McMinn was born in Newry, County Down. He was the son of a bank manager, Joseph McMinn (c. 1794 – 6 April 1874) and his wife Martha, née Hamill or Hammill (c. 1805 – 13 December 1861), who sailed with their eight children aboard the Albatross and arrived at Port Adelaide in September 1850. Upon leaving school Gilbert took up surveying.[1]
Career
Gilbert McMinn was one of ten surveyors[2] and a support crew of around 100 men, under Surveyor-General George Goyder and Dr. Robert Peel, who left Adelaide for Port Darwin shortly after Christmas 1868[3] to survey Palmerston and regions, and most of whom returned to Adelaide on 25 November 1869.[4]
McMinn worked as a surveyor on the Overland Telegraph Line. In February 1871 he was the first European to visit Simpsons Gap, which he identified as a better route for the line.[5]
McMinn left Darwin for the east coast of Australia around 1890 and settled in Hawthorn, Victoria. he died in Mary Street, St. Kilda, Victoria on 18 October 1924 after a sudden heart failure at the age of 83.[7]
Recognition
McMinn Street, a major thoroughfare in Darwin on the edge of the city, leading to the Stokes Hill Wharf, is named after him.
On 28 November 1874 in Port Darwin, McMinn married his first wife, Anna Gore. He married again on 15 November 1884 to Madge Fleetwood-Marsh. He had three sons and two daughters.[1]
^D. D. Daly; W. Harvey; S. King, jun.; R. R. Knuckey; G. G. McLachlan G. R. McMinn; W. W. Mills; A. J. Mitchell; A. H. Smith; E. M. Smith; J. M. Thomas; A. T. Woods
^"Personal". The Advertiser (Adelaide). Vol. LXI, no. 18, 727. South Australia. 21 October 1918. p. 6. Retrieved 20 May 2019 – via National Library of Australia.
Further reading
"McMinn, Gilbert Rotherdale (1841–1924)". Australian Dictionary of Biography. Published first in hardcopy MUP, 1974, volume 5. Australian National University. Retrieved 20 July 2019.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: others (link)