Eurelia is a town and locality in the Australian state of South Australia located on the east side of the Flinders Ranges about 264 kilometres (164 mi) north of the state capital of Adelaide and about 20 kilometres (12 mi) from the municipal seat of Orroroo.[5][1]
The town was surveyed in July 1878 and was gazetted as a government town on 12 September 1878 with its name being derived from the cadastral unit of the Hundred of Eurelia.[1][3] The locality's boundaries were created on 16 December 1999 for the “long established name” and includes the site of the Government Town of Eurelia.[1][4]
Eurelia's name comes from the local Jadliaura language and translates to "place of the ear". It is thought that local Dreamtime stories associated with the Ranges locates Eurelia as an "ear" of a prostrate man.[10] The pronunciation of the town's name has given rise to some long-standing jokes. One joke[11] has two railway porters at each end of the platform and as each train pulls in, one would call out "You're a liar! You're a liar", and the other would reply "You really are! You really are!". (I.e. the town's name sounds like either "you're a liar" or "you really are", depending on which syllable the stress falls). The "correct" pronunciation is "you really are"[10]
The District Council of Carrieton, based in adjacent Carrieton, was known as the District Council of Eurelia for the first six years of its existence, from 1888 to 1894.[12]
Land use within the locality is ’primary production’ and is concerned with “agricultural production and the grazing of stock on relatively large holdings.”[13]
Eurelia had two dams. The first built when the railway was constructed by C & E Miller. The original dam held 20,000,000 imperial gallons (9.1×1010 ml). This dam was later supplemented by a new dam of the same capacity which was built to the north of the original dam, with the intent that the old dam would act as a settling pond. Construction started in 1948 and was completed in 1952. The dam remained empty until 1958 when, after heavy rains in the region, both dams filled.
Water from the dams was shipped across the South Australian Railway system during times of drought.[15]
^ abMorgan, William (12 September 1878). "untitled proclamation (the Town of Eurelia)"(PDF). The South Australian Government Gazettee. South Australian government. p. 729. Retrieved 12 February 2018.
^Doncaster, N (as Editor) – Eurelia Dams – The Partyline No67 Autumn 1997; Steamtown Peterborough Railway Preservation Society (the article notes the material has been drawn from; Shepard, M; Ups and Downs of Eurelia 1876 to 1976