Mount Gambier, South Australia, Australia

History | Geography | Economy : Tourist Industry | Service industries | Arts and culture | Culture : Music | Media : Print : Television : Radio | Sport | Mount Gambier Gift | Mount Gambier Pioneers Basketball Club | Health | Utilities | Education | Transport

🇦🇺 Mount Gambier is the second most populated city in South Australia. The city is located on the slopes of Mount Gambier, a volcano in the south east of the state, about 435 km south-east of the capital Adelaide and just 17 km from the Victorian border. The traditional owners of the area are the Bungandidj people. Mount Gambier is the most important settlement in the Limestone Coast region and the seat of government for both the City of Mount Gambier and the District Council of Grant.

The city is well known for its geographical features, particularly its volcanic and limestone features, most notably its Blue Lake, parks, gardens, caves and sinkholes.

History Before British colonisation of South Australia, the Bungandidj (or Boandik) people were the original Aboriginal inhabitants of the area. They referred to the peak of the volcanic mountain as 'ereng balam' or 'egree belum', meaning 'home of the eagle hawk', but the mountain itself was called Berrin. The sinkhole in the township was referred to as "thu-ghee".

The peak of the dormant Mount Gambier crater was sighted in 1800 by Lieutenant James Grant from the survey brig, HMS Lady Nelson, and named after Lord James Gambier, Admiral of the Fleet. It was the first place named by the British in what was later to become the colony of South Australia. The peak is marked by Centenary Tower, built in 1901 to commemorate the first sighting by colonists.

In 1839, Stephen Henty, one of the Henty brothers who occupied large landholdings at Portland and Merino, led an overland expedition to explore the Mount Gambier region. He was the first white man to climb the peak and view the blue crater lake.

The Henty brothers subsequently laid claim to Mount Gambier in 1842 and established a sheep station there. Conflict with the local Aboriginal residents quickly ensued that same year with Henty's men shooting a number and burning their corpses. In March 1844, a band of Aboriginal people led by Koort Kirrup took a large number of Henty's sheep. Henty's men pursued and engaged them in a prolonged skirmish which resulted in the colonists having to retreat.

Other British pastoralists and their shepherds in the region were being robbed, speared and murdered by the local Aboriginal population and they proposed to form hunting parties to shoot them indiscriminately. After the Aboriginal population destroyed between 200 and 300 sheep, the Henty brothers were forced to abandon the Mount Gambier property later in 1844 with significant loss of capital.

Evelyn Sturt, the brother of the explorer Charles Sturt soon took up the leasehold, establishing himself at nearby Compton and bringing 500 cattle and 3000 sheep to pasture at Mount Gambier. Sturt claimed he was able to control the Bungandidj people by "a good rifle aimed by a correct eye". In May 1845, seven armed colonists pursued Aboriginal groups after livestock were taken. In late 1845, the first police station at Mount Gambier was formed. In 1846, the South Australian Mounted Police were involved in an affray with the Aborigines, shooting one and wounding another two.

In 1847, Aboriginal people speared cattle and threatened to spear Sturt. Subsequently, Corporal McCulloch and his troopers went on a mission to disperse them. In November, two police and three men tracked a group of Aboriginal people who had taken about 300 sheep to the coast. In their attempt to handcuff them, spears were thrown at them, and during the ensuring fight, four were shot dead.

Industries soon began to appear. The Post Office opened on 22 September 1846, an Afro-American named John Byng built the Mount Gambier Hotel in 1847, and Dr Edward Wehl arrived in 1849 to begin a flour-milling operation.

Hastings Cunningham founded "Gambierton" in 1854 by subdividing a block of 77 acres (31 ha). From 1861 to 1878 the Post Office was known by this name before reverting to Mount Gambier. Local government appeared in 1863 when Dr Wehl, who now owned a substantial millhouse on Commercial Road, was elected chairman of the District Council of Mount Gambier. In December 1864 this became the District Council of Mount Gambier West and, at the same time, a separate District Council of Mount Gambier East was formed.

Incorporation in 1876 saw a further division, with the creation of the Town Council and Mr John Watson elected Mayor. Mount Gambier was governed in this fashion until 1932, when the District Council of East and West merged to form a single District Council of Mount Gambier once more.

On 9 December 1954, Mount Gambier was officially declared a city, and is now an important tourism centre in south-east South Australia.

As of October 2022 the town has not been officially dual-named, but the lakes and several other culturally significant features of the location were given dual names in February 2022, and dual naming is being planned for the city, mostly likely as Berrin, the name by which it is known to the local Indigenous community.

Geography Mount Gambier's urban area is located mainly along the northern slopes and plain of a maar volcano of the same name, Mount Gambier. Comprising several craters, it is part of the Newer Volcanics Province complex of volcanoes. One of these contains a huge lake of high-quality artesian drinking water which changes colour with the seasons. In winter, it is a steel grey and then changes to a spectacular cobalt blue in the summer, giving rise to its name, Blue Lake.

This 75-metre (246 ft) deep lake accommodates a range of unusual aquatic flora and fauna, in particular fields of large stromatolites. There are several other craters in the city including Valley Lake and the Leg of Mutton River. The region surrounding the city includes other volcanic features such as Mount Schank, along with many karst features such as water-filled caves, cenotès and sinkholes.

Mount Gambier’s urban area encompasses the City of Mount Gambier and parts of the District Council of Grant. The city’s metropolitan area includes the following suburbs: Mount Gambier CBD (inner-city suburb), Suttontown (north-western suburb), Wandilo (north-western suburb), Mil-Lel (northern suburb), Worrolong (north-eastern suburb), Glenburnie (eastern suburb), Yahl (south-eastern suburb), Compton (western suburb), Moorak (southern suburb), Square Mile (south-eastern suburb), and OB Flat (south-eastern suburb).

Economy The economy of Mount Gambier is driven by all three economic sectors, though it has emerged as a regional service economy with its main industry being the service industry and its key areas of business including tourism, hospitality, retail, professional services, government administration and education. The city's historic primary sector roots including mining, agriculture and forestry continue to play a key role as well as being a major road transport and trucking centre.

Economy: Tourist Industry Mount Gambier is the major service centre for the tourism region known as The Limestone Coast. The area has many natural attractions, including volcanic craters, lakes, limestone caves, sinkholes, underground aquifers and stunning Cenotès, surrounded by a city with a wide range of accommodation, shopping and entertainment opportunities. Tourism generates around $100 million for the Mount Gambier economy. The city is a major accommodation gateway for the region. Major tourism attractions include the Blue Lake and Valley Lake wildlife park, and caves such as Umpherston Sinkhole / Balumbul, Cave Garden / Thugi and Engelbrecht Cave. Engelbrecht Cave is a popular cave diving venue. The region around Mount Gambier also has many water-filled cenotès, caves and sinkholes which attract cave divers from around the world.

Service industries As a major service centre for the region, the city has several key retail districts including the Commercial Street CBD. Mount Gambier Marketplace, opened in August 2012, is one of three major shopping centres in the city, the other two being Mount Gambier Central (formerly known as Centro Mount Gambier) and Coles shopping complex on Ferrers Street, which was opened in December 2020.

Major department stores include Big W, Kmart and Harvey Norman. Additionally each of the major supermarkets Aldi, Coles (both replaced Target which closed in May 2019), Woolworths, Foodland and IGA are represented. Other retailers in Mount Gambier include Bunnings Warehouse, Mitre 10, Dan Murphy's, Spotlight, BCF and Dimmeys,

Servicing the financial sector are branches of the big four Australian retail banks, National Australia Bank, ANZ, Commonwealth Bank and Westpac along with Bendigo & Adelaide Bank, People's Choice Credit Union, St George Bank and a number of smaller independent financial services firms.

In December 2020, the first Australian regional Krispy Kreme store was opened in the city.

Arts and culture The city's civic centre is in the refurbished and extended old town hall and Institute buildings. A cinema was operated in the early 1950s in this building by D. Clifford Theatres.

Located around Cave Gardens, is the hub of the city's arts and includes the Riddoch Art Gallery, South Australia's major regional art gallery. It also houses the University of South Australia's James Morrison Academy. The complex was extended in 2011 to include "The Main Corner", a modern building which includes a theatre. Nearby are the public library, a cafe next to the library and the old post office.

Culture: Music Every year the town and the surrounding area, hosts nearly 7,000 secondary school musicians for the Generations in Jazz Festival. Jazz artists like James Morrison, Ross Irwin, and Graeme Lyall travel to perform and adjudicate the stage band competition. Special guests have included Gordon Goodwin and his Big Phat Band, Whycliffe Gordon and recently (2017) the Adelaide Symphony Orchestra.

Media: Print The local newspaper for Mount Gambier, Limestone Coast and South East region of South Australia is The Border Watch. It is published and available in the local area every Tuesday through Friday (with the exception of some public holidays such as Christmas Day). Daily newspapers from Melbourne (Herald Sun and The Age) and Adelaide (The Advertiser) as well as national newspapers such as The Australian and Australian Financial Review are also available. Some newspapers from nearby towns such as Millicent and Penola, specialty newspapers like the British International Express weekly newspaper, agricultural newspapers such as The Weekly Times newspaper from Victoria and The South Australian Stock Journal (published by Australian Community Media) and The Independent Weekly from Adelaide are also available from local newsagents.

Historically, the town was served by multiple newspapers. Two earlier papers, the biweekly Mount Gambier Standard (3 May 1866 – 1874), and the South Eastern Star (2 October 1877 – 13 October 1930), were taken over by The Border Watch. Another, the South-Eastern Ensign (2 July 1875 – 30 June 1876), was also briefly printed. Later, a free commercial paper, the Exchange (1902– 8 October 1942) ran in opposition to the Watch, and was published by the Clark family. However, it ceased when the Second World War caused paper restrictions and a decline in advertising.

Media: Television • The Australian Broadcasting Corporation (ABC) – ABC, ABC TV Plus/ABC Kids, ABC Me, ABC News (digital channels) • The Special Broadcasting Service (SBS) – SBS, SBS Viceland, SBS World Movies, SBS Food, SBS WorldWatch, NITV (digital channels) • WIN Television (7, 9 & 10) as SES-8 and MGS-41 – SES-8 relays the programming from Seven Network (Seven SA), Nine Network (Nine SA) & Network 10 (10 SA). • Foxtel – Subscription Television service Foxtel is also available via satellite.

Channel Nine broadcasts Nine Network programming, Channel Seven broadcasts Seven Network programming & WIN Television broadcasts Network 10 programming. The programming schedules for these channels is the same as Channel Nine, Channel Seven and Channel 10 in Adelaide, with local commercials inserted and some variations for coverage of Australian Football League or National Rugby League matches, state and national news and current affairs programs, some lifestyle and light entertainment shows and infomercials. As of February 2013, there are no local news programs for the Mount Gambier area since the closure of WIN Television's news operation. WIN Television also broadcasts Sky News Regional programming, the programming schedule for these multichannel is the same as Sky News Australia and Fox Sports News, with local commercials inserted.

On 11 November 2011, WIN Television commenced transmission of the digital TV multi-channels 10 Bold, 10 Peach, 9Go!, 9Gem, 7two (an acronym of "72") and 7mate for Mount Gambier and the surrounding South East region of South Australia.

Due to the close proximity to the Victoria/South Australia state border, most people in Mount Gambier and some adjacent areas of south-east South Australia can receive television services from Western Victoria. These channels are broadcast from the Mount Dundas transmitter near the town of Cavendish, Victoria. The transmitter site is located approximately 100 km north-east of Mount Gambier and broadcasts all the television channels from Western Victoria including Prime7 Television (AMV), WIN Television Victoria (VTV), Southern Cross 10 (BCV), the ABC and SBS Victorian services, as well as the digital free-to-air multi-channels that are also now available from the Mount Burr transmitter, north west of Mount Gambier.

Media: Radio ABC • ABC South East SA (1476 AM) • ABC South East SA (1161 AM, Naracoorte) • ABC Triple J (102.5 FM) • ABC Radio National (103.3 FM) • ABC Classic FM (104.1 FM) • ABC NewsRadio (105.7 FM); Commercial • Radio TAB • Triple M Limestone Coast (90.5 FM) • SAFM (96.1 FM) (formerly Hit 96.1) • 5GTR FM (100.1 FM) • LIME FM (104.9 FM) (Formerly Rhema FM)

Some ABC radio services can also be received from the nearby town of Naracoorte and from Western Victoria.

Sport There are four Australian rules football teams competing in the Western Border Football League: North Gambier, East Gambier, South Gambier and West Gambier. They have produced such AFL players as David Marshall, Nick Daffy, Matthew Clarke., Tim O'Brien and Brad Close.

There is also a range of different sporting leagues and clubs in Mount Gambier and surrounding regions, including soccer, netball, basketball, tennis, hockey, cricket, swimming, cycling, triathlon, rifle, gun and pistol shooting, lawn bowls, ten-pin bowling, angling, archery and golf.

Motor sport is also popular, with the main facilities being the McNamara Park road racing circuit, and the Borderline Speedway, a 372-metre (407 yd) dirt track oval speedway nicknamed "The Bullring". Borderline Speedway hosts an annual Sprintcar event called the "Kings Challenge", first run in 1995 and is held in January each year a week before the Grand Annual Sprintcar Classic in nearby Warrnambool (Victoria), and two weeks before the Australian Sprintcar Championship. Borderline has played host to many Australian and South Australian speedway championships throughout its over 50-year history and is regarded as one of the best run and promoted speedways in Australia. The speedway is currently managed and promoted by former star sprintcar driver, Mount Gambier native Bill Barrows. In 2007, Borderline hosted the fifth and final round of the Australian Solo Championship. The round and the championship was won by Australia's own reigning World Champion Jason Crump.

Mount Gambier is the home of "The Alex Roberts 100 Mile Classic", a cycling event that lays claim to the longest continuing open cycling event in South Australia. The event held annually by the Mount Gambier Cycling Club.

The Mount Gambier Greyhound Racing Club hold greyhound racing meetings at a purpose-built complex called the Tara Raceway, at 161 Lake Terrace East. The Club moved from Glenburnie Racecourse in late 1996 and held its first meeting on Saturday 25 January 1997.

Mount Gambier Gift The 120m Mount Gambier Gift was held annually on the first Saturday in December at Vansittart Oval was the 2nd richest professional footrace in South Australia. Resurrected in 2001 the athletic carnival includes races from 70m to 1600m and attracts athletes from all over Australia, mostly from South Australia and Victoria. Of the eleven Mount Gambier athletic carnivals held to date, three Victorians have won the 120 m Gift. On 3 December 2011, 21-year-old Wallace Long-Scafidi won the Gift for the second year in a row. The race has not been held since 2012, and to this date continues to go unheld.

Mount Gambier Pioneers Basketball Club The Mount Gambier Pioneers Basketball Club are the city's only representative team to participate in a national competition. The Pioneers entered the South Eastern Basketball League in 1988 and currently play in the NBL1 South Conference, the second tier competition underneath Basketball Australia's premier elite professional competition the Australian NBL.

Health The city has a major regional hospital, Mount Gambier Hospital out of which operates the Mount Gambier and Districts Health Service. Additionally there are a number of private health services including the Mount Gambier Private Hospital (now closed).

Utilities The city's main catchment is the Blue Lake, the volcano lake is both a tourist attraction and the city's main reservoir. Water supply, sewage collection and disposal are provided by South East Catchment Water Management Board.

Education There are six Reception to Year 6 (R-6) Primary schools: • Reidy Park Primary School; • McDonald Park; • Compton Primary School; • Melaleuca Park; • Mulga Street Primary School; • Mount Gambier North Primary School.

There are two Reception to Year 12 (R-12) colleges: • Tenison Woods College • St Martins Lutheran College.

There are two high schools for Year 7 to 12: • Mount Gambier High School • Grant High School.

Post-secondary education is offered by the following providers: • TAFE South Australia has a campus in Mount Gambier providing an extensive variety of vocational study. • University of South Australia has a modern, state of the art campus in Mount Gambier which offers full-time or part-time undergraduate degrees in Education, Nursing, Midwifery and Social Work with enabling courses in Foundation Studies and Aboriginal Pathways Program also offered. • Flinders University also operates Flinders Rural Health SA in the grounds of Mount Gambier Hospital.

Transport Mount Gambier sits on a number of highways which connect the city to other major towns in the region, as well as to Adelaide and Melbourne. • Princes Highway (Jubilee Highway) travels through the city east to west.

◦ to Melbourne via Dartmoor, Portland and Warrnambool

◦ to Adelaide via Millicent, Kingston SE and Meningie • Riddoch Highway (Penola / Bay Road) travels through the city north to south.

◦ to Adelaide via Naracoorte and Keith

◦ to Port Macdonnell

Before conversion of the Adelaide–Wolseley railway line to standard gauge in 1995, Mount Gambier was connected to Adelaide on the broad gauge network via Naracoorte, Bordertown and Tailem Bend. Normal commercial passenger services to Adelaide ceased on 31 December 1990, while limited freight services operated until the line was disconnected from the national network on 12 April 1995. Limestone Coast Railway operated tourist trains to Coonawarra, Penola, Millicent, Tantanoola and Rennick until it ceased on 28 June 2006. In 2015, the former railyards were converted into a park.

Mount Gambier Airport is located a few km north of the city via the Riddoch Highway. The city is served by Rex Airlines, which flies Saab 340 aircraft to Adelaide and Melbourne up to three times per day. Since March 2021, Qantas operates one daily flight to and from Adelaide and Melbourne using De Havilland Canada Dash 8 aircraft in QantasLink livery.

Stateliner operate coach services to Mount Gambier from Adelaide. V/Line operates a daily interstate coach service from Mount Gambier to Warrnambool, connecting with a rail service to Melbourne. The Mount Gambier Visitor Centre (formally known as The Lady Nelson) is an agent for public passenger services tickets sales, and the services use the car park to arrive and depart from.

Australia/Adelaide/South_Australia 
<b>Australia/Adelaide/South_Australia</b>
Image: Adobe Stock dudlajzov #355310154

Mount Gambier has a population of over 29,639 people. Mount Gambier also forms the centre of the wider Limestone Coast Region which has a population of over 64,590 people. Mount Gambier is situated 435 km south-east of Adelaide.

To set up a UBI Lab for Mount Gambier see: https://www.ubilabnetwork.org Twitter: https://twitter.com/UBILabNetwork

Text Atribution: Wikipedia Text under CC-BY-SA license

North of: -37.828

🇦🇺 Box Hill -37.822

🇦🇺 Nunawading -37.817

🇦🇺 Ringwood -37.811

🇦🇺 Maroondah -37.807

🇦🇺 Melbourne -37.8

🇦🇺 Footscray -37.8

🇳🇿 Hamilton -37.788

🇦🇺 Doncaster -37.787

🇦🇺 Darebin -37.733

🇦🇺 Moreland -37.733

South of: -37.828

🇦🇺 Whitehorse -37.833

🇦🇺 Port Phillip -37.85

🇦🇺 Hobsons Bay -37.85

🇦🇺 St Kilda -37.864

🇦🇺 Wantirna South -37.881

🇦🇺 Knox -37.883

🇳🇿 Cambridge -37.883

🇦🇺 Point Cook -37.909

🇦🇺 Brighton -37.91

🇦🇺 Bayside -37.933

East of: 140.781

🇯🇵 Chōshi 140.817

🇯🇵 Watari 140.85

🇯🇵 Sendai 140.869

🇯🇵 Tomiya 140.874

🇯🇵 Iwaki City 140.883

🇯🇵 Iwaki 140.883

🇯🇵 Natori 140.913

🇯🇵 Sōma 140.917

🇯🇵 Osaki 140.962

🇯🇵 Muroran 140.972

West of: 140.781

🇯🇵 Aomori 140.753

🇯🇵 Hakodate 140.744

🇮🇩 Jayapura 140.72

🇯🇵 Hitachi 140.65

🇯🇵 Asahi 140.65

🇯🇵 Yokote 140.569

🇯🇵 Date 140.55

🇯🇵 Hitachinaka 140.533

🇯🇵 Naka 140.483

🇯🇵 Mito 140.471

Antipodal to Mount Gambier is: -39.219,37.828

Locations Near: Mount Gambier 140.781,-37.8282

🇦🇺 Ballarat 143.855,-37.562 d: 272.1  

🇦🇺 Murray Bridge 139.275,-35.12 d: 329.9  

🇦🇺 Victor Harbor 138.617,-35.55 d: 318.4  

🇦🇺 Mildura 141.6,-34.383 d: 390.1  

🇦🇺 Greater Geelong 144.35,-38.15 d: 314.8  

🇦🇺 Geelong 144.356,-38.147 d: 315.3  

🇦🇺 Adelaide 138.6,-34.917 d: 378  

🇦🇺 Bendigo 144.285,-36.758 d: 332  

🇦🇺 Kyneton 144.45,-37.233 d: 330.2  

🇦🇺 Port Adelaide 138.5,-34.833 d: 390.7  

Antipodal to: Mount Gambier -39.219,37.828

🇵🇹 Angra do Heroísmo -27.217,38.65 d: 18963.6  

🇵🇹 Ponta Delgada -25.673,37.736 d: 18825.6  

🇧🇷 Florianópolis -48.552,27.592 d: 18582.3  

🇧🇷 Guarulhos -46.517,23.455 d: 18272.6  

🇨🇦 St. John's -52.712,47.561 d: 18474.2  

🇧🇷 Vinhedo -46.975,23.03 d: 18211.2  

🇧🇷 Greater Vitória -40.308,20.289 d: 18062  

🇦🇷 Ensenada -57.9,34.867 d: 18313  

🇦🇷 Hurlingham -58.639,34.588 d: 18239.3  

🇨🇦 Stephenville -58.567,48.55 d: 18054.3  

Bing Map

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