| Frederick
Whitaker (later Sir)
Born 1812, Oxfordshire
Died 1891, New
Zealand, aged 79
Premier from
30 October 1863 to 24 November 1864 and 21 April 1882 to 25 September
1883.
Frederick Whitaker
was born at the Manor House, Bampton, Oxfordshire on 23 April 1812.
Whitaker undertook a legal education and became a solicitor and attorney
in at the age of 27. A year later he sailed to Australia and then New
Zealand.
Whitaker lived
in Auckland and was appointed a county court judge until this position
was abolished in 1844 when he returned to work as a attorney. He was
appointed to the Legislative Council in March 1845. He also served as
a major in the militia.
After leaving the
Legislative Council in 1846 he became a member again in May 1853. He
also became the provincial law office for Auckland in 1854.
Whitaker became
New Zealand’s 1st Attorney-General under responsible Government
in the Sewell Ministry in 1856. He served as Attorney-General until
1861 when he resigned from the Council and went back to the law. In
October 1863 Whitaker was called upon to form a cabinet to replace Premier
Domett after his defeat. The Whitaker Ministry lasted just over a year
until it ended in November 1864 after differences with Governor Grey
over the conduct of the war. Whitaker also resigned as a member of the
Legislative Council. He did serve briefly as MP for Parnell from 1866
to 1867.
In October 1865
he was elected Superintendent of Auckland which office he held until
1867. Then for nine years he stayed out of public office.
In 1876 he became
MP for Waikato and later Attorney-General again, under Atkinson. The
Atkinson Ministry lasted until October 1877 and Whitaker lost his seat
in the House in 1879. However when Premier Hall wanted him to serve
as Attorney-General again he was appointed once more to the Legislative
Council in 1879. When Hall resigned in April 1882, Whitaker became Premier
for the second time serving until September 1883.
Whitaker was made
a KCMG in 1884 and did a final spell as Attorney-General and leader
of the Legislative Council from 1887 to 1890. His health was failing
by then and he dies on 4 December 1891.

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