- Ranford, Western Australia
Infobox Australian Place | type = town
name = Ranford
caption =
lga = Shire of Boddington
est = 1936
postcode = 6390
pop =
dist1 = 127 | location1 = Perth
fedgov = Pearce
stategov = Wagin
state = wacoord|-32.793|116.493|type:city(50)_region:AU-WA_scale:50000|format=dms|display=titleRanford is a town located convert|3|km|mi|1 north-east of Boddington along the road from Pinjarra to Williams.
History
The town's name honours Henry Samuel Ranford, who had traversed the Hotham River and marked out the first holdings in the vicinity. In 1884, he became a government surveyor with the Lands Department and held various appointments in the
Swan River Colony , including Acting Surveyor General. In 1897, he moved to Katanning to become the Government Land Agent.In 1936, Industrial Extracts Ltd, which produced
tanning extracts from white gum timber, proposed a townsite based around their Tannin Extracts Factory. The townsite was gazetted and named Ranford in 1936. [LandInfo WA|c|R|2007-05-15] The Lieutenant Governor, Sir James Mitchell, opened the factory on 21 April 1937. For the next 20 years, the factory operated and brought many people to the district in the post-Depression era. However, by 1957, the plant had been closed down - twenty years at three shifts a day had worn out the factory and nearly exhausted the timber supply. Both mills were removed, and the offices, which are now a private dwelling, are the only original buildings remaining. [cite web|url=http://www.boddington.wa.gov.au/history/tanninfactory.html|title=History - Tannin Extracts Factory|author=Shire of Boddington|accessdate=2006-10-14]Although Ranford had a boarding house it relied on Boddington for its services, including shopping and education.
Present day
Ranford is largely a historic site, with a few remaining cottages and the factory area, now used as a grain storage silo. A large pool at the end of River Road offers canoeing and other water activities.
References
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.