Governor Gawler's seal |
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Title : | Governor Gawler's seal |
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Creator : | Issued by Queen Victoria and the Royal family | ||
Source : | PRG 50/44 | ||
Date of creation : | 1838 | ||
Format : | Object | ||
Contributor : | State Library catalogue | ||
Catalogue record | |||
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Copyright : | Reproduction rights are owned by State Library of South Australia. This image may be printed or saved for research or study. Use for any other purpose requires permission from the State Library of South Australia. To request approval, complete the Permission to publish form. |
Description : |
Royal Warrant with intact wax seal granted to George Gawler, appointing him Governor of South Australia on the behalf of Queen Victoria, 1838. It is possible that the decorative border around the warrant text was printed from a lithographic stone. The details of the warrant have been finished by hand in ink, including some calligraphy, and the circular wax seal (approximately 1500 mm) was once attached to the document with red silk thread ribbon. The image embossed into the wax features a figure mounted on a horse holding a shield. This unique object comes from a collection of the personal papers of Lt.Col George Gawler, Governor of South Australia (1838-1840), and members of his family, comprising school records, papers of appointment, correspondence, photographs, newspaper cuttings, certificates, pencil and watercolour drawings and other papers. George Gawler was South Australia's second Governor, arriving in the province of South Australia 12 Ocotber 1838 onboard the Pestonjee Bomanjee (ship) with his mother, wife and five children. His appointment followed a long service in the 52nd (Oxfordshire) Regiment, in which he obtained a commission as Ensign in 1810 and had risen in the ranks to Major in 1831. He departed from the Regiment via a promotion to unattached Lieutenant Colonel in 1834. Governor Gawler and his wife were pious evangelical Christians. Both disapproved of dancing and card playing, and held daily morning prayers which all the servants were expected to attend. Mrs Gawler, with her sons, distributed religious tracts amongst the inhabitants of Adelaide. "Gawler's administration as Governor embraced a most difficult period in the colony's development and his recourse to extraordinary expenditure in an attempt to resolve these difficulties, led to the censure of his actions and ultimate recall in May 1841" (R. Hetherington, 'Gawler, George (1795 - 1869)', Australian Dictionary of Biography, Volume 1, Melbourne University Press, 1966, pp 431-435).
"While many of the colonists approved of Gawler's actions, and attested to their confidence in his administration in a number of memorials and a testimonial prior to his departure from the colony, the weight of official opinion in England was against him, and only many years later was his administration impartially assessed and his measures vindicated" (R. Hetherington, 'Gawler, George (1795 - 1869)', Australian Dictionary of Biography, Volume 1, Melbourne University Press, 1966, pp 431-435).
Following his departure from South Australia in June 1841, Gawler returned with his family to England where he remained until his death in 1869. He was made a colonel in the British Army in 1846, only to resign from his commission in 1850. |
Subjects | |
Related names : | Fisher, Sir James Hurtle, 1790-1875 Gawler, George, 1795-1869 Hindmarsh, Sir John, 1785-1860 Pestonjee Bomanjee (Ship) Torrens, Robert, 1780-1864 Wakefield, Edward Gibbon, 1796-1862 |
Coverage year : | 1838 |
Period : | 1836-1851 |
Place : | Adelaide |
Region : | Adelaide city |
Further reading : | Borrow, K.T. Lieutenant-Colonel George Gawler KH Governor and Commander-in-Chief of South Australia 1838-1841, Adelaide: Pioneers' Association of South Australia, 1955 Cockburn, R Pastoral pioneers of South Australia 2 v. (207; 263 p.) Adelaide : Publishers Limited, 1925-1927 ("Reprinted from the Adelaide Stock and Station Journal.") Colonel George Gawler: a sketch, [South Australia: s.n., 1869] Colwell, M and Alan Naylor. Adelaide: an illustrated history, [Joslin, S. Aust.]: McP, 1981 Insights into South Australian history, volume 2: South Australia's German history and heritage, Harmstorf, Ian A. ed, Adelaide: Historical Society of South Australia, 1992- Loyau, George E. Notable South Australians or colonists: past and present, Adelaide, S. Aust.: G.E. Loyau, 1885 Kwan, Elizabeth. Living in South Australia: a social history, Netley, S. Aust.: South Australian Government Printer, 1987 Migration Museum. From many places: the history and cultural traditions of South Australian people, Kent Town, S. Aust.: Migration Museum (History Trust of S.A.) in association with Wakefield Press, 1995 Southern Australian, 9 January 1839, p. 3, col. d-e, The Southern Australian [newspaper : microform], Adelaide : Archibald McDougall, 1838-1844 South Australian, 11 August 1846, p. 3, col. a , The Southern Australian [newspaper : microform], Adelaide : Archibald McDougall, 1838-1844 The Wakefield companion to South Australian history. Editor Wilfrid Prest. Kent Town, S. Aust. : Wakefield Press, 2001 |
Internet links : | Australian Dictionary of Biography Online Edition: Search for George Gawler State Library of South Australia, General Information Factsheets OnlineSee 'Depressions in South Australia: 1840s, 1890s and 1930s' Religious tracts Wikipedia Pictures Catalogue National Library of Australia Gawler family. Personal papers, PRG 50 |