Clark Irving

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Preceded byFirst election
Succeeded byArthur Hodgson
Preceded byNew electorate
Succeeded byJohn Laycock
Clark Irving
Member of the New South Wales Parliament
for Clarence and Darling Downs
In office
15 April 1856  19 December 1857
Preceded byFirst election
Succeeded byArthur Hodgson
Member of the New South Wales Parliament
for Clarence
In office
21 June 1859  10 November 1864
Preceded byNew electorate
Succeeded byJohn Laycock
Personal details
Born(1808-01-01)1 January 1808
Wigton, England
Died13 January 1865(1865-01-13) (aged 57)
Brighton, England

Clark Irving (1 January 1808 – 13 January 1865) was an Australian merchant pastoralist and politician. He was a member of the New South Wales Legislative Assembly from 1856 until 1864.[1]

Irving was the son of a Cumberland farmer. He received only an elementary education and moved to London at an early age. After gaining business experience he emigrated to Sydney in 1836 and established a mixed mercantile business trading in watches, jewellery and wool. In 1843, he bought Casino station on the Richmond River and established a herd of short-horn cattle. He was highly successful in this venture and by 1856 he had expanded his runs to include 279,040 acres in the Richmond River and Darling Downs districts. While developing these properties he continued to spend much of his time in Sydney and was well known in colonial social circles. Irving also developed a practice as a trustee for insolvent estates and was a director of companies including the Australasian Sugar Company, the Australasian Steam Navigation Company and the Newcastle-Wallsend Coal Company. After 1862, Irving very actively pursued the establishment of an Anglican diocese in Grafton. He donated £2,000 of his own money to the diocese and toured England for his business interests and to raise further funds for the diocese. However, during this trip he lost his fortune by investing in Spanish railways and subsequently developed pneumonia and died. He was associated with many local organisations in the Clarence region.[2]

Colonial Parliament

Memorial

References

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