Port Wakefield

An historic port at the head of Gulf St Vincent which has been bypassed by the main road to Port Pirie. One a major port in the export of copper and then wool and wheat, today it is a small centre which is primarily driven by the traffic which passes on its way north. With mangroves growing on the far side of the narrow channel it is now obvious that the port can only be used for small fishing boats.

Where is it?: 99 km north west of Adelaide.




Port Wakefield is a major stop on the Adelaide ��� Yorke Peninsula and Adelaide ��� Port Augusta road routes. Just north of the township there is a major forked intersection where the Yorke Peninsula traffic diverges west from the main highway.

Heritage features: Port Wakefield Historic Walk; Police Station (1858); former Commercial Bank building (c.1877); Clinton Conservation Park (10 km west).

Brief History
A monument in town recalls the area's first contact with Europeans. "Captain Flinders of HMS Investigator, discovered, and on 30th March, 1802 at the head of the Gulf, named it Gulf of St. Vincent after Admiral Lord St Vincent (John Jervis)". Port Wakefield can claim to be the first town to be established north of Adelaide in the infant colony of South Australia. It was named after the River Wakefield which was located in 1838 by William Hill who named it after Edward Wakefield, the person whose vision of colonisation had been largely responsible for the establishment of South Australia.

Port Wakefield developed as the main port for the shipment of copper ore from the mines of Burra and Kooringa. A large number of bullock and mule teams travelled the gulf road between Burra and Port Wakefield, carting copper ore from the Burra copper works to the port, returning with coal and other requirements. When the township was surveyed by the government the settlement's name was changed from Port Henry to Wakefield. Small sailing barges landed cargoes of coal on the shore, and carried copper ore to Port Adelaide, or to large sailing ships anchored off shore.

Between 1850 and 1877, when the mine at Burra stopped sending copper to the coast, Port Wakefield was a prosperous and important seaport. The port had to be dredged as Port Wakefield was never a wonderful port. Today, if you arrive at low tide, you'll wonder how any vessel managed to get into the port. Consequently with the decline in copper the port declined although it did remain as a port for wool and wheat well into this century. In 1909 300,000 bags of wheat were exported through the port. The wheat was taken to the port by a tramway which was built over a length of 45 km. Horses were used to pull the carriages up to a higher point where the wheat was loaded on the tram. Then, with the horses loaded on the back, the tram used gravity to take itself back to the port.

Origin of name: the name is taken from the nearby River Wakefield. It was first located in 1838 by William Hill who named it after Edward Wakefield, the person whose vision of colonisation had been largely responsible for the establishment of South Australia.

Content © 2016 Australia For Everyone | Email us