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Belvidere is a small town in the Alexandrina Council area of South Australia.With the advent of improved transport, the town no longer has a school or post office. The Soldier's Memorial Hall was built in 1921 to commemorate the 17 young men of the district who served in World War I, five of whom did not return. [3]
The District Council of Belvidere was established in 1866 bringing dedicated local government administration to the hundred. [5] There were no towns within the hundred then, as is presently the case, but a council chamber was erected at Koonunga and housed the council until the hundred was annexed by the District Council of Kapunda in 1932. [ 6 ]
The Belvidere Range is a mountain range of the Northern Mount Lofty Ranges in South Australia. The range was named in 1840 by early geologist /explorer Johannes Menge because he thought the highest point commanded a beautiful view (Latin Bellus meaning beautiful and videre meaning sight).
St Johns is a locality southeast of Kapunda in the northern Barossa Valley, South Australia.Originally a private subdivision on sections 1450, 1451 and 1533 of the Hundred of Belvidere, [2] the boundaries of the locality were formalised in 2000 and the name formally adopted based on long-established use.
The District Council of Belvidere was a local government area in South Australia. It was created to provide local government in the Hundred of Belvidere on 13 December 1866 and combined into the District Council of Kapunda on 12 May 1932.
Belvidere Range, South Australia, a mountain range Hundred of Belvidere , a district north of the Barossa Valley in South Australia District Council of Belvidere , a former local government area governing the hundred
Peters Hill, (518m), formerly Peter's Hill (the possessive apostrophe being officially deleted in December 1940) [1] is the highest peak in the Belvidere Range of hills in South Australia, a northern extension of the Mount Lofty Ranges.
The localities of Highland Valley, Red Creek, Salem and the township of Woodchester are also within the hundred along with parts of Belvidere, Bletchley, Gemmells, Hartley, and Langhorne Creek. Parts of the Bugle Ranges, Mount Barker, Mount Barker Springs, Petwood and Wistow localities also overlap the northwestern part of the hundred. [1]