Frederic Carrington

http://dbpedia.org/resource/Frederic_Carrington an entity of type: Thing

Frederic Alonzo Carrington (Oct 1807 – 15 July 1901) was a 19th-century New Zealand politician and surveyor. He is regarded as the Father of New Plymouth. Carrington was born in Chelmsford, Essex, England, in 1807, the son of Captain William Carrington. He was 15 years in the Ordnance Survey Department. Then he was appointed by the New Zealand Company as Chief Surveyor to the Plymouth Company and surveyed the new settlement of New Plymouth. He arrived in Wellington with his family in the ship London in December 1840 as a cabin passenger. rdf:langString
rdf:langString Frederic Carrington
rdf:langString Frederic Carrington
rdf:langString Frederic Carrington
rdf:langString New Plymouth, New Zealand
xsd:date 1901-07-15
rdf:langString Chelmsford, Essex, England
xsd:date 1807-10-11
xsd:integer 21974863
xsd:integer 1115925025
rdf:langString left
xsd:date 1807-10-11
xsd:date 1901-07-15
rdf:langString Grey and Bell
xsd:integer 1875 1879
rdf:langString Founding survey of New Plymouth
rdf:langString Independent politician
xsd:integer 1870 1871 1875
xsd:integer 4 5 6
xsd:integer 1869 1870 1871
rdf:langString Frederic Alonzo Carrington (Oct 1807 – 15 July 1901) was a 19th-century New Zealand politician and surveyor. He is regarded as the Father of New Plymouth. Carrington was born in Chelmsford, Essex, England, in 1807, the son of Captain William Carrington. He was 15 years in the Ordnance Survey Department. Then he was appointed by the New Zealand Company as Chief Surveyor to the Plymouth Company and surveyed the new settlement of New Plymouth. He arrived in Wellington with his family in the ship London in December 1840 as a cabin passenger. In 1844, he returned to England, and undertook surveying for parliamentary committees in England and Scotland. In 1851, he displayed iron made from Taranaki iron sand at The Great Exhibition, London. From 1851 to 1856 he investigated business proposals in California and other parts of America, Paris and Belgium. He left for New Zealand with his family in January 1857 and in 1862 was made Government Engineering Surveyor for Taranaki. He finally obtained a grant of land in 1877. He was Superintendent of Taranaki Province from 1869 to 1876 (when the Provinces were abolished), and was the member of Parliament for Omata in 1870 and then Grey and Bell from 1871 to 1879 when he retired. He had stood unsuccessfully in the 1869 by-election for Town of New Plymouth He was a member of the Harbour Board (now Port Taranaki), and an advocate of an adequate harbour for New Plymouth. In 1881, Carrington laid the first stone for the main breakwater at the port, using a trowel made from Taranaki ironsand. Carrington died in New Plymouth and is buried in the family grave in Te Henui Cemetery. Carrington Street, a New Plymouth arterial route, and its extension Carrington Road, which winds between the Pouakai and Kaitake ranges, are named for him. He is regarded as the father of New Plymouth.
rdf:langString true
xsd:nonNegativeInteger 6474
xsd:gYear 1807
xsd:gYear 1901

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