Alan Bond's former wife Eileen Bond dies of heart complications
The former wife of West Australian entrepreneur Alan Bond, one of the nation's most loved socialites, is said to have passed away after suffering a stroke, her second, in a short period.
Bond had been living between homes in Perth and Sydney at the time but died in Perth on Wednesday night.
Her age was a national secret but press cuttings suggest she was 85 or 86.
Dubbed 'Red' for her famous flame hair, Bond was born Eileen Teresa Hughes in Fremantle, WA, the daughter of a wealthy Irish Catholic family who were the pillars of the church in Fremantle.
Her father William was a Perth wool buyer who played football for South Fremantle and became Commissioner of the Fremantle Port Authority.
As a teenager she would be swept off her feet by a smitten Alan Bond who she met at a dancing class in 1954 at age 16.
By 17 she was pregnant and married.
Bond would convert from Church of England to Catholicism for the ceremony.
'My family insisted, but Alan didn't mind, he was very happy to convert …' she would say years later.
She and Bond would welcome four children during their marriage: John, Craig, Susanne and Jody.
Outside of her family – and her Catholic faith – the famously high-spirited 'Red' loved to travel, party and decorate houses.
She once said she could never did anything in moderation.
Socialites and social scribes from the nation's west to east coasts loved her for it.
'You have to have either self control or moderation and I certainly haven't the latter,' she once said.
'I can never do anything in moderation. I'll eat and eat then suddenly stop and have next to nothing for eight days in a row.'
It was a trait she shared with her husband, a sign-writer who would go on to prosper in property development, later founding the company Bond Corp which also had interests in brewing (Toohey's), and media (Nine), before his name would be writ large in Australian corporate criminal history after he went bankrupt in 1992 with debts totalling $1.8 billion.
He was later sentenced to jail for seven years.
In the decades prior, Bond had become one of the nation's most famous businessmen whose backing of Australia II to victory in the 1983 America's Cup made him a household name.
Through it all his faithful wife had been at his side.
She was devastated when the couple's marriage ended as rumours circulated that her much-travelled husband was having an affair with the woman who would become his second wife, Diana Bliss.

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