Windback Wednesday - Stonyfell Quarry

Did you know that Stonyfell was the home of the first quarry in Adelaide, beginning operation in 1837? Stone and slate mined from the quarry was used in the construction of much of Adelaide’s early infrastructure, including the Adelaide Gaol. In 1858, a portion of the quarry was sold to Henry Clark and his fiancé Annie Martin, who named the land Stonyfell after the English term 'fell', used to describe a barren piece of land on a hill or other high-altitude landform. The Stonyfell Quarry was acquired by Boral in the 1880s and remains an active quarry today, producing road base, raw materials, and washed sands for the manufacture of concrete. Boral recycles their own concrete waste, and also receives pond sediment from Burnside Council, which assists Council with revegetation and environmental rehabilitation programs.

Stonyfell was also the home of the Stonyfell Olive Company, founded by Joseph Crompton, William Mair and Sidney Clark in 1873, which was South Australia’s largest producer of olive oil in 1932. Significant sites remaining in Stonyfell today include Stonyfell House, Clifton Manor, and Chiverton House (now part of St Peter’s Girls’ School).



Photograph: Stonyfell Quarries and Wattle Park, 1956. Burnside Local History Collection.

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