Charles Henry Eden
Charles Henry Eden (1839-1900), public servant and writer, was born on 20 March 1839, the younger son of Robert Eden (1800-1879) and his wife Frances, daughter of Rev. Rowland Egerton Warburton; his great-grandfather was Sir Robert Eden, third barone
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Charles Henry Eden (1839-1900), public servant and writer, was born on 20 March 1839, the younger son of Robert Eden (1800-1879) and his wife Frances, daughter of Rev. Rowland Egerton Warburton; his great-grandfather was Sir Robert Eden, third baronet of West Auckland, and his uncle was Admiral Henry Eden (1797-1888). After sale of his naval commission Eden arrived at Moreton Bay in the Queen of the Colonies on 6 April 1863. On 11 May at St John's Cathedral, Brisbane, he married a fellow passenger, Georgina, daughter of Captain F. W. Hill. According to his My Wife and I in Queensland: An Eight Years' Experience in the Above Colony with Some Account of Polynesian Labour (London, 1872), Eden shepherded at Pilton, obtained a post in the Registrar-General's Office through the influence of George Elphinstone Dalrymple, spent two years at Mount McConnell under Ernest Henry and searched for gold at Calliope and Gympie in 1867. In Brisbane in 1868 for the Duke of Edinburgh's visit he was appointed on 6 May police magistrate and subcollector of customs at Cardwell at a salary of £300. After an inquiry he was dismissed in March 1870 and left in the Clarence in May to return to England. In his book Eden did not mention his appointment at Cardwell; but his claim is evidently untrue that he left Brisbane in 1868 solely to join John Davidson in a sugar venture at Bellenden Plains until carried aboard the Black Prince unconscious from fever in early 1870. In England Eden turned to writing and by his death on 16 February 1900 had published in London some sixteen novels and many works of exploration and travel, including Australia's Heroes (c.1875) and The Fifth Continent, With the Adjacent Islands (c.1877).
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