Richard Joseph Smith
Richard Joseph Smith (1819 – 15 November 1883) was a member of both the New South Wales Legislative Council and the Queensland Legislative Council.[1] Early lifeSmith was born at Leicester, England in 1819 to Richard Smith and arrived in New South Wales as a young boy around 1824. By 1847 he had travelled to Brisbane and established a boiling down works at Kangaroo Point. In 1849 he established the Town Marie Boiling Down Works on the Bremer River at Karalee, near Ipswich.[1] PoliticsSmith became an elected member of the New South Wales Legislative Council on 1 March 1853, representing the Pastoral Districts of Moreton, Wide Bay, Burnett, and Maranoa. His term ended on 29 February 1856.[2] After Queensland had separated from New South Wales, Smith was appointed to the Queensland Legislative Council on 3 July 1863.[1] Smith was declared insolvent in 1866 and as a consequence resigned from the Council.[1] Civic lifeThe Governor of Queensland appointed Richard Joseph Smith to be First Lieutenant of the Cavalry of the Queensland Volunteer Rifle Corps on 26 May 1860.[3][4] After his resignation he became a crown law agent in Ipswich, before his appointment as a land commissioner in the Moreton area.[1] Personal lifeIn 1861, Smith married Maria Susanna Stutchbury in Brisbane and together they had one daughter.[1] He died in 1883[1] and was buried in Ipswich General Cemetery.[5] References
|