He was a longtime member of the
Royal Agricultural and Horticultural Society and its president from 1911 to 1912. He was a director and for many years chairman of the firms
Colton, Palmer and Preston Ltd., and the Northern Territory Land Company,
Bean Brothers Limited and a founding member of the board of the Castle Salt Company. He was a member of the Adelaide Theosophical Society, the major beneficiary of his will. He was also a Vice President of the
South Park Football Club an inaugural team in the SAFA from 1877 to 1884. He was a keen horseman with stables at
Lockleys and horses he raced in conjunction with William Reid,
William Pile and William Gerrard, as well as many he owned on his own account. He was one of Adelaide's first
greyhound breeders and racers, having extensive kennels at Corryton Park, where the
South Australian Coursing Club held its bi-annual race meetings. He was in 1875 one of the founding members of the modern incarnation of
South Australian Jockey Club, and was for many years a committee member. He seldom travelled by automobile, much preferring to ride in his
victoria. He was an enthusiastic gardener and invariably wore in his buttonhole one of his own
carnations. In 1875 he took over "Tremere" (now demolished), the residence his father had owned at
Glenelg, and was involved in local affairs, serving as mayor from 1880 to 1882 and 1912 to 1913. He married Louisa Ann Carvosso (c. 1826 – c. 21 August 1912) on 14 March 1864. They had no children. Louisa Ann Carvosso's sister Jane Anna Earle was the mother of feminist
Bessie Rischbieth OBE. == References ==