James Aikenhead

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James Aikenhead(1815-1887), businessman, editor and politician, was born in Montrose, Scotland. After commercial and legal training and experience in London business, he arrived at Launceston in the Janet in 1835. In 1841, after employment by a firm of merchants, he joined with others in establishing the Cornwall Fire and Marine Insurance Co. of which he was secretary until 1884. While in that position, he was active in having Launceston supplied with water.

With Rev. John West and J. S. Waddell, Aikenhead established the Examiner in 1842 and edited it until 1869 when he transferred his interest to his son William. He opposed the continued transportation of convicts and supported the establishment of free institutions in the colony, but his political views, reflected in the Examiner and in his public life, were generally conservative.

In 1835 he was one of the founders of the Launceston Bank for Savings, of which he was a manager till his death, and was also active in the foundation of the Launceston Chamber of Commerce. An investor in mining enterprises, he became a director of the Mt Bischoff Tin Mining Co. and of the Launceston branch of the Commercial Bank. He was placed on the Commission of the Peace in 1858 and twelve years later elected unopposed for the seat of Tamar in the Legislative Council, a position he held when he retired in 1885, having been chairman of committees for nine years from 1876.

Aikenhead worshipped at the Congregational Church, Tamar Street, was superintendent of its Sunday school and active in the Cornwall auxiliary branches of the British and Foreign Bible Society and the London Missionary Society. He helped to found the Mechanics' Institute and the Launceston Public Library and was a member of the Education Board.

In February 1840 he married Jane Priscilla, daughter of Rev. William Judson of High Wycombe, Buckinghamshire. There were twelve children of whom one son, William, and three daughters were alive when Aikenhead died on 9 July 1887 at Rosemont, High Street, Launceston. Select Bibliography

Launceston Advertiser, 3 Mar 1842; Hobart Town Gazette, 23 Feb 1858; Examiner (Launceston), 11 July 1887; correspondence file under Aikenhead (Archives Office of Tasmania).

Author: L. L. Robson

Print Publication Details: L. L. Robson, 'Aikenhead, James (1815 - 1887)', Australian Dictionary of Biography, Volume 1, Melbourne University Press, 1966, pp 3-4.

L. L. Robson, 'Aikenhead, James (1815 - 1887)', Australian Dictionary of Biography, Online Edition, Copyright 2006, updated continuously, ISSN 1833-7538, published by Australian National University http://www.adb.online.anu.edu.au/biogs/A010004b.htm

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