Background
He was the son of William Searcy, clerk and policeman, and his wife Charlotte Edwin, née Roffe, and brother of Arthur Searcy who also had a distinguished career as a South Australian public servant.
assistant public servant writer
He was the son of William Searcy, clerk and policeman, and his wife Charlotte Edwin, née Roffe, and brother of Arthur Searcy who also had a distinguished career as a South Australian public servant.
He attended Dumas" school, Mount Barker, later Pulteney Street School, Adelaide, until 1869.
He was based in Darwin from 1882 to 1896 and was a booster for development of northern Australia during and after his time there. Alfred Searcy died on 1 October 1925 in Adelaide and was buried in North Road Cemetery. In 1869, he was indentured as a journalist with The Advertiser, joining the customs department in 1873.
In the period before 1882, he received the certificate of the Royal Humane Society, London, for saving a woman from drowning and became a captain in the Portuguese Adelaide Rifle Company.
From 1882 he was sub-collector of customs in Darwin, Northern Territory and implemented new customs arrangements generally and licensing and duty arrangements for Macassan trepangers. He joined Paul Foelsche and Edward Robinson on several voyages.
He became Clerk of the House in 1918 and Clerk of the parliaments in 1920. Writer
In Northern Seas, published in 1905 collected newspaper articles about his period in the Northern Territory.
He reworked and extended the material as In Australian Tropics, published in 1907, with By Flood and Field, published in 1911, being a fictionalised account of the earlier books