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    Truro

    , SA

    Things to see
    Hotels
    Motels
    Cottages & Cabins
    Restaurants


    A vineyard in the Barossa Valley (courtesy S. A. Tourism Commission)

    Truro (including Moculta)
    Tiny historic mining settlement at the northern extremity of the Barossa district.
    Located 87 km north east of Adelaide on the Sturt Highway, Truro isn't really a Barossa Valley township although it does fall into the larger Barossa area in the sense that it was part of the original land purchase by George Fife Angas.

    Prior to European settlement a small number of Aborigines were well established in the district. They lived on a diet of grass seeds (made into a kind of damper), kangaroos, wallabies, possums, lizards and fish and protected themselves against the winter cold with possum skin rugs. Their life was simple but perfectly in tune with the climate, flora and fauna of the region.

    Soon after the arrival of colonists in South Australia in July, 1836 expeditions were sent out to explore the hinterland. By December 1837 explorers had reached Lyndoch and by 1838 other explorers had reached the Murray River passing through the Barossa Valley and past modern day Truro.

    Truro Hotel

    The valley was named by Colonel Light after Barrosa (Hill of Roses) in Spain where he had fought against the French in 1811 in the Peninsula War. The spelling mistake was never corrected.

    By 1839 Colonel Light, the Surveyor General of South Australia, was selling off large tracts of land in the valley. Charles Flaxman, the agent for George Fife Angas, purchased 28,000 acres in May, 1842 and in 1847-48 Angas's son, John Howard Angas and the Deputy Surveyor-General, Thomas Burr, laid out the township of Truro. It is said that John Angas named the town after Truro in Cornwall although this is questionable as Cornish miners moved into the area in 1842 to exploit copper at the Whealbarton Mine. It is likely the miners named the town Truro. The mine prospered until the 1860s but copper continued to be mined in the area until the 1970s.


    Things to see:   [Top of page]

    Historic Buildings
    Truro has a number of historically significant buildings including the Uniting Church, the Primary School, the bank, post office and council chambers.

    Heroes Park
    On the southern side of town, about a block away from the main street, is Heroes Park which is pleasant with picnic facilities and, when it has been raining, a river running through it.

    Moculta
    Moculta is located 8 km south of Truro and is characterised by a number of attractive stone buildings. Moculta House, an abandoned group of picturesque stone ruins associated with an important Romanesque Mausoleum, is located 1.5 kms to the north east on a knoll above the settlement.

    Holy Cross Lutheran Church, Gruenberg, near Truro


     

    Hotels   [Top of page]

     
      Crown Inn Hotel
    Morundie St
    Truro SA 5356
    Telephone: (08) 8564 0231
     
     
      Truro Hotel
    Morundie St
    Truro SA 5356
    Telephone: (08) 8564 0218
     
     

    Motels   [Top of page]

     
      Weighbridge Motel
    Moorundie St
    Truro SA 5356
    Telephone: (08) 8564 0400
    Facsimile: (08) 8564 0422
    Rating: ***
     
     

    Cottages & Cabins   [Top of page]

     
      Maison Cottages
    Moorundie St
    Truro SA 5356
    Telephone: (08) 8564 0057, 1800 227 677
     
     

    Restaurants   [Top of page]

     
      Weighbridge Motel/ Restaurant
    Moorundie St
    Truro SA 5356
    Telephone: (08) 8564 0400
    Facsimile: (08) 8564 0422
     




     

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