He was appointed a clerk in the Police Commissioner's office in 1857,[1] then studied law and worked as an articled clerk to John George Daly ( – 21 May 1881), second son of Sir Dominick Daly. In March 1868 he applied for admission to the Bar.
He began his journalistic career as sub-editor with The Advertiser[3] then was, around 1874, appointed the first editor of The Lantern,[4] a satirical magazine later taken over by Quiz. In April 1876, F. S. Carroll took over the Lantern; Stevenson left Adelaide to join the staff of the Sydney Morning Herald,[5] and was for many years on the literary staff of the Evening News and the Town and Country Journal. For the last three years of his life he was connected with the Australian Star, and was known as a conscientious journalist, a vigorous and incisive political writer, and a competent dramatic critic and reviewer. He suffered ill health the last four years of his life.[6]
Family
George married Jeanie (or Jeannie) Miller Davidson ( – 15 September 1916) of Little Para on 17 March 1863. They may have had only one child:
Lucy Margaret Stevenson (23 January 1864 – 14 July 1932) was a well-known soprano, a featured artist at many society functions and charity events in Adelaide. She never married, and spent much of her life caring for her mother.
^"Lucy Stevenson's Father". The Advertiser. 22 July 1932. p. 22. Retrieved 23 July 2015 – via Trove. The year of Lavington Bonython's meeting Stevenson (1864) is credible, but shows Stevenson's dual careers of law and journalism to be rather disjointed.