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Born at St.
Martin, Guernsey, Channel Islands of Norman French descent, the family
migrated to Adelaide in 1854 where de Garis received his education. After
training as an architect in Melbourne he joined the Wesleyan Methodist
church and was ordained in 1876 serving in Charlton, Durnham Ox and Kerang
in country Victoria. It was while a Methodist minister that de Garis became
interested in irrigation to assist farmers of north Victoria during the
drought-stricken period of 1877-84; he soon emerged as a “formidable yet
disinterested leader” of the water conservation schemes advocated by Hugh
McColl (1819-1885) and personally lobbied Alfred Deakin (St. Kilda
Cemetery) to provide financial assistance to the irrigation concept being
advanced by the Chaffey brothers in 1887. By now de Garis had left the
Methodist ministry but was still a lay preacher until his death. He settled
in the infant town of Mildura (1891-1908) where he established a diverse
range of successful ventures and entered local politics serving on the Shire
Council (president 1907-08); he lobbied for the Melbourne-Mildura railway
line and was first President of the Mildura Hospital. Leaving his Mildura
interests to his son
C. J. (Jack) (q.v.), de Garis moved to Melbourne in 1908, and
settled on Beach Road Sandringham. The following year he gained election to
the Moorabbin Shire Council (1909-12) to represent the local area; the
following year he unsuccessfully attempted to win election to the state seat
of Brighton after the death of
Sir Thomas Bent (q.v). De Garis died on 2 July 1948, aged 96 and
spent his last years residing at 268 Latrobe Terrace, Geelong. Survived by
three of his eight children, Mary (Clementina) de Garis (1881-1963) who in
1907 became the second women in Victoria to practice medicine after Emma
Stone (Boroondara Cemetery). Writing his autobiographical novel “Victories
of Failure. A Business Romance” (1925), his son Jack described his
father as “gifted with masculine graces and accomplishments...his intellect
was extraordinary. His variety and depth of knowledge profound. His
eloquence was unrivalled, and his diction surpassingly rich and diverse”. |

Monumental
Headstone |