William Harper Twelvetrees (1848 – 7 November 1919) was an
Englishgeologist who was important for the characterisation of the geology of
Tasmania.
Twelvetrees was born in
Bedfordshire, England, in 1848, to industrialist
Harper Twelvetrees and Mary Hubbard. He was educated in
London and in
Germany. From 1871 to 1880, he was employed at copper mines in eastern
Russia, and from 1882 to 1890 at the Lidjessi silver-lead mines in Asia Minor, of which he was general manager from 1884.[1]
He went to Tasmania in 1890 and followed various occupations until August 1899, when he was appointed Tasmanian government geologist and chief inspector of mines.[2]
He was a joint author of a number of articles and books about western Tasmanian geology, including with
William Frederick Petterd.[3][4]
In 1914 the office of chief inspector of mines was made a separate one, but Twelvetrees continued to act as government geologist and director of the geological survey of Tasmania until his death. He worked with energy and enthusiasm and his department grew in size and importance. He also interested himself in the
Launceston Museum, which was extended so that the excellent geological survey collection of specimens could be housed. He died at Launceston after a short illness on 7 November 1919.[5][6]
He was married twice: to Mary Adelaide Austin, who died on 11 July 1899,[7] and then to Sarah Elvin Genders,[8] who survived him. He was awarded the
Clarke Medal of the
Royal Society of New South Wales in 1912.
His writing in the bulletins of the Tasmanian geological survey and other publications, occurred at a very busy time in the
West Coast, Tasmania region's mining history, which has not been repeated since.[9][10][11][12]
Example of reports
Twelvetrees, W.H. (1903), The Progress of the Mineral Industry of Tasmania for the Quarter Ending 31 December 1902.[13]
Twelvetrees, W.H. (1905), The Progress of the Mineral Industry of Tasmania for the Quarter Ending 31 December 1904.
^"GOVERNMENT GEOLOGIST". Launceston Examiner. Vol. LIX, no. 186. Tasmania, Australia. 5 August 1899. p. 7. Retrieved 19 November 2016 – via National Library of Australia.
^Twelvetrees, W. H. (William Harper); Tasmania. Government Geologist's Office (1906),
Report on the Renison Bell tin-field, Government Geologist's Office, retrieved 19 November 2016