John Clements Wickham

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Captain
John Clements Wickham
John Clements Wickham.jpg
Portrait of John Clements Wickham
Police Magistrate,
District of Moreton Bay,
New South Wales
In office
1 January 1843[1] – 8 April 1853[1]
Appointed by Sir George Gipps
Preceded by Gilbert Elliot[2]
Succeeded by None;
position renamed Police Magistrate, Brisbane[1]
Government Resident,
District of Moreton Bay,
New South Wales
In office
8 April 1853[2] – 1858[2]
Appointed by Sir Charles Augustus FitzRoy
Preceded by None[2]
Succeeded by Frederick Rawkins[2]
Personal details
Born (1798-11-21)21 November 1798
Leith, Scotland
Died Script error: The function "death_date_and_age" does not exist.
Biarritz, France
Resting place churchyard of St Jean de Luz[3]
Military service
Service/branch Royal Navy
Years of service 1812 – 1841
Rank Captain
Commands HMS Beagle

John Clements Wickham (21 November 1798 – 6 January 1864) was a Scottish explorer, naval officer, magistrate and administrator. He was first officer on HMS Beagle during its second survey mission, 1831–1836, under captain Robert FitzRoy. The young naturalist and geologist Charles Darwin was a supernumerary on the ship, and his journal was published as The Voyage of the Beagle. After that expedition, Wickham was promoted to Commander and made captain of the Beagle on its third voyage, from 1837 and conducted various maritime expeditions and hydrographic surveys along the Australian coastline.[4]

In 1843, after his retirement from the Royal Navy, Wickham was made Police Magistrate and, later, Government Resident of the Moreton Bay District, in the Colony of New South Wales (NSW). Wickham retired in 1859, when the Moreton Bay District was separated from NSW, forming basis of the Colony of Queensland. When the Queensland and NSW governments disagreed over which was responsible for his pension, Wickham moved to France, where he died.[4]

The Wickham family

The origins of the Wickham family were Rowley, a Yorkshire village which later became depopulated.[5]:2 In 1638, two brothers, Richard and Thomas Wickham, were among the families to emigrate to America[5]:2 with Rev. Ezekiel Rogers after he was suspended as Rector of the parish church in 1638 for his non-conformist beliefs.[6] Thomas married Sarah and their fifth son, Samuel Wickham, was born in 1664; he later settled in Rhode Island and became a Freeman of that Colony and a Deputy.[5]:2 Samuel Wickham married Barbara Holken in 1691 and their fifth son, Benjamin Wickham, was born 17 November 1701 at Rhode Island. Benjamin was chosen by the Rhode Island colonial Assembly in 1756 to be Lieutenant-Colonel of a Regiment raised for the second expedition against Crown Point. In 1757, a deputy for Newport he became Speaker of the House of Deputies.[5]:2–3 Benjamin married Mary, daughter of Colonel John Gardner in 1743 and Samuel Wickham, their sixth and youngest son, was born at Newport, Rhode Island in 1758. This Samuel rose to the rank of Lieutenant in the Royal Navy; while he was attached to the Portuguese Navy as an instructor he was given the rank of Captain-Lieutenant. He fought on the British side in the War of Independence after which he left America and settled in Scotland. On 16 June 1795 he married Ellen Susan Naylor at Gibraltar.[5]:2–3 John Clements Wickham was born to them on 21 November 1798 at Leith in Scotland.[7]:461

Naval career

On 21 February 1812 John Clements Wickham joined the Royal Navy.[7]:461[8] By 1815 he was an Admiralty Midshipman and was posted to HMS Nightingale and in 1818 was posted to HMS Hyperion before being paid off. He passed his Lieutenant's examination in 1819.[5]:5

In 1825 he was appointed Second-Lieutenant on the British warship Adventure under the command of Phillip Parker King, son of Philip Gidley King, third Governor of New South Wales. The Adventure and the Beagle were ordered to survey the coasts of the southern part of South America, including Patagonia and Tierra del Fuego.[7]:461

Wickham transferred to the Beagle in 1831 as First Lieutenant, under Captain Robert Fitzroy and first officer Philip Parker King (1791–1856), to complete the survey of Patagonia and Tierra del Fuego, as part of a circumnavigation of the globe. Wickham and King were lifelong friends and brothers-in-law as they married sisters, the daughters of Hannibal Hawkins Macarthur.[4] This would be the most famous voyage of the Beagle, with naturalist Charles Darwin,[4][7]:461–2 and artists Augustus Earle and (later) Conrad Martens also on board. After entering the Pacific Ocean, the Beagle surveyed the coasts of Chile and Peru, the Galápagos Islands, the Society Islands, the Navigator (Samoa) and Fiji island groups, New Zealand, Port Jackson (Sydney), Van Diemen's Land (Tasmania), King George's Sound, the Cocos (Keeling) Islands and Mauritius. It then returned, via Saint Helena, Ascension Island, Bahia and Pernambuco to England in 1836.

On 10 January 1837, Wickham was promoted from Lieutenant to Captain and given command of the Beagle, while Lt John Lort Stokes – a shipmate from the first two journeys of the Beagle – was made first officer.[5]:5[9]

From 1837 to 1841, the Beagle charting the coasts of north western Australia and Arnhem Land. In 1839, Stokes sighted a natural harbour which Wickham named Port Darwin after their former shipmate.[10]

In 1841, Wickham fell ill and resigned his command which was taken over by Stokes, who continued the survey and completed the voyage in 1843. Darwin also took a Galápagos tortoise named Harriet which he gave to Wickham, who brought it to Brisbane. The tortoise gained fame for her longevity, living 175 years until 2006.[11]

Later life

Wickham became the police magistrate at the Moreton Bay District of New South Wales (now Queensland).[12]

From 1853 he was Government Resident of the Moreton Bay District and resided at Newstead House, Brisbane.[13]

In 1859, Wickham moved to the south of France, where he lived until his death in 1864.[4][14]

Commemorations

A commemorative plaque at Newstead House

Places

Australia
Chile
Falkland Islands
Solomon Islands

Other commemorations

Two defunct electorates in Australian state parliaments, namely

An Australian plant:

See also

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 Queensland State Archives Agency ID2700, Police Magistrate, Moreton Bay, The State of Queensland (Department of Public Works) 2004–2006 accessed 9 September 2011.
  2. 2.0 2.1 2.2 2.3 2.4 Queensland State Archives Agency ID2193, Government Resident, Moreton Bay, The State of Queensland (Department of Public Works) 2004–2006 accessed 9 September 2011.
  3. 3.0 3.1 Ismail Street became Wickham St in 1922. Ayr Advocate, 13 August 2004, p16 (via factiva.com; accessed 12 September 2011).
  4. 4.0 4.1 4.2 4.3 4.4 A. A. Morrison, "Wickham, John Clements (1798–1864)", Australian Dictionary of Biography, National Centre of Biography, Australian National University, accessed 8 September 2011.
  5. 5.0 5.1 5.2 5.3 5.4 5.5 5.6 C.G. Drury Clarke, "Captain John Clements Wickham, R.N. his antecedents and descendants" (1984) Journal of the Royal Historical Society of Queensland, Vol. 12 no. 1, pp 1–25 ISSN 0085-5804.
  6. Rev. Philip Graystone. "Elizabeth Jackson of Rowley" (1993, Lampada Press, Hull) ISBN 1 873811 02 0.
  7. 7.0 7.1 7.2 7.3 C. G. Austin, "Newstead House and Capt. Wickham, R.N.", (1947) Journal of the Historical Society of Queensland, Vol. 3 no. 6, pp 459–465, ISSN 1837-8366.
  8. O'Byrne, William Richard (1849). "Wikisource link to Wickham, John Clements". Wikisource link to A Naval Biographical Dictionary. John Murray. Wikisource. 
  9. "From the London Gazette". Caledonian Mercury [Edinburgh, Scotland], 14 January 1837 (British Library Gale Document No. BB3205424269; accessed 14 September 2011).
  10. The port became the site of the first enduring settlement on the north coast: Darwin, later capital and most populous city of the Northern Territory.
  11. 11.0 11.1 Australia Zoo – About Us – In The News – Harriet's 92 million minutes of fame
  12. L. E. Skinner, "Law and justice for the Queensland colony", (1972) Journal of the Royal Historical Society of Queensland, Vol. 9 no. 3 pp 94-106.
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  14. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  15. Landgate, 2012, "History of Country Town Names" (9 November 2012).

Further reading

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