District Council Of Laura
The council chambers were initially located in the Laura Town Hall, which had formerly been the Laura Institute. It was divided into six wards, each electing one councillor: East Laura, North Laura and West Laura Wards in Laura itself, and South (later Pine Creek), Stone Hut and Whyte Cliff Wards in the rural areas. The council area had a total population of 1,062 persons in 1936. The earlier town hall was replaced by a new Civic Centre in 1968. Amongst the council's later projects was a 1980s-era collaboration with the South Australian Housing Trust to build a number of pensioner cottages in the town. The council ceased to exist on 1 May 1988 when it merged with the District Council of Georgetown and the District Council of Gladstone to form the short-lived District Council of Rocky River.
Chairmen
- John Leo Kennedy (1932)
- John Holbeach Acott (1922-1933)
- George Edwin Cleggett (1933-1936)
- John Leo Kennedy (1936-1939)
- George William Smith (1939-1943)
- Victor Walter Blesing (1944-1948)
- Charles Amey (1948-1953)
- Louis Ernest Karger (1953-1954)
- Charles Amey (1954-1956)
- Charles Leonard Smith (1956-1957)
- William Mark Coe Weston (1957-1960)
- Norman Theodore Pech (1960-1966)
- George William Paxton Smith (1966-1967)
- Brian Robert Middlemiss (1967-1973)
- Vernon William Charles Taylor (1973-1977)
- Max Erwin Zanker (1977-1982)
- Peter Edwin Hill (1982-1983)
- Allan Glen Woolford (1983-?)
References
- ^ Marsden, Susan (2012). "A History of South Australian Councils to 1936" (PDF). Local Government Association of South Australia. p. 41. Retrieved 30 October 2015.
- ^ Hosking, P. (1936). The Official civic record of South Australia : centenary year, 1936. Adelaide: Universal Publicity Company. p. 644.
- ^ "Laura". Northern Areas Council. Retrieved 18 March 2016.
- ^ "District Council Elections". Laura Standard and Crystal Brook Courier. Vol. XLI, no. 2170. South Australia. 17 June 1932. p. 3. Retrieved 9 April 2016 – via National Library of Australia.
- ^ "Thursday, 27 August, 1987" (PDF). The Government Gazette of South Australia. Government of South Australia. Retrieved 20 November 2016.
- ^ Matthews, Penny (1986), South Australia, the civic record, 1836-1986, Wakefield Press, ISBN 978-0-949268-82-2