Francis Thomas Gregory

Francis Thomas "Frank" Gregory (19 October 1821 – 23 October 1888) was an Australian explorer and politician.


Frank Gregory
Member of the Queensland Legislative Council
In office
2 January 1874  23 October 1888
Personal details
Born
Francis Thomas Gregory

(1821-10-19)19 October 1821
Farnsfield, Nottinghamshire, England
Died23 October 1888(1888-10-23) (aged 67)
Harlaxton House, Toowoomba, Queensland, Australia
Resting placeDrayton and Toowoomba Cemetery
NationalityEnglish Australian
Spouse(s)Marion Scott Hume (m.1865)
RelationsJoshua Gregory (father), Augustus Charles Gregory (brother)
OccupationSurveyor
Known forExploration of Australia

Born in England, he emigrated with his family to Australia as a boy. He was the younger brother of the explorer and politician Augustus Gregory, who also made his career in the colony.

Biography

Gregory was born at Farnsfield, Nottinghamshire, England in 1821. His family, including his older brother Augustus, emigrated to Western Australia in 1829. After getting a basic education, Gregory entered the Western Australian public service in 1841 as a cadet surveyor.

In 1846, Gregory accompanied his older brother Augustus and explorer Henry Churchman, to investigate the country north of Perth. The following year, Gregory was appointed an assistant government surveyor; two years later he was promoted to staff surveyor in 1849.

In 1857 he led expeditions to the upper Murchison River, and to country farther east and north in 1858.

The next year Gregory visited England, to lobby the British government for funding towards exploration of North-West Australia. Gregory believed that the region might support grazing and/or plantation agriculture, based on the use of indentured labour from Asia.

In 1860, the Government of Western Australia put Gregory in charge of a proposed expedition to explore the interior around Nickol Bay. The southwestern part of this region was later known as the Pilbara. The British government provided £2,000 towards expenses. The expedition left Fremantle on 23 April 1861. Four days later, at Champion Bay (later Geraldton), Gregory was joined by three volunteers, making a party of nine. They completed the landing of the horses near the Harding River on 24 May, and started inland the following day.

After reaching the Fortescue River, the expedition followed it for several days, before turning to the south-west and following the Hardey River. On 25 June, having reached latitude 23° 56' south, they sought to retrace their steps and reached their landing place on the coast on 19 July. On 29 July, they commenced a second foray, north and east of the previous track.

Gregory returned with his party on 17 October and the expedition returned to Perth, which it reached on 9 November 1861. Gregory reported that he had seen between two and three million acres (1.2 million hectares) of land suitable for grazing. He also drew attention to the possibility of a pearling industry being established. As a result of the expedition to Nickol Bay, Gregory was awarded the Gold Medal of the Royal Geographical Society (1863).

In 1862 Gregory moved to Queensland, where his brother Augustus was already prominent as an explorer and official. Francis Gregory was appointed as a Commissioner of Crown Lands. He married Marion Hume in 1865, the sister of his surveying friend and protégé, Walter C. Hume[1]. From 1874, he was elected and served as a member of the Queensland Legislative Council. For a short period during 1883, he served as the appointed Postmaster-General of Queensland.

Death and legacy

Gregory died at Toowoomba on 23 October 1888 and was buried in Drayton and Toowoomba Cemetery.[2]

The exploration journals and records of Augustus and Francis Gregory were published in 1884 by the Queensland government as Journals of Australian Explorations.

Harlaxton in Toowoomba, c.1870

His Toowoomba home, Harlaxton House, is listed on the Queensland Heritage Register.[3]

Acacia gregorii, also known as Gregory's wattle, was collected in the Pilbara during the 1861 expedition, and is named in his honour.[4]

gollark: If the ocean shipping industry magically fixed itself, this is presumably useful information for us all.
gollark: What happened?
gollark: Even an efficiency maximiser has an ethical system. Broadly speaking. A goal system, at least.
gollark: Also convenience.
gollark: I, of course, do ethical things based on averaging various philosophy-derived ethical systems, arbitrary human intuition, and a neural network thing which weakly approximates average human judgements.

See also

References

  1. "Family Notices". Brisbane Courier (Qld. : 1864 - 1933). 15 May 1865. p. 2. Retrieved 27 May 2020.
  2. Cemeteries Online Toowoomba Regional Council. Retrieved 19 February 2015.
  3. "Harlaxton House (entry 600839)". Queensland Heritage Register. Queensland Heritage Council.
  4. "Acacia gregorii". Wattles of the Pilbara. Western Australian Herbarium. Retrieved 17 September 2018.

Further reading

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