John Young GCMG KCB
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John Young GCMG KCB (1807 - 1876)

Rt Hon Sir John "1st Baron Lisgar" Young GCMG KCB
Born in Bombay, Mahārāshtra, Indiamap
Ancestors ancestors
Brother of
Husband of — married 1835 [location unknown]
[children unknown]
Died at age 69 in Bailieborough, Cavan, Irelandmap
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Profile last modified | Created 9 Jun 2015
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Preceded by
Sir William Denison KCB
12th Governor of New South Wales
16 May 1861 to 24 Dec 1867 Badge of the Governor of New South Wales
Succeeded by
The Rt Hon. The Earl Belmore GCMG, PC
Preceded by
Charles Monck
2nd Governor General of Canada
1869 – 1872

Dates of Service
Governor General of Canada
2 February 1869 –25 June 1872

Biography

Notables Project
John Young GCMG KCB is Notable.
India Sticker Native
John Young GCMG KCB was born in India

Sir John Young (1807-1876), governor, was born on 31 August 1807 in Bombay, India, eldest son of Sir William Young, 1st baronet and East India Co. director, and his wife Lucy, daughter of Lieutenant-Colonel Charles Frederick. Educated at Eton and Corpus Christi College, Oxford (B.A., 1829), he was admitted to Lincoln's Inn in January 1829 and called to the Bar in 1834. On 8 April 1835 at Kells Church, Dublin, he married Adelaide Annabella Tuite Dalton, stepdaughter of the marquess of Headfort. He represented County Cavan in the House of Commons in 1831-55, generally supporting Sir Robert Peel and in touch with W. E. Gladstone and the fifth Duke of Newcastle. A lord of the treasury in 1841-44 and secretary of the treasury in 1844-46, he was chief secretary for Ireland in 1852-55.

In March 1855 Young was appointed lord high commissioner of the Ionian Islands and created G.C.M.G. The post was difficult because the representative assembly demanded union with Greece. In 1858 secret dispatches, in which he recommended that Corfu and Paxo be converted into British colonies, were published in the London Daily News, embarrassing the government, which had just arranged for Gladstone to report on the problem. Though recalled in January 1859, he was created K.C.B. and his administration was publicly praised.

On 18 January 1861 Young was appointed to succeed Sir William Denison as governor of New South Wales; because of intercolonial jealousy he was not given the title governor-general, borne by his two predecessors. With his wife, in the Northam, he arrived in Sydney on 21 March and immediately plunged into an angry and complicated political crisis. With the five-year term of the Legislative Council members due to expire on 13 May, the council disapproved of (Sir) Charles Cowper's proposal, accepted by the Legislative Assembly, that the council should be made elective. It also rejected two government bills and vital clauses in (Sir) John Robertson's land bills. Though Denison had advised against 'swamping' the council, Young conditionally approved Cowper's nomination of twenty-one new members to pass the land bills. But they were never sworn in because President Sir William Burton and nineteen other members resigned, and the council, deprived of a quorum, adjourned. The secretary of state for the colonies, Newcastle, disapproved of Young's action, believing that he had involved the vice-regal office in politics and encouraged the 'democratic cause'. Young considered that he had preserved the conservative character of the council, and he balanced his concessions to Cowper with an agreement for the satisfactory reconstruction of the council.

Unwilling to leave his ministers in Sydney unsupervised, Young did not travel widely or frequently in the colony, but he and his wife were keenly aware of the social responsibilities of Government House and were active in good causes. He worked diligently for the Sydney Ragged Schools, the Society for the Relief of Destitute Children, the Sydney Female Refuge Society, the Female School of Industry and the House of the Good Shepherd. A devout Evangelical Anglican, he appealed for nonsectarian sympathy and tolerance, raising the ire of some Protestants when he chaired a meeting in 1865 to organize the rebuilding of the burned St Mary's Cathedral.

Young was erect and clean-shaven, with long side-burns. He possessed an easy charm of manner and was an able public speaker; (Sir) William Windeyer described him as 'a gentleman & a scholar'. The Youngs left Sydney in the Geelong on 24 December 1867 and on his return to England he thought of re-entering politics. In February 1869 he became governor-general of Canada. Though it was a post in which he had less personal influence, his term of office was successful; Prime Minister John A. Macdonald regarded him as the ablest governor-general under whom he had served. In November 1870 he was created baron Lisgar of Lisgar and Bailieborough, County Cavan. Ill health forced him to resign in June 1872 and he died on 6 October 1876 at Lisgar House, Bailieborough, Ireland, without issue. The barony became extinct and the baronetcy descended to a nephew. Lambing Flat, a town in New South Wales, was renamed Young after him. On 3 August 1878 Lady Young married Sir Francis Turville; she died on 19 July 1895.

Research Notes

  • The text of this biography is quite similar to the text of the Australian Dictionary of Biography. Should be credited.

Sources





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De Jong-4576 and Young-15275 do not represent the same person because: parents not the same /// Cleaning up rejected matches /// If you get too many of these messages on this board, please delete them.❤️
posted by Aline Barbeau

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