Arthur Holroyd
Arthur Todd Holroyd was an Australian lawyer and politician. He was a member of the New South Wales Legislative Council between 1851 and 1856. He was also a member of the New South Wales Legislative Assembly for two periods between 1856 and 1857 and again between 1861 and 1864.
Biography
Early life
Arthur Todd Holroyd was born in London on 1 December 1806, the youngest child of the merchant Stephen Holroyd and Elizabeth. His father died in January 1810 when Arthur was aged three years.After a preliminary education in private schools, Arthur Holroyd was sent to Ripon Grammar School, North Yorkshire, "for a couple of years". In 1824 he began to study medicine in Winchester. Shortly afterwards Holroyd became a pupil at the Webb-street School of Anatomy at Southwark, London. In May 1827 he went to Christ's College at the University of Cambridge and then to Edinburgh University, from where attained the Doctor of Medicine degree in 1830.
Arthur Holroyd married Sophia Abbs on 6 June 1830 at Whitburn, county Durham. In May 1831 a daughter, Emily, was born to the couple.
In 1831 Holroyd commenced practice as a physician in London, “but not finding the prospects of the medical profession as lucrative or satisfactory as he had anticipated”, he decided to give up medicine and study as a lawyer. He was admitted to Lincoln's Inn in January 1835. After the first year of his admission, however, Holroyd decided to suspend his legal studies, having "determined to quit England for a time, and travel".
Travels on the Upper Nile
Holroyd left England in June 1836 and proceeded to Rome, from where, after a short time, he travelled to Alexandria in Egypt. Leaving Alexandria, he travelled up the Nile as far as the Second Cataract, arriving there in early December 1836 with his interpreter, Hajji Soliman, and Ali, "an inferior domestic". Holroyd took frequent opportunities to inscribe his surname and the year into the ancient monuments he visited. At the rock-cut temples at Abu Simbel, for instance, alongside the Second Nile Cataract, Holroyd inscribed his surname and "1836", enclosed in a rectangular border, at the entrance to the great hall. Beneath Holroyd's graffito at this location is also etched the name "Hajji Soliman". At Wadi Halfa at the Second Cataract, Holroyd decided to continue further south into the region then known in Arabic as Beled-es-Sudan. Holroyd hired camels and travelled along the west bank of the Nile, frequently stopping along the road "to examine all the antiquarian remains".image:Old Dobgola Kingdom of Makuria, Throne hall .jpg|left|upright=1.2|thumb|The Throne Hall at Old Dongola, Sudan, overlooking the deserted town and the Nile valley; when Holroyd was there in 1836 this building was being used as a mosque.
In late December 1836 Holroyd and his party arrived at Dongola, an Egyptian outpost with a population of about six thousand. After procuring a boat Holroyd travelled further up the river, 50 miles south to Old Dongola, once an important city of Nubia but now largely abandoned to the shifting sands. Holroyd recorded that Old Dongola had about 300 inhabitants and "the most striking object here is a mosque on rather an elevated site, from the top of which there is an extensive prospect of the arid Desert and meandering Nile". He then travelled further up the river as it turned towards the east, to Ambukol, arriving there on 8 January 1837. At Ambukol Holroyd had “a severe attack of fever” requiring him to rest for several weeks.
Holroyd decided to cross the Bayuda Desert rather than follow the great bend of the Nile, where the route of the river turns to the east and then north-east, before inclining back to the south at Abu Hamad. With hired camels Holroyd and his men crossed the desert in seven days, travelling south-south-east from Ambukol. At the wells of Bayuda, about half-way across, they replenished their water supply. Holroyd commented: "The water which we had brought from the Nile was putrid and nauseous, and we were glad to avail ourselves of the opportunity of procuring a fresh supply". They arrived at El Hajir on Nile on 31 January. Following the course of the river, the next day Holroyd and his men arrived at Khartoum at the confluence of the White Nile, flowing north from Lake Victoria, and the Blue Nile, flowing west from Lake Tana in Ethiopia.
Khartoum was the administrative centre of Beled-es-Sudan, under the Egyptian governor Khurshid Pasha, and "a place of considerable trade, being convenient as a rendezvous for the slave-caravans from Abyssinia, Sennar and Kordofan". Khartoum's population was about fifteen thousand, including 1,600 soldiers and their families. On 11 February Holroyd left Khartoum to travel up the Blue Nile, “Khurshid Pasha having provided me with an excellent boat for that purpose”. After ten days travel he arrived at Sennar where he remained for nearly a fortnight, in a house in the barracks precinct provided by the local military commandant. On 2 March 1837 Holroyd left Sennar, travelling downstream to Wad Madani, from where he and his men crossed overland from the Blue Nile to the White Nile, 86 miles to the west.
Holroyd reached the White Nile on 15 March. From Kajebi on the west bank, having procured camels and a guide, he headed in a south-west direction to cross the Habshábeh desert to El-Obeid, the capital of the Kordofan district. Holroyd and his party arrived at El-Obeid on 30 March 1837, remaining there for sixteen days during which time Holroyd recorded detailed observations of the township and its 30,000 inhabitants. He was the first Englishman to visit the Kordofan region. Holroyd particularly noted details of the slave trade being carried out, with troops whose pay was in arrears being compelled to capture and sell slaves in lieu of wages. He described a distribution of slaves he witnessed as “a more heart-rending scene cannot be imagined”. In mid-April he travelled back to the White Nile and followed its course back to Cairo. In Cairo Holroyd protested to the Egyptian Government against the slave-trading he had witnessed during his journey on the Upper Nile and the Kordofan region.
Holroyd was familiar with the Arabic language and travelled through Sinai, Palestine and Syria.
On 25 February 1839 in London Holroyd delivered a paper to the Royal Geographical Society entitled 'Notes on a Journey to Kordofán, in 1836-7'. He was elected a Fellow of the Society and his paper was subsequently published in the Society's journal.
Lincoln's Inn
Holroyd was called to the bar of Lincoln's Inn in May 1841, immediately after which he attended the West Riding Sessions, and was admitted as a member of the Western Circuit Bar.New Zealand
In the early 1840s Arthur Holroyd "determined to emigrate and try his fortune in the colonies". Arthur Holroyd and his daughter Emily departed from London aboard the barque Mary as cabin passengers, arriving at Wellington, New Zealand, on 9 August 1843. Other passengers on the voyage were Robert Hart and his brother George Hart; Holroyd and Robert Hart became partners soon afterwards. Holroyd was admitted as a member of the New Zealand bar shortly after his arrival. By September 1843 he was practising as a solicitor and barrister in the partnership of Messrs. Holroyd and Hart of Te Aro, Wellington. Holroyd remained in New Zealand until September 1845.Australia
On 12 October 1845 Holroyd, together with a “man servant” and his daughter Emily, arrived at Sydney aboard the brig Bee from Wellington, New Zealand. When he left New Zealand, Holroyd had intended to proceed to India, planning to remain in Sydney only as long as necessary to procure a passage. After his arrival, however, he decided to remain in the colony. On Friday, 31 October 1845, Arthur Holroyd moved for his own admission as a barrister of the Supreme Court of New South Wales. He submitted an affidavit detailing his career as a barrister in England and New Zealand, after which Holroyd was admitted to the Sydney Bar, the Chief Justice of the Supreme Court commenting that he “had established his claim to admission most satisfactorily”. By December 1845 Holroyd began practicing his profession at Bathurst.Colonial parliament
In 1851, prior to the establishment of responsible self-government, Holroyd was elected to the semi-elective Legislative Council. He represented the electorate of Western Boroughs until the granting of responsible self-government in 1856. Subsequently, at the first election under the new constitution he was elected to the Legislative Assembly as the member for the same seat. He was defeated by six votes at the next election in 1858. Holroyd re-entered parliament as one of the two members for Parramatta at an 1861 by-election caused by the resignation of James Byrnes. However, Byrnes defeated him at the subsequent general election. He then retired from political life.In 1855 Holroyd was appointed as a Director of the Australian Mutual Provident Society. Holroyd had been living at Erskineville while he was in Sydney. In March 1855 he purchased the 'Sherwood' estate from Dr. William Sherwin, consisting of 320 acres of land located about two miles from Parramatta. Holroyd commenced building the house, 'Sherwood Lodge', soon afterwards. The estate was renamed 'Sherwood Scrubs'.
Holroyd was the Secretary for Public Works in the first government of James Martin. He held this position for 15 months but resigned after being accused by William Arnold of accepting a bribe to appoint an associate to the bench of magistrates. A parliamentary commission found no truth in this accusation.