Chambers brothers (pastoralists)
James and John Chambers were early settlers in South Australia who left England in 1836, became wealthy pastoralists and were closely connected with John McDouall Stuart's expeditions across the continent of Australia.
James and John, sons of William and Elizabeth Chambers, their wives Catherine and Mary and their young families were among the first colonists, James arriving on the Coromandel at Holdfast Bay on 17 January 1837. The plan had been that by leaving on an earlier ship James would arrive in plenty of time to organise accommodation for the rest of the family, but unfavourable winds forced the Coromandel to delay its departure until 9 September. The ship was further delayed at Cape Town, partly because insufficient and inferior food supplies had brought about so much illness that Captain William Chesser feared many passengers would die on the voyage. They arrived 17 January 1837, around two weeks late.
The rest of the family, which included sister Priscilla Chambers, had a trouble-free voyage in the James Renwick, arriving off Largs Bay on 10 February 1837. Catherine and Mary's brother James Redin also emigrated, arriving with his wife on the Navarino on 21 February 1856.
Margaret Goyder Kerr, in her book Colonial Dynasty – the Chambers family of South Australia, makes the point that the two men were physically quite different, both in build and temperament, and John wore a green satin patch over his blind right eye, so would never be confused by contemporaries. The historian however has great difficulty: they both signed their names "J. Chambers" and were involved in similar activities so that it is difficult if not impossible at many points to determine which brother is involved.
James Chambers
James Chambers "Jemmy", born in Ponders End, London was a successful grazier and pastoralist in South Australia; with brother John a major sponsor of John McDouall Stuart's expeditions across the continent.He was the first to drive a team of bullocks between Adelaide and Port Adelaide, and Adelaide and Glenelg, effectively creating the Port Road and Bay Road. He ran sheep on a commonage licence in the area now known as Coromandel Valley.
He bought a town acre at the first land sale, and imported horses from Van Diemens Land
They built a house on Montefiore Hill in North Adelaide, at the site later occupied by John Langdon Bonython's Carclew.
He opened a livery stable in North Adelaide, He bought bullocks and wagons from Cape Town and coaches from England,
he tendered successfully for the mail contract to Burra around 1845 and built a substantial business carrying passengers to the mining areas north of Adelaide, including Gawler's expeditions into the country.
He provided the horses and carts for Tolmer's gold escort from Mount Alexander to Adelaide in 1852.
He was involved with the Jockey Club, and served as Clerk of Course in 1850.
He sold his business to Simms & Hayter in 1853 for around £14,000 and holidayed in Long Sutton, Lincolnshire, where he had gained his horse-dealing experience. With his new-found knowledge of what was needed in South Australia, he was able to return in 1856 on the ship Albuera with a useful selection of horses, cattle and sheep.
He and John dissolved their partnership and between 1854 and 1857 sold 1700 sq. miles for £48,000, retaining 270 sq. miles in the north.
Mining
James and his business partner William Finke found copper on one of their northern properties and on 23 July 1857 were issued with lease no 5 on some eighty acres that became known as the Oratunga Mine.He and Finke founded "Great Northern Copper Mining Company" and sold eleven mines, most notably Nuccaleena and Oratunga No.2 to that company, which originally consisted of eleven shareholders. The floating of the Great Northern Mining Company on the London Stock Exchange in 1860 was marked by irregularities, shady deals, deception and outright fraud. The first application for mining leases was refused by the Commissioner of Crown Lands Charles Bonney, but his replacement John Bentham Neales, M.P. took it on himself not only to grant them without going through the normal procedures, such as checking claims of the proponents, gaining approval from Major Freeling of the Survey Department, the Lands Office, and obtaining the signatures of the Chief Secretary and the Governor, but personally rushed the signed form to mining captains John Hart and Dashwood, and T. Hancock, as their ship to London was waiting on the tide at Glenelg. The Prospectus they prepared gave an unrealistic picture of the ore bodies, falsely claimed the Government was planning a railway to the mine, that the Burra proprietors had offered a large sum for the mine, and that it had the Governor 's endorsement, and falsely named John Morphett as a director. While the float was underway, ownership of the leases passed from Chambers and Finke to John Baker M.L.C. and Paxton.
In the parliamentary enquiry under Townsend which followed, James Chambers refused to answer questions, Finke avoided it by travelling interstate, Baker claimed parliamentary privilege and absented himself, and Neales claimed he was following a precedent. The directors judiciously reduced their holdings from 1500 shares each to 200 or 300 while prices were buoyant.
Exploration
He largely outfitted John McDouall Stuart for four of his six northern expeditions, brother John having supplied everything for the first, and the Government providing for the sixth. This last expedition set out with great ceremony on 25 October 1861 from James's residence on Montefiore Hill, North Adelaide, where he died of complications from a carbuncle without learning of its successful outcome.Family
James Chambers married Catherine Redin of Newton, Lincolnshire, in England on 6 August 1836. It is not known whether she came to Australia on the Coromandel or the James Renwick a month later. Her sister married John Chambers; her brother James Watson Redin also emigrated, lived at Aldinga, South Australia- Elizabeth Chambers married John Holden Newman on 21 January 1862. Elizabeth married again, to Edward John Peake on 29 June 1867. It is not known whether she had any further children.
- *Elizabeth Catherine Newman
- *John Holden Newman jnr. married Beatrice Emma Tate and moved to England.
- James Chambers jnr. residence "Wattaburrie" Port Elliot, married Emily Norall
- *Emily Chambers
- *Catherine Chambers married surveyor Walter Robert Gething on 30 December 1899; moved to Mica Street, then Wolfram Street, Broken Hill. She returned to Adelaide in 1939, eight years after her husband, who died there in 1934.
- *James Chambers married Mary Alice Provis on 20 January 1900 had a son 27 December 1903. She later married Fred Sinden.
- Catherine Chambers married her cousin, auctioneer John Barker on 11 March 1872. The town of Katherine, Northern Territory was named after her.
- *Alfred Edward Barker
- *Priscilla Mary Barker
- *Eleanor Kate Barker
- Anna Chambers married Peleg Whitford Jackson on 25 November 1869, previously of the firms Victorian Coach Company, Cobb & Co and Murray & Jackson, steamboat proprietors. They lived variously in Albury, New South Wales, Charleville, Queensland, Beechworth, Victoria and Brighton, Victoria and had six children.
- Hugh Chambers married Agnes May Ward on 3 December 1872 and lived at the family residence on Montefiore Hill.
- *Hugh Lindsay Chambers
- *Nina Chambers of Prospect, was a prominent Prospect socialite
- *Ruby Chambers of 4 Robe Terrace, Medindie, was also a prominent socialite
- *Rita Gay Chambers married John Whinham Packard on 28 October 1905
- *Alan Ward Chambers moved to Whakatane, New Zealand
- *Stuart Hansford Chambers married Ruby Rogers Skinner on 3 June 1911.
Barker & Chambers
They ran the "horse bazaar" on Sturt Street, Adelaide, also on Grenfell Street and Gay's Arcade, which in November 1884 was destroyed by fire and rebuilt as part of Adelaide Arcade.
When cattle dealer Edward Meade Bagot , disappeared in 1886, John Barker organised the search party.
Recognition
Chambers Creek and Chambers Hill were named for James Chambers.Chambers Pillar, River Chambers and Chambers Range in Central Australia as well as Chambers Bay, east of present-day Darwin, where the British flag was first raised, were named for him by Stuart. Katherine River was named for his second daughter Catherine.
Anna Creek, Edwards Creek and William Creek were named for John Chambers' children, by Peter Warburton in 1858, surveyor Lee in 1883, and John McDouall Stuart in 1858 respectively.
John Chambers
John Chambers, born in Ponders End, Middlesex was a successful grazier and pastoralist in South Australia.Both he and brother James were livestock dealers in East Dereham, Norfolk, following their father's profession. He arrived in South Australia in the John Renwick on 10 February 1837 with wife Mary, brother Benjamin and sister Priscilla shortly after his brother James.
He and his bullock dray were called on to assist the party of Light, Morphett and Hack, which explored the area between Holdfast Bay and Aldinga in June 1838. He claimed to have done the first ploughing in Adelaide and to have built the first Adelaide house with a fireplace, door and glass window. He also practised as a farrier and speculated as a dealer but over-reached himself in 1851 and John and Mary settled down on settled on 1200 acres in Cherry Gardens to run sheep.
In 1846 he took up land around Lake Bonney to run sheep, then formally converted it to leasehold in 1851, setting up a head station at Cobdogla, managed by James Trussell, successfully breeding horses and cattle. The two brothers took up the lease of the station pioneered by Fisher and Handcock near the present-day Renmark in 1858 and in 1859 William Finke took up another section in the area, creating two stations, "Bookmark" and "Chowilla". Around 1860 John Chambers took over Finke's lease, installing James Redin as manager. Around 1865 Chambers sold Bookmark and Chowilla to Richard Holland who around five years later passed it on to his stepsons William and Robert Robertson.
With brother James, he set up a headquarters at Mount Samuel, which Herschel Babbage used as a base for exploring the Flinders Ranges for prospective sites.
He took up leases at Pekina, Mount Remarkable, Moolooloo, Bobmoonie and Oratunga, Wirrealpa, Stuart Creek and Cournamont.
He and James dissolved their partnership and between 1854 and 1857 sold 1700 sq. miles for £48,000,
He sold much of his landholdings in 1863, avoiding losses in great drought
He had mining leases around Blinman, South Australia.
It was John who formed the idea of sponsoring John McDouall Stuart's expeditions across the continent. He supplied horses and provisions, and his employees formed Stuart's party.
He died aged 74 at his home on the Bay Road, near Richmond, South Australia.
Family
John married Mary Redin in October 1836. Their children included:- Fanny Chambers married stockbroker Alfred Francis Weaver on 29 June 1876
- Charles Chambers married Mary Jane Ransford on 30 April 1873
- Mary Chambers married Frederick James Blades on 16 June 1869.
- William Chambers married Clara Bailey on 19 April 1877; they had three children.
- Priscilla Chambers married Alfred Simms, son of William Knox Simms, on 17 June 1874
- Ellen Chambers married lawyer Alfred R B Lucas on 18 June 1885
Neither brother was involved in public affairs; John was a popular member of the Adelaide Hunt Club and owned the Richmond House racing stables; both were involved in horse racing.
Recognition
John McDouall Stuart named the Mary River and the Fanny River for his daughters, and the William River for his second son,It is probable that Chambers Avenue and Redin Street Richmond are linked to this branch of the family.
Benjamin Chambers
Benjamin Chambers and his wife Emily lived in Tombland, Norwich before emigrating with brother John on the John Renwick.He settled on a farm somewhere in the Upper Sturt / Cherry Gardens / Coromandel Valley area and played no major part in public affairs. There is circumstantial evidence that he was partner with his brother John in managing the Pekina run. There is no information available on his offspring, if any.
Priscilla Chambers
Priscilla Chambers arrived with brother John on the John Renwick on 10 February 1837In 1842 she married Alfred Barker who had been an officer on the Rapid, and settled at Yankalilla.
They moved to Burra when he ran the Burra Hotel, then took over the Baldina Run station in 1862.
He died at Baldina House, St. John's Wood, now part of Prospect, South Australia; she died at Henley Beach, South Australia
Family
- eldest son William Pitt Barker married Jane Young of Kooringa, South Australia on 26 May 1875, lived at nearby Baldina station. Part owner of Comongin Station
- second son John Barker married Catherine Chambers on 11 March 1872. Together with John Chambers, they formed the partnership of Barker and Chambers, major landholders in Queensland.
- eldest daughter Mary Barker married Donald MacLean on 21 June 1866
- Priscilla Barker married Gustav Wilhelm Moritz von Rieben on 21 April 1892
James Redin
His brother Thomas Redin was booked on the John Renwick voyage of 1836 but no more information is available as yet.
Family
He married Susan and had a home at Crowder Street, Lower Mitcham, South Australia and at Aldinga, South Australia Their children included:- James Redin married Emma Coles daughter of Alfred Coles, of Aldinga on 9 January 1863; worked on John Chambers' Bookmark station on the River Murray, was involved in a railway accident ca. 1890 and retired to Campbelltown.
- *Alfred J. Redin eldest son of James Redin, married Lilian E. M. Swansborough on 31 December 1888, perhaps the A. Redin who had a horse Defamation in 1893.
- Horatio Redin second son of the late James Redin of Hackney
- *Horatio Samuel Redin, athlete and reporter with South Australian Advertiser, died of pneumonia. Father at Palm Place, Hackney.
- Walter Newton, third son of James Redin of Palm Place, Hackney, married Lucy Elizabeth Edwards on 22 February 1899
- W. Redin was a reporter and cricketer in the early 1890s. was this Walter Newton?
- M. E. Redin had a wheat farm in 1901.