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・ Susan Gillingham
・ Susan Gillis
・ Susan Gilmore
・ Susan Glaspell
・ Susan Glazebrook
・ Susan Glickman
・ Susan Glover
・ Susan Goatman
・ Susan Goforth
・ Susan Goldin-Meadow
・ Susan Golding
・ Susan Gordon
・ Susan Gottesman
・ Susan Gould
・ Susan Goyette
Susan Grace Benny
・ Susan Graham
・ Susan Grant
・ Susan Greenfield, Baroness Greenfield
・ Susan Grey
・ Susan Griffin
・ Susan Griffiths
・ Susan Gritton
・ Susan Gubar
・ Susan Guerin
・ Susan Gundunas
・ Susan Gyankorama De-Graft Johnson
・ Susan H Spence
・ Susan H. Black
・ Susan H. Rodger


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Susan Grace Benny : ウィキペディア英語版
Susan Grace Benny

Susan Grace Benny, née Anderson, (1872 – 5 November 1944) of Seacliff, South Australia was Australia's first woman politician and the first Australian woman elected to local government. She was elected to the Brighton Council (now City of Holdfast Bay) in 1919.
==Early life==
Susan "Grace" Anderson was born in the ''Crown Inn Hotel'', Currie Street, Adelaide on 8 October 1872 to Peter Anderson and Agnes Ellen Harriot.
Benny grew up on the family's sheep station "Springfield", located near Stansbury, Yorke Peninsula. She married her cousin, solicitor Benjamin Benny (21 October 1869 – 10 February 1935), eldest son of the Reverend George Benny, on 16 July 1896 and moved to Adelaide where he worked. The couple moved to Seacliff in Adelaide's south and raised three daughters and two sons.
Benny was active in a range of community and political organisations and during the First World War was the Honorary Secretary of the Seacliff Cheer-up Society. She was also a member of the local progress association and spinning and croquet clubs.

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