Donnybrook stone is used as dimension stone in the building industry and is both a commercial name as well as a stratigraphic name.
Many public and private buildings in Western Australia feature Donnybrook stone. These include the facade and portico to the Parliament House building in West Perth, the General Post Office in Perth,[3] the entry portal to the Fremantle Railway Station and the Police Courts building in Beaufort Street, Perth, the latter of which is constructed entirely of Donnybrook stone.
Gold was found in Donnybrook in the mid-1890s and was being mined there in late 1898.[4][5] There was controversy regarding its usage in the early twentieth century.[6]
There were up to eight quarries producing Donnybrook stone in and around the town in the 1930s.[2] Most of these have since closed, however, in 1981 the Goldfields Quarry on the Upper Capel Road re-opened and now produces material for floor tiles and facing slabs. Several of the closed quarries are on the Donnybrook-Balingup Road.
^ ab"Donnybrook Stone"(PDF). Edward de Courcy Clarke Earth Science Museum, University of Western Australia. Archived from the original(PDF) on 15 September 2009. Retrieved 30 August 2009.
^Geological Survey of Western Australia (1984), A Guide to the building and facing stones of Perth and Fremantle, Western Australia Dept. of Mines, Geological Survey, ISBN978-0-7244-8673-1
^"Our Illustrations". Western Mail. Vol. XXII, no. 1, 093. Western Australia. 8 December 1906. p. 23. Retrieved 25 December 2023 – via National Library of Australia.
Donnybrook Stone Company (1987), The Donnybrook Stone Company, The Donnybrook Stone Company, retrieved 12 December 2013
Fetherston, J.M. 2007 Dimension stone in Western Australia. Volume 1: Industry review and dimension stones of the southwest region. Geological Survey of Western Australia. Mineral Resources Bulletin 23 181p
Freeman, M.J., Donaldson, M.J. 2004 Major mineral deposits of southwestern Western Australia – a field guide Geological Survey of Western Australia. Record 2004/17 38p