The Honourable James Colvin |
|
---|---|
Member of the New Zealand Parliament for Buller |
|
In office 1899 – 1919 |
|
Preceded by | Patrick O'Regan |
Succeeded by | Harry Holland |
Personal details | |
Born | 1844 Donegal, Ireland |
Died | 29 October 1919 Wellington, New Zealand |
Political party | Liberal |
James Colvin (1844 – 29 October 1919) was a New Zealand Member of Parliament for Buller, in the South Island.
Colvin was born in 1844 in Donegal, Ireland, where he received his education. He emigrated to Victoria, Australia in 1861 and went gold mining in Creswick and Daylesford. He came to New Zealand in 1862 and joined the Otago Gold Rush in Dunstan and Wakatipu, from where he went to the gold fields in the Wakamarina Valley in Marlborough; he set up a store in the latter place. When he was a young man, Colvin was held up by a member of the Burgess-Sullivan gang (also known as the Maungatapu Murderers) near where George Dobson had been murdered a few days previously. Unknown to his interrogator James Colvin was carrying 2,000 pounds worth of gold on his saddle, and managed to pass unmolested.
He served on numerous boards and committees: the Buller County Council (1885–89), Westport Harbour Board (Chairman 1890), and was Mayor of Westport between 1898 and 1900.
Colvin stood in the Buller electorate in the 1896 election but was defeated by Patrick O'Regan. He defeated O'Regan in 1899 as a supporter of Richard Seddon, and represented the Buller electorate in the House of Representatives for twenty years until his death in 1919. At the 1899 election, Colvin stood as an Independent Liberal rather than an official Liberal candidate.