William Shakespeare Hall

William Shakespeare Hall
Born 1825-12-25
Lambeth, England
Died 1895-02-11
Cossack, Western Australia
Cause of death heart attack / drowning
Resting place Cossack, Western Australia
Nationality English
Occupation pastoralist, pearler
Known for early settler, pastoralist, development of North West of Western Australia
Religion Anglican
Partner Hannah Boyd Lazenby (1849-1911)
Children Henry Ernest Hall (1869-1941), Hannah Joy Hall (1876-1960) and Harold Aubrey Hall (1871-1963)
Parents Sarah Theodosia (1793-1858) née Branson (M), Henry Edward Hall (1790-1859) (F)

William Shakespeare Hall (1825-1895), J.P., explorer, pastoralist and pearler, was born in London. With his parents, Henry and Sarah, and five siblings he emigrated to Western Australia and reached Fremantle in February 1830. The family received a large land grant at Mandurah and the locality of Hall's Head is named after them, though that venture was a failure.

The family later farmed at Wongong. In 1852, at the age of 27, William went to the Victorian goldfields. He returned to Western Australia and joined Francis Thomas Gregory's expedition exploring the north-west in 1861. In 1863 Hall took up the first sheep station, Andover, in the Roebourne district. On 2 November 1868 he married Hannah Lazenby (daughter of George Lazenby)[1].

He suffered a heart attack while swimming in Cossack Creek and was drowned. A tombstone at his grave in Cossack was erected 'as a mark of appreciation and respect by the North West Pioneers'[1].

References

  1. ^ a b Wilson, H. Margaret (1972). 'Hall, William Shakespeare (1825 - 1895)', Australian Dictionary of Biography. Melbourne: Melbourne University Press. http://www.adb.online.anu.edu.au/biogs/A040368b.htm.  (A select bibliography is appended.)