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Philip Santo

Philip Santo
Philip Santo.jpeg
South Australian
Commissioner of Public Works
In office
8 October 1861 – 17 October 1861
Premier George Waterhouse
Preceded by Alexander Hay
Succeeded by John Lindsay
In office
15 July 1863 – 4 August 1864
Premier Henry Ayers
Preceded by William Townsend
Succeeded by William Milne
In office
20 September 1865 – 23 October 1865
Premier Henry Ayers
Preceded by Francis Dutton
Succeeded by Thomas English
In office
3 May 1867 – 24 September 1868
Premier Henry Ayers
Preceded by Thomas English
Succeeded by William Everard
In office
13 October 1868 – 3 November 1868
Premier Henry Ayers
Preceded by William Everard
Succeeded by John Colton
Personal details
Born (1818-08-07)7 August 1818
Saltash, Cornwall, England
Died 17 December 1889(1889-12-17) (aged 71)
Adelaide, South Australia
Spouse(s) Elizabeth Pean

Philip Santo (7 August 1818 – 17 December 1889) was a South Australian politician and businessman.

Santo was born at Saltash, Cornwall, and trained to be a carpenter. At the age of 22 he left for South Australia on the ship Brightman, arriving in Adelaide in December 1840. He worked as a builder in Adelaide, then Burra. He moved to Melbourne during the rush to the Victorian goldfields but soon returned to set up a shop in Grote Street near Victoria Square in 1857, then Waymouth Street from 1866, then from 1873 as Philip Santo & Co in Waymouth Street and Lipson Street Port Adelaide; initially selling timber. then building materials then general hardware, riverboats and ships. By 1880 they had diversified into such disparate goods as patent medicines, perfumes and flavourings, American waggons, brooms, "kerosine", "gasoline" and cabinet organs. He was reported as the 1867 purchaser of Levi & Watt's newly-completed warehouse at 96 King William Street (now the site of the Commonwealth Bank) which became a warehouse for drapery wholesaler D. & W. Murray, but it appears he was acting for one T. Martin, an English investor.

In 1880 his company erected a new building on Waymouth Street, designed by architect D. Garlick. Tenants included Conigrave & Collison, agents and patent attorneys, and the S.A. Chamber of Manufactures. Santo's company ceased advertising around 1890.

Santo was elected to the South Australian House of Assembly in 1860 for the City of Adelaide district, 1862 and 1865 for East Adelaide then in 1868 for Barossa and was appointed Commissioner of Public works on a number of occasions for various periods, first in the Waterhouse cabinet, then with Henry Ayers to 1868. He lost his seat in 1870, during which year he was elected to the Legislative Council and held that seat for 21 years. He was an active member of the Church of Christ, Grote Street and frequently preached there as an Elder. He died at his home, "Fernleigh House" on West Terrace, Adelaide.


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