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Downer family

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John Downer
Alick Downer
Alexander Downer

TThe patriarch of the Downer family was Henry Downer, an immigrant tailor who arrived in Adelaide from England in 1838. Henry had several sons, among them John William, born in 1843, Henry Edward, and George. John William went on to get free secondary schooling by scholarship at Adelaide's Collegiate School of St Peter, "where he proved brilliant", according to the Australian Dictionary of Biography.

John William was later articled to brother Henry Edward, admitted to the South Australian Bar in 1867, and, with elder brother George, a prominent pastoralist, founded the "leading legal firm, J. and G. Downer". John entered state politics in 1878, became attorney-general in 1881 and was twice premier of his state - 1885-87 and 1892-93. At Federation in 1901 - by then Sir John Downer - he became one of South Australia's six original senators but resigned in December 1903 after missing appointment to the founding High Court.

John Downer died in 1915. He was twice married and survived by a son from each marriage. The son of his second marriage was Alexander Russell Downer, later a cabinet minister in the Menzies government in 1949 and, as Sir Alexander, Australian high commissioner to London in 1964. He, too, sired a son, Alexander John Gosse Downer, briefly Opposition leader in 1994 and John Howard's Foreign Minister for all of the last nine years as his reward for stepping down for Howard.

And what is it we learn of this distinguished family history in Roberts's book on this country's ruthless savagery by 19th-century pastoralists towards indigenous people? On pages 133 and 134 Roberts recounts how the notorious Constable Willshire, at his Port Augusta acquittal on multiple murder charges in 1891, was defended by the Foreign Minister's grandfather, "Sir John Downer, QC, former attorney-general and premier, with funds contributed by more than 60 supporters from Central Australia".

Most of it probably from our early land barons and their hirelings.

Name Birth name Alive Occupation Office Parents Spouse Notes
Henry Downer Henry Downer 1811–1870 Tailor Jane Field arrived from England aboard the Eden on 24 February 1838[1][2]
George Downer Alexander George Downer 1839–1916 Barrister, journalist, businessman Henry Downer and Jane Downer (née Field) unmarried
John Downer John William Downer 1843–1915 Partner in the legal firm G & J Downer Premier of South Australia

1885 – 1887, 1892 – 1893

Henry Downer and Jane Downer (née Field) Elizabeth Henderson

Una Stella Haslingden Russell
Henry Edward Downer 1836–1905 lawyer, businessman, politician Henry Downer and Jane Downer (née Field) Maria Martin Haggar
Alick Downer Alexander Russell Downer 1910–1981 Minister for Immigration, Australian

1958 – 1963

High Commissioner in London
1964 – 1972

John William Downer and Una Stella Haslingden Downer (née Russell) Mary Isobel Gosse
Mary Downer Mary Isobel Gosse 1924–2014 James Hay Gosse and Joanna Lang Gosse (née Barr Smith) Alick Downer
Alexander Downer 1951 – Minister for Foreign Affairs

1996 – 2007
Opposition Leader (Liberal Party)
1994 – 1995

Alick Downer and Mary Downer (née Gosse) Nicola Robinson
Georgina Downer Alexander Downer and Nicola Rosemary "Nicky" Downer (née Robinson) Trading heavily on her family connection and re-establishing herself in the electorate, she contested the 2018 Mayo by-election and the 2019 Australian federal election[3] as the endorsed Liberal candidate, in both cases unsuccessfully.

References

  1. ^ The Downers of South Australia Alick Downer - Wakefield Press. Retrieved 6 October 2019
  2. ^ Naval Tailor Fathers a Political Dynasty: Henry DOWNER (1811‐1870) & Jane FIELD (1806‐1861), The Pioneers Association of South Australia Inc. Retrieved 13 March 2016
  3. ^ "Georgina Downer secures Liberal preselection for Mayo six weeks after by-election defeat". ABC News. 8 September 2018. Retrieved 8 September 2018.