fbpx
Wikipedia

Terence Aubrey Murray

Sir Terence Aubrey Murray (10 May 1810 – 22 June 1873) was an Irish-Australian pastoralist, parliamentarian and knight of the realm. He had the double distinction of being, at separate times, both the Speaker of the New South Wales Legislative Assembly and the President of the New South Wales Legislative Council. From 1837 to 1859 he owned the Yarralumla estate, which now serves as the official Canberra residence of the Governor-General of Australia.

Sir
Terence Aubrey Murray
Member of Parliament
for electoral district of Argyle
In office
1859–1862
2nd Speaker of the New South Wales Legislative Assembly
In office
31 January 1860 – 13 October 1862
Preceded bySir Daniel Cooper
Succeeded byJohn Hay
5th President of the New South Wales Legislative Council
In office
14 October 1862 – 22 June 1873
Preceded byWilliam Wentworth
Succeeded bySir John Hay
Personal details
Born(1810-05-10)10 May 1810
Limerick, Ireland
Died22 June 1873(1873-06-22) (aged 63)
Darlinghurst, New South Wales
NationalityAustralian

Early years and background edit

Murray was born in Limerick, Ireland, into a patriotic and politically aware Roman Catholic family. His mother, Ellen Murray (née Fitzgerald), died at Saint-Omer in France in 1812, when Terence was still a child. His father, also named Terence, served as a paymaster in the British Army, enjoying the commissioned rank of captain.[1] Young Terence had two older siblings, Dr James Fitzgerald Murray (who trained as a surgeon), and poet, Anna Maria Murray (who married farmer and grazier George Bunn, of Braidwood, New South Wales).[2]

Paymaster Captain Terence Murray (1781–1835) had travelled with his regiment on a posting to the Australian colony of New South Wales in 1817 and later, in 1825, to India. In 1827, Captain Murray, then a single father, decided to move permanently to New South Wales with Anna-Maria and Terence Aubrey, to take advantage of the free land grants being made to military officers by the colonial government. They arrived in Sydney in April 1827 on the Elizabeth and leased a house at Erskine Park as a temporary measure.[2] Capt. Murray's eldest son, James Fitzgerald, joined them after he finished medical school.

Around 1829, Murray acquired his first farming and grazing land near the village of Collector, south-west of Sydney. His main property was situated alongside Lake George. He called it Winderradeen. Murray added to his country estates in 1837 when he purchased another large sheep-grazing property, Yarralumla, on the Limestone Plains (in what is now the Australian Capital Territory). Today, Yarralumla is the site of the official residence of the Governor-General of Australia.[3] Murray also acquired the Coolamine outstation, where he could graze his sheep in cooler conditions during the hot summer months.

Political career edit

With the establishment of a partially representative parliament in the colony in 1843, Murray resolved to pursue a political career. He was elected unopposed to the New South Wales Legislative Council, representing the Counties of Murray, King and Georgiana. During the ensuing years, he played a prominent role in parliamentary debates and proceedings. In 1856, a fully representative Legislative Assembly was established with the introduction of responsible government. Murray was duly elected to it, representing the electoral district of Southern Boroughs,[4] and from 1859 Argyle.[5] In 1856–1858, he sat in the New South Wales cabinet as the Secretary for Lands and Works.[6] At one point, Murray had the opportunity to form a ministry with himself heading up the government as premier.[2] But the move failed when Murray was unable to enlist the support of sufficient Members of Parliament, a number of whom disliked him, finding him intellectually arrogant. Substantial discrimination against Irish Catholics existed in the colony at that time, and robust Parliamentary debate involving aspersions cast against Murray's religion, can be found on the Hansard. Murray is attributed by biographer, Gwendoline Wilson, as the first colonial politician to campaign against 'transportation' and the death penalty.[2] Murray is noted by biographer, Wilson, to have commissioned Stewart Mowle to preserve the local Aboriginal nations' languages. Wilson, a descendant of Mowle, noted he then catalogued 12.[2][failed verification] Murray also named his property Winderradeen after the notable Wiradjuri warrior and resistance leader Windradyne, who had been active in the Lake George area.[7]

From 1860 to 1862, Murray served as an extremely effective and genuinely impartial speaker of the legislative assembly. Towards the end of 1862, he was appointed for life to the legislative council, which was the upper house of the New South Wales Parliament. He would serve as a distinguished president of the council until his death in 1873.[6]

Murray was a highly intelligent, extremely well-read country "squire". He owned an extensive library of books, a fine collection of furniture and other household possessions, and a comparatively liberal (if sometimes outspokenly opinionated) view of society and its institutions. His library included buddhist and other religious texts, philosophy, political science and sociology texts, and, a Quran. He was tall in stature (over 190 cm) with red hair, a swaggering walk and an imposing physical presence. Murray was also an outstanding horseman and bushman who, at the same time, liked to pursue the comfortable lifestyle of a prosperous "landed gentleman", drawing rents from the tenant farmers who occupied a large portion of Yarralumla after the abolition of assigned convict labour in the early 1840s.

Marriage to Minnie Gibbes edit

On 27 May 1843, Murray married into the Anglo-colonial establishment when he wed Mary "Minnie" Gibbes (1817–1858) at St James' Anglican Church, Sydney. English-born Mary went to live with her new husband (whom she called "Aubrey") at Yarralumla homestead; but being a cultivated and gregarious young lady, she found it extremely hard to adjust to rural life in the lonely and uncouth Australian countryside. She was also physically frail, and the six pregnancies that she experienced during the time of her marriage to Murray badly weakened her constitution, leaving her vulnerable to infection. At the time of Mary's wedding, Murray had settled a moiety of his landed property on her in case he should ever become bankrupt as a result of drought or economic depression. When 40-year-old Mary died suddenly at Winderradeen homestead on 2 January 1858, this arrangement put Murray in a difficult situation because control of Yarralumla and a key part of Winderradeen now passed to the trustees of Mary's estate. Murray wanted to sell some of the land but he could not do so without the trustees' permission. The trustees included Murray's father-in-law, Colonel John George Nathaniel Gibbes (1787-1873), who was a member of the colonial legislature and the Collector of Customs for NSW, and Murray's brother-in-law, Augustus Onslow Manby Gibbes (1828–1897), who was the manager of Yarralumla. (A third trustee, the politician, landowner and founder of the University of Sydney Sir Charles Nicholson, would return to England to live in 1862 and cease to be involved in Murray's affairs.)

In July 1859, Murray sold Yarralumla, all its buildings and its livestock to Augustus Onslow Manby Gibbes in order to raise cash. He continued, however, to reside at Winderradeen, the sale of which his late wife's trustees blocked repeatedly, much to Murray's growing annoyance. Regrettably, the dispute over the protracted non-sale of Winderradeen eventually spilled over into the NSW Supreme Court in 1868, when Murray tried without success to oust the trustees and replace them with people more sympathetic to his needs. This acrimonious legal action widened an existing rift between Murray on the one hand, and Colonel Gibbes and his wife Elizabeth on the other. Mrs Gibbes was particularly hostile towards Murray because she felt that he had contributed to her daughter Mary's early death by keeping her sequestered away on his country properties, far from Sydney and the better standard of medical care that was available there. The Gibbes trustees had also said it was their duty not to rush into the sale of Winderradeen. By obtaining the best possible price for the property, they could purportedly maximise the benefits accruing to Mary's three surviving children—Leila Alexandrina Murray, Evelyn 'Mary' Murray and James 'Aubrey' Gibbes Murray.

Murray remarried in 1860, to governess Agnes Edwardes. They had two sons (see below). His financial position worsened during the mid-1860s when disease devastated his sheep flocks. He auctioned the contents of Winderradeen's library to pay off debts. At one point, Murray's creditors had bailiffs dispatched to Winderradeen to seize valuable items from the homestead. In fact, Murray was only saved from bankruptcy (and automatic removal from his seat in parliament) by the generosity of a few of his colleagues, who loaned him money. He remained in a tight fiscal position for the rest of his life. The trustees of Winderradeen finally consented to the sale of the property at the end of the 1860s, which perhaps reflected the changing situation for the Colonol and Mrs Gibbes, as well as Murray himself, who all died in the years following.

Knighthood, final illness and death edit

Murray's financial travails did not hamper the effectiveness with which he discharged his public duties, and he had a knighthood conferred upon him by Queen Victoria in 1869 for his services to the parliament and the people of NSW. For a comprehensive account and assessment of Murray's administrative achievements, parliamentary activities and political attitudes, the best source remains Gwendoline Wilson's detailed 1968 biography, Murray of Yarralumla, published by Oxford University Press (Melbourne, London, Wellington and New York).

His health declined due to cancer and he was forced to take leave from parliament. In 1873, he died at a rented property, Richmond House, in the inner-Sydney suburb of Darlinghurst. He had endured his painful final illness with dignity and courage. Although baptised a Catholic, a faith that he never renounced, Murray had agreed shortly before his death to be interred in an Anglican churchyard when offered a burial plot at St Jude's, Randwick—in Sydney's eastern suburbs. Such an unorthodox arrangement was typical of Murray, who had consistently taken a non-sectarian approach to Christian worship.

Children and second marriage edit

Murray was survived by three children from his first marriage to Mary Gibbes. They were:

  • Leila Alexandrina Murray (1844–1901), rejected the practice of marriage as the subjugation of women, and worked for a time as a school teacher in Sydney for Lady Agnes Murray, her stepmother. She had also been the housekeeper of her uncle Augustus Onslow Manby Gibbes at Yarralumla. After Gibbes sold Yarralumla in 1881, she became his travelling companion on a nine-year-long tour around the UK and northern Europe. She spent the final few years of her life living on a small rural property near Goulburn, NSW.[8]
  • Evelyn Mary Fanny Matilda Murray (1849–1928), who, like her sister and father, was an expert rider and adept with firearms, from pastoral life. She married a sheep grazier, Robert Morrison, from Wellington, NSW, in 1874. She moved to England following her husband's death, and her daughter attended Cambridge University. Evelyn 'Mary' Morrison, and her daughter, also 'Mary', joined Pankhurst's suffragette movement in the early 1900s. Notably, Mary (Snr) was arrested with Pankhurst on Black Friday, whilst Mary (Jnr) was photographed wearing the suffrage sash, with Pankhurst, before the protest. She died in London.
  • James Aubrey Gibbes Murray (1857–1933), known as 'Aubrey', a skilful draftsman, joined the NSW Department of Lands. His brother Gilbert described him as gentle and retiring. In 1882, he married Marion Edith Lewis in Sydney. They had a number of children, including: Hubert Hubert Leonard Murray, CBE, born in 1886; George Gilbert Murray born 1892,[9] (Lance Corporal, AIF 17th Battalion) of 1 ANZAC Corps, who died in the Battle of Poelcappelle on 9 October 1917.[10] Another of his sons, Dr Gerald Aubrey Murray, born 1890, was the Commonwealth Quarantine Officer and later the Chief Medical Officer of Western Australia; four of six of his sons enlisted in WW2, two in the RAAF and two as Australian Army medics. One, Terence Desmond Murray, born 1924, died in WW2 in flying combat in Hungary during Operation Gardening, whilst attached to the RAF 205 Group 150 Sqn.[11]

In addition, Murray's first marriage produced three daughters who died in infancy. Christened Ayleen, Constance and Geraldine, they were all buried at Yarralumla.

Murray's first wife, Mary, had died in 1858, succumbing after the birth of her last child to heart failure and a severe infection. Mary Gibbes' reputed grandfather was the Duke of York, who was chronically affected by a stigmatized genetic disorder, Porphyria. Two years after this tragedy, on 4 August 1860, Murray married his children's English nanny/governess, Agnes Ann Edwards (1835–1891), at Winderradeen homestead. He would have a further two children with Agnes, who, incidentally, was a cousin of W. S. Gilbert of the celebrated Gilbert and Sullivan musical partnership. These children would both earn a degree of world fame when they grew up. They were:

Following the loss of her husband in 1873, Lady Agnes Murray made ends meet by conducting a girls' school at Sydney's Potts Point. (Her stepdaughter, Leila Alexandrina Murray, was a member of the school's staff for a time.) She was also a founding committee member of the Sydney Foundling Hospital[12] (now The Infants' Home Child and Family Services) a refuge for unmarried mothers and their children. Lady Murray's girls school did not thrive financially in the long run, however. She returned home to England, dying there in 1891.[2]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Read, Richard (1836). "Portrait of Captain Terence Murray". Retrieved 25 July 2020 – via Trove.
  2. ^ a b c d e f Wilson, Gwendoline (1967). "Murray, Sir Terence Aubrey (1810–1873)". Australian Dictionary of Biography. Vol. 2. National Centre of Biography, Australian National University. ISSN 1833-7538. Retrieved 25 July 2020.
  3. ^ Fitzgerald, A (1977). Historic Canberra 1825-1945, a pictorial record. Canberra: Australian Government Publishing Service. ISBN 0-642-02688-2.
  4. ^ Green, Antony. "Elections for Southern Boroughs". New South Wales Election Results 1856-2007. Parliament of New South Wales. Retrieved 24 July 2020.
  5. ^ Green, Antony. "1859 Argyle". New South Wales Election Results 1856-2007. Parliament of New South Wales. Retrieved 24 July 2020.
    Green, Antony. "1860 Argyle". New South Wales Election Results 1856-2007. Parliament of New South Wales. Retrieved 24 July 2020.
  6. ^ a b "Sir Terence Aubrey Murray (1810-1873)". Former members of the Parliament of New South Wales. Retrieved 11 May 2019.
  7. ^ Roberts, David Andrew (2005). "Windradyne (1800–1829)". Australian Dictionary of Biography. National Centre of Biography, Australian National University. ISSN 1833-7538. Retrieved 25 July 2020.
  8. ^ "Portrait of Leila Murray [picture]". Trove. Retrieved 25 July 2020.
  9. ^ "Corporal George Gilbert Murray". www.awm.gov.au. Retrieved 25 July 2020.
  10. ^ "1623 Corporal George Gilbert Murray" (PDF). Australian Red Cross Society wounded and missing enquiry bureau files 1914-1918 war. Retrieved 25 July 2020 – via The Australian War Memorial.
  11. ^ "Terence Desmond Murray". Roll of Honour. Australian War Memorial. Retrieved 25 July 2020.
  12. ^ "Foundling institution". Sydney Mail and New South Wales Advertiser. 9 August 1873. p. 168. Retrieved 28 November 2018 – via Trove.

Further reading edit

For more information about the history of the Yarralumla estate during Murray's tenure, see:

 

Parliament of New South Wales
New South Wales Legislative Council
New district Member for Counties of Murray, King and Georgiana
1843 – 1851
Succeeded byas Member for Counties of King and Georgiana
New district Member for Southern Boroughs
1851 – 1856
Council abolished
New South Wales Legislative Assembly
New parliament Member for Southern Boroughs
1856 – 1859
District abolished
Preceded by Member for Argyle
1859 – 1862
Succeeded by
Preceded by Speaker of the New South Wales Legislative Assembly
1860 – 1862
Succeeded by
Political offices
Preceded by Auditor-General of New South Wales
Aug – Oct 1856
Succeeded by
Secretary for Lands and Works
Aug – Oct 1856
Succeeded by
Preceded by Secretary for Lands and Works
Sep 1857 – Jan 1858
Succeeded by

terence, aubrey, murray, 1810, june, 1873, irish, australian, pastoralist, parliamentarian, knight, realm, double, distinction, being, separate, times, both, speaker, south, wales, legislative, assembly, president, south, wales, legislative, council, from, 183. Sir Terence Aubrey Murray 10 May 1810 22 June 1873 was an Irish Australian pastoralist parliamentarian and knight of the realm He had the double distinction of being at separate times both the Speaker of the New South Wales Legislative Assembly and the President of the New South Wales Legislative Council From 1837 to 1859 he owned the Yarralumla estate which now serves as the official Canberra residence of the Governor General of Australia SirTerence Aubrey MurrayMember of Parliamentfor electoral district of ArgyleIn office 1859 18622nd Speaker of the New South Wales Legislative AssemblyIn office 31 January 1860 13 October 1862Preceded bySir Daniel CooperSucceeded byJohn Hay5th President of the New South Wales Legislative CouncilIn office 14 October 1862 22 June 1873Preceded byWilliam WentworthSucceeded bySir John HayPersonal detailsBorn 1810 05 10 10 May 1810Limerick IrelandDied22 June 1873 1873 06 22 aged 63 Darlinghurst New South WalesNationalityAustralian Contents 1 Early years and background 2 Political career 3 Marriage to Minnie Gibbes 4 Knighthood final illness and death 5 Children and second marriage 6 See also 7 References 8 Further readingEarly years and background editMurray was born in Limerick Ireland into a patriotic and politically aware Roman Catholic family His mother Ellen Murray nee Fitzgerald died at Saint Omer in France in 1812 when Terence was still a child His father also named Terence served as a paymaster in the British Army enjoying the commissioned rank of captain 1 Young Terence had two older siblings Dr James Fitzgerald Murray who trained as a surgeon and poet Anna Maria Murray who married farmer and grazier George Bunn of Braidwood New South Wales 2 Paymaster Captain Terence Murray 1781 1835 had travelled with his regiment on a posting to the Australian colony of New South Wales in 1817 and later in 1825 to India In 1827 Captain Murray then a single father decided to move permanently to New South Wales with Anna Maria and Terence Aubrey to take advantage of the free land grants being made to military officers by the colonial government They arrived in Sydney in April 1827 on the Elizabeth and leased a house at Erskine Park as a temporary measure 2 Capt Murray s eldest son James Fitzgerald joined them after he finished medical school Around 1829 Murray acquired his first farming and grazing land near the village of Collector south west of Sydney His main property was situated alongside Lake George He called it Winderradeen Murray added to his country estates in 1837 when he purchased another large sheep grazing property Yarralumla on the Limestone Plains in what is now the Australian Capital Territory Today Yarralumla is the site of the official residence of the Governor General of Australia 3 Murray also acquired the Coolamine outstation where he could graze his sheep in cooler conditions during the hot summer months Political career editWith the establishment of a partially representative parliament in the colony in 1843 Murray resolved to pursue a political career He was elected unopposed to the New South Wales Legislative Council representing the Counties of Murray King and Georgiana During the ensuing years he played a prominent role in parliamentary debates and proceedings In 1856 a fully representative Legislative Assembly was established with the introduction of responsible government Murray was duly elected to it representing the electoral district of Southern Boroughs 4 and from 1859 Argyle 5 In 1856 1858 he sat in the New South Wales cabinet as the Secretary for Lands and Works 6 At one point Murray had the opportunity to form a ministry with himself heading up the government as premier 2 But the move failed when Murray was unable to enlist the support of sufficient Members of Parliament a number of whom disliked him finding him intellectually arrogant Substantial discrimination against Irish Catholics existed in the colony at that time and robust Parliamentary debate involving aspersions cast against Murray s religion can be found on the Hansard Murray is attributed by biographer Gwendoline Wilson as the first colonial politician to campaign against transportation and the death penalty 2 Murray is noted by biographer Wilson to have commissioned Stewart Mowle to preserve the local Aboriginal nations languages Wilson a descendant of Mowle noted he then catalogued 12 2 failed verification Murray also named his property Winderradeen after the notable Wiradjuri warrior and resistance leader Windradyne who had been active in the Lake George area 7 From 1860 to 1862 Murray served as an extremely effective and genuinely impartial speaker of the legislative assembly Towards the end of 1862 he was appointed for life to the legislative council which was the upper house of the New South Wales Parliament He would serve as a distinguished president of the council until his death in 1873 6 Murray was a highly intelligent extremely well read country squire He owned an extensive library of books a fine collection of furniture and other household possessions and a comparatively liberal if sometimes outspokenly opinionated view of society and its institutions His library included buddhist and other religious texts philosophy political science and sociology texts and a Quran He was tall in stature over 190 cm with red hair a swaggering walk and an imposing physical presence Murray was also an outstanding horseman and bushman who at the same time liked to pursue the comfortable lifestyle of a prosperous landed gentleman drawing rents from the tenant farmers who occupied a large portion of Yarralumla after the abolition of assigned convict labour in the early 1840s Marriage to Minnie Gibbes editOn 27 May 1843 Murray married into the Anglo colonial establishment when he wed Mary Minnie Gibbes 1817 1858 at St James Anglican Church Sydney English born Mary went to live with her new husband whom she called Aubrey at Yarralumla homestead but being a cultivated and gregarious young lady she found it extremely hard to adjust to rural life in the lonely and uncouth Australian countryside She was also physically frail and the six pregnancies that she experienced during the time of her marriage to Murray badly weakened her constitution leaving her vulnerable to infection At the time of Mary s wedding Murray had settled a moiety of his landed property on her in case he should ever become bankrupt as a result of drought or economic depression When 40 year old Mary died suddenly at Winderradeen homestead on 2 January 1858 this arrangement put Murray in a difficult situation because control of Yarralumla and a key part of Winderradeen now passed to the trustees of Mary s estate Murray wanted to sell some of the land but he could not do so without the trustees permission The trustees included Murray s father in law Colonel John George Nathaniel Gibbes 1787 1873 who was a member of the colonial legislature and the Collector of Customs for NSW and Murray s brother in law Augustus Onslow Manby Gibbes 1828 1897 who was the manager of Yarralumla A third trustee the politician landowner and founder of the University of Sydney Sir Charles Nicholson would return to England to live in 1862 and cease to be involved in Murray s affairs In July 1859 Murray sold Yarralumla all its buildings and its livestock to Augustus Onslow Manby Gibbes in order to raise cash He continued however to reside at Winderradeen the sale of which his late wife s trustees blocked repeatedly much to Murray s growing annoyance Regrettably the dispute over the protracted non sale of Winderradeen eventually spilled over into the NSW Supreme Court in 1868 when Murray tried without success to oust the trustees and replace them with people more sympathetic to his needs This acrimonious legal action widened an existing rift between Murray on the one hand and Colonel Gibbes and his wife Elizabeth on the other Mrs Gibbes was particularly hostile towards Murray because she felt that he had contributed to her daughter Mary s early death by keeping her sequestered away on his country properties far from Sydney and the better standard of medical care that was available there The Gibbes trustees had also said it was their duty not to rush into the sale of Winderradeen By obtaining the best possible price for the property they could purportedly maximise the benefits accruing to Mary s three surviving children Leila Alexandrina Murray Evelyn Mary Murray and James Aubrey Gibbes Murray Murray remarried in 1860 to governess Agnes Edwardes They had two sons see below His financial position worsened during the mid 1860s when disease devastated his sheep flocks He auctioned the contents of Winderradeen s library to pay off debts At one point Murray s creditors had bailiffs dispatched to Winderradeen to seize valuable items from the homestead In fact Murray was only saved from bankruptcy and automatic removal from his seat in parliament by the generosity of a few of his colleagues who loaned him money He remained in a tight fiscal position for the rest of his life The trustees of Winderradeen finally consented to the sale of the property at the end of the 1860s which perhaps reflected the changing situation for the Colonol and Mrs Gibbes as well as Murray himself who all died in the years following Knighthood final illness and death editMurray s financial travails did not hamper the effectiveness with which he discharged his public duties and he had a knighthood conferred upon him by Queen Victoria in 1869 for his services to the parliament and the people of NSW For a comprehensive account and assessment of Murray s administrative achievements parliamentary activities and political attitudes the best source remains Gwendoline Wilson s detailed 1968 biography Murray of Yarralumla published by Oxford University Press Melbourne London Wellington and New York His health declined due to cancer and he was forced to take leave from parliament In 1873 he died at a rented property Richmond House in the inner Sydney suburb of Darlinghurst He had endured his painful final illness with dignity and courage Although baptised a Catholic a faith that he never renounced Murray had agreed shortly before his death to be interred in an Anglican churchyard when offered a burial plot at St Jude s Randwick in Sydney s eastern suburbs Such an unorthodox arrangement was typical of Murray who had consistently taken a non sectarian approach to Christian worship Children and second marriage editMurray was survived by three children from his first marriage to Mary Gibbes They were Leila Alexandrina Murray 1844 1901 rejected the practice of marriage as the subjugation of women and worked for a time as a school teacher in Sydney for Lady Agnes Murray her stepmother She had also been the housekeeper of her uncle Augustus Onslow Manby Gibbes at Yarralumla After Gibbes sold Yarralumla in 1881 she became his travelling companion on a nine year long tour around the UK and northern Europe She spent the final few years of her life living on a small rural property near Goulburn NSW 8 Evelyn Mary Fanny Matilda Murray 1849 1928 who like her sister and father was an expert rider and adept with firearms from pastoral life She married a sheep grazier Robert Morrison from Wellington NSW in 1874 She moved to England following her husband s death and her daughter attended Cambridge University Evelyn Mary Morrison and her daughter also Mary joined Pankhurst s suffragette movement in the early 1900s Notably Mary Snr was arrested with Pankhurst on Black Friday whilst Mary Jnr was photographed wearing the suffrage sash with Pankhurst before the protest She died in London James Aubrey Gibbes Murray 1857 1933 known as Aubrey a skilful draftsman joined the NSW Department of Lands His brother Gilbert described him as gentle and retiring In 1882 he married Marion Edith Lewis in Sydney They had a number of children including Hubert Hubert Leonard Murray CBE born in 1886 George Gilbert Murray born 1892 9 Lance Corporal AIF 17th Battalion of 1 ANZAC Corps who died in the Battle of Poelcappelle on 9 October 1917 10 Another of his sons Dr Gerald Aubrey Murray born 1890 was the Commonwealth Quarantine Officer and later the Chief Medical Officer of Western Australia four of six of his sons enlisted in WW2 two in the RAAF and two as Australian Army medics One Terence Desmond Murray born 1924 died in WW2 in flying combat in Hungary during Operation Gardening whilst attached to the RAF 205 Group 150 Sqn 11 In addition Murray s first marriage produced three daughters who died in infancy Christened Ayleen Constance and Geraldine they were all buried at Yarralumla Murray s first wife Mary had died in 1858 succumbing after the birth of her last child to heart failure and a severe infection Mary Gibbes reputed grandfather was the Duke of York who was chronically affected by a stigmatized genetic disorder Porphyria Two years after this tragedy on 4 August 1860 Murray married his children s English nanny governess Agnes Ann Edwards 1835 1891 at Winderradeen homestead He would have a further two children with Agnes who incidentally was a cousin of W S Gilbert of the celebrated Gilbert and Sullivan musical partnership These children would both earn a degree of world fame when they grew up They were Sir John Hubert Plunkett Murray 1861 1940 who attended Oxford University and on his return to Australia served as a commissioned officer in the Boer War In 1908 he became the highly regarded colonial administrator of Papua dying in office shortly before the Japanese invasion during World War II Dr Gilbert Murray 1866 1957 who became Regius Professor of Greek at Oxford University and among other things a participant in the drafting of the League of Nations Covenant Note Professor Murray whose full array of given names was George Gilbert Aime declined to accept a knighthood when one was offered by the King in 1912 but he accepted the Order of Merit in 1941 Following the loss of her husband in 1873 Lady Agnes Murray made ends meet by conducting a girls school at Sydney s Potts Point Her stepdaughter Leila Alexandrina Murray was a member of the school s staff for a time She was also a founding committee member of the Sydney Foundling Hospital 12 now The Infants Home Child and Family Services a refuge for unmarried mothers and their children Lady Murray s girls school did not thrive financially in the long run however She returned home to England dying there in 1891 2 See also editMembers of the Legislative Council1843 18511851 1856 Election results for the Legislative Council184318481851 Members of the Legislative Assembly1856 18581856 18581858 18591859 18601860 1864 Election results for the Legislative Assembly185618591860 Members of the Legislative Council1861 18641864 18691869 18721872 1874References edit Read Richard 1836 Portrait of Captain Terence Murray Retrieved 25 July 2020 via Trove a b c d e f Wilson Gwendoline 1967 Murray Sir Terence Aubrey 1810 1873 Australian Dictionary of Biography Vol 2 National Centre of Biography Australian National University ISSN 1833 7538 Retrieved 25 July 2020 Fitzgerald A 1977 Historic Canberra 1825 1945 a pictorial record Canberra Australian Government Publishing Service ISBN 0 642 02688 2 Green Antony Elections for Southern Boroughs New South Wales Election Results 1856 2007 Parliament of New South Wales Retrieved 24 July 2020 Green Antony 1859 Argyle New South Wales Election Results 1856 2007 Parliament of New South Wales Retrieved 24 July 2020 Green Antony 1860 Argyle New South Wales Election Results 1856 2007 Parliament of New South Wales Retrieved 24 July 2020 a b Sir Terence Aubrey Murray 1810 1873 Former members of the Parliament of New South Wales Retrieved 11 May 2019 Roberts David Andrew 2005 Windradyne 1800 1829 Australian Dictionary of Biography National Centre of Biography Australian National University ISSN 1833 7538 Retrieved 25 July 2020 Portrait of Leila Murray picture Trove Retrieved 25 July 2020 Corporal George Gilbert Murray www awm gov au Retrieved 25 July 2020 1623 Corporal George Gilbert Murray PDF Australian Red Cross Society wounded and missing enquiry bureau files 1914 1918 war Retrieved 25 July 2020 via The Australian War Memorial Terence Desmond Murray Roll of Honour Australian War Memorial Retrieved 25 July 2020 Foundling institution Sydney Mail and New South Wales Advertiser 9 August 1873 p 168 Retrieved 28 November 2018 via Trove Further reading editFor more information about the history of the Yarralumla estate during Murray s tenure see Canberra Historical Journal New Series Number 48 September 2001 pages 11 31 Gables Ghosts amp Governors General The Historic House at Yarralumla by C D Coulthard Clark Allen amp Unwin North Sydney 1988 Boase George Clement 1894 Murray Terence Aubrey In Lee Sidney ed Dictionary of National Biography Vol 39 London Smith Elder amp Co Parliament of New South WalesNew South Wales Legislative CouncilNew district Member for Counties of Murray King and Georgiana1843 1851 Succeeded byJames Chisholmas Member for Counties of King and GeorgianaNew district Member for Southern Boroughs1851 1856 Council abolishedNew South Wales Legislative AssemblyNew parliament Member for Southern Boroughs1856 1859 District abolishedPreceded byDaniel Deniehy Member for Argyle1859 1862 Succeeded bySamuel EmmanuelPreceded bySir Daniel Cooper Speaker of the New South Wales Legislative Assembly1860 1862 Succeeded byJohn HayPolitical officesPreceded byBob Nichols Auditor General of New South WalesAug Oct 1856 Succeeded byWilliam MayneSecretary for Lands and WorksAug Oct 1856 Succeeded byJohn HayPreceded byJohn Hay Secretary for Lands and WorksSep 1857 Jan 1858 Succeeded byJohn Robertson Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Terence Aubrey Murray amp oldid 1179774954, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.