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MANNING, SIR WILLIAM MONTAGU, (1811-1895), politician and
judge, |
second son of John Edye Manning, of Clifton, England, was born at Alphington,
near Exeter, in June 1811. He was educated at private schools and University
College, London, and was entered at Lincoln's Inn in November 1827. He was
called to the bar in November 1832 and practised as a barrister on the Western
Circuit for about five years. During this period, in collaboration with S.
Neville, he prepared and published Reports of Cases Relating to the Duty and
Offices of Magistrates (3 vols, 1834-8), and was the author of
Proceedings in Courts of Revision in the Isle of Wight, etc. (1836). In
1837 he went to Australia and soon after his arrival was made a chairman of
quarter sessions. He took up his duties at Bathurst in October. In 1842 he was
offered the position of resident judge at Port Phillip, and in September 1844
became solicitor-general of New South Wales. In January 1848 he was appointed
acting-judge of the supreme court of New South Wales during the absence of Mr Justice
Therry (q.v.). He resumed the solicitor-generalship at the end of 1849, and
held this position until responsible government was established in 1856, when he
retired with a pension of £800 a year. He had been a nominated member of the
legislative council since February 1851, and assisted in the preparation of Wentworth's
(q.v.) constitution bill.
Manning was elected a member of the legislative assembly in the first
parliament, and was attorney-general in the Donaldson
(q.v.) ministry from 6 June to 25 August 1856. He was given the same position in
the Parker
(q.v.) ministry in October 1856, but resigned in the following May on account of
ill-health, and went to England. On his return he was offered a judgeship of the
supreme court but declined it. He re-entered parliament and on 21 February 1860
joined the Forster
(q.v.) ministry as attorney-general, but the ministry resigned about a fortnight
later. He was again attorney-general in the Robertson
(q.v.) and Cowper
(q.v.) ministries from October 1868 to December 1870. In February 1875, though
he was then a member of the upper house he was asked to form a ministry, but was
unable to obtain sufficient support. He was appointed a supreme court judge in
1876, and was primary judge in equity until his resignation in 1887. He
voluntarily gave up his pension when he became a judge. In 1887 he was again
nominated to the legislative council, and gave useful service there until near
the end of his life. He had been elected a fellow of the senate of the
university of Sydney in 1861, became chancellor in 1878 and held this position
until his death on 27 February 1895.
Before Manning came into office the university had been languishing for some
time, there were fewer than a hundred students in 1877, but during his
chancellorship there was much expansion in the scope of the university and
several new chairs were founded. He fought for and succeeded in getting
increased grants from the government, urged the necessity of more grammar
schools being established, and the provision of university scholarships. He
pleaded that women should have the same opportunities as men at the university
and this was granted in 1881. He carried out his duties with sagacity and
devotedness; one example of this was his saving the university £15,000 by his
discovery that the British taxation commissioners were charging succession duty
on the Challis estate on too high a scale. Few men in New South Wales had such a
long career of usefulness.
His portrait by Sir John Watson Gordon, paid for by public subscription is in
the great hall at Sydney university. He was knighted in 1858 and created
K.C.M.G. in 1892. He was married twice (1) to Emily Anne, daughter of E. Wise,
and (2) to Eliza Anne, daughter of the Very Rev. William Sowerby, and was
survived by children of both marriages.
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