William Nairne Clark
William Nairne Clark was a public notary and publisher, active at the Swan River Colony and Tasmanian settlements founded in Australia.
The son of Charles Clark of Princeland, he was born in Scotland at Coupar Angus, Perthshire, to Marjory, née Barclay. His great uncle, advocate and judge William Nairne, provided his early education at Dunsinnan House in Collace, and he studied law to become appointed a life long public notary. Amongst the recognition of his works and contributions, aside from the contemporary notability of his firsts in publishing and duelling, he is noted by Dominic Serventy and Hubert Whittell in the seminal work Birds of Western Australia as having published observations on birds of Southwest Australia and the first list of its avifauna. His poetry has occasionally been selected for anthologies of historic prose or republished in Australian newspapers.
First duel in Western Australia
He arrived at Fremantle, Western Australia aboard in March 1831 and began to practice law there. Clark engaged briefly with George French Johnson in a publishing venture known as The Inquisitor. Clark shortly accused Johnson of "clandestine transactions". After a verbal altercation on the street the two met to duel at Richmond House on the morning of the seventeenth of August, 1832, and Johnson was killed in the first duel recorded in the state; Clark was tried and cleared of the charge of manslaughter that followed.''Report of the Late Trial for Libel!!!''
He later began to draw on his experience in journalism to begin publishing in the new colony, his brief work Report of the Late Trial for Libel!!! Clarke versus MacFaul, has been noted by academic Geoffrey Bolton and others as the first publication in Western Australia. The text concerns a court settlement in favour of a Captain Clark, of the vessel Skerne, whose seamanship had been questioned in the pages of the Perth Gazette. A letter of apology was refused by Clark and the court's determination found the publication was slanderous in their comments on the captain and the proprietor Charles Macfaull was ordered to pay £21 in damages. The work was produced on a Ruthven printing press that had been delivered to the colony in 1831, from Tasmania; the printer was W. T. Graham of Fremantle.Journalism: Aboriginal relations
This book was followed by his contributions to another newspaper, Swan River Guardian, and he eventually assumed editorial control of that publication between 1836 and 1838. The Guardian was a competitor to the Perth Gazette, joining the alternatives that were a politically influential feature of the new colony's print media. Clark's criticism was often directed at the political elite, the acting governor Frederick Irwin, Peter Broun and George Fletcher Moore; his criticism of James Stirling was later tempered to a view that he was a good man misled by others. The ex-catholic cum missionary Louis Giustiniani, who returned from a tour of York decrying the murderous treatment of the Aboriginal Australians he had been appointed to Christianise, entered into an alliance with Clark to denounce the governor and gentry at Perth in his Swan River Guardian. After a series of violent acts or reprisals, the popular sentiment of the colonists was challenged by Clark in an editorial that suggested the outcome of any war was the certain destruction of one or the other of the parties and ought to be dreaded by both.Journalism: trade unionism
Clark sought to present himself as a people's champion, so was strident in his criticism of what he portrayed as an aristocratic elite. In reporting the meeting of the Western Australian Agricultural Society, he proposed the organisation of tradesmen and employees in response to the elites, "labourers, mechanics etc., ought to form a Society of their own for the protection of mutual rights, and send quarterly reports to the Secretary of State …".The Guardian ended in 1838, unable to operate without a loss, and his next attempt to establish an alternative to the Gazette was the Political Register; this was also unable to provide the required £200 that the state had recently enacted, purportedly to provide surety if charges of libel were won by a plaintiff. Clark's family was also suffering loss at this time; his son, Charles, aged four years and five months, died 7 May 1838, following the death of his sister, Anne Catharine, 8 April of the same year, falling short of her second birthday.