Clinton South Australia |
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General store
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Coordinates | 34°13′25.6″S 138°1′11.3″E / 34.223778°S 138.019806°ECoordinates: 34°13′25.6″S 138°1′11.3″E / 34.223778°S 138.019806°E | ||||||||||||||
Population | 366 (shared with other localities in the ‘State Suburb of Clinton (SA)’) (2011 census) | ||||||||||||||
Postcode(s) | 5570 | ||||||||||||||
Location |
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LGA(s) | Yorke Peninsula Council | ||||||||||||||
Region | Yorke and Mid North | ||||||||||||||
County | Daly | ||||||||||||||
State electorate(s) | Goyder | ||||||||||||||
Federal Division(s) | Grey | ||||||||||||||
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Footnotes | Distances Coordinates Adjoining localities |
Clinton (also known as Port Clinton) is a locality in the Australian state of South Australia located on the east coast of Yorke Peninsula overlooking the north west head of Gulf St Vincent about 125 kilometres (78 mi) west of the state capital of Adelaide.
The Hundred of Clinton was proclaimed on 12 June 1862, comprising 350 square kilometres (137 sq mi). The port was surveyed that same year, with a jetty being erected in 1863. Surveys and closer settlement by farmers soon followed, along with land clearing of the mallee woodland.
The first European occupiers were leaseholder pastoralists. In 1854 in what is now the northern parts of the Hundred of Clinton, W. & A. Rogers leased 190 square kilometres (75 sq mi) at an annual rental of ten shillings per square mile. In 1860, near the centre of the Hundred, T. & W. Day leased 31 square kilometres (12 sq mi).
This was an important and busy port in the 1860s and 70s, being a transfer point for goods and passengers travelling between Port Adelaide and the copper mines at Wallaroo and Moonta. That was despite the shallowness of the beach, which closed the port to larger vessels during low tide.
In 1878, the District Council of Clinton was established at the same time as the neighbouring councils of Kulpara and Port Wakefield. Clinton began a gradual decline after 1878 when the railway between Wallaroo and Adelaide was completed. The jetty was dismantled in 1916.
The town was named by Dominick Daly, the Governor of South Australia after Henry Pelham F.P. Clinton, the Duke of Newcastle who served as "the Secretary of State for the Colonies from 1859 until his death in October 1864." Boundaries for the locality were created in May 1999 for the "long established name." The name Port Clinton was reported in 2013 as being a "variant" name and as being the "…incorrect name for town."