John Bevan (politician)
John Bevan JP (1837 – 16 July 1911) was a 19th-century member of the House of Representatives. He was an auctioneer and merchant from Hokitika on the West Coast of New Zealand. Early life and commercial careerBevan was born in Jersey on the Channel Islands in 1837[1] into a Welsh family.[2] He received his education at Jersey Grammar School and emigrated to Victoria in Australia in 1857 before moving to Hokitika in New Zealand in circa 1865.[1][2] He entered a partnership with Michael Pollock and they traded as auctioneers and merchants under the banner of Pollock and Bevan in Hokitika's Revell Street.[2][3] He remained in Hokitika for the rest of his life.[4] Political career
Bevan belonged to many organisations. He was a longstanding member of the Westland Board of Education and for some time was the board's chairman. He was a member of the High School Board. He was a member of the Westland Land Board and got voted onto the Hokitika Borough Council. He was president of the Westland Hospital Board of Trustees. He was a Visiting Justice to Hokitika Prison and an official visitor to the local mental hospital.[4] Bevan contested the 1884 election in the Hokitika electorate against the incumbent, Gerard George Fitzgerald, and James Clarke. Fitzgerald, a brother of prominent politician James FitzGerald, had lived in Hokitika until 1880 but was a newspaper editor in Wanganui by the time he was elected in 1881 and remained a North Island resident. Bevan had a 4 percentage point margin over Fitzgerald, with Clarke coming a distant third.[5] He represented the Hokitika electorate until 1887, when he was defeated by Joseph Grimmond 830 votes to 610.[6][7] FreemasonryBevan was a District Grand Master of Freemasons in Westland.[8] Family and deathOn 7 May 1900, Bevan married the widow Anne Clery (née Handley) at All Saints' Church.[9] Bevan suffered a long and serious illness in 1909 and never fully recovered from it.[4] He died at Hokitika on 16 July 1911[10] aged 74.[4] He was survived by his wife Anne[11] and two stepchildren.[4] His funeral at Hokitika Cemetery was an Anglican service with Masonic ceremony, largely attended by Freemasons from throughout Westland.[12] Anne Bevan died in Dunedin in 1928.[13] References
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