Timeline of South Australian history

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is a Timeline of South Australian history.

Pre 1836[]

1800s[]

1830s[]

Adelaide in 1839, looking south-east from North Terrace

1840s[]

1850s[]

  • 1850: The forerunner to Harris Scarfe, G. P. Harris and J. C. Lanyon, opened on Hindley Street.
  • 1852: The Corporation of Adelaide is reconstituted. First transport of gold overland arrived in Adelaide.
  • 1854: The township of Port Augusta at the head of Spencer Gulf is surveyed.
  • 1854: The township of Gambierton, later Mount Gambier is founded in the South East.
  • 1855: James Macgeorge lays telegraph line between Adelaide and Port Adelaide.
  • 1856: The South Australian Institute, from which the State Library, State Museum and Art Gallery derived, is founded.
  • 1856: Government telegraph line and steam railway between Adelaide and Port Adelaide opened.
  • 1856: South Australia becomes one of the first places in the world to enact the Secret Ballot.
  • 1857: Adelaide Botanic Gardens opened at today's site in the Parklands at the corner of North and East Terraces.
  • 1858: Melbourne-Adelaide telegraph line opened.
  • 1858: The first edition of The Advertiser newspaper is published.
  • 1859: A jetty of more than 350 metres in length is constructed at Glenelg.
  • 1859: Shipwreck of SS Admella off Carpenter Rocks in the South East. 89 dead. Worst maritime disaster to this day.

1860s[]

1870s[]

1880s[]

1890s[]

1892: First public statue, Venus (Venere Di Canova), unveiled on North Terrace.

1900s[]

1900s[]

1910s[]

  • 1910: Federal Referendum on Surplus Revenue: South Australia votes No (50.94%).
  • 1911: Federal Referendum on Trade and Commerce: South Australia votes No (61.93%).
  • 1912: The Verco Building, an early 'skyscraper', is built on North Terrace.
  • 1913: Metropolitan abattoirs open.
  • 1913: Federal Referendum on Trade and Commerce: South Australia votes Yes (51.32%).
  • 1914: South Australian troops join their Australian comrades in Europe to fight in the Great War.
  • 1914: Torrens Island Internment Camp opens.
  • 1915: Liquor bars close at 6 pm following referendum, creating the six o'clock swill.
  • 1915: Torrens Island Internment Camp closes.
  • 1915: Four women Justices of the Peace appointed, the first in Australia.
  • 1915: Cheer-up Hut opens 4 November, first anniversary of Cheer-Up Society.
  • 1917: German private schools close because of the Great War.
  • 1917: First trains to Perth following completion of east–west continental railway.
  • 1918: Railway line from Hallett Cove to Willunga opens.
  • 1918: Railway branchline between Balhannah and Mount Pleasant opens.
  • 1919: Adelaide awarded official city status and Mayor became Lord Mayor.
  • 1919: Railway branchline between Monarto South and Sedan opens.

1920s[]

  • 1921: Politician Percy Brookfield is shot at the Riverton railway station and later dies.
  • 1924: 5CL, Adelaide's first AM broadcaster "on the air".
  • 1924: James Stobie invents the Stobie pole, now a South Australian icon.
  • 1924: Township of Murray Bridge is founded.
  • 1925: Wayville Showgrounds open.
  • 1927: North–south railway extended.
  • 1927: Duke and Duchess of York visit.
  • 1928: Federal Referendum - South Australia Votes:
    • Yes (62.68%) on State Debt
  • 1929: Electric service to Glenelg commences.

1930s[]

1940s[]

1950s[]

1960s[]

  • 1960: Adelaide Festival of Arts held for the first time.
  • 1962: State Election: The Liberal Party, led by Thomas Playford, holds onto government.
  • 1963: Port Stanvac oil refinery begins operations.
  • 1963: Queen Elizabeth II visits Adelaide.
  • 1963: Gas discovered in the Cooper Basin.
  • 1964: Record wind gust of 148 kilometres per hour recorded in Adelaide.
  • 1965: State Election: The Labor Party, led by Frank Walsh, wins government for the first time in 33 years.
  • 1965: Television station SAS-10 (Now SAS-7) begins broadcasting.
  • 1966: Flinders University opens at Bedford Park.
  • 1966: Beaumont children go missing at Glenelg beach.
  • 1967: Lotteries commence in South Australia.
  • 1967: Liquor trading hours extended.
  • 1967: Torrens Island Power Station begins operations.
  • 1967: Premier Frank Walsh retires and is replaced by Don Dunstan.
  • 1967: Federal Referendum - South Australia Votes:
    • Yes (86.26%) on Aboriginals
    • No (66.09%) on Parliament
  • 1968: State Election: The Liberal Party, led by Steele Hall, wins government.

1970s[]

  • 1970: State Election: The Labor Party, led by Don Dunstan, wins government. South Australia becomes first state to reform abortion laws.
  • 1971: Fluoridation of water supply commences.
  • 1973: State Election: The Labor Party, led by Don Dunstan, holds onto government.
  • 1973: New hospital opens at Modbury.
  • 1973: Two children disappear from Adelaide Oval and are never seen again.
  • 1973: Federal Referendum - South Australia Votes:
    • No (58.84%) on Commodity Prices
    • No (71.75%) on Incomes
  • 1974: Prince Philip, The Duke of Edinburgh, visits Adelaide.
  • 1974: Federal Referendum - South Australia Votes:
    • No (52.86%) on Simultaneous Elections
    • No (55.74%) on Mode of Altering the Constitution
    • No (55.89%) on Democratic Elections
    • No (57.48%) on Local Government Bodies
  • 1975: State Election: The Labor Party, led by Don Dunstan, holds onto government.
  • 1975: The is held in Adelaide and attended by Princess Anne.
  • 1975: The Adelaide City Council adopts the City of Adelaide Plan.
  • 1976: Rundle Mall, Australia's first pedestrian mall, opens between King William and Pulteney streets.
  • 1977: Queen Elizabeth and Prince Philip visit Adelaide to open the Adelaide Festival Centre.
  • 1977: Late night shopping commences.
  • 1977: Federal Referendum - South Australia Votes:
    • Yes (65.99%) on Simultaneous Elections
    • Yes (76.59%) on Senate Vacancies
    • Yes (83.29%) on Referendums
    • Yes (85.57%) on Retirement of Judges
  • 1978: The remains of seven women are found in bushland near Truro.
  • 1979: Don Dunstan resigns as Premier and is replaced by Des Corcoran.
  • 1979: State Election: The Liberal Party, led by David Tonkin, wins government.

1980s[]

1986: South Australia celebrates its 150th Anniversary.
  • 1980: Thirty-five homes destroyed in an Adelaide Hills bushfire.
  • 1981: Prince Charles, The Prince of Wales, visits Adelaide.
  • 1982: State Election: The Labor Party, led by John Bannon, wins government.
  • 1982: International air services begin at Adelaide Airport.
  • 1983: The Ash Wednesday fires claim 28 lives throughout the state.
  • 1983: The Prince and Princess of Wales visit Adelaide.
  • 1983: Wendy Chapman elected the first woman Lord Mayor of Adelaide.
  • 1984: South Australia officially adopts the current Coat of Arms.
  • 1984: Keswick Railway Terminal opens.
  • 1984: Federal Referendum - South Australia votes:
    • No (50.02%) on Terms of Senators
    • No (54.06%) on Interchange of Powers
  • 1985: State Election: The Labor Party, led by John Bannon, holds onto government.
  • 1985: The Adelaide Casino opens in the Adelaide railway station as part of the multimillion-dollar Adelaide Station and Environs Redevelopment (ASER).
  • 1985: The first Australian Grand Prix held on the Adelaide Street Circuit.
  • 1986: Queen Elizabeth II and Prince Philip visit Adelaide.
  • 1986: Pope John Paul II visits Adelaide and holds Mass to a gathering of hundreds of thousands in the East Parklands.
  • 1986: The South Australian Maritime Museum opens.
  • 1986: South Australia celebrates its sesqui-centenary as "Jubilee 150".
  • 1987: The Collins class submarine contract awarded to the Australian Submarine Corporation at Outer Harbor.
  • 1987: The Adelaide Convention Centre opens on North Terrace.
  • 1988: The Prince and Princess of Wales visit Adelaide.
  • 1988: Federal Referendum - South Australia votes:
    • No (73.24%) on Parliamentary Terms
    • Yes (69.39%) on Fair Elections
    • No (70.15%) on Local Government
    • Yes (73.99%) on Rights and Freedoms.
  • 1989: State Election: The Labor Party, led by John Bannon, holds onto government.
  • 1989: The Bicentennial Conservatory, referred to as "The Crystal Pasty", opens at the Botanic Gardens.

1990s[]

2000s[]

2000s[]

2000: Adelaide-Crafers Highway opened.
  • 2000: Adelaide-Crafers Highway opened.
  • 2001: John Olsen resigns as Premier and is replaced by Rob Kerin.
  • 2001: Construction of Alice Springs-Darwin track starts.
  • 2001: The National Wine Centre of Australia opens in the north-east of the Adelaide Parklands.
  • 2002: State Election: The Labor Party, led by Mike Rann, narrowly wins government.
  • 2003: The transcontinental railway line from Adelaide to Darwin is completed.
  • 2003: Port Stanvac Oil Refinery closed.
  • 2004: Port Adelaide Football Club wins its first AFL premiership.
  • 2004: First train travels on the completed Adelaide-Darwin railway.
  • 2005: Nine people die in bushfires on the Eyre Peninsula.
  • 2006: State Election: The Labor Party, led by Mike Rann, retains government in a landslide.
  • 2009: Wind gusts of 152 km/h recorded at Adelaide Airport.

2010s[]

See also[]

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