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HUNTER, JOHN (1737-1821), second governor of New South Wales,
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was born on 29 August 1737, at Leith, Scotland. The date usually given is
1738, but F. M. Bladen, in Journal and Proceedings Royal Australian
Historical Society, vol. I, states that he was christened at Leith on 1
September 1737. His father, William Hunter, was a captain in the merchant
service. His mother a daughter of J. Drummond. As a boy he was sent to live with
an uncle in the town of Lynn, where, and also at Edinburgh, he received the
classical education of the time. He was sent to Edinburgh university, but soon
left it to become a captain's servant in the navy. In 1755 he was made a
midshipman, and after serving in various vessels passed the examination for a
lieutenant in 1760. He was not, however, appointed lieutenant until 1780. When
the preparation of the First Fleet was in progress, he was made second captain
on the Sirius and sailed with Phillip
(q.v.) to New South Wales in 1787. There he was on the best of terms with the
governor, but lost his ship at Norfolk Island and had to go to England for the
customary court martial at which he was exonerated. In England he prepared for
publication his interesting An Historical Journal of the Transactions at Port
Jackson and Norfolk Island, published at the beginning of 1793. An abridged
edition appeared later in the same year. In the first edition of this work will
be found the earliest reference to the possibility of there being a strait
between the mainland and Tasmania. On page 126 Hunter says: "There is reason
thence to believe, that there is in that space either a very deep gulf, or a
straight, which may separate Van Diemen's Land from New Holland." When Hunter
learned that Phillip had resigned his governorship in July 1793, he applied for
the position in October, and in January 1794 was appointed. Various delays
occurred, and it was not until February 1795 that he was able to sail. He
arrived at Sydney on 7 September.
Hunter's difficulties soon began. Immediately Phillip left the colony the
military took complete control, and during the lieutenant-governorship of Grose
(q.v.) unmercifully exploited the convicts. A great traffic in spirits sprang
up, on which there was an enormous profit for the officers concerned. They had
obtained the control of the courts and the management of the lands, public
stores, and convict labour. Hunter realized that these powers had to be restored
to the civil administration, a task of great difficulty. And in Macarthur
(q.v.) he had an opponent who would hardly stop at anything in defending his
supposed rights. Eventually Hunter found himself practically helpless. A
stronger man might have sent the officers home under arrest, but it is not
unlikely that if Hunter had attempted to do so he would have only precipitated
the rebellion which took place in Bligh's time. Anonymous letters were even sent
to the home authorities charging Hunter with participation in the very abuses he
was striving to prevent. In spite of Hunter's vehement defence of the charges
made against him, he was recalled in a dispatch dated 5 November 1799. Hunter
acknowledged this dispatch on 20 April 1800, and left for England on 28
September. When he arrived he endeavoured to vindicate his character with the
authorities but was given no opportunity. He was obliged to state his case in a
long pamphlet printed in 1802. Governor Hunter's Remarks on the Causes of the
Colonial Expense of the Establishment of New South Wales. It is a valuable
document in early Australian history. In 1804 Hunter was given command of the
Venerable of 74 guns, which in the following November was driven ashore
during a fog and lost. Hunter was subsequently acquitted of all blame. He became
rear-admiral in October 1807 and vice-admiral in July 1810. He died in London on
13 March 1821.
Hunter was a courageous, humane, and amiable man, and a good officer, but the
circumstances in which he was placed made it almost impossible for him to be
completely successful as a governor. As his successor King
(q.v.) said his conduct was "guided by the most upright intentions", and he was
"most shamefully deceived by those on whom he had every reason to depend for
assistance, information, and advice ". Of his sojourn in the colony Hunter said
that he "could not have had less comfort, although he would certainly have had
greater peace of mind, had he spent the time in a penitentiary". He did good
work in exploring and opening up the country near Sydney, and also encouraged
the explorations of Flinders
(q.v.) and Bass
(q.v.). He continued his interest in Australia for long after he left it, and
the suggested reforms in his pamphlet were of much value.
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