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Born in
Tottenham, London on 31 December 1834, the son of A. J. Walstab
(q.v.) and Georgina née Steele; the family migrated to Victoria in
1852 and shortly after Walstab joined the Mounted Police. This led to
service in India where he sustained a leg injury that would hinder his
movement for life and by 1860 he had turned to journalism becoming editor of
the Calcutta Englishman; he also wrote his first novel
“Looking back, or, pique, repique and capot” (1864) that was
critically received. By 1865 Walstab
was back in Melbourne and went on to work briefly with The Age before a long association with The Herald (1865,
1882-1909) which he co-owned with others in 1889 after the death of John
Halfey (Boroondara Cemetery). As a writer, Walstab penned many novels
and short stories including “Looking Back”, “The Bushranger”,
“Double Harness” and legend has it chapters for “Long Odds”
(1868) the first novel by Marcus Clarke (Melbourne General Cemetery)
a close friend and co-founder of the bohemian Yorick Club; Walstab was with
Clarke when he died in 1881. However, by 1870 Walstab was bankrupt and
after a brief period in Castlemaine, Victoria where he edited the
Castlemaine Representative and Chronile, he landed a job under
(Sir) James
Casey (q.v.) in the
Department of Lands and Survey (1873-80) and by 1880 was said to have been
the highest-paid clerk in the department with £400 per annum. A
contemporary of A. Lindsay Gordon
(q.v.), Walstab was first editor of Australian Journal founded by
Alfred Massina (Boroondara Cemetery) in September 1865 - it was Massina
who refused Gordon a loan on the day Gordon committed suicide in 1870. He
resided at Clarinda Street, Elsternwick and died on 8 February 1909 from
chronic ulceration of the legs. |

Monumental Headstone (enlarge
image) |