George Burnett Barton
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George Burnett Barton (9 December 1836 – 12 September 1901) was an Australian lawyer, journalist and historian.
Barton was born in Sydney, the second son of William Barton and elder brother of Sir Edmund Barton. He was educated at William Timothy Cape's school and at the University of Sydney. After a dispute with Professor John Woolley he left for England, there he was admitted to the Middle Temple on 20 April 1857 and called to the Bar in 1860.
Barton returned to Australlia and became a journalist and was the first editor of the Sydney Punch. From 1865 to 1868 he was reader in English literature at the University of Sydney; his introductory lecture, The Study of English Literature, was published in 1866. Also in the same year appeared his Literature in New South Wales and Poets and Prose Writers of New South Wales, the first volumes of a bibliographical and critical character to be published in Australia.
Barton went to New Zealand in 1868, and for about two years was editor of the Otago Daily Times. He practised for some time as a barrister and solicitor at Dunedin, and in 1875 published A Digest of the Law and Practice of Resident Magistrates and District Courts.
He returned to Australia in the 1880s and did much writing for the Evening News and the Sydney Morning Herald. He was then commissioned by the government to write the History of New South Wales From the Records, of which he completed only the first volume, published in 1889. His The True Story of Margaret Catchpole was published posthumously in 1924. He died in Goulburn Hospital on 12 September 1901 of influenza.
[edit] References
- Serle, Percival (1949). "Barton, George Burnett". Dictionary of Australian Biography. Sydney: Angus and Robertson.
- John M. Ward, 'Barton, George Burnett (1836 - 1901)', Australian Dictionary of Biography, Volume 3, MUP, 1969, pp 113-115.