Everything about John Hindmarsh totally explained
Rear-Admiral Sir John Hindmarsh KH RN (1785 –
29 July 1860) was the first
Governor of South Australia, from
28 December 1836 to
16 July 1838.
Naval career
Hindmarsh joined the
Royal Navy in 1793, seeing action at the
Battle of the Glorious First of June, the
Battle of Algeciras Bay (or the Battle of the Gut of Gibraltar) and at the
Battle of the Nile in 1798 where he was briefly the only officer on the deck of
HMS Bellerophon where he gave orders which saved the ship from destruction. He was promoted lieutenant in 1803. He served on
HMS Phoebe at the
Battle of Trafalgar, at the
Battle of the Basque Roads (1809) on
HMS Beagle and at the Battle of Java on HMS Nisus. A period of inaction followed, but in 1830 he was in command of
HMS Scylla and was made a Rear Admiral in 1831. In 1836 he went to South Australia as its first governor after winning influential support and applying the
Colonial Office. When the
Naval General Service Medal, designed by
William Wyon, was introduced, it was discovered that only 2 people were entitled to the medal with seven clasps (one clasp for each battle the recipient took part in): Sir John Hindmarsh and
Admiral of the Fleet Sir
James Alexander Gordon.
Governor
Hindmarsh arrived in
South Australia in
28 December 1836, with a fleet of ships carrying the first
British settlers for the colony. The ships in the fleet included the
Cygnet (carrying
Colonel William Light's surveyors),
Africaine,
Tam O'Shanter,
Rapid, and
Buffalo (carrying Hindmarsh). Initially they landed on
Kangaroo Island, and sent out the team of
surveyors led by Light to find a suitable place for the capital city of the new colony. Hindmarsh wanted it near the mouth of the
Murray River, instead of at the present site which had been selected by Light. Light eventually chose the site of
Adelaide, and the fleet moved up the
Gulf of Saint Vincent to
Holdfast Bay, off the present-day suburb of
Glenelg. The
proclamation creating the colony was read on
28 December 1836 under
the Old Gum Tree.
There was some question as to the respective powers of the governor and the resident commissioner,
James Hurtle Fisher, and the two came into open conflict. Feeling ran high and when Hindmarsh went so far as to suspend
Robert Gouger and other public officers, the commissioners brought the matter before the secretary of state for the colonies. Hindmarsh was then recalled to
London in 1838. In 1840 he was made as Lieutenant-Governor of
Heligoland. Hindmarsh was knighted by
Queen Victoria on
7 August 1851, attained the rank of rear-admiral in 1856 and retired in 1856 to the seaside town of
Hove, England.
Legacy
Hindmarsh lived at 30 Albany Villas for a number of years, where there's now a plaque in his honour. Rear-Admiral Sir John Hindmarsh died in
London on
29 July 1860 and is buried in the grounds of St Andrews Church, Hove. Hindmarsh was governor of South Australia for little more than a year, an unfortunate episode in an otherwise distinguished career. His position was anomalous from the start, and, though he was sometimes wanting in both tact and wisdom, his difficulties were great. For an interesting summary see A. Grenfell Price's
Founders and Pioneers of South Australia, p. 92. His daughter Jane married Alfred Miller Mundy
MP of Shipley Hall, Derbyshire, and was the mother of Maria, who married Sir Constantine Phipps, father of ambassador Sir
Eric Phipps
Places named after John Hindmarsh
Further Information
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