Donald McLean | |
Birth Place: | Argyleshire, Scotland |
Death Date: | (75 years)[1] |
Death Place: | Strathalbyn, South Australia |
Known For: | Second settler near Strathalbyn |
Children: | Eleven |
Donald McLean (1780 – 11 October 1855) was a pastoralist in the early days of the British colony of South Australia, remembered as the colony's first wheat grower.
McLean, a Scotsman from Duisky, near Blaich, Ardgour, Argyleshire, was in July 1837 an early investor with the South Australian Company; for his £1000 he was entitled to select one "town acre", one surveyed section near the city, and the option on one future "special survey" further away. His family were once substantial landowners, but he was reduced to the status of tenant farmer. He was clearly not without means however; £1000 would be equivalent to several million dollars today.
The 1836 famine in Scotland which led to one of the Highland Clearances may have been a factor in this decision, and to live in the new province. He and his large family emigrated on the Navarino, falsifying their ages and occupations in order to qualify for free passage. They arriving at Holdfast Bay on 6 December 1837. He selected "town acre" number 57 on Hindley Street and Section 50, Hundred of Adelaide, an 80acres property at Hilton, South Australia, a few miles from Adelaide, adjacent to one of Dr. Everard's selections. Immediately on arrival in South Australia he sent his son Allan to Van Diemen's Land (now Tasmania) to bring back a team of working buffalo, implements and seed wheat, which they planted and reaped by hand in 1838, arguably the first such crop in the colony. He built a modest house. Ten years later he sold the property to John Marles (c. 1817–1914); it is now the suburb Marleston.
He selected a property at Strathalbyn, part of the Angas Special Survey of 1841, and was the second settler there, after Dr. Rankine. He built a two-storey house which he named either "Auchananda" or "Auchanada's",[2] where he died on 11 October 1855.
McLean is generally credited with producing South Australia's first commercial crop of 20 acres of wheat in December 1838,[3] but it is likely that others had domestic plots at home of small plantings around the same time. Dr. Everard had a small plot at his home on the corner of Hindley and Morphett Streets — the ground was hard and apparently infertile, but the experiment was successful, and heavy ears of grain were produced, to the discomfiture of his detractors.
Claims that eldest son Allan McLean was the first to plough land in South Australia on Donald Mcleans ' at Hilton ([3a] with plough newly purchased in Jan 1838 from Tasmania), were refuted by John Chambers.[4]
Donald McLean (c. 1780, perhaps 16 May 1772 – 11 October 1855) married Christina McPhee (c. 1790 – 9 April 1869). Their children included:
He died and was buried "nearby his home, "Auchanadala",[2] Strathalbyn., Further Reference to Matthew Rankine's personal diary page 13th October 1855
Allan McLean, 19th premier of Victoria, was a relative.
He has been confused with another, possibly unrelated, Donald McLean (died before July 1914) who was manager of the North West Bend station on the River Murray for C. H. Armytage, and was the first in South Australia to create sheep paddocks.[6] He pumped water for his flocks and also paid generous bounties for dingo scalps.[7] He married Mary Barker, a niece of John Chambers, on 21 June 1866. In 1871 he and William Barker purchased Murbko station,[8] on the River Murray opposite Morgan, then Comongin station near Quilpie.