Giving the past a future now!
Posted on Friday 08 April 2022
The drowning of University of Adelaide law lecturer Dr Duncan in the River Torrens on 10 May 1972 is one of South Australia’s – and the nation’s...
Posted on Tuesday 05 April 2022
South Australians are encouraged to reimagine and renew connections with their history, to get out and about in this great state, explore the familiar...
Posted on Thursday 17 February 2022
South Australian history will soon gain a new champion. Minister for Education, Hon John Gardner MP, who also has ministerial responsibility for the H...
Uncovering the dramatic, mysterious, and tragic life of a Destitute Asylum girl Corinne is a curator at Adelaide’s Migration Museum, and discovered ...
Posted on Monday 23 August 2021
In its 40th year, The History Trust of South Australia – along with partners including the State Library of South Australia, the University of Ad...
Posted on Monday 14 October 2019
Delve into the magical world of the British Library’s digital collections and hear about how they are used for research and creativity. The Hist...
Posted on Thursday 21 March 2019
The Queen’s Theatre, later known as the Royal Victoria Theatre, is a building of national heritage significance being the oldest purpose-built theat...
Opened for South Australia’s centenary in 1936, the Torrens Parade Ground building was designed in the Stripped Classical style. The site was pr...
Posted on Tuesday 19 March 2019
Adelaide is famously a gridded city, a colonial metropolis mapped onto unceded Kaurna land by the cardinal directions, by the lines of streets and squ...