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Born on 6
August 1826 in London, the eldest child of Sylvester Brown (1790-1864) a
shipping master with the “East India Co” who made and lost a fortune
in the Port Phillip colony and Elizabeth née Alexander; the family
changed the spelling to ‘Browne’ after the Captain’s death (“a self-made man
of imperious temperament and at times rough manners…difficult and
high-handed, apt to quarrel”). While at Sydney (1831-39) he was educated at
a private academy in King Street, then Sydney College (“a grounding in the
code of a gentleman”) under William Cape (1806-63) before completing his
education in Melbourne after the family moved to Hartlands on the
banks of the Yarra at Heidelberg in 1839. By 1844, Browne was a squatter in
the Portland district where he prospered with The Swamp (1844-59,
1861-63); his father’s breakdown and ruin in 1846 after the economic
depression led to Browne supporting his mother and siblings (“it was a last
chance for the family...if Brown failed, he would ruin the family
entirely”). But like his father, prodigal expenditure and speculative
adventures brought his downfall and by 1863 his debts had amounted to
£40,000 having lost everything. Compelled to give up
pastoral life and begin a second career as a civil servant (1871-95) (“in
all colonies civil service posts were favoured by pastoralists down on their
luck”), his first appointment was in April 1871 as Police Magistrate and
Commissioner of Gulgong Goldfields (1871-81); amid strident criticism from
the Gulgong Guardian (“He is, we must say, utterly unsuited for the
charge of this goldfield”) he served until 1881 before being transferred to
Dubbo (1881-84) and later Albury (1884-95) before retiring. But it was
Browne’s third career that earned him wide acclaim. Writing out of
financial necessity from 1870 under the non de plume ‘Rolf Boldrewood’,
he wrote some seventeen works over forty years of writing on colonial
Australia from “Ups and Downs” (1878) to “The Last Chance”
(1905); among the most popular were “The Miner's Right” (1890)
(“marries realism and romance”), “The Squatter’s Dream” (1890) and “Babes
in the Bush” (1900) (“has a breeziness and enthusiasm and a lack of
moralising which make it one of Browne’s more readable novels”). His most
renowned work was the classic “Robbery Under Arms” (1882) considered
one of the first truly great quintessential Australian novels, a stirring
account of romance, adventure and intrigue. First published as a serial in
the Sydney Mail from July 1882 to August 1883 and later dramatised,
filmed and published in many editions, it has never been out of print; its
success “was supposed to have embarrassed Browne…who found the attention at
odds with his taste for gentlemanly discretion”. Such was his popularity, a
letter addressed to “Mr Rolf Boldrewood,
Melbourne,
Victoria, Australia”
would find its recipient at the Melbourne Club. Described as “genial
and bearded…middle height and robust constitution”, Browne died on 11 March
1915, just a few weeks before the landing at Gallipoli. |
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(above) Rolf Boldrewood
(By permission of the
National
Library of Australia, nla.pic-an23251768)

(above) Monumental
Headstone (enlarge
image) |