Siddhesh Joshi (Editor)

James Pye

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Preceded by
  
first Assembly

Succeeded by
  
Henry Parkes


Occupation
  
Orchardist

Name
  
James Pye

Born
  
1 January 1801 Toongabbie, New South Wales (
1801-01-01
)

Died
  
30 December 1884(1884-12-30) (aged 83) Parramatta, New South Wales

Little dancing james pye


James Pye (1801 – 30 December 1884) was an Australian orchardist and politician. He was a member of the New South Wales Legislative Assembly for one term between 1856 and 1858.

Contents

Early life

Pye was the son of a pioneer Australian orchardist. After an elementary education he joined his father's business and eventually had large orchards in the Field of Mars and Seven Hills district. He founded the Cumberland Agricultural Society in 1857 and was active in the Royal Agricultural Society of New South Wales. Pye was the patron of numerous organisations in the Parramatta region including the National School Board. He was an alderman on Parramatta Municipality between 1861 and 1884 and Mayor in 1866-7.

In the 1850s, Pye offered the land surrounding Hunts Creek at nominal cost to the Government to enable the construction of dam and reservoir, known as Lake Parramatta, that operated as a permanent water supply to the City of Parramatta between 1856 and 1909.

Colonial Parliament

In 1856 Pye was elected as one of the two members for Cumberland (North Riding) in the first New South Wales Legislative Assembly under responsible government. In parliament he was noted for his attacks on the luxurious living of the working class, noting that "not one in twenty was worth employing and the native born were particularly idle". At the 1858 election he was a candidate for Parramatta where he was comprehensively beaten.

References

James Pye Wikipedia