Everything about John Macarthur Wool Pioneer totally explained
John Macarthur (1766 –
11 April 1834) was a soldier, entrepreneur, politician and pioneer of the
Australian
wool industry.
Early life
Macarthur was born in
Plymouth, Devonshire, the second son of Alexander Macarthur, who had fled to the
West Indies after the
Jacobite Rising before returning and working as a linen draper selling naval slop clothing. His exact date of birth is unknown, but he was baptised on
3 September 1767.
Military career
John Macarthur joined Fish's Corps as an
Ensign in 1782. Having never seen action, his regiment was placed on half-pay when the
American Revolutionary War ended in 1783. During the next five years Macarthur appears to have taught at a private school, using spare time to travel, read and perhaps contemplate a future at
the bar. Having exchanged into the
68th Foot (later
Durham Light Infantry) in 1788, Macarthur found himself facing possible
court-martial for new post in
Gibraltar. Ensuing negotiations with the
war office resulted in an alternative posting to far-flung
Sydney, with the
New South Wales Corps in 1789. Prior to his ship's departure to
New South Wales, Macarthur raged against various personnel, including the Sailing Master, a
warrant officer, with whom he's suspected of fighting a
duel. Disputes revolved around the cramped and squalid accommodation provided for his wife and infant son, although this resulted in his family being transferred to another ship.
He arrived in Sydney in 1790 holding the rank of
Lieutenant and was appointed as commandant at
Parramatta. In February 1793 the acting governor,
Major Francis Grose, granted Macarthur of land at
Rose Hill near Parramatta. He was granted as further in April 1794 for being the first man to clear and cultivate 50 acres. He named the property
Elizabeth Farm after his
wife and profitably farmed wheat and sheep. Grose came to depend on Macarthur's administrative skills and appointed him as
paymaster for the regiment and as superintendent of public works, which Macarthur resigned in 1796 to concentrate on his business and farming interests.
Macarthur was a proud man and quarrelled with many of his neighbours and successive Governors. He was involved in a campaign alleging that
Governor Hunter was ineffective and trafficked in rum that lead to Hunter being forced to answer the charges and contributed to Hunter being recalled to England where fought to try and restore his reputation.
In July 1801,
Governor King overturned a sentence of one year's imprisonment for Lieutenant James Marshall of the
Earl Cornwallis, who had been convicted of assaulting Macarthur and Captain Abbott during their investigation into a theft. King referred the matter for trial on England on the grounds that the court had refused to hear Marshall's objection to an officer of the NSW Corps hearing the case. Macarthur refused to let this go and tried to organise a petty social boycott of Governor King and when his superior,
Colonel Paterson, refused to cooperate Macarthur used personal material to try and blackmail him. This resulted in Paterson challenging Macarthur to a duel in which Paterson was severely wounded in the shoulder. Governor King had Macarthur arrested then released him and appointed him as commandant on
Norfolk Island to try and diffuse things. Macarthur refused to comply and demanded a
court martial by his fellow officers. King, realising that this would be pointless, sent Macarthur to England for trial. The statement against Macarthur went missing during the voyage, (Evatt in
Rum Rebellion states Macarthur stole it based on motive), and as all the evidence and witnesses were in Sydney the courts ruled the matter should be tried there.
The Duke of York, Commander-in-Chief of the British Army, rebuked King for failing to deal with the matter himself but confirmed that King's orders releasing Macarthur and transferring him to Norfolk Island stood. Macarthur, to avoid the posting, resigned his commission and returned to Sydney to run his businesses. Governor King had declared while Macarthur was in
London that, "if Captain Macarthur returns here in any official character, it should be that of Governor, as one-half the colony already belongs to him, and it won't be long before he gets the other half."
Establishing his flock
Macarthur decided that, instead of just producing food including mutton for the colony, the land around Sydney could be used to produce high quality wool and a profitable export industry established. In 1796 he imported some poor quality
Merinos, which being Spanish were better suited to the local climate, from
South Africa and began trying to breed up the quality of his flock's fleece.
On his way to England, for trial over the duel with Colonel Paterson, Macarthur's ship had put in for repairs in Indonesia where he met a young official of the East India Company with family connections, and was able to gain powerful backing for his wool enterprise. The Colonial Secretary,
Lord Camden, was highly supportive and backed Macarthur for a grant of 10,000 acres (40 km²) of his choosing. Sir
Joseph Banks, however, wasn't impressed with either Macarthur or his commercial venture. When Macarthur failed to conceal his low opinion of Banks, Banks became a strong opponent of the plan and had the grant halved, with transport five rams and one ewe to Sydney, even though the export of such sheep to the colonies was illegal and Banks opposed it .
When he arrived back in Sydney in 1805 Macarthur further antagonised local authorities by claiming his 5,000 acres (20 km²) in the Cowpastures. This was prime grazing land, well supplied by water from the Nepean river, and reserved by the Governor exclusively for the colony's cattle herds. Both Governors King and Bligh strongly objected to this and wanted the grant moved, but the Colonial Office wrote back affirming Macarthur's right to the land. Macarthur named it
Camden Park after his patron. Bligh also turned down Macarthur's request for the remaining 5000 acres (20 km²) after he'd begun exporting wool to England. Bligh was firmly opposed to Macarthur's venture famously declaring "What have I to do with your sheep, sir? Are you to have such flocks of sheep as no man ever heard of before? No, sir!".
Rum Rebellion
Governor
William Bligh was appointed, with backing by Sir Joseph Banks, to crack down on the commercial activities of the NSW Corps, especially their trade in alcohol. Macarthur was a prime target and the pair clashed throughout 1807.
Macarthur was owed a debt in wheat, the price of which had gone up fourfold, but on appeal Bligh ruled it was only payable at the original value. Bligh cancelled a lease Macarthur held for some government land that Bligh wanted to use and Macarthur tried to prevent Bligh taking hold of it. When Bligh ordered that a to ship the rest of the still to China or India instead. When Bligh again demanded that the still in its entirety be shipped back to England Macarthur won a court case declaring the shipping agent's seizure of his property illegal.
When a convict stowed away and escaped to Tahiti on the
Parramatta, a ship Macarthur part-owned, Bligh demanded that the 900 pound Transport Board bond be forfeited. Macarthur refused to comply and the ship was seized when it returned. In December 1807 Bligh had an order issued for Macarthur to appear before the courts, which Macarthur refused to obey and subsequently was arrested and bailed for a trial on the 25th January 1808. This trial led to the
Rum Rebellion when the officers of the NSW Corps on the court sided with Macarthur and the Corps overthrew Bligh.
Immediately after the rebellion took place Macarthur dispatched his son
Edward to London with Macarthur's version of the events, and accompanying him was the first bale of Australian wool to be exported. The British woollen mills were desperate for wool because of the Napoleonic blockade, and the wool sold for a record price.
Macarthur served as Colonial Secretary in the rebel administration, until he was removed. Macarthur was sent to England where he remained for eight and half years to avoid an arrest warrant for him in Sydney. While there he put his sons into public schools, went for a tour of the continent in them well. Macarthur had gained the right to return to Sydney through lobbying, but wouldn't accept the conditions imposed that he admit his wrong doing and promise his good behaviour and so he remained in England until Lord Camden granted him unconditional return to NSW in 1817.
Macarthur was never tried, and apart from the exile, wasn't punished for his involvement in the Rum Rebellion. H.V Evatt, who was extremely critical of Macarthur, details the legal technicalities involved in his book
Rum Rebellion.
Later life
On his return to NSW Macarthur devoted himself to his farming.
Wool had great advantages as an industry for New South Wales, which because of its distance from European markets needed a commodity which didn't perish during long sea-voyages and which offered high value per unit of weight. Wool also had a ready market in England because the
Napoleonic Wars had increased demand and cut English cloth-makers off from their traditional source of quality wool, Spain. The export of wool soon made Macarthur the richest man in New South Wales. In 1822, The Society for the Arts in London award him two medals for exporting of wool to England and increasing the quality of his wool to that of the finest Saxon Merino.
In the early 1820s, John Macarthur was an owner of more than 100 horses. He established
Camden Park Stud and was a major provider of bloodhorses. His sons, James and William Macarthur, followed in his footsteps and became important Thoroughbred owners and breeders.
Macarthur established Australia's first commercial winemaker and was a founding investor of both the Australian Agricultural Company (London 1824) and the Bank of Australia. His Involvement in the Rum Rebellion blocked him from being appointed as a magistrate in 1822 but in 1825 he was nominated to the NSW Legislative Council where he served until 1832 when he was suspended due to his failing mental health.
John Macarthur died at
Camden in 1834. His numerous and wealthy descendants remained influential in New South Wales affairs for many years. As the Macarthur-Onslows they're still wealthy but no longer prominent in public life.
In recognition of his contribution to Australian agriculture, Macarthur appeared on the
A$2 note
in 1966.
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