Address & Contact
Golf Course Rd
Undalya SA 5451
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Undalya is a small rural town on the southern edge of the
Clare Valley, in the mid north of the state of South Australia. It is located on Main North Road approximately halfway between the towns of Auburn and
Rhynie, at
the junction of the River Wakefield and
Pine Creek. To the east lies the town of
Saddleworth and to the south-west lies the town of
Balaklava. The town was officially gazetted as Undalya in 1859.
The name Undalya was given by the local Aborigines and means "water holes", while the surrounding district was known as Kercoonda meaning "
camp near water". In the early years of the village, Aborigines were in great numbers in the district.On one of his expeditions, explorer Edward
John Eyre camped at Undalya and commented on the large amount of water in the River Wakefield as
well as the availability of the local blue
limestone.
The most notable feature of Undalya is the local
bridge over the River Wakefield. Built in 1855, with various alterations, additions and repairs, the
bridge is known locally by three names: Basket
Bridge, Cradle
Bridge or Coathanger
Bridge. It has taken the full force of many floods and at one time was the biggest one-span
bridge in South Australia. The
bridge was bypassed with a new
bridge slightly to the east of it in the 1950s and today only serves the local residents.
In 1859, a local farmer sold one quarter of an acre for a Bible Christian Church. The Church was built in 1859 and the next year a school was commenced inside it. Both were open for nearly 100 years. Today the building is part of a private residence.
In 1866, with a grant of money and land from another local farmer, the Roman Catholic Church of St. Patrick was built by the Jesuit Fathers of
Sevenhill on the
hill just south of the village. The church closed in 1915 and was later demolished. A graveyard was attached to the church, and is still operating as a
cemetery today. People buried there include Patrick Michael Ryan, who discovered copper at Tiparra in 1861, which was the start of the famous
Moonta mine, and the first wife of the father of Auburn poet C.J. Dennis.
One of the biggest local industries during the 19th century was that of wool-scouring, or wool-washing in the River Wakefield. One such example is that of George Henry Michell, who moved his family to Undalya in 1870, after living at Cudlee Creek, where he had acquired the art of wool-scouring. He persuaded some local farmers to sell their wool directly to him. The wool was processed in the river and packed off to
Adelaide and then shipped to London and auctioned. His operation was hugely successful and in 1896 he was forced to move to Hindmarsh near
Adelaide. Today, Michell is a large multi-national company, run by descendants of George Henry Michell. The company's factory is located on Main North Road at Salisbury South. The Michell
homestead at Undalya still stands today and is used as an animal
shelter.
In the mid-to-late 19th century, ancestors of Australian Football Hall Of Fame footballer Neil Kerley lived at Undalya.
In the mid-19th century to the early 20th century, according to the newspapers of the time, Undalya was a thriving rural village with reports of ploughing matches, horse racing and even a shooting at the local hotel, where the owner shot a customer who, on being refused service, had jumped the counter to serve himself.
Today the village is nothing more than a collection of a few houses around a rarely used
bridge.