b. 1813
d. 1872-03-04
William Kelly was born in Sligo County, Ireland, to Andrew Kelly in
1817. He arrived in
British Columbia in
1859 and stayed until
1862. He wrote about his experiences in the colony, but they were never published because
his publisher did not receive a complete manuscript. Kelly wrote a letter in
1862 urging the
Duke of Newcastle to replace
British Columbia's
Governor Douglas. Kelly ostensibly disliked the governor due to
Douglas' focus on developing
Victoria's trade and infrastructure at the expense of the mainland's development.
As a young man, Kelly became a local magistrate in Sligo County. In
1849, ownership of his father's bleaching mill was given to Kelly's brother-in-law, prompting
him to ride the
Sarah Sands to America, where he travelled to California. In
1851 he published
An Excursion to California Over the Prairie, Rocky Mountains, and the Great Sierra
Nevada. With A Stroll Through the Diggings and Ranches of That Country, a detailed account of his American adventures.
Kelly arrived in Port Phillip, Australia, on
20 April 1854 to pursue rumours of gold discoveries. He left Melbourne for
London in
December 1857 after a string of unsuccessful business ventures. His novel,
Life in Victoria or Victoria in 1853, an account of his time in Australia, was published in
London in
1859.
In 1862, Kelly left British Columbia for France, where he married twenty-six-year-old Marguerite
Sidonie Mertens at Boulogne-sur-Mer. He died in France on 4 March 1872 at the age of 59.
- 1. Annette Potts, Kelly, William (1813-1872), Australian Dictionary of Biography.
- 2. Ibid.
- 3. Kelly to Newcastle, 1 March 1862, 2390, CO 60/14, 420.
- 4. Potts, Kelly, William (1813-1872), Australian Dictionary of Biography.
- 5. Ibid.
- 6. Ibid.
- 7. Ibid.
- 8. Ibid.
- 9. Ibid.