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Stonyfell, South Australia

Stonyfell is an eastern suburb in the foothills of Adelaide, Australia, within the council area of the City of Burnside. It has parks with walking tracks, and two creeks running through it. St Peter's Collegiate Girls' School is the only school in Stonyfell. There is a quarry and a winery, the present-day remnants of industries dating back to the early days of the colonisation of South Australia.

Stonyfell
South Australia
Stonyfell, ca. 1915
Stonyfell
Coordinates34°56′06″S 138°40′41″E / 34.935°S 138.678°E / -34.935; 138.678
Population1,266 (SAL 2021)[1]
Postcode(s)5066
LGA(s)City of Burnside
State electorate(s)Bragg
Federal division(s)Sturt
Suburbs around Stonyfell:
Erindale Wattle Park
Stonyfell Greenhill
Burnside Hazelwood Park

History edit

The area was inhabited by the Kaurna people before settlement by Europeans.[2][3]

Quarry and winery edit

 
Stonyfell quarry, c.1923

James Edlin opened the first quarry in the hundred of Adelaide on Section 1050 in 1837, to supply building stone and slate to local builders. G. Walker Johnson and Arthur Hardy took over the quarry by 1850 and it became known as Beacon Hill Quarry.[4][5]

In 1858, Henry Septimus Clark purchased land near the quarry from Edlin[6] in order to establish a vineyard. His fiancée, Annie Montgomery Martin, dubbed the land "Stonyfell"[7][8][9] (a "fell" being a term used for barren or uncultivated high ground in Northern England). Clark started planting the original vineyard with assistance from Robert Slape.[7][9] He built the two-storey wine cellars in the side of the hill, from locally quarried stone. By 1862, 25 acres (10 ha) had been planted with vines, mostly of the Black Portugal variety.[7] Joseph Crompton assisted in the vineyard, and in 1862 established a partnership with Clark and his brother A. Sidney Clark to conduct the business of winemakers, trading as Clark and Crompton. The company offices were in the same building as Francis Clark and Sons, with a warehouse in Blyth Street, Adelaide. On Henry's death, Sidney inherited his share of the business, which he sold to Crompton in 1873, though the business name remained "Clark and Crompton" until 1880.[10][11] Crompton took over the Home Park Winery at Magill, at which time Henry Tyler was the winemaker.[12]

Crompton married Susan Mary, sister of Clark, in 1866.[7]

The house and property, including the vineyards and winery, was taken over by quarry operator Henry Dunstan in 1886[12] or 1888,[6] after he had acquired nearby properties for quarrying in 1877.[13] In 1892 he separated the quarry and wine business, forming two companies.[7] He employed Henry Martin as his secretary and accountant,[6] with the company first called "H.Dunstan & Co. Winegrowers". Martin's son Ronald joined his father in 1902, trading as H.M. & R.H. Martin.[7][5]

 
Winery, c.1920

Stonyfell took over winemaking for Arthur Formby at Langhorne Creek in 1910; in 1955 the storage was moved to Stonyfell and the grapes from the Langhorne Creek property were crushed at Stonyfell. In 1939 the winery purchased a vineyard in Rostrevor and in 1949 another property at Magill. Ronald Martin died in a car accident in 1950; in 1958 Michael Auld was managing director and John Kilgour the winemaker. By this time, the original vineyard no longer existed, but was thought to be where the Stonyfell Quarry offices stood.[7]

The great hill on the Stonyfell property was still being quarried by Dunstan's family (as Quarry Industries Ltd.) well over a century after the first rock was quarried.[6]

In 1972 the winery was owned by Dalgety Australia, but by 1978 had been taken over by Seagram's, at which time the winemaking part of the business at Stonyfell was wound up.[14]

The Stonyfell Restaurant opened in 1981, after a A$1-million renovation under V. Deleso, who planned to restart winery operations, using grapes from the remaining 1.6 hectares (4.0 acres) of vineyard at Stonyfell, complemented by more from Barossa Valley vineyards. Promotions manager Kevin Parker said that activities in the functions cellar (which had been open since 1975 and seated about 200 people) had continued strongly, although wine-making had declined.[12]

The Stonyfell Winery and Vineyards were recommended for the local heritage list in 1986, at which time the premises comprised a restaurant and a small winery.[12]

In 2001, Amphora Wine Group bought the premises, reopening the site to the public in 2007.[12] The winery outbuildings, including the "vintage hall", were converted into a function centre for weddings and other events,[15][16] However the Stonyfell Function Centre closed on 30 June 2014.[17]

Clifton Manor edit

The Clifton Manor estate was established by a flour miller named George Sismey, who built the grand Gothic Revival-style mansion in 1852. The home was first leased (in 1872) and later purchased by Nathaniel Knox, who extended and developed the gardens, planting many European trees and shrubs. The estate was subdivided in 1926 and again in 1976, reducing the size to 2 acres (0.81 ha), and since then subdivided further for housing.[18]

Olives edit

The Stonyfell Olive Company was founded by Joseph Crompton[6] with William Mair and Sidney Clark[11] in 1873, with planting continuing until 1882.[19] By the 1900 had a 100 acres (40 ha) planted with about 10,000 olive trees, around Penfold Road.[20][21] In 1901, the company employed 81 workers.[19] This business became largely owned by the family of Owen Crompton (1875–1923) after his marriage to Sarah Simpson, daughter of A. M. Simpson, who settled on her the whole of his considerable stake in the company. With the inexorable expansion of Adelaide's suburbs, the land was sold to developers.[6] The olive crushing plant was actually in what is now the suburb of Wattle Park, at the western end of Crompton Drive.[22] In August 1932, the Stonyfell Olive Company was the largest producer of olive oil in South Australia, and it entered into an agreement with Bickford's (manufacturers of drinks and cordials) to do the bottling of the oil.[23]

Chiverton edit

Another grand manor, Chiverton, was built in the Italianate style in 1880 for merchant John Nankivell, but he soon afterwards leased the house to Harry Bickford, the manufacturer of drinks, cordials and syrups. The house was purchased by the Anglican Community of Sisters in 1894, who established a school on the premises. In 1957 the Sisters moved their North Adelaide school, St Peter's Girls' School, to the Stonyfell building. The house, stables and coach house were made of stone from the nearby quarry, and are now heritage-listed. The house is used as the school's administration building[24][25]

Description edit

Stonyfell Creek arises on the eastern border of Stonyfell, flowing through several suburbs before joining Second Creek.[26]

St Peter's Girls' School was founded in 1894 in North Adelaide and moved to its current site on Hallett Road in Stonyfell in 1957.[27]


Stonyfell Wines now uses vineyards at Langhorne Creek.[28]

There is still a quarry operating at Stonyfell as of June 2020,[29] operated by Boral since the 1980s and extracting sandstone and quartzite.[30]

The Stonyfell Quarry Reserve is on Penfold Road.[31]

Parks and reserves edit

The Ferguson Conservation Park, adjacent to St Peter's School, was dedicated as a conservation park on 2 June 1977.[32] It is a Category III protected area.[33] In 1980, the conservation park was listed on the former Register of the National Estate.[34]

The Michael Perry Botanic Reserve, comprising a long strip of land along Second Creek, originally part of the Clifton Manor estate, was created in the 1970s. It is named after Michael Perry, who was a councillor, alderman and Mayor of Burnside between 1958 and 1983.[35][36] A Vegetation Management Plan for the 3.2-hectare (7.9-acre) reserve was published by the council in 2012, which recommended a return to the native vegetation of the area.[37] Restoration work has been undertaken by the council and biodiversity contractors since then.[36] Part of the revegetation project was undertaken by a collaboration involving Burnside Council and Boral, as a corporate partner of Conservation Volunteers Australia (CVA), and 17 volunteers. More than 500 native seedlings were planted, and a new walking track was constructed in 2017.[30] In 2019, the Michael Perry Reserve Historic Garden Adaptation Plan was developed by council, "to guide the restoration of the historic garden areas of the reserve".[36]

References edit

  1. ^ Australian Bureau of Statistics (28 June 2022). "Stonyfell (suburb and locality)". Australian Census 2021 QuickStats. Retrieved 28 June 2022.  
  2. ^ O'Brien, Lewis Yerloburka; Paul, Mandy (8 December 2013). "Kaurna People". Adelaidia. Retrieved 3 February 2021.}
  3. ^ "Our early beginnings". City of Burnside. Retrieved 3 February 2021.
  4. ^ Smith, P.A. (Pam); Piddock, Susan; Pate, F.D. (Donald), eds. (2005). Historic Sites and Landscapes: Stonyfell to Tea Tree Gully. Hills Face Zone Cultural Heritage Project Reports, Department of Archaelology, Flinders University. Volume V. Kopi Books. Retrieved 4 June 2020.
  5. ^ a b "Sunday History Photo / SA". ExplorOz. 25 December 2016. Retrieved 4 June 2020. here are also several conflicting definitions of the area of Stonyfell Quarry, when differing names and dates surface.
  6. ^ a b c d e f Crompton & Sons; Crompton Bunyip Soaps; Stonyfell Olive Company (1962), The Story of Joseph Crompton and the companies he founded, Crompton & Sons: Crompton Bunyip Soaps Ltd.: Stonyfell Olive Co, retrieved 4 June 2020
  7. ^ a b c d e f g The Stonyfell Vineyards, 1858-1958: being the history of Stonyfell Vineyards and a record of the one hundred years of winemaking. The Griffin Press. 1958. Retrieved 17 June 2020.
  8. ^ "The A-Z history of Adelaide's suburbs". Adelaide Now. 9 October 2013. Retrieved 4 June 2020.
  9. ^ a b "Burnside Street Names and their Origins" (PDF). Burnside Historical Society. 2015. p. C-6,C-13. Preface to 3rd edition says 1st edition 1989; 2nd edition 2000; Amendment 1 2004; 3rd edition 2015. All sections available on Burnside Council website and at Burnside Historical Society.
  10. ^ Bishop, Geoffrey C. (1977). The vineyards of Adelaide: A history of the grapegrowers and wine-makers of the Adelaide area. Lynton Publications. ISBN 978-0-86946-280-5.
  11. ^ a b Findlay, Marjorie (1969). "Crompton, Joseph (1840–1901)". Australian Dictionary of Biography. Retrieved 17 June 2020 – via Australian National University. This article was first published in hardcopy in Australian Dictionary of Biography, Volume 3, (MUP), 1969
  12. ^ a b c d e Wine making in the Stonyfell area: 1929-1980, Burnside Library Local History Archive: Item ID C0472420660.
  13. ^ "Personal". The Advertiser. Adelaide: National Library of Australia. 24 May 1915. p. 8.
  14. ^ Warburton, Elizabeth; Burnside (S.A.). Corporation (1981). The paddocks beneath: a history of Burnside from the beginning. Corporation of the City of Burnside. ISBN 978-0-9593876-0-5.
  15. ^ "Stonyfell Winery Weddings". Panache Photography. 1 October 2013. Retrieved 4 June 2020.
  16. ^ . Stonyfell Function Centre. Archived from the original on 9 October 2017.
  17. ^ "Stonyfell Function Centres Closing Weekend Party". Weekend Notes. 21 June 2014. Retrieved 4 June 2020.
  18. ^ "Open Gardens South Australia Welcomes you to AVALON: Saturday 6 and Sunday 7 October2018: 20 Willowbridge Grove, Burnside" (PDF). Open Gardens. Retrieved 5 June 2020.
  19. ^ a b Reichelt, K.; Burr, M. (1997). Extra Virgin: An Australian Companion to Olives and Olive Oil. Wakefield Press. p. 28. ISBN 978-1-86254-417-8.
  20. ^ "Burnside Heritage Survey (South Australia): Part 1: General Report (amended 1987)" (PDF). Prepared for the Corporation of the City of Burnside and the State Heritage Branch of the Department of Environment and Planning by John Dallwitz and Alexandra Marsden of Heritage Investigations, Adelaide 1986. Retrieved 23 June 2020.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: others (link)
  21. ^ "Stoneyfell Olive Yards". State Library of South Australia. Retrieved 23 June 2020.
  22. ^ "Burnside's lost industry" (PDF). Newlsetter. 3 (3 September 1983). Burnside Historical Society: 5. September 1983. Retrieved 23 June 2020.
  23. ^ "A Forward Step in the Development of a South Australian Industry". The Advertiser (Adelaide). South Australia. 20 August 1932. p. 15 – via Trove.
  24. ^ denisbin (23 June 2020). "Adelaide. Stonyfell. Chiverton House erected in 1880 in local bluestone. Now the centre of St Peters Girls Anglican College". Flickr. Retrieved 23 June 2020.
  25. ^ "Miss Ferguson at Chiverton" (photo). State Library of South Australia. 1910.
  26. ^ Tonkin Engineering for the Torrens Catchment Water Management Board (March 2007). "First to Fifth Creeks Floodplain Mapping Project" (PDF). Retrieved 4 June 2020.
  27. ^ "Explore the History of St Peter's Girls' School in Adelaide, South Australia". St Peter's Girls' School in Adelaide, South Australia. Retrieved 4 June 2020.
  28. ^ "Our Story". Stonyfell Wines. 6 February 2012. Retrieved 4 June 2020.
  29. ^ "Stonyfell Quarry (Boral)". EPA. 28 August 2018. Retrieved 4 June 2020.
  30. ^ a b "Boral Stonyfell Quarry: Community Update" (PDF). September 2017.
  31. ^ "Stonyfell Quarry Reserve". City of Burnside. 22 June 2020. Retrieved 22 June 2020.
  32. ^ Hopgood, D.J. (2 June 1977). "National Parks and Wildlife Act, 1972-1974: Conservation Park Constituted" (PDF). The South Australian Government Gazette. Government of South Australia. p. 1580.
  33. ^ "Terrestrial Protected Areas of South Australia (refer 'DETAIL' tab )". CAPAD 2016. Australian Government, Department of the Environment (DoE). 2016.
  34. ^ "Ferguson Conservation Park - listing on the now-defunct Register of the National Estate (Place ID 6477)". Australian Heritage Database. Australian Government.
  35. ^ "Michael Perry Botanic Reserve". City of Burnside. 5 June 2020. Retrieved 5 June 2020.
  36. ^ a b c "Michael Perry Reserve Management". City of Burnside. 5 June 2020. Retrieved 5 June 2020.
  37. ^ Crompton, Andrew (November 2012). "Michael Perry Botanic Reserve: Vegetation Management Plan [draft]" (PDF). Reviewed by Leonie Scriven.

Further reading edit

  • The State Library of South Australia holds nearly 150 photographs pertaining to Stonyfell, with accompanying information: "[Search: Stonyfell]". State Library of South Australia.
  • Bender, Christine (1 December 2009). "Rock of Ages: Stoneyfell Quarry: An Archaeological Investigation into Stonyfell Quarry's Contribution to a Changing South Australian Landscape" (Abstract of thesis). Australian Archaeological Association.
  • denisbin (16 March 2018). "Burnside. Clifton Manor House at Stonyfell. Built in 1852 for Sismey. Gothic castle in style" (Photos and text). Flickr.
  • Ow, Yin-Yin (31 January 2013). "Michael Perry Botanic Reserve & Surrounds". Weekend Notes. Includes information about Clifton Manor; photos are pre-revegetation project though.
  • Paton, Penny (2017). "The Cromptons of Stonyfell" (PDF). SAOA Historical Series No 59. South Asia Open Archives (SAOA).
  • "1 Hour Walking Loop of Michael Perry Botanic Reserve". Walking SA. Includes downloadable map.

stonyfell, south, australia, stonyfell, eastern, suburb, foothills, adelaide, australia, within, council, area, city, burnside, parks, with, walking, tracks, creeks, running, through, peter, collegiate, girls, school, only, school, stonyfell, there, quarry, wi. Stonyfell is an eastern suburb in the foothills of Adelaide Australia within the council area of the City of Burnside It has parks with walking tracks and two creeks running through it St Peter s Collegiate Girls School is the only school in Stonyfell There is a quarry and a winery the present day remnants of industries dating back to the early days of the colonisation of South Australia Stonyfell South AustraliaStonyfell ca 1915StonyfellCoordinates34 56 06 S 138 40 41 E 34 935 S 138 678 E 34 935 138 678Population1 266 SAL 2021 1 Postcode s 5066LGA s City of BurnsideState electorate s BraggFederal division s SturtSuburbs around Stonyfell Erindale Wattle ParkStonyfell GreenhillBurnside Hazelwood Park Contents 1 History 1 1 Quarry and winery 1 2 Clifton Manor 1 3 Olives 1 4 Chiverton 2 Description 3 Parks and reserves 4 References 5 Further readingHistory editThe area was inhabited by the Kaurna people before settlement by Europeans 2 3 Quarry and winery edit nbsp Stonyfell quarry c 1923James Edlin opened the first quarry in the hundred of Adelaide on Section 1050 in 1837 to supply building stone and slate to local builders G Walker Johnson and Arthur Hardy took over the quarry by 1850 and it became known as Beacon Hill Quarry 4 5 In 1858 Henry Septimus Clark purchased land near the quarry from Edlin 6 in order to establish a vineyard His fiancee Annie Montgomery Martin dubbed the land Stonyfell 7 8 9 a fell being a term used for barren or uncultivated high ground in Northern England Clark started planting the original vineyard with assistance from Robert Slape 7 9 He built the two storey wine cellars in the side of the hill from locally quarried stone By 1862 25 acres 10 ha had been planted with vines mostly of the Black Portugal variety 7 Joseph Crompton assisted in the vineyard and in 1862 established a partnership with Clark and his brother A Sidney Clark to conduct the business of winemakers trading as Clark and Crompton The company offices were in the same building as Francis Clark and Sons with a warehouse in Blyth Street Adelaide On Henry s death Sidney inherited his share of the business which he sold to Crompton in 1873 though the business name remained Clark and Crompton until 1880 10 11 Crompton took over the Home Park Winery at Magill at which time Henry Tyler was the winemaker 12 Crompton married Susan Mary sister of Clark in 1866 7 The house and property including the vineyards and winery was taken over by quarry operator Henry Dunstan in 1886 12 or 1888 6 after he had acquired nearby properties for quarrying in 1877 13 In 1892 he separated the quarry and wine business forming two companies 7 He employed Henry Martin as his secretary and accountant 6 with the company first called H Dunstan amp Co Winegrowers Martin s son Ronald joined his father in 1902 trading as H M amp R H Martin 7 5 nbsp Winery c 1920Stonyfell took over winemaking for Arthur Formby at Langhorne Creek in 1910 in 1955 the storage was moved to Stonyfell and the grapes from the Langhorne Creek property were crushed at Stonyfell In 1939 the winery purchased a vineyard in Rostrevor and in 1949 another property at Magill Ronald Martin died in a car accident in 1950 in 1958 Michael Auld was managing director and John Kilgour the winemaker By this time the original vineyard no longer existed but was thought to be where the Stonyfell Quarry offices stood 7 The great hill on the Stonyfell property was still being quarried by Dunstan s family as Quarry Industries Ltd well over a century after the first rock was quarried 6 In 1972 the winery was owned by Dalgety Australia but by 1978 had been taken over by Seagram s at which time the winemaking part of the business at Stonyfell was wound up 14 The Stonyfell Restaurant opened in 1981 after a A 1 million renovation under V Deleso who planned to restart winery operations using grapes from the remaining 1 6 hectares 4 0 acres of vineyard at Stonyfell complemented by more from Barossa Valley vineyards Promotions manager Kevin Parker said that activities in the functions cellar which had been open since 1975 and seated about 200 people had continued strongly although wine making had declined 12 The Stonyfell Winery and Vineyards were recommended for the local heritage list in 1986 at which time the premises comprised a restaurant and a small winery 12 In 2001 Amphora Wine Group bought the premises reopening the site to the public in 2007 12 The winery outbuildings including the vintage hall were converted into a function centre for weddings and other events 15 16 However the Stonyfell Function Centre closed on 30 June 2014 17 Clifton Manor edit The Clifton Manor estate was established by a flour miller named George Sismey who built the grand Gothic Revival style mansion in 1852 The home was first leased in 1872 and later purchased by Nathaniel Knox who extended and developed the gardens planting many European trees and shrubs The estate was subdivided in 1926 and again in 1976 reducing the size to 2 acres 0 81 ha and since then subdivided further for housing 18 Olives edit The Stonyfell Olive Company was founded by Joseph Crompton 6 with William Mair and Sidney Clark 11 in 1873 with planting continuing until 1882 19 By the 1900 had a 100 acres 40 ha planted with about 10 000 olive trees around Penfold Road 20 21 In 1901 the company employed 81 workers 19 This business became largely owned by the family of Owen Crompton 1875 1923 after his marriage to Sarah Simpson daughter of A M Simpson who settled on her the whole of his considerable stake in the company With the inexorable expansion of Adelaide s suburbs the land was sold to developers 6 The olive crushing plant was actually in what is now the suburb of Wattle Park at the western end of Crompton Drive 22 In August 1932 the Stonyfell Olive Company was the largest producer of olive oil in South Australia and it entered into an agreement with Bickford s manufacturers of drinks and cordials to do the bottling of the oil 23 Chiverton edit Another grand manor Chiverton was built in the Italianate style in 1880 for merchant John Nankivell but he soon afterwards leased the house to Harry Bickford the manufacturer of drinks cordials and syrups The house was purchased by the Anglican Community of Sisters in 1894 who established a school on the premises In 1957 the Sisters moved their North Adelaide school St Peter s Girls School to the Stonyfell building The house stables and coach house were made of stone from the nearby quarry and are now heritage listed The house is used as the school s administration building 24 25 Description editStonyfell Creek arises on the eastern border of Stonyfell flowing through several suburbs before joining Second Creek 26 St Peter s Girls School was founded in 1894 in North Adelaide and moved to its current site on Hallett Road in Stonyfell in 1957 27 Stonyfell Wines now uses vineyards at Langhorne Creek 28 There is still a quarry operating at Stonyfell as of June 2020 update 29 operated by Boral since the 1980s and extracting sandstone and quartzite 30 The Stonyfell Quarry Reserve is on Penfold Road 31 Parks and reserves editThe Ferguson Conservation Park adjacent to St Peter s School was dedicated as a conservation park on 2 June 1977 32 It is a Category III protected area 33 In 1980 the conservation park was listed on the former Register of the National Estate 34 The Michael Perry Botanic Reserve comprising a long strip of land along Second Creek originally part of the Clifton Manor estate was created in the 1970s It is named after Michael Perry who was a councillor alderman and Mayor of Burnside between 1958 and 1983 35 36 A Vegetation Management Plan for the 3 2 hectare 7 9 acre reserve was published by the council in 2012 which recommended a return to the native vegetation of the area 37 Restoration work has been undertaken by the council and biodiversity contractors since then 36 Part of the revegetation project was undertaken by a collaboration involving Burnside Council and Boral as a corporate partner of Conservation Volunteers Australia CVA and 17 volunteers More than 500 native seedlings were planted and a new walking track was constructed in 2017 30 In 2019 the Michael Perry Reserve Historic Garden Adaptation Plan was developed by council to guide the restoration of the historic garden areas of the reserve 36 References edit Australian Bureau of Statistics 28 June 2022 Stonyfell suburb and locality Australian Census 2021 QuickStats Retrieved 28 June 2022 nbsp O Brien Lewis Yerloburka Paul Mandy 8 December 2013 Kaurna People Adelaidia Retrieved 3 February 2021 Our early beginnings City of Burnside Retrieved 3 February 2021 Smith P A Pam Piddock Susan Pate F D Donald eds 2005 Historic Sites and Landscapes Stonyfell to Tea Tree Gully Hills Face Zone Cultural Heritage Project Reports Department of Archaelology Flinders University Volume V Kopi Books Retrieved 4 June 2020 a b Sunday History Photo SA ExplorOz 25 December 2016 Retrieved 4 June 2020 here are also several conflicting definitions of the area of Stonyfell Quarry when differing names and dates surface a b c d e f Crompton amp Sons Crompton Bunyip Soaps Stonyfell Olive Company 1962 The Story of Joseph Crompton and the companies he founded Crompton amp Sons Crompton Bunyip Soaps Ltd Stonyfell Olive Co retrieved 4 June 2020 a b c d e f g The Stonyfell Vineyards 1858 1958 being the history of Stonyfell Vineyards and a record of the one hundred years of winemaking The Griffin Press 1958 Retrieved 17 June 2020 The A Z history of Adelaide s suburbs Adelaide Now 9 October 2013 Retrieved 4 June 2020 a b Burnside Street Names and their Origins PDF Burnside Historical Society 2015 p C 6 C 13 Preface to 3rd edition says 1st edition 1989 2nd edition 2000 Amendment 1 2004 3rd edition 2015 All sections available on Burnside Council website and at Burnside Historical Society Bishop Geoffrey C 1977 The vineyards of Adelaide A history of the grapegrowers and wine makers of the Adelaide area Lynton Publications ISBN 978 0 86946 280 5 a b Findlay Marjorie 1969 Crompton Joseph 1840 1901 Australian Dictionary of Biography Retrieved 17 June 2020 via Australian National University This article was first published in hardcopy in Australian Dictionary of Biography Volume 3 MUP 1969 a b c d e Wine making in the Stonyfell area 1929 1980 Burnside Library Local History Archive Item ID C0472420660 Personal The Advertiser Adelaide National Library of Australia 24 May 1915 p 8 Warburton Elizabeth Burnside S A Corporation 1981 The paddocks beneath a history of Burnside from the beginning Corporation of the City of Burnside ISBN 978 0 9593876 0 5 Stonyfell Winery Weddings Panache Photography 1 October 2013 Retrieved 4 June 2020 Welcome to Stonyfell Function Centre Stonyfell Function Centre Archived from the original on 9 October 2017 Stonyfell Function Centres Closing Weekend Party Weekend Notes 21 June 2014 Retrieved 4 June 2020 Open Gardens South Australia Welcomes you to AVALON Saturday 6 and Sunday 7 October2018 20 Willowbridge Grove Burnside PDF Open Gardens Retrieved 5 June 2020 a b Reichelt K Burr M 1997 Extra Virgin An Australian Companion to Olives and Olive Oil Wakefield Press p 28 ISBN 978 1 86254 417 8 Burnside Heritage Survey South Australia Part 1 General Report amended 1987 PDF Prepared for the Corporation of the City of Burnside and the State Heritage Branch of the Department of Environment and Planning by John Dallwitz and Alexandra Marsden of Heritage Investigations Adelaide 1986 Retrieved 23 June 2020 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint others link Stoneyfell Olive Yards State Library of South Australia Retrieved 23 June 2020 Burnside s lost industry PDF Newlsetter 3 3 September 1983 Burnside Historical Society 5 September 1983 Retrieved 23 June 2020 A Forward Step in the Development of a South Australian Industry The Advertiser Adelaide South Australia 20 August 1932 p 15 via Trove denisbin 23 June 2020 Adelaide Stonyfell Chiverton House erected in 1880 in local bluestone Now the centre of St Peters Girls Anglican College Flickr Retrieved 23 June 2020 Miss Ferguson at Chiverton photo State Library of South Australia 1910 Tonkin Engineering for the Torrens Catchment Water Management Board March 2007 First to Fifth Creeks Floodplain Mapping Project PDF Retrieved 4 June 2020 Explore the History of St Peter s Girls School in Adelaide South Australia St Peter s Girls School in Adelaide South Australia Retrieved 4 June 2020 Our Story Stonyfell Wines 6 February 2012 Retrieved 4 June 2020 Stonyfell Quarry Boral EPA 28 August 2018 Retrieved 4 June 2020 a b Boral Stonyfell Quarry Community Update PDF September 2017 Stonyfell Quarry Reserve City of Burnside 22 June 2020 Retrieved 22 June 2020 Hopgood D J 2 June 1977 National Parks and Wildlife Act 1972 1974 Conservation Park Constituted PDF The South Australian Government Gazette Government of South Australia p 1580 Terrestrial Protected Areas of South Australia refer DETAIL tab CAPAD 2016 Australian Government Department of the Environment DoE 2016 Ferguson Conservation Park listing on the now defunct Register of the National Estate Place ID 6477 Australian Heritage Database Australian Government Michael Perry Botanic Reserve City of Burnside 5 June 2020 Retrieved 5 June 2020 a b c Michael Perry Reserve Management City of Burnside 5 June 2020 Retrieved 5 June 2020 Crompton Andrew November 2012 Michael Perry Botanic Reserve Vegetation Management Plan draft PDF Reviewed by Leonie Scriven Further reading editThe State Library of South Australia holds nearly 150 photographs pertaining to Stonyfell with accompanying information Search Stonyfell State Library of South Australia Bender Christine 1 December 2009 Rock of Ages Stoneyfell Quarry An Archaeological Investigation into Stonyfell Quarry s Contribution to a Changing South Australian Landscape Abstract of thesis Australian Archaeological Association denisbin 16 March 2018 Burnside Clifton Manor House at Stonyfell Built in 1852 for Sismey Gothic castle in style Photos and text Flickr Ow Yin Yin 31 January 2013 Michael Perry Botanic Reserve amp Surrounds Weekend Notes Includes information about Clifton Manor photos are pre revegetation project though Paton Penny 2017 The Cromptons of Stonyfell PDF SAOA Historical Series No 59 South Asia Open Archives SAOA 1 Hour Walking Loop of Michael Perry Botanic Reserve Walking SA Includes downloadable map Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Stonyfell South Australia amp oldid 1162186526, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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