Poonindie, South Australia

Town in South Australia From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Poonindie is a small township near Port Lincoln on the Eyre Peninsula, South Australia. The township is situated in the historic Country of the Nauo People (an Australian Indigenous community), though it is within the modern governmentally recognised territorial borders of the Barngarla People.

Poonindie Mission, 1886 by Samuel Sweet.
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Poonindie
Poonindie is located in South Australia
Poonindie
Poonindie
Coordinates: 34.58126250°S 135.88101325°E / -34.58126250; 135.88101325
CountryAustralia
StateSouth Australia
RegionEyre Western[1]
LGA
Location
Established1850[2]
Government
  State electorate
  Federal division
Population
  Total210 (SAL 2021)[5]
Time zoneUTC+9:30 (ACST)
  Summer (DST)UTC+10:30 (ACST)
Postcode
5607[6]
CountyFlinders[1]
Mean max temp21.2 °C (70.2 °F)
Mean min temp11.3 °C (52.3 °F)
Annual rainfall383.2 mm (15.09 in)
Localities around Poonindie
Whites Flat Whites Flat
Louth Bay
Louth Bay
Charlton Gully Poonindie Spencer Gulf
North Shields North Shields Spencer Gulf
Location[6]
Climate[7]
Adjoining localities[2]
Close

Poonindie Mission was established as a mission for Aboriginal people in South Australia in 1850, at the instigation of the first Archdeacon of Adelaide, Mathew Hale, who also served as superintendent for several years. St Matthew's church, built in 1854-55 and originally intended to be the school, served both the mission and the local community. It survives and remains in use today. Hale ran the Aboriginal Training Institution at the mission.[8] His friend, the Anglican Archbishop of Adelaide, Augustus Short, visited the mission, which prospered.

Church of St Matthew, Poonindie, Port Lincoln.

The mission closed after 44 years, after which the land was divided and sold, with just St Matthew's and a small area of land remaining the property of the Anglican Church. 300 acres (120 ha) of land became an Aboriginal reserve when the Mission closed in 1894.[8] Most of the residents were moved to Point Pearce and Point McLeay missions, while others moved to the nearby Aboriginal reserve,[9] but a small number of residents remained on the mission site until the 1910s.[10]

The institution is named in the Bringing Them Home report, as one which housed Indigenous children forcibly removed from their parents and thus creating the Stolen Generations.[11]

The former reserve is now an Aboriginal self-managed Aboriginal community called Akenta, run by Akenta Incorporated.[12][13]

Pooonindie Uniting Church lies to the north of the township.[14]

Heritage listings

Poonindie has a number of sites associated with the former mission listed on the South Australian Heritage Register, including:

  • Poonindie Mission Bakehouse Complex and Well[15]
  • Poonindie Mission Superintendent's Residence[16]
  • Poonindie Cemetery[17]
  • Poonindie Mission Schoolhouse[18]
  • St Matthew's Anglican Church[19]

See also

Other 19th century Aboriginal missions in SA

References

Further reading

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