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Thomas Cockburn-Campbell

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Australian politician
Thomas Cockburn-Campbell
Sir Thomas Cockburn-Campbell, c. 1891
1st President of the Western Australian Legislative Council
In office
29 December 1890 – 27 September 1892
Preceded byPosition created
Succeeded byGeorge Shenton
Member of the Western Australian Legislative Council for Albany
In office
23 September 1874 – 4 February 1889
Preceded byAlbert Hassell
Succeeded byLancel de Hamel
Personal details
Born18 April 1845
Exeter, England, UK
Died27 September 1892(1892年09月27日) (aged 47)
Parliament House, West Perth, Western Australia
Cause of deathChlorodyne overdose
Resting placeEast Perth Cemeteries
Spouse
Lucy Anne Trimmer
(m. 1870)
Children4
RelativesMerome Beard (great-great-granddaughter)
ProfessionTabloid editor, politician

Sir Thomas Cockburn-Campbell, 4th Baronet (18 April 1845 – 27 September 1892) was an English-born journalist and politician in Australia.

Early life

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Cockburn-Campbell was born in Exeter, the second son of Sir Alexander Thomas Cockburn-Campbell, second Baronet, and his wife, Grace, daughter of Joseph Spence. He was educated in England and at Heidelberg and travelled in Europe.

Cockburn-Campbell left England for Queensland, Australia in 1864 where he worked with Augustus Gregory as a chainman and later with other surveyors. In the late 1860s he went to Western Australia and took up farming; his father was resident magistrate at Albany, Western Australia. In 1871 he succeeded to the baronetcy on the death of his elder brother Alexander Cockburn-Campbell.

Political career

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In 1873 Cockburn-Campbell was nominated a member of the old Western Australian Legislative Council and became chairman of committees. He was for some time editor of the West Australian but retired in 1887 due to ill health and was succeeded by John Winthrop Hackett. In 1890 he was appointed one of the delegates sent to London to give information and assistance in connexion with the passing of the Western Australian constitution bill. He also gave evidence before the Colonization Committee of the House of Commons. In December 1890 Campbell became a member of the new Legislative Council and was elected its first president. He died at Parliament House in Perth, Western Australia within the Legislative Council chamber on 27 September 1892 due to a Chlorodyne overdose.[1] He had married in 1870 Lucy Anne, daughter of Arthur Trimmer, who survived him with two sons and four daughters.

In 1882, Ferdinand von Mueller named Prostanthera campbellii in his honour.[2]

Music

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Sir Thomas composed a waltz "The Fair Maid of Perth" (1890) dedicated to Miss Margaret Brockman (Mrs P.A.Hope), published in London.[3]

Family

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Cockburn-Campbell is the great-great-grandfather of National Party MP Merome Beard.[4]

References

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  1. ^ "Presidents of the LC" (PDF). Parliament of Western Australia . May 2016. Retrieved 20 March 2025.
  2. ^ von Mueller, Ferdinand (1882). "Definitions of some new Australian plants". Southern Science Record. 2 (11): 252. Retrieved 26 August 2020.
  3. ^ "Fair maid of Perth [music] : Waltz".
  4. ^ Law, Peter (17 October 2022). "Merome Beard: Descendant of pioneering politician and newspaper editor takes seat in Legislative Assembly". The West Australian. Retrieved 26 October 2022.
Baronetage of the United Kingdom
Preceded by
Alexander Cockburn-Campbell
Baronet
(of Gartsford)
1871–1892
Succeeded by
Alexander Thomas Cockburn-Campbell
Western Australian Legislative Council
Preceded by Member for Albany
1874-1889
Succeeded by
Preceded by
New position
President of the
Western Australian Legislative Council

1890–1892
Succeeded by

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