Walter Hussey Vivian (c. 1851 – 6 November 1928) was an Australian politician.
Early life
Little is known of him outside of the period in which he was active in New South Wales politics and his parliamentary biography contains little detail.[1] His death notice, inserted by five of his daughters, lists him as aged 77 at his death,[2] which would mean he was born in 1850 or 1851. A biography published by the Australian Town and Country Journal in 1890 states he was born in 1852, a member of the Vivian family, educated in England and Belgium, arriving in Australia in 1873 via Fiji.[3][4][a] On 10 August 1876, he married Eliza Alison and his marriage announcement stated that he was the fourth son of William Vivian Esq of 15 Bolton Gardens, London.[7] In 1880, he was a squatter on the Bogan River, before returning to Sydney in 1885,[3] becoming an estate agent.[1]
Vivian was one of the New South Wales commissioners to the Colonial and Indian Exhibition of 1886 in London, in charge of the wool exhibits,[3] the New South Wales Executive Commissioner for the Tasmanian International Exhibition of 1891–2 in Launceston,[13] and one of the New South Wales commissioners to the World's Columbian Exposition of 1893 in Chicago, on the committees for wool and silk, manufacturing and liberal arts, education and ethnology.[14]
Later life and death
By 1891, Vivian had become a stock and share broker.[15][16]
Sometime in the early 1900s, Vivian left Australia for South Africa,[1] and in 1903 announced the death of his fourth daughter, Edith, at Johannesburg.[17] He also lived at Durban before his death at Pinetown, Natal Province on 6 November 1928 (aged 77).[2]
Notes
^A Mr Vivian arrived in Melbourne on the Nil Desperandum from Fiji on 20 June 1874 [5] and W H Vivian arrived in Sydney on the Hero from Melbourne on 10 July 1874.[6]