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George
Waterhouse
Born 1824, Cornwall,
England
Died 1906, Devon,
England , aged 82
Premier from
11 October 1872 to 3 March 1873.
George Waterhouse
was born in Cornwall and educated at Wesleyan College near Bristol.
Waterhouse moved
to Tasmania with his father in 1839 and in 1843 went into business in
Adelaide. He was so successful that at the age of 27 he was able to
retire if he so chose.
He was elected
to the South Australia Legislative Council where he served until June
1854 when he resigned to travel overseas. He visited the United States
and Great Britain and returned in 1856 where he got involved once more
in South Australia politics becoming Chief Secretary on two occasions.
He resigned his seat in December 1863 and in 1869 appeared in New Zealand
where he purchased a 20000 acre station in south Wairarapa.
In May 1870 he
was appointed to the Legislative Council by Fox who had met him previously
in Australia. During his years in office he never accepted a salary
as he was sufficiently well off.
In October 1871
he joined the Executive and continued to play a major role in the affairs
of the Legislative Council. In October 1872 Vogel was called upon to
form a Government and Vogel proposed that Waterhouse be made Premier.
This was unique in that Waterhouse had no portfolio, no salary and no
seat in the lower House. However Vogel was seen to hold much of the
actual power of the office and Waterhouse resigned in March 1873.
Waterhouse remained
as an MP until 1890 and served as Speaker of the Legislative Council
in 1887. In 1888 he left New Zealand for good and returned to Devon
where he died on 6 August 1906.

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