James Alexander Louis Manning , pastoralist, was born on 9 April 1814 in Exeter, England, third surviving son of John Edye Manning and his wife Matilda Jorden, née Cooke. Educated in France and Exeter, he travelled in Europe. In 1830-33 he attended Hohenheim Agricultural College near Stuttgart and visited Goethe nine months before he died and discussed foreign missions. In 1834 Manning arrived at Sydney and next year settled on Cumbamarra, near Yass. He established rapport with the Aboriginals, whom he called `nature`s gentlemen`, and gathered details of their religious beliefs which he later published. He became a magistrate in 1836. In 1840-41 he capitalized on the Port Phillip District`s need for meat by sending overland large drafts of cattle but the value of his own property was diminished by catarrh which attacked his sheep for five successive seasons after 1848. In 1853 he joined his brothers Edye and William Montagu, T. S. Mort, E. and R. Tooth and John Croft to form the Twofold Bay Pastoral Association which held 400,000 acres (161,876 ha) in three stations on the Monaro and three in the Bega district. From 1854 Manning, as managing partner, lived on the central estate Kameruka. Enterprising and energetic, he overcame a labour shortage by introducing German families and cleared a road route from the Monaro to the coast at Merimbula, making that port the trade outlet for the southern Bega Valley. As part of their vigorous efforts to hinder free selection the partnership was dissolved in 1860. Manning retained Wolumla and Towamba and bought Kameruka in 1861, but John Robertson`s Land Acts, combined with floods and disease, broke up their huge holdings. In 1862, after losing 7000 cattle through pleuro-pneumonia, Manning sold Kameruka. Assisted by his brother William, he began again at Warragaburra, 2000 acres (809 ha) near Bega in 1864. An enthusiastic innovator, he planted thriving vineyards, introduced maize to the district, initiated scientific American methods of cheese making and agitated for a telegraph between Bega and Sydney, sending the first message in 1868. In 1870 he moved to Queensland, where with Mort he spent huge sums experimenting with freezing and preserving meat. From 1871 Manning lived in Sydney, keeping an interest in Warragaburra, managed by his son Albert after 1869, and Black Flat in the Bombala district. In 1845 at Melbourne Manning had married Mary Mehitabel, eldest daughter of Major Firebrace. He died at Double Bay on 26 October 1887 and was buried in Waverley cemetery, survived by his wife, to whom he left £15,000, and three sons and three daughters. (Source: http://www.manning.ch/genealogy/f827.htm#P2675)