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Thomas Prior in Australia?

Robert M-P wrote that his grandfather Thomas visited Queensland ‘briefly’, but gives no evidence.1) Rosa Campbell Praed, Thomas Prior's granddaughter, wrote that she recalled one of her grandmother's trunks with the information on its side, 'that Colonel Thomas Murray-Prior had taken passage in the Roxburgh Castle from Southampton, England, for Bungroopim Station, Logan River, Brisbane Water, Moreton Bay, Australia'. The Roxburgh Castle was the ship her father had sailed in when he first emigrated in 1838, and it is more likely that, especially given Thomas consistently dropped the Murray from his name, that Rosa's memory had let her down. Her memoir was, after all, published in 1902, when she could no longer check with her grandparents or parents.2)

Andrew Darbyshire has undertaken research into TLM-P and his family. He provides evidence in the form of a land map of Prior’s Pocket [Road] Moggill (Brisbane) showing that ‘T. Prior’ selected land there ‘in the early 1850’s during his stay in the Brisbane area (he also purchased land in Cleveland)’ and shows a map courtesy of the Queensland State Archives. He also reproduces a letter from the Surveyor’s Letterbook (Queensland State Archives) dated 25 October 1853, that ‘Major Prior has applied to purchase’ the allotments at Moggill. Darbyshire then explains that ‘Thomas purchased this and other land at Cleveland using a Remission Order allowed him as an officer in HM Regiment’.3) In contrast, the Mogill Historical Society states that TLM-P was the purchaser, and in 1850.

It is more likely that TLM-P bought the land in his father's name, with there being no need for Thomas Prior visiting Queensland. Acquiring land in the names of family members was a well-established practice to get around closer settlement laws that sought to restrict large holdings of land by a few owners (as occurred in the United Kingdom). Eminent historian Ross Fitzgerald puts in bluntly: the squatters regarded selectors as intruders and cynically manipulated land regulations to keep the newcomers out. As a result 'many [squatters] resorted to “dummying” their runs (i.e., lodging land claims using the name of a family member of employee)… Queensland became “a liar's paradise” … Most of the distinguished squatting families of the [Darling] Downs were involved….'4)

Andrew Darbyshire also gives evidence that Major Prior, and not his son TLM-P, was a returning officer in April 1854 election for the County of Stanley for the NSW Legislative Council (Queensland was part of NSW until 1859). Trove reveals that the references to ‘Major Prior’ as returning officer are in the Moreton Bay Courier, 5 August 1854, p.2. How likely is it that this ‘Major Prior’ is our Thomas, who had been promoted from Major in 1849, and had been further promoted to Brevet Lieutenant Colonel in England in June 1854?

To do: Christine Wright, Wellington's Men in Australia: Peninsular War Veterans and the Making of Empire C.1820-40 Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan, 2011.


1)
Robert Murray-Prior, Blood royal of the Murray-Priors, 1901-05, p
2)
Rosa Campbell Praed, My Australian Girlhood, London:1902.
3)
Andrew Darbyshire, A Fair Slice of St Lucia, St Lucia History Group Research Paper No. 8, p.57.
4)
Ross Fitzgerald, From the Dreaming to 1915. A History of Queensland, St Lucia: University of Queensland Press, 1982, p.189.
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