.|leftBoyd's legacy includes the buildings of Boydtown near Eden on Twofold Bay in New South Wales. The township was established by Boyd to provide services for the extensive properties he owned locally. It was abandoned in the mid-1840s when Boyd's finances failed. The township has since been revived. Boyd's Tower is located at the entrance to the park near
Twofold Bay and was designed as a lighthouse and lookout. The tower was designed by
Oswald Brierly who had accompanied Boyd to Australia from England. It was built from sandstone quarried in Sydney. The structure was not commissioned as a lighthouse and the building work stopped in 1847 as funds became short. The tower was used as a whale sighting station. Whaling was already an established industry when Boyd arrived in the area and he brought with him his own boats and crew, The name was in use by 1845. Boyd's life was dramatised in the radio play
The First Gentleman (1945) by
Betty Roland, and in an episode of the television series
Jonah (1962).
George Blaikie wrote a fictionalised account of Boyd's life for his newspaper-syndicated series
Our Strange Past, titled
The Scot Who Would Be King (1953). An Australian animated children's television series first broadcast in 1999 entitled
The Adventures of Sam features a character named Captain Ben Boyd who engages in blackbirding, and is likely inspired from the historical figure. In 1971 the
Ben Boyd National Park was established, located near
Boydtown south of
Eden and named after Boyd. The park area covers approximately . In the wake of the
George Floyd protests around the world and
in Australia and the
Black Lives Matter movement gaining pace in May–June 2020, calls for the national park to be renamed were renewed.
Matt Kean, the
NSW Environment Minister, commented that "national parks are about connecting people, not dividing them", and promised to seek a briefing about renaming the park and to consult with local Aboriginal Elders and the community about a suitable new name. In September 2022 the park was renamed Beowa National Park.Ben Boyd Road in
Neutral Bay, New South Wales was named in his honour. Three small plaques describing his life and death are on display at the corner of Ben Boyd Road and Kurraba Road, Neutral Bay. The
North Sydney Council resolved to install the third plaque in 2021 to provide further context about Ben Boyd, his involvement in blackbirding and his reputation. Boyd house of Neutral Bay Primary School was likewise named after him; in 2021 after consulting with parents and students the house was renamed Waratah. To commemorate the 150th anniversary of Boyd's 1851 disappearance, a scale model of
Wanderer was created for the
Eden Killer Whale Museum. File:Ben Boyd plaque 1.jpg File:Ben Boyd plaque 2.jpg File:Ben Boyd plaque 3.jpg == References ==