James Ruse
Encyclopedia
|
| Tutorials | Encyclopedia | Dictionary | Directory |
|
James Ruse
James Ruse (9 August 1759 – 5 September 1837) was a pioneer of agriculture in Australia, being the first to successfully grow grain in the early colony.
Early lifeRuse was born on a farm in CornwallEngland. As a pioneering farmerGovernor Arthur Philip allocated Ruse one and a half acres (6,000 mē) of already cleared ground and assisted in clearing a further five acres (20,000 mē). He was to be given two cows and six hens and was to be fed and clothed from the public store for 15 months. In return, if he was successful, he was to be granted 30 acres (120,000 mē). After 15 months Ruse announced that he and his wife Elizabeth (he married her in 1790) were now self-sufficient in food, and their farm formed the nucleus of a small community of farmers who, while technically still convicts, enjoyed considerable freedom and later had other convicts assigned to work for them. An account of Ruse's methods is given on pp. 80-1 of A Complete Account of the Settlement at Port Jackson by Watkin Tench. Ruse expected to reap about eight bushels (290 litres) to the acre. After Ruse's sentence expired in 1792, the title of his land was deeded to him, the first land grant in the colony. In 1793 he sold his land to Dr Harris of the New South Wales Corps. In 1794 Ruse moved further out, to the junction of the Hawkesbury River and South Creek, and became a fairly successful farmer. He and Elizabeth had seven children together (two of them thought to be adopted). Later, however, he was wiped out by flooding (always the risk of farming in the Hawkesbury) and had to find work as a seaman. He was heavily in debt and only the hard work of his wife saved him from bankruptcy. From 1828 he was employed as an overseer by a landowner at Minto, south of Sydney. He died at Campbelltown on 5 September 1837. In memory of James RuseRuse's gravestone, which he carved himself, reads: "Sacred to the memory of James Ruse who departed this life September 5 in the year of Houre Lord 1837. A replica of his tombstone stands in the front garden of Barrengarry House, the administration block at James Ruse Agricultural High School. The memory of James Ruse is perpetuated in the naming of key locations in Sydney, including James Ruse Agricultural High School, in Carlingford; James Ruse Drive, running from Silverwater to Northmead, near Parramatta; and Ruse, a suburb in southwest Sydney. See alsoReferences
Source: Wikipedia | The above article is available under the GNU FDL. | Edit this article
|
|
top
©2008-2009 TutorGig.com. All Rights Reserved. Privacy Statement