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Tragic cause of death of 6-year-old Airlie Montgomery revealed

<p>The tragic cause of death of six-year-old Airlie Montgomery, who went missing on Sunday afternoon, has been revealed, with authorities believing she likely died from "misadventure" after a desperate search ended in heartbreak.</p> <p>Airlie, who was autistic and non-verbal, was found in the Shoalhaven River at the base of a nature reserve near The Grotto, a popular cliff-top hiking trail on the New South Wales south coast in North Nowra. She had wandered away from her family home earlier that afternoon, prompting an urgent search effort that concluded when her body was discovered just after 6pm.</p> <p>NSW Police have stated that there are no suspicious circumstances surrounding Airlie’s death, and it is being treated as an unfortunate accident. Her tragic loss has left the local community devastated, with Shoalhaven Mayor Patricia White describing Nowra as a “town in mourning”.</p> <p>“Words cannot describe how horrible this is,” Mayor White told <em>The Daily Telegraph</em>. “It’s an absolute tragedy.”</p> <p>Neighbours and community members, many of whom participated in the frantic search for Airlie, are struggling to come to terms with the heartbreaking outcome. Cathy, a neighbour of the grieving family and the last person to see Airlie alive, recalled her as a joyful child who often played near her parents’ home. “She was a lovely little thing, non-verbal, but a happy girl always smiling and blowing kisses when she saw you,” Cathy shared with <em>Daily Mail Australia</em>.</p> <p>“Except yesterday she was crying, no one knows why… and then I didn’t see her. She must have gone over the edge above The Grotto.”</p> <p>Airlie’s father, Corey Montgomery, visited North Nowra Public School on Monday to collect his daughter’s belongings, leaving with a bunch of pink flowers in her memory. Her mother, Katie Amess, was too distraught to speak, receiving support from neighbours in the wake of the tragedy.</p> <p>The NSW Department of Education expressed its condolences in a statement, saying it was “deeply saddened” by Airlie’s death. “Our thoughts are with the family and all those affected,” the statement read. “We are providing support to students and staff and will continue to do so for as long as it is needed.”</p> <p>Authorities have confirmed that a report will be prepared for the coroner to determine the exact circumstances of Airlie’s death.</p> <p>As the community mourns, tributes continue to flow for the young girl whose life was tragically cut short.</p> <p><em>Images: NSW Police</em></p>

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Golf club owner Kerri-Anne Kennerley is suing over husband's fall is a long-time "friend"

<p>On the evening of March 6, 2016, Australian TV personality Kerri-Anne Kennerley’s life changed forever after her husband John fell from a verandah at the Bonville International Golf Resort which caused him to fracture his C3 and C4 vertebrae.</p> <p>He was paralysed from the neck down following the incident and sadly passed away three years later in March 2019 at the age of 73.</p> <p>Now, news has emerged that the golf course is being sued for negligence due to the accident, but the place is owned by a friend of Kerri-Anne’s as well as being a former Australian Olympian.</p> <p>Peter Montgomery, 69, represented Australia in four Olympic campaigns from 1972 to 1984 before serving as chairman of the Australian Olympic Committee Athletes’ Commission and vice-president of the AOC from 2001 to 2016, according to <a rel="noopener" href="https://www.dailytelegraph.com.au/news/nsw/olympian-peter-montgomery-owns-golf-course-kerrianne-kennerley-is-suing-over-husbands-fall/news-story/f828ef5503ab6baeaf7fb55fe7e5b2ce" target="_blank"><em>The Daily Telegraph</em>.</a></p> <p>The real estate portfolio owned by Montgomery includes the Bonville International Golf Resort, which is now being sued for unspecified damages, interests and costs filed by John Kennerley five months before his death.</p> <p>Montgomery’s company Ironhill Services has denied that the fall was its fault and that the accident occurred due to John not looking where he was walking.</p> <p>"The defendant says if the plaintiff suffered injury, loss and damage as alleged, such injury, loss and damage was caused or contributed to by the plaintiff's own negligence," read the court document in an NSW Supreme Court filing.</p> <p>Ironhill claim that John “failed to look where he was walking, stepping into a garden bed (and) failing to take care not to step onto an object, prize, on the floor”.</p> <p>However, John’s lawyers are arguing that a “reasonable person” from the golf resort’s perspective would have implemented measures to ensure patrons cannot get hurt at the golf course residence.</p> <p>Kerri-Anne spoke to <a rel="noopener" href="https://celebrity.nine.com.au/latest/golf-course-kerri-anne-kennerley-husband-died-being-sued-friend-former-olympian/9bb4599b-b4c2-460c-b4c9-ecc21bcdf0d5" target="_blank">News Corp</a> earlier this week about the incident.</p> <p>"John and I survived for three years but other people could not and that does actually make me angry,” she said.</p> <p>"Whatever the circumstances are, for an accident for any insurance company to drag something out for almost three-and-a-half years is despicable."</p> <p>The incident is said to have strained things between the former friends, but John Eales, an ambassador of Bonville Golf Resort, has said that Montgomery is “a man of the highest integrity”. </p>

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8 things you might not know about Anne of Green Gables

<p>L. M. Montgomery’s classic and beloved novel <em>Anne of Green Gables</em> is now more than a century old, yet it remains as popular today as ever before. The novel follows the story of newly-adopted orphan Anne as she settles into her new life at Green Gables on Canada’s Prince Edward Island. Here are 8 things you might not have known about this charming, iconic book.</p> <ol> <li><strong>Many famous authors are fans</strong> – Mark Twain called her “the dearest and most lovable child in fiction” since <em>Alice from Alice in Wonderland</em>, and Margaret Atwood penned <a href="https://www.theguardian.com/books/2008/mar/29/fiction.margaretatwood" target="_blank"><strong><span style="text-decoration: underline;">an essay</span></strong></a> in 2008 in praise of the beloved character.</li> <li><strong>Japan loves Anne</strong> – A missionary left a copy of the book with her Japanese friend in 1939 who then translated it into Japanese, titling it <em>Akage No Anne</em> (Anne of the Red Hair). She kept her translation hidden throughout the war, only releasing it in 1952. It was adapted into Japan’s school curriculum and quickly rocketed the novel to fame, partly due to Anne’s “exotic” red hair and her strong work ethic, a value highly praised in Japanese society.</li> <li><strong>Anne was a figurehead of Polish resistance</strong> – <em>Anne of Green Gables</em> was unofficially translated into Polish in 1912 under the pseudonym “Anne Montgomery”. Over the next four decades, during the hardest times in Poland’s history, the book remained a symbol of everything the Polish resistance was fighting for.</li> <li><strong>Anne is just as popular as ever</strong> –It may have been more than a century, but to this day more than 125,000 people still flock to setting of the novel, Cavendish (or Avonlea in the books), each year – around 20 per cent of which come from Japan. Montgomery’s books and Anne of Green Gables merchandise are still huge earners.</li> <li><strong>Anne is a reflection of L. M. Montgomery</strong> – Montgomery was raised by her strict grandparents who never made her feel like part of the family. She created Anne as an idealised version of herself, and this is particularly clear in quotes like, “Nobody ever did want me.”</li> <li><strong>Montgomery didn’t want any sequels</strong> – The author confessed that she never wanted to create a sequel, but was coerced into doing so by the publisher. “I’m awfully afraid if the thing takes, they’ll want me to write her through college,” she wrote to a friend in 1908. “The idea makes me sick.”</li> <li><strong>The girl who played “Anne Shirley” was named “Anne Shirley”</strong> – Seems too good to be true? Well, in a way, it is. In the 1934 film, the actress hired to play Anne, Dawn Paris, was forced to change her name to Anne Shirley to boost publicity for the film.</li> <li><strong>Not just books</strong> – The character of Anne has appeared in three films (one more to come in the next year or so), 17 television series and specials (with another to come next year) and six stage productions.</li> </ol> <p>What was your favourite book as a child? Tell us about it in the comments below.</p> <p><strong>Related links:</strong></p> <p><a href="/entertainment/books/2016/07/6-classic-books-that-were-banned/"><span style="text-decoration: underline;"><em><strong>6 classic books that were banned</strong></em></span></a></p> <p><a href="/entertainment/books/2016/06/why-you-should-read-every-day/"><strong><span style="text-decoration: underline;"><em>8 reasons why you should read every day</em></span></strong></a></p> <p><a href="/entertainment/books/2016/05/encouraging-children-to-read/"><em><span style="text-decoration: underline;"><strong>How to encourage your grandchildren to love reading</strong></span></em></a></p>

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