Alfred de Bathe Brandon

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Alfred de Bathe Brandon

Birthdate:
Birthplace: London, England (United Kingdom)
Death: September 22, 1886 (76-77)
Wellington, New Zealand
Place of Burial: Wellington, New Zealand
Immediate Family:

Son of Henry Brandon and Sarah Woodthorpe
Husband of Constance Mary Anne Brandon and Lucy Brandon
Father of Henry Eustace de Bathe Brandon; Alfred de Bathe Brandon; Constance de Bathe Larnach; Charles Sydney Brandon; Letitia Annie Brandon and 7 others
Brother of Private; Private; Private; Private; Private and 2 others

Occupation: Lawyer
Managed by: Charlene Newport
Last Updated:

About Alfred de Bathe Brandon

Alfred de Bathe Brandon (1809 – 22 September 1886) was a 19th-century New Zealand politician.

Early life



Brandon was born in London in 1809; his father was Henry Brandon. He was educated as a lawyer. He took an interest in Edward Gibbon Wakefield's ideas on colonisation and came to Wellington, New Zealand, in 1840 on the London as a cabin passenger.

Political career



Brandon was elected to the Wellington Provincial Council in its first election in 1853. He represented the Wellington Country electorate until 1865, and then the Porirua electorate until the abolition of the provincial governments in October 1876. He served on various Executive Councils (comparable to a cabinet between 1857 and 1871. He was Provincial Solicitor during the superintendency of Isaac Featherston.

He represented the Wellington Country electorate in Parliament from 1858 to 1860, then the Porirua electorate from 1860 to 1870, then the Wellington Country electorate again from 1871. In 1871, Brandon was challenged by Edward Thomas Gillon. Whilst there was criticism of Brandon not having had a good connection to his electorate, Brandon won with a solid majority. The next election in 1875 was contested by Gillon, Brandon, and J. H. Wallace. Brandon was again successful and received 208 votes versus 141 for Gillon, with Wallace a distant last. Brandon won the 1879 election and at the end of the parliamentary term in 1881, he retired from politics.

He was one of the staunch provincialists (i.e. he was opposed to the abolition of the provinces).

He was called to the Legislative Council on 5 June 1883 and served until his death.

Outside parliament



Brandon was Crown Prosecutor in Wellington. He was regarded as an expert in conveyancing and in legal drafting. He was on the board of governors of Wellington College. He was director of two insurance companies (Colonial Insurance Co. and Australian Mutual Provident Society). He was president of the Wellington Law Society for a time

Family and death



His first marriage was to Constance Mary Ann Brandon (née Brandon); they married in London in 1840. His wife died in December 1842 and was buried at the original St Paul's Church, located just behind the present Beehive. She left him an infant son, Eustace Brandon, who became a notable artist.

His second marriage was to Lucy Poole in 1854, and they were to have three sons and four daughters. Brandon died in Wellington on 22 September 1886. His son Alfred Brandon was Mayor of Wellington. His grandson, Alfred Brandon, was a lawyer and military aviator.

Brandon's house near Bulls, Brandon Hall Homestead, was registered by the New Zealand Historic Places Trust in 2005 as a Category II heritage structure. This registration was done with little involvement of the current property owners.

Brandon Street in Wellington Central is named for him.


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Alfred de Bathe Brandon's Timeline

1809
1809
London, England (United Kingdom)
1840
1840
ship London, at sea
1854
December 13, 1854
Wellington, New Zealand
1856
1856
New Zealand
1860
1860
1861
1861
1861
1886
September 22, 1886
Age 77
Wellington, New Zealand