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Born on 28 May 1868 at Windsor,
New South Wales the son of Henry Templeton, a bootmaker and Margaret née
Hissken. In 1885 he joined the New South Wales public service as a clerk
with the Postmaster-General’s department and by 1893 had risen to the
position of clerk-in-charge of intercolonial and international postal
affairs; superiors acknowledged him as an efficient and competent officer.
Prior to the transfer of the various state postal departments to the
Commonwealth on 1 March 1901, Templeton acted as secretary to the
intercolonial conferences set up to make preparations for the transfer; of
the seven new Federal departments, the Commonwealth Postmaster-General’s
department was the largest. Templeton joined the staff in July 1901 as
accountant and senior clerk in Melbourne (1902-06) and later chief clerk
(1907-08). But chronic underfunding for staff and equipment saw the
permanent head (Sir) Robert Scott (Toowong Cemetery) wage a losing
battle; at the long standing royal commission on postal services (1908-10),
he defended Scott criticising incompetent officers who had resisted central
office control and went on to support the appointment of women telephonists
“because they did not seek promotion”. In November 1908 he was appointed
Queensland deputy postmaster-general (1908-22) and later served as assistant
commissioner of Federal taxation (1922-29) and second commissioner (1929-35)
before retiring after five decades of public service. Templeton died on 10
September 1943; his wife Eva née Dowel (d 1931) whom he married on 12
June 1895 predeceased him. |

Monumental Headstone (enlarge
image) |