St. George Richard Gore

St. George Richard Gore (26 March 1812 – 16 August 1871) was a grazier and politician in colonial Queensland, a member of the Queensland Legislative Assembly and, later, the Queensland Legislative Council.

Early life
Gore was born in Dublin, Ireland, eldest of five sons of Thomas Gore (brother of the 7th baronet, of Manor Gore, Donegal) and his wife Elizabeth, née Corbet. Gore was of the same family as the Earls of Arran. St George Gore was educated by his father and at Trinity College, Dublin (B.A., 1831; M.A., 1834). He was called to the Bar and practiced in London until 1839, having decided to emigrate. Gore married in 1840 Frances, daughter of the late Edward Coldwell, of Lyndhurst, Southampton, England.

Queensland grazier
Gore, along with brother Ralph Thomas Gore, arrived in Sydney aboard the Bengal in February 1840. Gore moved to Moreton Bay district (now Queensland) and settled in the Warwick, Queensland district at Yandilla.

Politics
Gore was elected to the first Legislative Assembly of Queensland for the Warwick Electorate in May 1860. He was Secretary for Lands and Works in the first Ministry formed under responsible government by Robert Herbert from January to March 1862. Nominated to the Queensland Legislative Council on 3 July 1863, Gore took office in the first Arthur Macalister Government as Postmaster-General, and represented them in the Legislative Council from September 1866 to August 1867. He was again Postmaster-General and leader of the Legislative Council in the Charles Lilley Ministry from January to May 1870.

Later life
Gore died in Warwick, Queensland, Australia on 16 August 1871.

Legacy
The All Saints Anglican Church in Yandilla, built by the Gore family, was listed on the Queensland Heritage Register in 1992.

The town of Gore in the Goondiwindi Region is named after him.