Sir John Hubert Plunkett Murray (29 December 1861 â 27 February 1940) was an Australian colonial administrator. He served as lieutenant-governor of the Territory of Papua from 1908 until his death in 1940.
Murray was born in Sydney, the son of Irish-born Terence Aubrey Murray (1810âÂÂ73), and his second wife Agnes Ann, née Edwards; he was named after Terence Murray's friend John Hubert Plunkett. Murray was educated at a non-denominational school in Sydney, then attended a preparatory school in Melbourne in 1871. Between 1872 and 1877 Murray attended Sydney Grammar School where he won several sporting prizes and was school captain in 1877. He then moved to England in 1878 and attended Brighton College (which expelled him after he punched a master) and Oxford University, where he attended Magdalen College. A tall (6'3" or 190 cm), powerfully built man, Murray played rugby for Harlequins and won the English amateur heavyweight boxing title.
After university he entered the legal profession, and was called to the bar at the Inner Temple in 1885. he subsequently returned to New South Wales and worked at a legal practice in Sydney. In 1892 Murray became a legal draftsman for the Parliament of New South Wales but described his time there as "living death in Macquarie Street". Sir Hubert Murray was made a Companion of the Order Order of Saint Michael and Saint George (C.M.G.) in 1914, and a Knight Commander (K.C.M.G.) of the same order in 1925.
Murray was involved in the formation of the New South Wales Irish Rifles, a part-time voluntary reserve unit intended to supplement the official colonial forces. He was commissioned as a captain in the unit in 1896 and became commanding officer in 1898 with the rank of major.
In 1900, Murray volunteered to fight in the Second Boer War, despite having personal misgivings about the war. He was initially stationed at Victoria West, later commanding New South Wales troops in the advance on Pretoria and at the Battle of Diamond Hill. His unit was subsequently tasked with implementing the British forces' scorched-earth policy, including breaking up Boer wagons and burning Boer farms. Murray disliked his duties and came to admire Boer general Christiaan de Wet. In private letters he observed that "there is nothing to do at the front except to steal cows". He was granted leave in late 1900 and left for England, returning to Australia in early 1901.
In 1904, Murray was appointed chief judicial officer of British New Guinea, which had been placed under Australian authority in 1902 and was in the process of being formally reorganised as an Australian external territory. Due to the small size of the administration, his role encompassed duties across all three branches of government. He was appointed Acting Administrator in 1907 and Lieutenant-Governor in 1908, a position he held until his death at Samarai in 1940. Murray was involved in controversy of the "dog incident", when he attended a meeting called to suppress the activities of sorcerers (vadas or vatas), when local people attempted to demonstrate the power of their vadas by reviving a dog that had been killed.
Murray was succeeded as administrator by his nephew, Hubert Leonard Murray (1886-1963), who had been Official Secretary since 1916.
The Murray family was among the early settlers of the Canberra district of New South Wales, where his father Sir Terence Aubrey Murray owned Yarralumla, and Windradeen, at Lake George. His grandfather, Captain Terence Murray, was a member of the Coldstream Guards and came to Australia as the paymaster for the 48th Regiment after having been the Paymaster of the Irish Brigade of Guards since 1811.
Hubert was the brother of Gilbert Murray, Professor of Greek at Oxford University, and, James Aubrey Gibbes Murray, the last child of Sir Terence Aubrey Murray's first marriage, to Mary Murray (nee Gibbes). Hubert Murray's sisters resided separately, at Yarralmula, with their grandparents Colonel and Elizabeth Gibbes, after the death of their mother. His sisters were: Leila Alexandrina Murray, who later became a governess for Lady Agnes Murray, and Evelyn Mary Matilda Murray, later 'Morrison', who joined Gilbert Murray in London, and participated in Pankhurst's suffrage movement with her daughter, also Mary (pictured here on 'Black Friday' with Pankhurst). James 'Aubrey' Gibbes Murray, described by Gilbert as shy and retiring, was a draftsman for the NSW Department of Lands. Despite the distance, Gilbert's prolific correspondence kept the siblings and their children in close contact.
In 1889 Murray married Miss Sybil Maud Jenkins ( - 1929). They had three children:
On 20 February 1930 Hubert Murray married an Irish widow Mrs Mildred Blanche Vernon née Trench (1875 - 1960). They were later separated.