Bernays went to
Sydney in 1852 and began working at the New South Wales Parliament. In 1859
Sir George Bowen, the
governor of Queensland had requested a clerk for the new
Legislative Assembly of Queensland. Bernays became the Clerk of Parliament in 1860, a position that he held for over 47 years. He published writing on agricultural economics, including
The Olive and its Products in 1872 and
Cultural Industries for Queensland; Papers on the Cultivation of Useful Plants Suited to the Climate of Queensland in 1883. His son
Charles Arrowsmith Bernays wrote about his father: 'On his death he was fittingly described by
J. T. Bell as being of the best and rarest type of public servant'. == Affiliations ==