The Surveyor General of New South Wales is the primary government authority responsible for land and mining surveying in New South Wales.
The original duties for the Surveyor General was to measure and determine land grants for settlers in New South Wales.
The Surveyor General is the leader and regulator of the land and mining surveying profession and plays a key advocacy role in the spatial industry in NSW
Surveyor General | Period in office | Comments | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
Augustus Alt | 1787–1803 | Alt's job was mainly undertaken by then Deputy, Charles Grimes | [1] |
Charles Grimes | 1803–1811 | George William Evans acted August 1803 – February 1805 | |
John Oxley | 1812–1828 | ||
Sir Thomas Mitchell | 1828–1855 | Samuel Augustus Perry, deputy from 1829. [2] Mitchell was responsible for the massacre of Aboriginal Australians on 27 May 1836. There were at least seven Aboriginal people killed as they fled across the Murray River. The subsequent public enquiry in Sydney resulted in only a minor reprimand of Mitchell for his actions. It was also recorded that Mitchell changed his recollections of the account. The site of the massacre was named Mount Dispersion by Mitchell. [3] It was reported that Mitchell, after being followed for several days by Indigenous people, armed his men (against New South Wales Government orders) and organised an unprovoked ambush of them. The massacre actually took place over the course of several days. While he was acquitted by the enquiry, the incident tarnished his reputation for the rest of his career. [4] | |
George Barney | 1855–1859 | ||
Alexander McLean | 1861–1862 | Acting Surveyor General 1859–1861 | |
Walker Davidson | 1864–1868 | Acting Surveyor General 1861–1863 | |
Philip Adams | 1868–1887 | Assisted the NSW Government Astronomer in observing a transit of Venus | |
Edward Twynam | 1890–1901 | Acting Surveyor General 1888–1890 | |
Position abolished | 1890–1911 | Office of Surveyor-General abolished in 1890, replaced by Chief Surveyor and Superintendent of Trigonometrical Survey. | |
Joseph Allworth | 1901–1904 | ||
Edward MacFarlane | 1904–1908 | ||
Robert McDonald | 1908–1911 | ||
Frederick Poate | 1911–1916 | Surveyor-General title revived 1911 | |
John Broughton | 1916–1922 | ||
Alfred Chesterman | 1922–1925 | ||
Henry Hall | 1925–1926 | ||
Hamilton Mathews | 1926–1937 | ||
Arthur Allen | 1937–1945 | ||
Harold Barrie | 1945–1946 | ||
Daniel Mulley | 1946–1953 | ||
George Vincent | 1953–1960 | ||
Charles Elphinstone | 1960–1963 | ||
Henry Barr | 1963–1965 | ||
Leo Fletcher | 1965–1978 | ||
Jack Darby | 1979–1985 | ||
Don Grant AO RFD | 1986–2000 | Grant was appointed an Officer of the Order of Australia in the 2020 Australia Day Honours for "distinguished service to surveying, particularly through the establishment of a combined public sector mapping agency" [5] He was previously appointed a Member of the Order of Australia in June 1994 in recognition of service to surveying. [6] [7] Grant has also been awarded three honorary doctorate degrees from Australian universities. In 1997, Charles Sturt University conferred on Grant the degree of Doctor of Applied Science (honoris causa) for his contribution to Australian and international surveying, mapping and spatial information. [8] Also in 1997, the University of New South Wales awarded Grant the degree of Doctor of Science (honoris causa). [9] In 2004, the University of Melbourne awarded Grant the degree of Doctor of Surveying (honoris causa) for his contributions to surveying. [10] | |
Warwick Watkins | 2000–2011 | Watkins was not professionally qualified as a surveyor or a Registered Surveyor. Watkins was sacked from the NSW Public Service after the NSW Independent Commission Against Corruption (ICAC) found in December 2011 that Watkins acted corruptly. [11] His sacking came after he had been stood down in March 2011 from his Chief Executive position in the NSW Public Service. The week prior to being sacked from the NSW Public Service, Watkins resigned his appointments as Surveyor-General, Registrar-General and Commissioner of the Soil Conservation Service. Had Watkins not resigned as Surveyor-General prior to being dismissed from the NSW Public Service, he would have become the first ever Surveyor-General sacked. [12] Following ICAC's findings, Watkins faced criminal charges in the NSW Local Court where it was reported he could have received 10 years imprisonment. Two of the charges were dismissed by the Court and in December 2013, Watkins was placed on a 12-month good behaviour bond for the further two charges of misleading ICAC, to which he had pleaded guilty. [13] [14] [15] On 23 October 2014, the Royal Institution of Chartered Surveyors expelled Watkins from the Institution and he automatically lost his Fellowship. [16] The Commonwealth of Australia Gazette, 29 February 2016, issued notice that the Governor-General of Australia, Sir Peter Cosgrove, had terminated Watkins appointment as a Member of the Order of Australia. [17] In November 2019, Watkins’ Honorary Fellowship of the Institution of Surveyors NSW was suspended for six months. [18] Watkins' death was reported as 12 November 2019. [19] [18] | |
Desmond Mooney | 2011–2016 | ||
Narelle Underwood | 2016–2021 | Underwood was the youngest person in 200 years and the first female to be appointed to the position of Surveyor-General. [20] | |
Thomas Grinter | 2021–present | Acting. [21] Grinter is not listed by the Board of Surveying and Spatial Information as a Registered Surveyor. [22] | |
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