Rosny was named for a family name of W.A. Bethune, the holder of the original grant on the point, and he named it after his ancestor, the Duc de Maximilien de Bethune Sully, of
Rosny-sur-Seine near Mantes in
France.
Rosny Children's Choir Rosny was the founding home of the
Australian Rosny Children's Choir. The choir was established in 1967 by local music teacher Jennifer Filby, who initially had her students perform carols at an end-of-year recital. Following this success, she was invited to provide a children's chorus for a production of
The King and I at the
Theatre Royal in Hobart, leading to the formal creation of the choir. The choir quickly gained national and international recognition. In 1971, it became the first choir from the
Southern Hemisphere to perform at the prestigious
Llangollen International Musical Eisteddfod in Wales. As part of the Australian government's inaugural cultural exchange with the
People’s Republic of China, the choir made history in 1975 as the first Australian group to perform in China, with concerts in
Beijing,
Guangzhou,
Shanghai, and a stopover in
British Hong Kong. In addition to its international tours to Japan (1987) and across Australia, the choir performed widely within Tasmania. It frequently collaborated with the
Tasmanian Symphony Orchestra and commissioned significant Australian works, including
There is an Island (1977) by composer
Don Kay with libretto by
Clive Sansom. ==Today==