Timeline of Adelaide history

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This is a timeline of Adelaide history.

Contents

[edit] 1800s

[edit] 1830s

[edit] 1840s

[edit] 1850s

  • 1850: G. P. Harris and J. C. Lanyon, the forerunner to Harris Scarfe, opens on Hindley Street.
  • 1851: Responsible Government is introduced to South Australia, enfranchising wealthy male colonists.
  • 1852: The Corporation of Adelaide is reconstituted and James Hurtle Fisher again becomes mayor. The first overland transport of gold arrives in Adelaide.
  • 1856: The South Australian Institute is founded, from which will derive the State Library, State Museum and Art Galllery. The first telegraph line and steam railway between Adelaide and Port Adelaide are opened.
  • 1857: Adelaide Botanic Gardens opens at today's site in the Parklands off North Terrace.
  • 1858: The Melbourne-Adelaide telegraph line is opened.
  • 1859: A jetty more than 350 metres in length is constructed at Glenelg. It has a wooden lighthouse at its end, which will later be destroyed by fire.

[edit] 1860s

[edit] 1870s

[edit] 1880s

[edit] 1890s

  • 1890: Adelaide's first public statue, Venus, is unveiled on North Terrace.
  • 1893: The Australian Association for the Advancement of Science meets in Adelaide - credit is universally accorded to Colonel Light for his selection of the site and for the design of Adelaide.
  • 1894: The world's second Act granting women suffrage is passed in Parliament House on North Terrace.
  • 1896: Moving pictures are shown for first time in South Australia at Theatre Royal on Hindley Street. Happy Valley Reservoir is opened.
  • 1899: The South Australian contingent left Adelaide for the Second Boer War.

[edit] 1900s

[edit] Early 1900s

  • 1900: First electricity station opened in South Australia at Grenfell Street.
  • 1901: Adelaide became a state capital upon the establishment of the Commonwealth of Australia on 1 January. The Duke and Duchess of York visited.
  • 1904: Adelaide Fruit and Produce Exchange opened in the East End.
  • 1908: Outer Harbor opened. Adelaide High School established.
  • 1909: Electric tram services began.

[edit] 1910s

  • 1912: The Verco Building, an early 'skyscraper', is built on North Terrace.
  • 1913: The first metropolitan abattoir opens.
  • 1915: Liquor bars close at 6 p.m. following a referendum.
  • 1917: German private schools are closed. The first trains travel to Perth following completion of the East-West continental railway.
  • 1919: Adelaide is awarded official city status and Mayor Charles Richmond Glover becomes the first Lord Mayor.

[edit] 1920s

  • 1924: Radio broadcasting begins.
  • 1925: The Wayville Showgrounds open.
  • 1927: The North-South railway is extended. The Duke and Duchess of York visit.
  • 1929: The electric tram service to Glenelg commences.

[edit] 1930s

  • 1931: The Beef Riot: 17 people are injured when unemployed men clash with police while protesting the decision to remove beef from the dole ration.
  • 1932: Local government is overhauled when Government redifines boundaries and names and abolishes others.
  • 1933: First Adelaide Christmas Pageant is organised by John Martins.
  • 1935: Many German place names, which had been changed during the Great War, are restored.
  • 1936: Centennial Park Cemetery opens. Grand celebrations are held to celebrate South Australia's Centenary.
  • 1937: First trolley bus services commence. First permanent traffic signals are installed. Mount Bold Reservoir is opened. Outbreak of poliomyelitis.
  • 1938: South Australian Housing Trust completes first dwelling.
  • 1939: Worst heat wave is recorded with disastrous bushfires and highest Adelaide temperature of 47.6° Celsius. New Parliament House is opened on North Terrace by Governor-General Lord Gowrie. Carrick Hill, home to Edward (later Sir Edward) and Ursula Hayward, is completed.

[edit] 1940s

  • 1940: Birkenhead Bridge opened. Second industry rapidly expanded throughout Adelaide region and South Australia at large as the war-effort intensified.
  • 1942: Rationing of tea and clothing introduced. Racesport and bookmaking banned.
  • 1943: Rationing of butter introduced. Racing re-allowed.
  • 1944: Rationing of meat introduced.
  • 1945: Gas and electricity restrictions imposed.
  • 1947: Orchards ripped up following discovery of fruit fly in the metropolitan area.
  • 1948: Glenelg jetty destroyed and widespread damage caused by severe storms. Clothing and meat rationing abolished. Holden began production.

[edit] 1950s

  • 1950: Petrol, butter and tea rationing abolished.
  • 1954: Adelaide was hit by a severe earthquake on 1 March. Queen Elizabeth II made first sovereign visit to Adelaide. Mannum-Adelaide pipeline completed, pumping water from the River Murray to metropolitan reservoirs.
  • 1955: Adelaide Airport at West Beach opened. Elizabeth officially proclaimed.
  • 1958: Queen Elizabeth, the Queen Mother, visited Adelaide. First parking meters installed. South Para Reservoir opened and connected to Adelaide water supply. Last street tram removed, leaving only the Glenelg Tram.
  • 1959: Television broadcasting commenced, with NWS-9.

[edit] 1960s

  • 1960: First Adelaide Festival of Arts held.
  • 1962: Myponga Reservoir opened and connected to Happy Valley Reservoir.
  • 1963: Port Stanvac oil refinery began operations. Queen Elizabeth II visited.
  • 1964: Record wind gust of 148 kilometres per hour noted in Adelaide.
  • 1966: Flinders University opened at Bedford Park by the Queen Mother. Happy Valley Reservoir pipelines extended.
  • 1967: Wowserism goes into decline. Lotteries commenced in South Australia. Liquor trading hours extended. Torrens Island power station began operations.
  • 1969: Natural gas pumped from Moomba to Adelaide through 832-kilometre pipeline. Glenelg Jetty rebuilt.

[edit] 1970s

[edit] 1980s

[edit] 1990s

  • 1990: New $1.3 million organ installed at the Adelaide Town Hall. Adelaide recommended as a site for the Multi Fuction Polis.
  • 1991: The University of South Australia formed from a merger of several institutions. The $40 million Adelaide Entertainment Centre opened.
  • 1992: Final marker to the 1.5 killometre Heysen Walking Trail positioned.
  • 1993: Poker machines installed for first time in South Australia.
  • 1994: Sunday trading introduced to city centre. High-speed ferry service from Glenelg to Kangaroo Island began.
  • 1995: United Water is contracted to manage Adelaide's water and sewerage systems. The Local Government (Boundary Reform) Act, 1995 passed to encourage municipal amalgamations, resulting in an overhaul of local government.
  • 1996: The Grand Prix is lost to Melbourne.

[edit] 2000s

[edit] References

  • Gargett, Kathyrn; Marsden, Susan (1996). Adelaide: A Brief History. State History Centre, History Trust of South Australia in association with Adelaide City Council, 40-42. ISBN 0-7308-0116-0. 
  • Whitelock, Derek (2000). Adelaide: A Sense of Difference. Kew: Australian Scholarly Publishing, 393-405. ISBN 0-87560-657-1. 

[edit] See also