City of Port Pirie

The City of Port Pirie was a local government area in South Australia from 1876 to 1997, centred on the city of Port Pirie.

City of Port Pirie
Seat of the former City of Port Pirie in South Australia

It was proclaimed on 28 September 1876 as the Corporate Town of Port Pirie, nearly four years after the town was surveyed. It consisted of two wards (North and South) at its creation, each electing two councillors.[1][2] It subsequently expanded to four wards: North, South, West and Solomontown.[3] It occupied a room in the Institute building in its early decades as a combined office and council chamber.[4]

The council purchased the buildings of the Institute Committee in 1932, and after substantial renovations, reopened the former institute as the new Port Pirie Town Hall and Municipal Offices. A new building next door was built for the Institute Library next door. Both developments had been funded from the profits of the council's electric works.[1][5] It also owned a camping ground at Mount Ferguson, following the gift of a former Broken Hill Associated Smelters Camp with funding to resite it to the new location, although this had been leased out by the 1930s.[4] It became the City of Port Pirie with the proclamation of city status on 26 February 1953, becoming the first provincial city in South Australia.[6]

In July 1996, it absorbed the District Council of Pirie, which had surrounded but been separate from the City. The merged municipality subsequently amalgamated with the District Council of Crystal Brook-Redhill to form the Port Pirie Regional Council in March 1997.[7]

Mayors of Port Pirie

  • Henry Warren (1876–1879) [1]
  • William Wood (1880–1881) [1]
  • William Goode (1882–1883)
  • J. L. Coombe (1883–1884) [1]
  • Fred Grey (1885) [1]
  • J. C. Harris (1886) [1]
  • T. Magor (1887) [1]
  • J. Gordon (1888) [1]
  • T. C. Simpson (1888–1890) [1]
  • A. A. Pearce (1891–1892) [1]
  • Charles Geddes (1893–1894) [1]
  • J. C. Haslam (1895–1897) [1]
  • G. F. Claridge (1898–1899) [1]
  • L. J. Wilcher (1900–1901) [1]
  • Fred Grey (1902–1903) [1]
  • L. J. Wilcher (1904) [1]
  • M. L. Warren (1905) [1]
  • M. C. Copinger (1906–1907) [1]
  • M. L. Warren (1908–1909) [1]
  • William Morrow (1910–1911) [1]
  • H. C. Alford (1912–1913) [1]
  • C. A. Degenhardt (1913–1914) [1]
  • J. S. Geddes (1915–1916) [1]
  • A. B. Forgan (1916–1919) [1]
  • M. F. Goode (1919) [1]
  • J. S. Geddes (1919–1920) [1]
  • J. F. Jenkins (1921) [1]
  • John Fitzgerald (1922–1923) [1]
  • J. S. Geddes (1924) [1]
  • John Fitzgerald (1925–1927) [1]
  • C. A. Degenhardt (1928–1929) [1]
  • Mervyn Merritt Bath Middleton (1930–1931) [8]
  • William Threadgold (1932–1946) [8]
  • Mervyn Merritt Bath Middleton (1946–1949) [8]
  • Charles Davis (1949–1957) [8]
  • Henry Boucher (Harry) Welch (1957–1971) [8]
  • Ted Connelly (1971–1975) [8]
  • John Nykiel (1975–1979) [8]
  • William Gordon (Bill) Jones (1979–1989) [8]
  • Denis Olley Crisp (1989–1995) [9]
  • Kenneth Francis Madigan (1995–1997) [10]

References

  1. Hosking, P. (1936). The Official civic record of South Australia : centenary year, 1936. Adelaide: Universal Publicity Company. p. 376.
  2. "CORPORATION OF PORT PIRIE". Evening Journal. VIII (2357). South Australia. 30 September 1876. p. 3. Retrieved 19 April 2016 via National Library of Australia.
  3. "Corporation of Port Pirie". Port Pirie Recorder And North Western Mail (1463). South Australia. 28 October 1911. p. 3. Retrieved 19 April 2016 via National Library of Australia.
  4. Official souvenir of Port Pirie diamond jubilee, 1876-1936 : celebration 26th September to 3rd October, 1936. pp. 3, 11.
  5. "NEW INSTITUTE AT PORT PIRIE". The Chronicle. LXXV (3, 946). South Australia. 21 July 1932. p. 40. Retrieved 19 April 2016 via National Library of Australia.
  6. "The Recorder". Recorder (14, 020). South Australia. 27 February 1953. p. 2. Retrieved 19 April 2016 via National Library of Australia.
  7. "Minutes of the Ordinary Meeting of Council held on Wednesday 23 July 2014" (PDF). Port Pirie Regional Council. Archived from the original (PDF) on 22 February 2016. Retrieved 15 February 2016.
  8. Matthews, Penny (1986), South Australia, the civic record, 1836-1986, Wakefield Press, ISBN 978-0-949268-82-2
  9. "Thursday, 25 May, 1989" (PDF). The Government Gazette of South Australia. Retrieved 19 November 2016.
  10. "Thursday, 25 May 1995" (PDF). The Government Gazette of South Australia. Retrieved 19 November 2016.

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