Hundred Of Mobilong
Etymology
According to South Australian historian Geoffrey Manning, the word Mobilong is a corruption of the Aboriginal term mupulawangk, meaning "soft reed place" as "reeds along the [Murray] river bank were used in the making of coiled baskets." Mobilong was also the original name for the early township of Murray Bridge and is the present name for the suburb of Mobilong, which covers the Mobilong Swamp area immediately north of the city centre.
Localities
The following localities and suburbs of the Murray Bridge Council area are situated inside (or partly inside) the bounds of the Hundred of Mobilong:
- Tepko (southern half only)
- Caloote (southern half only)
- Wall Flat (southern half only)
- Woodlane
- Pallamana
- Mypolonga
- Murray Bridge North
- Toora
- Rocky Gully
- Northern Heights
- Mobilong
- Murray Bridge
- White Hill
- Monarto South (north east portion only)
- Gifford Hill
- Murray Bridge South
- Swanport
- Riverglen
Local government
The District Council of Mobilong was established in 1884, bringing local government to the hundred. From 1924 to 1977 the Corporate Town of Murray Bridge formed a second separate local government body within the hundred, and the district council expanded to govern most of land encapsulated by the easterly neighbouring hundreds of Burdett and Ettrick as well as land in the south neighbouring Hundred of Brinkley. The town and district councils merged in 1977 to bring the hundred back under the governance of an expanded single body called the District Council of Murray Bridge.
See also
References
- ^ "Property Location Browser: Search for 'Hundred of Mobilong, HD' (ID SA0045460)". Government of South Australia. Archived from the original on 7 December 2015. Retrieved 11 July 2016.
- ^ "Place Names of South Australia - M - Mobilong". Manning Index of South Australian History. State Library of South Australia. Retrieved 11 July 2016. Index compiled based on Manning, Geoffrey H. (2006). Manning's Place Names of South Australia from Aaron Creek to Zion Hill. Modbury, South Australia: Gould Books. ISBN 9780947284602.