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FOVEAUX, JOSEPH, (1765-1846), early administrator,
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was born in 1765. When the New' South Wales corps was founded in 1789 he was
an ensign in the 60th regiment, but on joining the corps became a lieutenant. He
reached the rank of major on 10 June 1796 and became acting commandant at
Norfolk Island in April 1800 and acting lieutenant-governor in the following
June. In December, receiving information that there was a plot to murder the
officers, he hanged two of the ringleaders. Holt
(q.v.) in his memoirs states that the men were executed two hours after arrest
without any trial. Evatt in his Rum Rebellion accepts a statement in the
Bligh
(q.v.) papers in the Mitchell library that the men were "summarily hanged . . .
without ever being told their crime, much less confronted with their accuser . .
. merely upon the private information of a vagabond convict". This is not
strictly accurate. Foveaux stated that other information had come to his
knowledge when the matter was brought before the judge-advocate and five other
officers all signed the warrant of condemnation. Foveaux succeeded in satisfying
both Governor
King (q.v.) and the English authorities that his action was justified. (See
H.R. of N.S.W., vol. IV, pp. 266, 325 and 688.) Foveaux was succeeded by
Captain
Piper (q.v.) in 1804, sailed to England on 9 September, and did not return
to New South Wales until the middle of 1808. He took over the administration of
the colony from Major
Johnston (q.v.) and issued a proclamation dated 31 July to the effect that
he was not competent to judge between Bligh and the officers who had deposed
him, and would not interfere with the status quo until he received
instructions from the British authorities. His statement that there would be
"the most impartial justice between persons of every description" was, however,
apparently not intended to apply to Bligh as on 16 August he wrote for Colonel
Paterson a completely biased statement relating to the acts and designs of
Bligh, and on 4 September 1808 sent similar charges to Viscount Castlereagh.
Foveaux apparently accepted without question everything that was said by his
brother officers. Evatt in his Rum Rebellion bluntly speaks of his
"lying", but that is probably going too far. In January 1809 Colonel Paterson
took over the administration from Foveaux who returned to England in April 1810.
He received an appointment on the Irish staff in 1811, and was promoted colonel
in that year, major-general in 1814 and lieutenant-general in 1830. He died at
London on 20 March 1846.
Macquarie
(q.v.) described Foveaux as a "man of very superior talents . . . of strict
honour and integrity" and recommended that he should be appointed
lieutenant-governor at Hobart. This opinion, however, was formed on very short
acquaintance. Foveaux's administration at Norfolk Island appears to have been
cruel and callous, and his conduct in connexion with Bligh was more politic than
just. His own justification of his career may be found in vol. VII of the
Historical Records of New South Wales, pp. 295-9.
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