Peacock and SonPeacock & Son was a tanning and wool-brokering[1] business in the early days of South Australia. Three members of the family were notable public figures: William Peacock (c. 1790 – 20 January 1874) was a successful businessman and one of the colony's first parliamentarians.[2] His eldest son Joseph Peacock carried on the family business and was a member of parliament. His youngest son Caleb Peacock was a member of parliament and Mayor of Adelaide from 1875 to 1877, the first such born in the Colony. William and family sailed for South Australia on the "Glenalvon", a ship he chartered,[3] arriving at Holdfast Bay on 28 December 1838. William PeacockWilliam commenced his tannery business in Grenfell Street in 1839, with a fellmongering facility at Adam Street, Hindmarsh.[4] He had moved by 1868 to Thebarton[5] His was the first major tannery, ahead of both Dench & Co. and G. W. Bean,[6] and the first to export acacia bark. The Adam Street property was sold in July 1903 to fellmongers Michell and Sons.[7] He was one of the original investors in the South Australian Mining Association, which developed the lucrative Burra copper mines between 1845 and 1865, and a director (disqualified in 1860 through absence greater than 6 months but subsequently re-elected[8]) Religion and educationHe was associated with the Congregational Church in Freeman Street (now part of Gawler Place), funded the building of the chapel in Ebenezer Place (off Rundle Street east). He then helped organise the building of the Hindmarsh Square Congregational Church, which later became an office and orchestral studio for ABC Radio.[3] He was closely associated with J. L. Young and his Adelaide Educational Institution, which for many years used rooms at the Ebenezer Place and Freeman Street chapels. PoliticsHe served on the Adelaide City Council as Councillor and Alderman from 1842 He won the seat of Noarlunga in the South Australian Legislative Council (then the only House) against Major O'Halloran in 1851[9] which he held to 1856. He won a Legislative Council seat in 1861, which he held until 1869 when he retired,[10] a few days before parliament was prorogued.[11] FamilyWilliam Peacock married Elizabeth Everett, daughter of Joseph, another Bermondsey fellmonger, in 1816. He was widowed between 1834 and 1836 and remarried in 1836. His new wife was Maria Groch who accompanied him on the "Glenalvon" with their infant son William. The older children in the party were from his first marriage to Elizabeth.
His children with Maria (c. 1802 – 13 February 1869) were:
Their home for many years was "Palm House" in Hackney on what was known as "Peacock Hill", now St. Peter's College. He married Mary Ann Evans (1821–1908) on 15 June 1871. She was to marry Carrington Smedley on 4 March 1875.[14] References
Sources
|