Extract date: 22/11/2024
Name | Charles River |
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Type Designation | Stream |
Place Id | 11704 |
Place Type | Feature |
Status | Registered |
Date Registered | 5 August 1959 |
Location (Datum GDA94) | |
Latitude: -23° 41' S (Decimal degrees -23.6914) | |
Longitude: 133° 53' E (Decimal degrees 133.8846) | |
Locality / Suburb | |
Stuart | |
Local Government Area | |
Alice Springs Town Council | |
History/Origin | The Charles River, rising in the hills north of Alice Springs, is a tributory of the Todd River and is believed to have derived its name like the Todd River, after Sir Charles Todd who was responsible for the construction of the Overland Telegraph Line. Sir Charles Todd (1826 - 1910) was born in Islington, London. He arrived with his wife Alice in Glenelg, South Australia, on 4 November 1855 to take up the post of Observer and Superintendent of Telegraphs in South Australia, responsible for the equipping of the new Adelaide Observatory. Whilst responsible as Post Master General for many ventures such as the setting up and supervision of a network of meteorological stations and the design and construction of a number of major telegraph lines connecting Adelaide to outlying areas then Melbourne and Sydney, it is as Superintendent of the construction of the Overland Telegraph Line that Todd is most famous. Running from Adelaide to Darwin and connecting Australia to Europe by way of a submarine cable, this tremendous feat was completed on 22 August 1872 with the first messages between London and Adelaide being exchanged on 22 October 1872. |
Date | Gazettal | Comment |
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05/08/1959 | NTG34 |