Edwin Austin
Edwin Henry Austin (23 August 1860 – 30 November 1909) was an Australian politician in the Victorian Legislative Assembly. Austin served as the member for Ripon and Hampden between 1892 and 1900 and went on to serve in the Legislative Council for Nelson Province between 1906 and 1909.[1] Austin ran as a conservative.[2] Personal lifeAustin was the second son of pastoralist Thomas Austin and Elizabeth Phillips Harding.[2] Austin's father is noted as the person who introduced rabbits into Australia.[3] Austin attended Ballarat College before moving to Geelong Grammar School in July 1872 and eventually went to Scotch College, Melbourne from 1878.[2] On 10 June 1884 Austin married Jessie Isabella, the Daughter government surveyor and grazier, Thomas Shaw. In 1883, Austin began a six-year lease of Gorrinn Station in the district. He went on to purchase St Enochs near Beaufort in 1888, but sold it around a decade later and made his home at Colvinsby in Dobie. He passed away from nephritis in Stawell on 30 November 1909. He was survived by his wife, two daughters, and his son Rex, who died of meningitis in 1914.[2] References
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