There died in the Greymouth Hospital on September 23 (writes the Dunedin correspondent of the Argus) one of the last survivors of the famous Burke and Wills Expedition. In August, 1860, when residing in Bendigo, Alexander McPherson was requested by the Victorian Inspector of Police to join the expedition as saddler. Sandy, as he was known, consented, and at once set out to join the party at the Campaspe, travelling on from there as far as Menindie, on the Darling. Here he was left with some of the party, while the leaders went on with Gray and King. A few days later, when a trooper arrived at the camp with despatches, McPherson and a blackfellow volunteered to accompany him in his attempt to overtake Burke. The three lost their way, and ran out of provisions. After suffering much hardship they fell in with a tribe of blacks, with whom McPherson lived for three months. He was then rescued by one of the search parties sent out. It is stated that he was the first person to give an account of the Nardoo plant. McPherson was attracted to New Zealand by the discovery of gold, and for some years lived at Maori Creek, on the West Coast.
'McPherson, Alexander (Sandy) (1835–1896)', Obituaries Australia, National Centre of Biography, Australian National University, https://oa.anu.edu.au/obituary/mcpherson-alexander-sandy-15562/text26774, accessed 19 September 2024.
23 September,
1896
(aged ~ 61)
Greymouth,
New Zealand
Includes subject's nationality; their parents' nationality; the countries in which they spent a significant part of their childhood, and their self-identity.