Peterborough (South Australia)
Peterborough is a town in South Australia.
Understand
Peterborough was settled in the 1870s, and was initially known as 'Petersburg'. The name of the town was anglicised to Peterborough in 1918, as a result of the First World War. It was one of 69 towns in South Australia whose names were changed from German or German-influenced names to anglicised ones.
Get in
By car
Peterborough is a 250km drive from Adelaide which would take around 2 hours and a bit via the A32 Barrier Highway and B79 Petersburg Road. Road is a high quality road, with mostly 110km/h limits.
By bus
York Peninsula Coaches have services to Peterborough three times a week, at around a cost of $50-65.
See
- π Steamtown Heritage Rail Centre, 1 Telford Avenue, β +61 8 8651-3355, fax: +61 8 8651-2173. 9AM-5PM daily. Peterborough was once a vast rail operation, a crossroads on former narrow-gauge lines, with a hundred steam locomotives daily heading to all corners of Australia. Many of the lines were re-gauged or closed; a heritage railway line which ran north in the late 1970s was abandoned in 2002 and dismantled in 2008. The sheds and heritage-listed roundhouse were preserved as a static museum with locomotives and carriages. A night-time βSound and Light Showβ is presented (extra cost). $15/person for guided tours.
- π The Town Carriage Miseum (Railway Carriage Museum).
Eat
- π Duck Duck Goose Cafe, 163-165 Main St, β +61 472 626 151. Tu-F 7AM-2PM.
Sleep
- Peterborough Caravan Park. Mini-golf.
- π Roundhouse Motel, 25 Queen St, β +61 8 8651 2078. Check-in: 2PM, check-out: 10AM.
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