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Jermyn Symonds

John Jermyn Symonds
b&w seated portrait photo of a bearded man
Seated portrait of J. Jermyn Symonds
Member of the New Zealand Parliament
for Pensioner Settlements
In office
1858 – 1860
Preceded by Joseph Greenwood
Succeeded by William Mason
Personal details
Born 4 January 1816
England
Died 3 January 1883(1883-01-03) (aged 66)
Onehunga, New Zealand
Spouse(s) Alethia Symonds (née Wilson)
Relations Thomas Symonds (grandfather)
William Symonds (father)
Mary Anne Whitby (aunt)
William Cornwallis Symonds (brother)
Thomas Symonds (brother)

Captain John Jermyn Symonds (4 January 1816 – 3 January 1883) was a 19th-century Member of Parliament in Auckland, New Zealand. He purchased land for the New Zealand Company and was later a judge of the Native Land Court.

Symonds was born in 1816 as the youngest son of the family. His father was Sir William Symonds. On the recommendation of Lord Normanby, he joined the survey department in New South Wales in 1839. He moved on to Auckland, New Zealand in 1841 to join his elder brother William Cornwallis Symonds, but his brother drowned in a boating accident in November of that year. For a while, he was acting protector of aborigines, and was in charge of purchase of land from Māori, and the survey of that land. In 1844, he purchased the Otago block with Frederick Tuckett on behalf of the New Zealand Company.

In 1846, he became private secretary to Governor George Grey. The governor transferred an island in the Firth of Thames to Symonds to create a test case regarding the Crown's pre-emptive right of purchase to Māori land deriving from the Treaty of Waitangi; in R v Symonds, the court decided in favour of the Crown's case. In 1847, he was one of the founding members of the Auckland Savings Bank. He returned to England for some time, where he married in 1849. He came back to New Zealand in 1849 in charge of a detachment of the Fencibles, which he settled in Onehunga. He became a justice of the peace in 1853, was appointed Native Secretary in 1855, and became Onehunga's resident magistrate and returning officer in 1856.


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