Beverley Suttor Beverley Suttor i(A627 works by) (a.k.a. William Beverley Suttor; Beverly Suttor)
Also writes as: Bev. Sut. Redivivus
Born: Established: ca. 1805 ; Died: Ceased: 1882 Bathurst, Bathurst area, Bathurst - Orange area, Central West NSW, New South Wales,
Gender: Male
The material on this page is available to AustLit subscribers. If you are a subscriber or are from a subscribing organisation, please log in to gain full access. To explore options for subscribing to this unique teaching, research, and publishing resource for Australian culture and storytelling, please contact us or find out more.

BiographyHistory

Prior to coming to Australia, Suttor appears to have gained some form of medical training. In The Anti-Teetotalist (1842), he claims to have lived in London for some three years with the prominent early 19th century surgeon and anatomist, Sir Charles Bell (1774-1842).

In Sydney, Suttor opened an apothecary in George Street, which he ran from ca. 1829 to 1831, along with a second establishment at Parramatta. However he became insolvent in ca. 1832, after which he appears to have moved to Bathurst, where in 1829 he had married Cordelia Suttor (possibly a relative). He lived at Beverley Park, a mixed grazing farm outside Bathurst, from ca. 1836 perhaps until his death in 1882, however during the 1840s he also probably spent brief periods in Sydney and Melbourne. At one point he was connected with the Theatre Royal at Parramatta.

Following the publication of his volume Original Poetry (1838), Suttor was ridiculed by colonial critics, and for a time his name became synonymous with bad poetry. In 1839, Suttor called for subscriptions to a second volume of poetry, but it appears this was never published. Some individual poems were published in the Australasian Chronicle, the Geelong Advertiser, the Sydney Gazette, the Commercial Journal and Advertiser, and the Sydney Herald.

Not to be confused with his son, William Beverley Suttor (1832-1884).

Most Referenced Works

Last amended 3 Oct 2013 14:48:00
Influence on:
Measure's Imitation Matthew Measure , 1838 single work poetry
Other mentions of "" in AustLit:
    X