Background
Maurice Charles O'Connell was born in Ireland in 1768. There, in May 1810, O'Connell hastily married widow Mary Putland, the daughter of the deposed former governor William Bligh, shortly before Bligh's return to England.
Member of the New South Wales Legislative Council
Maurice Charles O'Connell was born in Ireland in 1768. There, in May 1810, O'Connell hastily married widow Mary Putland, the daughter of the deposed former governor William Bligh, shortly before Bligh's return to England.
He had had a distinguished career in the army. In 1809, he came with the newly appointed Governor of Macquarie to Sydney in charge of the 73rd Regiment of Foot. O'Connell also had a commission as Lieutenant-Governor, and so acted when Macquarie was absent in Tasmania in the latter part of 1812.
O'Connell was then on good terms with Macquarie, who, in November of that year, strongly recommended that his salary should be considerably increased. O'Connell became involved in the quarrel and in August 1813 Macquarie in a dispatch to Lord Bathurst stated that, "though lieutenant-colonel O'Connell is naturally a very well disposed man. . . it would greatly improve the harmony of the country.
. . if the whole of the officers and men of the 73 regiment were removed from it". On 26 March 1814 O'Connell and his regiment were transferred to Ceylon. In 1838, Maurice O'Connell returned to Sydney in command of the forces.
The matter was settled by compromise in 1841. O'Connell was acting-governor of from 12 July to 2 August 1846. Maurice O'Connell died in Sydney on 25 May 1848 and received a full military funeral at St James' Church.
O'Connell, was named after him by George Evans, when Evans followed the route of Blaxland, Lawson, and Wentworth in crossing the Blue Mountains as were streets in Sydney, Melbourne and North Adelaide.
He was senior member of the executive council when, the question of the rights of Bligh's daughters to certain land granted to Bligh in 1806 having been again raised, Governor Gipps found himself in an extremely delicate position.