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The jetty at Arno Bay
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Arno Bay
Tiny settlement on the Eyre Peninsula
Located 537 km northwest of Adelaide and 24 km from
Cleve, Arno Bay is a tiny settlement on Spencer Gulf between Port Neill
and Cowell. It is a settlement which sprawls from the huge grain silos
near the Lincoln Highway, across the flat coastal lands to the small
shopping centre, and then on to the Hotel Arno Bay and the Caravan Park
which lie between the muddy, tidal Salt Creek and the jetty.
It has been common to think that Arno Bay was named
after the Arno River in Italy but the Geographical Names Board of South
Australia claims that in 1889 the name was chosen because 'Arno' was
the Aboriginal name applied to the nearby 'Sandhill Well'. An
alternative version, and by far the most attractive derivation of the
town's name, is that Matthew Flinders, while circumnavigating Australia
in the Investigator sailed up Spencers Gulf. Reaching Arno Bay the
lookout cried out 'Land Ahoy!'. Matthew Flinders looked and said, 'Ah!
No bay there!' and so it was named Arno Bay. An unlikely tale.
A tiny outpost grew up around Salt Creek because, in the
early days of settlement, the coastal plain was covered with mallee
scrub. The only access from the wheat farms to the coast was down the
dry river beds.
Although the locals referred to the area as Arno Bay it was
officially named Bligh, probably after Captain William Bligh, in 1883.
The township of Bligh was subdivided and 184 allotments were put up for
sale however there was no great demand for land in such an isolated
area. The locals resisted the name Bligh and continued to refer to the
area around the jetty and Salt Creek as Arno Bay. Eventually in 1940
the town's name was officially changed from Bligh to Arno Bay.
Arno Bay offers an interesting insight into the hardships
and hopes which characterised the early development of the Eyre
Peninsula. In the earliest days of settlement the tall clippers which
sailed along the coast brought supplies and fertilisers to enrich the
impoverished Peninsula soils. They took away with them grain and wool.
Before the jetty was built the ships had to weigh anchor offshore while
a sailor rowed to the shore and lit a signal fire. This fire could be
seen for some distance and another fire was lit on Ranford Hill to
advise the local farmers that a ship was off the coast.
In 1880, in expectation of Arno Bay becoming an
important port, a jetty was built.
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The Arno Bay Hotel
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Business was slow but
by 1911 the port was important enough for the elaborate and solid Hotel
Arno to be built. It was built on the expectation that the combination
of a railhead and a port would see the area grow rapidly. The following
year the jetty was extended to 370 metres and by the 1940s the town had
grown to a point where over 11 000 tonnes of grain were being shipped
out. All this came to an end in 1963 when the bulk grain silos were
built. The ships were replaced by trucks which carried the local grain
south to the major port facilities at Port Lincoln. Thus, today Arno
Bay is a sleepy little village with minimal facilities.
Things to see:
Fishing and Relaxing
It is an ideal place for people who want to do a
little fishing or walk along the narrow, but beautiful, beach. The
jetty has been shortened and is now used only for fishing and walking.
The waters of the Gulf abound with salmon, flathead, whiting and snapper.
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Hotels
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Hotel Arno
Government Rd
Arno Bay
SA
5603
Telephone: (08) 8628 0001
Rating: *
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Caravan Parks
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Arno Bay Foreshore Tourist Park
Park Lane
Arno Bay
SA
5603
Telephone: (08) 8628 1057
Facsimile: (08) 8628 1057
Rating: **1/2
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Restaurants
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Hotel Arno
Government Rd
Arno Bay
SA
5603
Telephone: (08) 8628 0001
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