Warrawong Sanctuary


Warrawong Wildlife Sanctuary is a wildlife reserve in the Australian state of South Australia located in the suburb of Mylor about south-east of the centre of the state capital of Adelaide. It was established by Dr John Wamsley to conserve endangered Australian wildlife. He purchased the first, a degraded dairy farm, in 1969, with later added.
Wamsley eradicated all feral plants and animals from the sanctuary and erected a surrounding fence to preserve the sanctuary's feral free state. Warrawong was opened to the general public in 1985 with a view to generating enough money to set up more sanctuaries. A company, Earth Sanctuaries Limited, was started in 1988 with a forty-year strategy to create a network of eighty sanctuaries, spanning all of Australia's habitats. The company was listed on the Australian Stock Exchange on 8 April 2000. The float was under-subscribed leaving the company A$10 million short of funds and unable to complete its network of sanctuaries in the eastern states of Australia. During the mid-2000s Earth Sanctuaries Limited was delisted from the Australian stock exchange. Due to the company's poor commercial performance, Warrawong was closed for five months of 2005. In 2006 the sanctuary was bought by Anthony Miller, owner of the Gumeracha Toy Factory and Big Rocking Horse, with a commitment to continue operations.
In May 2010 Warrawong Wildlife Sanctuary was bought by Zoos South Australia and the Ngarrindjeri People. In February 2013 Zoos South Australia announced that they had withdrawn their support for the Sanctuary due to it being an unsustainable return on their investment.
In 2017, the abandoned Sanctuary was purchased by Narelle MacPherson and David Cobbold, a couple from Western Australia's Peel Zoo.