Dictionary of Australian Biography

TOWNS, ROBERT (C. 17941873)

businessman, pastoralist, and founder of Townsville
was born at Long Horseley, Northumberland, England, on 10 November 1794. This is the date usually given, and it agrees with his death notice in theSydney Morning Heraldof 12 April 1873 which stated that he was then in his seventy-ninth year. The date given by theAustralian Encyclopaedia, 1791, appears however, to be more likely, as after being educated at a village school Towns went to sea, was a mate in 1811, and a master in the following year. In 1813 he was captain of a brig in the Mediterranean, and in 1827 he made his first voyage to Australia as captain ofThe Brothers.In 1833 he married the sister ofW. C. Wentworth(q.v.), and in 1842 established a mercantile and shipping business at Sydney. He afterwards bought station properties in Queensland, and about 1860 or a little later began growing cotton, employing South Sea islanders to do the cultivation and picking. Many attempts had been made to grow cotton in Australia before this time, but Towns was the first to do so on a large scale. Realizing that a port was needed on the Queensland coast north of Bowen, Towns arranged for explorations to be made from his stations, a suitable site was found at Cleveland Bay, and on to October 1865 it was gazetted as a port of entry and named Townsville. Working practically until the end Towns died at Sydney on 11 April 1873. He had been a member of the legislative council from 1856, and, although he did not take a leading part in politics, his advice was much sought in matters affecting business. A shrewd, generous, active, and independent man, Towns in his time was one of the leading citizens of Sydney, always interested in anything that would be for the good of the colony.
The Sydney Morning Herald, 12 April 1873; J. H. Heaton,Australian Dictionary of Dates; P. Mennell,Dictionary of Australasian Biography; E. Palmer,Early Days in North Queensland, p. 150;Jubilee History of Queensland, p. 180.