Sydney Sampson
Sydney Sampson was an Australian businessman and politician who served as a member of the Australian [House of Representatives|House of Representatives] from 1906 to 1919, representing the Division of Wimmera in Victoria. Outside of politics, he was a newspaper proprietor.
Early life
Sampson was born in 1863 in Creswick, Victoria. He was the fourth of seven children born to Mary Jane and John Sampson.Sampson's parents were both immigrants from Cornwall, lured by the Victorian gold rush. His mother died when he was about eight years old, and his father remarried to a widow with four children of her own; two children from that marriage brought his total number of siblings to twelve. Sampson's father worked initially as a gold miner and later as a wood carter. He was president of the Creswick Miners' Association, which he had helped found with William Spence, and later treasurer of the local branch of the Amalgamated Miners' Association. He was forced out of the industry by mine owners in response to his leadership of a strike.
Sampson moved to Warracknabeal, and farmed in the Mallee for several years. In 1891, he married Matilda Brewer in St Arnaud; they had two daughters together. At the time of his first daughter's birth, which occurred in Birchip the following year, he listed his profession as "rabbit inspector". By 1893, Sampson was living in the small township of Jeparit, where he had bought the general store. He started a local newspaper, the Jeparit Leader, and soon sold the store to his brother-in-law James Menzies in order to concentrate on the paper. He eventually sold the Leader in 1899 and purchased the Warracknabeal Herald, which had a larger market.