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  • 21 Aug, 2019

  • By, Wikipedia

District Council Of Hall

The District Council of Hall was a local government area in South Australia from 1878 to 1935.

History

The District Council of Hall was officially proclaimed on 14 November 1878 as constituting the entire Hundred of Hall. It was divided into five wards:

  • Hoyleton, centred on the township of Hoyleton in the north east of the hundred
  • Halbury, centred on the township of Halbury in the centre of the hundred
  • Wakefield, in the south of the hundred beside the Wakefield River
  • Woodlands, centred on the locality of Woodlands in the north west of the hundred
  • Watchman's Plains, centred on the locality of Watchman at Watchman's Plain in the west of the hundred

In 1911 a part of the western ward of Watchman's Plains was severed from the Hall council and annexed by the District Council of Balaklava.

From 1930 to 1934, the local government commission appointed under the Local Government Areas Re-arrangement Act, 1929, had proposed several recommendations on amalgamating the district of Hall. Despite being consistently opposed by residents of Hall, the commission declared in 1934 that the Hall district would be amalgamated with the councils of Blyth and Balaklava. On 21 March 1935 it was promulgated that, effective 1 May 1935, the Hoyleton and Woodlands wards in the north would go to Blyth and be known there as the new ward of Hoyleton, and that the remainder would go to Balaklava and constitute the new wards of Halbury and Wakefield.

Neighbouring local government

The following adjacent local government bodies co-existed with the Hall council:

References

  1. ^ "Proclamations" (PDF). South Australian Government Gazette. 1878 (53 ed.). Government of South Australia: 1389. Retrieved 30 June 2017.
  2. ^ Marsden, Susan (2012). "Local Government Association of South Australia: A History of South Australian Councils to 1936" (PDF). Meetings were held in the Hoyleton Hotel until Council Chambers were built by H Wenzel in Halbury, and the first meeting was held there on 2 March 1889.
  3. ^ "Local Government Areas (Re-Arrangement) Acts, 1929 and 1931" (PDF). South Australian Government Gazette. 1935 (13 ed.). Government of South Australia: 859-863. 21 March 1935. Retrieved 30 June 2017.