John Mackintosh Roberts
John Mackintosh Roberts NZC (31 December 1840 – 12 October 1928) was a New Zealand soldier, resident magistrate and administrator.
John Mackintosh Roberts was born in the city of Bombay, India, on 31 December 1840, the eldest child of George Roberts and Mary née Mackintosh. His father was an official in the Supreme Court of India, who died in 1844. This left Roberts and a sister, just an infant at the time, to be raised by his mother. An aunt soon joined the family in India but they eventually moved to Inverness in Scotland. Here Roberts attended the Royal Academy. The family, which included Robert's aunt and her husband, who she had met in India, migrated to New Zealand in late 1855, aboard the Carnatic.[1]
On 12 March 1872 in a ceremony at Cambridge, Roberts married Jessie née Clare, who was his cousin. Her father, Robert's uncle by marriage, was an officer in the New Zealand militia.[2]
After seeing considerable action across the North Island in the New Zealand wars, Roberts was appointed commander of the new New Zealand Permanent Militia in February 1887. After retiring as a soldier in 1888, he was a magistrate in Masterton and Tauranga and two Royal Commissions.[1]
Roberts died on 11 October 1928 in Rotorua at the age of 88. Buried in the Tauranga cemetery, he was survived by two sons and two daughters. His wife had predeceased him several years previously.[3]
References
- ^ a b Parham, W. T. "John Mackintosh Roberts". Dictionary of New Zealand Biography. Ministry for Culture and Heritage. Retrieved 1 December 2011.
- ^ "Marriages". Daily Southern Cross. No. 4545. 20 March 1872. Retrieved 23 August 2018.
- ^ "Obituary: Lieut-Colonel Roberts (N.Z.C)". Bay of Plenty Times. No. 9900. 12 October 1928. Retrieved 23 August 2018.
- 1840 births
- 1928 deaths
- New Zealand military personnel
- District Courts of New Zealand judges
- People of the New Zealand Wars
- Military personnel from Mumbai
- Recipients of the New Zealand Cross (1869)
- People educated at Inverness Royal Academy
- British emigrants to New Zealand
- Colony of New Zealand judges
- British people of colonial India
- New Zealand military personnel stubs
- New Zealand law biography stubs