Bowen, Charles C. (Charles Christopher), 1830-1917

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Charles Christopher Bowen was born in Ireland in 1830. He was educated at Rugby School and studied for one year at the University of Cambridge before emigrating with his family in 1850 to Canterbury, New Zealand. Between 1851 and 1852, he served as private secretary to J.R. Godley, agent of the Canterbury Association, and in 1852, became a justice of the peace.

When the Canterbury provincial government was formed in 1853, Bowen was appointed inspector of police and chief clerk to the resident magistrate and provincial treasurer. Between 1855 and 1859, he served as provincial treasurer and member of the provincial government, and in his spare time he was editor and then joint owner of the Lyttelton Times .

In 1859, he left New Zealand to travel around the world, returning in 1862 to Christchurch where he resumed his duties in the provincial treasury. In 1864, he was appointed resident magistrate, a post he held until 1874, when he was invited to take a seat in the Legislative Council, taking office as minister of justice and commissioner of stamp duties later in the year. In 1877, he introduced an Education Bill, providing for a system of compulsory and free state education, administered by a Department of Education, Education Boards and School Committees.

After his retirement from politics in 1881, Bowen visited England, returning to Christchurch to become managing director of the New Zealand Loan and Mercantile Agency Company, manager of the New Zealand Trust and Loan Company, and a director of the New Zealand Shipping Company Limited. In January 1891, Bowen was appointed to a life seat in the Legislative Council and, in 1905, was appointed speaker of the Council. In 1901, he served as a member of the Royal Commission, which recommended against New Zealand joining the new Federation of Australia. As Clements Robert Markham's brother-in-law, Bowen was host to members of the British National Antarctic Expedition, 1901-1904 (leader Robert Falcon Scott) and the British Antarctic Expedition, 1910-1913 (leader Robert Falcon Scott). He was knighted in 1910 and died in New Zealand in 1917.

From the guide to the Charles Bowen collection, 1904, (Scott Polar Research Institute, University of Cambridge)

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referencedIn Charles Bowen collection, 1904 Scott Polar Research Institute
creatorOf Charles Bowen collection, 1904 Scott Polar Research Institute
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associatedWith Scott Robert Falcon 1868-1912 person
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Birth 1830-08-29

Death 1917-12-12

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