Walter Bradley (Australian politician)

Walter Bradley (1 November 1836 27 June 1893) was an English-born Australian politician.

He was born at Hackney near London to Royal Mint assayer George Robert Bradley and Eliza Cave. He arrived in Sydney in 1854 and worked as an auctioneer at Wynyard. In 1859 he co-founded his own firm of Bradley, Norton and Lamb. On 31 March 1859, he married Emily Hobbs. The couple had fifteen children, only one of whom did not survive infancy.

He was a long-serving Randwick alderman, being thrice mayor, and was a founder of the Zoological Society of New South Wales and the Moore Park Zoological Gardens. He retired from his auctioneers' firm in 1887 to concentrate on real estate development, building a number of houses in Randwick. In 1891 he was elected in a by-election to the New South Wales Legislative Assembly as a Protectionist member for East Sydney, but he was defeated in the general election later that year. Bradley died at Randwick in 1893 of apoplexy and paralysis following two high profile legal cases in which his wife sued first for Judicial Separation and then for divorce.(NSW BDM 1893/12575;NRS 13495 1892/836; 1891/722).[1]

References

  1. "Mr Walter Bradley (1836 - 1893)". Former Members. Parliament of New South Wales. 2008. Retrieved 4 July 2015.
New South Wales Legislative Assembly
Preceded by
John Street
Member for East Sydney
1891
Served alongside: Burdekin, McMillan, Reid
Succeeded by
Edmund Barton
Varney Parkes
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