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DIBBS, SIR THOMAS ALLWRIGHT (1832-1923), banker,
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son of Captain John Dibbs of St Andrews, Scotland, and brother of Sir George
Dibbs (q.v.), was born in George-street, Sydney, on 31 October 1832. His
father died when he was a boy, and at the age of 14 Dibbs entered the service of
the Commercial Banking Company of Sydney Limited as a junior clerk. In 1857 he
became accountant, and 10 years later was appointed general manager, a position
he was to hold for 48 years. He retired at the age of 82 in 1915, when he was
made an honorary director of the bank and given a pension of £2000 a year. In
1916 he presented his house, Graythwaite, North Sydney, to the Commonwealth for
a home for sick and wounded soldiers. He died at Sydney on 18 March 1923. He
married in 1857 Tryphena Gaden who survived him with six daughters. He was
knighted in 1917. He was much interested in the Church of England, and was
treasurer of the church buildings loan and other funds. He was also a trustee of
various public funds. He was well-known as a yachtsman, and for some years was
commodore of the Royal Sydney Yacht Squadron.
Dibbs was the ideal banker, urbane in manner, helpful to his customers and
thoroughly dependable. He built up a fine staff from which he had complete
loyalty, and he guided the affairs of his bank with ability for a period which
must have broken all records. He discouraged the land-booming of the
eighteen-eighties, and when the crash came in 1893 met the situation with
wisdom. For many years Dibbs was the trusted confidential adviser in financial
matters of the various New South Wales governments, and when he retired in 1915
the government of the state presented an address to him expressing "profound
recognition of the invaluable services rendered by him to vital public interests
. . . a testimony without parallel in the history of Australian business life".
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