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Maurice O'Rorke

The Honourable
Sir Maurice O'Rorke
portrait of man in his 60s with sideburns
George Maurice O’Rorke
5th Speaker of the House of Representatives
In office
1879–1890
Prime Minister John Hall
In office
1894–1902
Prime Minister Richard Seddon
Member of the New Zealand Parliament
for Onehunga (previously Town of Onehunga)
In office
1861 – 1881
Member of the New Zealand Parliament
for Manukau
In office
1881 – 1890
In office
1893 – 1902
8th Superintendent of Auckland Province
In office
February 1875 – March 1875
Personal details
Born 2 May 1830
Moylough, County Galway, Ireland
Died 25 August 1916(1916-08-25) (aged 86)
Auckland, New Zealand
Political party Liberal
Spouse(s) Cecilia Mary Shepherd
Relations Alexander Shepherd (father-in-law)
Children Edward

Sir George Maurice O’Rorke (2 May 1830 – 25 August 1916) was a New Zealand politician, representing (as George O’Rorke) the Auckland seat of Onehunga, and later Manukau, and was Speaker of the House of Representatives. He was a committed provincialist and was the eighth Superintendent of the Auckland Province. Upon receiving his knighthood in 1880, he became known as Sir Maurice.

O’Rorke was born in Moylough, County Galway, Ireland, the third son of the Rev John O’Rorke (an Anglican minister and large landowner) and his third wife Elizabeth (née Dennis). He went to Trinity College, Dublin, getting a B.A. with high honours in classics in 1852. Immediately after finishing his university education, he sailed for Melbourne, Australia. Whilst this was the time of the Victorian gold rush, this was not his motivation. Rather, he had had an uncle, Henry Dennis, who had settled as a squatter in the Darling Downs in the early 1840s, but who had perished in the sinking of the Sovereign near Moreton Bay in 1847. After working in Victoria, Australia on a farm, he came to Auckland in 1854, farming in Papakura and Onehunga, Auckland.

He represented Onehunga, which became Manukau, from 1861 to 1902, except for 1891–1893 when he was out of Parliament. He was Minister of Immigration and Crown Lands 1873–1874 in the Waterhouse, Fox and Vogel ministries, but was sacked by Vogel, dissatisfied with his performance. He supported the Provincial system in New Zealand, and spoke out against its abolition by Vogel. He served as Chairman of Committees from 1871 to 1872.


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