Philip Lamothe Snell Chauncy (1816–1880) was a colonial surveyor and amateur ethnographer.

Born 21 June 1816 at Datchet in Buckinghamshire, England, he travelled to the colonies in Australia, residing in Victoria after 1839 and at the Swan River Colony (Perth, WA) between 1841 and 1853. He was appointed to the position of assistant government surveyor at Swan River. Chauncy interviewed the Indigenous inhabitants on his journeys, recording the names of places he was documenting and incidental remarks. His reports became a source of ethnographic material for contemporary works such as Robert Brough Smyth's The Aborigines of Victoria (Melbourne 1878), supplying an appendix, 'Notes and Anecdotes of the Aborigines of Australia', along with his other remarks, and to later authors of texts regarding Indigenous Australians.[1][2]

The site of Chauncy Spring in the Shire of Mundaring, which he surveyed in 1847 and recorded by the existing local name 'Jardemin', was gazetted in 1848 at Perth with his name.[3]

He married Susan Augusta Mitchell (1828–1867; daughter of William Mitchell) in 1848.[4]

References edit

  1. ^ Bush, Fiona. "Philip Lamothe Snell Chauncy". Design & Art Australia Online (DAAO). Retrieved 7 October 2018.
  2. ^ Izett, EK 2014, 'Breaking new ground: early Australian ethnography in colonial women's writing', Doctor of Philosophy.
  3. ^ "Chauncy Spring". inHerit - State Heritage Office. wa.gov.au. Retrieved 7 October 2018.
  4. ^ Phillip Lamothe Snell Chauncy (1873). Memoirs of Mrs Chauncy. Ballarat.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)