*** Welcome to piglix ***

Thomas William Hislop

The Honourable
Thomas William Hislop
Portrait photo of a bearded man in his late 20s
Portrait of Thomas Hislop in 1908
New Zealand Legislative Council
In office
2 September 1921 – 2 October 1925
21st Colonial Secretary of New Zealand
In office
8 October 1887 – 10 September 1889
Governor William Jervois
James Prendergast (acting)
The Earl of Onslow
8th Minister of Education
In office
9 July 1889 – 10 September 1889
In office
17 October 1889 – 24 January 1891
Member of the New Zealand Parliament
for Waitaki
In office
10 January 1876 – 28 April 1880
Member of the New Zealand Parliament
for Oamaru
In office
20 May 1885 – 3 October 1890
16th Mayor of Wellington
In office
1905–1908
Personal details
Born (1850-04-08)8 April 1850
Kirknewton, Scotland
Died 2 October 1925(1925-10-02) (aged 75)
Wellington, New Zealand
Resting place Karori Cemetery, Wellington
Spouse(s) Annie Hislop (née Simpson; m. 1873–1909)
Louis Hislop (née Smith; m. 1922–1925)
Children Thomas Hislop
Residence Hayes Court, Wellington
Alma mater University of Otago
Occupation barrister and solicitor; politician
Cabinet Atkinson Ministry, 1887–1891

Thomas William Hislop (8 April 1850 – 2 October 1925) was the Mayor of Wellington from 1905 to 1908, and had represented two South Island electorates in the New Zealand Parliament.

He was born in Kirknewton, West Lothian in 1850. His father, John Hislop, was the first secretary for Education in New Zealand. The family left Scotland in 1856 on the Strathmore and landed in Port Chalmers. They settled in East Taieri. He was educated by his father until the age of twelve, and then attended John Shaw's Grammar School (Albany Street, Dunedin), Dunedin High School and University of Otago, where he studied law. He was admitted as a barrister and solicitor in 1871, only a few months after his teacher from Shaw's Grammar, Robert Stout (who later became Premier and then Chief Justice). He practised as a lawyer in Oamaru (in a firm where he was a colleague of Stout ), in which town he resided until 1890. After the 1890 election defeat, he moved to Wellington, where he became a partner in the legal firm of Brandon and Hislop (later Brandon, Hislop and Johnston) with Alfred Brandon.

He was first elected for the Waitaki electorate in the 1876 general election, and was re-elected in 1879. He resigned on 28 April 1880 "for private reasons". He then represented Oamaru from an 1885 by-election to 1889, when he resigned from his two ministerial portfolios (effective 10 September 1889) and his parliamentary seat (effective 4 September 1889) over the Ward–Hislop Affair. He won the resulting 1889 by-election, but was defeated by Thomas Young Duncan at the next general election in 1890. He contested the 1896 general election in the Wellington Suburbs electorate, but was defeated by Thomas Wilford, with 2194 to 1942 votes. An election petition was filed one month after the election, accusing Wilford of bribery, illegal practices and not being properly registered as a voter himself. Therefore, it was argued, that only Hislop was properly registered, and should thus be returned. Wilford's election was declared invalid, but a by-election was called. Hislop declared that he would not stand in the by-election in favour of the opposition candidate Arthur Richmond Atkinson, who had come forth in the three-member Wellington electorate.Charles Wilson from the Liberal Party narrowly defeated Atkinson in the 1897 by-election, though.


...
Wikipedia

...