Peter MacIntyre (1783 – 13 January 1842), sometimes referred to as Peter McIntyre, was a Scottish born colonist of
New South Wales. He is credited as being one of the main pioneers of British colonisation in the
Upper Hunter
The Upper Hunter Shire is a local government area in the Upper Hunter Region of New South Wales, Australia. The Shire was formed in May 2004 from the Scone Shire and parts of Murrurundi and Merriwa shires.
The Mayor of the Upper Hunter Shire ...
and
New England regions.
Early life
MacIntyre was born in
Perthshire
Perthshire (locally: ; gd, Siorrachd Pheairt), officially the County of Perth, is a historic county and registration county in central Scotland. Geographically it extends from Strathmore in the east, to the Pass of Drumochter in the north, ...
,
Scotland, in 1783 to Donald (Daniel) and Mary MacIntyre. He became a highly regarded agriculturalist and farm manager, winning many prizes for farming, and was employed to manager the estates of the aristocrat,
Baron Gwydyr.
Agent for Thomas Potter MacQueen
In 1824, MacIntyre was appointed as the chief agent for Thomas Potter Macqueen, an influential Anglo-Scottish
Member of Parliament who had received from the
Colonial Secretary,
Earl Bathurst, a free grant of 20,000 acres (8100 ha) in the colony of
New South Wales. MacQueen chartered the vessels ''Nimrod'' and the ''Hugh Crawford'', filled them with servants, livestock, and supplies, and placed them under the control of MacInytre. The ships reached Sydney in April 1825, and MacIntyre, after inspecting the best lands available, chose a locale for the uptake of the massive grant on the banks of the
Pages River, east of modern-day
Scone.
Segenhoe and Blairmore
MacQueen's land acquisition was named Segenhoe after his family's estate in
Bedfordshire, and MacIntyre was placed in charge. Segenhoe initially consisted of 27 employees, flocks of Saxon and Merino sheep and valuable Shorthorn cattle. While MacIntyre was establishing Segenhoe, he also lost no time in furthering his own interests by requesting and receiving other grants of land in Hunter region for himself and his brothers. MacIntyre was granted 2000 acres of prime land along
Dart Brook, which he successfully fought a legal battle over its ownership against the surveyor of the area,
Henry Dangar, who wanted the land for himself. MacIntyre called his property Blairmore. He also secured land grants of similar size in the region for his brothers, John and
Donald MacIntyre. Donald named his grant Kayuga.
Segenhoe became the largest estate in New South Wales, where up to 100 convicts were put to work under MacIntyre to turn it into a productive venture. At his own estate at Blairmore, MacIntyre also built up a large enterprise where by 1829 he had 44 convicts and 8 free servants labouring for him. Local
Geawegal
Geawegal is the name for an Australian Aboriginal people who were recorded as inhabiting an area of the Hunter Valley in eastern New South Wales, north of Sydney. This identification has been recently questioned by Jim Wafer of Newcastle Universit ...
and
Wonnarua Aboriginal people were pushed out of their lands by the arrival of the Scottish and made raids on the crops grown by these colonisers. MacIntyre's brother, John, led a resultant
punitive expedition but was forced to retreat when the Aborigines took up a high position and rolled rocks down upon them.
In 1827, explorer
Allan Cunningham organised an expedition of discovery into the uncolonised lands north of the
Liverpool Plains. He prepared for his journey at Segenhoe, where MacIntyre became his friend and assisted Cunningham by guiding him through the difficult pass across the
Liverpool Range on the initial stage of his expedition. In return, Cunningham named the
Macintyre River and Macintyre Brook in his honour.
By 1830, MacIntyre's own agricultural interests had become so profitable that he resigned from the managerial position at MacQueen's Segenhoe estate, where he was replaced by Hamilton Sempill. MacIntyre had a lavish 22 room mansion built for himself at Pitnacree in the town of
East Maitland from where he ran his affairs. He recruited Alexander Campbell, who had also left the employment of Segenhoe, to be the direct supervisor of his properties.
Pastoral squatter in New England
MacIntyre soon found the need to have more land and decided to send Campbell out into the uncolonised lands to the north to acquire and stock large
squatting leaseholds. Through Campbell's efforts in the 1830s, MacIntyre was able to establish the properties of Long Point (near
Breeza
Breeza is a locality in New South Wales, Australia. It is about south of Gunnedah, in the Liverpool Plains agricultural region. The area around Breeza in particular is called the "Breeza Plains". The name "Breeza" may be derived from an Abori ...
),
Keera, Byron Plains,
Guyra and Falconer Plains.
In 1838, Aboriginal people who escaped the
Myall Creek massacre found refuge at MacIntyre's station at Keera. The settlers who perpetrated the massacre followed them there and killed approximately ten more.
By 1839, Campbell had established the Byron Plains station on the MacIntyre River, which had been named after his employer. Campbell named the southern part of the Byron run, Inverell, from which the town of
Inverell evolved. Large numbers of Aboriginal people resisted the occupancy of their lands at Byron Plains by spearing the shepherds and taking the livestock belonging to MacIntyre.
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]
Later life and death
The severe economic downturn in colonial Australia in the early 1840s took its toll on MacIntyre and he suffered badly from depression. He died in January 1842 at his Pitnacree estate.
Legacy
The
Macintyre River, Macintyre Brook and several Macintyre creeks are named after him.
References
{{DEFAULTSORT:MacIntyre, Peter
1783 births
1842 deaths
Colony of New South Wales people