Hugh Dixson

For his nephew Hugh Robert Dixson (1865–1940), also a businessman and philanthropist, see Hugh Denison

Sir Hugh Dixson (29 January 1841 – 11 May 1926) was an Australian business man and philanthropist. Dixson was born in George Street, Sydney, the son of Hugh Dixson and his wife Helen, née Craig.[1]

Early life and education

He was educated at the Elfred House Private School kept by William Timothy Cape at Paddington. At 14 years of age, Dixson went to work at a timber yard for Phillip McMahon.[1] In 1856, he joined the tobacco business founded by his father, becoming a partner in 1864. The business grew steadily and, after his father's death in 1880, expanded rapidly under the management of Hugh Dixson and his brother Robert Dixson. It was subsequently merged in the British-Australian Tobacco Company Proprietary Limited, probably the largest business of its kind in Australia at the time.

Later life

Dixson then retired, but with his wife, Dame Emma Elizabeth Dixson, continued his interest in the Baptist Church and in various philanthropic institutions. In 1900 Dame Emma founded the Sydney Medical Mission, a service run by women for women of the poorer areas of the city.[2] An early substantial gift was £5000 as the beginning of a fund to present a battleship to Britain. This fund was not successful and his gift was devoted to educating British boys at Australian agricultural colleges. A gift of £10,000 helped the establishment of an aged and infirm ministers' fund in the Baptist Church, and much assistance was given to the building of churches in various parts of the state. A sum of £20,000 was used to build a cancer wing at the Ryde home for incurables but the gifts of Dixson and his wife were both many and varied. Both worked on committees, and Dixson, at various times, served as president of the Baptist Union, of the Baptist Home Mission Society, and of the Young Men's Christian Association. Dixson was a noted horticulturist, becoming a member of the Linnean Society of New South Wales in 1887, and the Australasian Association for the Advancement of Science in 1898. Dixson died at Colombo on 11 May 1926. He was knighted in the 1921 Birthday Honours. He married in 1866 Emma Elizabeth (died 1922) daughter of William Edward Shaw, and was survived by two sons and four daughters.

Dixson's elder son, Sir William Dixson (born 1870) made a remarkable collection of pictures, books, manuscripts, prints, maps and charts, relating to Australia, all destined to become the property of the state of New South Wales. A large collection of pictures was presented in 1929 and housed in the William Dixson gallery at the Mitchell library, Sydney. Dixson was knighted in 1939.

In addition to seeking to fund a battleship for Britain, Dixson supported other patriotic causes. One such cause was the Legion of Frontiersmen, a patriotic, paramilitary organisation formed in Britain in 1905 by Roger Pocock, a former Constable with the North West Mounted Police and Boer War veteran, to bolster the defensive capacity of the British Empire.

References

  1. 1 2 B. Cook (1981). "Dixson, Sir Hugh (1841 - 1926)". Australian Dictionary of Biography, Volume 8. MUP. pp. 308–310. Retrieved 2008-09-28.
  2. "Sydney Medical Mission". The Sydney Morning Herald (19,560). New South Wales, Australia. 20 November 1900. p. 3. Retrieved 10 May 2016 via National Library of Australia.

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