John Hart (South Australian colonist)


Captain John Hart CMG was a South Australian politician and a Premier of South Australia.

Early life

Hart was born in England, son of journalist/newspaper publisher John Harriott Hart and Mary Hart née Glanville. probably at 23 Warwick Lane off Newgate Street, London, and baptised at Christ Church Greyfriars, London. At 12 years of age he first went to sea, visiting Hobart, Van Diemen's Land in September 1828 in the Magnet. In 1832 Hart was in command of the schooner Elizabeth, a sealer operating from Tasmania and visiting Kangaroo Island and Gulf St Vincent. Early January 1838 he was "on the River Murray near Mount Hope" and foresaw the great thoroughfare it would become in the second half of that century. Hack also gave Hart two acres of land in Adelaide. In 1839 he managed a whaling station at Encounter Bay.
In January 1843 Hart sailed to England in command of the South Australian Company's ageing barque Sarah and Elizabeth, delivering it to London for sale. Aboard as a passenger was the explorer John Hill, from whom Hart had just purchased Section 2112 at Port Adelaide, in partnership with Jacob Hagen. In December 1843 Hart returned to Adelaide in command of the barque Augustus of which he was part owner with Jacob Hagen and Hagen's brother. Among the passengers was the artist George French Angas.
He settled near Port Adelaide, where he joined with H. Kent Hughes as merchants Hughes and Hart then, as Hart & Company, established large and successful flour mills. His flour mill at the Port was regarded as one of the best, and "Hart's Flour" commanded the highest prices in Australia. John Hart & Co. merged with the Adelaide Milling Company in 1882.
He was a member of the Agricultural and Horticultural Society and its president from 1858 to 1859.

Political career

In 1851, he was elected to the Legislative Council. Hart resigned in 1853 to visit England and was re-elected the next year, serving until the Council expired in 1857.
Hart was member for Light from May 1868 to April 1870. including a second short stint as premier from 24 September 1868 to 13 October 1868.
At the 1870 election, Hart changed seats to represent The Burra, the seat he retained until his death. He was premier and Treasurer again from 30 May 1870 to 10 November 1871.
One newspaper obituary gave the opinion that Hart had been unfairly criticised in several of his decisions and should have been given credit for the Overland Telegraph Line rather than Sir Henry Ayers.

Death

John Hart died suddenly on 28 January 1873, while chairing the third annual general meeting of the Mercantile Marine Insurance Company at the Adelaide Town Hall, leaving a widow and a large family.

Recognition

Hart was created C.M.G. in 1870.

Family

John Hart married Margaret Gillmor Todd fourth daughter of Charles Hawkes Todd and Elizabeth Bentley on 12 May 1845; among their two sons and five daughters were:
  • Elizabeth Sarah Hart married Henry Brook Dobbin on 3 July 1867
  • Margaret Hart married Arthur Powell; she founded St. Margaret's Home for convalescents, Semaphore.
  • John Hart, Jr. married Emily Lavinia Finch on 8 August 1877; he was MHA for Port Adelaide 1880–1881. He died at Wooton Lea, Glen Osmond
  • Mary Hart married Henry Huth Walters on 14 October 1868
  • Charles Hawkes Todd Hart was manager Port Adelaide flour mill 1873, was owner of "Beefacres", near Campbelltown with brother John Hart Jr.; may have returned to England.
  • Annie Hart married Rowland James Egerton-Warburton on 14 May 1872. Rowland was a son of Colonel Peter Egerton-Warburton.
  • Katherine Hart married Algernon Arbuthnott Godwin on 9 January 1879