FOCUS On Burnside - the news hub

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WELCOME.

This is our media hub of all things Burnside.

A hub for local news about people, businesses and happenings in our community.

You will see some beautiful photos of Wyfield Reserve, one of Burnside's biodiversity sites, at the top right of this page.



WELCOME.

This is our media hub of all things Burnside.

A hub for local news about people, businesses and happenings in our community.

You will see some beautiful photos of Wyfield Reserve, one of Burnside's biodiversity sites, at the top right of this page.


  • First drive-through petrol station in Australia

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    Do you remember this Adelaide landmark?

    ‘Bolton’s Corner’ was a motor workshop and service station on the corner of Greenhill and Fullarton Roads built by George Bolton Snr.

    George Bolton was Mayor of Burnside Council from 1952 to 1954, then again from 1962 to 1967. Bolton entered the motor business in 1924 and a year later built Bolton’s Corner in Dulwich. It was the first drive-through petrol station in Australia. In 1939, the station was remodelled in art-deco design, and then in 1970, it was converted into a motorcycle showroom.

    Bolton passed away in 1977 and his son took over the business, which eventually moved to Keswick. In 2012, the business merged with Bill’s Motorcycles.

    Photograph courtesy of the Bolton Archives, 1971


  • Tree Stories

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    Trees are an integral part of the City of Burnside. The trees along our streets and in our reserves and gardens provide natural character and shape our experience of the area. Trees provide many benefits, from cooling the urban environment to providing habitat for wildlife. Trees can also inspire us and be part of memorable experiences. Residents and visitors of the City of Burnside have shared their experiences of trees on our website.

    Some of the captions are displayed on bus shelters around the City of Burnside, as depicted here.

    This project was supported by Amongst It.

    Tree Stories Urban Forest Interactive

  • New Community Newspaper

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    The new Adelaide East Herald was launched today (1 October). Published by the same company who have successfully run The Adelaide Hills Herald for many years, the new publication targets the eastern suburbs, covering the Council areas of Burnside, Unley and Mitcham and a small section of Norwood, Payneham & St Peters.

    Council has committed to a monthly paid column for October, November and December and will consider a fortnightly column in 2021. The paper also accepts listings for community events and will publish free in their What's On pages.

    Although not home delivered the paper is dropped in bulk to more than 90 locations within the City of Burnside. It is FREE so visit the Library or one of the many other locations listed below to collect your copy.

    Read the paper online

    Or collect your copy from one of the pick up points listed below (click on the heading 'New Community Newspaper' to see the list)

  • Council credit card transactions published online

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    Monthly credit card transactions and expenditure for all Council credit card holders are published every month on Council's website.

    General Manager Corporate and Development, Martin Cooper, said that Council Administration is committed to being open and transparent in its financial management and reporting.

    "We will continue working to provide our community with more visibility of our financial management practices and publishing these records is another step in this direction," Mr Cooper said.

    "There are thirteen other registers that we currently publish and update regularly. The credit card transactions register will be updated every month with each new report published in the third week of every month," Mr Cooper said.

    The new credit card transactions register is listed with the Public Registers.


  • Wind Back Wednesday

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    In 1912, W G McAllan established the Adelaide Brick Company on Waterfall Gully Road, Burnside. In the centre of what is today known as Langman Recreation Reserve, the company built an 18 chamber Hoffman Kiln.

    Clay was blasted from the hillside and fired in the kiln, which was initially powered by coal. At its peak, the plant employed 43 men and was producing 5 million bricks per annum. Production ceased in the 1960s.

    Pictured here is the demolition of the chimney in 1970. A few relics of the plant remain at the Reserve.


  • Centenarian Mary Celebrates

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    Long time Burnside resident Mary Maitland has celebrated her 100th birthday.

    Born in Riverton in the mid north in April 1920, Mary had a long career as a teacher and an even longer marriage to Bill.

    Mary says things have changed a lot in her time. “You have to lock up your house when you go out, even if I just go around the corner I lock the back door. Many years ago we didn’t do that - we just left everything open. Things change – even the bus routes into the city have changed.”

    Asked her secret to longevity Mary says “I think if you are lucky enough to have a loving family and you have enough common sense to eat properly. I have someone come now to shower me every day and someone who comes in the evenings and helps me get ready for bed. I couldn’t live here if I didn’t have that help.”

    Raised at Auburn in the mid north she was brought up a very staunch Methodist. “I was not allowed to buy an ice-cream on Sunday,” she says. “My father believed it was wrong for shops to trade on a Sunday. Those were very different days. Our bathroom did not have hot water or a shower.”

    Despite the hardship and lack of modern conveniences Mary says people who haven’t lived in the country have missed a lot. “I used to go dancing Saturday nights at the Auburn Institute but I couldn’t go unless my older brother went with me.”

    Playing tennis regularly Mary met Bill on court when he appeared for an opposing team. “Our first date was a dance on the lawn at Riverton and we had to wear sensible shoes,” Mary says.

    Completing her education at Clare High School Mary was the only girl in the senior class. She went on to train at Adelaide Teachers College and began teaching at Woodville High School in 1940.

    “I was very lucky that I had loving, caring parents. I was renting a unit (in Adelaide) but I could go home any time,” she says. “I could also go to Bill’s parents any time.”

    In the 1940s married women were not employed as teachers or bank staff. “So when I decided to marry Bill I went to the Director General of Education and asked for an exemption,” Mary says. “He thought about it and said ‘You have to resign and stay home for 3 days to make it official, then I will re-appoint you as a temporary teacher for 3 years.’ And that’s how they got around it,” Mary says.

    She and Bill attended Church regularly at the Pirie Street Methodist Church where Mary sang in the choir and learnt to play the pipe organ. “We were married there in 1941,” Mary says. Soon after marrying, Bill went to South Africa with the Air Force to learn to fly planes. Mary heard very little from him except the occasional telegram.

    After the war Bill returned but stayed with the Air Force. Their only child, Craig, was born in 1943 at Auburn where Mary was living with her parents. Bill was in Melbourne at the time and got home on the odd weekend.

    They eventually moved back to the country where Mary taught at Clare and Riverton High Schools, two days in one and three in the other. When Craig was three they moved south to Pinnaroo. There the local school Principal heard Mary was a trained teacher and asked if she would work there. “He said I would be happy because women got as much (pay) as men did which was not the case before,” says Mary. Later Bill was moved to Jamestown and Mary resigned. “But the same thing happened,” she says. “There was a knock on the door and the principal of the High School asked if I would come back.”

    When they moved to Adelaide in 1958 she was called by Nailsworth Girls’ Technical High School. She became a senior mistress, then Deputy Principal, until she was 61 when she retired. “I enjoyed teaching. As Deputy Principal a lot of staff came to me with their problems and when I could solve them that was the best part.”

    “We bought a house in Allinga Ave Glenside when Craig was 12 (1955). We stayed there about 30 years then we decided we better buy a unit which would be less work. I was 89 and I have been here since.”

    “I used to always go over to the library, that’s where I leant to use a computer and the books were excellent. I found Burnside Library a great help with everything. They still deliver books to me once a month.”

    Mary says she is not good at walking around Burnside Village as she used to, so Craig does the banking. She has a hairdresser and podiatrist come to her and the chemist delivers. She also has groceries delivered once a month. “You can live successfully in your own home,” she says. “I am being very careful now since I had a fall a while ago and broke a couple of bones so I use a little walker around the house.”

    Mary has a granddaughter who is married and lives at Jamestown with her three children. Her grandson is 50 this year and has a partner and they have two children, 7 and 10.

    She is still a social member at Toorak Bowls where she played with Bill for more than 20 years. “The Club was going to have a party (for my 100th),” she says. “My son was going to have a party as well but this virus came and it was all stopped. They all arrived with flowers and the back porch was filled with flowers. I even got a letter from the Queen and the Governor General.”

    “I just like to be grateful for living in Burnside with all the help that I get. I go to the Legacy Widows’ Club, a lovely group, but I haven’t been for months because of this virus. But of course the numbers are declining and the younger girls are not joining because they are all working. I have always found Burnside a wonderful area to live in. I miss Bill very much but I recognise that I was lucky to have had him for so long.”

  • #Whywasteit?

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    Today is International Day of Awareness of Food Loss and Waste #FLWDay. Let’s stop food loss and waste for the people, for the planet!


    LET'S SAVE MONEY BY SAVING FOOD WASTE!


    Did you know that Australians throw out 1 in 5 bags of groceries each week? This adds up to between $2.6-3.8K worth of food per household each year.. Eeek !


    Our latest East Waste Councils bin audit showed that:

    30 % of what we throw in the landfill bin is food.

    75 % of this is edible food.

    48 % is fresh fruit and vegetables.


    Let's eat it and not waste it! Read more about how we can save money and food waste.


    City of Burnside’s stats were:

    30 % of what we throw in the landfill bin is food.

    64 % of this is edible food.

    51 % is fresh fruit and vegetables.

  • Windback Wednesday

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    William Anderson established the Mountain Hut Inn on the Great Eastern Road, Glen Osmond in 1845. The next publican was the infamous Robert Spearman, who in 1848 was sent to Van Diemen’s Land for highway robbery.

    The story of the robbery was shared years later in The Express and Telegraph:
    “A farmer called at the hotel, and having been served by Spearman continued his journey up the hill by the longer way round the Devil’s Elbow. Spearman followed his man, and taking the short cut, intercepted him and robbed him on the top road. He got back to the hotel as quickly as possible, and the farmer came back and reported the robbery to the very man who had robbed him.” (5 August 1899, page 4).

    The Mountain Hut Inn traded as a pub until 1909. The site then operated as a Temperance Hotel until the 1950s. The building was used as a dog and cat boarding business for 50 years and was sold earlier this year with plans to develop it into a childcare centre.

  • Model T Ford in the trees

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    William Wagener opened a motor-wrecking yard on Glen Osmond Road, Frewville around 1930. Famously, in the branches of the tall pines surrounding the yard, Wagener hung a battered Model T Ford as an advertisement for the business. The wrecking yard would be a collector’s delight today! Do you recognise any of the vehicles?


  • Adelaide's early water shortage

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    Water supply was a high concern for Adelaide’s population in the late 19th Century. At that time, the River Torrens (Karrawirra Parri) was the primary water source.

    In 1860, the first piped-water network was built, reaching some Adelaide homes. It took many years for houses in the suburbs to be connected, so many property owners had to establish their own water supply, such as a well.

    Pictured here are well diggers at work in Stonyfell, circa 1902. Alfred Black of Bell Yett purchased this allotment next to a creek to build an extra well for his home after struggling through a drought year.


Page last updated: 02 May 2024, 03:53 PM