24:
213:, aged 52, and was buried in St Kilda general cemetery. The eldest of his seven sons, Monckton Davey Synnot, and three of the younger ones carried on as wool-brokers. Both fathers and his son, Monckton, were tall, handsome, genial and convivial, with the Irish tendency to enjoy a brisk argument, but the senior Monckton was the only one to take any part in public affairs.
165:
had been extolled by the Thomas Shaws, C. H. MacKnight, J. L. Currie and others, but in the mid-1860s Synnot's letters to the papers queried their real value and gave rise to a drawn-out and sometimes bitter battle of words. Selling South
Brighton in 1868, he bought the large Terrick Terrick station
141:
By 1852 they had scattered and
Monckton, after a brief sortie with Albert to the Californian and Victorian goldfields, was the only one left in the Little River district, as sole owner of the 26,500-acre (10,724 ha) Mowyong, later called Bareacres. In 1852 he assisted in the rescue of the survivors
197:
Synnot entered
Melbourne wool-broking in prosperous and expansive times, when many firms were offering warehouse services, selling wool by auction or privately, or arranging and often financing its shipping for sale overseas. A pioneer of the wool trade with the East, he visited China, sent a
190:. He bought large central city premises from the merchants and flour-millers, William Degraves & Co., and set up the Flinders Wool Warehouse in Flinders Lane: in this he followed the lead of his elder brother
155:
126:
Born at the family seat of
Ballymoyer, Synnot settled in the colonies in 1836 with his father Captain Walter Synnot and brothers. A year later two elder sons crossed to
306:
53:
206:. His efforts failed at first, but later that year when the first Japanese Trade Commission visited Australia his ideas bore some fruit.
130:, followed in 1838 by the next two, Albert and the 12-year-old Monckton. They brought sheep with them and became pioneer landholders at
194:
who, opening in
Geelong as a stock and station agent, had held one of the first auction sales of wool there in November 1858.
75:
46:
301:
296:
142:
of the flood at the Wedge’s
Werribee Station and rescued the granddaughter Annie Emily Lawrence (daughter of
202:
to produce samples of woollen cloth, which were exhibited throughout
Australia and New Zealand and at the
162:
150:, Melbourne, he married Annie Emily Lawrence. He later bought the South Brighton sheep station in the
36:
203:
40:
32:
171:
143:
131:
92:
57:
210:
104:
291:
286:
96:
8:
187:
147:
198:
consignment of woollen yarns to Hong Kong and arranged for silk and cotton weavers at
135:
112:
170:, and for a few years had some share with his brothers Albert, George and Nugent in
280:
191:
120:
167:
127:
116:
179:
100:
175:
138:, where they remained in various partnerships for about ten years.
199:
151:
266:(Melbourne), 16 Sept 1877, 8 Jan 1878, 8 Sept 1883.
216:
278:
161:The prize-winning superfine merino wools of the
45:but its sources remain unclear because it lacks
273:, Melbourne University Press, 1976, pp 238–239.
154:where, in 1862, he was a member of the first
271:Australian Dictionary of Biography, Volume 6
146:and Anne Wedge). On 25 February 1853 at
76:Learn how and when to remove this message
279:
307:Irish emigrants to colonial Australia
245:The Australian Wool Market, 1840-1900
238:The History of Geelong and Corio Bay
17:
13:
269:'Synnot, Monckton (1826 - 1879)',
14:
318:
224:Pastoral Pioneers of Port Phillip
209:Synnot died on 23 April 1879 at
22:
222:R. V. Billis and A. S. Kenyon,
158:, and a councillor in 1862-63.
107:and his second wife Elizabeth,
250:L. J. Blake and K. H. Lovett,
217:References and further reading
186:, a mansion on Brighton Road,
1:
111:Houston, and the grandson of
156:Horsham District Roads Board
91:(1827-1879) was a prominent
7:
10:
323:
231:Australian Families, vol 1
260:, 1862, 1863, 2 Feb 1866.
204:Paris Exhibition of 1878
31:This article includes a
252:Wimmera Shire Centenary
144:Robert William Lawrence
60:more precise citations.
302:19th-century squatters
178:. In 1873 he moved to
297:Settlers of Australia
174:and Cowl Cowl in the
105:Captain Walter Synnot
229:A. Henderson (ed),
103:, the sixth son of
33:list of references
236:W. R. Brownhill,
113:Sir Walter Synnot
86:
85:
78:
314:
163:Western District
81:
74:
70:
67:
61:
56:this article by
47:inline citations
26:
25:
18:
322:
321:
317:
316:
315:
313:
312:
311:
277:
276:
254:(Horsham, 1962)
219:
89:Monckton Synnot
82:
71:
65:
62:
51:
37:related reading
27:
23:
12:
11:
5:
320:
310:
309:
304:
299:
294:
289:
275:
274:
267:
261:
255:
248:
241:
234:
227:
218:
215:
84:
83:
41:external links
30:
28:
21:
9:
6:
4:
3:
2:
319:
308:
305:
303:
300:
298:
295:
293:
290:
288:
285:
284:
282:
272:
268:
265:
262:
259:
256:
253:
249:
246:
242:
239:
235:
232:
228:
225:
221:
220:
214:
212:
207:
205:
201:
195:
193:
189:
185:
181:
177:
173:
169:
164:
159:
157:
153:
149:
145:
139:
137:
133:
129:
124:
122:
121:County Armagh
118:
114:
110:
106:
102:
98:
94:
90:
80:
77:
69:
59:
55:
49:
48:
42:
38:
34:
29:
20:
19:
16:
270:
263:
257:
251:
247:(Melb, 1958)
244:
243:A. Barnard,
240:(Melb, 1955)
237:
233:(Melb, 1941)
230:
226:(Melb, 1932)
223:
208:
196:
183:
182:, living in
168:Murray River
160:
140:
132:Little River
128:Port Phillip
125:
108:
88:
87:
72:
63:
52:Please help
44:
15:
292:1879 deaths
287:1827 births
211:Elsternwick
58:introducing
281:Categories
117:Ballymoyer
258:Economist
184:Ballyreen
180:Melbourne
166:near the
101:Australia
66:June 2011
188:St Kilda
176:Riverina
148:St Kilda
97:Victoria
93:squatter
200:Ning-Po
152:Wimmera
136:Geelong
54:improve
192:George
172:Gunbar
264:Argus
134:near
115:, of
39:, or
109:née
95:in
283::
123:.
119:,
99:,
43:,
35:,
79:)
73:(
68:)
64:(
50:.
Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License. Additional terms may apply.