John Hamilton (Queensland politician) explained

John Hamilton
Constituency Am2:Gympie
Assembly2:Queensland Legislative
Term Start2:15 November 1878
Term End2:7 September 1883
Predecessor2:James Kidgell
Successor2:William Smyth
Constituency Am3:Cook
Assembly3:Queensland Legislative
Term Start3:30 October 1883
Term End3:27 August 1904
Predecessor3:John Walsh
Successor3:John Hargreaves
Alongside3:Frederick Cooper, Thomas Campbell, Charles Hill
Birth Date:19 August 1841
Birth Place:Melbourne, Colony of New South Wales
Death Place:Brisbane, Queensland, Australia
Restingplace:Toowong Cemetery
Birthname:John Dinwoodie
Nationality:Australian
Party:Ministerialist
Occupation:Gold miner, Amateur doctor

John Hamilton (19 August 1841  - 7 December 1916), also known as John Dinwoodie, was an Australian politician.

Early life

He was born in Melbourne to saddler John Dinwoodie and Janet, née McFarlane. He was sent to a private tutor in England before travelling to Rockhampton with the intention to become a pastoralist. He instead became a gold miner at the Calliope gold rush and moved to Gympie in 1867, where he became a magistrate under the name John Hamilton. He also practiced as a doctor despite his lack of qualifications, and in 1877 was a surgeon to the hospital at the Hodgkinson gold rush, where he attracted publicity with a public dispute with the local warden and a successful defamation case after allegations that he seduced the daughter of a friend of the local editor.

Politics

In 1878 he was elected to the Legislative Assembly of Queensland for Gympie and supported Thomas McIlwraith's conservative group. In 1883 he changed seat to Cook, winning the election amid allegations of vote rigging.[1]

Hamilton supported the North Queensland separatist movement and continued to support McIlwraith's conservative successors, becoming a significant but occasionally rebellious backbencher, successfully opposing the attempted reduction of parliamentary salaries in 1893 and defeating the nomination of Alfred Cowley as Speaker in 1899. In 1903 he lost his post as government whip and in 1904 lost his seat to a Labour candidate.

Later life

Following his defeat he retired, and died in 1916 at the Royal Brisbane Hospital,[1] having never married and was buried at Toowong Cemetery.[2] [3]

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Bolton . G. C. . Hamilton, John (1841-1916) . . . 1972 . 8 November 2011.
  2. https://online.brisbane.qld.gov.au/cemeteries/cemeteries_step3.jsp?mapdisplay=178107 Hamilton John
  3. News: [Funeral notices]. ]. . 8 December 1916 . 3 January 2015 . 6 . National Library of Australia . 11 March 2020 . https://web.archive.org/web/20200311001016/https://trove.nla.gov.au/newspaper/article/0 . dead .