Benjamin Benny
Quick Facts
Biography
Benjamin Benny (21 October 1869 – 10 February 1935) was an Australian politician.
History
Born in Aldinga, South Australia, he was educated at state schools and then the University of Adelaide, becoming a solicitor. He was Vice-President of the South Australian Law Society, and served as mayor of Brighton Council. In 1919, he was elected to the Australian Senate as a Nationalist Senator for South Australia. He did not recontest in 1925 and although his term was due to finish on 30 June 1926 he resigned from parliament on 26 January 1926 due to ill health, and was replaced by Alexander McLachlan. In June 1926 Benny was convicted of fraudulent conversion of trust funds and sentenced to three years' jail, and declared insolvent. His wife Susan Grace Benny, who had never worked for a living, opened an employment agency and that way supported her family. She had in 1919 made history as the first woman to be elected to local government (the Seacliff ward of the Brighton Council) in Australia.
Benny died in 1935.