Kent Town was named for Benjamin Archer Kent (1808 – 25 November 1864), a medical practitioner of Walsall, Staffordshire, who emigrated to South Australia aboard Warrior, arriving in April 1840 with his wife Marjory Redman Kent, née Bonnar, and two children, Benjamin Andrew Kent, and Graham Eliza Kent, who in 1848 married Frederick Charles Bayer (died 15 August 1867).[3] Hydraulic engineer C. A. Bayer[4] and architect E. H. Bayer[5] were sons. Another son, Tom, was a kangaroo hunter, who went to live at the township of Yalata (now Fowlers Bay) on the west coast, and created a cluster of cottages named "Kent Town", which no longer exist.[6]
Kent established a flour mill and farm which failed financially and he was obliged to return to his profession to support his family. He sold his property at a handsome profit, repaid all his creditors and returned to England.[7]
He was the attendant physician when Edwin Thomas Smith was born in 1830. Smith later built his Kent Town Brewery on the site of the doctor's cottage.[7]
The Wesley Uniting Church was founded as the Jubilee Wesleyan Methodist church in 1864 by George P. Harris, John Colton, F. H. Faulding, and others. It has had a significant place in the life of South Australians for over 150 years.[8]
In the latter half of the 19th century, a tram network serviced Kent Town, with one branch running eastwards to Kensington Gardens. They transitioned from horse-drawn trams around 1909, and were all removed in the 1950s.[9]
Dr Kent's Paddock
There is a large section of land known as "Dr Kent's Paddock", much of which is now part of Prince Alfred College grounds.[10] The social housing known as "Dr Kent's Paddock Housing Complex", facing 3-57 Capper Street and 28-48 Rundle Street[11] and comprising 114 homes,[10] was designed by Newell Platten, Chief Architect at the SA Housing Trust,[12] and built by the Housing Trust in two stages, the first in 1978–9 and the second in 1981. The medium-density complex includes a warehouse conversion[11] of a former John Martin's warehouse built in 1912.[10]
According to a report by the SA Heritage Council released in 2022, the complex "is widely acknowledged as one of the best medium-density, cluster-housing urban infill developments built in South Australia during the late twentieth century". It is still owned by the state government housing authority, now renamed Housing SA.[11] The Australian Institute of Architects regards it as a good model of social housing, "designed with consideration of community, environmental performance, privacy and access to landscaped space". In early November 2023, after receiving 38 written submissions during the consultation period, the Heritage Council provisionally listed Dr Kent's Paddock Housing Complex in the South Australian Heritage Register under the Heritage Places Act 1993.[12] The listing was confirmed on 19 November, after environment minister Susan Close backed the submission. The gardens include an old pepper tree.[10]
Other heritage listings
As of November 2023[update], there are 20 state and local heritage-listed places in the Kent Town portion of Rundle Street.[10]
By the 2021 Census, there were 1,443 persons recorded. They are predominantly male (56.7%), with a median age of 36. There were 303 families, with an average of 1.5 children per family. Around 43% of people aged 15 and above were tertiary-educated. People born in Australia accounted for 58.3%, with the next largest group (5.6%) born in England. More people (42.6%) had both parents born overseas than both in Australia (41.5%).[2]
Community
Schools
Prince Alfred College, an independent school for boys is located on Dequetteville Terrace, the western boundary of the suburb.
Attractions
During the Adelaide Fringe festival, the world's second-largest annual arts festival, the bars and restaurants of Kent Town receive thousands of customers. The local Kent Town Hotel is popular.
Transport
Roads
The suburb is serviced by the following main roads:
^"Personal". The Express and Telegraph. Vol. XLV, no. 13, 535. South Australia. 20 October 1908. p. 1. Retrieved 12 April 2019 – via National Library of Australia.
^"Fowlers Bay History". Fowlers Bay. Fowlers Bay Holiday Flats. Archived from the original on 1 December 2021. Retrieved 19 October 2021.