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Edward Cotton was born at
Balham Hill - Clapham, London in 1803, the last of six children and
later educated at Crediton Grammar School, Richmond and Oxford University
receiving a classical education befitting a lad destined to live the life of
an English gentleman. While living in France, he married Adele Cornelie
née Benoist in 1828; their two children did not survive childhood. In
March 1842, Cotton and his wife migrated on board the Eagle as
unassisted passengers to the Port Phillip district (“he was not meeting his
expenses in France”) and were accepted into colonial society; they were
followed a few months later by Cotton’s brother John (d 1849) and large family. The decision
to migrate was a disaster. Unsuited as a pastoralist, they lived a shadow
of their former selves experiencing a gradual slide into near poverty. The
first disaster was to purchase - with limited capital - a licence for a run
of 14,720 acres near Yea on the banks of the Goulburn River (“the first
substantial residence in the Goulburn district”); it did not help that the
colony was experiencing a severe economic depression at the time. Thanks
largely to the open
handed generosity of his brother John, Edward was able to avoid insolvency
for six years (1842-48), though the relationship between the two became
strained. In June 1848, Cotton sold Balham Hill intending to buy a cattle
run; the station at Western Port proved another disaster (“cattle he had
bought in good faith proved to be stolen”) and they were forced to live on
the generosity of a nearby friend at Little Red Bluff. Near poverty (“all
our clothes are nearly worn out, my poor wife has scarcely a dress”) having
sold all their last possessions to repay money owed, Cotton sought the path
of other failed squatters - a position with the Civil Service. In July
1851, he was appointed to the position of Registrar (Chief Clerk) of the
County Court (1851-60) “through the good offices of La Trobe” (“a good
friend”) on a salary of £250 per annum later rising to £600; for a brief
period he was also appointed Sergeant-at-Arms. Cotton’s death from drowning
on 12 September 1860 near Pic-nic Point, Moorabbin was overshadowed by
“extravagance and financial mismanagement” that led to his suspension the
week before his sudden demise. His estate was valued at £1,000. |

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