Philip Gidley King was born at
Launceston, England on 23 April 1758, the son of
draper Philip King, and grandson of Exeter attorney-at-law John Gidley. He joined the
Royal Navy at the age of 12 as captain's servant, and was commissioned as a lieutenant in 1778. King served under
Arthur Phillip who chose him as second lieutenant on
HMS Sirius for the expedition to establish a
convict settlement in New South Wales. On arrival, in January 1788, King was selected to lead a small party of convicts and guards to set up a settlement at Norfolk Island, leaving Sydney on 14 February 1788 on board HMS
Sirius. On 6 March 1788, King and his party landed with difficulty, owing to the lack of a suitable harbour, and set about building huts, clearing the land, planting crops, and resisting the ravages of grubs, salt air and hurricanes. More convicts were sent, and these proved occasionally troublesome. Early in 1789 he prevented a mutiny when some of the convicts planned to take him and other officers prisoner, and escape on the next boat to arrive. Whilst commandant on Norfolk Island, King formed a relationship with the female convict
Ann Inett—their first son, born on 8 January 1789, was named Norfolk. (He went on to become the first Australian-born officer in the
Royal Navy and the captain of the schooner
Ballahoo.) Another son was born in 1790 and named Sydney. Following the wreck of
Sirius at Norfolk Island in March 1790, King left and returned to England to report on the difficulties of the settlements at
New South Wales. Ann Inett was left in Sydney with the boys; she later married another man in 1792, and went on to lead a comfortable and respected life in the colony. King, who had probably arranged the marriage, also arranged for their two sons to be educated in England, where they became officers in the navy. Whilst in England King married
Anna Josepha Coombe (his first cousin) on 11 March 1791 and returned shortly after on
HMS Gorgon to take up his post as Lieutenant-Governor of
Norfolk Island, at an annual salary of £250. King's first legitimate offspring,
Phillip Parker King, was born there in December 1791, and four daughters followed. On his return to Norfolk Island, King found the population of nearly one thousand torn apart by discontent after the strict regime of Major
Robert Ross. However, he set about enthusiastically to improve conditions. He encouraged settlers, drawn from ex-convicts and ex-marines, and he listened to their views on wages and prices. By 1794 the island was self-sufficient in grain, and surplus swine were being sent to Sydney. The number of people living off the government store was high, and few settlers wanted to leave. In February 1794 King was faced with unfounded allegations by members of the
New South Wales Corps on the island that he was punishing them too severely and ex-convicts too lightly when disputes arose. As their conduct became mutinous, he sent twenty of them to Sydney for trial by court-martial. There Lieutenant-Governor
Francis Grose censured King's actions and issued orders which gave the military illegal authority over the civilian population. Grose later apologised, but conflict with the military continued to plague King. ==Governor of New South Wales==