Andrews and his family arrived in Western Australia from England by the ship
Warrior in 1830. He purchased the southern half of
Robert Ansell Partridge's property, which he named
Daviot Park, for
Daviot, the home town of his mother-in-law in Scotland. Additional land was purchased in the names of his children: Elizabeth C. Andrews, Alexanderina [sic] J. M. Andrews, Walter Boyd Tate Andrews, Henry James Andrews, Francis Jane Andrews, Henrietta M. W. Andrews in 1833 and John William Andrews in 1834. He was in 1841 a member of the
Perth Town Trust and on 8 February 1842 took office as the first elected chairman of the committee that became the
City of Perth. Andrews was associated with
Richard W. Nash and John Schoales, jun. in various enterprises and public bodies including •
Children's Friend Society, charged with the ensuring the welfare of minors sent out from England, most to become servants •
Western Australian Steamboat Company, formed to establish water communication along the
Swan River •
W. A. Agricultural and Horticultural Society 1845 • Building fund committee for
St George's (Anglican) Church, Perth R. W. Nash was brother-in-law of lawyer John Schoales, jun. (c. 1810–1847), who became
Guardian of Juvenile Immigrants. One of Andrews' daughters married a Rev.
John W. Schoales, but the relationship (if any) between these two has yet to be found. An assertion that Rev. Schoales emigrated to Perth is without foundation.
Arrivals in Adelaide In September 1846 Walter Boyd Andrews and his youngest sons John William Andrews, Richard [sic, see below] Tapley Andrews and Lewis Grant Boyd Andrews sailed to South Australia aboard
Joseph Albino and at some stage secured a residence in Gilbert Street. In January 1847 his wife and the remainder of their offspring Elizabeth Christiana Andrews, Alexandrina Isabella Andrews, Walter Boyd Tate Andrews, Frances Jane Andrews, and Henrietta Matilda Wittenoon [sic] Andrews sailed to South Australia on the same ship.
Return to Perth Andrews must have returned to Western Australia around this time, as was appointed to the colony's Legislative Council in June 1847, just three months before his death. His remains were interred in the
East Perth Cemeteries. The identity and fate of John William Andrews are not clear. A lad of that name and similar age (c. 1834 – 12 May 1847) was shot dead by a son of
Sir Richard Spencer at
Lady Ann Warden Spencer's home "Strawberry Hill" on
King George Sound. The incident, deemed accidental by the magistrates, was reported in only one newspaper, cursorily, and four weeks after the event. The home may have been the site of the accidental death of Horatio Spencer in 1839. Walter Boyd Tate Andrews inherited his father's property "Daviot Park", which he sold to
George Walpole Leake in 1868. ==Family==