Dictionary of Australian Biography

MARTIN, ARTHUR PATCHETT (18511902)

miscellaneous writer
son of George Martin, and his wife, Eleanor Hill, was born at Woolwich, Kent, England, on 18 February 1851. He was brought by his parents to Australia and arrived in Melbourne in December 1852. Educated at St Mark's school, Fitzroy, he entered the Victorian civil service but early began writing. He was editor of theMelbourne Review, founded in January 1876, until he went to England in 1882. He published in 1876Sweet Girl Graduate, a novelette with a few short poems added, and in 1878 appearedLays of To-day; Verses in Jest and Earnest. Some of the poems in this volume were included inFernshawe; Sketches in Prose and Verse, mostly a collection of essays and verses from theMelbourne Reviewand other journals, published in 1882. Going to London in this year Martin led a busy journalistic life. In 1889Australia and the Empirewas published, and in 1893 hisLife and Letters of Viscount Sherbrooke, a conscientious and interesting piece of work. In the same year appearedTrue Stories from Australasian History, and two years laterThe Withered Jester and Other Verses. He published nothing else of any importance and died on 15 February 1902. He married in 1886, Harriet Anne, daughter of Dr J. M. Cookesley.
Martin was a competent journalist of some influence in the early literary life of Melbourne. No other similar journal has had so long a life as theMelbourne Review, a most creditable effort considering the difficulties with which it had to contend.
11, Mennell,The Dictionary of Australasian Biography; E. Morris Miller,Australian Literature; Death noticeThe Times, 19 February 1902.