Alexander Douglas

 
Douglas.jpg

Profile:

Earliest/Latest Known date

1872 - 1905

Date of Birth:

07-Feb-1843

Date of death

05-Feb-1914

Place of birth

St Heliers, Channel Islands

Officer’s reason for departure

Retired

Location of grave

England

Marriage

Lucy Street (m. 1884)

 

Rank/Position:

  • Acting Sub-inspector: 1872 - 1872.

  • 1/C Sub-Inspector: 1872 - 1876.

  • 2/C Sub-Inspector: 1876 - 1884.

  • 2/C Inspector: 1884 - 1893.

  • 1/C Inspector: 1893 - 1898.

  • Senior Inspector: 1898 - 1900.

  • Chief Inspector: 1900 - 1905.

  • Acting Commissioner: 1900 - 1905.


 
The physical appearance of this officer is slim and wiry, standing about 5 feet 7 inches, and looking not a year older than three and twenty. Yet, he has been known to shoot down the blacks by dozens in skirmish with them, thereby clearing the road of these murdering savages, and ensuring the safety of the traveller.
— Empire, 1874
 

postings:

 
  • 1872 - 1873: Marlborough

  • 1873 - 1874: Fort Cooper (aka Nebo)

  • 1874 - 1875: Eight Mile

  • 1874 - 1875: Endeavour River (aka Cooktown)

  • 1874 - 1876: Puckley Creek

  • 1875 - 1875: Normanby Diggings

  • 1876 - 1879: Deep Creek (aka The Hodgkinson)

  • 1877 - 1881: Barron River (aka Baan Bero)

  • 1878 - 1880: Mossman River (aka Saltwater Creek)

  • 1879 - 1882: Belyando River (aka Mistake Creek)

  • 1879 - 1880: Jundah

  • 1881 - 1882: Brisbane

  • 1882 - 1883: Stewart’s Creek (aka Johnstone River)

  • 1882 - 1884: Moresby River

  • 1884 - 1885: Townsville

  • 1886 - 1889: Dunrobin

  • 1886 - 1888: Deep Creek (aka The Hodgkinson)

  • 1887 - 1888: Norman River

  • 1888 - 1891: Normanton


Biography:

 

Alexander Douglas Douglas (1843-1914), inspector of police and explorer, was born at St Helier, Channel Islands, son of Alexander Douglas Douglas, army officer, and his wife Ann, née Rouse. His joined the navy in 1857 as a cadet and served in the Tientsin campaign and the Taiping rebellion. His experiences gave him a taste for wandering and adventure. In 1865 he left the navy and migrated to Rockhampton, Queensland. For a time he satisfied his wanderlust by working as a teamster and drover. Attracted by police work he became an officer in the Queensland Native Police in 1872, and soon won promotion to sub-inspector in charge of the area from Cooktown to the Palmer River goldfield. In 1874 he was ordered to blaze a new trail from the goldfields to Cooktown, a task which suited his taste. His success secured him a second commission to find a practicable route to the new Normanby field, and in 1876 to yet another new goldfield, the Hodgkinson. For these achievements he ranks with the important explorers of the north.

In 1879 Douglas moved to a new station, Jundah, in the west, but next year was sent back to the north, this time to Biboohra on the Atherton Tableland. His services were much in demand and he was brought to Brisbane in 1881 to take charge of white police, but in 1882 he was sent to Herberton in the north. Once again exploratory duties called him: with four troopers, two old gold diggers and five Chinese, he blazed yet another trail, this time from Herberton to Mourilyan. On this trip the party was without rations and in continuous rain for twenty days, living mainly on roots, but the leadership of Douglas brought them through. He established a new native police camp at Mourilyan, and the government allocated to him a small steamship Vigilant to assist his patrols of the coast. At the end of 1884 he was given charge of the Townsville district, but from May to September 1885, during the Russian scare, because of his naval experience he was appointed commander of H.M.S. Otter in the Queensland navy. His next move was to Roma but in 1886 he was sent north to Georgetown in charge of the Gulf district. There he took charge of the largest gold escort, 26,000 oz., ever recorded in Queensland. In 1888 he moved his headquarters to Normanton where he remained until 1891. In 1893 he returned to Roma but in May 1898 became senior inspector of the Northern district, stationed at Townsville. In 1900 he was transferred to Brisbane and on 1 July succeeded John Stuart as chief inspector of the Queensland Police. He acted as commissioner four times and in 1902 went to Roma to investigate the Patrick Kenniff case. In 1905 Douglas was superannuated and returned to England where he died on 5 February 1914 in a private hospital near Portsmouth.

On 19 April 1884 at Charters Towers as a widower he had married Lucy, who at 3 had come to Australia in 1858 with her father Abraham Street, of Alva, Stirlingshire. They had no children. She died on 13 May 1905.