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TURNER, HENRY GYLES (1831-1920), banker and historian,
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was born at Kensington, London, on 12 December 1831. He was educated at the
Poland-street academy and at 15 years of age was apprenticed to William
Pickering, the publisher. In 1850 he joined the London joint stock bank and in
September 1854 sailed for Australia, arrived in Melbourne on 4 December, and
joined the staff of the Bank of Australasia. In 1865 he became accountant of
this bank, and in 1870 general manager of the Commercial Bank of Australia, then
a comparatively small institution. Under his management it became one of the
leading banks of Australia. In the bank crisis of 1893 it suffered very heavy
losses and did not recover its position for many years. There can be no doubt
that there was much over-trading, and Turner was blamed for the bad state of
affairs. He was, however, away in Europe on leave from February 1888 to March
1889, and it was during this period that the "boom" was at its height. He had
hoped to retire at a comparatively early age, but now had to set himself to
recover the lost fortunes of the bank. By 1901 the worst of its troubles were
past and he was able to retire in his seventieth year.
Turner had always been interested in literature and during his banking life
did a good deal of writing. In November 1875 he called a meeting of his friends
at his house and, with the slender capital of £100, a literary magazine The
Melbourne Review was started. It lasted just 10 years and was not only the
longest lived but the best purely Australian review that appeared in the
nineteenth century. Turner was joint editor with Alexander
Sutherland (q.v.) during its later years, and supplied much of the driving
force. In 1898 a volume on The Development of Australian Literature,
written in conjunction with Sutherland, was published, and after his retirement
Turner wrote and published in 1904 his History of the Colony of Victoria
in two volumes, a work of some value, not yet superseded. The First Decade of
the Australian Commonwealth appeared in 1911, which was followed in 1913 by
Our Own Little Rebellion, the Story of the Eureka Stockade. In 1917 when
in his eighty-sixth year Turner gave a public lecture on "The War and
Literature" and succeeded in completely holding the attention of his audience.
He died at Melbourne on 30 November 1920. He married in September 1855 Helen
Ramsay who died in 1914, without issue. His portrait by E. Phillips
Fox (q.v.), is in the national gallery at Melbourne.
Apart from his historical writings Turner was a busy worker. He was at
different times chairman of the associated banks, president of the chamber of
commerce, president of the Shakespeare Society, president of the trustees of the
public library, museums and national gallery of Victoria, and held numerous
other offices in a large variety of institutions. He was tall, lean, and genial
in manner, calm in judgment, and always reasonable. His critical work in
connexion with literature was of doubtful value, and his historical work at
times shows a conservative bias. But these things do not seriously detract from
the value of the large amount of sound and careful work carried on through a
long lifetime. The bulk of his estate was left to charitable institutions, his
manuscripts and a large selection from his fine library went to the public
library at Melbourne.
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