District Council of Munno Para East

The District Council of Munno Para East was a local government area of South Australia from 1853 to 1933, seated at Uleybury.[1]

District Council of Munno Para East
South Australia
District Council of Munno Para East
Coordinates34°42′59″S 138°45′21″E
Established1853
Abolished1933
Council seatUleybury
LGAs around District Council of Munno Para East:
Mudla Wirra (1854-1867)
Mudla Wirra South (1867-1933)
Mudla Wirra (1854-1867)
Mudla Wirra South (1867-1933)
Gawler (1857-1933)
Gawler South (1899-1933)
Munno Para West (1854-1933) District Council of Munno Para East Barossa West (1854-1888)
Parra Wirra (1854-1933)
Barossa (1888-1933)
Yatala (1853-1868)
Yatala North (1868-1933)
Highercombe (1853-1933)
Tea Tree Gully (1858-1933)
Yatala (1853-1868)
Yatala North (1868-1933)
Parra Wirra (1854-1933)

History

The District Council of Munno Para East was established in 1853 to govern the eastern half of the cadastral Hundred of Munno Para.[2][3] The District Council of Munno Para West was established the following year to bring local government to the western half of the hundred. The combined area was bounded on the south by the Little Para River (which derives its name from the Kaurna (Aboriginal language) pari meaning "stream of flowing water") and on the north by the Gawler River/South Para River and was also known as the northern Para Plains.[3]

In 1899 a part of the council of Munno Para West was severed to be the District Council of Gawler South and later merged with the Corporate Town of Gawler[3]

in 1933. In 1933, the council of Munno Para West was abolished, with part going to the Town of Gawler, part to the new District Council of Salisbury and the remainder merging with the Munno Para East council to form the new District Council of Munno Para.[3]

See also

Notes

  1. "District Council of Munno Para East". The Bunyip (4, 413). South Australia. 25 May 1934. p. 8. Retrieved 6 October 2017 via National Library of Australia. [...] meeting duly held at the District Office, Uley, on Monday, May 7th, 1934 [...]
  2. "History of Playford". City of Playford. Retrieved 23 February 2016.
  3. Marsden, Susan (2012). "Local Government Association of South Australia: A History of South Australian Councils to 1936" (PDF). Retrieved 27 November 2020.


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