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Hindley Street

Hindley Street

Hindley Street, South Side, 9th March 1973, Hindley Street frontage is 13 yards and Peel Street frontage is 37 yards.

Hindley Street

Hindley Street

Hindley Street, south side, 9th March 1973, Hindley Street frontage is 13 1/3 yards and Peel Street frontage is 37 yards.

Hindley Street

Hindley Street

Hindley Street, south side, 6th June 1978. The photo shows the City Central Motel at No. 23 Hindley St., the offices of TAA at No. 27 Hindley St. with a TAA bus.

Hindley Street, Adelaide

Hindley Street, Adelaide

[General description] City shops seen from the middle of the intersection of King William, Hindley and Rundle Streets. Businesses are: On the corner is H. Muirhead watchmaker and goldsmith with a Portrait Rooms upstairs, at Number 29 is A. Arch & Company, hat makers, and at Number 31-33 is S. Allen, tent and tarpaulin maker. [On back of photograph] 'Acre 78 / Corner (S.W.) of Hindley Street and King William Street / 1873-76'. [See also B 1272, B 4684, and B 143]

Hindley Street

Hindley Street

Hindley Street looking west from the north western corner of King William and Hindley Streets. Horses and carts line the street creating a busy scene. Verandahs shade the footpath on this sunny day.

Hindley Street looking west

Hindley Street looking west

Hindley Street looking west from the eastern side of the Rundle Street - Hindley Street intersection.

Wesleyan Methodist Chapel, Hindley Street

Wesleyan Methodist Chapel, Hindley Street

Wesleyan Methodist Chapel 1838 in Hindley Street was the first to be built in Adelaide. This was situated on Acre 48 close to the western boundary of the Acre, but about 20 to 30 yards back from Hindley Street. Copied from a sketch reproduced in the Christian Weekly and Methodist Journal, 11 May 1900. The first Methodist minister, Reverend William Longbottom and his family were shipwrecked on the Coorong en route from Hobart. It took the family 8 weeks to reach Adelaide. The foundation stone for the new church was laid in 1837 and the first service was held before the roof was erected.

Workmen with ladders in Hindley Street

Workmen with ladders in Hindley Street

Woman watching workmen with ladders in Hindley Street, North side. Probably 18 August 1977 as the newspaper billboards relate to newspapers of the day. Hair Factory is listed at No. 34 Hindley Street, photo includes Pepe's Coffee Rendezvous.

Hindley Street

Hindley Street

Hindley Street, north side. This sketch shows the premises of WC Rigby at 53 Hindley Street. Rigby Bookshop was also an agent for the Register, Observer, Advertiser and Chronicle newspapers. William Charles Rigby sailed his own boat "The Gem" to Adelaide with a cargo of five cases of books for the newly established colony. He became known as a supplier of fine books and the business thrived. He retired on his 75th birthday in 1909

Hindley Street, Adelaide

Hindley Street, Adelaide

View of Hindley Street, Adelaide, north side with Robin and Birks Drapery at 89 Hindley St., on extreme left and Conrad's butcher shop centre. The extreme left of the photo is 34 yards west of Victoria Street.

Hindley Street

Hindley Street

Hindley Street, north side. Johnnie's Fun Spot which is a fun and games parlour. At one stage the building housed cabaret rooms. A parapet surrounds the two storey building at 148 Hindley Street

Castle Inn, Hindley Street

Castle Inn, Hindley Street

Hindley Street, north side, 11 October 1937, frontage of the Castle Inn is 18 yards. The Castle Inn stood on the north west corner of Hindley and Morphett Streets. For alterations made in 1937 see B 7385. The proprietor of the hotel at the time the photograph was taken was Albert Augustine Edwards or Arthur Edwards. A stack of wicker baskets stand next to a cockatoo in a wire cage on the verandah of the two storey hotel in Light Square.

Hindley Street

Hindley Street

Hindley Street, north side, 21 December 1962, left side of cottages is 33 yards east of West Terrace and frontage is 32 yards. A row of cottages is in the process of being demolished. The trees from the parklands bordering West Terrace can be seen behind a service station on the corner of Hindley Street and West Terrace.

Hindley Street, Adelaide

Hindley Street, Adelaide

[General description] This corner building, a previous tenant having been A. Dunn, Drapery and Fancy Goods, is soon to be surrounded by the new additions to the West End Brewery. Men are busy on the building site. [On back of photograph] 'Acre 68 / Hindley Street, south side / February 9th 1938 / For view of buildings erected adjacent to the west and south sides of the corner building in 1938, see B 8195 / The left side of the building in centre abuts Clarendon Place / Hindley Street frontage is 13 yards / Clarendon Place frontage is 17.5 yards'.

Hindley Street, Adelaide

Hindley Street, Adelaide

West end of Hindley Street, Adelaide, South Australia, November 1849. Trinity Church, North Terrace, is on the left of the picture. Two Aboriginal people are in the centre of the engraving. A pair of oxen are pulling a heavily laden cart and further along Hindley Street a cart of straw is being pulled along by horses. A number of houses and businesses can be seen across the colony which is only just over a decade old at the time of the engraving. This engraving appeared in The Illustrated London News August 24th, 1850.

Exterior view of Hindleys Olympia Restaurant, 139 Hindley Street

Exterior view of Hindleys Olympia Restaurant, 139 Hindley Street

Hindley Street, South Side, 9th September 1980, left side of building is 84 2/3 yards east of Morphett Street and frontage is 10 1/3 yards.

Hindley Street

Hindley Street

Hindley Street, south side, 18 July 1956, right side of Central Cafe is 22 3/4 yards east of Club House Lane, and frontage is 5.5 yards. Mittiga Tailor was at 71 Hindley Street. Frontage of Wicks building is 6.5 yards

Fire damage to Hains Hunkins, Hindley Street

Fire damage to Hains Hunkins, Hindley Street

Hindley Street, south side. Fire damage to Hains Hunkins store after a fire on December 21, 1965. Hindley Street, South side. Hains Hunkins was a home furnishings store. In the 1920s Leslie Claude Hunkin joined forces with Ralph Hains to establish the retail furnishing store

Fire damage to Hains Hunkins, Hindley Street

Fire damage to Hains Hunkins, Hindley Street

Hindley Street, south side. Fire damage to Hains Hunkins store after a fire on December 21, 1965. Hindley Street, South side. Hains Hunkins was a home furnishings store. In the 1920s Leslie Claude Hunkin joined forces with Ralph Hains to establish the retail furnishing store

Fire damage to Hains Hunkins, Hindley Street

Fire damage to Hains Hunkins, Hindley Street

Hindley Street, South side. Fire damage to Hains Hunkins store after a fire on December 21, 1965. Hindley Street, South side. Hains Hunkins was a home furnishings store. In the 1920s Leslie Claude Hunkin joined forces with Ralph Hains to establish the retail furnishing store

Fire damage to Hains Hunkins, Hindley Street

Fire damage to Hains Hunkins, Hindley Street

Burnt out vehicle among damage to Hains Hunkins store after a fire, Hindley Street, South side. December 21, 1965. Hindley Street, South side. Hains Hunkins was a home furnishings store. In the 1920s Leslie Claude Hunkin joined forces with Ralph Hains to establish the retail furnishing store

Fire damage to Hains Hunkins, Hindley Street

Fire damage to Hains Hunkins, Hindley Street

Burnt out shell of a truck among damage to Hains Hunkin store after a fire, Hindley Street, South side. December 21, 1965. Hindley Street, South side. Hains Hunkins was a home furnishings store. In the 1920s Leslie Claude Hunkin joined forces with Ralph Hains to establish the retail furnishing store

Hindley Street

Hindley Street

Hindley Street during the first visit of the Duke and Duchess of Cornwall and York in 1901. The royal couple were representing Albert Edward, Prince of Wales and Alexandra who were preparing for the coronation following the death of Queen Victoria in 1901. The Duke and Duchess were visiting Australia to open the first Federal Parliament in Melbourne. In the photograph the bunting and flags which decorated Hindley Street can be seen.

G.W. Cox and State Theatre, Hindley Street, Adelaide

G.W. Cox and State Theatre, Hindley Street, Adelaide

Viewed from the north side of Hindley Street people queue on the footpath outside G.W. Cox and the State Theatre, Hindley Street, Adelaide, where the motion picture, Tammy, starring Debbie Reynolds is playing. A unidentified man is walking away from a 1950 Jaguar MK 5 Drop Head Coupe.

King William Street, Adelaide.

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. Buildings in the foreground on the eastern side of King William Street are the National Bank and Beehive Corner and on the western side are the English, Scottish and Australian Bank and the Australian Mutual Provident (AMP) Society. The street is busy with horse drawn vehicles and pedestrians. A telegraph pole and wires also dominates the foreground. 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. The horse trams are lunch time 'specials', which did not stop, and two pedestrians can be seen running to board the moving tram. Many city workers went home for lunch at this time [additional information provided by a researcher].

King William Street, north of Hindley Street

King William Street, north of Hindley Street

King William Street, east side, looking north from Hindley Street with a busy Rundle Street on the right. The attractive building on Bee Hive corner has numerous turrets topped with crosses. A wide verandah offers shade to pedestrians in King William Street. L Cook Elite Cafe stands near the corner of the building in Rundle Street. An ornate lamp post supporting electricity wires stands in the middle of the intersection.

Leigh Street

Leigh Street

Leigh Street, near side of the two storey building on left is 54 yards south of Hindley Street and frontage is 8 yards. View looking south of a row of business premises on the east side of Leigh Street (looking south), between Hindley and Currie Streets, showing (from left) Church Office (for the Church of England), Edler Bros. (importers), J.P. Combe (brass founder and gas fitter), unidentified, Henry Clarke, and the Steam printing Office.

Hindley Street, Adelaide

Hindley Street, Adelaide

Hindley Street, Adelaide, looking east, taken from a point opposite Leigh Street. Thomas' Billiard Saloon was on the western corner of Peel Street. Busy Rundle Street can be seen in the distance and a horse tram is passing by on King William Street.

Hindley Street from King William Street

Hindley Street from King William Street

Lithograph of Hindley Street, from King William Street, based on an artwork by S.T. Gill. The artwork depicts a street vendor and customers in the foreground and the continuation of a busy street and buildings in the background. Published by Penman & Galbraith, Adelaide, as No. 1 in the 'Views in Adelaide' series.

Blyth Street off Hindley Street

Blyth Street off Hindley Street

Blyth Street, west side, 2 October 1899. This narrow street runs betwwen North Terrace and Hindley street. EG Shorney wholesale ironmonger and furnisher's premises are depicted in the photograph. R Collins upholsterers are nextdoor.