Home  Caravan Parks  Contact Us

Pet Friendly

The Peterborough Caravan Park is located at 36 Grove Street Peterborough. The park has powered and unpowered sites. The park is pet friendly. Resident Managers are on site. Bookings can be made by telephoning the park and please tell them that you have seen their photos on Caravan Park Photos. Read more about Peterborough

Photos and report on this page were supplied by our roving reporters Barry and Helen Rodgers in January 2011.

REGION: South Australia > Central South Australia District > Peterborough.


Peterborough Caravan Park - Peterborough South Australia
Click on the thumbnail to view the full image
Peterborough Caravan Park - Peterborough South Australia: Entrance to the Park Peterborough Caravan Park - Peterborough South Australia: Reception and office Peterborough Caravan Park - Peterborough South Australia: Cottage accommodation, ideal for families, couples and singles Peterborough Caravan Park - Peterborough South Australia: Amenities block and laundry


View Larger Map


Barry and Helen write: "It is listed in the RACQ book as "non star rated". It is privately operated and not in any group. We stayed there on our way to the Flinders Ranges and on our return journey. They have powered sites and cabins The showers etc were all clean and tidy, much better than some we have stayed at. Did not like the radio going all night in toilets, but otherwise no complaints."

Peterborough is a town in the mid north of South Australia, in wheat country, just off the Barrier Highway. It was originally named Petersburg after the landowner, Peter Doecke, who sold land to create the town. It was one of 69 places in South Australia renamed in 1917 due to anti-German sentiments during World War I.

Peterborough sits on the intersection of the East-West railway linking Port Pirie and Broken Hill, and the North-South railway linking Adelaide eventually to Alice Springs via Quorn, both narrow gauge (1,067 mm (3 ft 6 in)) lines.

The line from Port Pirie and Jamestown arrived in 1881, followed shortly after by the line from Terowie in the south. The line to Broken Hill was completed in 1887.

Peterborough was the home town for Bob the Railway Dog who is remembered by a bronze statue located in the Main Street. In 1970, the East-West line was converted to standard gauge (1,435 mm (4 ft 8 1?2 in)), and the line south of Peterborough to Terowie to broad gauge (1,600 mm (5 ft 3 in)). Thus Peterborough became one of three, triple-gauge railway junctions in Australia. The others being Gladstone and Port Pirie, all on the same railway corridor.

The broad-gauge connection to Adelaide, via Burra, was severed in the late 1980s. The narrow-gauge line north to Quorn last carried freight in 1980, and was removed, between Eurelia and Bruce in the mid-1980s. Grain trains ran as far as Orroroo into the mid 1980s. In its later years it was used by tourist trains from Steamtown as far as Eurelia. Steamtown ceased operations in 2002, however the roundhouse is still used to display its coaches and locomotives. The District Council, with funding from the three tiers of government and recovery of the Eurelia line, have subsequently established the Steamtown Heritage Rail Centre, with SA's first Sound & Light Show.

The town is still served by the twice-weekly Indian Pacific train run by Great Southern Railways, which heads to Adelaide on Sundays and Thursdays, and to Sydney on Tuesdays and Fridays.

We gratefully acknowledge the information provided by Wikipedia under a Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported License. The full article can be viewed at Wikipedia.

Return to the top of the page