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Robe, South Australia

Robe
South Australia
RobeSAaerial2.jpg
Aerial photograph
Robe is located in South Australia
Robe
Robe
Coordinates 37°09′0″S 139°45′0″E / 37.15000°S 139.75000°E / -37.15000; 139.75000Coordinates: 37°09′0″S 139°45′0″E / 37.15000°S 139.75000°E / -37.15000; 139.75000
Population 1,246 (2006 census)
Established 1846
Postcode(s) 5276
Location
LGA(s) District Council of Robe
Region Limestone Coast
County County of Robe
State electorate(s) MacKillop
Federal Division(s) Barker
Mean max temp Mean min temp Annual rainfall
18.1 °C
65 °F
10.9 °C
52 °F
631.5 mm
24.9 in
Localities around Robe:
Ocean Guichen Bay Mount Benson
Ocean Robe Mount Benson
Bray
Ocean Nora Creina Nora Creina
Bray
Footnotes Climatic data
Adjoining localities

Robe is a town and fishing port located in the Limestone Coast of South Australia. The town's distinctive combination of historical buildings, ocean, fishing fleets, lakes and dense bush is widely appreciated. Robe lies on the southern shore of Guichen Bay, just off the Princes Highway. At the 2006 census, Robe had a population of 1,246. Robe is the main town in the District Council of Robe local government area. It is in the state electorate of MacKillop and the federal Division of Barker.

Robe is one of the oldest towns in South Australia, founded by the colonial government as a seaport, administrative centre and village just ten years after the Province of South Australia was established.

Robe was named after the fourth Governor of South Australia, Major Frederick Robe, who chose the site as a port in 1845. The town was proclaimed as a port in 1847. It became South Australia's second-busiest (after Port Adelaide) international port in the 1850s. Robe's trade was drawn from a large hinterland that extended into western Victoria, and many roadside inns were built to cater for the bullock teamsters bringing down the wool, including the 'Bush Inn' still standing on the outskirts of Robe. Exports included horses and sheep skins and wool. The Customs House has been listed on the South Australian Heritage Register since 1980. A stone obelisk was built on Cape Dombey in 1852 to assist ships to navigate safely into the bay. Even so, there have been a number of shipwrecks along the coast in the area. An automatic lighthouse was built on higher ground in 1973.


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