William Stephens (Australian politician)
William Stephens (1857–1925) was a businessman and politician in Queensland, Australia. He was a Member of the Queensland Legislative Assembly and a Member of the Queensland Legislative Council. Early lifeWilliam Stephens was born on 7 November 1857 at South Brisbane, the eldest son of Thomas Blacket Stephens and his wife Ann (née Connah),[1] and raised at the family home of Cumbooquepa on Vulture Street, South Brisbane.[2] He was educated at the National Public School, then the Brisbane Grammar School.[3] Commencing as a merchant, he took over the family estate on the death of his father.[4] He married Pauline Ann Caroline Effey in March 1900,[5] and they had three sons and three daughters:[4] Thomas Blacket (1902–),[6] William (1909–), and Edward Harry (1916–1916); Dorothea Louise (1901–),[7] Ann Pauline (1905–1984), and Marian Victoria (1907–). From 20 acres (8.1 ha) of land transferred to Stephens by his father in 1886, Stephens built the family residence of Waldheim, off Ipswich Road, Annerley (now 35 Waldheim Street), about 1900 at the cost of €300;[8] 'Waldheim' being a German word for 'home in the forest'. (It is now a Brisbane City Council designated local heritage place.[8]) PoliticsIn 1882 he was elected as a member of the Yeerongpilly Divisional Board, and later, for thirty-six years, the Nerang Divisonal Board (later the Nerang Shire Council).[4] In 1887 he was elected president of the Metropolitan Traffic Board, and also became an alderman of the south ward, Brisbane. The South and Woolloongabba boards were merged the following year to become the City of South Brisbane, where he became the first mayor, in 1888, 1889, and 1901.[4][3] Stephens was elected on 12 May 1888 to the Queensland Legislative Assembly in Woolloongabba. In the 1893 colonial election, he successfully contested the seat of South Brisbane which he held until 27 August 1904, when he was defeated in the 1904 state election. He contested South Brisbane again in the 1907 election and was successfully, representing the electorate from 18 May 1907 to 5 February 1908, when he was again defeated in the 1908 election.[9][10] During this last period, he was Secretary for Public Instruction and Agriculture from 19 November 1907 to 18 February 1908. In the 1912 election, Stephens unsuccessfully contested Buranda. On 1 July 1912, he was appointed for life to the Queensland Legislative Council, a position he held until the Council was abolished on 23 March 1922.[9] Business interestsStephens had many business interests in South Brisbane and other areas, including:[3]
Later lifeFollowing ill health late in life, Stephens collapsed from a stroke while holidaying at Southport, Queensland on Monday 27 April 1925. He was taken to a private hospital where he died on Thursday 30 April 1925. His funeral left his home Waldheim on Friday 1 May 1925 for his burial at South Brisbane Cemetery.[1][3] Many prominent citizens attended his funeral.[11] His brother Thomas Connah Stephens (1868–1937) lived in the same street at Knutsford, on the corner of Waldheim and Blacket Streets.[12][2] Stephens also donated a block of land 'to be held in perpetuity for the scout movement' at 63 Waldheim Street, almost opposite the Junction Park State School, upon which was erected a 40 by 32 feet (12.2 m × 9.8 m) two-storey building costing £331, which was opened on Saturday 7 December 1929.[13][14] It was for the use of the Stephens Boy Scout and Tarragindi Girl Guide groups; Stephens being the locale named for Stephens' father, and Tarragindi being an adjoining suburb. It is now a private residence.[15] His wife Pauline died on 2 August 1960, aged 85.[16] References
External linksMedia related to William Stephens (Queensland) at Wikimedia Commons |