Gawler, South Australia

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Gawler
South Australia
Gawler is located in Greater Adelaide
Gawler
Gawler
Coordinates Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
Population 23,957 (2011 Census)[1]
Established 1836
Postcode(s) 5118
Elevation 75 m (246 ft)
Location 40 km (25 mi) north of Adelaide
LGA(s) Town of Gawler
State electorate(s) Light
Federal Division(s) Wakefield
Mean max temp Mean min temp Annual rainfall
22.4 °C
72 °F
10.3 °C
51 °F
440.3 mm
17.3 in
Localities around Gawler:
Willaston
Reid Gawler Gawler East
Gawler West Gawler South

Gawler is the first country town in the state of South Australia, and is named after the second Governor (British Vice-Regal representative) of the colony of South Australia, George Gawler.[2] It is 44 km (27 mi) north of the centre of the state capital, Adelaide, and is close to the major wine producing district of the Barossa Valley. Topographically, Gawler lies at the confluence of two tributaries of the Gawler River, the North and South Para rivers, where they emerge from a range of low hills.

History

Gawler in around 1869

A British colony, South Australia was established as a commercial venture by the South Australia Company through the sale of land to free settlers at £1 per acre (£2/9/5d per hectare). Gawler was established through a 4,000-acre (1,600 ha) "special survey" applied for by Henry Dundas Murray and John Reid and a syndicate of ten other colonists.

The town plan was devised by the colonial surveyor William Light, and was the only town planned by him other than Adelaide. William Jacob used Light's plans and laid out the town.

Adelaide became a model of foresight with wide streets and ample parklands. After Light's death, it also became a model for numerous other planned towns in South Australia (many of which were never built). As the only other town planned by Light, Gawler is dissimilar to Adelaide's one square mile (2.6 km²) grid; the heart of Gawler is triangular rather than square, a form dictated by the topographical features. The parkland along the riverbanks and a Victorian preference for public squares are present, but Light was aware that he was planning a village, not a metropolis.

Gawler prospered early with the discovery of copper nearby at Kapunda and Burra, which resulted in Gawler becoming a resting stop to and from Adelaide. Later, it developed industries including flour milling by Hilfers & Co, and the engineering works of James Martin & Co manufactured agricultural machinery, mining and ore-processing machinery and smelters for the mines of Broken Hill and the Western Australian goldfields, and steam locomotives and rolling stock. May Brothers & Co. also manufactured mining and agricultural machinery. [3]

With prosperity came a modest cultural flowering, ("The colonial Athens" was its nickname in the late 19th and early 20th centuries[4]), the high point of which was the holding of a competition to compose an anthem for Australia in 1859, four decades before nationhood. The result was the Song Of Australia, written by Caroline Carleton to music by Carl Linger. This became, in the next century, a candidate in a national referendum to choose a new National Anthem for Australia to replace God Save the Queen.

Gawler had a horse street tram service from 1879 to 1931.[5]

Culture

Gawler is a commercial centre for the Mid-North districts of South Australia and, increasingly, a dormitory town for Adelaide. The hit Australian television program about the McLeod sisters, McLeod's Daughters, was shot at "Kingsford", a working property outside Gawler's northeastern fringe.

Famous People

See also

References

  1. http://www.censusdata.abs.gov.au/census_services/getproduct/census/2011/quickstat/UCL412001?opendocument&navpos=220
  2. History of Gawler 'Shawfactors'
  3. Australasian Institute of Mining Engineers visit to Gawler South Australian Chronicle, 15 April 1893. Pp 7-8. Accessed 17 April 2015.
  4. New Council Chambers, Gawler South Australian Register 18 April 1878 p.6 accessed 10 March 2011
  5. Australian Railway Historical Society Bulletin, August/September 1950 pp55-56/75-76

External links