Robert Edwin Bush
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Robert Bush | |
|---|---|
| Member of the Legislative Council of Western Australia | |
| In office 24 December 1890 – 17 July 1893 | |
| Preceded by | Theodore Fawcett |
| Succeeded by | None (abolished) |
| Personal details | |
| Born | 11 October 1855 Redland, Bristol, England |
| Died | 29 December 1939 (aged 84) Stoke Bishop, Bristol, England |
Robert Edwin Bush (11 October 1855 – 29 December 1939) was a British explorer, businessman, sportsman, and politician who was primarily known for his activities in colonial Western Australia. Arriving there in the 1870s, he was one of the settlers in the Gascoyne region and took up a number of pastoral lease. He served on the Western Australian Legislative Council from 1890 to 1893. He eventually returned to England, where he was a Civic Sheriff of Bristol and Deputy Lieutenant Gloucestershire.
Bush was born at Redland, Bristol; his father was Lieutenant-Colonel Robert Bush, who commanded a detachment of the 96th Infantry in Western Australia in the 1840s. Bush attended Clifton College[1] from 1865 to 1875, captaining the school's cricket team in his last two years. Between August 1874 and June 1877, he played first-class cricket for Gloucestershire County Cricket Club, alongside W. G. Grace and his brother James Bush; he was a right-handed batsman and occasional wicket-keeper.[2]