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Francis Jollie

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Name
  
Francis Jollie

Role
  
Politician


Died
  
1870

Siblings
  
Edward Jollie

Francis Jollie (1815 – 30 November 1870) was a 19th-century politician in New Zealand.

Biography

Jollie was born in 1815. The family was from Brampton, Carlisle, England. His father was the Reverend Francis Jollie, and he was the oldest son; the fourth son was Edward Jollie.

He was one of the earliest settlers in the country, having arrived in 1842 as the agent of the New Zealand Company. He arrived in Nelson on the ship Fifeshire, where he farmed on fifty acres of land he had purchased at Wakapuaka, and called his property 'Thackwood'. He was followed to New Zealand by his younger brother Edward. In August 1853, Francis Jollie was one of the three candidates in the inaugural election for the superintendency of Nelson Province. Jollie came last, and Edward Stafford was successful.

Later in 1853, Jollie moved to Peel Forest in Canterbury, where he would live for the rest of his life. He named the forest after Sir Robert Peel, the British Prime Minister of the United Kingdom who had died in 1850, the year that Canterbury was founded. The adjacent mountain also took Peel's name. In June 1854, a by-election was held in the Town of Nelson electorate. Jollie was one of the nominees, and both he and the other candidate were absent (Samuel Stephens). Stephens won the by-election on a show of hands at the nomination meeting, as Jollie's supporters did not request an election.

In 1858, Jollie returned to England for some time. Upon coming back to New Zealand, he briefly lived near Christchurch. He married Jane Cooper on 28 May 1859 at Riccarton Church, Christchurch.

He was the Member of Parliament for Timaru from 1861 to 1866 and then Gladstone from 1866 to 1870, when he died. He was a cabinet minister, as Colonial Treasurer (now called Minister of Finance) in the second Stafford Ministry from 1866 to 1869.

He died on 30 November 1870 at his residence at Peel Forest.

References

Francis Jollie Wikipedia