Hugh Carleton | |
Birth Date: | 3 July 1810 |
Birth Place: | Ireland |
Death Place: | London |
Spouse: | Lydia Jane Williams, youngest daughter of the missionary Henry Williams |
Order3: | 2nd Chairman of Committees |
Term Start3: | 1856 |
Term End3: | 1870 |
Predecessor3: | Frederick Merriman |
Successor3: | Maurice O'Rorke |
Constituency Mp5: | Bay of Islands |
Parliament5: | New Zealand |
Term End5: | 1870 |
Predecessor5: | New constituency |
Successor5: | In abeyance (title next held by Richard Hobbs) |
Relations: | Henry Williams (father-in-law) |
Hugh Francis Carleton (3 July 1810 – 14 July 1890) was New Zealand's first member of parliament.
Carleton was born in 1810. He was the son of Francis Carleton (1780–1870) and Charlotte Margaretta Molyneux-Montgomerie (d. 1874). Hugh Carleton, 1st Viscount Carleton was the brother of his grandfather, John Carleton. His family was living in Clare, County Tipperary and then Greenfield, County Cork, Ireland. He was educated at Eton College and Trinity College, Cambridge.[1] He studied law in London, then art in Italy.[1]
He settled in the Bay of Islands in 1842. On 30 November 1859, he married Lydia Jane Williams, youngest daughter of the missionary Henry Williams and Marianne Williams; they had no children.[2]
He became a journalist in Auckland and edited the New Zealander then established the Anglo-Maori Warder, which followed an editorial policy in opposition to Governor George Grey. In 1856 he became the editor of the Southern Cross.[1]
He was a member of New Zealand's first, second, third, and fourth Parliaments, representing the electorate from 1853 to 1870, when he was defeated. Due to the system of staggering used in the first general election, Carleton was actually the first MP ever elected in New Zealand (though he was elected unopposed), hence he liked to be called the Father of the House.[3] [4]
Carleton was the second Chairman of Committees, succeeding Frederick Merriman on 17 April 1856, i.e. just after the opening of the first session of the 2nd Parliament. He remained Chairman of Committees until he left Parliament in 1870.
He had a strong interest in parliamentary procedure, and unsuccessfully lobbied for the position of Speaker. He is known for his unsuccessful campaign against the availability of alcoholic beverages at Bellamy's, the parliamentary restaurant. He was also a critic of the idea that all voting districts should contain the same number of voters, saying that this system gave "a preponderating control" of the political world to one specific class. He was described as "scholarly" by his allies and "pedantic" by his critics.
Carleton returned to England and spent the last ten years of his life there. He died at Lewisham, Surrey, England, on 14 July 1890.[5]
His wife Lydia died in Napier, New Zealand on 28 November 1891.[6] [7] [8] [9] [10]