John Basson Humffray | |
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Born | (1824-04-17)17 April 1824 Newtown, Montgomeryshire, Wales |
Died | 18 March 1891(1891-03-18) (aged 66) Ballarat, Victoria, Australia |
Known for | Leader of the Ballarat Reform League, defender of those arrested at the Eureka Stockade and Politician |
John Basson Humffray (17 April 1824 – 18 March 1891) was a leading advocate in the movement of miner reform process in the British colony of Victoria, and later a member of parliament.
Humffray was born in Newtown, Montgomeryshire, Wales. He was articled to a solicitor, and became active in the Chartist movement, but abandoned his legal studies and migrated to Victoria, Australia in 1853.
From rural Wales to Australia
Humffray arrived in Melbourne on the "Star of the East" on 19 September 1853, and moved to Ballarat two months later to try his hand at gold digging. At a protest meeting of over 10,000 diggers at Bakery Hill on Saturday, 11 November 1854, Humffray was elected secretary of the Ballarat Reform League. In his view, the diggers' grievances were the result of an unrepresentative political system, which he felt could be changed by moral suasion.
Humffray was a member of the three-person delegation which met the Governor of Victoria, Sir Charles Hotham, in Melbourne on Monday, 27 November 1854. The miners' demands for economic and political reforms were rejected. After a particularly vicious licence hunt, a meeting of the Ballarat Reform League was held on Thursday, 30 November 1854 at which the miners rejected "moral force" as advocated by Humffray. They embarked on the path of "physical force" by electing Peter Lalor as their leader, and deciding to meet force with force by building the Eureka Stockade.
Humffray was not part of the rebellion and played the role of peacemaker in the lead up to the battle at the Eureka Stockade on 3 December 1854. He represented the interests of aggrieved diggers at the Commission of Enquiry into the discontent on the goldfields, and was a vocal defender of the 13 miners who were charged with high treason for their role in the rebellion. He was in 1855 an organiser of Ballarat's first eisteddfod (fore-runner of the South Street competitions), editor of the short-lived Ballarat Leader, first president of the Ballarat Mechanics' Institute, and passed first-year law, University of Melbourne (1860). As a result of losing money in mining speculations, Humffray became dependent on charity in his last years. After a long illness, he died a pauper on 18 March 1891.
Political career
When the miners were granted the right to vote and representation in 1855 Humffray was elected unopposed as the member of the Victorian Legislative Council for Ballaarat (1855-1856); then Member of the Victorian Legislative Assembly for North Grant (1856-1859) then Ballarat East (1859-1871). He served as Minister for Mines (November 1860 to November 1861) and Chairman of the Royal Commission on Mining (1862).
Legacy
Humffray Street, one of the major roads in Ballarat, is named after him, with that being sometime prior to 1858.
Humffray was an Anglican, and was buried in the Ballaarat Old Cemetery, near those who had died in the Eureka rebellion. A headstone was erected by the people of Ballarat.
References
- ^ "John Basson Humffray". Re-Member: a database of all Victorian MPs since 1851. Parliament of Victoria. Archived from the original on 23 April 2023. Retrieved 27 August 2022.
- ^ Langmore, Diane. "Humffray, John Basson (1824–1891)". Australian Dictionary of Biography. Canberra: National Centre of Biography, Australian National University. ISBN 978-0-522-84459-7. ISSN 1833-7538. OCLC 70677943. Retrieved 8 October 2015.
- ^ Corfield, Justin; Wickham, Dorothy; & Gervasoni, Clare, Eureka Encyclopaedia, Ballarat Heritage Services, 2004, pg 281
- "The Society's History". The Ballarat Star. No. 20851. Victoria, Australia. 21 February 1924. p. 6. Retrieved 19 October 2022 – via National Library of Australia.
- "Heritage Victoria - Online Heritage Database".
- "VHD".
- Corfield, Justin; Wickham, Dorothy; & Gervasoni, Clare, Eureka Encyclopaedia, Ballarat Heritage Services, 2004, pg 280-282
- Serle, Geoffrey, The Golden Age: A history of the colony of Victoria 1851-1861, Melbourne, MUP, 1977, p. 164.
- Reclaim the Radical Spirit of the Eureka Rebellion
External links
Victorian Legislative Council | ||
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New creation | Member for Ballaarat 1855–1856 Served alongside: Peter Lalor |
Original Council abolished |
Victorian Legislative Assembly | ||
New creation | Member for North Grant 1856–1859 |
District abolished |
New creation | Member for Ballarat East 1859–1864 Served alongside: John Cathie |
Succeeded byCharles Jones |
Preceded byCharles Jones | Member for Ballarat East 1868–1871 Served alongside: Charles Dyte |
Succeeded byJohn James |
People of the Eureka Rebellion | |
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Rebels | |
Government officials | |
Military and police | |
Other miners and civilians | |
See also |
- Australian Anglicans
- Members of the Victorian Legislative Council
- Members of the Victorian Legislative Assembly
- Chartists
- Welsh emigrants to Australia
- Politicians from the Colony of Victoria
- 1824 births
- 1891 deaths
- Politicians from Ballarat
- Protests in Australia
- 19th-century Welsh people
- 19th-century Australian politicians
- 19th-century Australian lawyers
- People of the Eureka Rebellion
- Ministers of mines (Victoria)
- Eureka Rebellion