George Edmondstone
George Edmondstone was politician in Queensland, Australia. He was a Member of the Queensland Legislative Assembly and an alderman and mayor in the Brisbane Municipal Council.
The surname is spelled 'Edmonstone' in the Brisbane City Council Archives, spelled 'Edmundston' on his father's marriage banns, spelled 'Edmondston' on his baptismal certificate and Edmondstone on his father's Testament.
Personal life
George Edmondstone was born on 4 May 1809 in Edinburgh, Scotland, the son of William Edmondstone, a naval commissary, and Alexandrina Farquharson daughter of a watchmaker. George's father died when he was 12 and he migrated to New South Wales in 1832. Later he went to Hobart Town and after some hard times began business in Sydney. He then moved to Maitland and about 1840 he took up Normanby Plains Station. He sold out early in 1842 and set up as a butcher in Brisbane, hoping to profit from trade with the newly settled Darling Downs. He had married Alexis Telleray in 1837 in New South Wales.George was in the first group of free settlers to arrive in Brisbane in 1840.
He built a house called "Pahroombin".
In his later years, George was described by his peers as a genial, amiable, old gentleman. He died in Brisbane on Friday 23 Feb 1883. His funeral notice appeared in the Brisbane Courier and said:
At that time, the "General Cemetery" of Brisbane was Toowong Cemetery.
Business life
George Edmondstone had a butchery in Queen Street, the main street of Brisbane.Public life
George was a founding alderman of the Brisbane Municipal Council and its mayor in 1863.He served on a number of committees including:
- Legislative Committee 1859–1865
- Lighting Committee 1862
- Incorporation Committee 1862, 1864
- Bridge Committee 1862–1864, 1866
- Water Committee 1864
- Finance Committee 1866
- Brisbane Board of Waterworks 1874–1883
On 12 May 1877, George was made a life Member of the Legislative Council of Queensland until his death on 23 Feb 1883.
He made a substantial contribution to the early development of Brisbane. Amongst the initiatives that he championed were:
- Breakfast Creek Bridge
- Brisbane General Cemetery Trust, now known as the Toowong Cemetery
- A primary school in Spring Hill
- Ann Street Presbyterian Church
- As mayor in 1863–64 he had much to do with the planning of the first Brisbane bridge, the First Brisbane Town Hall and Brisbane Waterworks.