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Edward Nucella Emmett

Edward Nucella Emmett
Edward Nucella Emmett abt 1860 Mayor of Bendigo.jpg
Born 18 February 1817
Winchester, London, England
Died 18 March 1874(1874-03-18) (aged 57)
Manly, New South Wales, Australia
Resting place Rookwood Cemetery
33°52′27″S 151°03′30″E / 33.874121°S 151.058361°E / -33.874121; 151.058361
Residence England, Tasmania, South Australia, Victoria and New South Wales
Occupation entrepreneur: auctioneer, banker, gold digger, broker, legal manager, mining agent
Spouse(s) Sarah Spottiswood Blackham
Partner(s) Sarah Ann Dolby (common law)
Children with Sarah Ann Dolby: Sarah Ann Dolby Emmett (1843 – 1881), Mary Dolby Emmett (1847 – 1913), Edward Nucella Dolby Emmett (1851 – 1911), with Sarah Spottiswoode Blackham: Edward Blackham Emmett (1850 – 1850), Richard Spottiswood William Emmett (1851 – 1851), Sarah Spottiswood Grace Emmett (1855 – 1861), Lilly Bannerman Blanche Emmett (1865 – 1866), Bertha Maud Beatrice Emmett (1868 – 1939)
Parent(s) Henry James Emmett and Mary Elizabeth Thompson Emmett (nee Townsend)
Mayor of Sandhurst
Mayor of Raywood
Member of Victorian Legislative Council
In office
from 29 August 1853 but may never have taken up seat

Edward Nucella Emmett (18 February 1817 – 18 March 1874) was an English born Australian entrepreneur and politician, briefly a member of the Victorian Legislative Council.

Emmett worked as an auctioneer in Adelaide, South Australia. He lived in Bendigo from 1852 to 1870, first as a gold digger and auctioneer He was said to be the first discoverer of the Hustler's Reef near Bendigo. and later, with Hugh Smith, he established the Bendigo Bank (subsequently purchased by the then Bank of Victoria). He later started a brewery and a number of mining companies. To secure Bendigo’s future, Emmett worked to establish a reliable water supply and was the main promoter of the Bendigo Waterworks Company (now part of Coliban Water).

Given the financial problems of the Victorian colonial government and the lack of local government funds he worked to privately fund a new water supply. The council controlled a 22-acre water reserve site along the Bendigo Creek at Golden Square. With funding from wealthy investors in Melbourne he formed the company which was incorporated by parliament. Joseph Brady was the first engineer for the project.

He went to Sydney after 1870 where he was a broker, legal manager and mining agent.

Emmett was nominated as a Member of the Victorian Legislative Council from 29 August 1853 to September 1853, but resigned in early September when rejected by a diggers' meeting and may not have taken his seat. He was first chairman of the Sandhurst municipal council and, subsequently, of the municipality of Raywood of which also he was the first chairman.

After the sale of the bank he acted in a number of official roles, including: the town valuator and conducted first government land sales; a member of first local court 1855; and Mining Registrar Raywood 1863.

Emmett was the son of Henry James Emmett and Mary Elizabeth Thompson Emmett (née Townsend) who immigrated to Van Diemen's Land from England with their young family in 1819 fifteen years after the establishment of Hobart Town (1804).


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