- George Washington Walker
George Washington Walker (
19 March 1800 –2 February 1859 cite web |url=http://www.adb.online.anu.edu.au/biogs/A020511b.htm |title=Walker, George Washington (1800 - 1859) |accessdate=2007-09-22 |author=Mary Bartram Trott |work=Australian Dictionary of Biography , Volume 2 |publisher=MUP |year=1967 |pages=pp 562-563] ) was amissionary for thechurch calledReligious Society of Friends , or Quakers.Walker was born to
Unitarian parents inLondon , the twenty-first child of John Walker by his second wife, Elizabeth. He was educated at a school inBarnard Castle . He was introduced to the Society of Friends in his teenage years when he worked in Newcastle for a linen draper who was a Quaker, but Walker did not become a Quaker himself until 1827. Walker also participated in thetemperance movement .Walker met his future missionary partner
James Backhouse in 1820 or 1821. Between September 1831 and February 1832, Walker and Backhouse travelled from England toHobart ,Van Dieman's Land (modernTasmania ). Between 1832 and 1838, they made a tour of the penal settlements inAustralia , Van Dieman's Land, andNorfolk Islands . Between 1838 and 1840, they left Australia and did missionary work inMauritius andSouth Africa .In 1840, Walker ended his travels. He returned to Hobart in September and was married to Sarah Benson Mather on
15 December 1840 . He set up a business as a draper, and, in 1844, helped establish theHobart Savings Bank which eventually became theTrust Bank . He worked at his business and for the Quakers and temperance until he died on2 February 1859 in Hobart.In 1994, the Hobart Savings Bank endowed a scholarship at the
University of Tasmania named the “George Washington Walker Trust Bank Perpetual Undergraduate Scholarship”; it was to be awarded to students of commerce or economics.References
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