George McCullagh Reed explained

George Reed
Constituency Am1:Ipswich
Assembly1:Queensland Legislative
Term Start1:4 August 1866
Term End1:19 June 1867
Predecessor1:Ratcliffe Pring
Successor1:John Murphy
Alongside1:Henry Challinor, Arthur Macalister
Birth Date:1831
Birth Place:County Monaghan, Ireland
Death Date:13 November 1898 (aged 65–66)
Death Place:Auckland, New Zealand
Restingplace:Symonds Street Cemetery
Birthname:George McCullagh Reed
Spouse:Jessie Chambers Ranken (m.1863)
Occupation:Journalist, Presbyterian minister
Alma Mater:Queen's College, Belfast

George McCullagh Reed (1831 – 13 November 1898) was a New Zealand presbyterian minister, journalist and newspaper proprietor.

Reed was born in County Monaghan, Ireland in about 1831. He received his education from Queen's College, Belfast, from where he graduated in 1856. He was ordained as a Presbyterian minister and went to France, Switzerland, and in 1857 to Victoria in Australia. From 1861, he was minister in Ipswich, Queensland, and it was there that he married Jessie Chalmers Ranken on 6 July 1863. He resigned from the ministry in 1866. Reed was elected to the second Legislative Assembly of Queensland for the district of Ipswich in a ministerial by-election on 4 August 1866 and held this seat until the end of the parliamentary term on 19 June 1867.[1]

He set up, bought, or edited many newspapers. He set up the Evening Star in Auckland in 1870. While living in Auckland, he was elected to the Auckland Provincial Council for the Takapuna electorate, and he served from 21 November 1873 until the abolition of provincial government on 31 October 1876. He served on the executive council (10 December 1873 – 13 November 1874) and was provincial treasurer until his resignation from that post.

In 1876, he established the Evening News in Dunedin. Some months later, he purchased a morning newspaper in Dunedin, the Otago Guardian, together with George Fenwick. The city could not sustain two morning papers and Fenwick and Reed bought their rival, the Otago Daily Times and its weekly, the Otago Guardian.

After time in Ireland as New Zealand's immigration agent, he was leader writer for The Argus in Melbourne before joining The New Zealand Herald in 1883. He moved to the United Kingdom as the Herald's correspondent, and there he set up the Australian Times and Anglo-New-Zealander together with Robert Reid. Reed returned to Auckland and became editor of the Auckland Evening Bell. In 1889, he was editor of the Evening Standard in Melbourne. In the following year, he was editor for The Sydney Morning Herald. By 1895, he had returned to Auckland and rejoined The New Zealand Herald.

Reed died in Auckland of a heart attack on 13 November 1898. He was survived by three sons, including Vernon Reed and John Reed, and two daughters.[2] He was buried in the Presbyterian section of the Symonds Street Cemetery.[3]

References

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

Notes and References

  1. 27 April 2020.
  2. Book: 210f . Scholefield . Guy . Guy Scholefield . A Dictionary of New Zealand Biography : M–Addenda . II . 1940 . . Wellington . 27 April 2015 .
  3. News: Funeral of the late Mr. G. M. Reed . 15 November 1898 . . 27 April 2015 . 5.