See also
Husband:
William Ardagh Gardiner Walter (1860-1940)
Wife:
Lucille Jane Thomson (1868-1947)
Children:
Marriage:
21 Sep 1887
Bunbury, Western Australia
Name:
William Ardagh Gardiner Walter
Sex:
Male
Father:
-
Father:
-
Note (shared):
William Ardagh Gardner Walter (1860-1940), magistrate, was born on 13 August 1860 at Wilton, Somerset, England, son of Octavius Gardner Walter, solicitor, and his wife Prudence, née Ardagh. Educated at Taunton College School, William migrated to Western Australia in 1885 and bought a cattle property at Tanjanerup, near Nannup. On 20 September 1887 at St Paul's Anglican Church, Bunbury, he married Lucille Jane Thomson (d.1947); they were to have a daughter and a son who was killed in World War I.
In 1891 Walter sold his station and entered government service. After helping to compile the census, he became warden of the new Murchison goldfield. From 1893 he was resident magistrate for the Blackwood area and registrar of Greenbushes tin-mining district; he quarrelled with the under secretary of crown lands over advice allegedly tendered by the latter on the issuing of mining leases. Walter was acting police magistrate at Perth in 1902 and then resident magistrate for three years at Geraldton; he was appointed second stipendiary magistrate at Kalgoorlie in 1909, acting warden of its mining district in 1911 and, after two years on the Murchison fields, first magistrate at Kalgoorlie.
In March 1918 he fined the leader of the parliamentary Opposition Philip Collier £25 plus costs for utterances 'likely to cause disaffection' during the conscription plebiscite. The fine was subsequently remitted and costs refunded in an undefended action before the High Court of Australia. A big, swarthy man with an iron-grey moustache, in 1919 Walter aroused hostility in trade union and labour circles when, after clashes between rival unions at Kalgoorlie, he refused bail for a number of Australian Workers' Union strikers and sent them to Perth for trial; it was later revealed that he had travelled to Perth for firearms to quell the disturbances. Workers disliked what they saw as his favouritism towards the Chamber of Mines and the Returned Sailors' and Soldiers' Imperial League of Australia; but one court reporter, while suspecting that Walter knew more about men than about the law, admired his judgements for their tolerance and compassion.
Walter left the goldfields in 1920 to become third stipendiary magistrate in Perth and was promoted second magistrate next year. Returning from a holiday in Burma in May 1924, he refused to resign and was compulsorily retired by the newly elected Collier Labor government. Victimization was alleged, but Collier remained adamant. Walter had shone at Rugby football and rowing in England, and at tennis and cricket in Western Australia; he coached women scullers on the River Swan and belonged to the Western Australian Turf Club. He was a member of Hannans Club and of the senate of the University of Western Australia; a vice-president of the Weld Club, he became its secretary in 1925, but resigned next year and went home to England where he died at Pembury, Kent, on 10 March 1940.
This article was published in Australian Dictionary of Biography, Volume 12, (MUP), 1990
http://adb.anu.edu.au/biography/walter-william-ardagh-gardner-8972 (accessed 28.09.2017)
Birth:
13 Aug 1860
Taunton, Somerset, England
Occupation:
a Farmer, Magistrate & Warden among other things
Education:
Taunton College and Exeter College Oxford
Death:
10 May 1940 (age 79)
Tonbridge, Kent, England
Name:
Lucille Jane Thomson
Sex:
Female
Father:
Mother:
Birth:
18 Sep 1868
Brookhampton, Blackwood, Western Australia
Death:
25 Feb 1947 (age 78)
Pembury, Kent, England
Name:
William Guy Ardagh Walter
Sex:
Male
Birth:
7 Aug 1888
Bridgetown, Western Australia
Education:
Connaught House, Weymouth & Sherborne School
Death:
6 Aug 1916 (age 27)
Battle of the Somme during WW1
Name:
Prudence Kate Lucille Walter
Sex:
Female
Spouse:
Children:
Birth:
8 Mar 1891
Bridgetown, Western Australia
Death:
29 Dec 1971 (age 80)
Courtlands, Sandrock Road, Tunbridge Wells, Kent
William Ardagh Gardner Walter (1860-1940), magistrate, was born on 13 August 1860 at Wilton, Somerset, England, son of Octavius Gardner Walter, solicitor, and his wife Prudence, née Ardagh. Educated at Taunton College School, William migrated to Western Australia in 1885 and bought a cattle property at Tanjanerup, near Nannup. On 20 September 1887 at St Paul's Anglican Church, Bunbury, he married Lucille Jane Thomson (d.1947); they were to have a daughter and a son who was killed in World War I.
In 1891 Walter sold his station and entered government service. After helping to compile the census, he became warden of the new Murchison goldfield. From 1893 he was resident magistrate for the Blackwood area and registrar of Greenbushes tin-mining district; he quarrelled with the under secretary of crown lands over advice allegedly tendered by the latter on the issuing of mining leases. Walter was acting police magistrate at Perth in 1902 and then resident magistrate for three years at Geraldton; he was appointed second stipendiary magistrate at Kalgoorlie in 1909, acting warden of its mining district in 1911 and, after two years on the Murchison fields, first magistrate at Kalgoorlie.
In March 1918 he fined the leader of the parliamentary Opposition Philip Collier £25 plus costs for utterances 'likely to cause disaffection' during the conscription plebiscite. The fine was subsequently remitted and costs refunded in an undefended action before the High Court of Australia. A big, swarthy man with an iron-grey moustache, in 1919 Walter aroused hostility in trade union and labour circles when, after clashes between rival unions at Kalgoorlie, he refused bail for a number of Australian Workers' Union strikers and sent them to Perth for trial; it was later revealed that he had travelled to Perth for firearms to quell the disturbances. Workers disliked what they saw as his favouritism towards the Chamber of Mines and the Returned Sailors' and Soldiers' Imperial League of Australia; but one court reporter, while suspecting that Walter knew more about men than about the law, admired his judgements for their tolerance and compassion.
Walter left the goldfields in 1920 to become third stipendiary magistrate in Perth and was promoted second magistrate next year. Returning from a holiday in Burma in May 1924, he refused to resign and was compulsorily retired by the newly elected Collier Labor government. Victimization was alleged, but Collier remained adamant. Walter had shone at Rugby football and rowing in England, and at tennis and cricket in Western Australia; he coached women scullers on the River Swan and belonged to the Western Australian Turf Club. He was a member of Hannans Club and of the senate of the University of Western Australia; a vice-president of the Weld Club, he became its secretary in 1925, but resigned next year and went home to England where he died at Pembury, Kent, on 10 March 1940.
This article was published in Australian Dictionary of Biography, Volume 12, (MUP), 1990
http://adb.anu.edu.au/biography/walter-william-ardagh-gardner-8972 (accessed 28.09.2017)