John Beveridge (mayor)

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Preceded byThomas Clarke
Succeeded byGeorge Howe
Succeeded byWilliam Poole
John Beveridge
15th Mayor of Redfern
In office
12 February 1891  29 May 1891
Preceded byThomas Clarke
Succeeded byGeorge Howe
Alderman on the Redfern Municipal Council
In office
20 September 1886  29 May 1891
Preceded byFrancis Augustus Wright
Succeeded byWilliam Poole
ConstituencyBelmore Ward
Personal details
Born(1848-08-08)8 August 1848
Died15 March 1916(1916-03-15) (aged 67)
Randwick, New South Wales, Australia
Resting placeWaverley Cemetery
PartyFree Trade Party
SpousePriscilla Wright (1853–1929)
Children7
OccupationMerchant and businessman

John Beveridge, JP (8 August 1848  15 March 1916) was a New South Wales businessman, sportsman and local government politician, who served as an Alderman (1886–1891) and Mayor of Redfern (1891).

Beveridge was born 8 August 1848 in the town of Windsor, Colony of New South Wales. He was the son of John Beveridge, a baker and confectioner, and Jane Greig, who as assisted migrants had emigrated from Kirkcaldy, Fife, Scotland, to Sydney on 16 January 1839. At the age of 19, Beveridge entered the mercantile firm of George Griffiths and Co. in 1867. On 8 August 1871 he was married to Priscilla Wright, the Anglo-Irish daughter of teacher and later principal of the Fort Street Training School John Wright (1822–1887),[1] at St Andrew's Presbyterian Church, Sydney, by the Rev. Robert Lewers.[2][3] Beveridge and his wife Priscilla had seven children: John Stuart (1872–1874),[4] Percy (1875–1947), Mabel (1878–1955), Harry (1882–1943), Violet (1886–1975), Cecil (1888–1946),[5][6] and Roy Stuart (1893–1916).[7] In 1880 he was made a partner in the firm, and on the retirement of Griffiths became the owner, which specialised in "wholesale grocery and general merchandise" from its premises on the corner of Bridge and Young streets, Sydney.[3]

A prominent member of the flourishing business community in Sydney and Redfern, Beveridge became involved as a member of the Sydney Chamber of Commerce and as a director of the Mortgage, Guarantee and Mercantile Finance Corporation of New South Wales, the Sydney Real Estate Bank and the Australian Traders' Fire Insurance Company.[3] Beveridge also became a member of the Redfern Branch of the Free Trade Association.[8] A keen sportsman, Beveridge was a member of the Cricket Union (vice-president in 1889) and was instrumental in the development of the Surry United Cricket Club, being captain from 1879 (now the Surry Hills Cricket Club).[3]

Public service

Later life

Notes

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