John Baxter Mather (5 March 1853 – 7 November 1940) was a Scottish born journalist, newspaper proprietor, landscape painter and art critic in
South Australia.
History
Mather was born in
Edinburgh, Scotland to Thomas S. Mather (c. 1824 – 20 June 1865) and Jessie Mather (c. 1826 – 20 October 1901), and emigrated with his parents to Australia around 1860, settling first in
Portland, Victoria.[1] Around 1864 they moved to
Mount Gambier, South Australia, where after completing his schooling he started working as a
compositor for A. F. Laurie and John Watson's
Border Watch.[2] In 1874 he left Mount Gambier for a time to work as compositor for Lawrie and Fairfax at the
Portland Guardian where
J. F. Archibald was an apprentice. After some initial sparring, the two became friends.[3]
In 1875, he started work at
Naracoorte, South Australia for the Border Watch, running its daughter publication, the
Narracoorte Herald, which shortly afterwards he and
George Ash acquired. In 1889 they were sued for libel by a wealthy
squatter and lost everything they had.[4] A great deal of sympathy was evinced locally for the pair.[5][6]
He moved to
Adelaide and found employment with
The Advertiser as a compositor, then joined their literary staff[7] as an art critic, a post he filled for fifteen years. From 1893 to 1899, he contributed drawings to the Adelaide Express, using the chalk plate method, at which he was particularly adept.[8]
He was at the forefront of process engraving technology; the first in South Australia to do colored monotypes.[8] In 1900 he and Joseph Hanka founded Mather & Hanka's Excelsior Engraving Company of 4
Franklin Street, Adelaide, etching chalk plates (a fore-runner of the process plate) then making
half-tone plates for printers, including The Advertiser. A year later the company was run by Mather and George Mackie[9] By November 1903 the company was known simply as J. B. Mather, Photo-engraver, and ceased operation in late 1910. In 1913 he was employed by the
Art Gallery of South Australia, revising the catalogue which
H. P. Gill completed in 1903.[10][11]
Other interests
He enjoyed writing humorous verse, and contributed occasionally to The Advertiser, and frequently to the magazine Quiz and its successor Quiz and The Lantern. A few are listed here:
He had two brothers: Alexander Henderson Mather (c. 1861 – 13 June 1942) of Mount Gambier, and George R. J. Mather of Naracoorte. A sister, Margaret married Omar Arthur of Mount Gambier on 17 November 1875. Another sister married J. J. Driscoll of Mount Gambier.
He married Johanna Fraser (c. 1853 – 26 June 1921) in 1880; they lived at 38 Myrtle Street,
Prospect, where he died.
References
^"Obituary". Portland Guardian (Evening ed.). Vic. 7 April 1941. p. 3. Retrieved 11 January 2015 – via National Library of Australia. This belated obituary is more complete and accurate than that of the Advertiser of 8 November 1940
^"Obituary". The Border Watch. Mount Gambier, SA. 9 November 1940. p. 3. Retrieved 11 January 2015 – via National Library of Australia.
^"A Primitive Newspaper". The Mail. Adelaide. 8 April 1916. p. 10. Retrieved 12 January 2015 – via National Library of Australia.
^George Ash abandoned journalism, studied law and was elected to for the seat of
Albert, which encompassed Naracoorte and Mount Gambier, in the
South Australian House of Assembly. He did much in Parliament to remedy the evils of dummyism, of which he had written in the Herald. He died of typhoid a mere five years later.