Colonel Light Gardens Adelaide, South Australia |
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Lincoln Avenue
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Population | 3,237 (2006 census) | ||||||||||||||
Postcode(s) | 5041 | ||||||||||||||
LGA(s) | City of Mitcham | ||||||||||||||
State electorate(s) | Waite | ||||||||||||||
Federal Division(s) | Boothby | ||||||||||||||
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Colonel Light Gardens is a suburb located within the City of Mitcham in the greater Adelaide region. The area is 1.58 km². It is known for featuring wide, tree-lined streets, presentable postwar bungalow homes, rounded street corners, and lots of manicured, well maintained open space.
It contains Colonel Light Gardens Primary School, the Colonel Light Gardens RSL, a number of sporting clubs using the name Reade Park, and a multitude of historical parks and gardens. It also contains many paved and unpaved laneways, alleyways and bike tracks, most of which do not appear on maps.
Named after the first Surveyor-General of Adelaide, Colonel William Light.
For many years residents in the northern section of the suburb adopted Reade Park as their address to distinguish themselves from the Thousand Homes Scheme area.
The school is named after William Light and is heritage listed. There are about 700 students at the school and each building is named after a historic South Australian figure. The buildings are Reade, Duncan, Mortlock and Grange.The focus on Japanese language.
The northern boundary of the suburb is Grange Road.
The part of the suburb east of Goodwood Road was used as an army training camp during World War I, and prior to this the area was known as Grange Farm.
An area of 1.2 km² was purchased in June 1915 by the Vaughan Labor government from the estate of William Tennant Mortlock. The Government decided to establish it as a 'model garden suburb' following New Zealand town planner Charles Reade's 1914 Australian Town Planning Tour.
The Post Office on Goodwood Road originally opened as Light's Gardens, was renamed Colonel Light Gardens on 1 January 1929 and Daw Park in 1967.
Until the 1970s the suburb was administered under the Garden Suburb Act and controlled by a South Australian government appointed Garden Suburb Commissioner, who carried out the functions of local government until it was eventually absorbed by the Mitcham Council.