Francis Dutton Explained

Honorific-Prefix:The Honourable
Francis Dutton
Honorific-Suffix:CMG
Order:7th Premier of South Australia
Term Start1:4 July 1863
Term End1:15 July 1863
Term Start2:22 March 1865
Term End2:20 September 1865
Monarch1:Victoria
Governor1:Sir Dominick Daly
Monarch2:Victoria
Governor2:Sir Dominick Daly
Constituency1:Light
Predecessor1:George Waterhouse
Predecessor2:Sir Arthur Blyth
Successor1:Sir Henry Ayers
Successor2:Sir Henry Ayers
Birth Date:18 October 1818
Birth Place:Cuxhaven, Lower Saxony
Death Place:London, United Kingdom

Francis Stacker Dutton CMG (18 October 1818 – 25 January 1877) was the seventh Premier of South Australia, serving twice, firstly in 1863 and again in 1865.

Early life and education

Francis Dutton was born at Cuxhaven, Germany, where his father was British vice-consul, in 1818. He was educated at Hofwyl College, near Bern in Switzerland, and afterwards at the high school at Bremen in Germany.

At 17, he went to Brazil as a junior clerk and was there for about five years, in Bahia and Rio de Janeiro.

Career

In 1839, Francis joined his older brothers Hampden, Pelham and Frederick[1] in Sydney, went overland to Melbourne, and followed mercantile pursuits for about 18 months

He then joined his brother Frederick at Adelaide, in the colony of South Australia, and in 1842 or early in 1843, discovered copper at Kapunda, 45 miles north of Adelaide. He showed the specimen he had found to Captain Charles Bagot, who produced a similar specimen that his son had found in the same locality. The land was purchased and samples were sent to England, which showed a high percentage of copper. Dutton visited England in 1845 and sold his interest in the mine for a large sum. While in London, he prepared for publication his South Australia and its Mines, a work of 360 pages, a valuable contemporary account of the new colony published in 1846.

Dutton returned to South Australia in 1847, and in 1849 became a member of the Adelaide board of city commissioners. In 1850 Dutton wrote "Constitution fuer Suedaustralien: Gesetz zur bessern Regierung der australischen Colonien Ihrer Majestaet" (In English: Constitution for South Australia: Act for the better government of Her Majesty's Australian Colonies) to bring discussions on the formation of a constitution in South Australia to the attention of German settlers.[2]

He was elected a member of the Legislative Council for East Adelaide in 1851 and sat until 1857, when he was elected to the House of Assembly as member for City of Adelaide (9 March 1857 to 18 March 1860) and then for Light (19 March 1860 to 22 Apr 1862; and 17 November 1862 to 28 September 1865).[3] He was Commissioner of Crown Lands and Immigration in the Hanson government from 30 September 1857 to 2 June 1859, and was premier from 4 to 15 July 1863. He formed his second cabinet on 22 March 1865 and was premier and commissioner of public works until 20 September of the same year, when he became agent-general for South Australia in London.

He was a good linguist, able to speak French, German, and Portuguese, and had an excellent knowledge of business.

Death

Dutton died on 25 January 1877.

Recognition

Dutton was made a Commander of the Order of St Michael and St George (CMG) in 1872. He was also a Fellow of the Geographical Society, Associate of the Institute of Civil Engineers, and a Member of both the Royal Institution of Great Britain and Colonial Institute.

Dutton's Bluff, later Dutton Bluff, a hill some 66 km north-west of Quorn, was named for him[4] and the Victorian government botanist named Eremophila duttonii in his honour.[5] [6]

Family

Dutton married Caroline MacDermott (ca.1822 – 1 June 1855), a daughter of Marshall MacDermott on 7 November 1849; they had two sons and a daughter:

William Hampden Dutton (1805–1849), pastoralist of Anlaby Station and miner at Kapunda, was a brother, as was pastoralist and parliamentarian Frederick Hansborough Dutton (1812–1890).

Note: William Dutton (1811–1878), sometimes referred to as "William Pelham Dutton", ship's captain, whaler and pioneer of Portland, Victoria, was not closely related. Author Geoffrey Dutton, great-grandson of W. H. Dutton, warned against this confusion in his article on F. S. Dutton in the Australian Dictionary of Biography. For his relationship to other people prominent in the history of South Australia see separate article.

Sources

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Notes and References

  1. News: Mr. Francis S. Dutton . . Sydney . 10 February 1877 . 25 November 2015 . 13 . Trove.
  2. Book: Dutton, Francis . Constitution fuer Suedaustralien: Gesetz zur bessern Regierung der australischen Colonien Ihrer Majestaet . 1850 . publisher not identified . [Adelaide?].
  3. 4158 . Mr Francis Dutton . yes . 19 August 2022.
  4. News: Nomenclature of South Australia . . Adelaide . 23 May 1908 . 21 November 2015 . 10 . Trove.
  5. Book: Chinnock. R.J. (Bob). Eremophila and allied genera : a monograph of the plant family Myoporaceae. 2007. Rosenberg. Dural, NSW. 9781877058165. 649–651. 1st.
  6. Book: Brown. Andrew. Buirchell. Bevan. A field guide to the eremophilas of Western Australia. 2011. Simon Nevill Publications. Hamilton Hill, W.A.. 9780980348156. 91. 1st.
  7. News: Rail Revenue Still Mounting. . . Adelaide . 12 May 1932 . 25 November 2015 . 37 . Trove.
  8. Web site: Caroine Birch Mitchell nee Dutton. Art UK. 5 March 2018.
  9. News: Death of Sir Frederick Dutton . . Adelaide . 15 October 1930 . 25 November 2015 . 14 . Trove.