Charles Townsend Gedye (1833-1900) was a Victorian entrepreneur of Cornish descent who is best known as a shipping grandee in colonial Australia, co-owner and founder of the centenarian Dangar, Gedye & Co. [1]
Charles Townsend Gedye was born in Devonport in 1833, the only surviving son of Charles Michael Gedye and Alice Townsend both from St Neot, Cornwall. [2] At the age of 14, he accompanied his father on a mail ship (Louisa) for a new life in Australia. [3] On arrival, [4] Gedye's father was engaged as manager at a meat canning factory in Newcastle, [5] while Gedye trained in book keeping and clerical work in support of his father. [6]
Gedye had a natural aptitude for numbers with an eye for detail, and in 1850 father and son went in to partnership. It was not long before Gedye took over as principal of the company from his father and moved his operations to Sydney. [7] In 1853, Gedye married Mary Harriet Wintle, a celebrated Tasmanian watercolourist. [8] For the next few years, Gedye moved with his growing family between Sydney and Newcastle, operating independently as a consultant auditor for the local government [9] as well as various Sydney businesses. [10] [11] [12]
In 1866, Gedye collaborated with Frederick Holkham Dangar to invest in fast ocean-going clippers, [13] and two years later, they part-owned their first vessel, South Australian. [14] Both men scoured shipyards from Britain to San Francisco, handing over responsibility for their business interests to each other in their absence. [15] In 1868, they part underwrote a second vessel, Hawkesbury, whose maiden voyage to Sydney was completed in 1869 and continued with the partnership in the Sydney-London trade until it was sold in 1889. [16]
The partnership itself was only formalised in 1870 with the creation of Dangar, Gedye & Co. [17] [18] The mainstay of their business was as commissioning agents for their own export/import freight, signing up many of the finest clippers of their day including the legendary Cutty Sark , which ran for the partners from 1885 to 1893, the period of her most sensational performances. [19] Cutty Sark was arguably the most glamorous of the ships run by the partners, but they also commissioned many other notable racing clippers, including Tweed, Hallowe’en and Brilliant. [20] [21]
The first wholly-owned Dangar, Gedye & Co ship was the Peruvian Francisco Calderón, purchased in 1879. The Francisco was a coolie slave steamship which was stripped, re-fitted for sail and re-named Gladstone in homage to the then Prime Minister of Britain, a close friend of Dangar's. [22] The second company clipper was launched in 1889, named Neotsfield. [23]
Gedye’s involvement in shipping raised his profile from merchant to business leader in a few short years. In 1870, he was commissioned as a Justice of the Peace in Sydney, [24] [25] mostly serving with the Water Police Courts. [26] Shortly after, Gedye started appearing in a variety of directorships for mining companies from Gold [27] to Copper [28] to Oil Shale, [29] and electricity, [30] as well as serving as auditor for the Chambers of Commerce and sitting on the boards of a number of financial institutions. [31] Gedye was admitted as a fellow to the Royal Society of New South Wales in 1877 [32] and in 1882, he was honoured with the office of Consul for the United Kingdoms of Sweden and Norway in New South Wales. [33] Gedye had become a respected leader in Sydney, seen as a safe pair of hands by the colonial administration of the time, honoured by a grateful monarch. [34]
Gedye died at his home in London in 1900. [35] The company bore his name for more than a century until it ceased trading in 1976. [36]
Cutty Sark is a British clipper ship. Built on the River Leven, Dumbarton, Scotland in 1869 for the Jock Willis Shipping Line, she was one of the last tea clippers to be built and one of the fastest, at the end of a long period of design development for this type of vessel, which ended as steamships took over their routes. She was named after the short shirt of the fictional witch in Robert Burns' poem Tam o' Shanter, first published in 1791.
John Joseph Cahill, also known as Joe Cahill or J. J. Cahill, was a long-serving New South Wales politician, railway worker, trade unionist and Labor Party Premier of New South Wales from 1952 to his death in 1959. Born the son of Irish migrants in Redfern, New South Wales, Cahill worked for the New South Wales Government Railways from the age of 16 before joining the Australian Labor Party. Being a prominent unionist organiser, including being dismissed for his role in the 1917 general strike, Cahill was eventually elected to the Parliament of New South Wales for St George in 1925.
The New South Wales Government Railways (NSWGR) was the agency of the Government of New South Wales that administered rail transport in New South Wales, Australia, between 1855 and 1932.
Blackadder was a clipper, a sister ship to Hallowe'en, built in 1870 by Maudslay, Sons & Field at Greenwich for Jock Willis & Sons.
Waverley Council is a Local government area in the eastern suburbs of Sydney, in the state of New South Wales, Australia. First incorporated on 16 June 1859 as the Municipality of Waverley, it is one of the oldest-surviving local government areas in New South Wales. Waverley is bounded by the Tasman Sea to the east, the Municipality of Woollahra to the north, and the City of Randwick in the south and west. The administrative centre of Waverley Council is located on Bondi Road in Bondi Junction in the Council Chambers on the corner of Waverley Park.
The All for Australia League (AFAL) was an Australian political movement during the Great Depression. It was founded in early 1931 and claimed to have amassed 130,000 members by June 1931. Right-wing and anti-establishment in nature, the league had the backing of a number of prominent businessmen and industrialists. It was critical both of the Labor Party and the right-wing Nationalist Party. It primarily operated in Sydney, but also had branches in country New South Wales and absorbed a similar organisation in Victoria. The league eventually chose to co-operate with the existing Nationalist organisation at the 1931 federal election, helping preselect candidates for the new United Australia Party (UAP). After the election victory the league was absorbed by the UAP's state organisation.
The Sydney Opera House Trust operates and maintains the Sydney Opera House in Sydney for the Government of New South Wales in Australia.
Henry Dangar (1796–1861) was a surveyor and explorer of Australia in the early period of British colonisation. He became a successful pastoralist and businessman, and also served as a magistrate and politician. From 1845 to 1851 Dangar was a Member of the New South Wales Legislative Council.
The New South Wales Open is an annual golf tournament held in New South Wales, Australia. The event was founded in 1931 as the New South Wales Close Championship, being restricted to residents of New South Wales, becoming the New South Wales Open Championship in 1958 when it was opened up to players from outside New South Wales. Norman Von Nida won the event six times, while Jim Ferrier and Frank Phillips won it five times with Greg Norman winning it four times.
The Municipality of Alexandria was a local government area of Sydney, New South Wales, Australia. Originally part of the municipalities of Redfern from 1859 and Waterloo from 1860, the Borough of Alexandria was proclaimed on 27 August 1868. With an area of 4.2 square kilometres, it included the modern suburbs of Alexandria, Beaconsfield and parts of Eveleigh, St Peters and Erskineville. After a minor boundary change with the Municipality of Erskineville in 1908, the council was amalgamated with the City of Sydney, along with most of its neighbours, with the passing of the Local Government (Areas) Act 1948, although the former council area was later transferred in 1968–1982 and 1989–2004 to the South Sydney councils.
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Rodney was an iron-hulled clipper ship that was built in Sunderland in 1874 and wrecked on the Cornish coast in 1901. She was one of the last ships built for the Australian migration trade. Devitt and Moore operated her between Britain and Australia for more than two decades. Rodney set numerous records for speed, and had luxuries that were unusual for her era.
The Agent-General for New South Wales is the representative of the State of New South Wales in the United Kingdom who is responsible for the promotion of New South Wales' trade and economic interests in the United Kingdom, Europe and Israel. The holder is a state government public servant, as part of the Investment NSW agency, and also concurrently serves as New South Wales' Senior Trade and Investment Commissioner for Europe and Israel.
Thomas Dangar was an English-born Australian politician.
Abram Orpen Moriarty was an Irish-born Australian politician.
Members of the New South Wales Legislative Council who served from 1917 to 1920 were appointed for life by the Governor on the advice of the Premier. This list includes members between the election on 24 March 1917 and the election on 20 March 1920. The President was Fred Flowers.
South Australian was a composite-hulled clipper ship that was built in Sunderland in 1868 and sank in the Bristol Channel in 1889. She was a successor to clippers St Vincent and City of Adelaide. For nearly two decades she voyaged annually between London and South Australia.
Mary Harriet Gedye (1834–1876) was an Australian watercolourist.
A by-election was held for the New South Wales Legislative Assembly electorate of Gwydir on 29 June and 20 July 1865 as a result of the Committee on Elections and Qualifications declaring that the seat of Thomas Dangar was vacant because he had an office of profit under the Crown.
A by-election was held for the New South Wales Legislative Assembly electorate of Macleay on 29 May 1893 because of the resignation of Otho Dangar (Protectionist) due to insolvency.
A.D. Fraser (Ed.) - 1938, "THIS CENTURY OF OURS, Being an Account of the Origin and History during One Hundred Years of the House of Dangar, Gedye & Malloch Ltd, of Sydney.", published Halstead Press Pty Ltd, Sydney, 2012