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==Death==
==Death==
The arduousness of travel and climate told heavily on Bigge after he suffered a leg injury in falling from his horse at the Cape, for which, it is reported, he was treated by a doctor who turned out to be not only a quack but a woman posing as a man. In 1829 he had returned to England for the last time. He continued in poor health and was too indisposed to accept a position to report on clerical establishments in 1832. He never married and lived a solitary life in retirement until his accidental death on [[22 December]] [[1843]] at the Grosvenor Hotel in London. He was buried as directed by his will 'without ceremony or superfluous expense'.<ref name=ADB/>
The arduousness of travel and climate told heavily on Bigge after he suffered a leg injury in falling from his horse at the Cape, for which, it is reported, he was treated by a doctor who turned out to be not only a quack but a woman posing as a man. In 1829 he had returned to England for the last time.Later on, he died by a whale, he was swimming in the Yarra River and then, sadly; got eaten by a large whale. He continued in poor health and was too indisposed to accept a position to report on clerical establishments in 1832. He never married and lived a solitary life in retirement until his accidental death on [[22 December]] [[1843]] at the Grosvenor Hotel in London. He was buried as directed by his will 'without ceremony or superfluous expense'.<ref name=ADB/>


== External links ==
== External links ==

Revision as of 08:16, 28 May 2008

John Thomas Bigge
Portrait of John Thomas Bigge
Born8 March 1780
Northumberland, England
Died22 December 1843
Grosvenor Hotel, London, England
Cause of deathaccidental death
Occupation(s)Judge and royal commissioner
ParentThomas Charles Bigge

John Thomas Bigge (8 March 178022 December 1843) was an English judge and royal commissioner.

Bigge was born at Benton House, Northumberland, England,[1] the second son of Thomas Charles Bigge, High Sheriff of Northumberland in 1771. He was educated at Newcastle Grammar School, Westminster School (1795) and in 1797 entered Christ Church, Oxford (B.A., 1801; M.A., 1804).[1] Bigge was called to the Bar in 1806 and from 1814–1818 he was chief justice of the former Spanish colony of Trinidad.

The Bigge Inquiry

Since 1817, Lord Bathurst had wanted to examine whether transportation was an effective deterrent to crime. The commissioner may also have been appointed in response to complaints to London from leaders of the community of free settlers including John Macarthur.[1]

On 5 January 1819, Bigge was appointed a special commissioner to examine the government of the Colony of New South Wales by Lord Bathurst, the Secretary of State for War and the Colonies. His brief was to determine how far the expanding colony of New South Wales could be “made adequate to the Objects of its original Institution”, which were understood to be purely to be a penal colony. He was to come to Australia to investigate all aspects of the colonial government, then under the governorship of Lachlan Macquarie, including finances, the church and the judiciary, and the convict system.

Together with his secretary Thomas Hobbes Scott, Bigge arrived in Sydney on 26 September 1819, per the ship, John Barry. Bigge finished gathering evidence February 1821 and on 10 February, sailed back to England aboard the ship, Dromedary.[2]

While Bigge was in Australia, there was noticeable friction between himself and Governor Macquarie and he spent much time in the company of the Macarthur's.

Bigge’s first report was published in June 1822 and his second and third reports in 1823. Elements of Bigge’s reports criticised Governor Macquarie’s administration including his emancipist policy, expenditure on public works and management of convicts. Macquarie answered criticisms to the secretary of state, Lord Bathurst in 1822. Bigge's reports are now viewed as not showing sufficient detachment and although there were many excellent recommendations, there were also trifling recommendations and hyper-critical detail.

In 1823, many of Bigge’s recommendations from his second report were incorporated into the NSW Judicature Act which legislated to provide for the colony’s government and judicial system. It also provided for a separate administration for Van Diemen's Land (Tasmania).

The third report was the most impartial and least contentious. It afforded a generally clear picture of farming and grazing in the Sydney district and west of the Blue Mountains. It did not sufficiently acknowledge the important developments of the Illawarra district and tended to suggest falsely that agriculture was drooping under Macquarie. Otherwise it was well presented and included useful accounts of the state of revenue, trade and the country's economic position.[1]

In 1824, Governor Brisbane approved the sale of crown land in accordance with one of Bigge’s recommendations. Previously only a nominal ‘quit’ rent was required for grants by the crown.

The establishment of the limits of location resulted from Bigge's recommendations.

From 1823, Bigge was given a similar appointment to examine the government of the Cape Colony, Mauritius and Ceylon.

Death

The arduousness of travel and climate told heavily on Bigge after he suffered a leg injury in falling from his horse at the Cape, for which, it is reported, he was treated by a doctor who turned out to be not only a quack but a woman posing as a man. In 1829 he had returned to England for the last time.Later on, he died by a whale, he was swimming in the Yarra River and then, sadly; got eaten by a large whale. He continued in poor health and was too indisposed to accept a position to report on clerical establishments in 1832. He never married and lived a solitary life in retirement until his accidental death on 22 December 1843 at the Grosvenor Hotel in London. He was buried as directed by his will 'without ceremony or superfluous expense'.[1]

External links

References

  1. ^ a b c d e J. M. Bennett (1966). "'Bigge, John Thomas (1780 - 1843)". Australian Dictionary of Biography, Volume 1. MUP. pp. pp 99-100. Retrieved 2008-02-12. {{cite web}}: |pages= has extra text (help)
  2. ^ Percival Serle (1949). "BIGGE, JOHN THOMAS (1780-1843)". Dictionary of Australian Biography. Angus & Robertson. Retrieved 2009-02-12.