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"Sydney" Sir Daniel Cooper (Image plate from Vanity Fair)

Leslie Ward1882

National Portrait Gallery

National Portrait Gallery
Canberra, Australia

Sir Daniel Cooper GCMG (1821–1902), a prominent colonial businessman, was born into a Lancashire merchant family and, after gaining some commercial experience, arrived in Sydney in 1843. His business in partnership with his brother-in-law and later his elder brother was said to be 'about the most extensive mercantile house in the Australian colonies'. A substantial landholder and director of multiple companies, Cooper, according to the Sydney Morning Herald in 1856, overpowered ‘the envy which commonly attends remarkable prosperity by a temper singularly humane and generous, and manners affable and unpretending'. A liberal politician and protégée of Sir Henry Parkes, Cooper was elected to the first New South Wales Legislative Assembly and served as its first Speaker. He supported numerous enterprises, such as the newspaper The Empire and the University of Sydney. Created baronet of Woollahra in 1863, Cooper continued to be a powerful advocate for colonial interests even after returning to England after 1861.

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  • Title: "Sydney" Sir Daniel Cooper (Image plate from Vanity Fair)
  • Creator: Sir Leslie Ward
  • Date Created: 1882
  • Physical Dimensions: sheet: 38.0 x 26.3 cm
  • Provenance: Collection: National Portrait Gallery, Canberra Gift of Mr Ronald Walker 2001
  • Rights: https://www.portrait.gov.au/form-image-request.php
  • External Link: https://www.portrait.gov.au/portraits/2003.206.6
  • Medium: Chromolithograph
National Portrait Gallery

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