LiberalAdelaide City

Arthur Rymill as lord mayor of 1950s Adelaide city, with town clerk W.C.D. Veale, makes big improvements to parks

Arthur Rymill as lord mayor of 1950s Adelaide city, with town clerk W.C.D. Veale, makes big improvements to parks
Arthur Rymill, as Adelaide lord mayor during the 1950s, worked with long-time town clerk W.C.D. Veale to significantly improve the city parklands including what became the eastern Rymill Park. 
Images courtesy State Library of South Australia and City of Adelaide 

Arthur Campbell Rymill asserted his conservative outlook as businessman, solicitor, Adelaide lord mayor and Legislative Council member in 20th Century South Australia.

Born in Adelaide in 1907 to businessman Arthur Graham Rymill and wife Agnes Lucy, and grandson of South Australian family patriarch Henry Rymill, Arthur Campbell Rymill was educated at Queen’s School, North Adelaide; St Peter’s College and Adelaide University. He was admitted to the Bar in 1930.

First elected to Adelaide city council in 1933, Rymill represented Young Ward until 1937 and then Robe Ward (1938-39). In 1940 he enlisted as a private in the 2/14th Field Regiment, 2nd AIF, and was commissioned as lieutenant in 1941. Injured in an army vehicle accident (in Sydney according to one report), Rymill was elected out of the service and returned to his legal practice, and later serving as a part-time Red Cross representative and with the naval auxiliary patrol off Adelaide’s Outer Harbor.

Rymill represented Adelaide city’s MacDonnell Ward 1945 to 1950 when he became, after John Lavington Bonython, youngest elected lord mayor of Adelaide and served four terms. Assisted by long-time (1947–1965) Adelaide town clerk (and close friend), W.C.D. Veale, Rymill commissioned significant improvements to the city’s parklands. He was, for a time, chairman of the city council's parliamentary and bylaws committee.

Rymill was a lifelong supporter of the conservative wing of South Australia's Liberal and Country League. He supported Robert Menzies’ Australian government 1951 referendum to ban the Communist Party of Australia. Knighted in 1854, Rymill was elected unopposed in 1956 (until 1975) to the Legislative Council as a member for Central District No.2, chairing the council's  finance committee and became president. He supported limiting Legislative Council voters to property owners (and citizens with overseas war service). Such views brought him in conflict with to the party’s little-l liberal politicians such as Robin Millhouse and Steele Hall, emerging in the 1960s.

Rymill was chairman of Advertiser Newspapers Ltd 1953-79, and  director of Public Companies of South Australia, Bennett and Fisher and South Australian Brewing Company. And a member of the AMP Society’s principlal board (1964-80). He held many public offices included first president of the National Trust in South Australia; vice president, Australian Elizabethan Theatre Trust 1954–63; and member of foundation board of Adelaide Festival of Arts and Adelaide Children’s Hospital board. He was a member of the Adelaide Club from 1929 (president 1979–1980) and a member of the Melbourne Club from 1956.

Rymill represented South Australia in interstate polo matches 1933–1951, including the Gold Cup tournament in Sydney in 1938. As a speedboat driver, he won the 1933 Australasian hydroplane championship in his father's hydroplane Tortoise II against H. McEvoy's Cettein. The next year it sank in Outer Harbor after flipping at 70 miles an hour.

Whitehead, built for his father on Brougham Place, North Adelaide, in 1907, became home for Rymill and his wife Margaret Earle Cudmore when they married in 1934. Later state heritage listed, Whitehead became the principal’s resident for Adelaide University's Lincoln College.

Other related ADELAIDE AZ articles

Horse transport, dominating King William Street, Adelaide city, in about 1884 (above) was dumping 70 tonnes of excrement and urine of the city's streets every day.
Health >
Infant deaths peak at 200 per 1000 babies in 1880s Adelaide, making 'city of stenches' worse than London's worst
READ MORE+
The Malcolm Reid furniture store in Rundle Street east, Adelaide city, in 1936 (at left), with the 1880s building (including the Austral Hotel) complex South Australian state heritage listed and still carring the store's branding in the 20th Century. At right: The Malcolm Reid store in King William Street, Adelaide city, still trading at Reids furniture and carpets in 1960.
Adelaide City >
Malcolm Reid store moves into 1880s Rundle Street east, Adelaide, complex built for South Australian Company
READ MORE+
Caleb Peacock (left) was the first South Australian-born mayor of Adelaide 1875-75 and involved with his father William and brother Joseph in the family tannery and woolbroking business, starting in Grenfell Street, Adelaide city, in 1839. At right: Peaock and Son employees in 1871.
Industry >
Caleb Peacock, from family in tannery and other businesses, first South Australian-born mayor of Adelaide, 1875
READ MORE+
Twin cottages in a crowded tiny cul-de-sac off Gray Street in the south western corner of Adelaide city, in 1949. Image courtesy State Library of South Australia
Class >
Rows of dark tiny cottages characteristic of Adelaide city's crowded and poor west end from earliest days
READ MORE+
Senator Nancy Buttfield followed her father Ted Holden in believing in the importance of public service. Image courtesy of the State Library of South Australia
Liberal >
Nancy Buttfield South Australia's first female parliamentarian as independent Liberal senator from 1955-74
READ MORE+
The 2021 bikeway expansion aimed to make cycling access to Adelaide city easier and safer.
Cycling >
Council, government fund $12 million project in 2021 on bikeways to make access to Adelaide city easier and safer
READ MORE+

 

 
©2025 Adelaide AZ | Privacy | Terms & Disclaimer | PWA 1.1.58