Prospect, South Australia

Prospectis the seat of theCity of Prospectand an inner northern suburb of greaterAdelaide.It is located 5 km (3.1 mi) north of Adelaide's centre.

Prospect
Adelaide,South Australia
The western side of Prospect facing north, bounded on the west by the railway line
Map
Population14,584 (SAL2021)[1]
Postcode(s)5082
Area5 km2(1.9 sq mi)
LGA(s)City of Prospect
State electorate(s)
Federal division(s)Adelaide
Suburbsaround Prospect:
Regency Park Kilburn
Blair Athol
Enfield
Dudley Park
Devon Park
Prospect Nailsworth
Medindie Gardens
Ovingham Fitzroy
Thorngate
Medindie

Surrounding suburbs includeKilburn,Fitzroy,MedindieandDevon Park.The suburb has boundaries of Main North Road to the East; Carter Street, Audley Avenue and Avenue Road to the South; TheGawler railway lineto the west, and a line 400m north ofRegency Road(Livingstone Avenue, Angwin Avenue and Henrietta Street) to the north.

Prospect comprises a large majority of the land area (about five-sevenths, or 71%) of the City of Prospect council area.

The seat was initially founded by Conrad Martens and Oliver Glasson, following Martens' venture as a landscape artist within the state.[1]

History

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John Bradford received a land grant for section 373 of the Hundred of Yatala on July 25, 1838, he subdivided it into several eight-acre allotments, according to H.C. Talbot, the area was named for its stunning views over the Adelaide Plains and its separation from North Adelaide by the beautifully wooded Parklands, filled with gum trees and wattles,[2]the early Prospect Village was a private subdivision of sections 373 and 349 of theHundred of Yatala,which intersected at the village centre (now St Helens Park and St Cuthbert's Anglican Church).[3]

To the new settlers, the undeveloped locality presented a "beautiful prospect", being described as "well timbered, with waving gum and shady trees".[4]Thus the early township was dubbedProspect Villageby ColonelWilliam Lightshortly after the colonisation of South Australia in 1838. TheCity of Prospectwas established in 1872, formalising the name for local government and, in 1944, the city council voted to formally adopt the same name for the suburb which was the council seat itself.[5]

The first Prospect Post Office opened around 1861 and closed around 1872. ANailsworthoffice (open from 1861) was renamedProspectin 1874 and has remained open since then. It was located at First avenue,Nailsworth,with two tall palm trees planted in front of the post office to enhance visibility from a distance.[6]

Historic divisions

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In the 1940s the area now known as Prospect was separated into seven localities. West of Prospect Road, from north to south, wereProspect Estate,HighburyandDudley Park(the west portion of the latter presently remaining a separate suburb). East of Prospect Road, from north to south, wereBlair Athol(the name today for the old suburbs of Enfield Gardens and Bosworth Park, north of Prospect),Prospect Park,Prospect Hill,St Johns Woodand the old suburb of Prospect itself.[7]

Several even older historic named subdivisions existed within the current suburb bounds around the turn of the twentieth century, according to an 1896 map of the Hundred of Yatala:[8]

  • Section 348 immediately south of the early Prospect Village was once known asLittle Adelaide,reportedly laid out into lots by "Mr Tilly" in the late 1830s or early 1840s.[9]It was subsumed by the early suburb of Prospect, but its southern neighbour,Fitzroy,presently remains a separate suburb.
  • Section 371 (roughly present-day Rose Street up to Olive Street) was split intoProspect Weston the west andProspect Northon the east.
  • Further north in sections 369 and 352 layProspect Hill Extension,later subsumed by St Johns Wood and/or Prospect Hill, andClaraville.
  • Immediately south ofRegency RoadlayReepham,its name preserved in the present-day Reepham Hotel atChurchill Roadcorner, andSleaford.
  • The part of Prospect east of therailway lineand west of present-day Churchill Road from Winter Terrace up to Regency Road was once considered to be part ofIslington(originally section 376 in the Hundred of Yatala). This place name is preserved by theIslington railway station,the city-bound platform of which lies in Prospect. Present-dayRegency Park,formerly "Tam O'Shanter Belt", to the west was home to the Islington sewage farm from 1881 to 1966.
  • Immediately north of Regency Road in section 354, present-day Prospect's extreme north east, layEnfield SouthandDingley Dell.These were subsumed by Blair Athol.
  • Immediately north of Regency Road section 367, in present-day Prospect's extreme north west, was a part ofTam O'Shanter East,Tam O'Shanter being an old name for the Regency Park area. This area became Prospect Estate.
Audley House, aVictorianmansion at 32 Prospect Road on the southern border of Prospect, was built in 1885.[10]

Green spaces

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Prospect is home to theProspect Oval,a sports stadium located at Menzies Crescent.[11]Larger parks in the suburb include the Soldier's Memorial Gardens, St Helens Park, the Prospect Estate Reserve and Barker Gardens. Smaller green spaces include St Johns Wood Gardens (34°53'1.39 "S 138°36'8.47" E) on the corner of Alpha Road and Main North Road, Percy Street Park (34°52'41.55 "S 138°35'58.69" E), Dean Street Park (34°52'54.50 "S 138°36'5.90" E) on the corner of Barker Road, Bradford Park (34°53'37.38 "S 138°35'55.14" E) on Bradford Street, and Wilson Street Park (34°53'39.34 "S 138°36'3.80" E) on the corner of Highbury Street.

Soldier's Memorial Gardens(34°53'7.75 "S 138°35'56.91" E) is the largest park in Prospect. It has an open grass area and includes a playground, tennis courts and a performing stage for park events. Other features include sandpits, water features, a footbridge, a heritage shelter and the Prospect Community Garden.[12][13]

St Helens Park(34°53'33.35 "S 138°35'43.33" E), located on Prospect Road, has a playground, public barbecues, rose gardens and climbing trees. It is also accessible from the rear of the park via Koonga Avenue. The City of Prospect's Spring Fair was formerly held here for almost four decades.[14]

Barker Garden(34°53'3.39 "S 138°35'38.96" E) is located on the corner of Alpha Road and Prospect Road and features a memorial for Australia soldiers, rose gardens and garden arches in the centre. It is popular for wedding ceremonies and light displays during the Christmas period.[15]

Education

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Prospect has several schools, including primary schools. Rosary School, a private Roman Catholic school from Reception to year 7, Prospect Primary School and Prospect North Primary School. Other schools includeBlackfriars Priory School,an all boys private Roman Catholic school from early learning to year 12, andPrescott College, South Australia,a co-edSeventh-day Adventistschool from year 7 to 12.

Notable People

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See also

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References

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  1. ^Australian Bureau of Statistics(28 June 2022)."Prospect (SA) (suburb and locality)".Australian Census 2021 QuickStats.Retrieved28 June2022.
  2. ^The Romance of Place Names of South Australia, By Geoffrey.H.Manning, 1986, p.173.
  3. ^"Placename Details: Prospect Village (Subdivision)".Property Location Browser.Government of South Australia.SA0056932.Retrieved29 September2017.Other Details: Private subdivision of sections 373 & 349, now in the suburbs of Prospect and Ovingham
  4. ^"Location".City of Prospect.Retrieved3 June2016.
  5. ^"Placename Details: Prospect (Suburb)".Property Location Browser.Government of South Australia.SA0048477.Retrieved16 December2015.
  6. ^Premier Postal History."Post Office List".Premier Postal Auctions.Retrieved26 May2011.
  7. ^Adelaide - Map 8(Map). c. 1945. Archived fromthe originalon 1 April 2016.Retrieved16 December2015.
  8. ^"YATALA"(Map).Hundred of Yatala.1896.
  9. ^"Past eventful, present is progressive".Prospect supplement—eight pages inNews.Vol. 63, no. 9, 689.Adelaide,South Australia. 31 August 1954. p. 18.Retrieved2 June2016– via National Library of Australia.
  10. ^"Prospect mansion: Heir of romance".The Australian.20 November 2016.Retrieved12 June2018.
  11. ^Prospect, The City of."Prospect Oval".Retrieved11 June2018.
  12. ^Prospect, The City of (20 January 2017),Memorial Gardens,The City of Prospect,retrieved11 June2018
  13. ^"Prospect Community Garden".City of Prospect.Retrieved12 June2018.
  14. ^"St Helens Park".City of Prospect.Retrieved11 June2018.
  15. ^"Barker Gardens".City of Prospect.Retrieved11 June2018.
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34°53′02″S138°35′38″E/ 34.884°S 138.594°E/-34.884; 138.594