fbpx
Wikipedia

John Langdon Bonython

Sir John Langdon Bonython KCMG (/bɒˈnθən/;[1] 15 October 1848 – 22 October 1939) was an Australian editor, newspaper proprietor, philanthropist, journalist and politician who served as a member of the inaugural federal Parliament, and was editor of the Adelaide daily morning broadsheet, The Advertiser, for 35 years.[2][3]

John Langdon Bonython
Member of the Australian Parliament
for South Australia
In office
30 March 1901 – 16 December 1903
Member of the Australian Parliament
for Barker
In office
16 December 1903 – 8 November 1906
Preceded byNew seat
Succeeded byJohn Livingston
Personal details
Born(1848-10-15)15 October 1848
London, England
Died22 October 1939(1939-10-22) (aged 91)
Adelaide, South Australia
NationalityCornish Australian
Political partyProtectionist Party
SpouseMary Louisa Fredericka Balthasar
OccupationJournalist
John Langdon Bonython c. 1901
John Langdon Bonython c. 1915
John Langdon Bonython c. 1935

Early life

Bonython was born in London in 1848, the second son of George Langdon Bonython (1820–1909), a carpenter and builder, and Annie MacBain (1824–1906). His siblings were George Langdon Bonython (1845–1921) and Alfred MacBain Bonython (1865–1954). George (senior) was born in Canada to which his parents Thomas Bonython (1787-1860) and Ann (nee Langdon 1800-1897?) had migrated. George was sent back to England into the care of his maternal grandfather John Harris Langdon, a successful architect/builder. Thomas, Anne and their family later returned to England and eventually migrated to South Australia in 1840, but without George. But after the death of his grandfather and employer John Harris Langdon, George (senior) with wife Ann and children, also migrated to South Australia in July 1854 where young John Langdon Bonython was educated at the Brougham School in North Adelaide. In 1870 he married Mary Louisa Fredericka Balthasar[2] (Marie Louise Friedrike,[3] or Marie Louise Frederica[4]); they had eight children of whom three daughters and three sons survived infancy.[2]

Media career

When he was sixteen, Bonython took a job at The Advertiser, where he was well regarded as a hard worker. In 1879, he became a part proprietor of The Advertiser.

In 1894, Bonython became the sole proprietor and editor of The Advertiser, positions which he held for a further 35 years. During this time, the weekly Chronicle and the evening Express newspapers were added to The Advertiser.

He retired from his newspapers in 1929, after 65 years' service.[3] On 12 January 1929, Adelaide paper The Mail announced that Langdon Bonython had sold The Advertiser for £1,250,000 to a group of Melbourne financiers, but had retained a considerable interest.[5]

Political career

Throughout his career, Bonython had avoided local politics, but after Federation in 1901 he was nominated to represent the single statewide Division of South Australia as a Protectionist in the Australian House of Representatives at the 1901 election. He ultimately finished second in the poll and was one of seven members elected. At that time, South Australia was a single electorate with multiple members.

At the 1903 election, Bonython was elected unopposed for the newly created Division of Barker. In 1904, he was a member of the Select Committee on old-age pensions, as well as the Royal Commission on the same subject in 1905–1906.

Bonython did not stand for reelection at the 1906 election, and retired from politics.[3] In 1908 he was appointed a Companion of the Order of St Michael and St George (CMG) "In recognition of service to the Commonwealth of Australia".[6]

Public service and philanthropy

In 1883, Bonython was elected chairman of the Adelaide School Advisory Board. In 1889 he became the president of the council for the South Australian School of Mines and Industries, a position he held until his death. He often assisted the school with his own money, and provided the funds for the chemical and metallurgical laboratories there.

Bonython became chairman of the council of the agricultural college at Roseworthy in 1895, and he held this position until 1902.

He was knighted in 1898.

He was appointed one of fourteen trustees under the soldiers' repatriation programme of 1916, and one of seven commissioners under the Australian Soldiers Repatriation Act 1917.[3]

Bonython joined the council of the University of Adelaide in 1916, and donated over £50,000 for the construction of a hall,[7] and £20,000 to fund a Chair in law. From 1916 to 1926, Bonython was also the deputy chairman of the South Australian advisory council of education. He donated £100,000 towards the construction of Parliament House in Adelaide.[8][9]

In 1919 he was appointed Knight Commander of the Order of St Michael and St George (KCMG) "In recognition of service to the Commonwealth".[10]

Bonython was vice-president of the Royal Institution of Cornwall from 1900 until becoming president from 1932–33, succeeding Viscount Falmouth. Despite living in Australia, and being unable to visit Cornwall during his presidency, he became one of the most active and hard working presidents that the institution had had.[11] In 1931 he gave £2,000 to the Royal Cornwall Museum building fund and the Bonython gallery on the ground floor was named in his honour.[12]

His wife, Lady Bonython, was also active in altruistic causes, notably the Kindergarten Union[13] and State Children's Council,[14] in association with Catherine Helen Spence and C. Emily Clark.

Bonython Hall
 
Bonython Hall & the Ligertwood Building
 
Bonython Hall (looking west)

Legacy

Bonython died in 1939, leaving an estate of over £4,000,000, which at the time was estimated to be one of the largest of any Australian. Beneficiaries under his will included the Pirie Street Methodist Church, where he always worshipped and of which he was a trustee; St Peter's Cathedral, to which he donated the cost of the canons' and choir stalls in 1925 in memory of his wife who had died the previous year; and the Salvation Army.

Children

On 24 December 1870 Bonython married Mary Louisa Fredericka Balthasar ( – 9 February 1924) in Adelaide. She is also referred to in various references as "Marie Louise Friedrike", "Marie Louise Frederica", and after Langdon's knighthood in 1898, Lady Bonython.

They had eight children of whom three daughters and three sons survived infancy. Outliving his wife and four of his children, he was survived by three daughters and one son, (John Lavington Bonython).[2][3]

His children included:

 
Elsie (1874–?)
 
John (1875–1960)
 
Edith (1877–?)
 
Hugh (1879–1915)
 
Bridesmaids at the wedding of Elsie Bonython with Herbert Angas Parsons, 18 April 1900.[16][17] Left to right: Elsie Parsons (half sister of bridegroom); Ada & Edith Bonython (sisters of the bride); Winifred Bonython (cousin of the bride)

Family name

Bonython was descended from an old Cornish family, well known in Tudor and Stuart times.[3] Inspired by his grandmother, Bonython took an interest in his heritage. He had a fine library of books on Cornish history and was patron of the South Australian Cornish Association and a member of the Royal Institution of Cornwall. Although he acquired some family relics, he deeply regretted that he could not buy back Bonython Manor, the family seat in Cornwall.[2] After purchasing a large mansion in North Adelaide in 1908, he renamed it 'Carclew' after the area in Cornwall which his ancestors were from.[21]

Bonython told The Literary Digest: "It is a Cornish name and the accent is on the second syllable: Bon-y'thon, y as in spy. The ancient family located at Bonython in the Lizard district at a very early period. Existing deeds show that Stephen Bonython was in possession of the family lands in 1277."[1]

Honours

Bonython was knighted in 1898. In 1908 he was made a Companion of the Order of St Michael and St George (CMG), and in 1919 was promoted to Knight Commander of that Order (KCMG).

In 1935, Bonython was made the first Australian bard of the Cornish Gorseth Kernow.[22]

The Division of Bonython, an Australian Electoral Division in the northern suburbs of Adelaide, was named after Bonython. It was created in 1955 and abolished in 2004.[3]

See also

References and notes

  1. ^ a b Charles Earle Funk, What's the Name, Please? (Funk & Wagnalls, 1936).
  2. ^ a b c d e W. B. Pitcher, Bonython, Sir John Langdon (1848–1939), Australian Dictionary of Biography, Volume 7, Melbourne University Press, 1979, pp 339-341
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h Serle, Percival (1949). "Bonython, John Langdon". Dictionary of Australian Biography. Sydney: Angus & Robertson. Retrieved 19 November 2008.
  4. ^ "Family Notices". The Advertiser. Adelaide: National Library of Australia. 11 February 1924. p. 8. Retrieved 20 November 2012.
  5. ^ "Sir Langdon Bonython Sells 'The Advertiser' for More Than £1,000,000". The Mail. Trove (trove.nla.gov.au). 12 January 1929. p. 1. Retrieved 17 June 2012.
  6. ^ Companion of the Order of St Michael and St George 9 November 1908 Citation: In recognition of service to the Commonwealth of Australia
  7. ^ "Bonython Hall" is the Great Hall of the University of Adelaide. It is located on North Terrace, Adelaide opposite Pulteney Street.
  8. ^ Parliament House is located on the corner of North Terrace and King William Street, Adelaide.
  9. ^ The South Australian Story, Advertiser Newspapers Ltd, Griffin Press, Adelaide, South Australia, 1958.
  10. ^ KCMG 3 June 1919 Citation: In recognition of service to the Commonwealth
  11. ^ Journal of the Royal Institution of Cornwall, Volume XXIV, Parts 1 and 2, 1933-34
  12. ^ Journal of the Royal Institution of Cornwall, Volume XXIII, Parts 3 and 4, 1931-32.
  13. ^ "The Kindergarten Movement". The Register. Adelaide: National Library of Australia. 28 September 1905. p. 4. Retrieved 20 November 2012.
  14. ^ "The State Children's Council". The Advertiser. Adelaide: National Library of Australia. 11 February 1913. p. 12. Retrieved 20 November 2012.
  15. ^ Family tree, www.mundia.com/au
  16. ^ a b On 18 April 1900 in the Pirie Street Methodist Church, Mary Elsie Bonython married Sir Herbert Angas Parsons (1872–1945), judge and politician. "Parsons spent many hours at the Adelaide Club, preferring its convivial atmosphere to his wife's Methodism". "Survived by Lady Parsons and their two sons, he died of cirrhosis of the liver". (Kwan, Australian Dictionary of Biography, vol.11 pp.148-150.)
  17. ^ a b Elizabeth Kwan, Parsons, Sir Herbert Angas (1872–1945), Australian Dictionary of Biography, Volume 11, Melbourne University Press, 1988, pp 148-150.
  18. ^ W. B. Pitcher, Bonython, Sir John Lavington (1875–1960), Australian Dictionary of Biography, Volume 7, Melbourne University Press, 1979, pp 341-342.
  19. ^ Funeral notices The Advertiser (Adelaide) 15 February 1915 pg.2
  20. ^ Death of Mr. Hugh Bonython Barrier Miner (Broken Hill, NSW) 10 March 1915 p.4
  21. ^ Carclew Website
  22. ^ Dunkerley Family Web Pages – The Bards of the Gorseth of Cornwall in Australia

Further reading

  • Mennell, Philip (1892). "Bonython, John Langdon" . The Dictionary of Australasian Biography. London: Hutchinson & Co – via Wikisource.
Parliament of Australia
New division Member for South Australia
1901–1903
Served alongside: Batchelor, Glynn, Holder, Kingston, Poynton, Solomon
Division abolished
New division Member for Barker
1903–1906
Succeeded by

john, langdon, bonython, confused, with, john, lavington, bonython, grandson, 1905, 1992, kcmg, october, 1848, october, 1939, australian, editor, newspaper, proprietor, philanthropist, journalist, politician, served, member, inaugural, federal, parliament, edi. Not to be confused with his son John Lavington Bonython or his grandson John Langdon Bonython 1905 1992 Sir John Langdon Bonython KCMG b ɒ ˈ n aɪ 8 en 1 15 October 1848 22 October 1939 was an Australian editor newspaper proprietor philanthropist journalist and politician who served as a member of the inaugural federal Parliament and was editor of the Adelaide daily morning broadsheet The Advertiser for 35 years 2 3 The Honourable SirJohn Langdon BonythonKCMGMember of the Australian Parliament for South AustraliaIn office 30 March 1901 16 December 1903Serving with Lee Batchelor Paddy Glynn Frederick Holder Charles Kingston Alexander Poynton and Vaiben Louis SolomonMember of the Australian Parliament for BarkerIn office 16 December 1903 8 November 1906Preceded byNew seatSucceeded byJohn LivingstonPersonal detailsBorn 1848 10 15 15 October 1848London EnglandDied22 October 1939 1939 10 22 aged 91 Adelaide South AustraliaNationalityCornish AustralianPolitical partyProtectionist PartySpouseMary Louisa Fredericka BalthasarOccupationJournalistJohn Langdon Bonython c 1901 John Langdon Bonython c 1915 John Langdon Bonython c 1935Contents 1 Early life 2 Media career 3 Political career 4 Public service and philanthropy 5 Legacy 6 Children 7 Family name 8 Honours 9 See also 10 References and notes 11 Further readingEarly life EditBonython was born in London in 1848 the second son of George Langdon Bonython 1820 1909 a carpenter and builder and Annie MacBain 1824 1906 His siblings were George Langdon Bonython 1845 1921 and Alfred MacBain Bonython 1865 1954 George senior was born in Canada to which his parents Thomas Bonython 1787 1860 and Ann nee Langdon 1800 1897 had migrated George was sent back to England into the care of his maternal grandfather John Harris Langdon a successful architect builder Thomas Anne and their family later returned to England and eventually migrated to South Australia in 1840 but without George But after the death of his grandfather and employer John Harris Langdon George senior with wife Ann and children also migrated to South Australia in July 1854 where young John Langdon Bonython was educated at the Brougham School in North Adelaide In 1870 he married Mary Louisa Fredericka Balthasar 2 Marie Louise Friedrike 3 or Marie Louise Frederica 4 they had eight children of whom three daughters and three sons survived infancy 2 Media career EditWhen he was sixteen Bonython took a job at The Advertiser where he was well regarded as a hard worker In 1879 he became a part proprietor of The Advertiser In 1894 Bonython became the sole proprietor and editor of The Advertiser positions which he held for a further 35 years During this time the weekly Chronicle and the evening Express newspapers were added to The Advertiser He retired from his newspapers in 1929 after 65 years service 3 On 12 January 1929 Adelaide paper The Mail announced that Langdon Bonython had sold The Advertiser for 1 250 000 to a group of Melbourne financiers but had retained a considerable interest 5 Political career EditThroughout his career Bonython had avoided local politics but after Federation in 1901 he was nominated to represent the single statewide Division of South Australia as a Protectionist in the Australian House of Representatives at the 1901 election He ultimately finished second in the poll and was one of seven members elected At that time South Australia was a single electorate with multiple members At the 1903 election Bonython was elected unopposed for the newly created Division of Barker In 1904 he was a member of the Select Committee on old age pensions as well as the Royal Commission on the same subject in 1905 1906 Bonython did not stand for reelection at the 1906 election and retired from politics 3 In 1908 he was appointed a Companion of the Order of St Michael and St George CMG In recognition of service to the Commonwealth of Australia 6 Public service and philanthropy EditIn 1883 Bonython was elected chairman of the Adelaide School Advisory Board In 1889 he became the president of the council for the South Australian School of Mines and Industries a position he held until his death He often assisted the school with his own money and provided the funds for the chemical and metallurgical laboratories there Bonython became chairman of the council of the agricultural college at Roseworthy in 1895 and he held this position until 1902 He was knighted in 1898 He was appointed one of fourteen trustees under the soldiers repatriation programme of 1916 and one of seven commissioners under the Australian Soldiers Repatriation Act 1917 3 Bonython joined the council of the University of Adelaide in 1916 and donated over 50 000 for the construction of a hall 7 and 20 000 to fund a Chair in law From 1916 to 1926 Bonython was also the deputy chairman of the South Australian advisory council of education He donated 100 000 towards the construction of Parliament House in Adelaide 8 9 In 1919 he was appointed Knight Commander of the Order of St Michael and St George KCMG In recognition of service to the Commonwealth 10 Bonython was vice president of the Royal Institution of Cornwall from 1900 until becoming president from 1932 33 succeeding Viscount Falmouth Despite living in Australia and being unable to visit Cornwall during his presidency he became one of the most active and hard working presidents that the institution had had 11 In 1931 he gave 2 000 to the Royal Cornwall Museum building fund and the Bonython gallery on the ground floor was named in his honour 12 His wife Lady Bonython was also active in altruistic causes notably the Kindergarten Union 13 and State Children s Council 14 in association with Catherine Helen Spence and C Emily Clark Bonython Hall Bonython Hall and Elder Conservatorium University of Adelaide Bonython Hall amp the Ligertwood Building Bonython Hall looking west Legacy EditBonython died in 1939 leaving an estate of over 4 000 000 which at the time was estimated to be one of the largest of any Australian Beneficiaries under his will included the Pirie Street Methodist Church where he always worshipped and of which he was a trustee St Peter s Cathedral to which he donated the cost of the canons and choir stalls in 1925 in memory of his wife who had died the previous year and the Salvation Army Children EditOn 24 December 1870 Bonython married Mary Louisa Fredericka Balthasar 9 February 1924 in Adelaide She is also referred to in various references as Marie Louise Friedrike Marie Louise Frederica and after Langdon s knighthood in 1898 Lady Bonython They had eight children of whom three daughters and three sons survived infancy Outliving his wife and four of his children he was survived by three daughters and one son John Lavington Bonython 2 3 His children included 1872 1873 Clive Hereward Bonython 15 1874 1956 Mary Elsie Bonython later Lady Parsons 16 17 2 children 1875 1960 Sir John Lavington Bonython who was a Lord Mayor of Adelaide 18 2 marriages 6 children 1877 1956 Edith Annie Bonython 1879 1915 Hugh Trevarnon Bonython died 10 March 1915 only three weeks after his wife 19 20 1881 1965 Ada Langdon Bonython Elsie 1874 John 1875 1960 Edith 1877 Hugh 1879 1915 Bridesmaids at the wedding of Elsie Bonython with Herbert Angas Parsons 18 April 1900 16 17 Left to right Elsie Parsons half sister of bridegroom Ada amp Edith Bonython sisters of the bride Winifred Bonython cousin of the bride Family name EditBonython was descended from an old Cornish family well known in Tudor and Stuart times 3 Inspired by his grandmother Bonython took an interest in his heritage He had a fine library of books on Cornish history and was patron of the South Australian Cornish Association and a member of the Royal Institution of Cornwall Although he acquired some family relics he deeply regretted that he could not buy back Bonython Manor the family seat in Cornwall 2 After purchasing a large mansion in North Adelaide in 1908 he renamed it Carclew after the area in Cornwall which his ancestors were from 21 Bonython told The Literary Digest It is a Cornish name and the accent is on the second syllable Bon y thon y as in spy The ancient family located at Bonython in the Lizard district at a very early period Existing deeds show that Stephen Bonython was in possession of the family lands in 1277 1 Honours EditBonython was knighted in 1898 In 1908 he was made a Companion of the Order of St Michael and St George CMG and in 1919 was promoted to Knight Commander of that Order KCMG In 1935 Bonython was made the first Australian bard of the Cornish Gorseth Kernow 22 The Division of Bonython an Australian Electoral Division in the northern suburbs of Adelaide was named after Bonython It was created in 1955 and abolished in 2004 3 See also EditMembers of the Australian House of Representatives 1901 1903 Members of the Australian House of Representatives 1903 1906 BonythonReferences and notes Edit a b Charles Earle Funk What s the Name Please Funk amp Wagnalls 1936 a b c d e W B Pitcher Bonython Sir John Langdon 1848 1939 Australian Dictionary of Biography Volume 7 Melbourne University Press 1979 pp 339 341 a b c d e f g h Serle Percival 1949 Bonython John Langdon Dictionary of Australian Biography Sydney Angus amp Robertson Retrieved 19 November 2008 Family Notices The Advertiser Adelaide National Library of Australia 11 February 1924 p 8 Retrieved 20 November 2012 Sir Langdon Bonython Sells The Advertiser for More Than 1 000 000 The Mail Trove trove nla gov au 12 January 1929 p 1 Retrieved 17 June 2012 Companion of the Order of St Michael and St George 9 November 1908 Citation In recognition of service to the Commonwealth of Australia Bonython Hall is the Great Hall of the University of Adelaide It is located on North Terrace Adelaide opposite Pulteney Street Parliament House is located on the corner of North Terrace and King William Street Adelaide The South Australian Story Advertiser Newspapers Ltd Griffin Press Adelaide South Australia 1958 KCMG 3 June 1919 Citation In recognition of service to the Commonwealth Journal of the Royal Institution of Cornwall Volume XXIV Parts 1 and 2 1933 34 Journal of the Royal Institution of Cornwall Volume XXIII Parts 3 and 4 1931 32 The Kindergarten Movement The Register Adelaide National Library of Australia 28 September 1905 p 4 Retrieved 20 November 2012 The State Children s Council The Advertiser Adelaide National Library of Australia 11 February 1913 p 12 Retrieved 20 November 2012 Family tree www mundia com au a b On 18 April 1900 in the Pirie Street Methodist Church Mary Elsie Bonython married Sir Herbert Angas Parsons 1872 1945 judge and politician Parsons spent many hours at the Adelaide Club preferring its convivial atmosphere to his wife s Methodism Survived by Lady Parsons and their two sons he died of cirrhosis of the liver Kwan Australian Dictionary of Biography vol 11 pp 148 150 a b Elizabeth Kwan Parsons Sir Herbert Angas 1872 1945 Australian Dictionary of Biography Volume 11 Melbourne University Press 1988 pp 148 150 W B Pitcher Bonython Sir John Lavington 1875 1960 Australian Dictionary of Biography Volume 7 Melbourne University Press 1979 pp 341 342 Funeral notices The Advertiser Adelaide 15 February 1915 pg 2 Death of Mr Hugh Bonython Barrier Miner Broken Hill NSW 10 March 1915 p 4 Carclew Website Dunkerley Family Web Pages The Bards of the Gorseth of Cornwall in AustraliaFurther reading EditMennell Philip 1892 Bonython John Langdon The Dictionary of Australasian Biography London Hutchinson amp Co via Wikisource Parliament of AustraliaNew division Member for South Australia1901 1903 Served alongside Batchelor Glynn Holder Kingston Poynton Solomon Division abolishedNew division Member for Barker1903 1906 Succeeded byJohn Livingston Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title John Langdon Bonython amp oldid 1145984288, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.