James Lorimer (Australian politician)

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Succeeded byJames Bell
Born(1831-03-30)30 March 1831
Dumfriesshire, Scotland
Sir James Lorimer
Minister of Defence
In office
18 February 1886  6 September 1889
PremierDuncan Gillies
Preceded byFrederick Sargood
Succeeded byJames Bell
Personal details
Born(1831-03-30)30 March 1831
Dumfriesshire, Scotland
Died6 September 1889(1889-09-06) (aged 58)
SpouseEliza Kenworthy
ChildrenEleven

Sir James Lorimer KCMG (30 March 1831 – 6 September 1889)[1] was an Australian politician and businessman. He was the first chairman of the Melbourne Harbor Trust and a Member of the Legislative Council in the Victorian parliament from 1879 to 1889.[2]

Lorimer was born on 30 March 1831 in Dumfriesshire, Scotland, to merchant Thomas Lorimer and Catherine, née Walkin. He was educated at Haddon Hall Academy, and articled to a Liverpool softgoods firm which traded with Africa and America. He travelled to Victoria in 1853 on health advice and chose to stay. He married Eliza Kenworthy, the daughter of the United States consul in Sydney, on 4 March 1858, with whom he raised eleven children, ten of whom survived him.[2]

In 1869 he commissioned architect Leonard Terry to design a large Toorak mansion which he named 'Greenwich House'.[3]

He died of pleurisy on 6 September 1889, leaving an estate of £60,000, and was buried in St Kilda Cemetery.[2]

Business interests

Public life

References

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