Timeline of Adelaide history
This is a timeline of Adelaide history.
Prior to 1800s
- The Kaurna peoples' traditional lands stretched from Port Broughton to Cape Jervis, encompassing the Adelaide Plains.
1800s
1830s
- 1834: The South Australian Lodge of Friendship No. 613 was founded 22 October. The Lodge held its first meeting at 7 John Street, Adelphi, London [1]
1835 tent city set up as the capital of South Australia on the site now known Kingscote on Kangaroo island
- 1836: The site for Adelaide is chosen by Colonel William Light beside the River Torrens as Australia's first free colony. Governor John Hindmarsh on the HMS Buffalo lands at Holdfast Bay and proclaims the new colony of South Australia on 28 December.
- 1837: Colonel Light completes the survey of Adelaide and designs the city's grid layout. Single-acre allotments are made, first to holders of land orders and then by auction. The city's first hospital is opened on North Terrace.
- 1838: The South Australia Police, the first police force in Australia, is formed in Adelaide under Henry Inman. The first German immigrants arrive and settle in Adelaide and its surrounds.
- 1839: Colonel Light dies at Thebarton and is interred in Light Square - a memorial will be built over the grave. Port Road opens as the first road built in South Australia.
- Late 1830s: The first stone house in Adelaide is built by William Austin Barnes on the corner of Morphett and Grote streets
1840s
- 1840: The first portion of Government House is completed, becoming the first in Australia. The Corporation of Adelaide is founded as the first municipal authority in Australia, and James Hurtle Fisher is elected mayor. An agricultural show, which will become the Royal Adelaide Show, is first held in the yard of Fordham's Hotel in Grenfell Street.
- 1841: Construction begins of Adelaide Gaol, and the first section is completed. The Adelaide Hospital (later Royal) is opened.
- 1843: The first Legislative Council building is opened on North Terrace.
- 1844: The colonial Government takes control of the Corporation of Adelaide.
- 1847: St Peter's College is established. Pulteney Grammar School is established.
- 1848: The Savings Bank of South Australia begins trading from a room in Gawler Place.
- 1849: City Commissioners are nominated to manage Adelaide.
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.
- 1853: The first four local governing bodies in South Australia (apart from the Corporation of Adelaide) were established as the district councils of Mitcham, East Torrens, Onkaparinga and Hindmarsh, following the passing of the 1852 'Act to appoint District Councils'.[2] The Philosophical Society of Adelaide founded (later becoming the Royal Society of South Australia).
- 1855: Central Adelaide Mosque
- 1856: The South Australian Institute is founded, from which will derive the State Library, State Museum and Art Gallery. 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. Railway between Adelaide and Gawler was opened.
- 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.
- 1859: The Norwood Town Hall was built on the Parade at Norwood. It was the first Town Hall in South Australia.
1860s
- 1860: Thorndon Park Reservoir supplied water through new reticulation system.
- 1861: East Terrace markets opened.
- 1863: First gas supplied to city.
- 1865: Bank of Adelaide founded.
- 1866: The Italianate Adelaide Town Hall opened.
- 1867: Prince Alfred, Duke of Edinburgh, made first royal visit to Adelaide. Gas Street Lights first appear on Adelaide streets.
- 1869: The City Market (later Central) opened on Grote Street.
- 1869: The Brighton Town Hall was built on Brighton Road, Hove.
1870s
- 1870: Port Adelaide Football Club established.
- 1872: The General Post Office opened. Adelaide became first Australian capital linked to Imperial London with completion of the Overland Telegraph.
- 1873: First cricket match played at Adelaide Oval.
- 1874: The Adelaide Oval officially opened. The University of Adelaide founded.
- 1876: Adelaide Children's Hospital founded.
- 1877: The Adelaide Bridge across the Torrens completed.
- 1878: First horse-drawn trams in Australia commenced operations in the city. Port Adelaide railway extended to Semaphore.
- 1879: Foundation stone of the University of Adelaide laid.
1880s
- 1880: Telephone introduced.
- 1880: Royal Society of South Australia received royal patronage.
- 1881: The Art Gallery of South Australia opened by Prince Albert Victor. Ornamental Torrens Lake created following construction of weir.
- 1882: First water-borne sewerage service in Australia commenced. The City Baths opened on King William Street.
- 1883: Adelaide Zoological Gardens opened.
- 1883: Roseworthy Agricultural College established, the first agricultural college in Australia.
- 1884: Adelaide Trades and Labor Council inaugurated. Largs Bay Fort opened.
- 1884: Grand Lodge of South Australia Established. 16 April with 30 Lodges and 2064 members.[3]
- 1885: The Adelaide Arcade opened. Flinders Column erected at the Mount Lofty Summit.
- 1887: The Intercolonial Express starts running between Adelaide and Melbourne. Stock Exchange of Adelaide formed.
- 1889: School of Mines and Industries opened on North Terrace.
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.
1900s
Early 1900s
- 1900: First electricity station opened in South Australia at Grenfell Street. Electric street lights first appear.
- 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.
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 pm 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.
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.
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 John Martin's Christmas Pageant.
- 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 46.1° 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.
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.
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. The Queen Elizabeth Hospital, located in western suburb of Woodville South, opens.
- 1955: Adelaide Airport at West Beach opened. Satelitte city of Elizabeth officially proclaimed. Redhen railcars make their first appearance on Adelaide's suburban rail network.
- 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.
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. First stage of the South Eastern Freeway is opened.
- 1969: Natural gas pumped 832 kilometres (517 mi) from Moomba to Adelaide through the Moomba Adelaide Pipeline System. Glenelg Jetty rebuilt.
1970s
- 1970: South Australia becomes first state to reform abortion laws.
- 1971: Fluoridisation of water supply commenced. Age of majority reduced to 18 from 21.
- 1973: New hospital opened at Modbury. Dunstan Labor Government returned to Government and commenced extensive social reforms. Adelaide Festival Theatre opened.
- 1974: Prince Philip, The Duke of Edinburgh, visited Adelaide. First match of the new South Australian National Football League held at West Lakes. South Australian Railways split into two new entities, Australian National and State Transport Authority.
- 1975: The International Equestrian Exposition was held in Adelaide, attended by Princess Anne, The Princess Royal. The City of Adelaide Plan adopted by the City Council.
- 1976: 5AA began broadcasting. The Liberal Movement is founded in Adelaide. Rundle Mall, Australia's first pedestrian mall, opened between King William and Pulteney streets.
- 1977: Queen Elizabeth and Prince Philip visited Adelaide, with the Queen opening the Adelaide Festival Centre. Late night shopping commenced. First of 307 Volvo B59 buses enters service with State Transport Authority.
- 1978: Suburban rail network extended south to Noarlunga Centre while the Semaphore line is closed.
1980s
- 1980: Thirty-five homes destroyed in an Adelaide Hills bushfire. New 'Jumbo' railcars enter service on Adelaide's rail network. Mitsubishi Motors purchased Chrysler Australia. The Constitutional Museum opened.
- 1981: Prince Charles, The Prince of Wales, visited Adelaide.
- 1982: International air services to Adelaide begin, flown by Qantas and Singapore Airlines. Coldest minimum temperature recorded in June ( -0.4° Celsius)
- 1983: The Prince and Princess of Wales visited Adelaide. The Ash Wednesday fires razed the Adelaide Hills, claiming twenty-eight lives throughout the state. Wendy Chapman elected the first woman Lord Mayor of Adelaide.
- 1984: Population of Adelaide reaches 1 million people. Keswick Railway Terminal opened. The Indian Pacific, Trans Australian and The Ghan first run into Adelaide.
- 1985: The Adelaide Casino opened in the Adelaide railway station as part of the multimillion-dollar Adelaide Station and Environs Redevelopment. The first Australian Grand Prix held on the Adelaide Street Circuit. RMS Queen Elizabeth 2 visits Adelaide for the first time.
- 1986: Queen Elizabeth II and Prince Philip visited Adelaide. Pope John Paul II visited Adelaide and held Mass to a gathering of hundreds of thousands in the Adelaide Parklands. The South Australian Maritime Museum opened. South Australia celebrated its Jubilee, 150 years since settlement. O-Bahn Busway is opened.
- 1987: The Collins class submarine contract awarded to the Australian Submarine Corporation at Outer Harbor. The Adelaide Convention Centre opened on North Terrace. New 3000 class railcars enter service on Adelaide's rail network.
- 1988: The Prince and Princess of Wales visited Adelaide. Adelaide's tallest building State Bank Building is opened. Red light cameras introduced. East End Markets closed. Australia's first hospitality college opened in Adelaide. Port Dock Railway Museum at Port Adelaide opened.
- 1989: Bicentennial Conservatory opened in the Botanic Gardens. O-Bahn Busway extended to Modbury.
1990s
- 1990: New $1.3 million organ installed at the Adelaide Town Hall. Adelaide recommended as a site for the Multi-Function Polis. Country rail passenger services from Adelaide are axed by Australian National.
- 1991: The University of South Australia formed from a merger of several institutions. The $40 million Adelaide Entertainment Centre opened. Dame Roma Mitchell becomes Governor of South Australia, the first woman to hold the position in any Australian state.
- 1992: Final marker to the 1.5 kilometre Heysen Walking Trail positioned. Bid for the 1998 Commonwealth Games lost to Kuala Lumpur.
- 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. The last Australian Grand Prix held in Adelaide, future events to be held in Melbourne.
- 1997: The world's longest reversible one way freeway, the Southern Expressway is opened. Adelaide Crows football club win the AFL Grand Final. Port Adelaide Football Club joins the Australian Football League.
- 1998: Adelaide Crows football club win the AFL Grand Final for the second time.
- 1999: First Tour Down Under held.
2000s
2000s
- 2000: All government bus operations handed to private operators, buses and infrastructure still government owned. Heysen Tunnels in Adelaide Hills are opened.
- 2001: Construction of Alice Springs-Darwin track starts. The National Wine Centre of Australia opens in the East Parklands.
- 2002: Queen Elizabeth II and Prince Philip visited Adelaide. First low floor bus entered service on the O-Bahn Busway.
- 2003: The transcontinental railway line from Adelaide to Darwin is completed.
- 2004: Port Adelaide Football Club wins the AFL Grand Final. Trains travel from Adelaide to Darwin for the first time.
- 2005: Adelaide Airport's new T1 terminal is opened. Port River Expressway opened.
- 2007: World Police and Fire Games held in Adelaide. Adelaide-Glenelg tram service is extended to North Terrace (City West).
- 2008: Record breaking heat wave set in March. RMS Queen Elizabeth 2 visits Adelaide for the last time. Electrification of suburban rail network announced.
- 2009: Temperature reaches 45.7° Celsius[4] on January 30. Lance Armstrong Rides In the Tour Down Under
2010s
- 2010: MS Queen Victoria [5] visits Adelaide for the first time on 23 February. RMS Queen Mary 2 [6] visits Adelaide for the first time on 11 March. Adelaide-Glenelg tram service extended to Adelaide Entertainment Centre. Northern Expressway constructed. Stephen Yarwood elected new Lord Mayor of Adelaide. Almost 70mm of rain falls on Adelaide on 7 December,[7] breaking the daily record.
- 2011: RMS Queen Mary 2 [8] visits Adelaide on 20 February.
- 2012: US Secretary Of State Hillary Clinton visits Adelaide.[9] Construction begins on South Road Superway. Emirates begins direct flights to Dubai on 1 November.
- 2013: South Australian Health and Medical Research Institute (SAHMRI) opened 29 November.[10]
- 2014: Adelaide becomes the last mainland capital city to introduce electric trains with the A-City Class 4000s introduced on the Seaford line on 23 February[11]
See also
References
- ↑
- Glover, C. R. J. (Charles Richmond John); Archive CD Books Australia (2007), A history of first fifty years of Freemasonry in South Australia, 1834-1884, Archive CD Books Australia, ISBN 978-1-921461-29-3
- ↑ Marsden, Susan (2012). "LOCAL GOVERNMENT ASSOCIATION OF SOUTH AUSTRALIA: A HISTORY OF SOUTH AUSTRALIAN COUNCILS to 1936" (PDF). Retrieved 23 February 2016.
- ↑
- Hilbig, P. B. (Paul Berthold), 1903-; Mander-Jones, Evan, 1902-1975; Freemasons. Grand Lodge of South Australia (1976), A history of craft masonry in South Australia, 1884-1934, Grand Lodge of South Australia, ISBN 978-0-9596459-0-3
- ↑ "THE EXCEPTIONAL HEATWAVE OF JANUARY-FEBRUARY 2009 IN SOUTH-EASTERN AUSTRALIA". Australia Bureau of Statistics. 21 January 2013. Retrieved 22 December 2013.
- ↑ "Giant 'royal' cruise ships Queen Victoria, Queen Mary II visit Adelaide". AdelaideNow. 23 February 2010. Retrieved 27 February 2011.
- ↑ "Giant cruise ship the Queen Mary 2 heads for Adelaide". AdelaideNow. 9 March 2010. Retrieved 11 December 2010.
- ↑ "Storms wipe $300m in grain crops in South Australia". Herald Sun. 7 December 2010. Retrieved 11 December 2010.
- ↑ "Queen Mary 2 to steam into Outer Harbor today". AdelaideNow. 20 February 2011. Retrieved 27 February 2011.
- ↑ "US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton impressed with Adelaide's facilities". AdelaideNow. 15 November 2012. Retrieved 22 December 2013.
- ↑ "SA's $200m medical research institute officially opened by Prime Minister and Premier". ABC News 24. 29 November 2013. Retrieved 22 December 2013.
- ↑ The Seaford line is now electrified Department of Planning, Transport & Infrastructure
Further reading
- Gargett, Kathyrn; Marsden, Susan (1996). Adelaide: A Brief History. State History Centre, History Trust of South Australia in association with Adelaide City Council. pp. 40–42. ISBN 0-7308-0116-0.
- Whitelock, Derek (2000). Adelaide: A Sense of Difference. Kew: Australian Scholarly Publishing. pp. 393–405. ISBN 0-87560-657-1.
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