Heritage & History
River trade, irrigation and pioneer stories
The best heritage & history in Blanchetown
Paddle-steamer wharves, irrigation museums, historic hotels and a re-created pioneer village tell the story of how the river built these towns.
The Riverland's history is the history of the river itself. Before roads and rail, the Murray was the highway of the interior, and paddle steamers carried wool and wheat downstream to ports that boomed and faded. That story is written across the region in wharves, locks, grand old pubs and pioneer settlements.
Walk the restored wharf at Morgan, once the colony's second-busiest inland port, and visit the Morgan Museum in the old railway buildings. Watch a working steamer fire up — the 1911 PS Industry at Renmark, or the venerable PS Mayflower at Morgan. Trace the river engineering at Lock 1 Blanchetown, the first of the Murray's locks, completed in 1922.
The open-air Loxton Historical Village recreates pioneer life in vivid detail. Pair these with the region's riverfronts and reserves to understand how completely the Murray once ran the life of the interior.
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2 places
Lock 1 Blanchetown
FreeThe first weir and lock built on the River Murray, a working piece of river engineering you can watch in action.
Lock 1 Weir Walk, Blanchetown
FreeThe first lock built on the Murray, where you can watch the navigation and fishway up close.