James Milne Wilson

Sir James Milne Wilson, KCMG (29 February 1812 – 29 February 1880) served as Premier of Tasmania from 1869 to 1872.

Sir

James Milne Wilson

KCMG
8th Premier of Tasmania
In office
4 August 1869  4 November 1872
Preceded bySir Richard Dry
Succeeded byFrederick Innes
Personal details
Born(1812-02-29)29 February 1812
Banff, Scotland, UK
Died29 February 1880(1880-02-29) (aged 68)
Hobart, Tasmania
NationalityBritish

Biography

Wilson was born in 1812 in Banff, Scotland; the third son of John Wilson, a shipowner, and his wife, Barbara Gray; maternal grandson of Alexander Gray and wife, Jean Bean (See Pedigree of Bean of Portsoy). Educated at Banff and Edinburgh, he emigrated to Tasmania in 1829, studied practical engineering and afterwards became a ship's officer. He was connected with the Cascade Brewery for 14 years and became its manager. He entered politics in October 1859 as member for Hobart in the legislative council, and in January 1863 joined the Whyte cabinet as minister without portfolio. In 1868, at the time of the visit of the Duke of Edinburgh, Wilson was Mayor of Hobart and on 4 August 1869 became Premier and colonial secretary in a ministry which lasted until November 1872.

Anthony Trollope, who came to Australia in 1871, formed a high opinion of Wilson: "I thought I had not met a sounder politician in Australia... Victoria is desirous of annexing Tasmania. Perhaps when she has done so, Mr Wilson will become premier for the joint colonies, and then great things may be expected." In 1872, Wilson was elected President of the Tasmanian Legislative Council, and held this position until his death on 29 February 1880, on his "seventeenth" birthday aged 68.

In 1847, he married Deborah Hope, daughter of Peter Degraves. Lady Wilson survived him with children. He was knighted in 1873 and created K.C.M.G. in 1878. He was a man of unbounded popularity, well known for his charities. He was president of the Southern Tasmanian Agricultural Society and chairman of committees and president of the Tasmanian Jockey Club. As a politician Wilson showed wisdom in his advocacy of free-trade between the Australian colonies. Tasmania passed an intercolonial freetrade act in 1870 during his premiership, but the question made no headway on the mainland.

Wilson achieved the extremely rare feat of being both born on 29 February (making him a leapling) and dying on the same date at the age of 68.

gollark: What causes population goodness/badness then?
gollark: Well, the water-walking thing presumably has to either magically make him hover above the surface or effectively provide more contact area with the water, right?
gollark: Would that work? How is Jesus's water-walking thing implemented?
gollark: You can check whether the results of it are good by some other metric, but that just pushes the problem up a level.
gollark: Regarding objective morality: I don't understand how it's meant to work. Generally we consider things "true" if they're well-established by experiment and observation. I do not see how you can empirically test whether something is what you "should" do.

References

  • Serle, Percival (1949). "Wilson, James". Dictionary of Australian Biography. Sydney: Angus and Robertson.
  • Parliamentary Library profile
Political offices
Preceded by
Sir Richard Dry
Premier of Tasmania
1869–1872
Succeeded by
Frederick Innes
Tasmanian Legislative Council
Preceded by
Frederick Innes
President of the Tasmanian Legislative Council
1872–1880
Succeeded by
Frederick Innes
Preceded by
John Walker
Member for Hobart
1859–1880
Served alongside: Carter/Kennerley/Agnew, Horne/Wedge/Fysh/Crowther
Succeeded by
Alexander McGregor
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