- Frederick Augustus Hely
Frederick Augustus Hely (1794 – 8 September 1836), a public servant and settler of colonial
Australia , was born inCounty Tyrone, Ireland . He was the son ofColonel Forbes Francis Hely.Place in New South Wales
At eighteen years of age, in the year 1812, he married Georgina Lindsay Bucknell.While there is no evidence of the actual time when Hely came to Australia, it is known that he was given the post of principal superintendent of the convicts in
New South Wales sometime in early 1823, but it was later in the year that he arrived inSydney , with his wife and children, to actually take up the post (a post he would hold throughout the entirety of the rest of his life). Hely held several other additional places of public and social influence. He became ajustice of the peace in 1825 and became president of theBoard of Magistrates in 1826. The year following, he became acting superintendent of police, and, in 1831, he was appointed a member of the Assignment Board. Later, in 1832, Hely applied for an appointment as stipendiary magistrate atBrisbane Water , but, to induce him to stay as superintendent of convicts (an office in which he had been quite successful in the past), he was offered a salary increase of £100 from the £200 he was already earning. Two years later, however, Hely became a foundation director of the Commercial Banking Co. of Sydney.Australian Dictionary of Biography
last=Pike
first=A. F.
authorlink=
year=1966
id=A010491b
title= Hely, Frederick Augustus (1794 - 1836)
accessdate=2008-09-27 ]Land ownership
Hely established a farm, which he called Wyoming, after he was granted almost 550 hectares of land at Narara, Brisbane Water in 1824, and, in doing so, became the first man to settle there permanently and to grow a citrus fruit
orchard garden.In 1829, Hely's land was expanded to approximately convert|4000|acre|km2, or a little over 1600 hectares, after further grants in the districts of Ourimbah and Tuggerah. The land Hely was granted in Tugerah incited a fierce conflict withWilliam Cape , a free settler who did not report his selection of land to the government before clearing around convert|100|acre|km2 of land and building a barn on the land which was later granted to Hely. Despite the numerous letters of complaint that Cape sent to the government and others over a period of more than twenty years, his case was lost in court.Death
In 1836, Hely began to suffer periods of bad health, and he was recommended for retirement, with a pension to live on. However, before the pension could be approved, Hely died of
apoplexy in Sydney. He was survived by his wife and his five children (three daughters and two sons).Notes
References
*citebook|last=Swancott|first=C.|title=Brisbane Water Story
*citebook|last=Watson|first=F.|title=Historical Records of Australia|series=Series 1
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