James Chisholm (merchant)
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James Chisholm (23 January 1772 – 31 March 1837) was an early settler in colonial Australia, contributing to its business, banking,
Presbyterian church Presbyterianism is a part of the Reformed tradition within Protestantism that broke from the Roman Catholic Church in Scotland by John Knox, who was a priest at St. Giles Cathedral (Church of Scotland). Presbyterian churches derive their nam ...
, education, democratic processes and pastoral industry. He was the first person of the name Chisholm to come to Australia and is considered the patriarch of the Clan Chisholm in that country. From being a private, then corporal (1798) and sergeant (1808), in the New South Wales Corps, he became a prominent merchant in Sydney. Chisholm was a founder and director of the Bank of New South Wales, a leader in the movement for democratic reform, a humanitarian benefactor, and one of the largest landholders in New South Wales.


Early life and military service

Chisholm was born at Mid Calder, in the
Scottish lowlands The Lowlands ( sco, Lallans or ; gd, a' Ghalldachd, , place of the foreigners, ) is a cultural and historical region of Scotland. Culturally, the Lowlands and the Highlands diverged from the Late Middle Ages into the modern period, when Lowl ...
some 15 miles west of
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, the third child of John Chisholm and his wife Isabel née Wilson, and was baptized at the kirk of Calder on 2 February 1772. His other siblings were Elizabeth (b. 1768), Alexander Hugh (1770–1850) and Mary (c. 1782–1835). On 14 November 1788, at the age of 16, Chisholm enlisted in the 29th Regiment of Foot with a letter of recommendation from either the Hon. Robert Sandilands or his cousin James Sandilands the Ninth
Lord Torphichen Lord Torphichen or Baron Torphichen is a title in the Peerage of Scotland. It was created by Queen Mary in 1564 for Sir James Sandilands (to whom she was related), with remainder to his heirs and assigns whatsoever. The first Baron Sandilands h ...
, the local Baron and ''principal heritor'' of the kirk of Calder. He maintained correspondence with the Tenth Baron after his establishment in New South Wales. Chisholm transferred to the New South Wales Corps, commanded by Major Francis Grose, at
Forton Barracks Forton Barracks was a military installation near Gosport in Hampshire, which served first as an Army barracks and then as a divisional headquarters for the Royal Marines. It subsequently served as a Royal Navy training establishment. Today, the sit ...
in
Gosport Gosport ( ) is a town and non-metropolitan borough on the south coast of Hampshire, South East England. At the 2011 Census, its population was 82,662. Gosport is situated on a peninsula on the western side of Portsmouth Harbour, opposite t ...
, on 11 July 1790, with the rank of private and the occupation of "taylor".


Master taylor of the New South Wales Corps (1791–1810)

James Chisholm travelled to New South Wales as part of the Third Fleet contingent of the New South Wales Corps, as a guard of convicts on the whaler ''Britannia'', leaving
Portsmouth Portsmouth ( ) is a port and city in the ceremonial county of Hampshire in southern England. The city of Portsmouth has been a unitary authority since 1 April 1997 and is administered by Portsmouth City Council. Portsmouth is the most dens ...
on 27 March and arriving at
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on 14 October 1791. He was assigned to Major Francis Grose's Headquarters Company from the time of his arrival in the colony. In 1793, Chisholm assisted the Surveyor-General, Baron Augustus Alt, to set out town allotments along Spring Row (later George Street, Sydney). These lots, adjacent to the new Parade Ground and Barracks, were allocated to six non-commissioned members of the New South Wales Corps, including one for Chisholm himself, where he resided until 1821–22. At this time he undertook the duties of a tailor and by July 1798, when he was promoted to Corporal, became "master taylor" of the New South Wales Corps, operating this function from his establishment in Spring Row. Because of these duties, Chisholm did not have active involvement in the suppression of the
Castle Hill Rebellion The Castle Hill convict rebellion was an 1804 Convicts in Australia, convict rebellion in the Castle Hill, New South Wales, Castle Hill area of Sydney, against the colonial authorities of the British Empire, British colony of Colony of New South ...
of 1804. On 26 January 1806, at the age of 34, he married the 21-year-old Mary Brown, daughter of the Scottish free settler David Brown. Later that year their son, James Chisholm Junior, was born. James Chisholm was illiterate at the time of his marriage but, under Mary's tutelage, was later able to read and write as early as 1808 when he was promoted to sergeant. Chisholm was not a major player in the Rum Rebellion, which deposed
Governor Bligh Vice-Admiral William Bligh (9 September 1754 – 7 December 1817) was an officer of the Royal Navy and a colonial administrator. The mutiny on the HMS ''Bounty'' occurred in 1789 when the ship was under his command; after being set adrift i ...
in January 1808. He was aligned with Lieutenant Colonel
Joseph Foveaux Joseph Foveaux (1767 – 20 March 1846) was a soldier and convict settlement administrator in colonial New South Wales, Australia. Early life Foveaux was baptised on 6 April 1767 at Ampthill, Bedfordshire, England, the sixth child of Joseph Fove ...
, whom he claimed as a friend, and Lieutenant Colonel William Paterson, both of whom were opposed to the perpetrators of the Rebellion, principally Major George Johnston and John Macarthur. Governor Macquarie later favoured Chisholm for his loyalty to the Crown. Moreover, unlike the officers of the New South Wales Corps, there is no evidence that Chisholm was involved in the rum trade or any other private enterprise before 1808. However, in that year he commenced dealing as an agent in real estate and mortgage transactions, obtained his first rural land grant at the Eastern Farms and began trading in agricultural commodities. In February 1809, Chisholm purchased for £140 the lease on two town lots measuring "141 feet in front, 175 feet in length", previously owned by Sergeant-Major William Jamieson, and adjacent to his own land in Spring Row. On 5 March 1809, he obtained a licence to retail wine and spirits from Jamieson's former premises, later named the ''Crown and Thistle'', a licence he held continuously until 1822.


Merchant of Sydney (1810–1823)

With the arrival of Colonel
Lachlan Macquarie Major-general (United Kingdom), Major General Lachlan Macquarie, Companion of the Order of the Bath, CB (; gd, Lachann MacGuaire; 31 January 1762 – 1 July 1824) was a British Army officer and colonial administrator from Scotland. Macquarie se ...
as
Governor of New South Wales The governor of New South Wales is the viceregal representative of the Australian monarch, King Charles III, in the state of New South Wales. In an analogous way to the governor-general of Australia at the national level, the governors of the ...
, on 11 February 1810 James Chisholm requested and received his discharge from the army, after 21 years service. He never returned to military service nor the tailoring trade. With the support of Colonel Foveaux, Macquarie also renewed the leases to Chisholm's land in George Street (as Spring Row was renamed that year). Macquarie, in a concerted effort to shut down the rum trade, also restricted the number of persons licensed to retail spirits. Nevertheless, he granted James Chisholm one of only 20 liquor licenses issued on 16 February 1810. Chisholm then launched into a career as an importer and retailer of wine and spirits, a producer of rural produce for sale into the Commissariat, a trustee of deceased estates and mortgages, and a land agent and developer; as a consequence of his mercantile interests, he was an early agitator for monetary reform and the establishment of a colonial currency. He also began to accumulate town and country real estate in his own right, eventually spending some £12,000 on land and owning 23,000 acres stretching from the County of Cumberland to the Southern Tablelands. By the late 1820s Chisholm was one of the six largest landholders in New South Wales, and by the 1880s his descendants owned 3,125 square miles of Australia, stretching from the
Gulf of Carpentaria The Gulf of Carpentaria (, ) is a large, shallow sea enclosed on three sides by northern Australia and bounded on the north by the eastern Arafura Sea (the body of water that lies between Australia and New Guinea). The northern boundary is ...
to the state of Victoria. James Chisholm's Sydney real estate included a 379-foot frontage (a block of more than one acre) along the eastern side of George Street, the main thoroughfare of Sydney. With a few minor set-backs, the diversity of his business allowed him to weather the economic crisis of 1812–1815 and he became a wealthy and influential Sydney merchant. Chisholm's first wife, Mary, died on 17 December 1817, aged only 32. Soon after, the 11-year-old James Chisholm Junior travelled to
Calcutta Kolkata (, or , ; also known as Calcutta , List of renamed places in India#West Bengal, the official name until 2001) is the Capital city, capital of the Indian States and union territories of India, state of West Bengal, on the eastern ba ...
, where he lived, worked, and received schooling, under the care of his father's business partner John Campbell Burton. In August 1818, while his son was away in India, Chisholm Senior, now 46, married his second wife the 21-year-old Mary Bowman (1796–1878), daughter of John and Honor Bowman of Archerfield,
Richmond, New South Wales Richmond is a town in New South Wales, in the local government area of the City of Hawkesbury. It is located 19 metres above sea level on the alluvial Hawkesbury River flats, at the foot of the Blue Mountains on the Cumberland Plain. It is abou ...
. The Bowmans had arrived as free immigrants on the ''Barwell'' in 1798. In 1817, Chisholm was one of the "principal merchants" invited by Governor Macquarie to a meeting that led to the formation of Australia's first trading bank. In June 1822, Chisholm sold his spirits licence to Mary Reiby and leased his Crown and Thistle inn to the newly formed Bank of New South Wales, wherein it conducted business until 1853. He was an original shareholder in the bank and later became a director (1826). In 1821–22, Chisholm commenced building a country house on his 57-acre ''Newtown Farm'', at what is today the suburb of Redfern. This he named ''Calder House'', after the Torphichen mansion in Scotland, and it became his principal residence for the remainder of his life. ''Newtown Farm'' was chosen as the site for the Eveleigh Railway Workshops in 1875 and ''Calder House'' was destroyed by fire in 1923. In 1823, Chisholm also constructed a three-story stone townhouse, next to the Bank of NSW, at 85 George Street, Sydney.


Religion, education, public service, politics and later life (1823–1837)

James Chisholm gave to public and private charitable institutions and served on their councils and committees. He was a
reformed evangelical Reform is beneficial change Reform may also refer to: Media *Reform (album), ''Reform'' (album), a 2011 album by Jane Zhang *Reform (band), a Swedish jazz fusion group *Reform (magazine), ''Reform'' (magazine), a Christian magazine *''Reforme'' ...
Christian, many of the charities he supported being sponsored by the
Presbyterian Church Presbyterianism is a part of the Reformed tradition within Protestantism that broke from the Roman Catholic Church in Scotland by John Knox, who was a priest at St. Giles Cathedral (Church of Scotland). Presbyterian churches derive their nam ...
, but he also supported the construction of the first Roman Catholic chapel in
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. Chisholm contributed to the establishment of Scots Church in Sydney (1826), and its associated religious-social schemes, principally through his loyalty to Rev.
John Dunmore Lang John Dunmore Lang (25 August 1799 – 8 August 1878) was a Scottish-born Australian Presbyterian minister, writer, historian, politician and activist. He was the first prominent advocate of an independent Australian nation and of Australian re ...
(1799–1878). He was a founding trustee of the Sydney Public Free Grammar School of Dr Laurence Hynes Halloran (1824), and became a member of its management committee (1825), was a founding governor of Sydney College (1830), and a supporter, shareholder and councilor of Lang's Presbyterian School, Australian College (1831). In the field of assisted emigration, Chisholm was a committee member and treasurer of Lang's Emigrant's Friend Society (1832). In addition to his interests in the Bank of NSW, Chisholm was a founding shareholder in the Bank of Australia (July 1826), and later a trustee of the Savings Bank of NSW, which opened on 18 August 1832 at his three-story house next door to the trading bank. Chisholm had long and active involvement in the colonial court system of NSW (1822–37): he was one of two members of the Governor's Court, appointed by Governor Macquarie (1822–23); and a member of the ‘grand juries’ and juries of the Quarter Sessions courts (1823–36), being their first Foreman (1824). He was prominent in initiatives for political change through his association with the reforms of William Charles Wentworth (1790–1872). He supported Wentworth in his campaigns for trial by jury, taxation reform and representative government in the form of an elected Legislative Assembly, being a founding member of the Australian Patriotic Association (1835). Although aligned with Lang and Wentworth, Chisholm was not a radical – his politics would appear conservative to modern observers – but in the context of colonial NSW they were democratic and reformist. Throughout his public service, he maintained his family and business interests, and remained loyal to his friends: as an example, along with his friend John Dickson, he provided co-surety of £6,000 for William Douglas Campbell in his legal suit against the estate of his former business partner,
Garnham Blaxcell Garnham Blaxcell (1778-3 October 1817) was a merchant and trader in the colony of New South Wales, Australia Australia, officially the Commonwealth of Australia, is a Sovereign state, sovereign country comprising the mainland of the Austr ...
(1823–27). In 1834, the Colonial Secretary, Alexander Macleay, asked James Chisholm to justify his ownership of his land in George Street after a legal challenge from a descendant of William Jamieson. In this Chisholm was successful, and all the leases along the east side of George Street, between Hunter and King Street, were converted to freehold. A series of stores and tenements had been built on the George Street lots, with Chisholm's tenants providing him with rental income. He sold a small portion of this land in January 1836, but his family retained the remainder until the 1880s.


Death

In March 1837, James Chisholm visited the house his eldest son had built at his property, ''Kippilaw'', some 8 miles west of Goulburn, New South Wales. Here he caught a cold that turned to
pneumonia Pneumonia is an inflammatory condition of the lung primarily affecting the small air sacs known as alveoli. Symptoms typically include some combination of productive or dry cough, chest pain, fever, and difficulty breathing. The severity ...
. He was driven by carriage back to ''Calder House'' in Sydney, where he died on 31 March, aged 65. His second wife, his eldest son James Junior and seven children of his second marriage, the last child Edwin being born eight months before his death, survived him. Chisholm was initially buried on ''Newtown Farm'', according to the rites of the Presbyterian Church, but the remains were moved with his first wife to St Stephen's Church of England Cemetery, Camperdown, in 1867, where they remain to this day. The inscription on his grave states that he departed this life "leaving a numerous family to lament their loss. He was a native of Scotland and upwards of 47 years a resident of this Colony, where he maintained a character which for simplicity of manner and integrity will long be remembered."


Legacy

James Chisholm's legacy as a wealthy merchant, political reformer and landowner, was built upon by his descendants. His widow Mary Chisholm was a successful pastoralist and businesswoman in her own right. His eldest son
James James is a common English language surname and given name: *James (name), the typically masculine first name James * James (surname), various people with the last name James James or James City may also refer to: People * King James (disambiguat ...
became a pioneer sheep breeder and woolgrower, an elected member of parliament for the seat of King and Georgiana (1851–56), voting for the Constitution Act, that conferred responsible government in NSW (1864), and a Legislative Councillor (1865–88). James Junior, his sons and his half-brother John William, expanded the Chisholm family land holdings over the Breadalbane Plains and beyond throughout the nineteenth century, eventually controlling two million acres of Australia.


References


Sources

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External links


Colonial Secretary's papers 1822–1877
State Library of Queensland The State Library of Queensland is the main reference and research library provided to the people of the State of Queensland, Australia, by the state government. Its legislative basis is provided by the Queensland Libraries Act 1988. It contai ...
- includes digitised correspondence and letters written by Chisholm to the
Colonial Secretary of New South Wales Colonial or The Colonial may refer to: * Colonial, of, relating to, or characteristic of a colony or colony (biology) Architecture * American colonial architecture * French Colonial * Spanish Colonial architecture Automobiles * Colonial (1920 ...
{{DEFAULTSORT:Chisholm, James 1772 births 1837 deaths Australian bankers Australian pastoralists Australian merchants