starting on a junction list for Adelaide–Mannum Road

Major intersections edit

LGALocation[1]km[2]miDestinationsNotes
WalkervilleMedindie, Gilberton00.0City Ring RouteAs Northcote Terrace
Medindie, Gilberton, Walkerville, CollinswoodAs North East Road
Walkerville, Prospect, Port Adelaide EnfieldCollinswood, Walkerville, Manningham, BroadviewHampstead Road
Walkerville, Port Adelaide EnfieldVale Park, ManninghamTaunton Road/Ascot Avenue
Klemzig, Hampstead GardensO. G. Road
Muller Road
  •       Route transition

References

  1. ^ "SAPPA with suburb and LGA layers". Retrieved 9 January 2020.
  2. ^ Google (9 January 2020). "ScottDavis" (Map). Google Maps. Google. Retrieved 9 January 2020.

Wind farms edit

 
 
Starfish Hill
 
Canunda
 
Cathedral Rocks
 
Clements Gap
 
Coober Pedy
 
Hallett
 
Hornsdale
 
Lake Bonney
 
Mount Millar
 
Snowtown
 
Waterloo
 
Wattle Point
 
Willogoleche
 
Lincoln Gap
Wind power projects in South Australia
    Operating
    Under construction
    Proposed
    Canceled or decommissioned

Wikitree test edit

This text is not rendering properly on William Charles Loxton (1848 - 1938). The end of the blockquote is before the end of the contained dl; and the text afterwards is body text instead of paragraph. It seems OK here.

He married Elizabeth Turner Dunn on 9 September 1875 at the residence of Philip Turner Dunn, Sanders Creek.[1]

LOXTON-DUNN.-On the 9th September,

at the residence of the bride's father, by licence, by the Rev. J. Hall Angus, of Mount Pleasant, William, second son of Mr. Albert Loxton, of Tungkillo, to Elizabeth Turner, eldest daughter of Mr. Phillip Turner Dunn, Sanders' Creek.

--South Australian Register, 11 September 1875 page 4[2]

They had a son, Phillip Turner Loxton, on 18 December 1875 at Tungkillo.<

Elizabeth died aged 21 on 19 December 1875 at South Petherton. She was recorded as living at Saunders Creek.

William Loxton was charged with taking 13-year-old Mary Ellen Goodes without the consent of her parents on Sunday 13 February 1876. She was brought home by William's brother-in-law Thomas Talbot the following Friday. The Magistrate's Court allowed bail but committed him for trial in the Supreme Court.[3]

The case was mentioned late in the day on both 23 and 24 March:

REGINA V. LOXTON.

Mr. W. H. Bundey stated that in this case—one of abduction of a female—the parties proposed to be married, and His Honor adjourned the case.

--Evening Journal, 24 March 1876[4]

References

  1. ^ LOXTON, William, South Australian Marriage registrations index, Nairne 104/732, accessed 15 September 2023 via Genealogy SA
  2. ^ Family Notices (1875, September 11). South Australian Register (Adelaide, SA : 1839 - 1900), p. 4. Retrieved September 15, 2023, from http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article40078970
  3. ^ POLICE COURT. (1876, March 1). South Australian Register (Adelaide, SA : 1839 - 1900), p. 3. Retrieved September 15, 2023, from http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article43005357
  4. ^ Law and Criminal Courts. (1876, March 24). Evening Journal (Adelaide, SA : 1869 - 1912), p. 2 (SECOND EDITION). Retrieved September 15, 2023, from http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article197689309