Sir John Logan Campbell - Auckland, New Zealand
Posted by: Groundspeak Premium Member No Fixed Aboder
S 36° 53.313 E 174° 46.561
60H E 301816 N 5915181
A statue of Sir John Campbell sits on top of a fountain at the entrance to Cornwell park, which he donated to the people of New Zealand.
Waymark Code: WM9H3V
Location: North Island, New Zealand
Date Posted: 08/21/2010
Published By:Groundspeak Regular Member Math Teacher
Views: 2

Sir John Logan Campbell Logan Campbell was termed the father of Auckland within his own lifetime.
A chronology of his life is:
Born Edinburgh 3 November 1817.
Graduated doctor of medicine University of Edinburgh, 1839.
Sailed to Australia, 1839, met business partner William Brown on the ship.
Arrived Herekino, Coromandel Peninsula, 1840.
Moved to Auckland - purchased Motukorea, Browns Island. Set up trading company, 1840.
Acacia Cottage built, 1841.
Partners purchase One Tree Hill estate, 1853.
Elected superintendent of Auckland province, 1855.
Married to Emma Wilson, 1858.
Children born 1859, 1861 and 1864 (twins).
Brown and Campbell partnership dissolved, 1873.
Brown and Campbell merges with Ehrenfried Brothers to become Campbell Ehrenfried, 1897.
Elected Mayor of Auckland, 1901.
Donated Cornwall Park, 1901.
Knighted, 1902
Opens Cornwall Park, 1903.
Dies 22 June 1912. He is buried on the summit of One Tree Hill.

The many roles commercial and civic that Campbell played in the fledgling and growing city settle his reputation as the father of the city. His business here was founded the same year as Auckland and he became central to the commerce and politics of the city. As well as trading in merchandise and farming he was involved in shipping, brewing, timber, export of flax, kauri gum and manganese, newspaper publishing and banking, being a foundation director of the Bank of New Zealand. His public roles were in the government of the province and as a member of the New Zealand parliament, as a captain of the militia and in the foundation of the Mechanics Institute and the Northern Club to name a few.

He lived abroad for much of the period 1855 to 1871. His palatial home Kilbryde, built in 1877 in Parnell, no longer exists. Only one of his children survived him and he has no descendants alive today.
URL of the statue: [Web Link]

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