Astone Lane
31°56′34″S 115°51′53″E / 31.9427°S 115.8647°E Astone Lane was originally a right of way running between Brisbane Street and Baker Avenue in Perth, Western Australia. A proposal to name the right of way as Astone Lane was considered at the Town of Vincent council meeting in September 2006. The naming of the lane was in honour of Antonino Astone, a migrant from Raccuia, Sicily, who established a bootmaker business nearby on the corner of Brisbane and William Streets. Astone was a well-known identity in the community, and a pioneer in assisting migrants who arrived in Fremantle after World War II, many of them settling into the area.[1]
Antonino Astone
[edit]Antonino Astone was born in Raccuia, Sicily on 9 June 1907 and died on 25 December 1995; he arrived in Fremantle in 1949.[2] Astone became a naturalised Australian citizen in a ceremony on 29 January 1964.[3]
During that time, being more significant, Mr Astone held the first license to transport passengers to and from the Fremantle Port. Mr Astone transported hundreds of migrants and brought them to settle within the Northbridge area. During the 1950s, Mr Astone made a significant contribution to the local community through his work as the owner of a taxi fleet, fruit and vegetable vendor, and a crockery business where he established a vast network of Northbridge restaurant clients. His crockery business continued for 26 years. My father was a well known figure within the Northbridge community, who resided at 135 Bulwer Street for over 40 years. The cohort of students from that time (Highgate Primary School) remember Mr Astone as the "Man with the red truck".[1]
References
[edit]- ^ a b "ORDINARY MEETING OF COUNCIL - 26 SEPTEMBER 2006" (PDF). City of Vincent. Retrieved 16 May 2018.
- ^ "Signorino ASTONE [Application for admission of Antonino ASTONE Australia ]". National Archives of Australia. Australian Government. Retrieved 3 June 2018.
- ^ "CERTIFICATES OF NATURALIZATION". Commonwealth of Australia Gazette. No. 25. Australia. 19 March 1964. p. 1086. Retrieved 3 June 2018 – via National Library of Australia.