William Robertson (Australian politician)

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William Robertson (29 March 1839 – 23 June 1892) was a barrister and politician in colonial Victoria.[1][2]

Robertson was the second son of Margaret Whyte[2] and William Robertson senior, who went to Victoria from Tasmania in 1812, and purchased the Colac estate from the late Captain Foster Fyans. Robertson, sen., was for many years engaged in pastoral pursuits at Campbelltown, between Hobart and Launceston, and he afterwards entered into business as a merchant in Hobart, where his son William was born in the year 1839.[3] The latter received his education at the High School in Hobart and at Wadham College, Oxford, where he graduated B.A. in 1861. He was called to the Bar at the Middle Temple in January 1863. While at Oxford he rowed in the Oxford and Cambridge annual boat race on the Thames in 1861, and was one of the winning crew, being the first of several young Australians who have taken part in the great inter-university race. The oar used on that occasion, converted into a trophy of the victory and appropriately mounted and inscribed, was always one of Robertson's proudest possessions.[3]

In 1863 Robertson returned to Victoria, where he was admitted to the Bar in the following year. For several years Robertson practised as a barrister in Melbourne, but he never exerted himself to any great extent in that direction.[3]

Politics

Late life

References

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