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Thomas Jessep
Male 1848 - 1916


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  • Birth  1 Nov 1848  Gooderstone, Norfolk, England Find all individuals with events at this location 
    Gender  Male 
    Died  7 Nov 1916 
    Person ID  I1342  Forsyth Tanners
    Last Modified  24 Sep 2013 

    Family  Louisa Drury,   b. 5 Dec 1850,   d. 25 Oct 1939, Charing Cross NSW Find all individuals with events at this location 
    Married  10 Apr 1873  William Drury's place Riley Street, Surry Hills Find all individuals with events at this location 
    Last Modified  23 Sep 2013 
    Family ID  F470  Group Sheet

  • Notes 

    • Louisa?s older sister Jane married a tanner, James Brown (J.B.) Forsyth. J.B. influenced Thomas into trying his hand in the leather trade. In 1875, two years after his marriage, Thomas was engaged as a currier in the leather business, residing at 50 King Street, Sydney (north side) close to the intersection with Clarence Street (where a branch of the Commonwealth Bank is now located).



      Jessep, Thomas (1848?1916)
      by Mark Lyons

      This article was published in Australian Dictionary of Biography, Volume 9, (MUP), 1983

      Thomas Jessep (1848-1916), fruit merchant and politician, was born on 1 November 1848 at Gooderstone, Norfolk, England, son of Thomas Jessep, farmer, and his wife Jane, née Cooper. He reached Hobart Town in 1854 with his mother and elder brother James; his father had died on the voyage. In 1861 he began work as a farmhand and five years later left for the Victorian diggings. Unsuccessful, he arrived in Sydney in 1869.

      Starting as a carrier, in 1874 Jessep moved into the fruit trade and by the early 1880s was a well-established wholesale fruit merchant, operating as a commission agent for intercolonial, New Zealand and, particularly, Fijian producers. His speciality was bananas, and he later encouraged their cultivation in the New Hebrides and Papua. When in 1890 the Sydney Municipal Council proposed moving the fruit market from the Queen Victoria site to the Haymarket, many merchants and growers formed a co-operative and established their own market, the Fruit Exchange, in Bathurst Street. Jessep was, until his death, its chairman. For many years he was president of the Fruit Merchants' Association of New South Wales and appeared as an expert witness before several inquiries into the industry. By the late 1880s prosperity had enabled him to build a large residence, Norfolk House, at Waverley.

      An alderman on Waverley Municipal Council in 1889-90 and 1892, he represented Brisbane Ward on Sydney Municipal Council in 1893-1900. In 1896, at a by-election, he was elected to the Legislative Assembly for Waverley as a free trader, holding the seat in 1898, 1901 and 1904 as a Liberal. Although defeated in 1907 (by liquor and sporting interests) and again in 1910 (for Camperdown), he remained active in party matters.

      A committed evangelical Methodist, Jessep became experienced in public speaking as a lay preacher. For nearly twenty-eight years he was superintendent of the Waverley Methodist Sunday School. His was an evangelical rather than a denominational Christianity. His arrival in Sydney had coincided with an outburst of sectarianism and the formation of Catholic and Protestant sectarian subcultures. In 1870 he joined the Loyal Orange Institution of New South Wales; he was grand secretary (1883-85 and 1911-12), deputy grand master (1886-88) and grand master (1889). In 1915 he was president of the grand council of the Loyal Orange Institution of Australasia. For many years he was a chairman of the Protestant Hall Co. Ltd and in 1901 was a foundation member of the Australian Protestant Defence Association and a member of the Evangelical Council of New South Wales. He had been secretary of the New South Wales Total Abstinence Society in 1871 and was prominent in local option campaigns in 1907 and 1916. Temperance organizations endorsed him in his election campaigns. His main political interest was moral reform: local option, control of music halls, prevention of gambling. Although he never returned 'Home' he retained a British identity: 'I am a loyal Britisher, not a loyal Australian', he once testily remarked. Both his commercial interests and his sectarianism pushed him to the Liberal side of politics, but he placed his commercial interests before parliamentary duties. He was, however, an important link between Protestant sectarianism, wowserism and commerce that provided the Liberal party with its main electoral base in the first decade of the twentieth century.

      On 7 November 1916 Jessep died of cancer and was buried in Waverley cemetery. He was survived by his wife Louisa, née Drury, whom he had married in Sydney on 10 April 1873, and by four daughters and three of their four sons.


      Children
      Thomas William 1874
      Percy 1877
      William 1879
      Arthur 1882
      Amy L 1884
      Alice J 1886
      Eva 1888
      Una M 1891