William Aplin

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

William Aplin was a pastoralist, businessman and parliamentarian, Aplin was the founding member of the Townsville Municipal Council and also the Mayor twice, he was also a member of the Thuringowa Divisional Board in 1879, 1886, 1889 and from 1894 to 1896, he was Thuringowa's first chairman when elected in 1880 and then reelected in 1882,[1] until he was elected on to the Dalrymple Divisional Board in April 1883 where he remained a member until 1901.[2]
Aplin was born on 27 April 1840 in Somerset, England. In 1862 Apline migrated to Brisbane and in 1863 he moved up to Bowen, where he became a representative of Seaward, Marsh & Co.
When Townsville was founded, He moved to Cleveland Bay and formed Clifton & Aplin. He was also a member of the board of trustees for the Townsville Grammar School in 1888,[3] the vice president of the North Queensland Pastoral and Agricultural Association, the Flinders District Hospital Committee and the trustee of the Townsville cemetery, and also a member of the Legislative Council.
Aplin's Weir on the Ross River is also named after him.

[edit] References

  1. ^ The ThuringowanCommemorative edition: page 4.
  2. ^ Aplin, William (1840 - 1901) Biographical Entry - Australian Dictionary of Biography Online
  3. ^ The History of Townsville Grammar School book