Everything about Robert Torrens totally explained
For the economist and MP see Robert Torrens (economist); for the Irish cricketer, see Roy Torrens.
Sir
Robert Richard Torrens GCMG (
1814 –
August 31 1884) was the first
Premier of South Australia and a pioneer and author of simplified system of transferring land.
Biography
Early Life
Torrens was born at
Cork,
Ireland, in 1814. His father,
Colonel Robert Torrens, F.R.S., the distinguished economist, was one of the founders of
South Australia. He was educated at
Trinity College, Dublin, where he graduated M.A. He went to Australia in 1839 and in the same year married Barbara, widow of Augustus George Anson. In February 1841 he was collector of customs at
Adelaide, and it's probable that he'd received this position directly he arrived. In the enlarged legislative council elected in July 1851 Torrens was one of the four official nominees nominated by the governor and when responsible government came in, in October 1856, Torrens became treasurer in the ministry of
Finniss. He was elected as one of the members of the House of Assembly for the city of Adelaide in the new parliament, and on 1 September 1857 became premier, but his government lasted less than a month.
Real Property Act 1858
In December of the same year he passed his
Real Property Act of 1858 for the transfer of real property through the assembly, the system became known as
Torrens title. The system was that property was transferred by registration of title instead of by deeds, and it has since been widely adopted throughout the world. Attempts have been made to minimize the credit due to Torrens for his great achievement, and it has been stated that Anthony Forster, then editor of the Adelaide Register, made the original suggestion. In the preface to his
The South Australian System of Conveyancing by Registration of Title, published at Adelaide in 1859, Torrens stated that his interest in the question had been aroused 22 years before through the misfortunes of a relation and friend, and that he'd been working on the problem for many years. Whoever first suggested the present method which may have owed something to a report presented to the
British House of Commons on 15 May 1857, it was Torrens who put it into practicable shape and fought it through parliament in spite of violent opposition from the legal profession. He later visited
Victoria and assisted in bringing in the new system in that colony.
England
In 1863 he left Australia, settled in England and was a member of the House of Commons for
Cambridge from 1868 to 1874. He was created K.C.M.G. in 1872 and G.C.M.G. in 1884. He died on 31 August 1884. In addition to the volume already mentioned he published
Speeches by R. R. Torrens (1858),
A Handy Book on the Real Property Act of South Australia (1862),
Transportation Considered as a Punishment and as a Mode of Founding Colonies (1863), and
An Essay on the Transfer of Land by Registration (1882).
Family
The
River Torrens which runs through
Adelaide, is believed to have been named after his father.
Further Information
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