Benjamin Nash

Benjamin Nash (5 March 1829 – 19 April 1890) was a tailor and politician in colonial South Australia.

He was born in Birmingham and emigrated to Melbourne in 1857 but in July, after only a few months in the gold diggings, moved to Adelaide and set up a tailoring business in Rundle Street.

He was prominent in the Voluntary Militia, and from 1858 to 1865 served with the West Adelaide Company under Colonel George Mayo. In 1859 he successfully tendered for the supply of the first uniforms for the Volunteer Military Force. In 1878 he was elected to the Walkerville District Council, and became its chairman.[1]

He was elected to the seat of West Torrens and sat from April 1887 to April 1890. He failed in his bid to be reelected, and died of kidney failure ten days later. He was buried in West Terrace Cemetery's Catholic section. He had converted to that faith around two years before his death. He made a gift of an organ to St. Laurence's, his small local church.[2]

Family

He married Ann Ide; they lived at Sturt Street, Adelaide and had eight children:

  • Joseph George Nash ( 1853 – 1909 ), an engineer, patented a novel sheep shearing handpiece.[3] He has been credited with invention of the Totalizator.[4]
  • Charlotte Ann Nash (c. 1854 – 10 July 1911) married Thomas Carter (c. 1853 – 2 February 1923), on 20 February 1928; they lived at Roseworthy, then Palmerston Road, Unley. She died after being struck by a motor car while crossing Unley Road.
  • Sarah Jane Nash(1860 - 1863)
  • John Francis Nash (1862 - 1904) a tobacconist; married Rose Ann Mackell (1865 - ) on 3 June 1891, Sydney NSW
  • Eliza Nash (1863 - 1863), twin [5]
  • Hannah Nash (1863 - 1863), twin [6]
  • Alice Mary Nash (c. 1864 – 13 January 1899) [7]
  • youngest daughter Agnes Jane Eily "Jenny" Nash (1867 – 1932) married John Joseph Leahy (1851 – 1910) a contractor, on 8 September 1888 [8]

On 14 February, 1874, Benjamin Nash married Clara Francis Barnes (1851 - 1950); they lived in Nashville Tc, Medindie


Benjamin had a twin brother Joseph, in America, who also died uremia.

gollark: Remember when I said to fear my inferential powers, LyricLy, and you IGNORED it, like you IGNORE Macron-related Macron data?
gollark: These are very phasic, I must say. Glad I used apionic induction to use this information!
gollark: The CSS is obviously the kind I write (trivially), it inconsistently uses fairly advanced new JS like template strings and destructuring and Uint8Arrays, it uses overly general operations like zip and cartesian product and map and insertDiagonalFrom, it also uses the exotic labelling feature, I doubt many people here know about WebWorkers or the ridiculous hack I came up with a while ago to do them without an actual external file, it does IO in such an ugly accursed way, and the AI is insane.
gollark: But it would have been funny, at least.
gollark: I decided not to because I knew it was you anyway and giving other people more information would be bad.

References

  1. "The Advertiser". The Advertiser. Adelaide. 21 April 1890. p. 4. Retrieved 22 September 2015 via National Library of Australia.
  2. "In Memoriam". The Southern Cross. Adelaide. 25 April 1890. p. 7. Retrieved 22 September 2015 via National Library of Australia.
  3. "The Machinery Section". Adelaide Observer. SA. 11 September 1897. p. 25. Retrieved 22 September 2015 via National Library of Australia.
  4. "Invention of Totalisator". The News. Adelaide. 30 April 1929. p. 8 Edition: Home. Retrieved 22 September 2015 via National Library of Australia.
  5. name="Ide Families in Australia"
  6. name="Ide Families in Australia"
  7. name="Ide Families in Australia"
  8. name="Ide Families in Australia"
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.