Windback Wednesday - Skye

The suburb of Skye was created in 1958, out of a 1950s subdivision by Skye Estates Ltd. The name came from the Gaelic word sgiath (meaning ‘a wing’), and was named thus because the shape of the new suburb was similar to that of the Scottish Isle of Skye.

When development of Skye began in the 1960s, the expense of creating new infrastructure to service this new suburb on the outskirts of developed land meant that it was never connected to the mains water supply. When a re-drawing of Council boundaries in the early 1990s saw Skye absorbed into the Burnside Council area, it became the only suburb in Burnside not connected to the mains water supply. It wasn’t until 2015, after lengthy negotiations between State Government representatives and SA Water, that householders in Skye were presented with the opportunity to commit to a 15-year payment plan to connect their homes with the State’s mains water supply—a deal which was accepted by 92 of the suburb’s 138 homeowners.

Before the subdivision, the land was mostly used for sheep grazing, and Bertram Cox’s 1952 book ‘Farming is Fun’ provides a humorous account of a hopeful accountant-turned-sheep farmer’s attempts to run his own farm on a plot of land in the area that would later become Skye.

Photograph: Newspaper real estate advertisement for Skye, courtesy of the Burnside News Review, December 1958.

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