Sir George McLean (1834 – 17 February 1917) was a 19th-century Member of Parliament from the Otago region in New Zealand.
Years | Term | Electorate | Party | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1871–1872 | 5th | Waikouaiti | Independent | ||
1875 | 5th | Waikouaiti | Independent | ||
1875–1879 | 6th | Waikouaiti | Independent | ||
1879–1881 | 7th | Waikouaiti | Independent |
McLean owned Matanaka Farm near Waikouaiti from February 1878 until 1892.[1]
He represented the Waikouaiti electorate from 1871 to 1872 when he resigned, and from an 1875 by-election to 1881 when he retired.[2]
McLean held several ministerial appointments under Vogel and Atkinson: Postmaster-General and Commissioner of Telegraphs from 1 to 13 September 1876 and 12 January to 13 October 1877. He was Collector of Customs from 1 September 1876 to 13 October 1877 and (as a MLC) Commissioner of Trade and Customs from 28 August to 3 September 1884.
On 19 December 1881, he was appointed to the New Zealand Legislative Council and remained a member until his death on 17 February 1917.[3]
He was knighted in 1909.[2] He had married a daughter of Matthew Holmes.[4] His daughter Georgia Constance McLean married Thomas Wilford in 1892.[5] His brother-in-law, the solicitor John White, unsuccessfully contested the Waikouaiti electorate in the 1899 election.[6]