Elizabeth: Planning a City is based on a document entitled "Proposed Shopping Facilities: Elizabeth, South Australia. This document was first made available at the information centres of the South Australian Housing Trust in Adelaide and Elizabeth on the 13th of September 1960.
Still images used in this video courtesy of the Playford's Past Recollect Website.
Elizabeth SA is a tribute channel to the founding families of Elizabeth, an outer northern suburb of Adelaide, South Australia, and the generations who have since followed. Elizabeth is located in the City of Playford. Although Elizabeth's population largely comprised, and still comprises, of many different ethnic migrant communities, it was initially nicknamed "Pommy Town", as many of Elizabeth's originals were English immigrants who migrated as part of the "Ten Pound Pom" movement. Ten Pound Poms (or Ten Pound tourists) is a colloquial term used in Australia and New Zealand to describe British citizens who migrated to Australia and New Zealand after the Second World War. The Government of Australia initiated the Assisted Passage Migration Scheme in 1945. The migrants were called Ten Pound Poms due to the payment of £10 in processing fees to migrate to Australia. The Commonwealth arranged for assisted passage to Australia on chartered ships and aircraft. The word Pom is derived from "pomegranate" an Australian rhyming slang for "immigrant".
At the time, Elizabeth was the seat of the former local government body, the City of Elizabeth, which included Elizabeth as well as the immediately adjacent suburbs on all sides except the west. Although the City of Elizabeth no longer exists, having been amalgamated into the much larger City of Playford in 1997, the term 'Elizabeth', in the context of Adelaide, typically refers to the historic municipality and the distinct community therein.
Before the 1950s, most of the area surrounding today's suburb of Elizabeth was farming land. After the end of the Second World War with its shortage of materials, the state government decided that South Australia needed to grow and become industrialised. A satellite city was planned for northern metropolitan fringe of Adelaide between the existing townships of Salisbury and Smithfield. The South Australian Housing Trust initiated a housing development program in the area, with a purchase of 1,200 hectares (3,000 acres) at the site of the present suburb.
The township (now suburb) of Elizabeth was established on 16 November 1955, being named after Queen Elizabeth II, Queen of Australia. In 1964, a new local government body, the municipality of Elizabeth, later called City of Elizabeth, was created by severance from the District Council of Salisbury. This allowed the local government to focused explicitly on the newly-developed land and distinct local growing community centred at Elizabeth.
Although the City of Elizabeth no longer exists, having been amalgamated into the much larger City of Playford in 1997, the term 'Elizabeth', in the context of Adelaide, typically refers to the historic municipality and the distinct community therein.
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