Hundred of Barunga

The Hundred of Barunga is a cadastral unit of hundred located in the Mid North of South Australia on the approximate area of the Barunga Range, centred on Bald Hill.[1] It is one of the 16 hundreds of the County of Daly.[2] It was named in 1869 by Governor James Fergusson[1] after an indigenous term meaning gap in the range.[1] See Barunga Range § Etymology

Plan of the Hundred of Barunga, 1964

Hundred of Barunga
South Australia
Grain silos beside railway track at Snowtown
Hundred of Barunga
Coordinates33.72°S 138.17°E / -33.72; 138.17
Established15 July 1869
Area330 km2 (129 sq mi)
LGA(s)Wakefield
RegionMid North
CountyDaly
Lands administrative divisions around Hundred of Barunga:
Mundoora Redhill Koolunga
Wiltunga Barunga Boucaut
Ninnes Cameron Everard

The following localities and towns of the Wakefield Council area are situated inside (or largely inside) the bounds of the Hundred of Barunga:

Local government

On 5 January 1888 the District Council of Snowtown was established, along with many other new local government bodies in South Australia, by the District Councils Act 1887,[3] incorporating the entirety of the hundreds of Barunga and Boucaut. The Hundred of Barunga contained the Barunga and Snowtown wards of the council.

In 1987 Barunga and Snowtown wards of the Snowtown council retained their statuses as a ward in the consolidated District Council of Blyth-Snowtown. Since the amalgamation of Blyth-Snowtown and Wakefield Plains councils into the new Wakefield Regional Council the hundred has been a part of the much larger North ward of the Wakefield council.

See also

References

  1. "Search for 'Hundred of Barunga, HD'". Land Services, Government of South Australia. 29 January 2009. SA0005062. Retrieved 17 February 2016. Derivation of Name: ABNA for gap in the range
  2. South Australia hundred maps 1:63 360. Surveyor General's Office. 1867.
  3. "The District Councils Act 1887 No. 419". Flinders University. p. 90. Retrieved 27 March 2015. DISTRICT OF SNOWTOWN.-Comprising the Hundreds of Barunga and Boucaut.
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