Background
Barker was the eldest son of the late John Barker and Mary Anne, and was born at Aylesbury, Buckinghamshire.
Barker was the eldest son of the late John Barker and Mary Anne, and was born at Aylesbury, Buckinghamshire.
He was the first parliamentary clerk of both the Legislative Council and Legislative Assembly in the Victorian colonial parliament. Revisiting England, he was called to the bar in 1843. And in 1844 married Susanna, daughter of Richard Hodgkinson, of Morton Grange, Nottingham.
In the next year he was appointed a magistrate, and in August 1849 was one of the Commissioners under the Disputed Boundaries Acting, having the Hamilton district assigned to him.
Barker, who was admitted to the Victorian bar in November 1851, was in October of that year, on the separation of Portuguese Phillip from New South Wales and its formation into the colony of Victoria, appointed Clerk of the Legislative Council then constituted, and successfully performed the difficult task of inaugurating its procedure. When responsible government came into operation in 1856, Barker was offered the choice of the clerkship of the new Upper or Lower Chamber.
He accepted the latter, and remained Clerk of the Assembly until April 1882, when he was appointed Clerk of the Legislative Council and Clerk of Parliaments, a post which he resigned in 1891. He died on November 15 of that year.
At his death he was the last surviving participant from either the first parliament or the formation of the Legislative Assembly.