Henry Ayers

The Honourable
Sir Henry Ayers
GCMG
8th Premier of South Australia
In office
15 July 1863  4 August 1864
Monarch Victoria
Governor Sir Dominick Daly
Preceded by Francis Dutton
Succeeded by Sir Arthur Blyth
In office
20 September 1865  23 October 1865
Monarch Victoria
Governor Sir Dominick Daly
Preceded by Francis Dutton
Succeeded by Captain John Hart
In office
3 May 1867  24 September 1868
Monarch Victoria
Governor Sir Dominick Daly
Preceded by Sir James Boucaut
Succeeded by Captain John Hart
In office
13 October 1868  3 November 1868
Monarch Victoria
Governor Sir James Fergusson
Preceded by Captain John Hart
Succeeded by Henry Strangways
In office
22 January 1872  22 July 1873
Monarch Victoria
Governor Sir James Fergusson
Sir Anthony Musgrave
Preceded by Sir Arthur Blyth
Succeeded by Sir Arthur Blyth
Personal details
Born (1821-05-01)1 May 1821
Portsea, Portsmouth, Hampshire, England, UK
Died 11 June 1897(1897-06-11) (aged 76)
Adelaide, South Australia, Australia

Sir Henry Ayers GCMG (1 May 1821 – 11 June 1897) was the eighth Premier of South Australia, serving a record five times between 1863 and 1873.

Historians note his lasting memorial is in the name of Uluru/Ayers Rock, discovered in 1873 by William Gosse.[1][2]

Overview

Ayers was born at Portsea, Portsmouth, Hampshire, England son of William Ayers, of the Portsmouth dockyard, and his wife Elizabeth, née Breakes. Educated at the Beneficial Society's School (Portsea) he entered a law office in 1832. He emigrated, as a carpenter, to South Australia in 1840 with his wife, Anne (née Potts) with free passages. Until 1845 he worked as a law clerk, he was then appointed secretary of the Burra Burra mines.[3] Henry Roach was chief Captain, responsible for day-to-day operations, from 1847 to 1867.[4] Within a year the mine employed over 1000 men. For nearly 50 years Ayers was in control of this mine, initially as secretary and later as managing director. He made his wealth from the Burra Burra Copper Mines, which was known as the "Monster Mine" that secured the wealth of the colony of South Australia.

Politics

On 9 March 1857 Ayers was elected to the first South Australian Legislative Council under responsible government, the youngest member elected.[3] He was continuously a member for over 36 years. For many years the whole colony formed a single electorate for the council; on two occasions (1865 and 1873) Ayers headed the poll.

In March 1863 Ayers was selected as one of the three South Australian representatives at the inter-colonial conference on uniform tariffs and inland customs duties. He also represented the colony at several other conferences from 1864 to 1877.[3] On 4 July 1863 Ayers became minister without portfolio in the first Dutton cabinet. This ministry resigned just 11 days later however, as council demanded that it should have an executive minister to represent the government and Dutton refused. Ayers formed his first ministry as Premier and Chief Secretary on 15 July 1863.[3] The house was much divided and it was almost impossible to get business done. Ayers reconstructed his ministry on 22 July 1864 but was defeated, and resigned on 4 August 1864. The Blyth ministry which was then formed included Ayers as chief secretary, but did not survive a general election and resigned on 22 March 1865. When Dutton formed his second ministry Ayers had his old position as chief secretary, and still retaining that office, formed his third administration on 20 September 1865 which lasted just over a month. In spite of dissolutions it was found very difficult to get a workable house. There were 18 ministries between July 1863 and July 1873. Ayers became premier again from May 1867 to September 1868, October to November 1868, 27 January 1872 to March 1872, and with an entirely new team of ministers, from March 1872 to July 1873. He held the position of chief secretary in the Colton ministry from June 1876 to October 1877,[3] his last term of office.

In 1881 Ayers was elected President of the South Australian Legislative Council, and until December 1893 carried out his duties with ability, impartiality and courtesy. He died at Adelaide on 11 June 1897. His wife had died in 1881 and he was survived by three sons and a daughter. He was created CMG in 1870, knighted KCMG in 1872 and raised to GCMG in 1894.[3]

Legacy

Apart from his mining interests, Ayers held important directorates and was for many years a member and chairman of the board of trustees of the Savings Bank of South Australia; he was re-appointed chairman only a few days before his death. He was the first Chairman of the South Australian Gas Company, from 1862 was a governor of the Adelaide Botanic Gardens, president of the South Australian Old Colonists' Association, and was for many years on the council of the University of Adelaide. He was in parliament for an unbroken term of 37 years and in no other Australian colony or state has a politician exercised so much influence or been in so many ministries while a member of the upper house. It is likely, however, that if Ayers had been in the House of Assembly he would have had more control of business, and his seven premierships would have been longer in duration and more fruitful in results. An address he gave on Pioneer Difficulties on Founding South Australia was published as a pamphlet in 1891.

Ayers resided in Ayers House from 1855 until 1897 and built it from a 9-room house into a grand mansion in the 1860s. The youngest child, Lucy, was born at Ayers House. During Sir Henry's parliamentary service, Ayers House was used for Cabinet meetings, parliamentary dinners and grand balls.

Family

Henry Ayers married Anne Potts (1812 – 13 August 1881) at Alverstoke around 1839.[3] Anne was a sister of winemaker Frank Potts. They had four sons:[5][6]

and two daughters:

References

  1. Henry Ayers: The Man Who Became a Rock - by Jason Shute, published by I.B.Tauris
  2. On this day, 11 June 1897, Sir Henry Ayers: Professional Historians Association
  3. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 S. R. Parr (1969). "Ayers, Sir Henry (1821 - 1897)". Australian Dictionary of Biography, Volume 3. MUP. pp. 63–64. Retrieved 2008-01-27.
  4. "The Monster Mine", Burra Mine, Department of Mines and Energy, retrieved 2016-08-15
  5. Provisions of the Will, Barrier Miner (Broken Hill, NSW), 27 August 1897
  6. Sir Henry Ayers Will, The Advertiser (Adelaide, SA), 28 August 1897
Parliament of South Australia
Preceded by
John Bagot
Arthur Blyth
Francis Dutton
Member of the South Australian Legislative Council
1857  1893
Served alongside: Multiple Members
Succeeded by
Martin Basedow
James Martin
William Russell
South Australian Legislative Council
Preceded by
William Milne
President of the
South Australian Legislative Council

18811893
Succeeded by
Richard Baker
Political offices
Preceded by
Francis Dutton
Premier of South Australia
1863  1864
Succeeded by
Arthur Blyth
Preceded by
John Hart
Chief Secretary of South Australia
1863  1865
Succeeded by
John Hart
Preceded by
Francis Dutton
Premier of South Australia
1865
Preceded by
James Boucaut
Premier of South Australia
1867  1868
Preceded by
Arthur Blyth
Chief Secretary of South Australia
1867  1868
Preceded by
John Hart
Premier of South Australia
1868
Succeeded by
Henry Strangways
Chief Secretary of South Australia
1868
Succeeded by
John Bagot
Preceded by
Arthur Blyth
Premier of South Australia
1872  1873
Succeeded by
Arthur Blyth
Preceded by
William Milne
Chief Secretary of South Australia
1872  1873
Preceded by
George Hawker
Chief Secretary of South Australia
1876  1877
Succeeded by
William Morgan
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