This article is about the NSW & WA politician born 1858. For the businessman, banker, philanthropist & NSW politician born 1804, see Thomas Walker (philanthropist).
Walker was born in Preston, Lancashire, England, the son of corn miller and merchant Thomas Walker, and Ellen née Eccles. He was educated at Leyland Grammar School, then worked as a schoolteacher at Preston for two years.[1] He then emigrated to Canada, where he worked as a farmhand and chemist's assistant. After returning to the United Kingdom he work as a journalist on the Preston Herald.[2] He later spent some time in Toledo, Ohio, where he spent 1876 lecturing on evolution and the occult. The following year he toured through New South Wales, England and South Africa, lecturing on spiritualism and politics. While in South Africa in 1881, he married Andrietta Maria Somers, with whom he had two sons and two daughters.[1]
Walker returned to Australia in 1882, spending some time in Victoria before settling in New South Wales. He became a prominent public figure through his political lectures, in which he argued for secularism and an immediate separation of New South Wales from England. In February 1885 he played a prominent role in a meeting held to discuss British government policy towards the Pacific Islands, and shortly afterwards he was involved in opposing the deployment of New South Wales troops to the Sudan.[1]
Some time after 1894, Walker visited New Zealand, where he taught elocution, promoted temperance, lectured on various subjects, and wrote for the press.[2] On returning to New South Wales he unsuccessfully contested the seat of Sturt in 1898.[4]
In 1899, Walker emigrated to Western Australia. He found work as a journalist with the Sunday Times in Perth, and later with the Kalgoorlie newspapers Sun and Kalgoorlie Miner. He became editor of the Sunday Times in 1901, and was also editor of the Sun until 1905.[2] It was while editor for the Sunday Times that he is believed to have written the article "Corruption by Contract" condemning C. Y. O'Connor and the Golden Pipeline scheme.[5] This article is generally believed to have contributed to O'Connor's suicide.
Mansfield, Bruce (May 1953). "The Background to Radical Republicanism in New South Wales in the Eighteen Eighties". Historical Studies. 5 (20): 338–348. doi:10.1080/10314615308594959.