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King William Street, Adelaide
King William Street, Adelaide, looking south toward Victoria Square from near the intersection with Rundle Street. Aldridge's Southern Cross Hotel and the premises of John Tasker & Co., Tailors, can be seen.


Crowd watching a fashion show
A model posing on a runway in front of a large audience, made up mostly of women. The model is wearing a long dark dress with a fox fur stole. The fashion show, described as a mannequin parade and led by Jessica Harcourt, is being held in the Adelaide Town Hall.

![Plan of New Parkside [cartographic material] :
being subdivision of part sections 241 and 242 , Hundred of Adelaide /
Evans & Evans, Licenced Surveyors and Architects.](https://slsa-collections.s3.amazonaws.com/bb/ef/435a-ab65-50ef-b184-4244b62b6ae6.jpg)
Plan of New Parkside [cartographic material] : being subdivision of part sections 241 and 242 , Hundred of Adelaide / Evans & Evans, Licenced Surveyors and Architects.
Plan of New Parkside, now part of Unley, South Australia, showing building blocks with lot numbers and measurements. Includes street names, oval and a number of sketches of buildings - Institute, English Church, School, Cremorne Hotel, House and Model School. Includes a description of the subdivision and an extract from the 1881 census showing increase in the population in the Municipality of Unley and Parkside. Bordered on three sides by Unley Road., Wattle Street and [Windsor St.]. Inset locates the subdivision in relation to the city of Adelaide and surrounding suburbs.


Electric tram, Port Adelaide
The official opening of the electric tram system outside the Town Hall, Port Adelaide.


King William Street, Adelaide
King William Street, Adelaide, looking south from North Terrace. A small group of men stand outside Hunt's Labour Office, and another group are outside the Savings Bank. The unpaved street is quiet, with only a few cabs standing in its centre. The Town Hall tower is visible in the distance.


Chalmers Church and intersection of North Terrace and Pulteney Street
View across North Terrace to Chalmers Church, later renamed Scots Church, on the corner of North Terrace and Pulteney Street, Adelaide, viewed from a high point on the now demolished Exhibition Building. The Town Hall and Post Office clock towers can be seen in the distance.


King William Street, Adelaide
[General description] Trams, pedestrians, horse drawn vehicles, bicycles and a car or two are all sharing the street whilst city buildings form a background. In the distance are the General Post Office and Town Hall Towers. On the right a trio of Police Greys ride past a De Dion Bouton, car no. 141, owned by George Bond, later the proprietor of Bond Tours. [On back of photograph] 'King William Street, looking south from the Bank of N.S.Wales / Dec. 1910 / Near side of Commercial Bank (on right) is 54 yards north of Hindley St'.


King William Street, Adelaide
King William Street, Adelaide, looking south from near the intersection with North Terrace toward the intersection of Rundle Street and Hindley Street. The Adelaide Town Hall clock tower can be seen in the distance. A banner advertising the play 'Sweet Nell of Old Drury' which was presented at the Theatre Royal, Hindley Street, from 28 April 1902 to 9 May 1902 is visible in high resolution scans.


King William Street, Adelaide
King William Street, Adelaide, looking south from a point a little north of Rundle Street. Horse trams are moving down the centre of King William Street. The Town Hall is in the distance on the eastern side of King William Street and the Post Office can be seen on the west side.


King William Street, Adelaide
King William Street, Adelaide, looking south from the Kither Building, north of Hindley Street. A car threads its way past pedestrians, cyclists and a horse and buggy. There are lots of cars, and a couple of buggies parked by the kerb. Trams can be seen in the distance, near the Town Hall. This photo was taken to show traffic at 2.30 p.m. on December 4th, 1924.


King William Street, Adelaide
[General description] City buildings and street on a rainy day with the Town Hall and General Post Office in the distance. The pavement in front of the Bank of South Australia building is slick with rain. A horse tram can be seen and there are cabs for hire in the centre of the street, one of which is a hansom cab, in the left foreground. [On back of photograph] 'Acres 78, 108, 109, 141 / King William Street, looking south / 1880-1881'.


King William Street, Adelaide
[General description] Horse Tram number 119 is trundling south down King William Street which is lined with city buildings. In the distance the towers of the Town Hall can be seen (on the lef)t and the General Post Office (on the right). Moss & Co. Outfitters 'Monster Clothiers' is on the right on the Hindley Street corner. [On back of photograph] 'Acre 78 / King William Street, west side / Looking south from a point a little north of Rundle Street'.


King William Street, Adelaide
[General description] This view is taken from above and shows a panorama of city buildings along King William Street and beyond. The street is busy with trams and cars, with cars being angle parked at the kerb. Only a few horse-drawn vehicles are to be seen. Pedestrians stroll across the road in a leisurely manner. Note the traffic policeman on point duty near the white car in the foreground. Archer and Holland Jewellers are on the right, and on the left, in the Waterhouse Building is Lawrence and Levy, Tobacconists. The Town Hall is yet to get its clock. [On back of photograph] 'Published in the "Chronicle", Dec. 16, 1922 / King William St. looking south from Hindley St. / Acres 79, 108'


King William Street, Adelaide
King William Street, Adelaide, looking south from Rundle Street. Everett's Chambers can be seen on the left. It is likely that the ground floor premises is a grocery store. The Town Hall can be seen in the distance. Horse cabs for hire wait in the middle of the road.


King William Street, Adelaide
King William Street, Adelaide, looking south from Hindley Street, on a wet day. The busy street shows a mix of tram, car and horse drawn transport. On the left is the Waterhouse building with Duhst and Biven, Tobacconists, on its ground floor. On the right is Archer and Holland, Jewellers. In the centre is Noonan's Southern Cross Hotel. The Town Hall and Post Office Towers are seen in the distance.


King William Street, Adelaide
[General description] King William Street, its buildings and traffic, looking south towards the Town Hall. Transport is mainly cars, some angle parked at the kerb, and electric trams. One of the few horse drawn vehicles is seen in the foreground, near a policeman on point duty. [On back of photograph] 'King William Street / looking south from Hindley Street c. 1921'.


King William Street, Adelaide
[General description] City buildings, traffic and pedestrians with the Town Hall tower in the distance. A policeman is directing traffic on the busy intersection of King William, Rundle and Hindley Streets. The recently completed (1924) T & G Building is prominent. [On back of photograph] 'Reproduced in the 'Observer', Feb. 19, 1927 / Acres 79, 108 / King William Street, looking south from Hindley Street / Feb 1927'.


King William Street, Adelaide
[On front of photograph] 'King William St., looking south from a point near Rundle St. / About 1864 / Acres 109, 140.' [General description] Horse drawn vehicles, some for hire, are lined up in the centre of the street. The large building in the centre of the view is the Bank of Australasia, and on its right is Green's Exchange, with the verandah and balcony. The premises of R.H. Wigg are to the right of Green's. Perryman's Jewellers are seen on the opposite side of the road. In the centre left of the view, the Albert Tower section of the Town Hall can be seen, under construction. Gouge's fountain, soon to be removed for the 1867 visit of the Duke of Edinburgh, is seen in the centre of the street.


King William Street, Adelaide
[General description] View looking south along King William Street. Prominent on the right is the ornate Bank of South Australia building, designed by Edmund Wright and Lloyd Tayler in the French Renaissance style and constructed between 1875- 1878. Three towers are seen in the distance; those of the Town Hall, General Post Office and Advertiser Building. A buggy is stationary in the middle of the road whilst the horse feeds from its nosebag. Tracks of the horse tramline can be seen in the foreground turning into Rundle Street. [On front of photograph] 'King William Street / Bank of South Australia' [On back of photograph] '1878-1879 / See also Album B 39362'.


King William Street, Adelaide
[General description] Taken from the Victoria Square gardens, this view shows a well dressed couple posing for the photographer by the Square gates. Behind them city buildings can be seen on either side of King William Street with the General Post Office on the left and the Town Hall prominent on the right. [On back of photograph] 'King William Street, looking north from Victoria Square / 1874-83 / Presented by Mrs. E.H. Burchell'.


Adelaide Philharmonic Choir du
Adelaide Philharmonic Choir performing in the Adelaide Town Hall.


Pirie Street, Adelaide
Wesleyan Church and manse, south side of Pirie Street, Adelaide. Built in 1850 it was the Methodist 'cathedral' with seating for over 1000. In 1969 it amalgamated with the Stow Congregational Church and was demolished in 1972. Construction work on the right is probably part of the Town Hall. The far side of the church is 75 yards east of King William Street and the near side of the manse is 81 yards west of Gawler Place.


Victoria Square, Adelaide
View across Victoria Square, looking north east from a vantage point. Part of the Post Office, the Town Hall and Treasury Building can be seen in the middle distance. Photograph by S. Cole, landscape photographer, Field Street, Adelaide.


King William Street, Adelaide
[On back of photograph] 'Acre 237 / Looking north from Victoria Square / 1872.' [General description] The view looks along King William Street. In the foreground some boys are sitting on the iron railings which surround the Square. The new General Post Office, built in the late 1860s, is on the extreme left. The Town Hall, also recently completed, is on the right. Further along on the left side of the road, the tower of the Advertiser building can be seen. A horse and cart stands in the left foreground and more horse drawn vehicles for hire are waiting in the centre of the road.


Foundation Stone Ceremony
Foundation store ceremony, Victoria Tower of the G.P.O. during the visit of Prince Alfred, Duke of Edinburgh on November 1, 1867. Crowds of spectators have assembled including those standing in carriages and buggies. The horses have been unharnessed. A tall covered grandstand has been erected on the northern side of the GPO block. The Town Hall Treasury Building can be seen on the opposite side of King William Street. A chorus of 4000 children greeted the Duke. The foundation stone was fashioned from Macclesfield marble


Victoria Square, Adelaide
Victoria Square, Adelaide, looking west from the Supreme Court building, in August 1908. The Square garden is on the right and the Post Office and Town Hall Towers are prominent in the distance. Horse and cart traffic ambles along.


Victoria Square
[General description] A panoramic view of Victoria Square with its formal gardens and post-and-rails fencing and the city buildings beyond. Prominent are the General Post Office on the left and the Treasury Buildings and Town Hall on the right. [On back of photograph] 'Victoria Square / with Acres 270, 267, 238, 303 / looking north / 1875-79'.


Prince of Wales visit, 1920
ACRE 203: Flags and bunting flying in King William Street near Adelaide Town Hall in honour of the Prince of Wales state visit to South Australia in 1920.


Bob Francis with 'The Beatles'
Media personality Bob Francis with "The Beatles" addressing the crowd gathered outside the Adelaide Town Hall. Left to right: Jimmy Nicol, Paul McCartney, Bob Francis, George Harrison (obscured), John Lennon.


Debutante presentation
GENERAL: Debutante presentation at the Adelaide Town Hall to the Right Honourable Lord Mayor of Adelaide, W.L. Bridgland.