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David Blair (encyclopedist)

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Name
  
David Blair


Role
  
Australian Politician

Died
  
February 19, 1899, Melbourne, Australia

Books
  
The History of Australasia: From the First Dawn of Discovery in the Southern Ocean to the Establishment of Self-government in the Various Colonies, Comprising the Settlement and History of New South Wales, Victoria, South Australia, Tasmania, and New Zealand, Together with Some Account of Fiji and New Guinea

David Blair (4 June 1820 – 19 February 1899) was an Irish Australian politician, journalist and encyclopedist.

Contents

Background

David Blair was born in County Monaghan, Ireland to parents of Scottish descent. He studied at the Hibernian Military School, Dublin. He left in 1835, aged 15 years and worked in an uncle's business but did not enjoy it.

In 1840 he joined the Ordnance Survey of Ireland as a calculator stationed in Limerick and then Cork. He transferred to Southampton in 1841 and for almost nine years he worked on the triangulation of England and the survey of London.

Chartism

Blair was unsatisfied in his work, even speculating in 1848 on a military career, and found expression in supporting the Chartists as a lecturer in Southampton, in reading and in church activities.

Australia

He later studied for the ministry in Ireland and came to Australia in 1850 at the suggestion of John Dunmore Lang, the intention being that he should go into the back country as a missionary. He took up journalism in Sydney, where he was associated with Henry Parkes on the Empire newspaper. Blair went to Victoria in 1852 and had a long and varied career as a journalist, including a long stint as leader writer for The Age and as a contributor to Victorian Review.

Blair was elected a member of the legislative assembly of Victoria in 1856 and again in 1868, but did not make any special mark in politics. In 1876 he edited the Speeches of Henry Parkes, and in 1878 or 1879 he published the important The History of Australasia--to the Establishment of Self-Government, based largely on the works of his predecessors, and Cyclopedia of Australasia (1881). He died at Melbourne on 19 February 1899, aged 78.

References

David Blair (encyclopedist) Wikipedia