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Adelaide Plains Council

Adelaide Plains Council
South Australia
Mallala LGA.png
Location of the Adelaide Plains Council
Population 8,750 (2015 est)
 • Density 9.387/km2 (24.313/sq mi)
Established 1935, renamed 15 April 1937
Area 932.1 km2 (359.9 sq mi)
Mayor Tony Flaherty
Council seat Mallala
Region Barossa Light and Lower North
State electorate(s) Goyder, Taylor
Federal Division(s) Wakefield
Adelaide Plains Council Logo.png
Website Adelaide Plains Council
LGAs around Adelaide Plains Council:
Wakefield Regional Council
Adelaide Plains Council Light Regional Council
City of Playford

The Adelaide Plains Council (formerly the District Council of Mallala) is a local government area in South Australia. It consists of a largely rural region along the Gulf St Vincent, covering a total area of approximately 926 km2. The council seat lies at Mallala, but it also maintains a service centre at Two Wells.

Both the Light River and the Gawler River pass through the district and the rich fertile plains are ideal for vegetable production, the majority of which is sent to the nearby Adelaide markets. As well as the general agricultural pursuits of grain growing and storage and running livestock, other major industries in the region include the livestock market / sale yards, metal fabrication and manufacture of industrial equipment.

The District Council of Light was proclaimed on 21 March 1935, having stemmed from the amalgamation of the District Council of Grace, the District Council of Dublin and the District Council of Port Gawler. It is unrelated to either the earlier or later councils also named District Council of Light, both of which were predecessors of the adjacent Light Regional Council.

In 1936, the council petitioned the state government to have its name changed citing an existing problem with correspondence intended for the Council being addressed to towns situated outside its boundaries in the cadastral unit of the Hundred of Light and that the recent creation of the electoral district of Light which was also outside of its boundaries would “cause further confusion.” The change was granted and the renaming of the council as the ‘District Council of Mallala’ was gazetted on 15 April 1937.

The first white settlement of the area dates back to the Port Gawler Special Survey in 1839. Originally the land was inhabited by the Kaurna people whose territory extended in a narrow corridor along the eastern shore of Gulf St Vincent; Cape Jervis to Port Wakefield; inland to near Crystal Brook, Snowtown, Blyth, Hoyleton, Hamley Bridge, Clarendon, Gawler, and Myponga; from the east side of the Hummock Range to Red Hill. Inland the stringy bark forests of the Mount Lofty Ranges marked their boundary.


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