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Edgar Chapman

Edgar Chapman
Born 1838
Died 8 May 1909

Edgar Chapman (1838 – 8 May 1909) was a brewer and businessman in Adelaide, South Australia, closely associated with the Theatre Royal.

James Chapman, a tailor and draper of Kent, England, emigrated to South Australia with his wife Mary and their seven children aboard Rajah, arriving at Adelaide in April 1850. He founded a drapery on Hindley Street, at that time the premier business strip in the young city.

His eldest son Edgar Chapman joined with W. K. Simms in 1865 as Simms & Chapman to operate West End Brewery, which Simms had purchased in 1861. The partnership was dissolved in 1879.

Chapman and Caleb Peacock were passengers on the steamer Auckland when she struck a reef between Cape Conran and Cape Everard, on 27 May 1871. The ship was lost but all aboard were rescued by the Macedon.

Chapman invested in commercial property on fashionable Hindley Street. In October 1876 he purchased the Theatre Royal, its hotel and the adjoining shops for ₤11,000, and lost no time in appointing George R. Johnson architect for a complete rebuild of the theatre. The rebuilt house, costing about £20,000, was opened on 25 March 1878.

In 1878, on the eve of the departure of Mr. and Mrs Chapman and their daughters Clara, Emily Fannie and Lily for a European holiday, he was presented by a throng of prominent citizens with a pair of diamond studs valued at ₤250 (perhaps $50,000 today), the work of J. M. Wendt. While on holiday he booked various acts for Australia, but with James Alison also leased Drury Lane for an Australian production of Henry V starring George Rignold, perhaps doing something to refute criticisms by the Christian Colonist.

He was for any years owner of Kallioota Station, of 102 square miles (260 km2), some 50 miles (80 km) north of Port Augusta, carrying 10,000 sheep and 800 cattle.


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