- James Macandrew
James Macandrew (1819 - 1887) was a
New Zealand ship-owner and politician. He served as amember of Parliament and as the last Superintendent ofOtago Province .Macandrew was born in
Scotland (probably inAberdeen ). He became active in the Free Church of Scotland, and from there, in the proposed colonisation ofOtago (which was being advocated by the Lay Association of the Free Church of Scotland, later the Otago Association). In partnership with his brother-in-law, Macandrew bought aschooner , loaded it with cargo, and set sail for Otago with his family. He arrived in January 1851.Still working in partnership with his brother-in-law, Macandrew immediately became a major figure in the business community of
Dunedin . His brother-in-law, W. H. Reynolds, began to build up a shipping business, while Macandrew himself established a trading firm in the city. The partners later established a steamer service between Dunedin andMelbourne ,Australia . The two soon became very wealthy.When it was formed, Macandrew was elected to the
New Zealand Parliament , representing the Town of Dunedin electorate. In Parliament, he fought what he saw as a bias towards northern provinces (Auckland andWellington ) at the expense of his own Otago. He also defended the practice of opening Parliament with prayers (describing them as a necessary "acknowledgement of dependence on the Divine Being"), and lobbied that all Parliamentary debates be published. As well as serving in Parliament, Macandrew was also Superintendent of Otago Province from 1860 to 1861, and again from 1867 until abolition in 1876. He remained in Parliament until his death on24 February 1887 , having served in nine separate terms.The town of Macandrew Bay on the
Otago Peninsula is named after James Macandrew, and Dunedin's main sporting venue, Carisbrook is named after his former home in the city.Link
* [http://www.teara.govt.nz/1966/M/MacandrewJames/MacandrewJames/en Biography in the 1966 "Encyclopaedia of New Zealand"]
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.