Amelia Bunbury

[4] Amelia eventually inherited the property and at her death in 1956, "the house was still furnished with much of the period furniture that the Pries family had brought out from England.

"[4] In 1897, Amelia married Mervyn Corry Richardson-Bunbury (1858-1910),[5] and they moved to remote Williambury station, near Minilya in north-western Western Australia.

[6] After her move to Williambury, Amelia started to publish photographs in the Western Mail and other publications under the pseudonym Coyarre, including images of Indigenous people.

[17] Amelia's photography of Indigenous people has been criticised as being posed in the style "suggested by anthropological photographers of the day,"[7] that was created under "the instructions of the white woman in authority.

"[6] In the first decade of the 1900s, Amelia studied woodcarving at the Perth Technical School, who decorated her home with her hand-carved furniture.