Charles Henry Hussey
Charles Henry Hussey was a politician in colonial South Australia.
Charles was the youngest son of George Edward Hussey originally of Towcester, Northamptonshire, and his wife Catherine, née Burt, who emigrated on the ship Asia to South Australia, arriving in Holdfast Bay in July 1839.
While in the employ of Matthew Goode as a drapery salesman, Charles was attracted to Port Elliot and settled there, working for Mr. Mackie and Philip Greayer. Early in the 1870s he and his family left Port Elliot to assist with the management of George Fife Angas's "Roslyn House", about south of Melrose. They returned to Adelaide, and he worked for a few years for John Dunn, then purchased David Golding's milling business in Port Elliot.
He was elected to the South Australian House of Assembly seat of Encounter Bay and sat from March 1887 to April 1890.
He was an uncle of George Hussey MHA.
Family
George Edward Hussey of Poole, Dorset, and his wife Catherine, née Burt, and their family arrived in South Australia on the ship Asia in July 1839. Among their descendants were:- second son Rev. Henry Hussey married Mary Ann Reid on 19 December 1857. Before entering the ministry he was secretary to George Fife Angas.
- George Frederick Hussey married Emma Maria Tidmarsh in 1851. He ran a bakery on King William Street.
- Charles Henry Hussey married Harriet Ada Webb on 6 March 1856. Harriet was the second daughter of William Webb of Grenfell Street. Among their children were: