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DALLEY, WILLIAM BEDE (1831-1888), orator and politician,
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was born at Sydney in 1831 of Irish parents, and was educated at the Sydney
College and St Mary's College. He was called to the bar in 1856, in the
following year was elected to the legislative asssembly as one of the
representatives of Sydney, and in November 1858 joined the second Cowper
(q.v.) ministry as solicitor-general, but held this position for only three
months. Early in 1861 he was appointed a commissioner of emigration by the New
South Wales government, went to England in 1861 with his fellow commissioner Henry
Parkes (q.v.), and was away about a year. He held many successful meetings
in southern England and in Ireland. After his return to Australia in 1862 he
took up his legal practice again and became the leading counsel in criminal
cases in Sydney. He did not, however, become a Q.C. until 1877. In February 1875
he joined the third Robertson
(q.v.) ministry as attorney-general and was nominated to the legislative
council. Robertson resigned in March 1877 but was in power again five months
later with Dalley in his old position until December. For the next five years
Dalley took no part in politics, but in January 1883 he became attorney-general
in the Stuart
(q.v.) ministry, and in 1884 his Speeches on the Proposed Federal Council for
Australasia was published. In February 1885 Dalley, as acting-premier during
the absence of Stuart from the colony, offered a detachment of New South Wales
troops to go to the Sudan. Though there was opposition in some quarters this was
taken up with great enthusiasm in others and a contingent was sent. The Stuart
ministry resigned in October 1885 and Dalley did not hold office again. His
health began to weaken and his last two years were spent practically in
retirement. He died at Sydney on 28 October 1888. He refused a knighthood and
the office of chief justice, but in 1886 was appointed to the privy council, the
first Australian to be given that honour. He married Eleanor Long who
predeceased him, leaving him with three young children. One son John Bede
Dalley is noticed separately, another, William Bede Dalley, born in 1873,
became well-known as a journalist in Sydney.
Dalley was a highly cultured man of great ability. His political achievement
was small, largely because he was not really interested in politics. He will
always be remembered for the sending of the contingent to the Sudan, the first
armed force sent overseas by a British colony. He was a great advocate in
criminal cases, and while he was attorney-general showed he had a fine general
grasp of law. He had an immense reputation as an orator, having a beautiful
voice, melodious, clear and insinuating, a sense of humour, a ready wit, and a
complete grasp of essentials. He was a good literary critic and often wrote for
the Sydney Morning Herald and the Freeman's Journal. His magnetic
personality and fine character drew everyone to him. When he died there was a
chorus of praise from the press; even the Bulletin which seldom in those
days allowed itself to show enthusiasm, and incidentally had been bitterly
opposed to the sending of the contingent, spoke of Dalley's "career of high
conduct as a citizen, his splendid achievement as an advocate", and pronounced
him "the most notable man Sydney had given birth to".
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