#sturton rights !!!
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mrstick-yaoi · 1 year ago
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@zedortoo @olympeparpaing @snazzytheidiot , yaoi 💥 💥
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aaronplumbingltd · 1 year ago
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Navigating the Flow: Handbook to choosing the right plumbing services
Whether it's a leaky faucet, a burst pipe, or a bathroom renovation, finding the right plumbing services is crucial for maintaining the integrity of your home. Unless or until the plumbing issues you can't stay peacefully but before going in search of a Plumber in Sturton get to know the valid factors you have to look into to make the right decision. Here's a comprehensive guide to help you make an informed decision when choosing plumbing services. Credentials and licensing  Plumbing services are not less you can find when you get into search for them but before finalizing the specific ensure they are properly licensed and have certified professionals. Licensing is an assurance of their adherence to industry standards and regulations. It gives you peace of mind knowing that your plumbing needs are in the hands of qualified experts. No matter, whether Power flushing Gainsborough or others prefer a licensed service provider. Experience and expertise Experience matters when it comes to plumbing. Look for services with a proven track record of handling a variety of plumbing issues or else you will wind up with another tragedy. An experienced plumber will have the capability of finding and fixing plumbing issues accurately and efficiently.
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Range of services When it comes to plumbing services go with the one that offers extensive services as a one package because sometimes fixing the simple repairs may require assistance from various experts. In that instance, you can stay assured that reduces the plumbing fees than going with individual plumbers. Prefer the highly rated plumber for Drainage in Gainsborough fixing they make the task easier. Wrap-up By considering these factors, you can make an educated decision when choosing plumbing services that align with your needs, ensuring a smooth and reliable plumbing experience for your home. Remember little knowledge can make you escape from great mistakes.
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annelisterstravelnotes · 4 years ago
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Netherlands with Mariana - Lincoln, 21 August 1831
August Sunday 21
3 55/..
9 55/..
Fahrenheit 66° at 5 a.m.
good bed – off from Peterborough,
at 5 20/.. (all 3 inside) – to Lincoln –
52 miles – Market Deeping like
a good village Bourne at 6 53/.. the same – of brick –
at Folkingham at 7 53/.. – picturesque little
village like town – stop to change
horses in a large square – brick
or stuccoed and partly straw thatched –
at the Lion Hotel Sleaford at 8 42/.. –
good little town very neat good church – 1/2 hour for
breakfast – had it upstairs and both had little
motion and all the better for it –
off at 9 12/.. change horses 8 miles from Lincoln at single
house at 10 – nice country all the way today –
well farmed light yellowish red light
land – flat but not dead flat –
not much wood – some capital wheat
to cut – beautiful even corn all today –
wheat and barley chiefly – and capital turnips –
did not observe the cathedral till between 4 and 5 miles
from Lincoln – looks more like York in the
distance than any of them –
at 10 3/4 fine look down upon the plain
of Lincoln – at the commercial Inn just
on this side the gate (Sternbow) at 10 57/..
ate my 4 oranges – out at 11 25/.. – found
we might have gone forward to Hull by the
Express coach at 12 1/2 if we liked – which coach left
Peterborough at the same time that we did – came up
the hill in 10 minutes to the cathedral – 2 west
towers and Lantern tower like York but the west
tower are not seen to rise from the ground but great
heavy mass of front covers them – very
inferior to York – the rest of the exterior very
fine – longer? but less regular than York and not
so well kept – cant get all round –
indifferent brick houses or not at all
good enough houses too near all round the building –
but stands finely on the hill – far superior
to York in that respect – waited in the interior
till service over at 12 – the chair very
fine – rather florid gothic upper arches
with corbeilles supporting the clustered pillars
below and between these upper arches as at Ely –
a sort of 2nd transept springing from the
choir at the foot of the chancel –
annunciation by a late prebewarry Mr Petres
Mr Petres who got a living of £300
a year by it – Cloisters lead to the chapter
house with handsome column in the middle
supporting the groined roof – all the
intervals between the pointed arches
inside and out relieved by a trellis –
which had a very good effect –
{margin: 2 west towers – too low -}
sinking for water and found tesselated
pavement 1700 years old – now covered
in by brick building – go down 8 steps
to it – 2 pieces the lesser under a brick arch –
said by some to have been a bath – by others
a ground room – cloisters round the whole
square – the modern arcades of them under
the deans library – communicate with the
choir transept by old cloister pass –
the lady’s chapel of 3 large arches
like the choir arches very large behind
the altar in fact a regular part of the choir with
its aisles in the style of Ely – monument
of bishop Fleming – attempted to fast 40 days
and 40 nights – did it 3 weeks and then died –
his monument is a sort of supine
recumbent skeleton –
only one transept aisle to each
transept east side partitioned off
into chapels and the entrances to the 2 choir
aisles – Lancet arches in transept
and rounder in the nave – small vestibule
between west entrance doors and the nave – oh
that the organ was there – 9 1/2 minutes going to the top
260 steps and 8 minutes coming down – 1/4 hour
at the top – just an hour doing the whole –
home at 1 3/4 – our Inn neat and newly done up –
the great old brick house, the Rein deer,
just opposite is perhaps the head Inn –
off from Lincoln, Saracen’s head, at 2 –
queer winding up narrow streets and lanes to get
out of the town – poor town – handsome new
stuccoed or stone assize courts and judges’
lodgings brick at a little distance – the prison
of brick – the new drop in a sound tower
that belonged to the old castle wall – the olds
castle keep tower on a mound – ivy covered put
ruin – looking down on all this from the top of the
cathedral and on an old ruined baronial house
called King John’s house – saw the river (small)
witham like a canal running towards
the Trent – look down upon
upon immense plain all around the
foot of the hill on which Lincoln stands –
the best part of the town around the cathedral
but apparently no good house –the screen in the
cathedral is narrowed and heavy three quarters
of the great pillar towards the nave – at
the little village of Sturton at 3 12/.. and stopt
to water the horses – just 3/4 hour out
of Lincoln fine look down upon Extensive
richish looking plain – then turn left
along fat uninteresting country – cross road
and very bad all the way till good new road near Lex pretty
little tidy tidy white washed tiled and straw thatched village a 4 10/..
here lives the reverend Sir Charles Anderson – some
fine pastures – Gainsborough a large
brick town – 1 long narrow street then a
kind of square or markeet place with large
brown lamp post in the middle – stop to change
chaise and horses at 4 27/.. at the Roebuck Inn –
off at 4 10/.. – returned to near where
we entered te town and croff the
Trent over handsome 3 arch hewn stone
bridge along a new road? a dyke,
a chaussee or fosse dike – fine pastures on
each side full of abundance of Scotch and other cattle –
fine liveable country – good land – much corn and grass –
well farmed from Gainsborough to Bawtry –
nice fresh air as we get away from
the fens – Gringley at 5 25/.. nice good little
village – see great extent of barish plain right
and rich and well wooded plain left
pretty road here – winding and descending –
at Bawtry at 6 4/.. nice good wide –
street village with good airy Inn where
we shall rest very comfortably – tea and bacon
and poached eggs at 6 ½ to 7 10/.. – went out
at 7 1/2 very fine evening – very pretty village –
walked to the 1st main street on the Tilnsney road
to 13 miles from Rotheram and 19 from Sheffield – very
pretty good country road – back at 8 20/.. - fine
day – very fine evening – Fahrenheit 65° now at 8 1/2 p.m.
came to our room at 8 50/.. –
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gtarealestatepros · 5 years ago
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GTA Listings Jul 19 2019
GTA Homes For Sale - July 19 2019
The homes that are for sale right now throughout the GTA right here, in one convenient place. Take a look - we guarantee you'll find something you'll love. No matter what area, there is something here for you.
Street and TownMLS CodeLink 25 Rennie Ave, MarkhamN452260125 Rennie Ave, Markham 532 Jane St, TorontoW4522519532 Jane St, Toronto 5692 River Grove Ave, MississaugaW45224805692 River Grove Ave, Mississauga 22 Woodriver St, Richmond HillN452249122 Woodriver St, Richmond Hill 57 Divon Lane, Richmond HillN452249057 Divon Lane, Richmond Hill 50 Cromarty Pl, VaughanN452253850 Cromarty Pl, Vaughan 64 Frank Kelly Dr, East GwillimburyN452250464 Frank Kelly Dr, East Gwillimbury 194 Concord Ave, TorontoC4522481194 Concord Ave, Toronto 65 Bear Run Rd, BramptonW452234165 Bear Run Rd, Brampton 3353 Liptay Ave 9, OakvilleW45223503353 Liptay Ave 9, Oakville 218 Arichat Rd, OakvilleW4522104218 Arichat Rd, Oakville 12 Old Oak Lane, OrangevilleW452224012 Old Oak Lane, Orangeville 62 Westhead Dr, TorontoW452225162 Westhead Dr, Toronto 2552 Andover Rd, OakvilleW45223272552 Andover Rd, Oakville 1838 Green Meadow Dr, BurlingtonW45222851838 Green Meadow Dr, Burlington 3027 Augusta Dr, MississaugaW45224213027 Augusta Dr, Mississauga 82 Aylesbury Dr, BramptonW452226582 Aylesbury Dr, Brampton 18 Reid Manor, TorontoW452221318 Reid Manor, Toronto 21 Hawtrey Rd, BramptonW452241721 Hawtrey Rd, Brampton 2951 Westoak Trails Blvd, OakvilleW45221782951 Westoak Trails Blvd, Oakville 59 Gwillimbury Dr Bradford, West GwillimburyN452243659 Gwillimbury Dr Bradford, West Gwillimbury 55 Goldpark Crt, VaughanN452231655 Goldpark Crt, Vaughan 27 Knotty Pine Tr, MarkhamN452230627 Knotty Pine Tr, Markham 65 Bluff Tr, KingN452236765 Bluff Tr, King 3 Pine Hills Crt, East GwillimburyN45221323 Pine Hills Crt, East Gwillimbury 424 Port Royal Tr, TorontoE4522205424 Port Royal Tr, Toronto 991 Carlaw Ave, TorontoE4522188991 Carlaw Ave, Toronto 4 Avanti Cres, HamiltonX45218534 Avanti Cres, Hamilton 949 Pondcliffe Crt, KitchenerX4522041949 Pondcliffe Crt, Kitchener 1011 Rebecca St, OakvilleW45215911011 Rebecca St, Oakville 2333 Presquile Dr, OakvilleW45218372333 Presquile Dr, Oakville 83 Sixteenth St, TorontoW452174383 Sixteenth St, Toronto 3072 Knob Hill, MississaugaW45216543072 Knob Hill, Mississauga 5345 San Remo Crt, MississaugaW45218775345 San Remo Crt, Mississauga 3208 W Dundas St, TorontoW45218793208 W Dundas St, Toronto 963 Preston Manor Dr, MississaugaW4521828963 Preston Manor Dr, Mississauga 22 Howland Cres, BramptonW452190722 Howland Cres, Brampton 3353 Liptay Ave 9, OakvilleW45217853353 Liptay Ave 9, Oakville 9 Antrim Crt, CaledonW45219089 Antrim Crt, Caledon 2436 Hilda Dr, OakvilleW45216752436 Hilda Dr, Oakville 26 Hartwood Pl, MarkhamN452187426 Hartwood Pl, Markham 1 Bruce Creek Dr, MarkhamN45216291 Bruce Creek Dr, Markham 22 Caymus St, Richmond HillN452179722 Caymus St, Richmond Hill 44 Mill Run Gate, UxbridgeN452162044 Mill Run Gate, Uxbridge 37 Timna Cres, VaughanN452180537 Timna Cres, Vaughan 87 Longhouse St, VaughanN452205387 Longhouse St, Vaughan 30 Norwich Dr, MarkhamN452208330 Norwich Dr, Markham 4 Township Ave, Richmond HillN45220004 Township Ave, Richmond Hill 7 Covington Dr, WhitbyE45219387 Covington Dr, Whitby 21 Marlee Ave, TorontoC452202721 Marlee Ave, Toronto 14 Mullet Rd, TorontoC452160214 Mullet Rd, Toronto 5 Preakness Dr, TorontoC45218225 Preakness Dr, Toronto 1 Anewen Dr, TorontoC45215281 Anewen Dr, Toronto 106 Kincardine St, VaughanN4521571106 Kincardine St, Vaughan 4 Falling River Dr, Richmond HillN45214064 Falling River Dr, Richmond Hill 2559 King Forrest Dr, MississaugaW45215292559 King Forrest Dr, Mississauga 6412 Cedar Springs Rd, BurlingtonW45214266412 Cedar Springs Rd, Burlington 29 Don Head Village Blvd, Richmond HillN452134329 Don Head Village Blvd, Richmond Hill 20 Donwoods Cres, WhitbyE452144920 Donwoods Cres, Whitby 1282 Myron Dr, MississaugaW45214991282 Myron Dr, Mississauga 3261 Mintwood Circ, OakvilleW45214683261 Mintwood Circ, Oakville 134 Mccabe Cres, VaughanN4521435134 Mccabe Cres, Vaughan 13699 Regional Rd 39 Rd, UxbridgeN452157513699 Regional Rd 39 Rd, Uxbridge 22 Bayswater Ave, Richmond HillN452152422 Bayswater Ave, Richmond Hill 24 Wild Cherry Lane, MarkhamN452123324 Wild Cherry Lane, Markham 5215 Brockworth Dr, MississaugaW45212515215 Brockworth Dr, Mississauga 15 Credo Dr, VaughanN452122915 Credo Dr, Vaughan 7502 Black Walnut Tr, MississaugaW45211947502 Black Walnut Tr, Mississauga 106 Speedwell St, BramptonW4521079106 Speedwell St, Brampton 54 Oxfordshire St, MarkhamN452117054 Oxfordshire St, Markham 39 Bryant Rd, MarkhamN452118539 Bryant Rd, Markham 7881 Dufferin St, VaughanN45211017881 Dufferin St, Vaughan 70 E Devondale Ave, TorontoC452114970 E Devondale Ave, Toronto 6936 Barrisdale Dr, MississaugaW45209616936 Barrisdale Dr, Mississauga 32 W Kirk Bradden Rd, TorontoW452102132 W Kirk Bradden Rd, Toronto 502 Grovehill Rd, OakvilleW4520770502 Grovehill Rd, Oakville 989 Focal Rd, MississaugaW4520934989 Focal Rd, Mississauga 2487 Oakhaven Dr, OakvilleW45209482487 Oakhaven Dr, Oakville 28 Jacksonville Dr, BramptonW452088728 Jacksonville Dr, Brampton 138 Mount Royal Circ, BramptonW4520903138 Mount Royal Circ, Brampton 380 Swinburne Rd, BurlingtonW4520749380 Swinburne Rd, Burlington 61 Bow River Cres, MississaugaW452095461 Bow River Cres, Mississauga 1387 Waverly Ave, OakvilleW45210311387 Waverly Ave, Oakville 2049 Tolman Rd, MississaugaW45208802049 Tolman Rd, Mississauga 69 Eaglewood Blvd, MississaugaW452079569 Eaglewood Blvd, Mississauga 5134 Nishga Crt, MississaugaW45208045134 Nishga Crt, Mississauga 4530 Centretown Way, MississaugaW45209214530 Centretown Way, Mississauga 1264 Kane Rd, MississaugaW45208131264 Kane Rd, Mississauga 185 Annette St, TorontoW4520686185 Annette St, Toronto 39 Ironshield Cres, MarkhamN452075839 Ironshield Cres, Markham 68 Senator Reesors Dr, MarkhamN452094268 Senator Reesors Dr, Markham 80 Oakborough Dr, MarkhamN452074280 Oakborough Dr, Markham 66 Meadowview Ave, MarkhamN452065566 Meadowview Ave, Markham 105 Pitfield Rd, TorontoE4520807105 Pitfield Rd, Toronto 96 Curzon St, TorontoE452095196 Curzon St, Toronto 7900 Thickson Rd, WhitbyE45209007900 Thickson Rd, Whitby 19 Stuart Cres, TorontoC452065619 Stuart Cres, Toronto 52 Denison Ave, TorontoC452073752 Denison Ave, Toronto 89 Palmerston Ave, TorontoC452065389 Palmerston Ave, Toronto 121 Edgewater Dr, HamiltonX4520175121 Edgewater Dr, Hamilton 10 Sturton Rd, TorontoW452053010 Sturton Rd, Toronto 103 Ennerdale Rd, TorontoW4520523103 Ennerdale Rd, Toronto 16 Royal West Dr, BramptonW452049416 Royal West Dr, Brampton 3469 Placid Pl, MississaugaW45206123469 Placid Pl, Mississauga 1007 Syndenham Lane, MiltonW45205441007 Syndenham Lane, Milton 411 S Inglehart St, OakvilleW4520248411 S Inglehart St, Oakville 2609 N Misener Cres, MississaugaW45204202609 N Misener Cres, Mississauga 3220 Robert St, BurlingtonW45203153220 Robert St, Burlington 27 Ivano Mews, VaughanN452020827 Ivano Mews, Vaughan 78 Martini Dr, Richmond HillN452033678 Martini Dr, Richmond Hill 26 Aldergrove Dr, MarkhamN452062826 Aldergrove Dr, Markham 2 Pantano Dr, VaughanN45204292 Pantano Dr, Vaughan 27 Fergus Ave, Richmond HillN452043227 Fergus Ave, Richmond Hill 81 Frank Kelly Dr, East GwillimburyN452050881 Frank Kelly Dr, East Gwillimbury 59 Rhodes Ave, TorontoE452039159 Rhodes Ave, Toronto 45 Rothean Dr, WhitbyE452022745 Rothean Dr, Whitby 62 Columbine Ave, TorontoE452016362 Columbine Ave, Toronto 8 Caronridge Cres, TorontoE45203208 Caronridge Cres, Toronto 157 Ellerslie Ave, TorontoC4520588157 Ellerslie Ave, Toronto 108 Shaw St, TorontoC4520533108 Shaw St, Toronto 122 Baycrest Ave, TorontoC4520456122 Baycrest Ave, Toronto 43 Tefley Rd, TorontoC452019643 Tefley Rd, Toronto 335 W Elgin Mills Rd, Richmond HillN4517599335 W Elgin Mills Rd, Richmond Hill 68 Thornbrook Crt, VaughanN451951368 Thornbrook Crt, Vaughan 39 Pagebrook Dr, TorontoW452008739 Pagebrook Dr, Toronto 23051 Mccowan Rd, GeorginaN452000023051 Mccowan Rd, Georgina 71 Pathway Dr, BramptonW452002471 Pathway Dr, Brampton 1063 Avenue Rd, TorontoC45201321063 Avenue Rd, Toronto 9015 Mosport Rd, ClaringtonE45199309015 Mosport Rd, Clarington 10 Lost Holllow Rd, CaledonW451991410 Lost Holllow Rd, Caledon 15 Daleridge Cres, BramptonW452005015 Daleridge Cres, Brampton 38 Northwest Crt, Halton HillsW451997438 Northwest Crt, Halton Hills 67 Thirtieth St, TorontoW452010667 Thirtieth St, Toronto 15 Reesor Rd, TorontoE451983615 Reesor Rd, Toronto 28 Chisholm Ave, TorontoE451984228 Chisholm Ave, Toronto 131 Deerwood Cres, Richmond HillN4519809131 Deerwood Cres, Richmond Hill 8 Glenwood Cres, TorontoE45198078 Glenwood Cres, Toronto 122 Landsdown Cres, MarkhamN4519865122 Landsdown Cres, Markham 5542 St John Sdrd, Whitchurch StouffvilleN45198395542 St John Sdrd, Whitchurch Stouffville 52 Spruce Ave, East GwillimburyN451979652 Spruce Ave, East Gwillimbury 8 Cirillo St, BramptonW45197248 Cirillo St, Brampton 24 Waterloo Crt, BramptonW451967624 Waterloo Crt, Brampton 494 Durie St, TorontoW4519729494 Durie St, Toronto 4 Intrigue Tr, BramptonW45197004 Intrigue Tr, Brampton 22 Rhapsody Cres, BramptonW451967322 Rhapsody Cres, Brampton 2740 Baseline Rd, GeorginaN45197512740 Baseline Rd, Georgina 311 Glenholme Ave, TorontoC4519704311 Glenholme Ave, Toronto 1687 Danthorpe Dr, MississaugaW45191661687 Danthorpe Dr, Mississauga 56 Playfair Terr, MiltonW451940256 Playfair Terr, Milton 191 Hallam St, TorontoW4519613191 Hallam St, Toronto 5153 Rayana Rdge, MississaugaW45193305153 Rayana Rdge, Mississauga 10 E Quintette Clse, BramptonW451936910 E Quintette Clse, Brampton 1598 Hollywell Ave, MississaugaW45193711598 Hollywell Ave, Mississauga 36 Wildmoor St, MarkhamN451952136 Wildmoor St, Markham 49 Buchanan Dr, MarkhamN451947349 Buchanan Dr, Markham 16 Rossini Rd, Richmond HillN451954016 Rossini Rd, Richmond Hill 93 Maurier Blvd, VaughanN451964393 Maurier Blvd, Vaughan 10 Goodwin Crt, East GwillimburyN451937810 Goodwin Crt, East Gwillimbury 2 Glentworth Rd, TorontoC45195782 Glentworth Rd, Toronto 529 Terrington Cres, KitchenerX4519228529 Terrington Cres, Kitchener 3350 Ryerson Rd, BurlingtonW45191723350 Ryerson Rd, Burlington 15 Grafton Ave, TorontoW451905915 Grafton Ave, Toronto 6914 Lisgar Dr, MississaugaW45192296914 Lisgar Dr, Mississauga 36 Cedarsprings Way, BramptonW451922036 Cedarsprings Way, Brampton 320 Wendron Cres, MississaugaW4518957320 Wendron Cres, Mississauga 169 Sixteen Mile Dr, OakvilleW4519235169 Sixteen Mile Dr, Oakville 1052 Enola Ave, MississaugaW45189981052 Enola Ave, Mississauga 1499 Lorne Wood Rd, MississaugaW45189211499 Lorne Wood Rd, Mississauga 19 Mulholland Ave, TorontoW451884019 Mulholland Ave, Toronto 61 Sheshi Dr, VaughanN451902961 Sheshi Dr, Vaughan 50 Timber Valley Ave, Richmond HillN451901650 Timber Valley Ave, Richmond Hill 34 Breckonwood Cres, MarkhamN451897534 Breckonwood Cres, Markham 143 Rushworth Cres, VaughanN4519116143 Rushworth Cres, Vaughan 2 Emmeline Cres, TorontoE45188622 Emmeline Cres, Toronto 3 Serene Crt, WhitbyE45188703 Serene Crt, Whitby 28 Overton Cres, TorontoC451918328 Overton Cres, Toronto 143 Niagara St, TorontoC4519212143 Niagara St, Toronto 3307 Lonefeather Cres, MississaugaW45187763307 Lonefeather Cres, Mississauga 274A Beta St, TorontoW4518617274A Beta St, Toronto 201 E Finch Ave, TorontoC4518631201 E Finch Ave, Toronto 144 Heward Ave, TorontoE4518534144 Heward Ave, Toronto 749 E Gerrard St, TorontoE4518640749 E Gerrard St, Toronto 11360 Fifth Line, Halton HillsW451869411360 Fifth Line, Halton Hills 128 Rising Hill Rdge, BramptonW4518752128 Rising Hill Rdge, Brampton 42 Jessie Cres, East GwillimburyN451875442 Jessie Cres, East Gwillimbury 2 Valleyway Dr, BramptonW45186072 Valleyway Dr, Brampton 6 Bloomfield Tr, Richmond HillN45186466 Bloomfield Tr, Richmond Hill 16 Lugano Cres, MarkhamN451852816 Lugano Cres, Markham 15 Mckee Crt, AuroraN451858115 Mckee Crt, Aurora 5 Highvalley Circ, BramptonW45226575 Highvalley Circ, Brampton 142 Hurst Ave, VaughanN4522613142 Hurst Ave, Vaughan 7 Wingate Cres, Richmond HillN45226447 Wingate Cres, Richmond Hill 1576 Carmen Dr, MississaugaW45225941576 Carmen Dr, Mississauga 40 Silverhill Dr, TorontoW452259640 Silverhill Dr, Toronto 86 A Greensides Ave, TorontoC452262486 A Greensides Ave, Toronto 168 Nelson St, OakvilleW4522546168 Nelson St, Oakville 17 Oakbank Rd, VaughanN452254517 Oakbank Rd, Vaughan 25 Eastdale Cres, Richmond HillN452249325 Eastdale Cres, Richmond Hill 9 Adonis Clse, BramptonW45221469 Adonis Clse, Brampton 289 Rebecca St, OakvilleW4522427289 Rebecca St, Oakville 3246 Donald Mackay St, OakvilleW45223903246 Donald Mackay St, Oakville 1220 Bellview St, BurlingtonW45222711220 Bellview St, Burlington 24 Dumfries Dr, MarkhamN452220324 Dumfries Dr, Markham 84 Willow Farm Lane, AuroraN452239784 Willow Farm Lane, Aurora 41 Pennock Cres, MarkhamN452211941 Pennock Cres, Markham 25 Country Ridge Dr, MarkhamN452243125 Country Ridge Dr, Markham 18480 Keele St, KingN452236418480 Keele St, King 61 Michael Fisher Ave, VaughanN452224961 Michael Fisher Ave, Vaughan 15975 E Jane St, KingN452215415975 E Jane St, King 1611 N Ritson Rd, OshawaE45222921611 N Ritson Rd, Oshawa 155 E Estelle Ave, TorontoC4522136155 E Estelle Ave, Toronto 35 37 Tournament Dr, TorontoC452236335 37 Tournament Dr, Toronto 1594 Calverton Crt, MississaugaW45220011594 Calverton Crt, Mississauga 12312 Kennedy Rd, CaledonW452192212312 Kennedy Rd, Caledon 74 Gort Ave, TorontoW452190274 Gort Ave, Toronto 5354 Ruperts Gate Dr, MississaugaW45216855354 Ruperts Gate Dr, Mississauga 4796 Countryside Dr, BramptonW45216594796 Countryside Dr, Brampton 111 Firglen Rdge, VaughanN4521739111 Firglen Rdge, Vaughan 5852 Sixteenth Sdrd, KingN45220955852 Sixteenth Sdrd, King 62 Randolph Dr, VaughanN452188062 Randolph Dr, Vaughan 107 Marc Santi Blvd, VaughanN4521905107 Marc Santi Blvd, Vaughan 16 Windridge Dr, MarkhamN452180716 Windridge Dr, Markham 208 Mortimer Ave, TorontoE4521909208 Mortimer Ave, Toronto 30 Chipping Rd, TorontoC452173330 Chipping Rd, Toronto 25 Burleigh Heights Dr, TorontoC452171725 Burleigh Heights Dr, Toronto 147 Sutherland Dr, TorontoC4522061147 Sutherland Dr, Toronto 79 Elmsthorpe Ave, TorontoC452194179 Elmsthorpe Ave, Toronto 16 Davean Dr, TorontoC452175416 Davean Dr, Toronto 108 Bayview Ridge Rdge, TorontoC4521901108 Bayview Ridge Rdge, Toronto 52 Charleston Rd, TorontoW452156752 Charleston Rd, Toronto 7 Stanford Rd, MarkhamN45215177 Stanford Rd, Markham 59 Tanjo Crt, VaughanN452152759 Tanjo Crt, Vaughan 15 Rolling Green Crt, VaughanN452145515 Rolling Green Crt, Vaughan 154 Eaglewood Blvd, MississaugaW4521457154 Eaglewood Blvd, Mississauga 12 Mary Agar Crt, KingN452152512 Mary Agar Crt, King 375 Warren Rd, KingN4521486375 Warren Rd, King 35 Madison Ave, Richmond HillN452154435 Madison Ave, Richmond Hill 300 Portview Rd, ScugogE4521568300 Portview Rd, Scugog 17 Kootenay Rdge, VaughanN452142117 Kootenay Rdge, Vaughan 3265 Lloydtown Aurora Rd, KingN45212853265 Lloydtown Aurora Rd, King 168 Beverley Glen Blvd, VaughanN4521279168 Beverley Glen Blvd, Vaughan 100 Garden Ave, Richmond HillN4521275100 Garden Ave, Richmond Hill 191 Spadina Rd, Richmond HillN4521239191 Spadina Rd, Richmond Hill 22 Violetridge Crt, BramptonW452127022 Violetridge Crt, Brampton 224 Hollywood Ave, TorontoC4521197224 Hollywood Ave, Toronto 2488 Wanless Dr, BramptonW45211302488 Wanless Dr, Brampton 422 Macdonald Rd, OakvilleW4521123422 Macdonald Rd, Oakville 90 Via Romano Blvd, VaughanN452109790 Via Romano Blvd, Vaughan 126 Cambridge Cres, Richmond HillN4521131126 Cambridge Cres, Richmond Hill 1376 1 Side Rd, BurlingtonW45206641376 1 Side Rd, Burlington 1300 Queen Victoria Ave, MississaugaW45208441300 Queen Victoria Ave, Mississauga 34 Peter Schneider Dr, East GwillimburyN452078934 Peter Schneider Dr, East Gwillimbury 75 Langtry Pl, VaughanN452098675 Langtry Pl, Vaughan 38 Brownlee Ave, VaughanN452098038 Brownlee Ave, Vaughan 76 Shamrock Cres, VaughanN452066576 Shamrock Cres, Vaughan 24 Terrance Dr, MarkhamN452070824 Terrance Dr, Markham 8C Clairtrell Rd, TorontoC45198908C Clairtrell Rd, Toronto 14 Flaremore Cres, TorontoC452028714 Flaremore Cres, Toronto 399 Progreston Rd, HamiltonX4520152399 Progreston Rd, Hamilton 12378 Coleraine Dr, CaledonW452058112378 Coleraine Dr, Caledon 12394 Coleraine Dr, CaledonW452058312394 Coleraine Dr, Caledon 11 Birchview Blvd, TorontoW452026911 Birchview Blvd, Toronto 1293 Old Bridle Path, OakvilleW45203211293 Old Bridle Path, Oakville 10 Love Crt, BramptonW452024610 Love Crt, Brampton 5 Oakcrest Ave, MarkhamN45206505 Oakcrest Ave, Markham 15 Giordano Way, VaughanN452061715 Giordano Way, Vaughan 17 Donhill Cres, VaughanN452055817 Donhill Cres, Vaughan 51 Bowhill Dr, Richmond HillN452021451 Bowhill Dr, Richmond Hill 1 Trumpour Crt, MarkhamN45206081 Trumpour Crt, Markham 182 Headwind Blvd, VaughanN4520568182 Headwind Blvd, Vaughan 30 Marcus Crt, VaughanN452038730 Marcus Crt, Vaughan 43 Shining Willow Crt, Richmond HillN452053843 Shining Willow Crt, Richmond Hill 100 Laurentian Blvd, VaughanN4520200100 Laurentian Blvd, Vaughan 50 Denham Dr, Richmond HillN452043050 Denham Dr, Richmond Hill 52 Harriet St, TorontoE452030252 Harriet St, Toronto 101 Neville Park Blvd, TorontoE4520421101 Neville Park Blvd, Toronto 16 Gilgorm Rd, TorontoC452034916 Gilgorm Rd, Toronto 136 Homewood Ave, TorontoC4520444136 Homewood Ave, Toronto 452 Glengarry Ave, TorontoC4520304452 Glengarry Ave, Toronto 2A Nina St, TorontoC45202302A Nina St, Toronto 238 Combe Ave, TorontoC4520362238 Combe Ave, Toronto 84 Bevdale Rd, TorontoC452029184 Bevdale Rd, Toronto 851 W Richmond St, TorontoC4520602851 W Richmond St, Toronto 195 Cameron Ave, TorontoC4520225195 Cameron Ave, Toronto 70 Dorwood Crt, VaughanN451990270 Dorwood Crt, Vaughan 17 Blue Silo Way, BramptonW452012217 Blue Silo Way, Brampton 1 Shorncliffe Ave, TorontoC45201301 Shorncliffe Ave, Toronto 138 Everden Rd, TorontoC4499846138 Everden Rd, Toronto 1165 Alexandra Ave, MississaugaW45199251165 Alexandra Ave, Mississauga 44 Sprucewood Dr, MarkhamN452008444 Sprucewood Dr, Markham 81 Balderson Dr, VaughanN451991581 Balderson Dr, Vaughan 5031 Lakeshore Rd, BurlingtonW45200465031 Lakeshore Rd, Burlington 22 Amelia St, TorontoC451995922 Amelia St, Toronto 16130 Bathurst St, KingN436354516130 Bathurst St, King 25 Grand Vellore Cres, VaughanN452005125 Grand Vellore Cres, Vaughan 2596 W Lake Shore Blvd, TorontoW45198842596 W Lake Shore Blvd, Toronto 63 Cornelius Pkwy, TorontoW451986263 Cornelius Pkwy, Toronto 18 Belvale Ave, TorontoW451980418 Belvale Ave, Toronto 167 Sheardown Dr, KingN4519866167 Sheardown Dr, King 6 Tortoise Crt, BramptonW45198296 Tortoise Crt, Brampton 61 The Fairways Frwy, MarkhamN451983061 The Fairways Frwy, Markham 7 Braithwaite Rd, MarkhamN45198827 Braithwaite Rd, Markham 3530 Lakeshore Rd, BurlingtonW45197663530 Lakeshore Rd, Burlington 5648 Lakeshore Rd, Whitchurch StouffvilleN45197195648 Lakeshore Rd, Whitchurch Stouffville 28 Long Valley Rd, AuroraN451976228 Long Valley Rd, Aurora 60 Brookview Dr, TorontoC451973560 Brookview Dr, Toronto 36 Senlac Rd, TorontoC451967836 Senlac Rd, Toronto 57 Church St, HamiltonX451940457 Church St, Hamilton 19 Degrey Dr, BramptonW451939519 Degrey Dr, Brampton 33 Mountview Ave, TorontoW451929133 Mountview Ave, Toronto 216 Carlini Crt, OakvilleW4519626216 Carlini Crt, Oakville 902 Beechwood Ave, MississaugaW4519350902 Beechwood Ave, Mississauga 8768 Mississauga Rd, BramptonW45195088768 Mississauga Rd, Brampton 23B Lunness Rd, TorontoW451962823B Lunness Rd, Toronto 144 Temperance St, AuroraN4519400144 Temperance St, Aurora 59 Old Kennedy Rd, MarkhamN451948659 Old Kennedy Rd, Markham 10 Alta Dr, Whitchurch StouffvilleN451958110 Alta Dr, Whitchurch Stouffville 146 Battaglini Ave, Richmond HillN4519548146 Battaglini Ave, Richmond Hill 34 Royal West Rd, MarkhamN451962534 Royal West Rd, Markham 24 Liebeck Cres, MarkhamN451963524 Liebeck Cres, Markham 27 Crescentwood Rd, TorontoE451931827 Crescentwood Rd, Toronto 245 Oak Park Ave, TorontoE4519633245 Oak Park Ave, Toronto 110 Donwoods Dr, TorontoC4519576110 Donwoods Dr, Toronto 13440 Guelph Line, MiltonW451923713440 Guelph Line, Milton 1325 Indian Grve, MississaugaW45189851325 Indian Grve, Mississauga 21 25 27 Main St, MississaugaW451908521 25 27 Main St, Mississauga 2420 Ventura Dr, OakvilleW45189992420 Ventura Dr, Oakville 13385 Innis Lake Rd, CaledonW451906913385 Innis Lake Rd, Caledon 2111 Wildfel Way, OakvilleW45188512111 Wildfel Way, Oakville 18 Farina Dr, BramptonW451887318 Farina Dr, Brampton 14 Woodheath Lane, Whitchurch StouffvilleN451900814 Woodheath Lane, Whitchurch Stouffville 10 Grants Pl, MarkhamN451911410 Grants Pl, Markham 206 Corner Ridge Rd, AuroraN4519095206 Corner Ridge Rd, Aurora 99 King High Dr, VaughanN451922499 King High Dr, Vaughan 630 Woodland Acres Cres, VaughanN4518886630 Woodland Acres Cres, Vaughan 299 N Blantyre Ave, TorontoE4519052299 N Blantyre Ave, Toronto 145 Churchill Ave, TorontoC4519102145 Churchill Ave, Toronto 34 Owen Blvd, TorontoC451890234 Owen Blvd, Toronto 118 Givins St, TorontoC4518821118 Givins St, Toronto 76 Summerhill Gdns, TorontoC451789476 Summerhill Gdns, Toronto 23 Laurentia Cres, TorontoC451894923 Laurentia Cres, Toronto 37A Harrison Ave, AuroraN451870637A Harrison Ave, Aurora 2399 Rock Point Dr, OakvilleW45186372399 Rock Point Dr, Oakville 458 Jeanette Dr, OakvilleW4518593458 Jeanette Dr, Oakville 15 Wiley Ave, Richmond HillN451862715 Wiley Ave, Richmond Hill 29 Subrisco Ave, Richmond HillN451874629 Subrisco Ave, Richmond Hill 249 Bedford Rd, TorontoC4518688249 Bedford Rd, Toronto 31 Norden Cres, TorontoC451866331 Norden Cres, Toronto
GTA Listings Jul 19 2019 first appeared on: GTA Real Estate Pros 154 Bathurst St, Toronto, ON, M5V 2R3 647-362-2000 https://goo.gl/Yj7G5g
source https://www.gtarealestatepros.ca/gta-listings-jul-19-2019/
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crarsports · 6 years ago
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17 Mind Numbing Facts About History Of Daihatsu | history of daihatsu
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5axismachiningchina · 7 years ago
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Salisbury. Early view of stone gates and Gate Houe for Paralowie House which was built in 1894. Paralowie gate house how I remember it.
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Salisbury. Early view of stone gates and Gate Houe for Paralowie House which was built in 1894. Paralowie gate house how I remember it.
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Salisbury. Early view of stone gates and Gate Houe for Paralowie House which was built in 1894. Paralowie gate house how I remember it.
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Image by denisbin Oranges along the Para. The orange tree is botanically known as citrus sinensis which comes from China but is grown in tropical and subtropical areas of the world. The fruit of this tree gave us the name for one of our primary colours. This colour was first recoded in the English language in 1512. Orange is a Sanskrit Indian word. In Europe oranges have been grown in Italy and Spain since they were brought there by the Crusaders in 1100s from the Middle East. The first mention of commercial orange growing along the Para was in 1870 when Mr Urlwin exhibited Salisbury oranges at the Adelaide Royal Show. Then Mr F Fendon was described in newspapers in 1876 as a pioneer of commercial orange growing at Salisbury as he had been experimenting with orange trees since 1850. He hoped his display at the Salisbury Show of 1876 would encourage others to turn to orange growing. He had 20 varieties growing along Para when he exhibited them at the Salisbury Annual Show in 1876. More oranges were grown in the 1880s and by the 1890s hundreds of cases a year were being exported by P & O steamers to London. Thus the big expansion of commercial orange growing was in the 1880s. The oranges grown were Navel, Valencias, Washingtons and Lisbons( lemon) and these were the four” houses” in the Salisbury Primary School in the 1950s. Other earlier varieties grown included Sabina (a sour Italian orange), Rio (a red grapefruit), Seville oranges etc. Navel orange is a variety that was developed in Brazil in the 1820s, Washingtons were also from Brazil but Navels were developed for commercial orchards in California. Mr Russsell of Paralowie House is a good example of what Salisbury farmers did. He converted from growing oats and wheat to oranges in 1890. He planted 82 acres of his 122 acres in citrus trees 21 feet apart giving him over 1,000 trees. The annual floods of the Little Para were the secret of providing the rich alluvial soils in the Para valley. Other early citrus growers in Salisbury were the Kuhlmann, Moss, Tate, Jenkins, Harvey, Ponton and Sayer families. In the 1970s as the citrus industry died the flood plains of the Little Para were converted to parklands if they flooded or to housing if they were not flood prone. But once the Little Para Reservoir was completed the annual floods stopped anyway. Oranges were also extensively grown at Golden Grove. During the dry of summer water was taken from the Little Para to irrigate the oranges and one old stone waterwheel used for this purpose has been restored in Salisbury. That waterwheel was built for orange grower Frederick Kuhlmann of the Old Spot Hotel in 1899 and used until the 1940s.
Salisbury. Sir Montague( or Montagu) Chapman, Third Baronet of Westmeath near Dublin Ireland, used a loop hole in the Special Survey regulations of 1839 and selected his 4,000 acres for £4,000 in different areas. He took 800 acres at Koonunga near Kapunda; 500 acres at Kapunda (a friend of his Bagot also got land there); 500 acres near Waterloo and Marrabel; and later in 1842 he selected a further 2,200 acres between the Little Para River and Dry Creek at what is now Mawson Lakes, Salisbury and Cross Keys. At Killua Castle in Ireland he had 9,000 acres and hundreds of tenant farmers. He wanted to do the same in SA. In 1840 he sent out Captain Charles Bagot from Ireland with 224 Irish immigrants to settle his, and Bagot’s lands, at Kapunda with Irish labourers and tenants. Then in 1842 he sailed out to SA himself with 120 Irish tenant farmers whom he installed on his lands at Cross Keys. Sir Montague Chapman returned to Ireland the next year. Then in 1847 he sent out a further 214 Irish immigrants to be tenant farmers on his Cross Key to Salisbury lands. They came out on the ships named Trafalgar and Aboukir. Sir Montague Chapman lived in Ireland not SA but returned to his SA estates in 1852 and drowned at sea in 1853 off Portland when returning to SA from Melbourne. His brother inherited the SA lands and estates. The lasting effect of Sir Montague Chapmans tenant farming ideas was a large number of Irish Catholics around the Salisbury and Kapunda districts. Many of these immigrants soon became independent landowners themselves rather than Montague’s tenants.
Daniel Brady, another Irishman was a self-made Irish immigrant to the area. He purchased 100 acres, now the Parafield Airport in 1845. He then got the license to the Cross Keys hotel. Much later Brady laid out the town of Virginia in 1858.But there were other Catholic influences in Salisbury too. William Leigh of Staffordshire (and of Leigh Street Adelaide) was a great land investor and speculator in SA and donated lands early to the Anglican Church ( in Leigh St.) then he converted to Catholicism and donated lands to the SA Catholic Church for the first church and bishop’s palace on West Terrace etc. At Salisbury he donated 500 acres to the local Catholic Church along the Little Para where the reservoir is now situated. The local church rented that farm out as income until it was sold in 1896. Thus because of two major Catholic British aristocrats Salisbury thrived as a centre of Catholicism and had one of the largest Catholic Churches in SA in the mid-19th century. The church itself was set up when the state Government was offering glebe lands for churches to get established. The Catholics of Salisbury received 20 acres of land under this system through Bishop Murphy in 1850. The foundations of St Augustine’s Church were laid in 1851 with the church being used before its final official opening in 1857. This grand stone church replaced an earlier pug and pine church which had opened in 1847 on the site. The tower was added in 1926.
But the main story of Salisbury is centred on Scottish born John Harvey of Wick. But who was John Harvey? Is his main claim to fame that he brought out from South Africa soursob bulbs? He was a man of ideas wanting to make money. He came out to SA alone when he was 16 years old arriving in 1839 on the ship named Superb. By 1843 Harvey had moved to Gawler where he drove mails between Adelaide and Gawler. This gave him the idea of grazing cattle on the unoccupied plains between the two settlements. He started squatting. He let overlanders from NSW depasture their flocks on these lands, for a fee, although he had no legal right to do so. He accepted cattle for fees and soon had stock of his own. To this he added some horses which he bred for sale (or export to India) and once he had fattened the cattle he sold them for meat for the Adelaide market or through his butcher shop in growing Gawler. He became a major meat supplier for Adelaide and Gawler. He also experimented with cereal growing on the Salisbury plains and claims to be have been the first to do so. Within a few years he had amassed a sizeable amount of money from almost nothing and he purchased his first land at Gawler, where he built his first stone house, and at Salisbury when the Hundred of Yatala was declared in 1846. He was temporarily forced off the land he was squatting upon until he purchased 147 acres in 1847. He subdivided a small part of it to create the town of Salisbury with the main street named after himself and the street parallel to it named Wiltshire where his wife Ann Pitman (cousin of Sir Isaac Pitman of shorthand fame) was born. His town plans were submitted in 1848 as he hoped to make money from this action. Harvey continued living in Salisbury and went into building houses for people, breeding race horses and encouraging agriculture. He was elected to parliament in 1857 for one term and served on the Yatala District Council. His land deals included selling the area of Gawler that became Bassett Town by the old Gawler railway station. He was a mainstay of the Royal Horticultural Society and the Adelaide Racing Club. He was a local Justice of the Peace. John Harvey died in Salisbury in 1899, aged 78 years but his descendants stayed on in the town to be orange growers. John and his wife Ann are buried in St John’s Anglican cemetery. He left three sons and daughter.
By 1854 there were churches being erected in Salisbury; a flour mill; a hotel; and many houses for residents. The earliest SA settlers has eschewed the Adelaide Plains as they were hot and dry and they preferred the wetter, cooler Adelaide Hills. By 1845 less hills land was available and some saw the potential of this fertile little river valley close to the Adelaide and on the main copper mine routes from Adelaide to Kapunda and Burra. Apart from the Catholics the town attracted Anglicans, who were to construct their first church in 1849 or 1850 although the date on the building says 1846 which was before the land was even surveyed. John Harvey is known to have sold two lots to the Anglican Bishop Short for a nominal amount for an Anglican Church in 1850. It is therefore unlikely that the Anglicans built anything before 1850 but John Harvey might have allowed a building on his land before it was officially handed over to Bishop Short. A number of Primitive Methodists were also drawn to Salisbury and they who formed their congregation in 1849 with services on the banks of the Little Para. In 1851 they opened their Primitive Methodist Church called Hephzibah which was replaced with a second solid stone church in 1858. The Primitive Methodists purchased their land from John Harvey. They then established satellite Primitive Methodist churches at Burton, Sturton, Greenwith and other further out districts like Carclew, Two Wells etc. The Wesleyan Methodists had a church at the Old Spot (1857) but they too constructed a Wesleyan church in Salisbury West in 1858 after the arrival of the railway to the town. It has been a residence since 1904 but is defaced with ugly 1950s additions.
Salisbury grew quite quickly because it was only a few years before the town was connected with Adelaide by the Gawler train line. North of the Para River John Porter purchased land at the same time as John Harvey in 1847 and he too create a small private town with Porter, Gawler and Commercial streets etc. His town merged with Harvey’s as did the later 1856 subdivision of Salisbury West by William Trevaskis. No cathedral emerged but the town had its churches, hotels, a flour mill and industry. It soon had a private school too. Charles James Blatche Taplin, my great great grandfather had a licensed school in Salisbury from 1855 until his death in 1867. His wife Eliza Taplin had a separate school for girls which she continued after his death. After the Education Act of 1875 the government built the old Salisbury School in 1876. Charles Taplin was also the treasurer of the St Johns Anglican Church for many years and was present at the laying of its foundation stone with architect Daniel Garlick in 1858. The town remained a local service centre until World War Two when the government purchased land at Edinburgh for an ammunitions works and secure storage area and a further 58 acres of land, mainly from descendants of John Harvey, along Park Terrace in Salisbury for emergency war housing. It was required to house all the workers required for the war time industry at Penfield. Some 284 fibro “cabin homes” were erected in Salisbury on vacant land and the population grew rapidly. After the war the town grew further with the establishment of Salisbury North in 1949 as a Housing Trust suburb with over 500 new homes. Shortly after this in 1954 the new satellite city of Elizabeth and its associated industries was created in the Salisbury Council area abutting on to the Para River. In the 1950s most of the pioneering families from the late 1840s were still living in Salisbury as it was just a small rural town with a water trough for horses in the main street and a hitching post! By the 1970s the town had become a city and changed dramatically for ever.
Some Historic Salisbury Properties. •Anglian Church and cemetery. See details above. Early building 1849 or 1846? The Garlick designed church opened 1865 but the foundation stone was laid in 1858. In 1989 a fire destroyed the interior and the roof of the church was rebuilt. •Former Primitive Methodist Hephzibah Church and cemetery. After open air services the first Primitive Methodist church was built on this site in 1851. In 1858 a new grand church called Hephzibah was erected here to replace it. The land for the church was purchased from John Harvey for £10. The church name means “in her delight”. The church was restored in 1904 and then became the only Methodist church in Salisbury. In 1960 the church was sold to Coles who replaced it with a supermarket and a new Methodist Church was built on Park Terrace. That new church is now the Uniting Church. •Salisbury Institute. This important building for social events also providing the original reading room and library which opened in 1884.The land was donated by William Kelly of One Tree Hill and the architect was Frederick Dancker originally from Macclesfield where he designed their institute too. Like many institutes it became a community hall run by the Council in 1939 who started showing movies in it. •Salisbury Schools. The northern wing of Salisbury School was built in 1876 with pointed gothic windows in the west gable. The southern wing was added in 1879. Notice the slightly different windows etc. The first school operated in the 1846/49 Anglican Church for many years. A High School opened in Salisbury in 1959. •Salisbury Police Station and Courthouse now the town museum. This police station with cells and outbuildings and Courthouse was opened in 1859 after a request by MP John Harvey to the Commissioner of Public Works. E.A Hamilton was the architect for the government. The station cost £730. It is now a museum.
Salisbury West, the Gawler railway and Shirley Hall. The first major railway line in South Australia was from Adelaide to Gawler and it reached Salisbury in 1857. A local land owner then subdivided some of his land to create Salisbury West which was west of the new railway line. William Trevaskis did this in 1856 before the railway came when he divided off a few acres from his original 1846 freehold estate of 82 acres (one section). As a land speculator he created 61 town blocks which he advertised as “adjoining Salisbury Station of the Adelaide Gawler Town Railway.” This worked well. This area just west of the railway station soon had residences, a hotel, and a Wesleyan Church. When Trevaskis subdivided this estate he named one street East Terrace facing the railway line. This is where Edmund Paternoster later established his windmill, pumps and engineering works in 1878. His Little Gem windmills were sold in all colonies. East Tce was later changed to Paternoster Street to commemorate this important local industrialist of the 19th century. The Assistant Engineer for the construction of the railway Adelaide-Gawler railway, W Coulls purchased three blocks and built the Australian Heritage Listed Shirley Hall is on one of them with outbuildings, coach house and stables on the others. Shirley Hall was built just behind the old Wesleyan Church of 1858 with cellars and 7 main rooms and a separate kitchen in the outbuildings. The original brick and cast iron fence (made at James Martin foundry Gawler) still survives as does the original slate tiles. Coulls died in 1861 and the house had several owners before it was purchased by James Thompson in 1898. He renamed it Chelsea. Sir Jenkin Coles, Speaker of the South Australian parliament for the lower Mid North was a friend of James Thompson and often held political meetings at Chelsea House. The house was only sold out of the Thompson family in 1975. The nearby Wesleyan Methodist Church was built in Romanesque style in 1858. With the three Methodist churches union in 1900 all services were conducted in the former Wesleyan Church between 1900 and 1904 when repairs to Hephzibah were completed and Hebzibah then became the one and only Methodist church in Salisbury. Not long after 1904 this Wesleyan church was sold as a residence.
Paralowie. Paralowie House overlooks the Little Para River and the owner in 1894 had a fine stone Gate House and stone pillar gates built right on the edge of the river on Waterloo Corner Road. Paralowie House and this gate house was built in 1894 for Frank Russell an investor and farmer. His story is related above how he changed from dairying and cereal growing to orange and lemon orchards in 1890. The land on which Paralowie now stands was earlier owned by the Bagster family who sold it on in 1883. The Russells liked to host functions at their residence and it was reported in the press that the whole town attended celebrations here when Mafeking was successfully relived by the British forces in 1900 during the Boer War. Russells sold their Paralowie estate in 1917. A later resident of Paralowie House for many years was the state Coroner lawyer T.E.Cleland. Cleland lived at Salisbury and travelled to the Coroner’s Court by train daily rom Salisbury. Cleland served as Coroner from 1947 into the 1960s. Cleland was a pig breeder.
Salisbury. Southern wall of the old Wesleyan Methodist Church. Built in the new Salisbury west subdivision of 1858 when the church was built. It closed around 1904 when the Primitive Methodist church became the main Methodist church of the town. .
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Image by denisbin The first major railway line in South Australia from Adelaide to Gawler reached Salisbury in 1857. A local land owner then subdivided some of his land to create Salisbury West which was west of the new railway line. Trevaskis did this in 1856 before the railway came. he created 61 town blocks.
Oranges along the Para. The orange tree is botanically known as citrus sinensis which comes from China but is grown in tropical and subtropical areas of the world. The fruit of this tree gave us the name for one of our primary colours. This colour was first recoded in the English language in 1512. Orange is a Sanskrit Indian word. In Europe oranges have been grown in Italy and Spain since they were brought there by the Crusaders in 1100s from the Middle East. The first mention of commercial orange growing along the Para was in 1870 when Mr Urlwin exhibited Salisbury oranges at the Adelaide Royal Show. Then Mr F Fendon was described in newspapers in 1876 as a pioneer of commercial orange growing at Salisbury as he had been experimenting with orange trees since 1850. He hoped his display at the Salisbury Show of 1876 would encourage others to turn to orange growing. He had 20 varieties growing along Para when he exhibited them at the Salisbury Annual Show in 1876. More oranges were grown in the 1880s and by the 1890s hundreds of cases a year were being exported by P & O steamers to London. Thus the big expansion of commercial orange growing was in the 1880s. The oranges grown were Navel, Valencias, Washingtons and Lisbons( lemon) and these were the four” houses” in the Salisbury Primary School in the 1950s. Other earlier varieties grown included Sabina (a sour Italian orange), Rio (a red grapefruit), Seville oranges etc. Navel orange is a variety that was developed in Brazil in the 1820s, Washingtons were also from Brazil but Navels were developed for commercial orchards in California. Mr Russsell of Paralowie House is a good example of what Salisbury farmers did. He converted from growing oats and wheat to oranges in 1890. He planted 82 acres of his 122 acres in citrus trees 21 feet apart giving him over 1,000 trees. The annual floods of the Little Para were the secret of providing the rich alluvial soils in the Para valley. Other early citrus growers in Salisbury were the Kuhlmann, Moss, Tate, Jenkins, Harvey, Ponton and Sayer families. In the 1970s as the citrus industry died the flood plains of the Little Para were converted to parklands if they flooded or to housing if they were not flood prone. But once the Little Para Reservoir was completed the annual floods stopped anyway. Oranges were also extensively grown at Golden Grove. During the dry of summer water was taken from the Little Para to irrigate the oranges and one old stone waterwheel used for this purpose has been restored in Salisbury. That waterwheel was built for orange grower Frederick Kuhlmann of the Old Spot Hotel in 1899 and used until the 1940s.
Salisbury. Sir Montague( or Montagu) Chapman, Third Baronet of Westmeath near Dublin Ireland, used a loop hole in the Special Survey regulations of 1839 and selected his 4,000 acres for £4,000 in different areas. He took 800 acres at Koonunga near Kapunda; 500 acres at Kapunda (a friend of his Bagot also got land there); 500 acres near Waterloo and Marrabel; and later in 1842 he selected a further 2,200 acres between the Little Para River and Dry Creek at what is now Mawson Lakes, Salisbury and Cross Keys. At Killua Castle in Ireland he had 9,000 acres and hundreds of tenant farmers. He wanted to do the same in SA. In 1840 he sent out Captain Charles Bagot from Ireland with 224 Irish immigrants to settle his, and Bagot’s lands, at Kapunda with Irish labourers and tenants. Then in 1842 he sailed out to SA himself with 120 Irish tenant farmers whom he installed on his lands at Cross Keys. Sir Montague Chapman returned to Ireland the next year. Then in 1847 he sent out a further 214 Irish immigrants to be tenant farmers on his Cross Key to Salisbury lands. They came out on the ships named Trafalgar and Aboukir. Sir Montague Chapman lived in Ireland not SA but returned to his SA estates in 1852 and drowned at sea in 1853 off Portland when returning to SA from Melbourne. His brother inherited the SA lands and estates. The lasting effect of Sir Montague Chapmans tenant farming ideas was a large number of Irish Catholics around the Salisbury and Kapunda districts. Many of these immigrants soon became independent landowners themselves rather than Montague’s tenants.
Daniel Brady, another Irishman was a self-made Irish immigrant to the area. He purchased 100 acres, now the Parafield Airport in 1845. He then got the license to the Cross Keys hotel. Much later Brady laid out the town of Virginia in 1858.But there were other Catholic influences in Salisbury too. William Leigh of Staffordshire (and of Leigh Street Adelaide) was a great land investor and speculator in SA and donated lands early to the Anglican Church ( in Leigh St.) then he converted to Catholicism and donated lands to the SA Catholic Church for the first church and bishop’s palace on West Terrace etc. At Salisbury he donated 500 acres to the local Catholic Church along the Little Para where the reservoir is now situated. The local church rented that farm out as income until it was sold in 1896. Thus because of two major Catholic British aristocrats Salisbury thrived as a centre of Catholicism and had one of the largest Catholic Churches in SA in the mid-19th century. The church itself was set up when the state Government was offering glebe lands for churches to get established. The Catholics of Salisbury received 20 acres of land under this system through Bishop Murphy in 1850. The foundations of St Augustine’s Church were laid in 1851 with the church being used before its final official opening in 1857. This grand stone church replaced an earlier pug and pine church which had opened in 1847 on the site. The tower was added in 1926.
But the main story of Salisbury is centred on Scottish born John Harvey of Wick. But who was John Harvey? Is his main claim to fame that he brought out from South Africa soursob bulbs? He was a man of ideas wanting to make money. He came out to SA alone when he was 16 years old arriving in 1839 on the ship named Superb. By 1843 Harvey had moved to Gawler where he drove mails between Adelaide and Gawler. This gave him the idea of grazing cattle on the unoccupied plains between the two settlements. He started squatting. He let overlanders from NSW depasture their flocks on these lands, for a fee, although he had no legal right to do so. He accepted cattle for fees and soon had stock of his own. To this he added some horses which he bred for sale (or export to India) and once he had fattened the cattle he sold them for meat for the Adelaide market or through his butcher shop in growing Gawler. He became a major meat supplier for Adelaide and Gawler. He also experimented with cereal growing on the Salisbury plains and claims to be have been the first to do so. Within a few years he had amassed a sizeable amount of money from almost nothing and he purchased his first land at Gawler, where he built his first stone house, and at Salisbury when the Hundred of Yatala was declared in 1846. He was temporarily forced off the land he was squatting upon until he purchased 147 acres in 1847. He subdivided a small part of it to create the town of Salisbury with the main street named after himself and the street parallel to it named Wiltshire where his wife Ann Pitman (cousin of Sir Isaac Pitman of shorthand fame) was born. His town plans were submitted in 1848 as he hoped to make money from this action. Harvey continued living in Salisbury and went into building houses for people, breeding race horses and encouraging agriculture. He was elected to parliament in 1857 for one term and served on the Yatala District Council. His land deals included selling the area of Gawler that became Bassett Town by the old Gawler railway station. He was a mainstay of the Royal Horticultural Society and the Adelaide Racing Club. He was a local Justice of the Peace. John Harvey died in Salisbury in 1899, aged 78 years but his descendants stayed on in the town to be orange growers. John and his wife Ann are buried in St John’s Anglican cemetery. He left three sons and daughter.
By 1854 there were churches being erected in Salisbury; a flour mill; a hotel; and many houses for residents. The earliest SA settlers has eschewed the Adelaide Plains as they were hot and dry and they preferred the wetter, cooler Adelaide Hills. By 1845 less hills land was available and some saw the potential of this fertile little river valley close to the Adelaide and on the main copper mine routes from Adelaide to Kapunda and Burra. Apart from the Catholics the town attracted Anglicans, who were to construct their first church in 1849 or 1850 although the date on the building says 1846 which was before the land was even surveyed. John Harvey is known to have sold two lots to the Anglican Bishop Short for a nominal amount for an Anglican Church in 1850. It is therefore unlikely that the Anglicans built anything before 1850 but John Harvey might have allowed a building on his land before it was officially handed over to Bishop Short. A number of Primitive Methodists were also drawn to Salisbury and they who formed their congregation in 1849 with services on the banks of the Little Para. In 1851 they opened their Primitive Methodist Church called Hephzibah which was replaced with a second solid stone church in 1858. The Primitive Methodists purchased their land from John Harvey. They then established satellite Primitive Methodist churches at Burton, Sturton, Greenwith and other further out districts like Carclew, Two Wells etc. The Wesleyan Methodists had a church at the Old Spot (1857) but they too constructed a Wesleyan church in Salisbury West in 1858 after the arrival of the railway to the town. It has been a residence since 1904 but is defaced with ugly 1950s additions.
Salisbury grew quite quickly because it was only a few years before the town was connected with Adelaide by the Gawler train line. North of the Para River John Porter purchased land at the same time as John Harvey in 1847 and he too create a small private town with Porter, Gawler and Commercial streets etc. His town merged with Harvey’s as did the later 1856 subdivision of Salisbury West by William Trevaskis. No cathedral emerged but the town had its churches, hotels, a flour mill and industry. It soon had a private school too. Charles James Blatche Taplin, my great great grandfather had a licensed school in Salisbury from 1855 until his death in 1867. His wife Eliza Taplin had a separate school for girls which she continued after his death. After the Education Act of 1875 the government built the old Salisbury School in 1876. Charles Taplin was also the treasurer of the St Johns Anglican Church for many years and was present at the laying of its foundation stone with architect Daniel Garlick in 1858. The town remained a local service centre until World War Two when the government purchased land at Edinburgh for an ammunitions works and secure storage area and a further 58 acres of land, mainly from descendants of John Harvey, along Park Terrace in Salisbury for emergency war housing. It was required to house all the workers required for the war time industry at Penfield. Some 284 fibro “cabin homes” were erected in Salisbury on vacant land and the population grew rapidly. After the war the town grew further with the establishment of Salisbury North in 1949 as a Housing Trust suburb with over 500 new homes. Shortly after this in 1954 the new satellite city of Elizabeth and its associated industries was created in the Salisbury Council area abutting on to the Para River. In the 1950s most of the pioneering families from the late 1840s were still living in Salisbury as it was just a small rural town with a water trough for horses in the main street and a hitching post! By the 1970s the town had become a city and changed dramatically for ever.
Some Historic Salisbury Properties. •Anglian Church and cemetery. See details above. Early building 1849 or 1846? The Garlick designed church opened 1865 but the foundation stone was laid in 1858. In 1989 a fire destroyed the interior and the roof of the church was rebuilt. •Former Primitive Methodist Hephzibah Church and cemetery. After open air services the first Primitive Methodist church was built on this site in 1851. In 1858 a new grand church called Hephzibah was erected here to replace it. The land for the church was purchased from John Harvey for £10. The church name means “in her delight”. The church was restored in 1904 and then became the only Methodist church in Salisbury. In 1960 the church was sold to Coles who replaced it with a supermarket and a new Methodist Church was built on Park Terrace. That new church is now the Uniting Church. •Salisbury Institute. This important building for social events also providing the original reading room and library which opened in 1884.The land was donated by William Kelly of One Tree Hill and the architect was Frederick Dancker originally from Macclesfield where he designed their institute too. Like many institutes it became a community hall run by the Council in 1939 who started showing movies in it. •Salisbury Schools. The northern wing of Salisbury School was built in 1876 with pointed gothic windows in the west gable. The southern wing was added in 1879. Notice the slightly different windows etc. The first school operated in the 1846/49 Anglican Church for many years. A High School opened in Salisbury in 1959. •Salisbury Police Station and Courthouse now the town museum. This police station with cells and outbuildings and Courthouse was opened in 1859 after a request by MP John Harvey to the Commissioner of Public Works. E.A Hamilton was the architect for the government. The station cost £730. It is now a museum.
Salisbury West, the Gawler railway and Shirley Hall. The first major railway line in South Australia was from Adelaide to Gawler and it reached Salisbury in 1857. A local land owner then subdivided some of his land to create Salisbury West which was west of the new railway line. William Trevaskis did this in 1856 before the railway came when he divided off a few acres from his original 1846 freehold estate of 82 acres (one section). As a land speculator he created 61 town blocks which he advertised as “adjoining Salisbury Station of the Adelaide Gawler Town Railway.” This worked well. This area just west of the railway station soon had residences, a hotel, and a Wesleyan Church. When Trevaskis subdivided this estate he named one street East Terrace facing the railway line. This is where Edmund Paternoster later established his windmill, pumps and engineering works in 1878. His Little Gem windmills were sold in all colonies. East Tce was later changed to Paternoster Street to commemorate this important local industrialist of the 19th century. The Assistant Engineer for the construction of the railway Adelaide-Gawler railway, W Coulls purchased three blocks and built the Australian Heritage Listed Shirley Hall is on one of them with outbuildings, coach house and stables on the others. Shirley Hall was built just behind the old Wesleyan Church of 1858 with cellars and 7 main rooms and a separate kitchen in the outbuildings. The original brick and cast iron fence (made at James Martin foundry Gawler) still survives as does the original slate tiles. Coulls died in 1861 and the house had several owners before it was purchased by James Thompson in 1898. He renamed it Chelsea. Sir Jenkin Coles, Speaker of the South Australian parliament for the lower Mid North was a friend of James Thompson and often held political meetings at Chelsea House. The house was only sold out of the Thompson family in 1975. The nearby Wesleyan Methodist Church was built in Romanesque style in 1858. With the three Methodist churches union in 1900 all services were conducted in the former Wesleyan Church between 1900 and 1904 when repairs to Hephzibah were completed and Hebzibah then became the one and only Methodist church in Salisbury. Not long after 1904 this Wesleyan church was sold as a residence.
Paralowie. Paralowie House overlooks the Little Para River and the owner in 1894 had a fine stone Gate House and stone pillar gates built right on the edge of the river on Waterloo Corner Road. Paralowie House and this gate house was built in 1894 for Frank Russell an investor and farmer. His story is related above how he changed from dairying and cereal growing to orange and lemon orchards in 1890. The land on which Paralowie now stands was earlier owned by the Bagster family who sold it on in 1883. The Russells liked to host functions at their residence and it was reported in the press that the whole town attended celebrations here when Mafeking was successfully relived by the British forces in 1900 during the Boer War. Russells sold their Paralowie estate in 1917. A later resident of Paralowie House for many years was the state Coroner lawyer T.E.Cleland. Cleland lived at Salisbury and travelled to the Coroner’s Court by train daily rom Salisbury. Cleland served as Coroner from 1947 into the 1960s. Cleland was a pig breeder.
Paralowie House 1894 overlooking the Little Para River.
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Image by denisbin Paralowie House overlooks the Little Para River and the owner in 1894 had a fine stone Gate House and stone pillar gates built right on the edge of the river on Waterloo Corner Road.
Oranges along the Para. The orange tree is botanically known as citrus sinensis which comes from China but is grown in tropical and subtropical areas of the world. The fruit of this tree gave us the name for one of our primary colours. This colour was first recoded in the English language in 1512. Orange is a Sanskrit Indian word. In Europe oranges have been grown in Italy and Spain since they were brought there by the Crusaders in 1100s from the Middle East. The first mention of commercial orange growing along the Para was in 1870 when Mr Urlwin exhibited Salisbury oranges at the Adelaide Royal Show. Then Mr F Fendon was described in newspapers in 1876 as a pioneer of commercial orange growing at Salisbury as he had been experimenting with orange trees since 1850. He hoped his display at the Salisbury Show of 1876 would encourage others to turn to orange growing. He had 20 varieties growing along Para when he exhibited them at the Salisbury Annual Show in 1876. More oranges were grown in the 1880s and by the 1890s hundreds of cases a year were being exported by P & O steamers to London. Thus the big expansion of commercial orange growing was in the 1880s. The oranges grown were Navel, Valencias, Washingtons and Lisbons( lemon) and these were the four” houses” in the Salisbury Primary School in the 1950s. Other earlier varieties grown included Sabina (a sour Italian orange), Rio (a red grapefruit), Seville oranges etc. Navel orange is a variety that was developed in Brazil in the 1820s, Washingtons were also from Brazil but Navels were developed for commercial orchards in California. Mr Russsell of Paralowie House is a good example of what Salisbury farmers did. He converted from growing oats and wheat to oranges in 1890. He planted 82 acres of his 122 acres in citrus trees 21 feet apart giving him over 1,000 trees. The annual floods of the Little Para were the secret of providing the rich alluvial soils in the Para valley. Other early citrus growers in Salisbury were the Kuhlmann, Moss, Tate, Jenkins, Harvey, Ponton and Sayer families. In the 1970s as the citrus industry died the flood plains of the Little Para were converted to parklands if they flooded or to housing if they were not flood prone. But once the Little Para Reservoir was completed the annual floods stopped anyway. Oranges were also extensively grown at Golden Grove. During the dry of summer water was taken from the Little Para to irrigate the oranges and one old stone waterwheel used for this purpose has been restored in Salisbury. That waterwheel was built for orange grower Frederick Kuhlmann of the Old Spot Hotel in 1899 and used until the 1940s.
Salisbury. Sir Montague( or Montagu) Chapman, Third Baronet of Westmeath near Dublin Ireland, used a loop hole in the Special Survey regulations of 1839 and selected his 4,000 acres for £4,000 in different areas. He took 800 acres at Koonunga near Kapunda; 500 acres at Kapunda (a friend of his Bagot also got land there); 500 acres near Waterloo and Marrabel; and later in 1842 he selected a further 2,200 acres between the Little Para River and Dry Creek at what is now Mawson Lakes, Salisbury and Cross Keys. At Killua Castle in Ireland he had 9,000 acres and hundreds of tenant farmers. He wanted to do the same in SA. In 1840 he sent out Captain Charles Bagot from Ireland with 224 Irish immigrants to settle his, and Bagot’s lands, at Kapunda with Irish labourers and tenants. Then in 1842 he sailed out to SA himself with 120 Irish tenant farmers whom he installed on his lands at Cross Keys. Sir Montague Chapman returned to Ireland the next year. Then in 1847 he sent out a further 214 Irish immigrants to be tenant farmers on his Cross Key to Salisbury lands. They came out on the ships named Trafalgar and Aboukir. Sir Montague Chapman lived in Ireland not SA but returned to his SA estates in 1852 and drowned at sea in 1853 off Portland when returning to SA from Melbourne. His brother inherited the SA lands and estates. The lasting effect of Sir Montague Chapmans tenant farming ideas was a large number of Irish Catholics around the Salisbury and Kapunda districts. Many of these immigrants soon became independent landowners themselves rather than Montague’s tenants.
Daniel Brady, another Irishman was a self-made Irish immigrant to the area. He purchased 100 acres, now the Parafield Airport in 1845. He then got the license to the Cross Keys hotel. Much later Brady laid out the town of Virginia in 1858.But there were other Catholic influences in Salisbury too. William Leigh of Staffordshire (and of Leigh Street Adelaide) was a great land investor and speculator in SA and donated lands early to the Anglican Church ( in Leigh St.) then he converted to Catholicism and donated lands to the SA Catholic Church for the first church and bishop’s palace on West Terrace etc. At Salisbury he donated 500 acres to the local Catholic Church along the Little Para where the reservoir is now situated. The local church rented that farm out as income until it was sold in 1896. Thus because of two major Catholic British aristocrats Salisbury thrived as a centre of Catholicism and had one of the largest Catholic Churches in SA in the mid-19th century. The church itself was set up when the state Government was offering glebe lands for churches to get established. The Catholics of Salisbury received 20 acres of land under this system through Bishop Murphy in 1850. The foundations of St Augustine’s Church were laid in 1851 with the church being used before its final official opening in 1857. This grand stone church replaced an earlier pug and pine church which had opened in 1847 on the site. The tower was added in 1926.
But the main story of Salisbury is centred on Scottish born John Harvey of Wick. But who was John Harvey? Is his main claim to fame that he brought out from South Africa soursob bulbs? He was a man of ideas wanting to make money. He came out to SA alone when he was 16 years old arriving in 1839 on the ship named Superb. By 1843 Harvey had moved to Gawler where he drove mails between Adelaide and Gawler. This gave him the idea of grazing cattle on the unoccupied plains between the two settlements. He started squatting. He let overlanders from NSW depasture their flocks on these lands, for a fee, although he had no legal right to do so. He accepted cattle for fees and soon had stock of his own. To this he added some horses which he bred for sale (or export to India) and once he had fattened the cattle he sold them for meat for the Adelaide market or through his butcher shop in growing Gawler. He became a major meat supplier for Adelaide and Gawler. He also experimented with cereal growing on the Salisbury plains and claims to be have been the first to do so. Within a few years he had amassed a sizeable amount of money from almost nothing and he purchased his first land at Gawler, where he built his first stone house, and at Salisbury when the Hundred of Yatala was declared in 1846. He was temporarily forced off the land he was squatting upon until he purchased 147 acres in 1847. He subdivided a small part of it to create the town of Salisbury with the main street named after himself and the street parallel to it named Wiltshire where his wife Ann Pitman (cousin of Sir Isaac Pitman of shorthand fame) was born. His town plans were submitted in 1848 as he hoped to make money from this action. Harvey continued living in Salisbury and went into building houses for people, breeding race horses and encouraging agriculture. He was elected to parliament in 1857 for one term and served on the Yatala District Council. His land deals included selling the area of Gawler that became Bassett Town by the old Gawler railway station. He was a mainstay of the Royal Horticultural Society and the Adelaide Racing Club. He was a local Justice of the Peace. John Harvey died in Salisbury in 1899, aged 78 years but his descendants stayed on in the town to be orange growers. John and his wife Ann are buried in St John’s Anglican cemetery. He left three sons and daughter.
By 1854 there were churches being erected in Salisbury; a flour mill; a hotel; and many houses for residents. The earliest SA settlers has eschewed the Adelaide Plains as they were hot and dry and they preferred the wetter, cooler Adelaide Hills. By 1845 less hills land was available and some saw the potential of this fertile little river valley close to the Adelaide and on the main copper mine routes from Adelaide to Kapunda and Burra. Apart from the Catholics the town attracted Anglicans, who were to construct their first church in 1849 or 1850 although the date on the building says 1846 which was before the land was even surveyed. John Harvey is known to have sold two lots to the Anglican Bishop Short for a nominal amount for an Anglican Church in 1850. It is therefore unlikely that the Anglicans built anything before 1850 but John Harvey might have allowed a building on his land before it was officially handed over to Bishop Short. A number of Primitive Methodists were also drawn to Salisbury and they who formed their congregation in 1849 with services on the banks of the Little Para. In 1851 they opened their Primitive Methodist Church called Hephzibah which was replaced with a second solid stone church in 1858. The Primitive Methodists purchased their land from John Harvey. They then established satellite Primitive Methodist churches at Burton, Sturton, Greenwith and other further out districts like Carclew, Two Wells etc. The Wesleyan Methodists had a church at the Old Spot (1857) but they too constructed a Wesleyan church in Salisbury West in 1858 after the arrival of the railway to the town. It has been a residence since 1904 but is defaced with ugly 1950s additions.
Salisbury grew quite quickly because it was only a few years before the town was connected with Adelaide by the Gawler train line. North of the Para River John Porter purchased land at the same time as John Harvey in 1847 and he too create a small private town with Porter, Gawler and Commercial streets etc. His town merged with Harvey’s as did the later 1856 subdivision of Salisbury West by William Trevaskis. No cathedral emerged but the town had its churches, hotels, a flour mill and industry. It soon had a private school too. Charles James Blatche Taplin, my great great grandfather had a licensed school in Salisbury from 1855 until his death in 1867. His wife Eliza Taplin had a separate school for girls which she continued after his death. After the Education Act of 1875 the government built the old Salisbury School in 1876. Charles Taplin was also the treasurer of the St Johns Anglican Church for many years and was present at the laying of its foundation stone with architect Daniel Garlick in 1858. The town remained a local service centre until World War Two when the government purchased land at Edinburgh for an ammunitions works and secure storage area and a further 58 acres of land, mainly from descendants of John Harvey, along Park Terrace in Salisbury for emergency war housing. It was required to house all the workers required for the war time industry at Penfield. Some 284 fibro “cabin homes” were erected in Salisbury on vacant land and the population grew rapidly. After the war the town grew further with the establishment of Salisbury North in 1949 as a Housing Trust suburb with over 500 new homes. Shortly after this in 1954 the new satellite city of Elizabeth and its associated industries was created in the Salisbury Council area abutting on to the Para River. In the 1950s most of the pioneering families from the late 1840s were still living in Salisbury as it was just a small rural town with a water trough for horses in the main street and a hitching post! By the 1970s the town had become a city and changed dramatically for ever.
Some Historic Salisbury Properties. •Anglian Church and cemetery. See details above. Early building 1849 or 1846? The Garlick designed church opened 1865 but the foundation stone was laid in 1858. In 1989 a fire destroyed the interior and the roof of the church was rebuilt. •Former Primitive Methodist Hephzibah Church and cemetery. After open air services the first Primitive Methodist church was built on this site in 1851. In 1858 a new grand church called Hephzibah was erected here to replace it. The land for the church was purchased from John Harvey for £10. The church name means “in her delight”. The church was restored in 1904 and then became the only Methodist church in Salisbury. In 1960 the church was sold to Coles who replaced it with a supermarket and a new Methodist Church was built on Park Terrace. That new church is now the Uniting Church. •Salisbury Institute. This important building for social events also providing the original reading room and library which opened in 1884.The land was donated by William Kelly of One Tree Hill and the architect was Frederick Dancker originally from Macclesfield where he designed their institute too. Like many institutes it became a community hall run by the Council in 1939 who started showing movies in it. •Salisbury Schools. The northern wing of Salisbury School was built in 1876 with pointed gothic windows in the west gable. The southern wing was added in 1879. Notice the slightly different windows etc. The first school operated in the 1846/49 Anglican Church for many years. A High School opened in Salisbury in 1959. •Salisbury Police Station and Courthouse now the town museum. This police station with cells and outbuildings and Courthouse was opened in 1859 after a request by MP John Harvey to the Commissioner of Public Works. E.A Hamilton was the architect for the government. The station cost £730. It is now a museum.
Salisbury West, the Gawler railway and Shirley Hall. The first major railway line in South Australia was from Adelaide to Gawler and it reached Salisbury in 1857. A local land owner then subdivided some of his land to create Salisbury West which was west of the new railway line. William Trevaskis did this in 1856 before the railway came when he divided off a few acres from his original 1846 freehold estate of 82 acres (one section). As a land speculator he created 61 town blocks which he advertised as “adjoining Salisbury Station of the Adelaide Gawler Town Railway.” This worked well. This area just west of the railway station soon had residences, a hotel, and a Wesleyan Church. When Trevaskis subdivided this estate he named one street East Terrace facing the railway line. This is where Edmund Paternoster later established his windmill, pumps and engineering works in 1878. His Little Gem windmills were sold in all colonies. East Tce was later changed to Paternoster Street to commemorate this important local industrialist of the 19th century. The Assistant Engineer for the construction of the railway Adelaide-Gawler railway, W Coulls purchased three blocks and built the Australian Heritage Listed Shirley Hall is on one of them with outbuildings, coach house and stables on the others. Shirley Hall was built just behind the old Wesleyan Church of 1858 with cellars and 7 main rooms and a separate kitchen in the outbuildings. The original brick and cast iron fence (made at James Martin foundry Gawler) still survives as does the original slate tiles. Coulls died in 1861 and the house had several owners before it was purchased by James Thompson in 1898. He renamed it Chelsea. Sir Jenkin Coles, Speaker of the South Australian parliament for the lower Mid North was a friend of James Thompson and often held political meetings at Chelsea House. The house was only sold out of the Thompson family in 1975. The nearby Wesleyan Methodist Church was built in Romanesque style in 1858. With the three Methodist churches union in 1900 all services were conducted in the former Wesleyan Church between 1900 and 1904 when repairs to Hephzibah were completed and Hebzibah then became the one and only Methodist church in Salisbury. Not long after 1904 this Wesleyan church was sold as a residence.
Paralowie. Paralowie House overlooks the Little Para River and the owner in 1894 had a fine stone Gate House and stone pillar gates built right on the edge of the river on Waterloo Corner Road. Paralowie House and this gate house was built in 1894 for Frank Russell an investor and farmer. His story is related above how he changed from dairying and cereal growing to orange and lemon orchards in 1890. The land on which Paralowie now stands was earlier owned by the Bagster family who sold it on in 1883. The Russells liked to host functions at their residence and it was reported in the press that the whole town attended celebrations here when Mafeking was successfully relived by the British forces in 1900 during the Boer War. Russells sold their Paralowie estate in 1917. A later resident of Paralowie House for many years was the state Coroner lawyer T.E.Cleland. Cleland lived at Salisbury and travelled to the Coroner’s Court by train daily rom Salisbury. Cleland served as Coroner from 1947 into the 1960s. Cleland was a pig breeder.
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Our team of professional qualified individuals can work with you to ensure that the project no matter how big or small, is planned, executed, controlled and completed in the agreed time. Projects we work on are completed on time thanks to our dedicated team, we’d be happy to speak to you and answer any questions you may have about the any of the processes mentioned above.
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If you’ve searched for diamond drilling companies in Great Sturton Lincolnshire, then you have found the right team to work with you on your project. You can contact us to discuss your requirements and to gain the answers to your questions, one of our project managers will be happy to speak to you so that you’re fully aware of what will need to be undertake in order to have your project completed in the timescales you need it completing and to the professional standards you expect.
We can also provide teams to carryout:
HYDRAULIC BURSTING HYDRAULIC CRUNCHING
Just let us know your requirements and we can supply you with what you need.
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aaronplumbingltd · 2 years ago
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Plumber in Sturton
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