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Bonython Family
Bonython may refer to: People with the surname * Blanche Ada Bonython, née Bray (18??–1908), first wife of Lavington Bonython * Charles Bonython (c.1653–1705), Member of Parliament for Westminster * Chris Bonython (born 1947), Australian amateur golfer * Constance Jean Bonython née Warren, Lady Bonython (1891–1977), second wife of (then) Sir Lavington Bonython * Elizabeth Bonython, Lady Wilson (1907–2008) * John Langdon Bonython (Sir Langdon Bonython, 1848–1939), Editor, philanthropist, Australian politician and journalist * John Langdon Bonython (1905–1992), prominent South Australian businessman * John Lavington Bonython (Sir Lavington Bonython, 1875–1960), Australian publisher and Lord Mayor of Adelaide * Kym Bonython (Hugh Reskymer Bonython, 1920–2011), art-dealer, author, entrepreneur, Companion of the Order of Australia * Richard Bonython, Colonel-General of the Saco Militia (1645–?) * Warren Bonython (Charles Warren Bonython, 1916–2012), conservatio ...
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Blanche Ada Bonython
Sir John Lavington Bonython (10 September 1875 – 6 November 1960) was a prominent public figure in Adelaide, known for his work in journalism, business and politics. In association with his father, he became involved in the management of newspapers including ''The Advertiser (Adelaide), The Advertiser''; he also served as editor of ''The Saturday Express'' and as a journalist. After ''The Advertiser'' was sold in 1929 and converted to a public company, he became a director, and for a time vice-chairman; an association that continued until his death. In 1901 he began a long association with the Adelaide City Council, serving as List of mayors and lord mayors of Adelaide, Mayor of Adelaide (1911–1913) and later as Lord Mayor of Adelaide (1927–1930). He was knighted in 1935.W. B. PitcherBonython, Sir John Lavington (1875 - 1960) Australian Dictionary of Biography, Volume 7, Melbourne University Press, 1979, pp 341-342. The now removed Lavington Bonython Fountain on North Te ...
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List Of Watercourses In Western Australia, B
Western Australia has many watercourses with gazetted names, including rivers, streams, brooks, creeks, gullies, anabranches and backwaters. This list is complete with respect to the 1996 Gazetteer of Australia.Gazetteer of Australia (1996). Belconnen, ACT: Australian Surveying and Land Information Group. Dubious names have been checked against the online 2004 data, and in all cases confirmed correct. However, if any watercourses have been gazetted or deleted since 1996, this list does not reflect these changes. Strictly speaking, Australian place names are gazetted in capital letters only; the names in this list have been converted to mixed case in accordance with normal capitalization conventions. Locations are as gazetted; some watercourses may extend over long distances. B See also *Geography of Western Australia Western Australia occupies nearly one third of the Australian continent. Due to the size and the isolation of the state, considerable emphasis has been ...
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Mount Bonython
Mount Bonython (, above sea level) is one of two major peaks in the Adelaide Hills visible from Adelaide. The other, about a kilometre to the south and some 50 m higher, is Mount Lofty. Mount Bonython is named after Sir John Langdon Bonython and was previously known simply as Little Mount. There is a telecommunications tower used for the Telstra NextG network located at its summit. According to the mythology of the indigenous Kaurna people, the Mount Lofty Ranges were part of the story of the ancestor-creator Nganno. Nganno travelled across the land of the Kaurna and after being wounded in a battle, lay down to die and formed the Mount Lofty Ranges. The current name of the Greater Mount Lofty Parklands, Yurrebilla, is taken from the Kaurna name for the twin hills of Mount Lofty and Mount Bonython, which are supposed to be Nganno's ears. See also *List of mountains in Australia This is a list of mountains in Australia. Highest points by state and territory List of mo ...
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Eric Bonython Conservation Park
Eric Bonython Conservation Park (formerly Eric Bonython National Parks Reserve) is a protected area in South Australia located about south of the town of the Yankalilla, South Australia, Yankalilla. The conservation park was proclaimed under the ''National Parks and Wildlife Act 1972'' in 1972. On 9 November 1967, it was proclaimed under the ''National Parks Act 1966'' as ''Eric Bonython National Parks Reserve''. Prior to 1967, it was already under statutory protection." As of 2011, the conservation park was described as being "a fine, but small, example of the pre-European settlement vegetation that once covered this area." The conservation park contains a dominant forest of Eucalyptus obliqua, Messmate Stringybark with an understorey including "tall shrubs and mid ferns" as well as the nationally endangered perennial herb, Euphrasia collina, Osborn's Eyebright. The conservation park is classified as an International Union for Conservation of Nature, IUCN IUCN protected area c ...
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Division Of Bonython
The Division of Bonython was an Australian Electoral Division in South Australia between 1955 and 2004. In its final configuration, it was based on the outer northern suburbs of Elizabeth, Munno Para, Parafield, Paralowie, Salisbury, Virginia, and to the town of One Tree Hill in Adelaide's outskirts. Bonython's first 14 years saw vast boundaries simultaneously cover as far north as Gawler, as far south as Magill Road at Norwood, and as far west as Ottoway. The seat would continue to cross south of Grand Junction Road until the creation of the Division of Makin at the pre-1984 redistribution. The division was named for Sir Langdon Bonython, philanthropist, publisher, and one of South Australia's federation parliamentarians. It was created as a safe Labor seat, carved mostly from the Labor-leaning portions of the neighbouring Division of Sturt, and was thus a natural choice for Sturt's Labor incumbent, Norman Makin, to transfer in 1955. Besides Makin, its most notable mem ...
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Bonython, ACT
Bonython () is a suburb of Tuggeranong, a township in southern Canberra, capital city of Australia. History The suburb is named after Sir John Langdon Bonython, the owner of ''The Advertiser (Adelaide)'' who promoted Federation, and was a member of the first Australian parliament. Original concept plans for Tuggeranong indicate that the suburb was initially to be known as "Stranger". The name "Bonython" was declared when it was gazetted as a suburb of Canberra on 17 October 1986. Streets in Bonython are named after prominent South Australians, particularly journalists, and South Australian Districts and Rivers. Prior to 1986, the land upon which Bonython now sits was grazing land, mainly grassland with scattered eucalypt trees. By 1989 construction of houses and the Lower Stranger Pond water quality control pond began and Canberra’s newest suburb was born. On 18 January 2003 the disastrous Canberra bushfire reached Bonython late in the afternoon. By that time, the winds had ...
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Bonython Park
Bonython Park is a 17-hectare park in the north-west Park Lands of the South Australian capital of Adelaide. The park was opened in 1962 and named in honour of prominent South Australian politician and journalist, Sir John Langdon Bonython. It is situated on north-western side of the River Torrens, bordered by Port Road. It is on the opposite side of the river to a golf course, and adjacent to the old Adelaide Gaol and the Police Barracks. Bonython Park forms part of what is known as Park 27, and since the dual naming initiative by Adelaide City Council in the early 2000s, Park 27 is also known as Tulya Wardli. There are sites straddling this park and Park 1/ Pirltawardli of some significance to the Kaurna people, since various "native locations" were established on the sites dating from 1837, when the first settlers arrived and the establishment of a Christian mission in the following year. History There is some evidence to suggest that there was a billabong on the site, us ...
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Bonython Manor
Bonython Manor near Cury, Cornwall, England, in the United Kingdom is an estate garden on the Lizard peninsula. Since 1999, the owners have been Mr. & Mrs. Richard Nathan. Location It is located five miles (8 km) south of Helston, on the main A3083 Helston to Lizard Road, turn left at Cury Cross Lanes (Wheel Inn) and the entrance is on the right. Garden In the 1830s, plantations of beech and Monterey pine were planted near the house, and paths were surfaced by pebbles from Loe Bar, near Helston. Extensive colourful gardens including a sweeping hydrangea-flanked drive to a Georgian manor house (not open to the public). There are herbaceous walled gardens and a potager with vegetables and picking flowers; three lakes in a valley planted with ornamental grasses, perennials and South African flowers; an exotic mysterious quarry lake; traditional rhododendrons, azaleas and many Spring bulbs. The gardens are promoted by the Campaign to Protect Rural England. House The house w ...
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Bonython Hall
Bonython Hall is the "great hall" of the University of Adelaide, located in the university grounds and facing North Terrace, Adelaide. The building is on the now-defunct Register of the National Estate and the South Australian Heritage Register. It is primarily used for University graduation ceremonies, examinations, expositions and public lectures and meetings likely to draw large audiences. History The hall was built in the period 1933-1936 as a result of a donation of over £50,000 from Sir John Langdon Bonython. It was opened on 8 September 1936 by Governor-General Lord Gowrie and the first public lecture was held a week later. Folklore There are many local legends about the building, with two being particularly resilient: Bonython Hall is opposite Pulteney Street. Folklore has it that the Bonython donation was made on the condition that a hall be built opposite Pulteney Street, thus blocking any future path through the parklands and preventing the division of the campus ...
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Bonython Gallery, Sydney
Bonython may refer to: People with the surname * Blanche Ada Bonython, née Bray (18??–1908), first wife of Lavington Bonython * Charles Bonython (c.1653–1705), Member of Parliament for Westminster * Chris Bonython (born 1947), Australian amateur golfer * Constance Jean Bonython née Warren, Lady Bonython (1891–1977), second wife of (then) Sir Lavington Bonython * Elizabeth Bonython, Lady Wilson (1907–2008) * John Langdon Bonython (Sir Langdon Bonython, 1848–1939), Editor, philanthropist, Australian politician and journalist * John Langdon Bonython (1905–1992), prominent South Australian businessman * John Lavington Bonython (Sir Lavington Bonython, 1875–1960), Australian publisher and Lord Mayor of Adelaide * Kym Bonython (Hugh Reskymer Bonython, 1920–2011), art-dealer, author, entrepreneur, Companion of the Order of Australia * Richard Bonython, Colonel-General of the Saco Militia (1645–?) * Warren Bonython (Charles Warren Bonython, 1916–2012), conservationi ...
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Bonython Gallery, Adelaide
Bonython may refer to: People with the surname * Blanche Ada Bonython, née Bray (18??–1908), first wife of Lavington Bonython * Charles Bonython (c.1653–1705), Member of Parliament for Westminster * Chris Bonython (born 1947), Australian amateur golfer * Constance Jean Bonython née Warren, Lady Bonython (1891–1977), second wife of (then) Sir Lavington Bonython * Elizabeth Bonython, Lady Wilson (1907–2008) * John Langdon Bonython (Sir Langdon Bonython, 1848–1939), Editor, philanthropist, Australian politician and journalist * John Langdon Bonython (1905–1992), prominent South Australian businessman * John Lavington Bonython (Sir Lavington Bonython, 1875–1960), Australian publisher and Lord Mayor of Adelaide * Kym Bonython (Hugh Reskymer Bonython, 1920–2011), art-dealer, author, entrepreneur, Companion of the Order of Australia * Richard Bonython, Colonel-General of the Saco Militia (1645–?) * Warren Bonython (Charles Warren Bonython, 1916–2012), conservationi ...
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Warren Bonython
Charles Warren Bonython, AO (11 September 1916 – 2 April 2012) was an Australian conservationist, explorer, author, and chemical engineer. A keen bushwalker, he is perhaps best known for his role, spanning many years, of working towards the promotion, planning and eventual creation of the Heysen Trail. His work in conservation has been across a range of issues, but especially those connected with South Australian arid landscapes.Warren Bonython
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Early years

Bonython was born in , , to