Fedor Kelling Explained

Fedor Kelling
Honorific-Suffix:JP
Birth Date:11 February 1820
Birth Place:Klütz, Grand Duchy of Mecklenburg-Schwerin
Death Place:Nelson
Constituency Mp:Waimea
Parliament:New Zealand
Majority:elected unopposed
Term Start:1859
Term End:1860
Predecessor:William Travers
Successor:Alfred Saunders

John Fedor Augustus Kelling, JP (11 February 1820 – 24 October 1909), known as Fedor Kelling, was a 19th-century Member of the New Zealand Parliament, representing Nelson. A leader of a group of immigrants from Germany, he also served as the German consul.

Early life

Kelling was born as Johann Friederich August Kelling in Klütz, Grand Duchy of Mecklenburg-Schwerin, where he became a farmer. Johann Kelling married Johanna Friederica Christiana Lampe in 1842. Their first child was born in the following year.

Kelling, his brother Carl and the Hamburg merchant Johann Ferdinand Benoit were asked by Count Kuno zu Rantzau-Breitenburg to manage a German immigration project to New Zealand. Together with German emigrants, the Kelling family and Carl left for New Zealand on the Skjold on 21 April 1844 from Hamburg. They reached Nelson on 1 September of that year. Kelling had two further children in New Zealand, but his wife died after child birth on 28 July 1848.[1] In New Zealand, Kelling changed his name to John Fedor Augustus Kelling, and he was known as Fedor Kelling.

Activities in New Zealand

The settlement of Nelson was organised by the New Zealand Company. The affairs in Nelson were poorly organised and the company was in debt. William Fox had been sent in to improve the situation. The day before the German settlers arrived, Fox had suspended the public works scheme, resulting in work opportunities for settlers diminishing. Benoit was discouraged by this and returned home early in the next year. The Kellings and their settlers took up 350acres in a locality that they called Ranzau. Other land was added to it, and soon they had planted field crops, fruit trees, vines, walnuts, hops and tobacco. Houses were built, a pastor arrived, a church was built and the whole developed into a village, which these days is known as Hope.

Kelling was a member of various organisations, including the Settlers Cattle Fair Association, the Nelson Agricultural Association, several road boards, and the Central Board of Education for Nelson. He became a justice of the peace in 1859. In 1863, he was sent as an immigration agent to Germany for Taranaki settlers, but the scheme fell through with the outbreak of the Second Taranaki War.

Kelling had two boys and one girl from his first marriage. He had remarried in 1855 at Ranzau; his second wife was Rose Mary Etty, but she died only six months later. While in Germany as an immigration agent, he married Dorothea (Doris) Wilhelmine Kuskop. She had a son in 1865, but died soon after.

From 1867 to 1886, Kelling was a German consul. The office was disestablished on his own recommendation. For his services, he was awarded the Prussian Order of the Crown.

Political career

Kelling represented the Waimea East electorate on the Nelson Provincial Council. He was first elected on 8 January 1857, the last year of the first Council. He served almost continuously until the abolition of provincial governments at the end of 1876, and was not a member only for the time he spent as an immigration agent in Germany.[2]

He represented the Waimea electorate from, when he was returned unopposed at a by-election.[3] The 2nd Parliament was dissolved on 5 November 1860.[4]

Kelling intended the contest the 1861 election for Suburbs of Nelson. At a meeting with electors in Stoke, it was decided that there was no real difference in political opinion between Kelling and James Wemyss, the other contender for the position. Kelling thus stepped back from the contest.[5] He instead contested the Waimea electorate again,[6] but was beaten by 125 votes to 60 by Alfred Saunders.[7]

He unsuccessfully contested the Waimea electorate in the 1864 and 1867 by-elections.[8] [9]

The in the Suburbs of Nelson electorate was contested by Kelling and Ralph Richardson. Kelling was a supporter of Julius Vogel's public works scheme, whilst Richardson was opposed to it. At the nomination meeting, held at the Provincial Hall on 26 January 1871, the show of hands went eleven to ten in favour of Kelling.[10] On polling day (7 February 1871), Kelling and Richardson received 89 and 130 votes, respectively.[11] The official declaration of the poll was held on the following day, and Richardson was announced elected.[12] Richardson resigned on 31 March 1873 "owing to urgent private affairs which require[d his] immediate departure for England".[13]

The resignation caused the . At the nomination meeting on 9 May, Charles Elliott, Andrew Richmond and Fedor Kelling were proposed. At the show of hands, they received 7, 15 and 6 votes, respectively.[14] On 13 May, Kelling retired from the election and placed an advertisement in the Nelson Evening Mail, stating that he wanted to avoid vote splitting and urging electors to support Richmond instead, so that the Vogel Ministry can continue with their public works programme.[15] On polling day on Wednesday, 14 May, Richmond and Elliott received 146 and 70 votes, respectively. Richmond was thus declared elected.[16] Richmond had previously represented (1861–1868), whilst Elliott had represented Waimea (1855–1858).

Death

Kelling died in Nelson on 24 October 1909. Kelling was buried at the cemetery of Ranzau two days later. He was survived by his three sons; his son-in-law and a nephew also attended the funeral. The Prime Minister, Joseph Ward, sent his condolences by telegram.[17]

Notes and References

  1. News: Death . 29 April 2012. Nelson Examiner and New Zealand Chronicle. VII . 334 . 29 July 1848. 88.
  2. Book: Scholefield, Guy . Guy Scholefield

    . New Zealand Parliamentary Record, 1840–1949 . Guy Scholefield . 3rd . First ed. published 1913 . 1950 . Govt. Printer . Wellington . 213.

  3. News: Election of a Member for the General Assembly . 8 April 2012 . Colonist . III . 229 . 30 December 1859 . 2.
  4. Book: Wilson, James Oakley . New Zealand Parliamentary Record, 1840–1984 . 4th . First ed. published 1913 . 1985 . V.R. Ward, Govt. Printer . Wellington . 154283103 . 210.
  5. News: The Colonist . 6 April 2012 . IV . 340 . 22 January 1861 . 2.
  6. News: To the Electors of the Waimea Districts . 6 April 2012. Colonist. IV . 341 . 25 January 1861. 4.
  7. News: Local Intelligence. . 6 April 2012. Nelson Examiner and New Zealand Chronicle . 2 February 1861. XX. 2.
  8. News: The Nomination . 6 July 2011. Colonist . X . 738 . 25 June 1867. 3.
  9. News: Election for the Waimeas . 6 July 2011 . Colonist . X . 741 . 5 July 1867. 4.
  10. News: Nomination for the Suburbs . 8 April 2012 . Nelson Examiner and New Zealand Chronicle. XXX . 22 . 27 January 1871. 2.
  11. News: Election for the Suburbs . 8 April 2012. Nelson Evening Mail. VI . 33 . 8 February 1871. 2.
  12. News: Declaration of Polls . 8 April 2012. Nelson Evening Mail. VI . 33 . 8 February 1871. 2.
  13. News: To the Electors of the Suburban Electoral District . 8 April 2012. . VIII . 81 . 3 April 1873. 3.
  14. News: Suburban Election . 10 April 2012. Nelson Evening Mail. VIII . 111 . 9 May 1873. 2.
  15. News: Suburbs Election. Retirement of Mr. Kelling. . 10 April 2012. . VIII . 114 . 13 May 1873. 2.
  16. News: The Election for the Suburbs . 10 April 2012. Colonist. XVI . 1633 . 16 May 1873. 3.
  17. News: The Funeral . 8 April 2012. Colonist. LI . 12680 . 27 October 1909. 2.