Osborne was born on 2 January 1861. He was a son of Charles Osborne and wife Ann Geary and grandson of
Sir Henry Osborne, 11th Baronet and second wife Elizabeth Harding. He was educated at St. Anne's and Streatham Hill. He entered a solicitor firm in
Durham after graduation. In 1880, he left the firm and entered the
Peninsular and Oriental Company and was sent to the Hong Kong offices in on 11 May 1882.[1]
On 20 April 1889, Osborne joined the
Hongkong and Kowloon Wharf and Godown Company. As secretary he encountered innumerable difficulties arising out of the organised attempts of the Chinese guilds to oppose the progress of the foreigner.[1] Osborne was also director of the
Dairy Farm, Steam Laundry and was member of the consulting committee of the
A. S. Watson & Co. and the China Borneo Company. He also helped forming the
Star Ferry Company and placing double-ended boats on the services between Hong Kong and Kowloon. He was responsible for building the
Hong Kong Club. He also rescued the
Hongkong Hotel Company from imminent bankruptcy at the request of the
Hongkong and Shanghai Bank and the mortgagees, by placing it upon a dividend-paying basis.[1]
Osborne was made
Justice of the Peace and later became member of the
Sanitary Board in 1900. During his service in the Sanitary Board, he helped fighting the plague. He also exterminated rats and enforced rules of health and cleanliness at the premises of his company. He also suggested setting up bathing places in the city which were carried out in 1913. In May 1906, Osborne succeeded
W. J. Gershom to be member of the
Legislative Council and its Financial Committee and the Public Works Committee. In 1913, he was appointed to a committee to investigate the
Green Island Cement Co.[1]
Osborne retired from the Wharf Company in 1913 and left Hong Kong in the
SS Empress of Japan to his family in
Hythe.[1] He later became Mayor of Hythe between 1922 and 1924.
Personal life
Osborne fought in the
First World War between 1916 and 1918 in
France. He was fond of outdoor sports especially rowing, riding, shooting, fishing and walking. He had walked from
Beijing just after the
Boxer Rebellion, across Korea, through parts of Japan and from
Hankou to Guangzhou by way of
Guilin. He also walked over most of the
New Territories.
Edward Osborne married on 21 February 1895 Phyllis Eliza Whitley (? - 23 February 1966), daughter of George Whitley of
Weybridge,
Surrey, and had five children:
Edward Osborne (? - 17 December 1902), died an infant
Sybil Margaret Osborne (28 November 1895 – 23 February 1973), married on 14 June 1927 Hilary Cope Barry of
Nut Trees Cottage,
Reydon,
Suffolk, and had issue.
Stanley Patrick Osborne (7 July 1904 – 19 December 1989), educated at
Felsted School,
Felsted,
Essex, and graduated from the
University of Wales,
Wales, with a
Bachelor of Science (BSc) degree, Senior Experimental Officer at the
Ministry of Supply and registered as an Associate Fellow of the
Royal Aeronautical Society (AFRAeS), married firstly on 11 September 1931 Muriel Harvey Matthews (27 Feb 1905[2] - 4 July 1968), who graduated with a
Bachelor of Arts (BA) degree and was invested as a Fellow of the
Royal Horticultural Society (FRHS), daughter of Llewellyn Harvey Matthews of
Shrewsbury,
Shropshire, and had two children, and married secondly in April 1969 Mary Enid Lyon, who graduated with a Bachelor of Arts (BA), daughter of Horace Lyon of
Goole,
Yorkshire, without issue:
Marcus Duncan Fitzwilliam Osborne (b. 20 February 1967)
Edward Peter Osborne (20 February 1938 – 3 February 2002), usually went by his middle name of Peter, educated at his father's Alma Mater Felsted School, Felsted, Essex, and graduated from
Peterhouse, University of Cambridge, Cambridge, Cambridgeshire, with a Bachelor of Arts (BA), married on 3 April 1961 Marjorie Newton, daughter of William Newton of
Fleetwood,
Lancashire, and had three children:
Judith Carol Osborne (b. 4 March 1962)
John Philip Osborne (b. 20 February 1963)
Janet Elizabeth Osborne (b. 29 March 1964)
Nora Gladys Osborne (31 August 1906 – 6 August 1998)
Aline Grace Osborne (2 August 1909 – 22 April 1970)
References
^
abcde"THE HON. MR. E. OSBORNE". The Hong Kong Telegraph. 8 February 1913. p. 4.