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・ Thomas Chippendale
・ Thomas Chippendale, the younger
・ Thomas Chippenham
・ Thomas Chippenham (disambiguation)
・ Thomas Chippenham (fl. 1388–1402)
・ Thomas Chippenham (fl.1420–1431)
・ Thomas Chirnside
・ Thomas Cavalier-Smith
・ Thomas Cavanaugh
・ Thomas Cave
・ Thomas Cave (died 1609)
・ Thomas Cave (Liberal politician)
・ Thomas Cavendish
・ Thomas Cawarden
・ Thomas Cawley
Thomas Cawthron
・ Thomas Cawton
・ Thomas Cebern Musgrave, Jr.
・ Thomas Cech
・ Thomas Cecil (disambiguation)
・ Thomas Cecil (engraver)
・ Thomas Cecil Alexander
・ Thomas Cecil Fitzpatrick
・ Thomas Cecil Gray
・ Thomas Cecil Howitt
・ Thomas Cecil, 1st Earl of Exeter
・ Thomas Centolella
・ Thomas Chabot
・ Thomas Chabrol
・ Thomas Chadbourne


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Thomas Cawthron : ウィキペディア英語版
Thomas Cawthron

Thomas Cawthron (25 May 1833 – 8 October 1915) was a New Zealand businessman and philanthropist responsible for the establishment of the Cawthron research institute.
“Its establishment was not only of great value to agriculture but it also stimulated scientific research throughout the whole of New Zealand.”
Sir Theodore Rigg, former Cawthron director, Encyclopaedia of New Zealand 1966
Many fortunes were made and lost in New Zealand’s 19th Century gold rushes. Canny merchant Thomas Cawthron amassed his pile of wealth from offices in the beached hulk of a ship at Port Nelson, but most of his money came through the hunt for coal and copper and from sending supplies to gold miners in Golden Bay and Hokitika.
Over a hundred years later the name of this retiring but generous man lives on in one of New Zealand’s leading scientific research organisations, Nelson’s Cawthron.
Thomas Cawthron was born at Newington, Surrey, on 25 May 1833 and was 15 years old when his parents and family set out for Nelson in the sailing ship Mary. He worked in Wellington, then followed the gold miners to Australia, spending several years as a contractor for miscellaneous goods on the goldfields of Bendigo and Ballarat. Returning to Nelson in the mid-1850s when his father became ill, he won a contract to dig the test drives for copper deposits on the Dun Mountain, going on to contract for the supply of food and stores for the copper-mining project and for the Jenkins Hill coal mine.
He delivered supplies to miners in the rough Mineral Belt country, around 20 km by a mountainous track from the Nelson township. He was an investor in property, shares, local bodies, war loans and mortgages and seemed to have a ‘golden touch’ in all his business transactions. By the time of his retirement in the late 1880s he had amassed a considerable fortune.
After his retirement he lived quietly and frugally with his sister Mrs Wright. He seemed to have few interests other than the investment and care of his money. However, behind the scenes he helped out in many individual cases of hardship and distress and contributed to causes such as relief funds, church organisations and educational and recreational schemes. In his later years, he made larger and more public gifts, including the Cathedral steps, the Rocks Road chains, Cawthron Park (in the hills to the east of the city), contributions towards a public hospital and nurses' home, and smaller donations to the Nelson Institute (which used to run the Nelson library), the Nelson School of Music and its pipe organ.
Thomas Cawthron died on 8 October 1915. He bequeathed £231,000, practically the whole of his estate, for the development of an Industrial and Technical School, Institute and Museum to be called the Cawthron Institute. This was officially opened in 1921 with Thomas Hill Easterfield, emeritus professor of chemistry at Victoria University College, as its first director.
== References ==


抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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