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Elias Solomon

Wikipedia:
Elias Solomon (2 September 1839 - 23 May 1909) was an Australian politician based in Fremantle. He was Mayor of Fremantle, MLA of South Fremantle, and the first Member for Fremantle in the Australian House of Representatives.
Solomon was born in London, England to Leah and Moss Solomon and migrated to Australia as a child, living at first in Sydney and then Adelaide. His uncle Emanuel Solomon owned the Queen's Theatre in Adelaide, and Solomon's father Moss was for a short while made manager. The family returned to Sydney until Moss's death in 1849 when Leah again moved to Adelaide and Solomon completed his schooling there.
After finishing school, Solomon joined another of his uncle's business concerns and in 1857 was sent to Mauritius to purchase goods. On his return, he worked for the firm of Solomon & Salom in Adelaide, and also Falk & Co. of Melbourne.
At the age of 29 Solomon headed west to Fremantle in Western Australia, arriving on 20 January 1868 aboard Eliza Blanche and initially living in Henry Street. Soon the same year he was joined by two of his nephews and together they formed Solomon & Nephews, Auctioneers and Agents of which Solomon was clerk and auctioneer. This venture was part-financed by his half-brother Judah Moss Solomon (of Melbourne) and brother-in-law Isaac Solomon (of Adelaide).
The weight of conducting business in a depressed economic environment bore on Solomon, and this was not helped by his nephews being active members of Fremantle's Amateur Dramatics Company, performing at the Oddfellows in William Street. He wrote to them in July 1869: '... that you may not be under any misunderstanding with regard to my present dissatisfaction, I will be more explicit. You have taken up time belonging to the firm in Amateur Theatrical matters which, I believe, is acting prejudiciously to the business ..."
In 1881 he was elected to the Fremantle City Council. In 1892, he was elected to the Western Australian Legislative Assembly as the member for South Fremantle, where he remained until 1901. In that year, he transferred to federal politics, winning the Australian House of Representatives seat of Fremantle for the Free Trade Party. He was defeated by Labor's William Carpenter in 1903. Solomon died in 1909. He was at one time head of the board of Fremantle Cemetery, where he is buried.
Solomon was married twice, first to Agnes Elizabeth Bickley (c. 1846 - 22 April 1886) and, after her death, to Elizabeth Mary Stokes (16 September 1868 - 3 December 1898) on 1 May 1887.
His second wife, with whom he had five children, died on 3 December 1898 aged 30. Wikipedia.

A house called Ocean View was built for Solomon in 1887 in Solomon Street, the street named for him. One of the roads in the Fremantle Cemetery is also named after him. Ironically, although it starts out with that name, by the time it gets to his grave it has changed name twice.



Agnes Bickley was born 1 February 1846 in Calcutta. She had four children with Elias, including Wallace Elias Bickley Solomon (1878-1950), and also Samuel.

The Solomon family lived for a time in Agnes Cottage, Cantonment Road (now QV Street). Wallace Solomon was born there. He married Anna Rosetta Moss in 1905. They had one daughter, Joan Louisa Lake. Wallace Solomon was the first secretary, and honorary solicitor, of the Royal Western Australian Historical Society in 1926.

Elizabeth Mary Stokes was the daughter of John Stokes (1835-1900), an enrolled pensioner and veteran of the Crimean War who had come to the colony as a guard on board the Racehorse. She had five children with Elias Solomon.

Elias's children also included Valerie Elizabeth and Maurice Elias (1888-1977). The latter was the son of Elizabeth, and was a lawyer and a Fremantle councillor.

Daily News 1898:
DEATH OF MRS. ELIAS SOLOMON. EX-MAYORESS OF FREMANTLE. BURIED AT SEA. The melancholy news announcing the death at sea of Mrs. Elias Solomon, ex-mayoress of Fremantle, was received at the Port this morning by Mr. E. B. Solomon, stepson of the deceased lady. The telegram conveying the sad news was sent from Adelaide, by Mr. M. L. Moss, and read as follows :—"Mrs. Solomon died Saturday night ; buried at sea Sunday. Father goes on to Melbourne in Bremen." At the time of leaving Mrs. Solomon was in a very serious condition, although it was considered that she was sufficiently strong to stand the passage across to South Australia, where she was being taken in the German mail steamer Bremen for medical advice. At the time of her death Mrs. Solomon was only slightly over 30 years of age. She leaves a family of three children, the youngest being only 18 months old. The mayor of Fremantle Mr. J. McHenry Clark, on behalf of himself and councillors of Fremantle, despatched a telegram of condolence to Mr. Solomon this morning, for whom universal sympathy is expressed.



Ari and Wendy Antonovsky occasionally conduct a tour of the Jewish section of Fremantle Cemetery. They have kindly provided the text of the talk. Here is the section on Elias Solomon.

We’ll next look at the life of Elias Solomon, the first MP for Fremantle, in the new Australian parliament.
Elias Solomon was a Londoner, born there in 1839. However, Elias was not only from a different generation to Lionel [Samson], he was also from a different class.
His family originally went to South Australia, but then moved shortly afterwards to New South Wales (a busy place even then). His father died when he was ten years old. His family then returned to Adelaide. I happened to spend time in Port Adelaide and one of the streets there (Timpson St) was known as ‘Jew Street’ at the time Solomon was there. Solomon worked for his uncle, an auctioneer, and eventually became chief clerk of the firm.
At the age of 29 he moved to Western Australia (obviously a man of vision) and established a business here as an auctioneer and grocery, wine & spirit merchant in association with two of his nephews. After the business dissolved, he became a business partner with Lionel Samson.
Fortunately, Solomon was a much more successful politician than businessman. Dating from 1877, he served a six year term on the Fremantle Town Council and was subsequently Mayor of Fremantle on three occasions between 1889 and 1901. In his time as mayor he initiated many of the well-known features around Fremantle - the Town Hall, the Markets, this cemetery and the Fremantle Hospital.
In 1892, by a margin of only 7 votes, he was elected to the Western Australian Legislative Assembly at a by-election for South Fremantle. However, he was subsequently returned unopposed in 1894 and 1897 running effectively as an Independent during those years.
In March 1901, Solomon contested the first federal election for the seat of Fremantle as one of three Free Trade candidates in a four cornered contest. He became a member of the first Commonwealth Parliament with a majority of the votes cast (1000 more than his Labor opponent). Interestingly, there were four Jewish members in the first Australian Parliament, including Isaac Isaacs, who later became the first Australian-born Governor-General. Solomon lost the next election in 1903 to the Labor Party. As it turns out, his opponent was named Carpenter and I would be interested to know if he is any relation to the WA state premier.
All along, Solomon was involved with the affairs of the Jewish community here. In many of his letters to his mother in Adelaide, he mentioned that he wished there was a Synagogue to attend. He was even the first person to bring Passover matzo into W.A. In 1902 he finally had his wish. As president of the WA Hebrew Congregations and a trustee for the lot granted to the Congregation by the State Government, he and Lawrence Alexander laid the foundation stone for the Fremantle Synagogue.
His home, constructed for him in 1887, was a magnificent house on Solomon Street (where else) named Ocean View. Twice married and widowed with a total of eleven children he died in Beaconsfield in 1909 and is one of the notables buried in the Fremantle Cemetery.

Erickson:
SOLOMON, Elias, b. 2.9.1839 (Eng), d. 23.5.1909 (Frem), son of Moses, arr. from SA 20.1.1868 per Eliza Blanche. (He was in SA from 1840), m. 1st 18.7.1877 Agnes Elizabeth BICKLEY b. 1.2.1846 (India) d. 22.4.1886, m. 2nd 1.5.1887 Elizabeth STOKES b. 16.9.1868 (Frem) d.3.12.1898 (at sea), dtr. of John & Elizabeth. Chd. Wallace Elias b. 1878 d. 1950, Leah Elizabeth b. 1880 d. 1960, Catherine A.B. b. 1881 d. 1882, Samuel Moss b. 1882 d. 1935, Julia Rose b. 1884, (2nd) Maurice Elias b. 1888 d. 1977, Valerie Elizabeth b. 1888 d. 1889, Cynthia Agnes b. 1889, Valentine Henry b. 1894 d. 1960 (Sydney), Frederick. Ivan b. 1895. Stella b. 1897 d. 1965, Fremantle. Auctioneer & general merchant Essex St. Solomon. & nephews advt. 8.7.1868 Importers & Retailers. Later he was in partnership with L.A.Manning: JP. Employed a T/L man 1878. Town Councillor 1877-1883, Chairman 1881. Mayor 1889-1891, 1896-8, 1900- 1: MLA Sth Frem. 10.1892- 4.1900: MLA Sth Frem. 1892-1901: M.H.R. Frem 1901- 3. 1st Chairman Frem. Munic. Tramways Bd. 1880 Consul for Italy in WA. President Frem. Literary Inst. Chairman Hospital Bd. & Cemetery Bd. Jewish.With Lionel Samson granted Lot C8 for Frem. Synagogue in 1902.


References and Links

Antonovsky, Ari & Wendy 2010, 'Here from the beginning: Jewish community life in early Fremantle', Fremantle Studies, 6: 1-11.

Antonovsky, Ari & Wendy, notes about Elias Solomon in their Heritage Walk around the West End of Fremantle.

Silbert, Eric 1999, 'Jewish personalities of Fremantle'Fremantle Studies, 1: 77-91.

Solomon, Coralie 2004, 'Elias Solomon: first Federal Member of Parliament for Fremantle: life and letters 1839-1909'Fremantle Studies, 3: 1-13.

See also: Solomon Street.

Wikipedia page

See Diane Oldman's page about John Stokes, father of Elizabeth, Solomon's second wife on her archived website.

Top photo: by Nixon, from Hitchcock.


Freotopia

This page incorporates material from Garry Gillard's Freotopia website, that he started in 2014 and the contents of which he donated to Wikimedia Australia in 2024. The content was originally created on 11 August, 2015 and hosted at freotopia.org/people/solomon.html (it was last updated on 9 October, 2023). The donated data is also preserved in the Internet Archive's collection.