William Forlonge


William Jack Forlonge was a pastoralist and politician in colonial Victoria and New South Wales, a member of the Victorian Legislative Council, the Victorian Legislative Assembly and the New South Wales Legislative Assembly.

Early life

Forlonge was born in Glasgow, Scotland, the son of John and Eliza Forlonge. John Forlonge was a merchant in Glasgow and decided to send his two surviving sons to New South Wales, several of his children having earlier died from tuberculosis. William Forlonge, his brother Andrew and their mother went to Leipzig with his mother in 1826 where William worked in a wool sorting house for three years. John joined his family in 1828. Eliza chose 98 Saxon sheep from studs, then she and her sons drove them to Hamburg. The sheep were shipped to Hull and were driven from there to Liverpool where they sailed, with William, for Sydney in the Clansman.

Colonial Australia

William Forlonge arrived in Hobart Town in November 1829 and decided to stay there. He was eventually granted of land near Campbell Town.
He married his first cousin Marion Templeton in 1837, by whom he had eleven children.
William Forlonge moved to the Port Phillip District along with his brother Andrew in 1838. In 1851, William purchased the Seven Creeks property in Euroa. In October 1854 Forlonge was elected to the unicameral Victorian Legislative Council for Villiers and Heytesbury, becoming a spokesman for squatters. Forlonge was a member of the Council until the original Council was abolished in March 1856. Forlonge became a member of the Victorian Legislative Assembly for The Murray in a by-election in January 1858 and resigned in January 1858.
Forlonge settled in New South Wales in 1859, becoming a member of the New South Wales Legislative Assembly for Orange on 15 December 1864, a seat he held until 12 June 1867.
Forlonge died in Dubbo, New South Wales, on 15 September 1890.
His daughter, Janet, married William Barton Wright.