchased the topsail schooner, Enterprize.

John Batman led an exploring party to Port Phillip District in May 1835, on board the schooner Rebecca. He explored a large area in what is now the northern suburbs of Melbourne, as far north as Keilor, and saw it as ideal country for a sheep run, before returning to Launceston.

When the Enterprize was ready to leave in August 1835, at the last moment creditors prevented Fawkner from joining the voyage. On board the Enterprize as it departed George Town, were Captain John Lancey, Master Mariner (Fawkner's representative); George Evans, builder; William Jackson and Robert Marr, carpenters; Evan Evans, servant to George Evans; and Fawkner's servants, Charles Wyse, ploughman, Thomas Morgan, general servant, James Gilbert, blacksmith and his pregnant wife, Mary, under Captain Peter Hunter.

On 15 August 1835, Enterprize entered the Yarra River. After being hauled upstream, she moored at the foot of the present day William Street. On 30 August 1835 the settlers disembarked to build their store and clear land to grow vegetables. The Fawkners arrived in the Port Phillip District, on Friday, 16 October 1835, on the second trip of the Enterprize. Fawkner's diary reads: 'Warped up to the Basin, landed 2 cows, 2 calves and the 2 horses.'[13] Only days later, these diary entries illustrate the energy and purpose he brought to Port Phillip. On 20 October he wrote: "My birthday this day I complete my 43 year – time too precious to be idle – employed battening the roof of house". [14] "We set to work and in one month from the day of landing at Melbourne, I had a four roomed weather boarded house completely floored with deal boards, with pannel doors, and glazed windows ready and fit for use. Having no Bricklayer with us I in conjunction with my blacksmith as laborer built a good brick chimney".[15]

Once a house was built, on to provisioning the colony - in November: "Commenced ploughing for a garden near the falls on the South side of the Yarra. found the leg of an iron pot about 8 inches below the surface – think it was left there by the runaway man from Point Nepean in 1803 who returned and described the Yarra his name was Dd G. Planted potatoes, set out beans and peas, sowed radishes and cabbage seeds".[14] Fawkner was active in the first land sales in Melbourne. On 1 June 1837 he bought the No 1 Block corner of Bourke and William Street for [£32], and another on the corner of Market and Flinders streets. His early home (built on the Bourke Street site) appears in this work by Robert Russell, taken from the south side of the Yarra River, from the Falls, near the present day Queen Street.[16]

 
Melbourne from The Falls, 1838 by Robert Russell. State Library Victoria, Melbourne, Australia. H24528.

Melbourne businessman and politician

Fawkner did much to secure his place in the early history of Melbourne. He opened the first hotel on the corner of Market Street and Flinders Lane.[17] He played a central role in the early newspaper scene of Melbourne, publishing two of the first papers. Through these, and an active public life he voiced his passions for equal access to participation in government, support for small business owners and landholders;[18] and the rights to independence for Port Phillip and a "strenuous opponent of transportation to these shores."[4]

He published the Melbourne Advertiser on 1 January 1838 which was the district's first newspaper. The Advertiser's first nine or ten weekly editions were handwritten in ink. The old wooden printing press brought to Tasmania by Lt. Governor David Collins in 1803, and some worn typeface were eventually obtained from Launceston and the first printed edition appeared on 5 March 1838. It was to last for a further 17 editions when it was closed down on 23 April 1838 for want of a newspaper licence from Sydney. The Port Phillip Patriot and Melbourne Advertiser was commenced on 6 February 1839 by newly licensed John Pascoe Fawkner. It was published daily commencing on 15 May 1845. In association with the newspaper he ran a bookselling and stationery business.

Fawkner acquired a property in 1839 as one of eleven lots in the subdivision of the Coburg district by the government surveyor, Robert Hoddle, in the present day Pascoe Vale. The property was called Belle Vue Park or Pascoe Vale Park.[19][20] and was bounded approximately by the Moonee Ponds Creek, Gaffney Street, Northumberland Road and the western prolongation of Boundary Road. There were two other lots to the east of Moonee Ponds Creek.[21] He lived at his farmhouse and at his town-house in Collingwood between 1840 and 1855.

Fawkner was very active in the development of the Port Phillip settlement, including its political life and he set out his views on participation and franchise in his document, Constitution and form of government, believed to have been written in the 1830s :

“All men have equal political rights, therefore all Males above the age of twenty one years of age, of sane mind, will be entitled to vote for the election of all officers requisite to preserve social order and all persons of ability and mora deportment will be eligible to hold any situation n the ruling or government of the colony…. A council of three resident householders shall be elected annually by the votes of all the male population as above. No fixed property shall be required for this office, good moral conduct and a fair share of talent shall render every such man eligible."

[22]

In 1842 Fawkner was elected one of the Market Commissioners, and in 1843 a town councillor, an office which he held for many years.[3] On 18 September 1851 Fawkner was elected to the first Victorian Legislative Council for Talbot, Dalhousie and Angelsey,[23] and held the seat until the original Council was abolished in March 1856.[24] In November 1856 Fawkner was elected to the first Parliament of the self-governing colony of Victoria, as a member of the Victorian Legislative Council for Central Province, a seat he held until his death on 4 September 1869.[24] Perhaps anticipating his life was drawing to a close, he sold his collection of books the year before.[25] His library contained 1,266 volumes and the titles listed in the sale catalogue indicates he was well read.

In Melbourne as in Launceston, Fawkner made many enemies, before dying as the grand old man of the colony on 4 September 1869 in Smith Street, Collingwood at the age of 77. At his government-appointed public funeral[10] over 200 carriages were present, and 15,000 persons were reported to have lined the streets on his burial day, 8 September 1869. He was buried at the Melbourne General Cemetery. He and Eliza did not have any children.

 
Funeral of the late John Pascoe Fawkner. State Library Victoria, Melbourne, Australia. IAN11/10/69/191

Legacy

 
John Fawkner's bluestone grave at Melbourne General Cemetery.
 
Statue of John Pascoe Fawkner at the site of Melbourne former National Mutual Plaza off Collins Street in Melbourne. Unveiled 26 January 1979

Many sites in Melbourne have been named in honour of John Fawkner including the John Fawkner Private Hospital as well as the suburbs of Fawkner, Pascoe Vale and Fawkner Park and the Fawkner Beacon weather station in Port Phillip.

In 1979 a statue of Fawkner, commissioned by Melbourne City Council and produced by sculptor Michael Mezaros, was unveiled on Collins Street, where it stood outside the National Mutual building, alongside a statue to John Batman, for almost 40 years, before being removed to make way for the CBUS Collins Arch development.[26][27]

A replica of the Enterprize, the ship he purchased to form the settlement of Melbourne, was built at the Melbourne Maritime Museum and was launched in 1997 and sails with tourists aboard from various places around Port Phillip Bay.

References

  • History of Melbourne
  • Billot, C.P. (1985). The Life and Times of John Pascoe Fawkner. Melbourne: Hyland House. ISBN 0-908090-77-3.
  • Serle, Percival (1949). "Fawkner, John Pascoe". Dictionary of Australian Biography. Sydney: Angus & Robertson. Retrieved 18 October 2008.
  1. ^ a b Anderson, Hugh (1966). "Fawkner, John Pascoe (1792–1869)". Australian Dictionary of Biography. National Centre of Biography, Australian National University. pp. 368–370. ISSN 1833-7538. Retrieved 12 August 2014.
  2. ^ C. P. Billot, The life and times of John Pascoe Fawkner, 1985
  3. ^ a b Mennell, Philip (1892). "Fawkner, Hon. John Pascoe" . The Dictionary of Australasian Biography. London: Hutchinson & Co – via Wikisource.
  4. ^ a b Reminiscences of John Pascoe Fawkner. La Trobe Journal, No 3 April 1969. Original at MS 13018, BOX 3661/3A
  5. ^ Reminiscences of John Pascoe Fawkner. John Pascoe Fawkner. Papers, 1828-1869.MS 13018, BOX 3661/3A. Book 2, p.18.
  6. ^ "JOHN PASCOE FAWKNER". The Argus. Melbourne, Vic. 6 September 1869. p. 5. Retrieved 24 January 2012 – via Trove.
  7. ^ Humphrey, A. W. H. (21 May 1814). "Public Notice". The Van Diemen's Land Gazette and General Advertiser. Hobart, Tasmania. Retrieved 9 July 2020.
  8. ^ Anderson 1966
  9. ^ Bonwick, James (1883), Port Phillip settlement, Sampson Low, Marston, Searle, & Rivington, p. 283
  10. ^ a b Gonner, Edward Carter Kersey (1889). "Fawkner, John Pascoe" . In Stephen, Leslie (ed.). Dictionary of National Biography. Vol. 18. London: Smith, Elder & Co.
  11. ^ Fawkner, John Pascoe (2002). Cotter, Richard (ed.). John Pascoe Fawkner's Sullivan Bay reminiscences. Red Hill South: Lavender Hill Multimedia. ISBN 0957967632.
  12. ^ Reminiscences of John Pascoe Fawkner. John Pascoe Fawkner. Papers, 1828-1869.MS 13018, BOX 3661/3A. Book 1, p.7.
  13. ^ John Pascoe Fawkner (edited by C.P. Billot) (1983), Melbourne's missing chronicle; being the journal of preparations for departure to and proceedings at Port Philip, Melbourne, Quartet, p.10. ISBN 0908128207
  14. ^ a b Reminiscences of John Pascoe Fawkner. John Pascoe Fawkner. Papers, 1828-1869.MS 13018, BOX 3661/3A.
  15. ^ Essential Facts in the Life of John Pascoe Fawkner covering the years 1792-1857 Written by himself.
  16. ^ Badman, H. E. "Plan of town of Melbourne, 1837 A.D first land sales held in Melbourne on 1st June & 1st November 1837". Melbourne: Sands & McDougall Limited. Retrieved 1 August 2022 – via State Library Victoria.
  17. ^ McGuire, Paul (1952), Inns of Australia, Melbourne, William Heinemann, p.86-7
  18. ^ Tim Hogan. Resplendent lights of publicity and despicable journals: the early newspapers of the Port Phillip District. Latrobeana. Vol.10, No. 2, June 2011 ISSN 1447-4026
  19. ^ Pascoe vale Farm. Heritage Council of Victoria
  20. ^ Pascoevale Farm, Oak Park Court, Oak Park. Heritage Victoria
  21. ^ Parish of Jika Jika in the County of Bourke c.1839-1850
  22. ^ Tim Hogan. John Pascoe Fawkner Papers, 1832–71.[1] La Trobe journal. No. 100, 2017.ISSN 1441-3760
  23. ^ Labilliere, Francis Peter (1878). "Early History of the Colony of Victoria". Retrieved 12 August 2014.
  24. ^ a b "John Pascoe Fawkner". Re-Member: a database of all Victorian MPs since 1851. Parliament of Victoria. Retrieved 27 August 2022.
  25. ^ Kirsop, Wallace (1985). John Pascoe Fawkner’s Library (First ed.). Melbourne: Book Collector’s Society of Australia. p. 16. ISBN 0958922004.
  26. ^ Ridley, Ronald T. (1996). A Walking Guide to Melbourne's Monuments. Melbourne: Melbourne University Press. ISBN 0-522-84727-7.
  27. ^ Millar, Benjamin (18 September 2018). "Statue of limitations: No place in the city for men we'd rather forget". The Age. Retrieved 25 August 2019.

External links

  • Enterprize – Melbourne's tall ship
  • John Fawkner Private Hospital

 

Victorian Legislative Council
New district Member for Talbot, Dalhousie and Anglesey
September 1851 – March 1856
With: William Mollison
Original Council abolished
New district Member for Central Province
November 1856 – September 1869
With: John Hodgson 1856–60
William Hull 1860–66
James Graham 1866–69
Henry Miller 1856–58
Thomas Fellows 1858–68
John O'Shanassy 1868–69
John Hood 1856–59
George Cole 1859–69
Nehemiah Guthridge 1856–58
Thomas T. à Beckett 1858–69
Succeeded by

john, pascoe, fawkner, other, people, named, john, faulkner, john, faulkner, disambiguation, october, 1792, september, 1869, early, australian, pioneer, businessman, politician, melbourne, australia, 1835, financed, party, free, settlers, from, diemen, land, c. For other people named John Faulkner see John Faulkner disambiguation John Pascoe Fawkner 20 October 1792 4 September 1869 was an early Australian pioneer businessman and politician of Melbourne Australia In 1835 he financed a party of free settlers from Van Diemen s Land now called Tasmania to sail to the mainland in his ship Enterprize Fawkner s party sailed to Port Phillip and up the Yarra River to found a settlement which became the city of Melbourne John Pascoe FawknerPortrait of John Pascoe Fawkner founder of Melbourne by William Strutt 1856 oil on canvas 61 3 x 51 2 cm National Library of Australia Born 1792 10 20 20 October 1792Cripplegate London England Kingdom of Great BritainDied4 September 1869 1869 09 04 aged 76 Collingwood Colony of Victoria British EmpireNationalityBritishOccupation s Businessman pioneer politicianSpouseEliza CobbParent s John Fawkner Hannah Pascoe Contents 1 Early years 2 Settlement of Melbourne 3 Melbourne businessman and politician 4 Legacy 5 References 6 External linksEarly years EditJohn Pascoe Fawkner was born near Cripplegate 1 London in 1792 to John Fawkner a metal refiner 1 and his wife Hannah nee Pascoe whose parents were Cornish 2 As a 10 year old he accompanied his convict father who had been sentenced to fourteen years gaol for receiving stolen goods being transported on HMS Calcutta alongside his mother and younger sister Elizabeth 3 as part of a two ship fleet to establish a new British colony in Bass Strait in 1803 His reminiscences 4 describe the time leading up to departure the voyage and their arrival at Sullivan Bay near modern day Sorrento the day before Fawkner turned 11 For several months the colony struggled to survive There were some 27 convict escape attempts including that of William Buckley Wm Buckley Charles Shore and two other prisoners attempted to leave the Camp at Sullivans Bay on Christmas eve The Police laid in wait for them and as they Attempted to pass and refused to halt when called upon three of the Police men fired Charles Shore fell shot in the Groin the Other three escaped And William Buckley was found alive in August 1835 nearly 32 years after his escape He had fallen almost into the condition of the Aborigines he did not teach them anything but adopted their ways and manners 5 Lack of wood and fresh water eventually persuaded Lieutenant Governor David Collins to abandon the colony in 1804 with the settlers and convicts departing for the new town of Hobart in Van Diemen s Land In 1806 the family obtained a farm upon which he worked without horses without capital and with scarcely any other appliances than a spade and a hoe At eighteen years of age he apprenticed himself to a builder and a sawyer and laboured for some years in a saw pit 6 In Hobart the young Fawkner assisted his father who had obtained a conditional pardon in his bakery timber business and brewery taking charge of the bakery in Macquarie Street In 1814 he fell into trouble aiding and abetting in an attempted escape from Van Diemen s Land to South America seven transported convicts Antonio Martinio Forteso De Santo Patrick McCabe Vissanso Boucherie Antonio Janio Montrose Johnson and William Green 7 The group secretly went to Recherche Bay to fell trees with which they built a lugger When the lugger was completed Fawkner was put ashore and made his way back to his farm After sailing some distance out into the open ocean the remaining men on the lugger returned to Van Diemen s Land because of leaks in the water tanks The vessel was sighted at the entrance to the Derwent by a government ship and taken in charge because of her singular appearance Fawkner and Santos were the only ones of the group tried and in August 1814 were each sentenced to 500 lashes and three years hard labour 8 In a letter dated 19 October 1814 from Lieut governor Davey to Lieutenant Jeffreys instructs him that he is to receive on board John Fawkner one of those persons who lately absconded from the settlements after committing some most atrocious robberys and depredations and is under sentence of transportation for five years he proceeds to Sydney for the purpose of being sent to the Coal river during the period of his sentence and also to break the chain of a very dangerous connection he has formed in this settlement Fawkner s account of this incident was that a party of prisoners determined to escape sought his assistance and that in a moment of foolish sympathy he undertook to help them 9 10 He wrote the following account of the incident later in life The important night fell the clouds of evening set on the night of the 15th of April 1814 when I with the seven men the four named foreigners and William Green Patrick McCabe and Montrose Johnson took our places in the boat five as oarsmen myself as steersman and without noise or show we pushed off passed the guard boat and soon took up sail and away with a fair breeze Fixed on Recherche Bay in D Entrecasteaux on a fresh water stream and set to to cut timber to build a lugger this work was completed by the end of June 1814 we had no rope sufficient and set up a rope walk and from bark supplied our wants Wooden tanks were made to hold fresh water and the course to be taken was to make out South America when the lugger was launched I got these men to land me near Hobart Town and they then put to sea After sailing some 100 miles they found the tanks unsafe and returned to get water casks and whilst five men were away on this Service the two left in Charge ran the lugger into the Derwent on their way to Hobart Town the Government Vessel the Estramadiera caught sight of the strange lugger rigged craft sent a boat and took her to Hobart Town these base men told that I had found the means to build and victual the Lugger and the result was I had to meet the charge and suffered for my quixotism 11 In December 1819 transported convict Eliza Cobb and John Pascoe Fawkner loaded up a cart and moved to Launceston They were married on 5 December 1822 with a permit from Governor George Arthur They established a bakery timber business bookshop a newspaper The Launceston Advertiser in 1829 nursery and orchard Soon after Eliza had received a pardon Fawkner obtained a licence to run the Cornwall Hotel in 1826 William Strutt Eliza Fawkner 1801 1879 State Library Victoria Melbourne Australia H32027Settlement of Melbourne Edit The Enterprize Fawkner s ship State Library Victoria Melbourne Australia H36536 Fawkner became increasingly frustrated with a coercive and restrictive government focused on controlling the convict population with free settlers and the contribution they could make an afterthought It was to get rid of these evils as well as the Tyranny of Gov Arthur and in hopes to open out a wide field of energy and in this Immense scope of Country lying between Bass Straits and Port Jackson that tempted me to cast about to find some few countrymen to accompany me and assist to open up these fresh fields and pastures new Free Laws for free men on Freeholds where land was plentiful and a wide choice unburthened either with A Felon coerced population or a Govr with power to enact laws fitted only for the desperate and doubly convicted criminals that pervaded 12 Reading of reports back from the Hentys at Portland and Charles Sturts journeys further north and the good country to be found encouraged Fawkner s resolve to head to Port Phillip and search for a suitable settlement site In April 1835 he purchased the topsail schooner Enterprize John Batman led an exploring party to Port Phillip District in May 1835 on board the schooner Rebecca He explored a large area in what is now the northern suburbs of Melbourne as far north as Keilor and saw it as ideal country for a sheep run before returning to Launceston When the Enterprize was ready to leave in August 1835 at the last moment creditors prevented Fawkner from joining the voyage On board the Enterprize as it departed George Town were Captain John Lancey Master Mariner Fawkner s representative George Evans builder William Jackson and Robert Marr carpenters Evan Evans servant to George Evans and Fawkner s servants Charles Wyse ploughman Thomas Morgan general servant James Gilbert blacksmith and his pregnant wife Mary under Captain Peter Hunter On 15 August 1835 Enterprize entered the Yarra River After being hauled upstream she moored at the foot of the present day William Street On 30 August 1835 the settlers disembarked to build their store and clear land to grow vegetables The Fawkners arrived in the Port Phillip District on Friday 16 October 1835 on the second trip of the Enterprize Fawkner s diary reads Warped up to the Basin landed 2 cows 2 calves and the 2 horses 13 Only days later these diary entries illustrate the energy and purpose he brought to Port Phillip On 20 October he wrote My birthday this day I complete my 43 year time too precious to be idle employed battening the roof of house 14 We set to work and in one month from the day of landing at Melbourne I had a four roomed weather boarded house completely floored with deal boards with pannel doors and glazed windows ready and fit for use Having no Bricklayer with us I in conjunction with my blacksmith as laborer built a good brick chimney 15 Once a house was built on to provisioning the colony in November Commenced ploughing for a garden near the falls on the South side of the Yarra found the leg of an iron pot about 8 inches below the surface think it was left there by the runaway man from Point Nepean in 1803 who returned and described the Yarra his name was Dd G Planted potatoes set out beans and peas sowed radishes and cabbage seeds 14 Fawkner was active in the first land sales in Melbourne On 1 June 1837 he bought the No 1 Block corner of Bourke and William Street for 32 and another on the corner of Market and Flinders streets His early home built on the Bourke Street site appears in this work by Robert Russell taken from the south side of the Yarra River from the Falls near the present day Queen Street 16 Melbourne from The Falls 1838 by Robert Russell State Library Victoria Melbourne Australia H24528 Melbourne businessman and politician EditFawkner did much to secure his place in the early history of Melbourne He opened the first hotel on the corner of Market Street and Flinders Lane 17 He played a central role in the early newspaper scene of Melbourne publishing two of the first papers Through these and an active public life he voiced his passions for equal access to participation in government support for small business owners and landholders 18 and the rights to independence for Port Phillip and a strenuous opponent of transportation to these shores 4 He published the Melbourne Advertiser on 1 January 1838 which was the district s first newspaper The Advertiser s first nine or ten weekly editions were handwritten in ink The old wooden printing press brought to Tasmania by Lt Governor David Collins in 1803 and some worn typeface were eventually obtained from Launceston and the first printed edition appeared on 5 March 1838 It was to last for a further 17 editions when it was closed down on 23 April 1838 for want of a newspaper licence from Sydney The Port Phillip Patriot and Melbourne Advertiser was commenced on 6 February 1839 by newly licensed John Pascoe Fawkner It was published daily commencing on 15 May 1845 In association with the newspaper he ran a bookselling and stationery business Fawkner acquired a property in 1839 as one of eleven lots in the subdivision of the Coburg district by the government surveyor Robert Hoddle in the present day Pascoe Vale The property was called Belle Vue Park or Pascoe Vale Park 19 20 and was bounded approximately by the Moonee Ponds Creek Gaffney Street Northumberland Road and the western prolongation of Boundary Road There were two other lots to the east of Moonee Ponds Creek 21 He lived at his farmhouse and at his town house in Collingwood between 1840 and 1855 Fawkner was very active in the development of the Port Phillip settlement including its political life and he set out his views on participation and franchise in his document Constitution and form of government believed to have been written in the 1830s All men have equal political rights therefore all Males above the age of twenty one years of age of sane mind will be entitled to vote for the election of all officers requisite to preserve social order and all persons of ability and mora deportment will be eligible to hold any situation n the ruling or government of the colony A council of three resident householders shall be elected annually by the votes of all the male population as above No fixed property shall be required for this office good moral conduct and a fair share of talent shall render every such man eligible 22 In 1842 Fawkner was elected one of the Market Commissioners and in 1843 a town councillor an office which he held for many years 3 On 18 September 1851 Fawkner was elected to the first Victorian Legislative Council for Talbot Dalhousie and Angelsey 23 and held the seat until the original Council was abolished in March 1856 24 In November 1856 Fawkner was elected to the first Parliament of the self governing colony of Victoria as a member of the Victorian Legislative Council for Central Province a seat he held until his death on 4 September 1869 24 Perhaps anticipating his life was drawing to a close he sold his collection of books the year before 25 His library contained 1 266 volumes and the titles listed in the sale catalogue indicates he was well read In Melbourne as in Launceston Fawkner made many enemies before dying as the grand old man of the colony on 4 September 1869 in Smith Street Collingwood at the age of 77 At his government appointed public funeral 10 over 200 carriages were present and 15 000 persons were reported to have lined the streets on his burial day 8 September 1869 He was buried at the Melbourne General Cemetery He and Eliza did not have any children Funeral of the late John Pascoe Fawkner State Library Victoria Melbourne Australia IAN11 10 69 191Legacy Edit John Fawkner s bluestone grave at Melbourne General Cemetery Statue of John Pascoe Fawkner at the site of Melbourne former National Mutual Plaza off Collins Street in Melbourne Unveiled 26 January 1979 Many sites in Melbourne have been named in honour of John Fawkner including the John Fawkner Private Hospital as well as the suburbs of Fawkner Pascoe Vale and Fawkner Park and the Fawkner Beacon weather station in Port Phillip In 1979 a statue of Fawkner commissioned by Melbourne City Council and produced by sculptor Michael Mezaros was unveiled on Collins Street where it stood outside the National Mutual building alongside a statue to John Batman for almost 40 years before being removed to make way for the CBUS Collins Arch development 26 27 A replica of the Enterprize the ship he purchased to form the settlement of Melbourne was built at the Melbourne Maritime Museum and was launched in 1997 and sails with tourists aboard from various places around Port Phillip Bay References EditHistory of Melbourne Billot C P 1985 The Life and Times of John Pascoe Fawkner Melbourne Hyland House ISBN 0 908090 77 3 Serle Percival 1949 Fawkner John Pascoe Dictionary of Australian Biography Sydney Angus amp Robertson Retrieved 18 October 2008 a b Anderson Hugh 1966 Fawkner John Pascoe 1792 1869 Australian Dictionary of Biography National Centre of Biography Australian National University pp 368 370 ISSN 1833 7538 Retrieved 12 August 2014 C P Billot The life and times of John Pascoe Fawkner 1985 a b Mennell Philip 1892 Fawkner Hon John Pascoe The Dictionary of Australasian Biography London Hutchinson amp Co via Wikisource a b Reminiscences of John Pascoe Fawkner La Trobe Journal No 3 April 1969 Original at MS 13018 BOX 3661 3A Reminiscences of John Pascoe Fawkner John Pascoe Fawkner Papers 1828 1869 MS 13018 BOX 3661 3A Book 2 p 18 JOHN PASCOE FAWKNER The Argus Melbourne Vic 6 September 1869 p 5 Retrieved 24 January 2012 via Trove Humphrey A W H 21 May 1814 Public Notice The Van Diemen s Land Gazette and General Advertiser Hobart Tasmania Retrieved 9 July 2020 Anderson 1966 Bonwick James 1883 Port Phillip settlement Sampson Low Marston Searle amp Rivington p 283 a b Gonner Edward Carter Kersey 1889 Fawkner John Pascoe In Stephen Leslie ed Dictionary of National Biography Vol 18 London Smith Elder amp Co Fawkner John Pascoe 2002 Cotter Richard ed John Pascoe Fawkner s Sullivan Bay reminiscences Red Hill South Lavender Hill Multimedia ISBN 0957967632 Reminiscences of John Pascoe Fawkner John Pascoe Fawkner Papers 1828 1869 MS 13018 BOX 3661 3A Book 1 p 7 John Pascoe Fawkner edited by C P Billot 1983 Melbourne s missing chronicle being the journal of preparations for departure to and proceedings at Port Philip Melbourne Quartet p 10 ISBN 0908128207 a b Reminiscences of John Pascoe Fawkner John Pascoe Fawkner Papers 1828 1869 MS 13018 BOX 3661 3A Essential Facts in the Life of John Pascoe Fawkner covering the years 1792 1857 Written by himself Badman H E Plan of town of Melbourne 1837 A D first land sales held in Melbourne on 1st June amp 1st November 1837 Melbourne Sands amp McDougall Limited Retrieved 1 August 2022 via State Library Victoria McGuire Paul 1952 Inns of Australia Melbourne William Heinemann p 86 7 Tim Hogan Resplendent lights of publicity and despicable journals the early newspapers of the Port Phillip District Latrobeana Vol 10 No 2 June 2011 ISSN 1447 4026 Pascoe vale Farm Heritage Council of Victoria Pascoevale Farm Oak Park Court Oak Park Heritage Victoria Parish of Jika Jika in the County of Bourke c 1839 1850 Tim Hogan John Pascoe Fawkner Papers 1832 71 1 La Trobe journal No 100 2017 ISSN 1441 3760 Labilliere Francis Peter 1878 Early History of the Colony of Victoria Retrieved 12 August 2014 a b John Pascoe Fawkner Re Member a database of all Victorian MPs since 1851 Parliament of Victoria Retrieved 27 August 2022 Kirsop Wallace 1985 John Pascoe Fawkner s Library First ed Melbourne Book Collector s Society of Australia p 16 ISBN 0958922004 Ridley Ronald T 1996 A Walking Guide to Melbourne s Monuments Melbourne Melbourne University Press ISBN 0 522 84727 7 Millar Benjamin 18 September 2018 Statue of limitations No place in the city for men we d rather forget The Age Retrieved 25 August 2019 External links EditEnterprize Melbourne s tall ship John Fawkner Private Hospital Victorian Legislative CouncilNew district Member for Talbot Dalhousie and AngleseySeptember 1851 March 1856 With William Mollison Original Council abolishedNew district Member for Central ProvinceNovember 1856 September 1869 With John Hodgson 1856 60William Hull 1860 66James Graham 1866 69Henry Miller 1856 58Thomas Fellows 1858 68John O Shanassy 1868 69John Hood 1856 59George Cole 1859 69Nehemiah Guthridge 1856 58Thomas T a Beckett 1858 69 Succeeded byHenry Walsh Retrieved from 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