Nathaniel Hailes
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Nathaniel Hailes (1802 - 1879)

Nathaniel "Timothy Short" Hailes
Born in London, Englandmap
Son of [father unknown] and [mother unknown]
[sibling(s) unknown]
Husband of — married Jul 1838 in Kensington, London, Englandmap
Descendants descendants
Died at age 76 in Adelaide, South Australia, Australiamap
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Profile last modified | Created 18 Oct 2017
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Biography

Hailes claimed to have been an acquaintance of several British literary figures including Sir Walter Scott, de Quincy and others, before emigrating to Australia, and he had already published a selection of his poetry, The Emigrant and Other Poems(1833).

After arriving in South Australia on the Buckinghamshire in 1839 as the Superintendent of Emigrants, Nathaniel Hailes operated an auctioneering business in Adelaide. He was a colourful character, well-known for his prolific writings under the pseudonym 'Timothy Short', publishing what he later described as 'verses, generally satirical, allusive to passing occurrences' in The Register, The Southern Australian and other journals. He established the Adelaide Free Press (1841?) and with G. Dehane published the Independent and Cabinet of Amusement. In 1841 he was a member of the City Council and in 1842 was a member of the 'Provisional Committee of the Society which was formed to secure religious freedom' (Obituary)

In 1842 Hailes was faced with bankruptcy. He was appointed Clerk of the Court at Port Lincoln and Clerk to the Government Resident. He wrote for the Register on the subject of Aboriginal customs in the area, and was there when the murder took place of Frank Hawson and his hut keeper Mr Biddle, an event which created considerable publicity in South Australia. Returning to Adelaide in 1846, he settled at Magill, taking business rooms in Adelaide and on Norwood Parade, and it was during this time that he published Timothy Short's Journal of Passing Events (1847).

In 1852 he left for the Victorian goldfields, returning in 1853, and editing the literary journal The Wanderer: A Monthly Periodical of Original Literature. This contained work published under his own name together with a number of anonymous works and pseudonymous works which may also have been by him. During this time he wrote his The Soul's Journey (1856) and the Circumstantial Narrative of the Wreck of the Steamship Admella (1859) and from 1857-1859 he was Secretary to the South Australia Institute Library. With the opening of the Yatala Labour Prison in 1861 Hailes was appointed Prison Storeman, a position he held until 1866 when he moved to Mount Gambier, working briefly again as an auctioneer before returning to Adelaide where he spent the rest of his life. He published his Personal Recollections of a Septuagenarian in 47 chapters in 1877-1879.

In addition to the well-known pseudonym 'Timothy Short' it is likely that Hailes was also the author behind the pseudonym 'Lancelot Yellowleaf' and was one of those who contributed to the column 'Echoes from the Bush' in The Register as 'Geoffry Crabthorn' (see Scrapbbooks compiled by Alan Horsnell, held in the Mortlock Library Archives of the State Library of South Australia).

Most Referenced Works

  • Timothy Short's Journal of Passing Events 1847 periodical (1 issues)
  • The Wanderer The Wanderer : A Monthly Periodical of Original Literature Nathaniel Hailes (editor), 1853 periodical (1 issues)
  • Recollections : Nathaniel Hailes' Adventurous Life in Colonial South Australia Nathaniel Hailes , 1876-1877 autobiography
  • The Song of the Grant : Being a Pathetic Ballad After the Manner of Thomas Hood's "Song of the Shirt" i "With fingers weary and worn", Timothy Short , Adelaide : [1840-1849] poetry
  • [Scrapbooks of Hailes' Writings ] Nathaniel Hailes , Alan Horsnell ,1839-1878 selected work poetry autobiography criticism column

(Source: AustLit website)

Sources





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Did Nathaniel Hailes publish erotic verse to his mistress?

Did they have two boys, as some family records suggest?

posted by Di Smith
Barry Whitmore Smith, the great-great-grandson of Nathaniel Hailes, has been tested at Family Tree and the results are also uploaded to GEDmatch.
posted by Di Smith

This week's featured connections are Redheads: Nathaniel is 20 degrees from Catherine of Aragón, 26 degrees from Clara Bow, 28 degrees from Julia Gillard, 21 degrees from Nancy Hart, 22 degrees from Rutherford Hayes, 19 degrees from Rita Hayworth, 24 degrees from Leonard Kelly, 19 degrees from Rose Leslie, 20 degrees from Damian Lewis, 27 degrees from Maureen O'Hara, 24 degrees from Jopie Schaft and 37 degrees from Eirik Thorvaldsson on our single family tree. Login to see how you relate to 33 million family members.

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Categories: Buckinghamshire, Arrived 21 Mar 1839