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John Cracroft Wilson

Sir John Cracroft Wilson KCSI CB (21 May 1808 – 2 March 1881), also known as Nabob Wilson, was a British-educated civil servant in India, farmer and politician in New Zealand.

Sir John Cracroft Wilson
Member of the New Zealand Parliament
for City of Christchurch
In office
1861–1866
Preceded byHenry Sewell
Succeeded byJames FitzGerald
Member of the New Zealand Parliament
for Coleridge
In office
1866–1870
Preceded bynew constituency
Succeeded byJohn Karslake Karslake[1]
Member of the New Zealand Parliament
for Heathcote
In office
1872–1875
Preceded byJohn Hall
Succeeded byJames Temple Fisher
Personal details
Born21 May 1808
Onamore, India
Died2 March 1881(1881-03-02) (aged 72)
Cashmere, New Zealand
Spouses
  • Elizabeth (née Wall)
  • Jane Torie (née Greig)
Relations
Children8 (Laura, William, Emma, Frederick, Constance, Alexander, Laura, and Walter) from first marriage
ResidenceCracroft Wilson estate
Occupation
  • civil servant
  • farmer
  • politician

Early life

John Cracroft Wilson was born in Onamore, India, the son of Alexander Wilson FRS, a judge in the Madras Civil Service and a noted botanist, and Elizabeth Clementina Wilson (née Cracroft). His mother was from a long established family—the Cracrofts of Hackthorn Hall in Lincolnshire. Her family name was given to him as a second Christian name, a custom that has been followed by the family ever since; they are thus known as the Cracroft Wilsons.[2]

He was educated at Haileybury College and Brasenose College, Oxford. He returned to India in 1828 and entered the Bengal Civil Service as a cadet, advancing to become a magistrate.[3][4] Advancing to the rank of assistant commissioner to William Sleeman, he was assigned to the Doab region in 1832 where he investigated men who were accused of thuggee.

He married Elizabeth (née Wall), probably on 4 November 1828 at Westminster, or Brixton, Surrey. His wife died in 1843 in Moradabad after giving birth to their eighth child.[4][5] He was married again, on 12 October 1844, to Jane Torie Greig in Bareilly near Moradabad. There were no children from this second marriage.[6]

Australia and New Zealand

In 1853 his health broke down and he was ordered to convalesce in a cooler climate. He wanted to find a country suitable for the retirement of employees of the East India Company. Accordingly, he sailed to Australia on the Queen with his wife, daughter Emma, many servants, stock and exotic livestock. He did not like Australia, but met Alfred Cox, who was buying sheep for his next venture in the Canterbury region of New Zealand. Wilson decided to also go to Canterbury, and, after purchasing sheep and cattle in Sydney, took them to Lyttelton in the Akbar.[2] After a disastrous journey where much of his stock died and 1,200 sheep had to be jettisoned, he arrived on 8 April 1854. His stock was transferred to the nearby Gollans Bay (the bay in Lyttelton Harbour beneath Evans Pass[7]), where he lost more stock to tutu poisoning and southerlies.[2] His party made its way over the Port Hills via the Bridle Path.[2] He took up 108 hectares (1.08 km2) of land on the other side of the Port Hills and named the farm Cashmere (now a suburb of Christchurch) after Kashmir in India.[8] He leased three more runs further away from Christchurch which he named Broadlands, High Peaks, and Cracroft. The run at Cracroft, near Hinds, was at 20,392 hectares (203.92 km2) the second largest in Canterbury. At his Cashmere station, he built a house with 11 rooms and several farm buildings. Wilson left Lyttelton on 19 December 1844 on the Waterwitch for India, and the following year, his eldest son arrived to take over the management of the properties.[9][6]

His wife and daughter would follow him some time later, and they would not arrive in Moradabad before 1857. His daughter Emma met Logan Campbell on the journey; they married on 25 February 1858 at Meerut, NWP India; they lived in Europe then in Auckland, New Zealand.[6]

Service in India

Wilson arrived in India in May 1855. During the Indian Rebellion of 1857, he secured special powers from the Lieutenant-Governor and acted to prevent the spread of disaffection. His intervention was so effective that, after the Mutiny, Lord Canning, the Viceroy, recommended him for a distinction

because he has the enviable distinction of having, by his obstinate courage and perseverance, saved more Christian lives than any man in India … at the repeatedly imminent peril of his own life.

In May 1860, Queen Victoria appointed him a Companion of the Order of the Bath (CB)[10] and, in 1872 Cracroft Wilson was offered, and accepted, the rank of Knight Commander (KCSI) of the Order of the Star of India.[11]

Later life in New Zealand

After he returned to New Zealand in 1859 Cracroft Wilson was elected to the House of Representatives for the electorates of City of Christchurch (1861–1866), Coleridge (1866–1870), and Heathcote (1872–1875).[6]

At the end of the 1866–1870 term, Cracroft Wilson retired from the Coleridge electorate due to an 'unfortunate accident' that he had suffered.[12] On 30 July 1872, he was elected unopposed in a by-election to represent Heathcote following the resignation by John Hall, who had accepted a position in the Legislative Council.[13] In the 1875–1876 general election, held on 4 January 1876 in the Heathcote electorate, Cracroft Wilson was defeated by James Temple Fisher.[14][15]

He was for some years Chairman of the Public Petitions Committee. He was a forceful and, at times, provocative debater. During the 1860s, when Māori affairs were frequently before the House, Cracroft Wilson drew freely on his Indian experiences to reinforce his arguments. He strongly urged the use of Gurkha troops as the most effective means of bringing the war to a speedy and successful conclusion.

He represented Ashburton on the Canterbury Provincial Council from May 1862 to May 1866 and Heathcote from March to July 1871, and again from April 1874 to abolition of the Provinces in October 1876.[16] He was on the Canterbury Executive Council from 15 April 1875 until its abolition, and during its last session (April to June 1875), he was its president.[6][17] In addition he served on numerous local bodies and was a keen member of the Canterbury Acclimatisation Society. He was an early member of the Canterbury Jockey Club and helped Cass to select the site of the racecourse. He commanded the Canterbury Yeomanry Cavalry, was a patron of opera and drama, a governor of Canterbury College, and a diocesan synodsman. As a farmer, he imported pedigree sheep, principally Lincolns, and founded a stud flock.

Cracroft Wilson died at Cashmere, Christchurch, on 2 March 1881.[18] He was survived by his wife and four of his children (Frederick, Alexander, Emma and Constance).[19]

During World War II, the military commandeered the Cracroft Wilson estate, founded by Cracroft Wilson in 1854, for their Southern Group headquarters, and secret work on the Cracroft Caverns underneath the house began in 1942.[20]

Notes

  1. ^ "The New Parliament". Nelson Examiner and New Zealand Chronicle. Vol. XXX, no. 41. 18 February 1871. p. 2.
  2. ^ a b c d Roberts 1991, p. 9.
  3. ^ McLintock, A. H. (23 November 2011) [1966]. Wilson, Sir John Cracroft, K.C.S.I., C.B. An Encyclopaedia of New Zealand.
  4. ^ a b "Sir John Cracroft Wilson. C.B., K.C.S.I". The Cyclopedia of New Zealand. Christchurch: The Cyclopedia Company Limited. 1903.
  5. ^ "Alexander Cracroft Wilson, 1840–1911". Christchurch: Christchurch City Libraries. Retrieved 2 March 2010.
  6. ^ a b c d e Kristiansen, Tessa. "Wilson, John Cracroft – Biography". Dictionary of New Zealand Biography. Ministry for Culture and Heritage. Retrieved 10 July 2011.
  7. ^ Taylor 2001, p. 57.
  8. ^ Roberts 1991, p. 10.
  9. ^ Roberts 1991, pp. 9–10.
  10. ^ "The London Gazette". 18 May 1860.
  11. ^ "No. 23863". The London Gazette. 31 May 1872. p. 2575.
  12. ^ "Local and General". The Star. No. 818. 10 January 1871. p. 2.
  13. ^ "Heathcote Election". The Star. No. 1381. 31 July 1872. p. 2. Retrieved 3 March 2010.
  14. ^ "General Elections Heathcote Polling". The Star. No. 2429. 5 January 1876. p. 2.
  15. ^ "Heathcote Election". The Star. No. 2430. 6 January 1876. p. 2.
  16. ^ Scholefield 1950, p. 197.
  17. ^ Scholefield 1950, pp. 189, 191.
  18. ^ "Deaths". The Star. No. 4015. Christchurch. 3 March 1881. p. 2.
  19. ^ "Obituary". The Star. No. 4016. 4 March 1881. p. 3.
  20. ^ . Archives New Zealand. Archived from the original on 24 May 2010. Retrieved 2 March 2010.

References

  • Roberts, Betty; Roberts, Norman (1991). Old Stone House, 1870–1990 and the Cracroft Community Centre of Christchurch, 1972–1990. Lincoln, New Zealand: Te Waihora Press. ISBN 0-473-01141-7.
  • Scholefield, Guy (1950) [First ed. published 1913]. New Zealand Parliamentary Record, 1840–1949 (3rd ed.). Wellington: Govt. Printer.
  • Taylor, William Anderson (2001). "Port Cooper or Whangaraupo (Bay of the Raupo Reeds)". Lore and history of the South Island Maori. Christchurch: Kiwi Publishers. Retrieved 22 June 2013.
  • Christchurch City Libraries (2016). "The Thug Hunter of Cashmere". Christchurch City Libraries. Christchurch. Retrieved 8 December 2017.

john, cracroft, wilson, kcsi, 1808, march, 1881, also, known, nabob, wilson, british, educated, civil, servant, india, farmer, politician, zealand, kcsi, cbmember, zealand, parliament, city, christchurchin, office, 1861, 1866preceded, byhenry, sewellsucceeded,. Sir John Cracroft Wilson KCSI CB 21 May 1808 2 March 1881 also known as Nabob Wilson was a British educated civil servant in India farmer and politician in New Zealand Sir John Cracroft WilsonKCSI CBMember of the New Zealand Parliament for City of ChristchurchIn office 1861 1866Preceded byHenry SewellSucceeded byJames FitzGeraldMember of the New Zealand Parliament for ColeridgeIn office 1866 1870Preceded bynew constituencySucceeded byJohn Karslake Karslake 1 Member of the New Zealand Parliament for HeathcoteIn office 1872 1875Preceded byJohn HallSucceeded byJames Temple FisherPersonal detailsBorn21 May 1808Onamore IndiaDied2 March 1881 1881 03 02 aged 72 Cashmere New ZealandSpousesElizabeth nee Wall Jane Torie nee Greig RelationsWilliam Wilson uncle Logan Campbell son in law Mary Grigg granddaughter Children8 Laura William Emma Frederick Constance Alexander Laura and Walter from first marriageResidenceCracroft Wilson estateOccupationcivil servant farmer politician Contents 1 Early life 2 Australia and New Zealand 3 Service in India 4 Later life in New Zealand 5 Notes 6 ReferencesEarly life EditJohn Cracroft Wilson was born in Onamore India the son of Alexander Wilson FRS a judge in the Madras Civil Service and a noted botanist and Elizabeth Clementina Wilson nee Cracroft His mother was from a long established family the Cracrofts of Hackthorn Hall in Lincolnshire Her family name was given to him as a second Christian name a custom that has been followed by the family ever since they are thus known as the Cracroft Wilsons 2 He was educated at Haileybury College and Brasenose College Oxford He returned to India in 1828 and entered the Bengal Civil Service as a cadet advancing to become a magistrate 3 4 Advancing to the rank of assistant commissioner to William Sleeman he was assigned to the Doab region in 1832 where he investigated men who were accused of thuggee He married Elizabeth nee Wall probably on 4 November 1828 at Westminster or Brixton Surrey His wife died in 1843 in Moradabad after giving birth to their eighth child 4 5 He was married again on 12 October 1844 to Jane Torie Greig in Bareilly near Moradabad There were no children from this second marriage 6 Australia and New Zealand EditIn 1853 his health broke down and he was ordered to convalesce in a cooler climate He wanted to find a country suitable for the retirement of employees of the East India Company Accordingly he sailed to Australia on the Queen with his wife daughter Emma many servants stock and exotic livestock He did not like Australia but met Alfred Cox who was buying sheep for his next venture in the Canterbury region of New Zealand Wilson decided to also go to Canterbury and after purchasing sheep and cattle in Sydney took them to Lyttelton in the Akbar 2 After a disastrous journey where much of his stock died and 1 200 sheep had to be jettisoned he arrived on 8 April 1854 His stock was transferred to the nearby Gollans Bay the bay in Lyttelton Harbour beneath Evans Pass 7 where he lost more stock to tutu poisoning and southerlies 2 His party made its way over the Port Hills via the Bridle Path 2 He took up 108 hectares 1 08 km2 of land on the other side of the Port Hills and named the farm Cashmere now a suburb of Christchurch after Kashmir in India 8 He leased three more runs further away from Christchurch which he named Broadlands High Peaks and Cracroft The run at Cracroft near Hinds was at 20 392 hectares 203 92 km2 the second largest in Canterbury At his Cashmere station he built a house with 11 rooms and several farm buildings Wilson left Lyttelton on 19 December 1844 on the Waterwitch for India and the following year his eldest son arrived to take over the management of the properties 9 6 His wife and daughter would follow him some time later and they would not arrive in Moradabad before 1857 His daughter Emma met Logan Campbell on the journey they married on 25 February 1858 at Meerut NWP India they lived in Europe then in Auckland New Zealand 6 Service in India EditWilson arrived in India in May 1855 During the Indian Rebellion of 1857 he secured special powers from the Lieutenant Governor and acted to prevent the spread of disaffection His intervention was so effective that after the Mutiny Lord Canning the Viceroy recommended him for a distinction because he has the enviable distinction of having by his obstinate courage and perseverance saved more Christian lives than any man in India at the repeatedly imminent peril of his own life In May 1860 Queen Victoria appointed him a Companion of the Order of the Bath CB 10 and in 1872 Cracroft Wilson was offered and accepted the rank of Knight Commander KCSI of the Order of the Star of India 11 Later life in New Zealand EditNew Zealand Parliament Years Term Electorate Party1861 1866 3rd Christchurch Independent1866 1870 4th Coleridge Independent1872 1875 5th Heathcote IndependentAfter he returned to New Zealand in 1859 Cracroft Wilson was elected to the House of Representatives for the electorates of City of Christchurch 1861 1866 Coleridge 1866 1870 and Heathcote 1872 1875 6 At the end of the 1866 1870 term Cracroft Wilson retired from the Coleridge electorate due to an unfortunate accident that he had suffered 12 On 30 July 1872 he was elected unopposed in a by election to represent Heathcote following the resignation by John Hall who had accepted a position in the Legislative Council 13 In the 1875 1876 general election held on 4 January 1876 in the Heathcote electorate Cracroft Wilson was defeated by James Temple Fisher 14 15 He was for some years Chairman of the Public Petitions Committee He was a forceful and at times provocative debater During the 1860s when Maori affairs were frequently before the House Cracroft Wilson drew freely on his Indian experiences to reinforce his arguments He strongly urged the use of Gurkha troops as the most effective means of bringing the war to a speedy and successful conclusion He represented Ashburton on the Canterbury Provincial Council from May 1862 to May 1866 and Heathcote from March to July 1871 and again from April 1874 to abolition of the Provinces in October 1876 16 He was on the Canterbury Executive Council from 15 April 1875 until its abolition and during its last session April to June 1875 he was its president 6 17 In addition he served on numerous local bodies and was a keen member of the Canterbury Acclimatisation Society He was an early member of the Canterbury Jockey Club and helped Cass to select the site of the racecourse He commanded the Canterbury Yeomanry Cavalry was a patron of opera and drama a governor of Canterbury College and a diocesan synodsman As a farmer he imported pedigree sheep principally Lincolns and founded a stud flock Cracroft Wilson died at Cashmere Christchurch on 2 March 1881 18 He was survived by his wife and four of his children Frederick Alexander Emma and Constance 19 During World War II the military commandeered the Cracroft Wilson estate founded by Cracroft Wilson in 1854 for their Southern Group headquarters and secret work on the Cracroft Caverns underneath the house began in 1942 20 Notes Edit The New Parliament Nelson Examiner and New Zealand Chronicle Vol XXX no 41 18 February 1871 p 2 a b c d Roberts 1991 p 9 McLintock A H 23 November 2011 1966 Wilson Sir John Cracroft K C S I C B An Encyclopaedia of New Zealand a b Sir John Cracroft Wilson C B K C S I The Cyclopedia of New Zealand Christchurch The Cyclopedia Company Limited 1903 Alexander Cracroft Wilson 1840 1911 Christchurch Christchurch City Libraries Retrieved 2 March 2010 a b c d e Kristiansen Tessa Wilson John Cracroft Biography Dictionary of New Zealand Biography Ministry for Culture and Heritage Retrieved 10 July 2011 Taylor 2001 p 57 Roberts 1991 p 10 Roberts 1991 pp 9 10 The London Gazette 18 May 1860 No 23863 The London Gazette 31 May 1872 p 2575 Local and General The Star No 818 10 January 1871 p 2 Heathcote Election The Star No 1381 31 July 1872 p 2 Retrieved 3 March 2010 General Elections Heathcote Polling The Star No 2429 5 January 1876 p 2 Heathcote Election The Star No 2430 6 January 1876 p 2 Scholefield 1950 p 197 Scholefield 1950 pp 189 191 Deaths The Star No 4015 Christchurch 3 March 1881 p 2 Obituary The Star No 4016 4 March 1881 p 3 Cracroft Caverns Archives New Zealand Archived from the original on 24 May 2010 Retrieved 2 March 2010 References Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to John Cracroft Wilson Roberts Betty Roberts Norman 1991 Old Stone House 1870 1990 and the Cracroft Community Centre of Christchurch 1972 1990 Lincoln New Zealand Te Waihora Press ISBN 0 473 01141 7 Scholefield Guy 1950 First ed published 1913 New Zealand Parliamentary Record 1840 1949 3rd ed Wellington Govt Printer Taylor William Anderson 2001 Port Cooper or Whangaraupo Bay of the Raupo Reeds Lore and history of the South Island Maori Christchurch Kiwi Publishers Retrieved 22 June 2013 Christchurch City Libraries 2016 The Thug Hunter of Cashmere Christchurch City Libraries Christchurch Retrieved 8 December 2017 New Zealand ParliamentPreceded byHenry Sewell Member of Parliament for Christchurch1861 1866 Succeeded byJames FitzGeraldNew constituency Member of Parliament for Coleridge1866 1870 Succeeded byJohn Karslake KarslakePreceded byJohn Hall Member of Parliament for Heathcote1872 1876 Succeeded byJames Fisher Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title John Cracroft Wilson amp oldid 1137618160, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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