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Born in
Mount Gambier, South Australia on 23 June 1872, the son of Alderman James
Ellery and educated at Whinham College, North Adelaide. A lover of classics
and dux of the school, Melbourne Punch noted that Ellery was “a
notable exception to the rule that the very brilliant youngster seldom makes
good in the rough world of maturity”. At the age of 27, he was selected
over forty-seven applicants to the position of Town Clerk of Adelaide
(1898-1915) where he left his mark on the city through the creation of the
Metropolitan Municipal Abattoirs to supply meat to the city butchers;
improvements to the state roads as President of the Good Roads Association
of South Australia; and the overhaul of the “notorious execrable” horse
tramway system to electricity that was recognised as a model service
throughout the Commonwealth. The position of Town Clerk was one which
Punch said required special qualities in a person who “must be a man of
personality and distinctive ability. He must be possessed of initiative,
recourse - an organiser, an administrator; and more than that, a business
director of the city trading enterprises”. By 1915 Ellery’s reputation as
the foremost authority on municipal affairs was assured. In August that
year, he was appointed Town Clerk of Melbourne (1915-23) where under his
eight years of administration he presided over “unequivocally the finest
municipal service in Australia”. With
Frank Stapley (q.v.) Ellery
was instrumental in lobbying for the formation of the Town Planning
Commission in 1922 that had the task of planning for the future metropolis;
fittingly, both men lie buried close by. “A brilliant and witty public
speaker, possessing an engaging personality”, the Lord Mayor Sir John
Swanson (St. Kilda Cemetery) commented upon his sudden death from
bronchial pneumonia on 16 October 1923 that “Ellery had been a slave to the
council. The work which he had done night after night had hastened his
illness. A better man never entered the service of the corporation”. He
resided at 32 Martin Street, Elsternwick survived by his wife Mabel
née
Wood whom he married in 1896. His son
Reginald Spencer Ellery (1897-1955) went on to become a noted psychiatrist and author. |

(above) Torrington
Ellery
(Art and Heritage Collection,
City of Melbourne)

(above) Monumental
Headstone (enlarge
image) |