Heritage & History
Stones & Stories
The best heritage & history in Port Elliot
Slate quarries, river ports, 19th-century churches, lighthouses and the living cultural sites of the Ngarrindjeri and Kaurna peoples - the Fleurieu is rich in stories older than colonisation.
History sits close to the surface on the Fleurieu Peninsula, and its heritage towns are among the best preserved in South Australia. Goolwa tells the story of the River Murray trade, when paddle steamers worked the river and Australia's first public railway carried goods to the coast — a heritage you can still ride today on the Cockle Train. Nearby Strathalbyn, settled by Scottish pioneers, is a classic colonial streetscape of stone buildings beside the Angas River.
The peninsula's past is layered and varied. Willunga grew rich on slate that roofed colonial Adelaide, and its old quarries and courthouse still tell that story. Encounter Bay was a shore-based whaling station in the 1830s, Cornish miners left their mark inland, and the lighthouse at Cape Jervis has guided ships through Backstairs Passage for generations.
Older still is the deep history of the Ngarrindjeri and Kaurna peoples, whose connection to this coast and its waters stretches back tens of thousands of years. Museums, National Trust collections, heritage walks and beautifully kept old towns make it easy to trace these threads. Many sites are free to wander, and a slow drive between the heritage towns is a rewarding day out in itself.
Browse heritage & history by area
2 places
Freeman Lookout and Obelisk
Whaler's lookout with the best view of Horseshoe Bay
At the end of The Strand, the restored Freeman Lookout perches above Horseshoe Bay on a headland that whalers used as a spotting post in the 1830s. One of the Fleurieu's best whale-watching vantage points in winter.
Port Elliot Historic Railway and Seaport Centre
$Inside Australia's oldest public railway terminus
The 1853 Port Elliot Railway Station, now home to the National Trust's Historic Railway and Seaport Centre, tells the story of the horse-drawn tramway that connected the Murray River to the sea.