Thomas Drury Smeaton
Thomas Drury Smeaton (c. 1831 – 18 February 1908) trained in England as an engineer, emigrated to the British colony of South Australia, where he was known as a banker and amateur scientist.
History
Thomas Smeaton was born in London "within sound of Bow Bells", and trained as an engineer. He was sponsored by the South Australian Company to emigrate to South Australia, but finding no opening for an engineer joined the Company's financial institution, the Bank of South Australia as a clerk sometime before 1856, later as the bank's accountant. In 1864 he was appointed manager of the newly formed branch in Robe, where he was an active as President of the Robe Institute, and where his wife, a popular Sunday-school teacher, died in childbirth. He returned to the Adelaide head office as assistant manager, and served as manager on numerous occasions between 1870 and 1884 when he retired to his home "Dalebank" in Blakiston. Around 1904 he moved to Mount Lofty, where he died after some months in poor health.[1] His wife Selina later lived at Brunswick Road, Dulwich.
Other interests
Smeaton was a well-read man, both of literature and scientific subjects, of which he had a wide knowledge and great enthusiasm. He was in 1853 a founding member of the Adelaide Philosophical Society, and chairman in 1860. Professor Stirling was a firm friend, as was Professor (later Sir) Robert Chapman of Adelaide University.
An article by him on rainbows was published in Nature; he regularly contributed articles to The Register, and he corresponded with many authors of Encyclopædia Britannica articles, offering useful criticism.
He was a member of the Adelaide Hospital Board for some years, and was one of the founders and longtime honorary secretary of that hospital's Good Samaritan Fund.
Family
He married (c. 1828 – 16 December 1865) who died in childbirth at Robe. He married again, to Selina Jane Witt ( – 13 May 1920); their children included:
- Anatole Smeaton (c. 1859 – 17 July 1940) married Enos H. Lock ( – 9 July 1921) on 6 December 1888
- Stirling Smeaton B.A., A.M.I.C.E. (30 October 1860 – 12 March 1909), one of the first two graduates from University of Adelaide railway engineer then with the Engineer-in-Chief's department. Noted field naturalist, he never married.[2]
- Edna Smeaton (4 January 1868 – 25 January 1954) married Thomas Luscombe Wright ( – ) on 15 August 1895
- Drury Luscombe Wright (c. June 1898 – 11 April 1917) was killed in France during WWI
- Fabrian Smeaton (17 June 1869 – 20 June 1906), died at Mount Lofty
- Ida Smeaton (18 March 1871 – )
- Dr. Bronte Smeaton (6 October 1873 – ) married Elizabeth Florence Moule (c. 1873 – 10 October 1900) on 16 June 1900. Elizabeth was a daughter of John Moule MHA. He married again, to Josephine Lucie Cordelia Wigley ( – ), daughter of mayor Henry Rodolph Wigley, on 18 May 1904. They lived at Mount Barker, later Barton Terrace, North Adelaide.
- Dr. Creagh Smeaton ( – ) married Morna Dobbie ( – ) on 9 February 1932.
- Raymond Smeaton (19 January 1876 – 27 August 1921) married Gertrude Margaret Jones (1875 – ) on 26 December 1903; he was manager of the Blyth, then Tumby Bay, Mount Pleasant and Murray Bridge branches of the Bank of Adelaide. Mrs. Smeaton was a prominent socialite.
- Margaret Condon Smeaton ( – ) married William Case Howard ( – ) on 14 January 1933.
- Graham Smeaton (21 December 1877 – 26 April 1949) married Nell. He was manager of C. Wright's estate on the Bay Road.
There is no evidence of his being closely related to the South Australian politician Thomas Hyland Smeaton.
References
- ↑ "The Late Mr. T. D. Smeaton". The Register (Adelaide, SA : 1901 - 1929). Adelaide, SA: National Library of Australia. 19 February 1908. p. 5. Retrieved 30 November 2015.
- ↑ "Concerning People". The Register (Adelaide, SA : 1901 - 1929). Adelaide, SA: National Library of Australia. 13 March 1909. p. 9. Retrieved 30 November 2015.