Dr Henry Challinor

Dr Henry Challinor was one of the first doctors to hang his shingle. He was born in 1814 and arrived in Ipswich in 1849 having been the surgeon-superintendent of the immigrant ship, Fortitude.

He spent much of the rest of his life in Ipswich and was proud to be a citizen. He later lived in Brisbane but did not venture far afield. He never returned to England and probably did not visit even Sydney. He married Mary Bowyer Hawkins at Ipswich in 1855; they had six daughters and two sons.

When Ipswich Hospital opened in 1860, Dr Challinor became a visiting medical officer and occasionally assisted with surgical operations.

Challinor contributed to the life of the Moreton Bay District in four main fields: medicine, civic affairs, the Congregational Church and colonial politics.

Highly trusted and competent he remained as a general practitioner until 1869, when he was appointed the second medical superintendent of the Mental Asylum at Woogaroo (Goodna) to straighten out a scandal. This he did successfully but by 1872 his health showed signs of deterioration and he then took up the less onerous position of health officer for the port of Brisbane (quarantine) and medical officer to various official institutions.

From 1876 he was inspector of public institutions such as the Orphan Schools and in 1878 was principal medical officer of the Queensland Volunteer Brigade. Thus in his professional life he practised in the three main official branches of clinical medicine, preventive medicine and mental health services.

In town and church affairs he was a member and usually an office bearer of almost all the societies and associations designed to promote the common good. He campaigned for separation from New South Wales and fought against the renewal of convict transportation. He was a member of the first Legislative Assembly in Queensland but through a comedy of political errors was not elected till June 1861. He was narrowly defeated in 1868 mainly because of a stand on principle. In his short parliamentary career he made his mark as an ardent if naive Liberal in a legislature dominated by squatters and their allies. He advocated a just land policy which would give opportunity to the small settler, efficient agriculture, free secular education, political equality, religious tolerance and railway construction free from the scandal of land grants. He opposed the cotton bonus and the aggregation of pastoral land by wealthy companies. None of this programme made him popular; instead he was actively disliked and even feared in parliamentary circles.

For his time he was an unusual doctor: Nonconformist by religious persuasion, an advocate of temperance, quiet and astonishingly industrious in private life, but constantly and tiresomely loquacious in public. His life was ruled by principle in defence of which he showed a blunt courage and cared not a whit for public opinion. He was the archetype of what is now called a 'do- gooder'. He wore his social conscience like a hair shirt, yet even before his death on 9 September 1882 in Brisbane his real virtues of tolerance and liberalism had come to be recognized.

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Dr Terry Mulhearn