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MICHIE, SIR ARCHIBALD (1813-1899), jurist and politician,
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son of Archibald Michie, merchant, was born at London in 1813. He was
educated at Westminster School, entered at the Middle Temple in 1834, and was
called to the bar in 1838. He emigrated to Sydney in 1839, practised his
profession and also took up journalistic work; he was associated with (Sir) James
Martin (q.v.) and Robert Lowe
(q.v.) on the Atlas when it was founded in 1844. About the year 1848 he
returned to England, but came to Australia again in 1852 and began to practise
at Melbourne. He was nominated a member of the Victorian legislative council in
the same year but resigned a few months later. He became proprietor of the
Melbourne Herald, then a morning paper, in 1854, but made losses and
retired from it two years later. At the first election under the new
constitution, held in 1856, Michie was elected one of the members for Melbourne
in the legislative assembly, and in April 1857 became attorney-general in the
second Haines
(q.v.) ministry. He was minister of justice in the first McCulloch
(q.v.) ministry from July 1863 to July 1866 and attorney-general in the third
Mcculloch ministry from April 1870 to June 1871. He was then defeated at an
election for the legislative assembly, and entered the legislative council,
resigning soon afterwards to pay a visit to Europe in 1872. Returning in 1873 he
was appointed agent-general for Victoria in London and held this position for
six years. He then returned to Melbourne and practised as a barrister. In his
old age he fell into ill health and for several years was confined to his house.
He died at Melbourne on 21 June 1899. He married in 1840 Mary, daughter of Dr
John Richardson, who survived him with three sons and two daughters. He was
created K.C.M.G. in 1878.
Michie was a widely-read and brilliant man with a keen sense of humour and a
fund of anecdotes. He was one of the barristers who so successfully defended the
leaders of the diggers after the Eureka rebellion, and in parliament was a good
administrator whose influence in the house was important, even when not in
office. He was well-qualified as a writer but his only published work was
Readings in Melbourne, published in 1879, which reprinted three public
lectures and a long essay on the resources and prospects of Victoria.
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