Hundred of Para Wirra
The Hundred of Para Wirra is a cadastral hundred of the County of Adelaide, South Australia, spanning a portion of the Adelaide Hills north of the Torrens Valley including Mount Crawford.Location
The hundred spans a large number of Adelaide Hills localities but is dominated by Kersbrook in the west and Mount Crawford in the east, with the Mount Gould Range forming a natural boundary between the two.
In the west of the hundred are the towns of Inglewood and localities of Humbug Scrub, Sampson Flat, Millbrook and Chain of Ponds. Other towns and localities crossing the hundred boundary in the west include Yattalunga, Lower Hermitage and Paracombe. Other towns and localities crossing the hundred boundary in the east include Forreston, Cromer, Mount Pleasant, and Flaxman Valley.History
The hundred was proclaimed by Governor Frederick Robe in 1846 and named for an indigenous compound term meaning 'river forest'.
The first local government within the hundred were the District Council of Para Wirra, seated at Kersbrook, and District Council of Mount Crawford. The councils were established on the same day in 1854 to administer, respectively, the western and eastern halves of the hundred, with the Mount Crawford council area extending into the neighbouring Hundred of Barossa and slightly east outside the County of Adelaide boundaries.
Para Wirra and Mount Crawford councils were both dissolved in 1935 and the hundred, from this time until 1997, was governed by the new District Council of Gumeracha.
In 1997, Gumeracha was amalgamated with East Torrens, Onkaparinga, and Stirling councils to form the much larger Adelaide Hills Council.
In 1962 the Para Wirra National Park was proclaimed in the northwest of the hundred. It was reconstituted as a recreation park in 1972, but was upgraded to Conservation Park status in 2015 and the recreation park status was abolished.
In 1966, the Warren Conservation Park was created in the middle of the hundred on the northern slopes of Mount Gould Range.