User:Doug butler
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This user is a married retired science/electronics tech born in Hindmarsh, South Australia. He remembers ...
- When "Made in Japan" and "Made in Germany" meant cheap inferior goods.
- Pledge at school assembly (hand on heart, literally): I am an Australian /I love my country, the British Empire /I salute her flag /I honour her king, King George the Sixth /. . . rest mercifully forgotten
- When kids played in pugholes and rode pushbikes to school. Real bike tracks on Port Road and Anzac Highway.
- Cracker night 5 November. Squibs, jumping jacks, penny bungers, Catherine wheels, throwdowns and sparklers so bright they hurt your eyes
- When South Road had six different names: Shillabeer Ave, Govt. Rd, John St., Taylors Rd, Fisher Tce, South Rd.
- When ABC announcers (and we technical staff) wore a suit and tie and the Adelaide studios were packed into a converted church and stables in Hindmarsh Square.
- When a bottle of beer (26 imperial fluid ounces (740 ml) only size sold), a packet of Rothmans® and a gallon of Super each cost 3/3d (32c), and a 45RPM single nearly three times that, at 9/3d (92c). Equivalent goods now roughly $6, $25, $6 and $2!
- ½d refund on beer bottles, 2d refund on coke bottles 6 imperial fluid ounces (170 ml) the only size sold.
- 6 O'clock closing, men only in the front bar and "under-age" meant under 21.
- Eight movie theatres in the city: God Save the Queen (everyone stood) then newsreel and two movies.
- Johnnies, Amscol, Hall's, Woodroofe's, Waltham's and The Hobby Shop on Gawler Place, Robby's at the Port.
These are a few of my favorite links
[edit]- Category:Members of South Australian parliaments by term
- List of historic houses in South Australia
- List of elections in South Australia
- List of categories: Australian people by occupation
- List of categories: Australian people by ethnic or national origin
- List of categories: Companies of Australia by industry
- List of categories: emigrants to Australia by nationality
- Stylemanual: Abbrev's
- {{convert}} units
- List of article and inline tags
- Wikipedia:New articles (Australia)
- Wikipedia:Australian Wikipedians' notice board
- Template:OSM Location map
- {{db-move|1=PAGE TO BE MOVED HERE|2=REASON FOR MOVE}} pls delete this page to make way for move
- Template:Rp page number for each instance of <ref name= >
- NT placenames search
- 1911 map Rundle/Grenfell east of King William
- 1911 map Rundle/Grenfell east of Gawler place many more; just follow the next/previous buttons
- list of SA journalists
- list of SA pen names
- Using Google to search parts of Wikipedia a wiki search leaves out
- eg https://www.google.com/search?q=ransom+%22australian+oxford+dictionary+site%3Awiki.eso.workers.dev (%22=" %3A=:)
- Finding unlinked strings
- eg "Scott Hicks" -linksto:"Scott Hicks (director)"
Articles created or substantially edited
[edit](intended as an aide-memoire not an attempt to impress anyone)
In User Space
[edit]South Australia/Northern Territory
[edit]- Ada Mary a'Beckett, née Lambert, leader of the kindergarten movement, first woman appointed lecturer at Melbourne University
- Abraham Abrahams businessman, philanthropist and art connoisseur
- Academy of Music, Adelaide theatre destroyed by fire three times
- Henry Adams (Australian politician) carpenter, unionist and politician
- James Hazel Adamson artist and inventor
- John Acraman businessman and pioneer of Aussie rules football
- Adelaide Agricultural School precursor to Adelaide Technical High School
- Adelaide Crystal Ice Company ice makers, founded Alaska Ice Cream
- Adelaide Easel Club members included James Ashton (artist), Edward Davies (architect), Paris Nesbit, Hans Heysen many more
- Adelaide Destitute Asylum another saga
- Adelaide Educational Institution with help from User:Pdfpdf (began 10 February 2011)
- Adelaide Independent and Cabinet of Amusement short-lived newspaper assoc. with Nathaniel Hailes, Henry Hussey (pastor) and George Dehane
- Adelaide Jubilee International Exhibition 1857 trade exhibition; Jubilee Exhibition Building built for the exhibition
- Adelaide Liedertafel
- Adelaide Racing Club
- Adelaide Women's Club
- Advanced School for Girls
- Albert Hall, Adelaide German Club hall sold to Salvation Army
- George Sydney Aldridge businessman, longtime president of the Adelaide Stock Exchange
- James Henry Aldridge hotelier and horse breeder
- Henry Alford (police officer) first mounted constable, rose to Inspector, quit when Tolmer became paranoid, became hotelier
- Frederick W. Allen racehorse breeder of Edithburgh
- James Allison (theatre) manager Theatre Royal with George Rignold widower died in San Francisco
- Alexander Anderson (Australian politician) Morphett Vale hotelier and MHA forced to resign as JP
- Charles B. Anderson railway engineer and commissioner founder Modern Pickwick Club
- J. Miller Anderson & Co. Hindley Street drapery; James Miller Anderson longtime CEO
- James R. Anderson lawyer and uniquely Attorney General without being a Member of Parliament. Married daughter of John Hannah Gordon
- William Buckton Andrews "Canon Andrews" Anglican minister, brother of Chief Justice Andrews both with family ties to William Giles (colonial manager)
- Edward William Andrews editor of S. A. Register
- Charles Howard Angas pastoralist son of John Howard Angas. Greyhound and cricket lover; donated clock above scoreboard, Adelaide oval
- H. T. M. Angwin Engineer-in-Chief links to E&WS, ETSA, Harbors Board
- Aquinas College, Adelaide Catholic college in Samuel Way's house Montefiore
- George Ash (Australian politician) editor of Narracoorte Herald sued by Hutchison, became MP, lawyer, died age 37
- Michael Atchison South Australian cartoonist
- W. P. Auld (1840–1912) explorer and wine merchant, incorporates father Patrick Auld (1811–1886) founder of "Auldana"
- Australische Zeitung succeeded Sued Australische Zeitung, German language newspaper founded by Otto Schomburgk, Carl Muecke (editor) and Gustave Droege
- Thomas Hamilton Ayliffe medical doctor whose large family settled in Sturt, Hamley Bridge and Angaston
- Benjamin Herschel Babbage (1815–1878) engineer winemaker, built "Babbage's Castle". Incorporates Charles Whitmore Babbage (1842–1923) embezzler and prominent Wanganui (NZ) citizen, Herbert Ivan Babbage (1875–1916) NZ artist, Eden Herschel Babbage (1844?–1924) prominent Roseville, NSW citizen and Dugald Bromhead Babbage (1823–1881) surveyor. Edited.
- Colin R. Badger, adult education specialist in Victoria, born in Peterborough grandson of David Badger, pioneering Baptist
- Edmund Baggs teacher of painting and "electric painting" (airbrush) painted in oils, inc. Grange Road at Monte Cristo, Junee
- Charles Hervey Bagot pastoralist, miner and ancestor of many famous Bagots
- E. D. A. Bagot fascist ratbag and Orientalist moved content to Alec Bagot
- John Bagot (1849–1910) MHA and businessman, grandson of Charles Hervey Bagot and father of Walter Bagot (architect) home "Forest Lodge" near Stirling
- John Stokes Bagshaw founder J. S. Bagshaw and Sons became Horwood Bagshaw Ltd.
- Josiah Howell Bagster land agent and politician
- Ted Baker (publican) sold pubs to breed racehorses, then back to pubs
- E. H. Bakewell pastoralist, businessman and MTT chairman
- William Bakewell (Australian politician) lawyer and MLA
- Samuel Bakewell grocer and MLA, brother of William
- Don Banfield (Donald Hubert Louis Banfield) trade unionist and politician
- Bank of South Australia (1837) founded by SA Company, taken over 1892 - stub
- Doug Bardolph journalist and Lang Labor and (independent) Labor MP. brother of Ken
- Ken Bardolph architect and Labor MLC brother of Doug
- John Barker (businessman) auctioneer horse dealer chairman of South Australian Jockey Club
- William Barlow (vice-chancellor), lawyer partner of Richard Chaffey Baker), Vice-Chancellor of Adelaide University
- Simeon Barnard racehorse owner and secretary of SAJC. Ran Newmarket Races 1879 as a private venture
- Ethel Barringer woman artist
- Gwen Barringer woman artist, Ethel's more famous sister-in-law (kept name after divorce)
- Joseph Barritt politician pastoralist
- George L. Barrow journalist jailed for libelling Samuel Tomkinson MP, died in Fiji
- Adolph Bartels Mayor of Adelaide (was stub)
- Frank Bartels pen-and-ink artist died from typhoid
- Harry Bartlett (Australian politician) Yorke Peninsula MLA "Father of the West Coast"
- William Bartley (politician) lawyer and acting MLC for a month or two
- Charles Bastard and his father Thomas Bastard (swimming), lessees of City Baths
- James Bath (headmaster) head of Christ Church school, then his own in North Adelaide, later Secretary to many Ministers of Education
- William Reynolds Bayly succeeded Frederic Chapple as headmaster of Prince Alfred College
- Bean Brothers tanners and wool brokers. George Bean (father) and sons W. H. Bean, G. T. Bean and Arthur Bean
- Bay of Biscay soil
- Thomas Hudson Beare (pioneer), a First Fleeter, the first storekeeper, daughter Arabella first of the fleet to set foot on SA; wife Lucy the first white woman to die in SA
- Isidor George Beaver architect in Adelaide and Melbourne, noted ice skater. Albert Beaver, jeweller and embezzler, was a brother. Marked for deletion December 2015
- F. J. Beck & Co. Charles, Frederick John and John. Merchants who made fortune from Burra copper mine, retired to England. John's property included Adelaie Arcade.
- Ray Beckwith chemist for Penfolds, influenced Max Schubert
- Thomas Walker Bee Relieving Officer at Destitute Asylum, Police Inspector while Peterswald at Barossa goldfields
- Beehive Corner Adelaide landmark
- James Michael Beerworth Port Augusta mayor, hotelier and politician
- William Begg captain of Coonatto (clipper ship) and The Murray (clipper ship), ship's surveyor and stevedoring business with John Legoe
- Ellen Ida Benham science teacher, associated with Adelaide Uni, Advanced School for Girls, Tormore School, Walford
- George Bennet (pastoralist) Allandale and Allan Park, Edwardstown. Father had same name, died Macumba Station
- Bennett & Fisher stock & station agents founded by Gabriel Bennett and Benjamin Fisher
- Gabriel Bennett auctioneer and racehorse owner
- Thomas Boutflower Bennett (1808-1894) schoolmaster. Incorporates J. W. O. Bennett (1845–1869) surveyor killed in NT.
- William H. Bennett (newspaperman) newspaper editor and proprietor in Peterborough
- William Bennett (headmaster) head of teachers' union
- Susan Grace Benny Brighton councillor, first woman to hold such position, married Benjamin Benny lawyer, senator and embezzler
- Alexander Vigors Benson medical doctor, chairman Port Adelaide Football Club, Port Adelaide Racing Club
- Lewis Henry Berens jeweller founder of Adelaide Arcade, disciple of Henry George single taxer and land reform advocate
- Claude Richard Beresford South Australian journalist with The News, wrote topical verse as "Seebee"
- John Berjew founded schools in North Adelaide and Stanley, Tasmania
- Robert Bernard (advocate-general) MLC stub
- Edwin S. Berry surveyor with Goyder and Gosse expeditions
- Richard Berry (missionary) seaman in charge of City Mission.
- Llewellyn David Bevan Welsh Congregationalist minister, first principal of Parkin College. Also at Collins Street Congregational Church
- Frederick Bevan singer choirmaster organist singing teacher at Elder Conservatorium prob. no relation
- John George Bice Port Augusta blacksmith and longterm politician
- John Leonard Sandoe Bice his son, also an MLC a farmer in Keith
- A. M. Bickford and Sons manufacturing chemists. Incorporates William Bickford (1815–1850), Ann Margaret Bickford, Harry Bickford (1843–1927), William Bickford (1841–1916), Drug Houses of Australia.
- Birks Chemists Rundle Street pharmacy later owned by Magarey family
- Charles Birks & Co Rundle street department store bought out by David Jones Ltd.
- George Vause Birks medical doctor of Angaston, progenitor of Birks family of South Australia
- Walter Richard Birks headmaster of Roseworthy College, left after students' strike
- Lawrence Birks electrical engineer in NZ. Was stub.
- Melville Birks surgeon supervisor of Broken Hill hospital, industrial health researcher
- William Blackler horse breeder of Fulham Park founder of Adelaide Racing Club, S. A. Tattersalls Club associate of Seth Ferry
- Neville Blyth (section of Arthur Blyth then made separate page)
- Traugott Wilhelm Boehm founder of Hahndorf College; sold to D. J. Byard
- George Bollen homeopath doctor mayor of Port Adelaide Methodist teetotaller
- John James Bonnar Mount Barker schoolteacher and lawyer in Mount Barker, Strathalbyn, Gladstone, Armidale NSW. Brother Henry Bonnar had several schools. Grandfather of
- Scott Bonnar lawnmower manufacturer and inventor
- Bonney Flat area near Gumeracha settled by the Hannaford family
- Bonney Flat Creek similar name but near Balhannah, settled by the Camacs
- Jeremy Boot painter of Australian birds
- Thomas Wilde Boothby
- Border Chronicle Bordertown newspaper stub
- The Border Watch Mount Gambier newspaper
- John Bosworth pastoralist politician
- Joseph Botterill Mount Gambier pastoralist politician stub
- Francis Joseph Botting and son Frank Botting auctioneers, owner Haussen & Co. (Hindmarsh Brewery)
- E. V. Boulger Irish scholar and Adelaide academic turned Catholic
- Bowman Brothers pastoralists around Hobart, Lake Albert, Crystal Brook, Wodonga and elsewhere
- Leslie Bradford chemist and metallurgist in Broken Hill, Port Pirie and Sydney; developed froth flotation, founded Bradford Insulation
- Walter Lewis Bridgland shopkeeper and mayor
- Henry Edward Bright politician of Gawler, editor of Bunyip (newspaper), Daily Herald (Adelaide) (substantial additions)
- Fred C. Britton etcher, art teacher
- Alfred Scott Broad (perhaps later Scott-Broad) early black and white artist
- Walter Bromley already article on his Nova Scotia teaching; he then opened on KI SA's first school, was Protector of Aborigines, drowned, called accidental. Stub.
- Rudolph Bronner ABC radio executive, son of teacher Charles Bronner
- Brooker & Sons jam and preserved fruit makers
- Thomas Henry Brooker Hindmarsh mayor, MHA
- Sir George Brookman businessman politician and philanthropist, father of Norman Brookman MLC and grandfather of David Norman Brookman MHA
- David Brookman (Australian politician) David Norman Brookman, son of Norman.
- Norman Brookman farmer politician son of George killed in car crash
- James Brown (Australian pastoralist) Kalyra Sanitorium and Estcourt House home for aged blind and crippled children founded from his estate
- Marie Brown a founder with Helen Mayo of the Mothers and Babies Health Association
- Sylvester John Browne pastoralist and miner involved in resurrection of Morphettville track
- William James Browne "Dr. Browne" converted from shared to separate article
- David Bruce (captain) skipper of the City of Adelaide (1864), South Australian (clipper ship). Son married an Angas, daughter married a Buik
- Bublacowie Military Museum on Yorke Peninsula stub
- Alexander Buchanan (judge) on the SA Supreme Court
- Frederick Estcourt Bucknall MP, mayor of Hindmarsh, developer of Grange, built Estcourt House, lost a fortune
- Bunyip (newspaper) Gawler publication founded by Barnet and Nott
- Frederic Britten Burden editor and part-owner The Advertiser
- John Britten Burden King William Street pharmacist
- Nora Burden stained glass artist related to the Martins
- O. L. A. Burford Naval officer in Adelaide associated with Cheer-Up Society
- W. H. Burford & Sons soap makers. Incorporates William Henville Burford (1807–1895), William Burford and Benjamin Burford
- Hermann Buring Clare winemaker with C. A. Sobels
- Leo Buring winemaker in SA and Minchinbury in NSW
- Meta Buring contralto, singing teacher
- Francis Robert Burton (1840–1915) penal reformer.
- Leonard Samuel Burton ran St George's Anglican school in Gawler; for a time taught with Thomas Smellie (minister) killed in level crossing smash
- D. J. Byard headmaster proprietor of Hahndorf College, bought from Traugott Wilhelm Boehm
- Caledonian Society of South Australia list of Chiefs
- Alexander Cameron (pioneer) founder of Penola
- Allan Campbell (Australian politician) homoeopathic medico and politician (like S. J. Magarey). Married daughter of James Way
- Daphne Campbell (actress) 1947 Miss NT married Sam Calder MHR
- Major Norman Campbell (politician) early MLC left under a cloud for Victoria
- Caroline Carleton poet, author of Song of Australia. Includes Charles James Carleton chemist, assayer, cemetery supervisor.
- Jimmy Carr (bookmaker) taught Sol Green a thing or two
- John Carr (Australian politician, born 1871) (prev. John Carr (South Australian politician) unionist and politician
- Whitmore Blake Carr journalist, A.R.C. and S.A.J.C. horse racing official, Stock Exchange chairman.
- Frank Skeffington Carroll editor and owner of The Lantern, MHA momentarily until background as fraudster became known
- John Carruthers (surveyor) fixed the boundary between the Northern Territory and Queensland with Larry Wells
- Tom Casey (Australian politician) followed Mick O'Halloran
- Thomas Caterer (1825–1917) founded Norwood Grammar School. Incorporates Frederick Isaac Caterer (1840?–1892) founded Glenelg Grammar, suicide, and T. Ainslie Caterer (died 1923) a master at St Peter's College.
- Catherine Helen Spence Memorial Scholarships list
- W. R. Cave businessman. Son jailed after abortion death.
- Cawthorne and Co music retailers
- Chambers brothers (pastoralists) pioneers James Chambers (pastoralist) and John Chambers (Australian pastoralist) sponsors of Stuart expeditions
- Champion Brothers soap and candle makers, forced to shift from Bowden to Thebarton
- Alfred Thomas Chandler journalist, and editor with Register, Advertiser, Quiz, Coolgardie Miner and Sunday Times (WA)
- Alfred George Chapman, Adelaide city builder
- Arthur Chapman (agent) businessman brother of Edgar, handled his estate inc. Theatre Royal
- Edgar Chapman brewer, owner of various Hindley Street properties, notably Theatre Royal, Adelaide
- Robert Hall Chapman railways engineer became Commissioner
- Robert William Chapman (engineer) Professor Chapman of Adelaide Uni (was stub)
- Frederic Chapple headmaster of Prince Alfred College, succeeded by William Reynolds Bayly
- Phoebe Chapple early woman doctor, decorated for heroism in WWI
- Alfred S. Cheadle wool merchant, company merged with Bennett & Fisher
- Cheer-Up Society WWI organization founded by Mrs A. Seager, W. J. Sowden
- Henry Cheetham (pastor) Congregationalist minister at High Street Kensington (not Clayton Church) and Milang; daughter married W. Peacock
- John Cheriton Strathalbyn farmer and M.P.
- The Children's Hour (Australian magazine) Education Department publication
- Norman Chinner nephew of William, organist and conductor
- John Henry Chinner caricaturist of Notable Citizens, supporter of PAC and Parkside Methodist church
- William Bowen Chinner organist, choirmaster, teacher and composer, 30 years with Pirie Street Methodist Church
- South Australian Chronicle weekly newspaper
- City of Adelaide (1838) (stub) emigrant ship not to be confused with City of Adelaide (1864)
- G. F. Claridge businessman and mayor of Port Pirie
- Clark & Robinson William Clark, Lionel Robinson, mining stockbrokers and racehorse owners in Adelaide then London won two Melbourne Cups
- Francis Clark and Sons engineers. Incorporates A. Sidney Clark, Henry Septimus Clark and links to Howard and Emily Clark
- John Howard Clark "Geoffry Crabthorn" (1830–1878) editor of South Australian Register, died of TB at Pt. Willunga.
- Caroline Emily Clark child welfare enthusiast
- W. H. Clark (brewer) Halifax Street brewery, left SA to avoid creditors
- Clayton Congregational Church head of Norwood Parade
- E. Davenport Cleland journalist and mine manager in SA and WA, son of John Fullerton Cleland of Beaumont
- Edward Erskine Cleland lawyer and judge on SA Supreme Court
- W. L. Cleland surgeon of Parkside Lunatic Asylum and Colonial Surgeon (South Australia)
- James Cock MHA in Mount Gambier, a son of Robert Cock
- Rodney Cockburn book on placenames, Hansard reporter, WWI nomenclature committee, criticised by Geoff Manning
- Stewart Cockburn journalist son of Rodney; wrote books on Tom Playford, Mark Oliphant, Harold Salisbury
- Patrick Boyce Coglin businessman/politician
- Emanuel Cohen (businessman) a founder of Adelaide Arcade, married a Benjamin of the Solomon family
- Lewis Cohen (mayor) grandfather of Wally Bridgland, also a mayor
- George William Cole teetotal politician
- James Cole (politician) (James William Cole) architect politician stub
- Joseph Stear Cole, aka Carlyon Cole founder and headmaster of Watervale School, became Stanley Grammar School
- Richard Bowen Colley first mayor of Glenelg
- C. N. Collison (1845–1929), journalist, patent agent, partner of J. Fairfax Conigrave, secretary of Aborigines' Friends' Association
- M. Chave Collisson feminist friend of Bessie Rischbieth daughter of Rev. R. K. Collisson
- Colonial Surgeon (South Australia) a short list
- Common Cause WWII thinktank founded by Sidney Crawford accused of Communist influence
- Commonwealth Club of Adelaide lunchtime discussion group started by S. H. Skipper
- Francis Joseph Condon Frank Condon, unionist and longtime MLC
- J. Fairfax Conigrave businessman secretary of Adelaide Jubilee International Exhibition committee
- Mountifort Longfield Conner auctioneer, politician, sportsman in SA, sports journalist in Vic and NSW
- H. L. Conran pastoralist in Queensland, stockbroker in SA, made fortune from Coolgardie gold ventures
- Edith Agnes Cook Unitarian, first female student at Adelaide University, second principal of the Advanced School for Girls; as Edith Agnes Hübbe principal of school in Burnside
- W. Moxon Cook brother of Edith, sports journalist as "Trumpator" for The Register and "Terlinga" for the The Australasian
- Ebenezer Cooke (politician) (1832-1907) politician and Commissioner of Audit. Mentions J. Herbert Cooke, first mayor of Parkside, Florence Cooke musician. Father of astronomer W. Ernest Cooke
- John Cooke (Australian politician) John Herbert Cooke, a son. Substantial additions
- W. H. Coombs longtime Anglican priest in Gawler
- Coonatto (clipper ship) skippers were William Begg, James Norval Smart and John Eilbeck Hillman, who ran her into Beachy Head
- George Witherage Cotton another land agent politician
- Robert Cottrell coachbuilder of Maitland NSW and Adelaide, politician and farmer of Maitland SA
- Frank Counsell architect used reinforced concrete
- The Courier (Mount Barker) a weekly newspaper
- Cowley's pie cart
- Rev. Francis William Cox first, and long-serving pastor of the Hindmarsh Square Congregational Church
- Frazer Smith Crawford photographer and photolithographer and authority on plant pests
- Robert Hugh Crawford owner of large grocery shops on Hindley and King William Streets
- Sidney Crawford truck dealer involved in Legacy, Harbours Board, St. Jude's church Brighton, grandson of brewer E. J. F. Crawford
- Cec Creedon Gawler Mayor and Labor politician
- John Creswell (sportsman) secretary of RA&HS, footballer cricketer and lawn bowler
- The Critic (Adelaide) literary magazine. C. J. Dennis was journalist, editor
- Joseph Crompton started half a dozen major businesses (Bunyip soap, Stonyfell Wines, Olives ...)
- John Crozier (politician) River Murray pastoralist, MLC and Oaklands pioneer. Eldest son William Crozier declared lunatic.
- Sir Arthur Cudmore surgeon and founder of RAA
- Daniel Cudmore (businessman) mentions James Francis Cudmore, Daniel Henry Cudmore, many more
- John D. Custance agricultural scientist, founder of Roseworthy College, sacked by James Henderson Howe
- Daily Herald (Adelaide) (1910–1924) a Labor daily (stub)
- William Dale (Australian politician) carpenter politician and teetotaler
- John Darling and Son wheat merchants and flour millers. Incorporates John Darling (1831–1905), John Darling jun. (1852–1914), Harold Gordon Darling, Norman Darling, Leonard Darling, and Leonard Gordon Darling. Also mentions shipwrecks of Norma, Ardencraig and Jessie Darling in 1907.
- Darwent & Dalwood Joseph Darwent and William T. Dalwood contracted for the northernmost section of Overland Telegraph Line and got screwed
- George Frederick Dashwood MLC, Commissioner of Police, other public service positions, emigration agent
- Robert Davenport (Australian politician) brother of Samuel Davenport
- George Davidson (minister) United Presbyterian minister at Flinders Street church
- James Edward Davidson founder of News Limited. Son Alan Davidson QANTAS pilot was first Qantas death.
- Charles Davies (South Australian politician) medico member of first elected Legislative Council
- Edward Davies (architect) architect, painter and arts administrator
- Abraham Hopkins Davis businessman and horticulturist
- William Bower Dawes Nairne farmer, miller and (briefly) politician
- Maynard Boyd Dawkins sheep breeder, Gawler choirmaster and politician
- The Dawn (feminist newsletter) a Bessie Rischbieth project, same name as Louisa Lawson's magazine
- Dr. Eulalie Dawson nee Burnard, early women Doctor, married Norwood footballer doctor died two years after graduating
- A. N. Day railway official lost pension due to scandal. Suicide. son was a Dam Buster
- Dr. Sir C. T. C. de Crespigny army medico, Dean of Adelaide University Faculty of Medicine, founder IMVS
- George Debney cabinetmaker of Rundle Street, sold business to Patrick Gay, house to Simpson Newland. Wife and daughter drowned in Glenelg boat capsize
- Renfrey Curgenven DeGaris "Ren DeGaris" Millicent businessman politician married a Willson of Penneshaw
- Hugh Denison son of Hugh Dixson, tobacco and media mogul founded Macquarie Network, built Stalheim (now Carclew), sponsored Mawson Antarctic expedition
- John Dempster (organist) City Organist, also St Matthews, Marryatville, St John's, Adelaide, Flinders Street Baptist, Philharmonic Choir
- Leslie Harold Densley farmer politician of Keith. Stub
- Deutsche Schule, Adelaide founded by Schleinitz, later run by Hansen, restarted by Niuehuus & Leschen (gymnastics teacher)
- Edward Dewhirst (1815–1904) minister of religion and educationist
- Ben Dickinson, full name Samuel Benson Dickinson, geologist and Director of Mines in South Australia
- Robert Dixson tobacco merchant and politician
- A. W. Dobbie brassfounder, hypnotist, retailer of Gawler Place and Hay Street, Perth
- Josiah Eustace Dodd, pipe organ builder
- Double Happiness Uranium, science fiction movie located Flinders University
- Alexander Dowie (1827–1909) footwear manufacturer. Uncle of faith healer John Alexander Dowie and grandfather of John Dowie (artist).
- George Downer (1839–1916) lawyer, brother of Sir John, summer residence "Monalta"
- Sidney Frederick Downer (1909–1969), sports writer, journalist object of Patricia Hackett's ink throwing, Japanese PoW
- Henry Edward Downer lawyer politician, another brother
- David Dridan landscape painter, art teacher, gallery director
- F. S. C. Driffield businessman, RAHS and Chamber of Commerce secretary, succeeded in both by John Creswell then J. A. Riley
- Ralph Drummond first minister of a Presbyterian Church in South Australia
- John Finlay Duff captain of Africaine, business partner of John Hallett (South Australian politician)
- Charles Dumas (newspaperman) founder of Mount Barker Courier and politician
- Sir Lloyd Dumas, a son, managing editor of The Advertiser and Playford supporter
- Sir John Duncan (Australian politician) wealthy pastoralist politician, nephew of Sir Walter Watson Hughes
- Walter Hughes Duncan brother of John
- Sir Walter Gordon Duncan son of John; longtime Liberal MLC (stub)
- Dunn family of South Australia another big list, AfD deleted
- Hedley Allen Dunn son of John Dunn Jr., architect
- John Dunn (miller) politician of Mount Barker
- John Dunn Jr. politician
- John Millard Dunn organist and choirmaster 1891–1936, St. Peter's Cathedral
- William Arthur Dunn Methodist minister, son of Charles Dunn
- Townsend Duryea Adelaide photographer and boatbuilder. Incorporates Sanford Duryea, John Hood (painter), William M. Nixon, Stephen E. Nixon, Charles H. Manning, Saul Solomon (photographer)
- Dutton family of South Australia another big list
- Charles Christian Dutton Port Lincoln pastoralist disappeared probably murdered by aborigines
- Emily Dutton musician and socialite, wife of Henry Hampden Dutton
- Frederick Hansborough Dutton pastoralist left "Anlaby" to nephew Henry Dutton
- Hampden Dutton (William Hampden Dutton) NSW pastoralist, bought into SA's first Special Survey, at Mt Barker, then went broke
- Henry Dutton (pastoralist) "Squire of Anlaby" and owner of yacht "Adele"
- Henry Hampden Dutton pastoralist of Anlaby, with Aunger and Allchurch first to drive Adelaide to Darwin
- Early Experiences of Colonial Life in South Australia serialized in Chronicle by J. W. Bull
- R. H. Edmunds surveyor explorer under Finniss at Escape Cliffs and with McKinlay at Darwin and Daly River
- Bert Edwards (politician) flamboyant homosexual hotelier politician. Substantial additions.
- Elder Overseas Scholarship in London for musicians
- Elder Scholarships in Music in Adelaide
- Brian Elliott academic Australian literature
- John Ellis (pastoralist) owner of Benara, Coola, stations
- John England (engineer) (1822–1877) chief Waterworks engineer
- J. Matthew Ennis succeeded Joshua Ives as director of Elder Conservatorium
- Rev. Cadwallader William Evan ( –1876), first minister of Stow Church
- Griffith Mostyn Evan (1863–1924), his son, South Australian lawyer and sports administrator
- Harry Congreve Evans journalist, founder of Quiz (Adelaide newspaper)
- William Everard (South Australian politician) (1819–1899) landholder and farmer. Son of Dr. Charles George Everard MLC. (1794–1876) generous to Unitarian church
- Andrew Fairweather mine manager Broken Hill South
- Edward Allan Farquhar (1871–1935) shipping agent and Harbors Board chairman
- George Henry Farr first head master of St Peter's College after move from Trinity Church to Hackney
- Julia Farr philanthropist wife of Canon Farr
- F. H. Faulding & Co manufacturing chemists founded 1845. Incorporates Francis Hardey Faulding (1816–1868) and Luther Scammell (1826–1910)
- Charles Fenner geologist, Director of Education
- William Ferguson (pioneer) passenger on the Buffalo owned city blocks, much of Magill, Highgate, Myrtle Bank
- Seth Ferry horse trainer, "master" of Adelaide Hunt Club, a founder of Oakbank Racing Club, Adelaide Racing Club, Gawler Racecourse
- Samuel Fiddian first principal of Prince Alfred College
- Thomas Field (Anglican priest, born 1829) "Canon Field" Anglican priest
- Field Naturalists Society of South Australia section of Royal Society of South Australia
- William Finke associated with Osmond Gilles as purchaser of Glenelg, South Australia, Chambers brothers (pastoralists) as sponsors of John McDouall Stuart
- William Finlayson (churchman) (1813–1897). Father of J. Harvey Finlayson (1843–1915), editor and part-owner of the South Australian Register. Incorporates Robert Kettle Finlayson (1839–1917)
- Dorothy Kell Finnis née Simpson: physiotherapist treated polio affected children; president Crippled Children's Auxiliary (Spastic group)
- Rev. Horace Percy Finnis, Anglican priest and organist in Victoria and South Australia
- John Finnis (captain) shipowner and (with Sturt and others) overlander
- Finniss Point a hill, once a small town
- Minna Fischer singer born in Tanunda, taught in London
- Benjamin Fisher auctioneer accountant, founding partner in Bennett & Fisher
- Charles Brown Fisher son of Sir James and noted pastoralist.
- Daniel Fisher (Australian politician) convict, seed merchant and MHA; link with Charles Birks, Harris Scarfe
- Joseph Fisher (Australian politician) Involved with The Register, Gas Company etc. Served time in Parliament like many prosperous businessmen at the time.
- Fitch & Son drapers founded by J. T. Fitch
- Flinders Street Baptist Church founded by Silas Mead
- Paul Foelsche N.T. photographer and policeman
- Forlorn Hope (boat) 2000 miles 1865, Adam Bay to CChampion Bay
- Samuel Forsyth (Methodist) founder of Kuitpo Colony, superintendent Central Methodist Mission, purchased 5KA
- D. & J. Fowler Ltd. wholesale grocers: David Fowler, James Fowler, later brother George Fowler (politician), nephew G. Fowler Stewart
- Arthur Aloysius Fox Catholic MHA, lived "Marybank" between Hectorville and Athelstone.
- Ivor Francis (painter) surrealist, art critic
- Hugh Fraser (Australian politician), Scotsman, stonemason MP who annoyed SA newspaper proprietors
- Frearson Brothers publishers of The Pictorial Australian
- Friends Meeting House, Adelaide Quaker chapel. Marked for deletion in 2013
- H. A. Frost German born saddler partner in Holden & Frost
- John Fulford (Australian priest) early Anglican stub
- Henry Ernest Fuller architect involved in S.A. Society of Arts, son of H. R. Fuller
- Henry Robert Fuller businessman, Mayor of Adelaide, parliamentarian - substantial additions
- The Gadfly (Adelaide) literary magazine founded by C. J. Dennis. stub
- David Gall (printer), associate of Henry Hussey (pastor), protectionist and animal rights advocate
- Ernest Gall, commercial photographer, son of David
- Gavin F. Gardner, son of the minister, a founder of Adelaide Stock Exchange (Royal Exchange building)
- John Gardner (minister) Presbyterian minister founded Chalmers Church, moved to Launceston to hostile congregation, then Queenscliff, Victoria
- William Gardner (surgeon) son of the minister
- Daniel Garlick architect in Gawler, Adelaide, Broken Hill
- Garrick Club (Adelaide) several unconnected theatre groups
- Herbert William Gartrell professor of mining and metallurgy, a tunneller in 1916
- Patrick Gay cabinetmaker purchased George Debney's business, destroyed by fire and became Gay's Arcade
- Richard Alexander Geddes South Australian politician from Port Pirie; father was notable too
- Harry Dickson Gell accountant and Glenelg mayor, president many organizations, father of Heather Gell
- Esmond George theatre actor and director, watercolor artist and art critic. His wife, Elizabeth George, was a journalist
- Madeline Rees George (1851–1931), South Australian educator. Includes sister Marian Rees George
- Sir Herbert Gepp Broken Hill chemist, Electrolytic Zinc Tasmania, Australian Paper Mills, Melbourne, wartime public servant
- German Club, Adelaide built Albert Hall, Adelaide and lost most members
- Benjamin Germein misrepresented lighthousekeeper hero of the Admella. Mentions brothers
- Claude Dixon Gibb engineer from Alberton with a considerable career in Great Britain
- William Gilbert (pastoralist) son of Joseph Gilbert (winemaker) of Pewsey Vale and Owen Springs
- William Gilbert (politician) M.P. and member of every possible Institution. No relation to the above
- Alfred Giles (explorer) explorer and drover for W. J. Browne
- Anstey Giles (William Anstey Giles) surgeon and medical administrator
- William Giles (colonial manager) added Family section, son George Harvey Giles was another crooked lawyer
- Tom Gill (public servant) Under-treasurer, died after being struck by tram
- Peter Paul Gillen storekeeper and MHA, Commissioner for Crown Lands died in office
- Benjamin H. Gillman railways, founded Modern Pickwick Club with James Wardlaw Gordon and Norman Malcolm married daughters of retailer James Marshall
- Henry Girdlestone rowing headmaster of St Peter's College
- Hampton Gleeson pastoralist miner politician in SA and brewer in NSW, nephew of Edward Burton Gleeson
- Allan C. Glover painter printmaker etcher
- Harry Glover (artist) lithographer; lessee of Stag Inn when riot broke out, Irishman shot
- Henry H. Glover (his son) artist, lithographer, career in Eastern States, New Zealand
- Thomas Gluyas railway worker, politician
- Samuel Dening Glyde grain merchant and MHA
- F. E. Goldsmith surgeon and Protector of Aborigines in Northern Territory, forced to resign by his leader B. T. Finniss
- William Dening Glyde grain merchant and MLC, his brother
- Walter Kelvington Gold painter and secretary of South Australian Society of Arts
- Walter J. Gollin Jewish merchant expanded to Melbourne, Sydney
- Thomas Good (merchant) another drapery wholesaler, cofounder Good, Toms & Co
- John C. Goodchild and Doreen Goodchild Adelaide painters
- Mrs. A. K. Goode politician and feminist. Opponent of flamboyant hotelier Bert Edwards (politician). Substantial additions.
- Charles Henry Goode founder of softgoods merchants Goode Durrant and Co.
- Charles Rufus Goode pastoralist and MHA
- Clarence Goode farmer and politician, son of Thomas Goode (pastoralist)
- H. A. and W. Goode Henry Abel Goode, William Goode and Benjamin Powell Goode merchants of Port Pirie, brothers of Thomas Goode (pastoralist) of Canowie station fame, later of Hyde Park
- Samuel Goode (mayor) farmed alternately and successfully in England and SA
- Thomas Goode (merchant) Goolwa identity. Family spread to Kingston-on-Murray, Narrung, Mypolonga, Meningie
- Thomas Goode (pastoralist) of Canowie station
- C. Harrie Gooden (1867–1905) Easel Club painter died after car crash
- Sir William George Toop Goodman known as W. G. T. Goodman tramways engineer
- Goolwa (clipper ship) captains Adam Johnston and John T. Thorkeldson or Torkelson, sunk in Bay of Biscay
- Charles Gosse surgeon who died in horse accident
- William Gosse (surgeon) father of William Christie Gosse
- Herbert Dillon Gouge, first Government Actuary; father built Granite Island causeway, kept first elephant
- Benjamin Gould (Australian politician) MHA and mayor of Hindmarsh
- John Benjamin Graham largest investor in Burra copper miner SAMA. Built "Graham's Castle" then returned to England with all his money
- Margaret Graham (Matron) Adelaide Hospital nurse at the centre of nepotism/favoritism controversy, later respected WWI Matron
- Henry Allerdale Grainger founding editor Australian Star, maverick MHA for Wallaroo; father of M. Allerdale Grainger nephew of John Grainger (politician)
- John Grainger (politician) property owner and appointed MLC
- Frank Lymer Gratton teacher and choral conductor, Thousand Voice Choir
- W. H. Gray property owner
- Lawrence Grayson mechanical engineer and MHA. Several sons were engineers
- Green's Exchange founded by George Green, father of Dutton Green. Includes several other early stock exchanges
- George Dutton Green real estate agent, MHA and founder of Pirie Street stock exchange with Rymill brothers
- Joseph John Green leather merchant
- F. Millward Grey art teacher, lithographer, associate of John C. Goodchild and Fred C. Britton
- Eliezer Griffiths Welsh Congregationalist minister in Queensland then Clayton Church, died in America
- Thomas Grigg (musician) violinist, teacher and conductor; daughter Etta Grigg was viola player, May Grigg was portraitist
- Edward Grundy politician and editor of Bunyip (newspaper)
- Joshua Gurr coal and iron merchant, father of John Henry Gurr AEI alumnus
- John Barton Hack businessman who lost a fortune despite hard work and good intentions. Incorporates Theodore Hack (additions)
- Wilton Hack Nephew of John Barton Hack. Dilettante involved in a South Australian Utopia, Theosophy, schools in Ceylon.
- Patricia Hackett lawyer, actress and author, daughter of Sir Winthrop Hackett of WA
- Jacob Hagen Quaker businessman MLC married sister of John Baker (Australian politician)
- William Hague (Australian politician) MLA for Barossa. So was his dad.
- Nathaniel Haines land agent, briefly newspaper owner; series of reminiscences, esp. Port Lincoln
- John Haimes brewer in South Australia, and as "Captain Haimes" landowner, horse breeder in Colac, Victoria
- William Haines (South Australian politician) "King of Tea Tree Gully" ran Highercombe Hotel
- Robert Haining (minister) first Church of Scotland minister in SA, succeeded by James Henderson (minister). Includes handy guide to the three Presbyterian sects in early Adelaide
- Francis Haire founded Albert House Academy on Angas Street
- George Hall (Australian politician) "Captain Hall" seaman and businessman
- H. Dalton Hall painted ships, made models of HMS Victory, HMS Buffalo, bronze on Centenary monument
- John Hall (violinist) associated with Alfred Anderson (pianist) and Ilma de Murska; brother George Hall succeeded him at Theatre Royal
- J. Hallett and Son brickmakers. Incorporates Job Hallett and Thomas Hallett
- John Hallett (South Australian politician) businessman with John Finlay Duff, pastoralist and landowner
- Clive M. Hambidge long-serving Surveyor-General
- George Hamilton (South Australian police) Commissioner following Peter Warburton
- George Ernest Hamilton engineer father of Edward Angus Hamilton (no relation to these other Hamiltons)
- Hamilton's Ewell Vineyards an Adelaide winery
- Hammer & Co. William H. Hammer photographers in Rundle Street
- H. R. Hancock "Captain Hancock" mine superintendent at Moonta and Wallaroo
- Marjorie Hann artist and art teacher. drew Charlie Cheesecake, portrait of May Griggs?
- Alf Hannaford inventor and manufacturer of farm machinery
- George William Hannaford orchardist exported apples to England, pioneer apiarist
- Susannah Hannaford pioneer, huge family tree has six famous Hannafords
- Walter Hannaford Riverton farmer and politician
- Albert James Hannan lawyer, Crown Solicitor
- William Hanson (engineer) brother of lawyer/politician Richard Davies Hanson
- William Harcus minister at Clayton Church, Register journalist and Advertiser editor. Widow and daughter Eliza Kelsey ran Dryburgh House School
- James Hardy (sailor) America's Cup captain
- Mabel Hardy teacher at Advanced School, founded Stawell School with Patience Hawker
- Thomas Hardy (winemaker) founder of Tintara
- Charles Hope Harris surveyor
- George P. Harris partner of John Charles Lanyon and founder of Harris, Scarfe
- Mary Packer Harris artist and art teacher
- Arthur Harrold MHA and businessman with Harrold Brothers, owners of City of Adelaide (1838), jailed after firm failed
- Rowland Edward Harrold dermatologist and floriculturist
- Harrold Brothers merchants and shipowners, collapsed insolvent
- Leslie Rupert Hart sheep breeder and politician of Two Wells
- Arthur Harvey (Australian politician) real estate developer (of Grange), MHA
- John Harvey (Australian politician) farmer, horseman, founder of Salisbury
- William Haslam politician and small businessman of Jamestown and Adelaide; partner in Globe Timber Mills
- Harry Hatwell house painter, would-be politician and mayor of Thebarton
- Clem Hawke Congregationalist minister and father of prime minister Bob Hawke
- Henry Binney Hawke Kapunda foundry sold to William Thomas, Rees Rees, William Thomas
- Edward William Hawker lawyer politician son of George Charles Hawker
- Patience Hawker co-founder with Mabel Hardy of Stawell School
- George Wright Hawkes Anglican churchman, philanthropist and magistrate, married half-sister of George Farr
- John Henry Mason Hawkes AEI alumnus, ink and soap manufacturer, manager of D. & J. Fowler's "Lion" factory
- James Symonds Hawkes his brother, AEI alumnus, accountant and Port Adelaide footballer, engineer and quantity surveyor in Sydney
- James Hay (singer) born in Clare, G&S tenor in UK and Aust
- Florence Hayward poet wife of William T. Hayward
- William Thornborough Hayward medical doctor served in WWI
- Hermann Heinicke German-born violinist, conductor and music teacher
- S. R. Heseltine riverboat captain, wine merchant, longtime secretary of Adelaide Racing Club
- Ivor Hele war artist and prolific portraitist (was stub)
- George Cockburn Henderson professor of Literature and History at Adelaide Uni. Two short marriages both divorced. Suicide in Sydney by cutting throat
- James Henderson (minister) Presbyterian in VIC and SA twice removed from his church after allegations of misconduct
- Andrew Harriot Henning AEI student, lawyer and politician in Western Australia.
- Rudolph Wilhelm Emil Henning yet another businessman politician father of Andrew
- Hesperus (clipper ship) another sailing ship
- Moritz Heuzenroeder pianist choirmaster composer from Germany
- Charles Hill (painter) engraver, art teacher at St. Peter's, AEI, School of Design etc.
- Henry Hill (politician) freight contractor and MHA; father of John Hill
- James Hill (merchant) founder of James Hill & Sons, motor cycle and cornflour dealers
- John Hill (businessman) (Henry John Hill) operator of horse coach company
- Murray Hill (politician) (Charles Murray Hill) real estate agent and MLC
- Hindmarsh Brewery founded by Edward Crawford, taken over by Henry Haussen and George Catchlove, then Frederick Estcourt Bucknall and Frank South Botting.
- Hindmarsh Square Congregational Church where F. W. Cox preached for 40 years
- Bert Hoare Labor Senator and MLC more details
- Howard Frederick Hobbs inventor of an automatic gearbox, left for UK where he developed several more; none sold
- Matthew Henry Hodge first Congregationalist minister in Port Adelaide
- John Hodgkiss draper and parliamentarian
- Thomas Hogarth farmer, pastoralist and MLC; brother in law of John Warren (Australian politician)
- Henry James Holden son of James, mayor of Kensington and Norwood, businessman of Holden & Frost
- James Alexander Holden saddlery merchant, founder of the company that later made motor cars
- William Holden (journalist) "The Puzzler" longtime reporter with The Register, Swedenborgian friend of Pitman
- Maurice William Holtze botanist founder of Darwin Botanic Gardens then director of Adelaide Botanic Gardens
- Frank Sandland Hone medical doctor, father of several sporting academics and medicos
- Thomas Hope (clergyman) Congregationalist minister of Clayton Church and Hindmarsh
- George Feltham Hopkins Port Adelaide MHA pistol suicide
- Leonard Anver Hopkins Port Augusta MHA
- Rupert Walter Hornabrook military doctor in WWI, Australia's first fulltime anaesthetist
- Horndale, South Australia location and winery
- John Horner (organist) taught at Elder Conservatorium, organist at Glenelg, St Augustine's, Unley and Stow Memorial Church
- Horwood Bagshaw Ltd. incorporates Joel Horwood, Thomas Horwood, John William Horwood, Joseph Henry Horwood
- Walter Henry Howard headmaster of Pulteney Street School and Anglican priest on Eyre Peninsula
- Edith Ulrica Hübbe "Rica Edith Hübbe", teacher and medico
- Ulrich Hübbe German immigrant associated with Real Property Act (Torrens title), father-in-law of Edith Hübbe
- Henry Kent Hughes pastoralist and politician associated with properties named "Avenel"
- Edwin Sawle Hughes auctioneer, city councillor, naturalist, Parkside Literary Society president
- Herbert Bristow Hughes pastoralist of Booyoolee, canned meat pioneer
- George Hunt (merchant) draper of Rundle Street, built "Tranmere House"
- William Hutchison (pastoralist) sued George Ash (Australian politician) for libel after claims of dummyism in Narracoorte Herald
- Jasol Chemical Products incorporates Charles George Johnson
- John Bristow Hughes grazier politician associated with St Peter's College
- William Alexander Hughes town clerk embezzler and forger; associated with Christ Church, North Adelaide
- Charles Henry Hussey, Port Elliot businessman, MHA, uncle of George
- George Hussey MHA killed by tram
- Henry Hussey (pastor) printer, Bentham Street preacher, secretary to George Fife Angas
- Thomas Francis Hyland Victorian gaol governor married Georgina Penfold, grew Penfolds Wines into big business, hence family name Penfold Hyland
- The Irish Harp and Farmers' Herald Catholic newspaper edited by Charles James Fox BA (ex AEI teacher) reported MacKillop sacking
- Levi Isaacs Jewish tobacconist moved to Melbourne
- Keith Sydney Isles Tasmanian economist and Adelaide University academic. Caught up in Sydney Sparkes Orr case
- Joshua Ives first Professor of Music at the University and founder of Elder Conservatorium
- Joseph Jackman founder of Jackman's Rooms, Jackman's Dining Room function centre, sons architects, Norwood footballer
- Caroline Jacob taught at Advanced School for Girls, headmistress proprietor of Tormore school, Thornber's School mother had Winnold House school, Mount Gambier
- S. J. Jacobs SA Brewery chief
- Roland Ellis Jacobs SA Brewery chief, descendant of V. L. Solomon
- David James (Australian politician) was stub. One of Syndicate of Seven, MLA, mayor of Kapunda, as was his brother Evan James (builder)
- Louis Robert James painter 15 years in Europe then moved to Sydney
- Arthur William Jarrett founded Millswood Auto and Radio, 5MA, SA's first (and failed) licensed radio broadcast station
- William Jeffries (minister) Methodist minister in UK, Qld, before Kadina, Kent Town, Highgate
- James Jefferis Congregational minister at Brougham Place, Pitt Street Congregational
- David Jelley and James Jelley, Labor MLCs
- Angas Johnson descendant of George Fife Angas, public health officer, immunization skeptic
- Thomas Johnson (Australian politician) bootmaker, protectionist MHA, father of Frank Johnson (mayor) and Fred Johnson, mayor of Charters Towers
- George Bain Johnston Murray riverboat captain, brought to SA by Captain Francis Cadell (explorer) mentions Capt. Thomas Johnston both of Goolwa. Thomas Johnston's daughters married sons of Thomas Goode (merchant)
- Helen Patricia Jones, SA historian educationist, daughter of baker Cashmore
- Henry Jones (photographer) watchmaker then photographer in Victoria and South Australia, photographed pioneers. Father of T. H. Jones
- James W. Jones Moonta surveyor and public servant. Incorporates Thomas Jones (civil engineer) and George Lindsay Jones
- T. H. Jones Thomas Henry Jones, organist and music teacher, suicide in WA mental institution
- Norman Lane Jude MLC who married a Bowman girl
- Julia Farr Centre previously Home for Incurables on Fisher Street, Fullarton
- Charles Rischbieth Jury poet son of G & R Wills accountant and partner
- Justices of the Peace, South Australia 1862 deleted
- Kapunda Herald newspaper founded by bankrupt C. H. Barton
- Robert Kay (librarian) director and secretary of SA Library, Art Gallery and Museum. Brother of William Kay (politician)
- William Kay (politician) businessman brother of Robert Kay. Both Unitarian stalwarts
- Frances Keith Sheridan headmistress benefactor of Adelaide Uni and RAH through recluse daughter; daughter married A. M. Simpson
- Hugh Craine Kelly MHA of Riverton, killed in buggy accident succeeded by his brother Robert Kelly (politician) (originally on same page but Robert made separate article by TDW)
- John Robert Kelly farmer of Yankalilla, MHA, then farmer of Oakey, Queensland
- Henry Kemp politician aka Harry Kemp nurseryman of Unley. Son "Jack" Kemp wrote garden column as "Grevillea"
- Kent Town Brewery founded by Edward Logue and Henry Crawford, taken over by E. T. Smith inc. map of Kent Town
- John Kerney "Captain Thunderbolt" bathetic holdup artist. Includes David Kerney and Thomas Field
- Donald A. Kerr Anglican minister, school inspector, headmaster at Pulteney Street School
- Donald Kerr (lawyer) son, WWI stretcher bearer, studied Constitution, Torrens title
- Donald Kerr (poet) grandson, killed in plane crash, PNG in WWII
- Edward S. Kiek followed Llewellyn David Bevan as principal of Parkin College
- Charles Kimber MHA, orchardist and flour miller of Clare
- S. G. Kingston lawyer brother of Charles Kingston, alcoholic depressive genius suicide
- Ernest Leopold William Klauer MLC. politician trades unionist
- William Knapman brewer and publican. Vic Richardson and Chappell brothers were descendants
- Knightsbridge School school for girls in Leabrook founded by Harriet Anne Cook and her sister Edith Agnes Hübbe
- William Robert Knox pianist City Organist at Town Hall founded Sunday concerts
- Koala Farm, Adelaide founded by Keith Minchin, of dynasty that ran Adelaide Zoo for three generations
- Lisette Kohlhagen painter, secretary of SA School of Arts
- Joseph Onesimus Ladd (1818–1882), founder of Ladd's cordials in Adelaide, South Australia
- Ladd's cordials ginger beer, soft drink manufacturer
- George Hingston Lake politician of Jamestown
- James Andrew Trehane Lake his brother; lawyer and politician
- Henry Lamshed Maitland farmer and MHA - two Lamshed families of Yorke Peninsula
- Max Lamshed OBE journalist, author and Red Cross official
- Albert Henry Landseer politician and River Murray businessman
- Park Laurie James Park Dawson Laurie co-founder of The Border Watch, MHA
- William Ramage Lawson secretary to George Fife Angas Register journalist, later with Financial Times
- Tina Lawton folk singer, died in plane crash
- John William Magarey Lawton, immunologist in Hong Kong, brother of Tina
- John Lazar Jewish actor, emigrated on Lady McNaughton manager of Theatre Royal, Sydney, Queen's Theatre, Adelaide, died in New Zealand. Rewrote article carpetbombed with citation required but was blatant copyvio.
- Samuel Lazar theatre manager of Adelaide and Sydney, Australia
- The Leader (Angaston) Barossa Valley newspaper founded by William Kirkby Robinson
- Robert Leake (Australian politician) pastoralist of Glencoe
- John Legoe captain of ships Celestial, The Murray (clipper ship), Yatala (clipper ship) and Hesperus (ship) father of Glen Legoe of Wilcox Mofflin
- Alfred Austin Lendon MD assoc. with Children's Hospital, Nursing. Married a Rymill
- James C. Leonard Congregationalist minister in WA and headmaster in Gawler and Angaston
- J. J. H. Leonard his son, illustrator for The Lantern, other newspapers
- John Lewis (Australian politician) pastoralist, MLC and father of Essington Lewis
- William Lewis (Australian politician) of Kapunda followed Carrington Smedley in business and politics
- G. C. Ligertwood lawyer
- Lion Brewing and Malting Company incorporates Oakbank pioneers Andrew Galbraith Johnston, James Johnston (brewer) and W. H. Beaglehole, also F. A. Chapman
- G. T. Light organist architect instrument maker euphonicon William Light was father's cousin
- Arthur Fydell Lindsay surveyor and politician. No relation to other Lindsays
- Charles Lindsay (Australian politician) brother of John. Stub
- John Lindsay (South Australian politician) partner Acraman, Main & Lindsay; insurance agent lived alone Pier Hotel, Glenelg; brother of David, Charles
- F. H. Linklater barrister bigamist playwright died in Melbourne
- Esther Lipman daughter of V. L. Solomon, Adelaide's first woman councillor
- Jonas Alfred Lipman Adelaide-born stage actor and director, film actor and distributor in Melbourne. List of family members
- Thomas Lipson "Captain Lipson" Harbour master of Port Adelaide
- Daniel Livingston MHA died a year after being elected. Not much to tell.
- Loch Bredan (barque) British ship lost at sea with crewman son of Frederick Estcourt Bucknall
- Carl Heinrich Loessel Lutheran pastor founded Flinders Street church, taught and preached at Lobethal
- Harry Longson caricaturist and racehorse owner
- William Lowrie Roseworthy academic and researcher (additions)
- George E. Loyau editor Gawler Bunyip and in Queensland; wrote Notable Men of South Australia
- James Lyall (minister) founded Flinders Street Presbyterian church (demolished 1956)
- Andrew MacCormac churchman turned Easel Club portrait painter
- Ab Macdonald racehorse trainer from Orroroo
- Thomas McCallum Meningie pastoralist and politician
- Edward McEllister mounted policeman turned politician
- George McEwin horticulturist, founder of Glen Ewin jams, gardener for George Stevenson (editor)
- Lyell McEwin (Alexander Lyell McEwin) farmer from Blyth and MLC longtime Chief Secretary and Minister of Health
- James Macgeorge architect, ran first telegraph line in SA
- Robert Forsyth Macgeorge his father, founder of Urrbrae farm
- David McLaren (Colonial Manager) early (and capable) administrator
- Donald McLean (pastoralist) first settler at Hilton; likely first to grow wheat in SA; early settler in Strathalbyn
- Matthew Madge baker Rechabite and MHA (briefly)
- Sylvanus James Magarey homoeopathic medico and politician; three sons took over Birks Chemists
- William James Magarey flour miller and politician, son of child molester
- William Mair (South Australian politician) Brighton mayor, businessman and politician
- Ross Ibbotson Dalton Mallam judge of the Northern Territory judge before Wells, ties to Kyffin Thomas
- Charles Mallen worked for W. H. Clark (brewer), Edgar Chapman, W. K. Simms, William Haimes founded Waverley Brewery, Mitcham.
- Geoff Manning SA placenames researcher, debunked work of Rodney Cockburn and Stewart Cockburn
- Charles Manthorpe longtime pastor of Glenelg Congregational Church friend of F. W. Cox
- Robert Marchand (director), stub, directed Come In Spinner. IMDb says he was FU drama graduate
- Maria (brigantine) 1840 shipwreck; all survivors massacred
- Frank Marlow football administrator
- Marshall & Sons music retailers; founder Samuel Marshall organ builder married sister of C. H. Myles
- James Marshall & Co. department store taken over by Myers 1928
- Allen Martin revived Port Adelaide Grammar School, headmaster when taken over by Education Dept. Later Inspector of Schools
- Annie Montgomerie Martin Miss Martin's School
- H. M. Martin and Son Stonyfell, Metala wines. Close ties with Francis Clark and Sons, Joseph Crompton
- James Martin (South Australian politician) Gawler engineer "Phoenix Foundry"
- John Martin (headmaster) Tungkillo, Pirie Street School, Fellenberg School, invented silent explosive
- Ken Martin (Australian sculptor) bronze of Barrie Robran, Makybe Diva, V. L. Solomon etc
- Peter Martin (economist) Oaklands Park boy, Flinders uni graduate, commentator on ABC, The Age, Canberra Times, SMH
- William Thomas Martin primary school inspector
- Adolph Emile Marval teacher and art dealer born in France. First wife also teacher, second wife abortionist
- St Mary's on the Sturt Anglican church on South Road
- William Mattinson MHA for Port Adelaide, early chairman of Port Adelaide Football Club
- William Maturin public servant includes Augustus Maturin jailed for stealing a gold ingot
- James Maughan Methodist minister. Son married sister of W. G. Torr.
- George Mayo doctor and militia officer
- Sir Herbert Mayo (judge) lawyer and Supreme Court judge, father of Eric Mayo (died on HMAS Sydney (D48))
- Edmond Mazure French winemaker with W. P. Auld
- Silas Mead Baptist minister founded Flinders Street Baptist Church, Christian Endeavour in Australia
- Mellor Bros. Joseph Mellor and sons inc. Benjamin Fox Mellor, James Fox Mellor, built farm machinery in Franklin Street and Kapunda, failed in 1893 bank crash. Their Melbourne factory became H. V. McKay's Sunshine Harvester.
- Alex Melrose lawyer sponsored Melrose Prize for portraiture
- George Melrose (1806–1894) Scottish pioneer pastoralist of Mount Pleasant; many influential descendants
- Daniel Wilkie Melvin auctioneer, Baptist, chess player
- William Menz founder of W. Menz & Co. family biscuit and confectionery company
- Frederick Metters founder of stove and oven company born in Victoria
- Alfred Metters Baptist minister and chaplain during WWI born in Victoria
- Michell Group of Companies incorporates George Henry Michell wool processors
- Adelaide Miethke teacher and education activist, links with Flying Doctor and School of the Air (was stub)
- Henry Mildred South Australian Company agent and politician. Son Henry Hay Mildred.
- Vili Milisits pastry cook Vilis Cakes
- Edmund King Miller, Anglican priest, first principal of the Pulteney Street School (later Pulteney Grammar)
- Eric Millhouse lawyer and RSL chief
- William George James Mills sheep breeder and politician of Millbrae, near Blakiston
- Milne & Co wine merchants, founded by William Milne (wine merchant), made fortune for George Milne (wine merchant)
- R. E. Minchin Richard Ernest Minchin, first zoo director
- A. C. Minchin Alfred Corker Minchin, son, director for 40 years
- Eustace Reveley Mitford farmer on Marion Road, and satirist as "Pasquin"
- R. C. Mitton headmaster
- Mildred Mocatta Jewish doctor friend of Patricia Hackett inherited Mocatta House, collected Australian art
- Modern Pickwick Club mostly of St Peters College boys
- D. C. F. Moodie South African historian and ratbag, founder of The Portonian employed Spencer Skipper "Hugh Kalyptus"
- Charles Moore and Co. Stores in Adelaide, Kadina, Perth, Prahran
- William Samuel Moore Pulteney headmaster and Anglican priest
- Morgan Whyalla pipeline
- Morialta Protestant Children's Home near Norton Summit
- George Morphett politician brother of Sir John. Includes other Morphett pioneers
- John Morphett (architect) designed Festival Theatre
- Morphett Street Brewery short-lived operation: Reid brothers, then Fred Fuller
- Charles Morris (Australian politician) timber merchant and MLC for one year
- William Morrow (South Australian politician) MLC from Port Pirie. substantial additions
- John Andrew Tennant Mortlock wealthy pastoralist left fortune to State Library and Waite Research Institute
- Henry Jackson Moseley Glenelg builder and hotelier Pier Hotel, Glenelg
- James Grey Moseley a son: pastoralist and politician. Was stub.
- Cecil Augustus Motteram biscuit baker
- Frank Beaumont Moulden 3rd generation lawyer, mayor of Adelaide, Francophile
- John Moule (politician) wheat merchant of Saddleworth and MHA
- Reuben Cranstoun Mowbray editor politician stub
- Henry Vivian Moyle (1841–1925) politician
- William Henry Mudie Anglican priest and educator. Incorporates Henry Mayelston Mudie
- Carl Muecke (editor) Lutheran minister and newspaperman in Tanunda, plant pathologist
- Hugo Carl Emil Muecke businessman politician; society links
- Carl Mumme choirmaster, tenor singer with liedertafel, Catholic cathedral
- Alfred Miller Mundy aristocratic MLC associated with Edward John Eyre and Joseph Hawdon
- Martin Luther Murphy Baptist minister president Council of Churches
- Murray Pioneer previously Renmark Pioneer, a newspaper
- Alexander Borthwick Murray sheep breeder, brother of elder John Murray (sheep breeder)
- Alick J. Murray sheep breeder, son of elder John Murray (sheep breeder)
- Alexander Murray (manufacturer) biscuit and jam maker, politician, of Coromandel Valley
- D. & W. Murray Limited drapery wholesaler mentions David Murray (South Australian politician) William Mackintosh Murray, Aldam Murr Pettinger. Warehouse on Gawler Place became Saverys
- John Murray (sheep breeder) father and son merino breeders
- The Murray (clipper ship), masters include captains John Legoe and William Begg
- Charles Hegan Myles Morphett Vale politician
- Narracoorte Herald weekly newspaper; mentions A. M. Simpson, George Ash (Australian politician), John Baxter Mather
- Benjamin Nash Rundle street tailor and MHA
- John Bentham Neales auctioneer, miner and parliamentarian
- George Needham (teacher) AEI and at Houghton. daughter married AEI student Partridge
- Ted Nettelbeck added jazz history
- A. C. Newbury Congregationalist minister of Victoria, then Clayton church
- Richard Francis Newland banker, MLC, Port Adelaide magistrate, emigration agent
- Ridgway William Newland converted redirect to stub, with large family list
- Charles Thomas Newman Australian Primitive Methodist minister in SA and NSW
- Nimble Ninepence shop on King William Street owned by Solomon cousins, destroyed by fire
- Richard Nitschke baritone in London 30 years and in later years a racehorse owner
- Henry Noltenius German immigrant wine and spirits merchant, associated with W. K. Simms and W. H. Clark (brewer)
- North Adelaide Grammar School aka Whinham College includes George Gough Newman, the last, allegedly paedophile, headmaster
- Linly Norman pianist conductor died and buried in Launceston
- The Northern Argus newspaper published in Clare by Tilbrook family since 1869
- Arthur Noyes (organist) in Weleyan church Burra then St. Ignatius' Catholic Church, Norwood
- Oakbank Racing Club aka Onkaparinga Racing Club
- Dudley Octoman politician from Lipson, Yorke Peninsula. Few details as yet.
- Thomas Joseph Shuldham O'Halloran, Stipendiary Magistrate and possibly pioneer footballer
- Thomas Shuldham O'Halloran KC, his son; lawyer and football administrator, grandson of the Police Commissioner
- Oliphant brothers Nigel B. Oliphant and R. Harry Oliphant, ultraviolet tubes
- James O'Loghlin (Australian politician) wheat buyer, newspaperman (Terowie Enterprise, Southern Cross) - additions
- Orient (clipper ship) gave name to the Orient Line, captain A. Lawrence
- Robert M. Osborne proprietor of Petersburg Times, Unley Citizen, Garden and Field, etc. Mayor of Launceston
- Samuel W. Osborne editor and proprietor, Port Pirie Advertiser, wrote column for Port Pirie Recorder
- Arthur H. Otto organist at St. John's, later singing and teaching career in London as Arthur Kingston-Stewart
- George Oughton bandleader and first City Organist, first Unitarian church organist
- William Owen (Australian politician) businessman, politician, Teetotaller, purchased an island in Fiji
- C. E. Owen Smyth public servant influential in design of North Terrace buildings. Found existing article and attempted fix by cut and paste, fixed by Necrothesp.
- H. D. Packard surveyor on relief party to Escape Cliffs, later with Goyder at Port Darwin. Father of first white child born in NT. Died there of throat abscess.
- Hamilton Charles Palmer lawyer and AEI master brother Rev. Charles Edwin Palmer was Congregationalist minister Glenelg, left to become Anglican priest
- William Paltridge (ca.1834 – 8 May 1890) Gambier farmer and politician; married cousin Elizabeth, daughter of John Dunn (miller)
- Ferdinand Lucas Parker clerk of SA parliament
- William Parkin businessman, parliamentarian and benefactor to Congregationalist church (inc. Parkin College)
- Josiah Partridge early lawyer father of several AEI boys, Partridge Street Glenelg named for him? retired to Clarendon
- Allyson Parsons deaf landscape painter stub
- James R. Parsons another educator
- Robert C. Patterson (engineer) on Overland Telegraph, also Tasmanian railways, politics
- William Paxton (Australian businessman) a chemist, one of "Snobs", then invested in Burra properties and returned to England quite wealthy
- Peacock and Son tanner. Incorporates William Peacock (businessman), Joseph Peacock (politician), Caleb Peacock. Edited
- Edward John Peake Clarendon winemaker, MP, married a Chambers girl
- George Pearce (South Australian politician) mentions father Henry, brothers William of Point Sturt and James, nephew Sir George Pearce
- James Pearce (South Australian politician) Kapunda businessman, MLA and MLC, no relation to George
- William Pearson (surveyor) member of Finniss's dysfunctional expedition to Escape Cliffs, met Alfred Dickens while working on NSW border
- Robert Peel (doctor) first Colonial Surgeon at Mount Gambier, member of the Goyder NT expedition, associated with horse racing clubs
- Lady Mary Pelham (barque)
- Alan G. Pendleton first Railways Commissioner
- Arthur James Perkins influential headmaster at Roseworthy College
- Isaiah Perry Methodist minister, father of Frank Tennyson Perry and Charlie Perry (Australian rules footballer)
- Samuel Perry (ironmaster) founder of Perry Engineering
- Sir Frank Perry (ironmaster) developed Perry Engineering, politician
- Perry Engineering
- Coleman Phillipson professor of law involved Treaty of Versailles, feud with H. S. Taylor, criticised N. Lindsay nudes
- William Herbert Phillipps businessman and philanthropist. Incorporates Malcolm Tarlton Phillipps founder of Philmac.
- John Pickering (Australian politician) of Hindmarsh member of both legislatures. Son John Pickering Jun. was prominent cricketer
- The Pictorial Australian one of several Frearson publications
- James Pile pastoralist of Cuthero, Polia and (briefly) Netley stations on the Darling. Includes William Pile and John Pile, racehorse owners
- The Pioneer (South Australia), newspaper published in Yorketown, 1903–1960
- Arthur William Piper lawyer SA Supreme Court judge
- Jacob Pitman architect, builder and educator and Swedenborgian brother of Isaac Pitman. Includes Thomas Pitman, a serious builder
- Edward J. Pitts pastoralist established The Levels
- Rev Thomas Playford I evangelist of Bentham Street, farmer, father and great-grandfather of two SA Premiers
- Violet Plummer early medical doctor, associate of Phoebe Chapple, Helen Mayo
- James Pollitt (priest) "Canon Pollitt", Anglican priest of Blakiston, Burra, St. Lukes (Whitmore Square)
- F. H. Pollock actor manager of Theatre Royal, Adelaide followed Wybert Reeve, succeeded by Herbert Myers
- Frederic Slaney Poole "Canon Poole" of St. John's Anglican church, Halifax Street; father of Thomas, classical scholar
- Thomas Slaney Poole "Justice Poole" lawyer
- Popeye (boat) Torrens Lake passenger boats
- Pope Products incorporated Barton Pope and Harley Pope
- Port Adelaide News weekly (sometimes bi-weekly) newspaper 1878–1933 with several long breaks
- Robert Evelyn Porter known as "Tom", stockbroker mayor of Adelaide, links to Cudmores, Patrick Gay
- G. V. Portus academic born in Maitland NSW
- Frank Potts (winemaker) founder of Bleasdale Winery
- Herbert Edward Powell Government photolithographer and secretary of S. A. Society of Arts
- Lawrence Power from cricketer stub to international operatic tenor
- P. D. Prankerd real estate agent and Moonta Mines executive returned to England a wealthy man
- Price-Peake administration Labor-Liberal Democratic Union coalition government 1905–1909
- John Primrose (brewer) founder of Union Brewery in Rundle Street
- George Henry Prosser businessman mayor politician
- Oswald Pryor cartoonist of Moonta mines
- Adelaide Punch satirical weekly
- Carl Puttmann violinist music teacher and composer, conductor of Adelaide Liedertafel:
- W. R. Pybus organist, pianist and music teacher
- Queen's College, North Adelaide privately run boys' school inc. map of NA
- Queen's Theatre, Adelaide old theatre recently restored
- William Quin plasterer and Port Adelaide MHA
- Quiz (Adelaide newspaper) satirical magazine
- Radio Call magazine produced by The News; ABC Weekly was its only competitor
- Ernest Pringle Ramsay deputy Director of Posts and Telegraphs
- William Randell "Captain Randell" (1824–1911) miller, politician and riverboat pioneer. Major edit
- James Rankine politician and farmer of Hindmarsh Island
- John Rankine (Australian politician) his uncle, also politician and farmer of Hindmarsh Island
- Rapid (brig) William Light's ship
- John Garrard Raws Baptist minister, succeeded Silas Meade at Flinders Street. Two sons died at Pozieres
- William Ray (medicine) Rhodes Scholar, Dean of Medicine, police surgeon, brother of Walter Vernon Ray SM
- The Recorder (Port Pirie) a newspaper
- T. S. Reed chairman Destitute Board, secretary Royal Geographical Society of Australasia (SA)
- The Reedbeds (Adelaide) obsolete geographical area name
- Wybert Reeve actor manager of Theatre Royal, Adelaide
- J. S. Reid owned "Rostrevor house", founded newspapers inc. Silver Age, Silverton Tramway Company and other railways
- Malcolm Reid timber and furniture merchant Adelaide and Broken Hill
- Ross T. Reid father John Reid founded Gawler; pastoralist of Mount Murchison, Tolarno, Tarcoon built "Rostrevor Hall"
- Immanuel Gotthold Reimann or Gotthold Reimann, Hahndorf pianist founder of Adelaide College of Music, became Elder Conservatorium
- George Alfred Reynolds artist and art teacher in Adelaide, Ballarat and Mount Gambier
- T. J. Richards coachbuilder whose company became Chrysler Australia Limited
- John Richards (Australian politician) MHA and writer on mining. Jailed for passing dud cheque; died broke
- A. E. V. Richardson agricultural scientist, first director of Waite Institute, director of CSIRO
- John Henry Richman lawyer. Daughter Olive married Sir James Fergusson, 6th Baronet
- George Riddoch pastoralist and politician in the State's South East.
- John Riddoch pastoralist and politician in the State's South East. George's older brother
- Rigby Ltd William Charles Rigby bookseller, Vernon M. Branson publisher
- J. A. Riley secretary of RA&HS etc. successor to John Creswell
- Charles Rischbieth German-born businessman involved with G & R Wills, Commercial Bank of South Australia
- George Ritchie (politician) Murray riverboatman and State politician (additions)
- Rohan Rivett Japanese POW and Advertiser editor
- Alfred Jabez Roberts OBE, stockbroker, tennis executive, Norwood footballer, mayor of Glenelg
- Douglas Roberts painter and art critic
- Samuel Edward Roberts printer and publisher for E. S. Mitford on King William Street
- Robertson brothers (pastoralists) William, Robert and John Holland Robertson of Calperum, Turretfield, Bookmark stations
- James Robert Robertson Freemason and Prince Alfred prep school headmaster associated with William Reynolds Bayly
- John Robertson (pastoralist) properties near Naracoorte
- Joseph Robertson (pastor) Congregationalist minister at Stow, Clayton and interstate
- James Robin businessman. Incorporates Charles Robin, Theophilus Robin
- William Alfred Robinson (Australian politician) trade unionist and MLC
- William Walsh Robinson farmer and politician from Crystal Brook (no relation)
- Talk:T. B. Robson Quaker orchardist, fig pioneer
- William Rogers (Australian politician) builder and pastoralist of Finniss, Sandergrove, Portee, Swan Reach
- William Rounsevell mail and stagecoaches taken over by Cobb & Co. Introduced weeds ryegrass and lambstongue as horse fodder.
- John Rounsevell pastoralist politician, son of William
- William Benjamin Rounsevell pastoralist politician son of William
- Colin Davies Rowe lawyer and politician
- John Rowe (Australian politician) mining assayer of Kapunda
- Royal Agricultural and Horticultural Society of South Australia
- RAHS timeline list of Royal shows etc (languished in userspace 2012–2023)
- Samuel Bruce Rudall Gawler lawyer and politician, father of Reginald John Rudall
- (Edwin) Keith Russack Kadina identity and politician; member of both SA houses
- Bevan Rutt architect but more into Sporting Car Club, Apex, Lions, Guide Dogs
- Rymill brothers - financiers Henry Rymill and Frank Rymill, and their influential family
- Arthur Campbell Rymill Lord Mayor and Establishment figure
- William Thompson Sabben first Town Clerk and shortest duration Mayor; jailed for forgery (title deed used to secure loan) and sued by bigamous priest for slander
- Clement Sabine managed pastoral properties for Price Maurice
- St John's Church, Adelaide second Anglican church in the city
- St Paul's Church, Adelaide and Pulteney Street School, predecessor of Pulteney Grammar
- St Vincent (clipper ship) Devill & Moore ship captained by Alex Louttit, Walter H. Bisset, John Howard Barrett, Albert John Ismay, Malcolm Nicholson
- Maurice Salom Jewish auctioneer and MLC A son was embezzler, a daughter married NZ judge
- C. J. Sanders (surveyor) associate of Goyder, cofounder of Institute of Surveyors
- William Sanders (organist) organist for Clayton Church, music critic as "Musicus"
- Alexander Wallace Sandford dairy products businessman and parliamentarian from Scotland
- Sir James Wallace Sandford dairy products businessman and parliamentarian son of A. W. Sandford
- William Sandover hotelier, politician and father of Alfred Sandover
- Philip Santo businessman and politician. Son AEI star student but died young
- A. T. Saunders amateur historian, especially marine, Port Adelaide, Queenstown and River Murray
- John Eden Savill horse owner/trainer made fortune on The Assyrian Melbourne Cup win, promptly returned to England where daughters married aristocracy (who was it made a fortune from Burra mine and daughter married into the peerage?)
- George Scarfe partner in Harris Scarfe; made a fortune and died at his home "Wattle Park"
- Hermann Carl von Schleinitz teacher at AEI and SPC includes Johann Christian Hansen who took over his Freeman Street school and Emil Jung who followed him at SPC
- John W. Schoales Anglican priest at St. John's, All Saints, Hindmarsh, returned to England
- School Boards of Advice local government body replaced by school councils or committees
- Hermann T. Schrader pianist, cellist, violinist moved to Victoria
- Adolf John Schulz educator, first Principal of the Adelaide Teachers' College
- Abraham Scott member of Legislative Council; brother of Henry Scott; married a Gooch, son married a Wigley
- Edward Bate Scott accompanied Eyre 1840; protector of Aborigines; partner of Randell; failed pastoralist; Superintendent of Yatala prison
- Henry Scott (Mayor of Adelaide) also member of Legislative Council; brother of Abraham Scott; married a Gooch (maybe two!)
- William Scott (South Australian politician) "Captain Scott" seaman, port agent, MLC. No relation to other MLCs
- Alexandra Seager founder Cheer-Up Society
- Sedna (beverage) alcoholic tonic made in Belfast contained coca, kola, beef extract. Later made by Seppelts kola the only additive
- Brian Seidel painter, teacher, art critic
- Benno Seppelt winemaker
- John Henry Sexton OBE Baptist minister married daughter of the younger Tom Playford
- John Alfred Seymour Canadian Methodist became Presbyterian minister of Scots Church
- James Shakespeare first and longtime organist at Stow Memorial Church
- Abe Shannon OBE pastoralist and philanthropist, admired Keith Vincent Anderson who died searching for his ex-friend Kingsford Smith
- Bert Shard Labor politician
- J. & D. Shearer of Mannum became David Shearer of Mannum, John Shearer of Kilkenny
- Geoffrey Richard Shedley architect for Housing Trust, Elizabeth, sculptor Rainmakers statue at Christies Beach
- William Henry Shephard farmer for whom Shepherds Hill Road was (mis)named
- William Sheppard (trainer) worked for William Blackler, Seth Ferry etc. son of same name age 12 lost leg in riding accident
- Arthur Short (politician) Maitland pioneer, auctioneer and MHA. Father declared lunatic. Stood for several WA seats unsuccessfully.
- Arthur Ernest William Short Rotarian who died within three weeks of being elected Lord Mayor of Adelaide. Son of Arthur Short
- Allan F. Sierp art teacher, author of technical drawing books
- William Knox Simms founder of West End Brewery, immensely wealthy businessman and durable politician
- Alfred Edward Simpson architect, not related to Simpson family, father of
- Henry Simpson (shipping) Black Diamond line ship owner and coal merchant
- James Young Simpson (minister) Methodist minister nephew of anaesthetic pioneer namesake
- Dorothy Kell Simpson married H. P. Finnis physiotherapist treated polio affected children; president Crippled Children's Auxiliary (Spastic group)
- William Henry Simpson "Billy" Simpson, jockey and trainer
- John Mitchell Sinclair shipping agent, mayor of Port Adelaide and MHA
- Spencer Skipper journalist "Hugh Kalyptus"
- Bronte Smeaton briefly medical superintendent Adelaide Hospital, prominent Mount Barker citizen. Requested deletion before someone else does.
- Thomas Drury Smeaton banker and amateur scientist
- Thomas Hyland Smeaton architect and Labor politician
- Carrington Smedley of Kapunda preceded William Lewis (Australian politician) in business and politics
- Thomas Smellie (minister) Presbyterian minister taught Latin at AEI, ran Gawler Academy
- William Smillie MLC and advocate-general
- Edwin Mitchell Smith surveyor-general
- Jacob Smith (politician) ship's captain, Mayor of Port Adelaide and MHA
- Richard Smith (businessman) silent partner with Harris, Scarfe
- Stow Smith in full Quinton Stow Smith, AEI student, businessman and Baptist philanthropist. Daughter married Harold Bayard Piper
- S. Talbot Smith lawyer, arts and sports journalist son of E. T. Smith. Wife died in his car crash
- Otto Fischer Sobell Wagnerian tenor, brother of Minna Fischer
- Emanuel Solomon parliamentarian brother of Vaiben Solomon,uncle of Vaiben Louis Solomon. Removed content of misspelled stub Emmanuel Solomon and made it a redirect.
- Lance Solomon painter grandson of Vaiben Solomon
- Samuel Moss Solomon Solomon family progenitor of dozens of famous and confusingly named Solomons, several crooked lawyers
- Vaib Solomon writer
- Vaiben Solomon emancipist brother of Emanuel Solomon
- J. D. Somerville railway engineer and historian of Port Lincoln; married a Tapley
- South Australian (clipper ship) same owners as City of Adelaide (1864), also captained by David Bruce (captain) and sons
- South Australian Free Press W. M. Akhurst's short-lived newspaper
- Members of the South Australian Legislative Council, 1851–1855,
1855–1857, 1857–1861, 1861–1865, 1865–1869, 1869–1873, 1873–1877, 1877–1881, 1881–1885, 1885–1888, 1888–1891, 1891–1894, 1894–1897, 1897–1900, 1900–1902, 1902–1905, 1905–1908, 1908–1910, 1910–1912, 1912–1915, 1915–1918, 1918–1921, 1921–1924, 1924–1927, 1927–1930, 1930–1933, 1933–1938, 1938–1941, 1941–1944, 1944–1947, 1947–1950, 1950–1953, 1953–1956, 1956–1959, 1959–1962, 1962–1965, 1965–1968, 1968–1970, 1970–1973, 1973–1975 Vastly improved by User:The Drover's Wife
- South Australian Literary Societies' Union debating society founded Union Parliament
- South Australian Mining Association "The Snobs" of Burra Grey Wheal "Monster mine"
- The South Australian Record London newspaper aimed at would-be emigrants, run by Henry Capper
- South Australian Register (edits)
- South Australian Scholarship awarded by the University of Adelaide from 1879 to 1886
- South Australian Society of Arts
- South Australian Tattersalls Club founded by William Blackler, folded then restarted to became an institution
- South Australian Vigneron and Gardeners' Manual written by George McEwin
- South Eastern Times Millicent newspaper stub
- Southern Argus newspaper published in Port Elliot, then Strathalbyn
- The Southern Cross (South Australia) Catholic weekly newspaper
- Southport, Northern Territory additions
- Sir William John Sowden journalist, editor or SA Register, member of everything except parliament
- Henry Yorke Sparks businessman and cricketer, linked to Cudmores
- John Brodie Spence banker, parliamentarian, brother of Catherine Helen Spence
- Frederick Spicer medical doctor and briefly politician. Brother of businessman Edward H. Spicer
- The Sport (Adelaide newspaper) published by F. J. Jennings, Kirkby Robinson. Newspaper stub
- Edward Squire (public servant) deputy Postmaster General and Director of Telegraphs under Charles Todd
- Stawell School for girls founded by Mabel Hardy and Patience Hawker
- John Stephens (editor) founder The Observer, early owner/editor of South Australian Register, brother of Samuel, Edward
- Samuel Stephens (Colonial Manager) a much-maligned administrator
- George Stevenson (Australian politician) son of George Stevenson (editor); lawyer, MHA. Journalist in SA and NSW
- G(eorge) Fowler Stewart director D. & J. Fowler
- John McKellar Stewart Professor of Philosophy and Vice-Chancellor, University of Adelaide
- Edward Stirling (politician) one of first MLCs, towns Stirling and Stirling North named for him
- Harriet Adelaide Stirling philanthropist Mothers and Babies etc.
- Samuel Stocks father and son, who drank himself to death after making fortune from Burra copper mine
- Stone Hut town in mid-North
- George Stonehouse Baptist minister in North Adelaide, head of Theology College. included some Baptist history
- William Storrie hardware merchant and politician wrote as "Saunders McTavish"
- Clarence Ross Story Renmark fruitgrower and politician
- Giles E. Strangways surveyor, overlander with Sturt and Finnis, brother of T. B. Strangways
- Alfred Stump photographer, eponym of Stump's Corner
- Alfred William Styles accountant, trade unionist and politician
- James Sunter, Canon Sunter, rector of St Paul's Anglican Church, Pulteney Street
- David Sutherland (politician) Scot who lost a fortune and Dunrobin Estate
- Harry Swift (medicine) Dean of Faculty of Medicine, researcher at Children's Hospital
- Thomas Tapley mini-biography part of Tapleys Hill Road
- George Taplin founder of Point McLeay Mission
- Robert Alfred Tarlton draper, businessman and politician
- Henry Tassie accountant and politician
- Benjamin Taylor (Australian politician) MHA, member of Taylor bros tannners and fellmongers of Thebarton
- Ashley H. Teece minister of Clayton Congregational Church
- J. G. O. Tepper entomologist at South Australian Museum
- Arthur Bishop Terrell member of Adelaide Stock Exchange but lived in Melbourne. Daughter married minor aristocrat, nephew of Lily Langtry
- Theatre Royal, Adelaide on Hindley Street, owners Edgar Chapman, Arthur Chapman (agent), leased by George Coppin, James Allison (theatre) etc.
- Evan Kyffin Thomas last of the newspaper dynasty
- James Edward Thomas Church of Christ preacher left for Melbourne
- Robert George Thomas architect son of The Register proprietor
- Robert Kyffin Thomas proprietor of South Australian Register
- T. Rees Thomas Congregationalist minister at Clayton, but mostly Queensland
- Henry W. Thompson (politician) sailor and MLC, died in office
- James Turnbull Thomson one of several brewers with similar name. This one founded Balhannah
- Catherine Thornber another headmistress: Mrs Thornber's School/Unley Park School
- J. Tidmarsh & Co soap and candle bought out by Burford's; John Tidmarsh pistol suicide
- The Times and Northern Advertiser Peterborough newspaper, previously Petersburg Times; mentions Orroroo Enterprise, Booleroo Magnet, Quorn Mercury
- George Tinline banker and politician
- Tolley family winemakers merchants and distillers of TST brandy
- Samuel Tomkinson another banker and politician
- Tormore House School girls' college in North Adelaide run by McMinn sisters then Caroline Jacob and her sister
- William George Torr Bible Christian (Methodist) teacher "Old Oxford" first head of Way College and founder Brighton Training College
- Torrens (clipper ship)
- The Transcontinental Port Augusta newspaper stub
- William Henry Trimmer winemaker of Fairford (later of Laffer's Triangle) laudanum suicide
- E. F. Troy painter and stained glass artist in Gawler Place
- Truth (Adelaide newspaper) various newspapers published by J. C. Wharton, C. W. Chandler, F. J. Jennings (of The Sport (Adelaide newspaper)), R. L. Solomon and others
- Marie Tuck Francophile painter
- Ruth Tuck watercolorist married to Mervyn Ashmore Smith
- William Wedd Tuxford MLC and agricultural machinery dealer with brother John Lefevre Tuxford; brother Walsingham Weston Tuxford owned Sportsman's Hotel.
- Michael J. Tyler herpetologist "The Frog Man"
- Carl Albert Unbehaun telephone pioneer, electrical engineer
- Unley Girls' Technical High School students included Tina Lawton and some aboriginal girls
- James Crabb Verco politician, father of Sir Joseph Cooke Verco
- Village Settlements (South Australia) 1890s depression scheme to put unemployed workers onto farms, mostly on River Murray
- The Voice (Adelaide newspaper) short-lived political newspaper founded by J. Medway Day in 1892
- Voluntary Service Detachment Red Cross women's civil defence organization founded just in time for WWII
- Alfred von Doussa businessman sportsman politician
- Louis von Doussa lawyer; son and grandson also lawyers
- H. L. Vosz painter and glazier, firm became Dulux and Clarkson Glass; name applied to many stained glass windows
- William Joseph Wadham and Alfred Sinclair (Wadham) brother painters
- William Edward Wainwright manager, Broken Hill South mines, son of Prince Alfred College and St Peters College master
- Walker Brothers (soap) Thomas Moody Walker, Frederick Charles Walker soap and candle factory on Wakefield Street
- Frederick Samuel Wallis typesetter compositor unionist politician
- Ebenezer Ward politician and orator
- Hansford Ward sea captain owner of O.G., Day Dawn, Punch, Waitemata; prehistory of Adelaide Steamship Company
- Arthur Wellington Ware (1861 – 29 January 1927) was Mayor of Adelaide from 1898 to 1901. additions
- David Wark medico and politician. Most of family died in one week
- John Warren (Australian politician) MLC from Mount Crawford
- Percival Watson Congregationalist minister married Port Pirie girl linked to Hugh Cairns (surgeon)
- Phebe Watson Teachers Union activist, acolyte of Adelaide Miethke
- Alfred Watts (South Australian politician) businessman partner of Philip Levi and Percy Wells (businessman)
- C. C. Watts (pastor) Charles Cameron Watts, minister at Clayton Congregationalist Church
- Edward Willis Way surgeon brother of Sir Samuel Way. Adelaide Hospital nepotism controversy, feud with Premier Charles Kingston
- James Way Bible Christian (Methodist) missionary, father of Edward, Samuel, Florence (who married Dr. Allan Campbell (Australian politician))
- William Alfred Wearing Supreme Court judge, lost on the SS Gothenburg
- George A. J. Webb portrait painter
- Alfred Wells (architect) son of Percy Wells; designed two Children's Hospital buildings, Norwood and Thebarton Town Halls
- Percy Wells (businessman) associated with Alfred Watts (South Australian politician) in building Cape Jaffa lighthouse etc.
- Thomas Wells (Australian judge) NT judge succeeded Ross Mallam
- William Andrew Noye Wells High Court Judge
- J. M. Wendt silversmith
- Emil Wentzel road engineer and surveyor, timber merchant and politician born and died in Germany
- J. C. Wharton editor of Adelaide Truth, (Anglican) Church Review, University Shakespeare Society Journal, Parramatta Times
- George Whinnen painter, was rifle champion in Broken Hill
- Elizabeth Whitby headmistress Carrington House, mother of pastoralist Francis John Whitby, lawyers Alfred Knight Whitby, Joseph James Whitby
- White's Rooms early public venue, founded by George White, tailor, winemaker of Rosefield which became Highgate, South Australia
- James White (South Australian politician) wealthy land agent and owner, MHA
- John White (South Australian painter) (1854–1943), painter and pharmacist
- Stanley Whitford Moonta politician, brother-in-law to R. S. Richards and Oswald Pryor
- Whitington family descendants of William Smallpeice Whitington - many interesting people
- A. O. Whitington secretary of re-formed SAJC
- Ernest Whitington journalist with Register then Advertiser, as "Rufus" conducted "Out among the People"
- Fred T. Whitington Anglican minister, archdeacon of Hobart
- H. T. Whittell medical doctor, city coroner. son was crooked lawyer, daughter married singer
- Edward Neale Wigg bookseller and businessman
- Edgar Smith Wigg bookseller founder of E. S. Wigg and Son
- Alfred Edgar Wigg prominent medical practitioner
- Thomas Francis Wigley lawyer, horse owner and racing official
- William Rodolph Wigley lawyer, mayor of Glenelg and MHA
- George Wilcox & Co hide and wool business, became Wilcox Mofflin Ltd.
- William Birkinshaw Wilkinson land agent prominent in Geographical Society
- Charles Willcox businessman and philanthropist
- Charles Williams (brewer) inc. Waverley brewery, Mitcham
- Francis Williams (headmaster) at St Peter's College
- Hartley Williams (clergyman) high Anglican priest, hounded out of Tasmania, founded high school in Mount Gambier
- Thomas Williams (South Australian politician) MLC briefly, bankrupt, jailed for fraud, father of Hartley
- John Williams (South Australian politician) politician pastoralist
- G. & R. Wills & Co. softgoods wholesaler
- James Phillips Wilson trade unionist and politician
- Robert Richard Wilson farmer and politician of Yeelana
- T. P. Wilson Anglican priest, son of Adelaide mayor, first headmaster and early incumbent of St John's Church, both briefly
- W. R. Wilson William Robert Wilson, miner at Broken Hill and horse breeder at St Albans, Geelong
- Lionel Williams actor, 5KA and Channel Nine personality
- Charles Richard Wilton "Autolycus" journalist with Mount Barker Courier, The Advertiser
- Percy W. Wise High Church Anglican priest, no friend of Bishop A. Nutter Thomas
- Brian Wibberley Primitive Methodist minister at Kent Town, Moonta, North Adelaide
- John Woffinden (born 1952), South Australian sculptor and bronze art founder
- G. Wood, Son & Co. grocery wholesaler: Gilbert Wood, Peter Wood and James Gartrell
- Rex Wood South Australian artist who lived for many years in Portugal; drowned; his Portugese "manservant" charged with his murder
- William John Woodcock Anglican priest, first curate of Christ Church, North Adelaide, migrated with James Pollitt (clergyman)
- John Woodforde medical doctor, physician to Colonel Light. Son John was dismissed by McDouall Stuart from his (successful) 1862 expedition
- E. J. Woods architect of St. Peter's Cathedral, Parliament House. Associated with William McMinn and Walter Bagot (architect)
- John Crawford Woods originally Irish Presbyterian, then Unitarian minister in England and SA. Married a Simpson
- George Speller Wright, first and longserving Inspector, State Bank of South Australia
- Frederick Wurm organist, member Liedertafel, silk grower at Unley, olive grower at Stansbury, two children changed names to Weston
- Harold Wylde teacher Elder Conservatorium, organist choirmaster Francis Xavier's cathedral, City Organist
- Yatala (clipper ship) between London and Adelaide under John Legoe until grounded near Cape Gris Nez, France
- Louis W. Yemm organist associated with Cheer-Up Society and Violet Memory Day
- Andrew Douglas Young stockbroker and Caledonian Chief
- Charles Burney Young landowner politician married aristocratic girl with links to Lord Byron
- Charles Herbert Young Anglican priest sacked in Kalgoorlie, son of C B Young
- George Young (Australian politician) businessman and politician stub. Brother of Gavin D. Young
- Harry Dove Young son of C B Young, took over Kanmantoo sheep run and winery, inherited by daughter Nora
- Thomas Young (Australian politician) early MHA. Includes son Thomas Young Jr., mayor of Port Augusta
Elsewhere in Australasia
[edit]- Charles Abrahams (sculptor), Sydney's first sculptor
- The Advocate (Melbourne) Catholic weekly founded by S. V. Winter
- John Alden (theatre) Shakespeare actor and director
- George Allen (sculptor) teacher in Melbourne
- Alfred Anderson (pianist) prodigy who died young, shortly after marrying Ilma de Murska; controversial Will
- Keith Vincent Anderson pilot of Kookaburra (aircraft), died in search for Charles Kingsford Smith
- Wallace Anderson sculptor at AWM with Web Gilbert and Leslie Bowles
- Walter Boyd Andrews early settler in Perth, son perhaps shot by son of Sir Richard Spencer (Royal Navy officer)
- William Andrews (Australian actor) played comic parts in Sydney
- Len Annois Melbourne watercolorist
- ANZAC Girls descriptions of the six episodes
- F. C. Appleton, actor with family of actors
- John E. C. Appleton aka Jack Appleton actor and radio producer
- Argonauts Club (additions)
- Frank Arnold (director) mostly for ABC TV series
- Villiers Arnold played in G.& S. operas
- Arrow Theatre associated with Frank Thring
- Edgar Arthur Ashcroft invented electrolytic zinc extraction process in Broken Hill. Made a fortune despite its failure
- Will Ashton born John William Ashton artist and gallery director
- Athenaeum Theatre, Sydney also Oxford theatre, Colonial Theatre, short-lived cinema on Brickfield Hill, Sydney,
- J. B. Atholwood actor convicted of bigamy
- Val Atkinson Mudgee war hero produced stage shows for amateur companies
- Australia: National Journal wartime arts magazine from Ure Smith
- Australian Club (Melbourne) another gentlemen's club stub
- Australian Institute of Arts and Literature grandiose title for a club in Melbourne
- Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy (expanded) founded in Broken Hill, still going
- The Australian Worker incorporates The Hummer (newspaper) and The Worker (Wagga)
- R. C. Bagot first secretary of Victorian Racing Club
- Harold Napier Baker Anglican priest at St Thomas' North Sydney
- John Balfour (editor) official histories of both world wars (with Charles Bean and J. L. Treloar)
- Erica Baneth Hungarian sculptor became Baneth-Goodey, married, left for US
- Thomas P. Banks organist at St Mary's Cathedral, Sydney. see also John A. Delany, William Cordner, John Hill (conductor)
- Hiram Barnes founder of Cobb and Co, Queensland, father of two MLA's:
- George Powell Barnes Queensland M.P.
- Walter Barnes (politician) Queensland M.P.
- William Charles Baxter merry-go-round operator, X-ray importer, pioneer movie projectionist
- Arthur Bazley Charles Bean's batman and editor
- Frederic Beard, choirmaster and organist, brother of Paul Beard (violinist)
- Beaumont House, Sydney, hosted various women's societies
- Emanuel de Beaupuis, Italian pianist married Bertha Lord, mother of actress Marjorie Osborne
- Frank Bell (Salvation Army officer) trained recruits in Sydney and Melbourne
- Victor Bell Methodist minister turned Presbyterian moderator
- T. S. Bellair actor and publican in Flemington, Ballarat and Wagga
- The Bendigo Independent defunct newspaper
- Zoe Benjamin Adelaide born kindergarten pioneer using Froebel method, member of Solomon family
- Selwyn Betts Sydney lawyer and judge
- Beyond Brass Basics by Anna Freeman book on natural trumpet no link yet
- Big Ideas (film) plot cast and sarcastic comment
- The Big Picture (documentary) overview of Chauvel's feature films, outtakes as restored by Umbrella Entertainment
- Bijou Theatre, Melbourne
- Rosa Bird, born Josephine Jacombs, married A. H. Popplewell, soprano friend of Robert Tooth
- Bissietta, Italian painter took over Dattilo-Rubbo's school, associated with Six Directions
- Blackfriars Primary School in Sydney now a University of Technology campus
- Blaze (2022 film) add plot
- Gus Bluett comedian stub died young son of Fred Bluett, brother of Kitty Bluett
- William Boissevain WA portraitist includes Rhoda Elsie Boissevain
- Bolinda Publishing Audiobooks (talking books) producer
- Orlando Brain NSW railway engineer and William Blanch Brain his father, mining engineer
- Mona Brand prolific playwright married to Len Fox
- Frank Brennan (judge) Queensland MLA and Supreme Court judge
- Ernest Le Gay Brereton mining engineer, brother of the poet
- T. L. Bright journalist with Melbourne Argus, assoc. Dr Neild
- Broken Hill South Limited mining company stub
- Robert Brough (actor) actor-manager assoc. Dion Boucicault Jr., G. S. Titheradge, Herbert Flemming
- Barbara Brunton daughter of elocutionist James Brunton Gibb and Ethel Lang (actress) stage and radio actress
- Dorothy Brunton singer and actress, probably no relation to Barbara (her father was Scottish scene artist)
- John Brunton (scenic artist), father of Dorothy; son Robert Brunton sold Hollywood film set to Selznick
- Beryl Bryant Sydney amateur theatre producer
- Monique Brynnel Swedish soprano, married Jon Weaving
- Elizabeth Burchill Australian nurse, philanthropist and author.
- John Edward Burke Queensland ship owner
- Tommy Burns (Australian boxer) (my 6th article 20 August 2009)
- Charles William Bush painter war artist who married age 60
- Frank Byrne (Australian politician) member for Hay 1898–1904
- Donald Cameron (Tasmanian politician)
- Ross McKay Campbell humorist with Women's Weekly
- Eleanor Carey (actress) furphy about her elopement; left for America
- George P. Carey comic actor and manager
- S. Pearce Carey English Baptist minister in Melbourne
- Archibald Drummond Carmichael industrial chemist partner of Leslie Bradford
- Norman Carter painter and arts lecturer
- Michael Cashmore (businessman) Jewish draper in Melbourne
- John Cazabon actor
- Central Hall, Little Collins Street theatre not to be confused with Central Hall, Melbourne
- Lucy Chambers Sydney-born contralto and singing teacher in Melbourne
- Conrad Charlton baritone and ABC executive, father of Michael and Tony
- Charterisville part of the Heidelberg school arts scene
- Alexandre Chayet French consul-general subject of David Low caricature
- Mary Ellen Christian contralto, singing teacher founded school in Sydney
- Clarke and Meynell theatre producers, taken over by J.C.W.
- Alfred Rutter Clarke share broker
- William James Cleary Tooth's Brewery manager, NSW Railways Commissioner, ABC chairman
- Frank Clewlow actor and ABC radio producer
- Jessie Clifton WWI army nurse from Perth
- Marshall Waller Gervase Clifton architect painter
- Romola Clifton Perth artist won Helena Rubinstein Portrait Prize father was architect painter
- Waller Clifton added difficult list of family members
- Alfred Clint (Australian painter) cartoonist and theatrical scene painter
- Thomas Edward Clouston Irish-born Presbyterian minister and academic in NSW
- Frank Clune writer, esp. of popular histories
- George Cockerill (journalist) (my 9th article 27 August 2009)
- College of the Bible, Glen Iris, in merged into Stirling Theological College
- Fred Collier bass-baritone with the British National Opera
- Collings Productions documentary filmmakers Dahl and Geoffrey Collings
- Albert Collins (painter) associated with Argonauts Club
- Commonwealth Literary Fund Australian Government body founded in 1908 to assist needy Australian writers
- Commonwealth of Australia Gazette expanded Draft; rejected, rescued by User:The Drover's Wife and User:Kerry Raymond
- Walter Conder Tasmanian military type broadcasting executive shafted by W. J. Cleary
- Contemporary Art Society (Australia) Max Harris, Dave Dallwitz, Ivor Francis et al. stub
- Coolgardie Miner WA newspaper, defuncted twice
- Marcus Cooney Tas playwright with Michael Boddy
- Sam Copley English barber ferry owner land speculator millionaire in Perth
- Rosa Cooper actress married to Lionel Harding
- William Cooper (Quaker) Cadbury executive, founded Claremont factory
- Cootamundra Jazz Band 1954–1960 became Riverina Jazz Band
- William J. Cordner organist choirmaster at St Mary's Sydney
- Tom Corrigan (jockey) steeplechaser died after racecourse accident
- C. F. Courtney manager Sulphide Corporation's Central Mine, Broken Hill, and (briefly) E. A. Ashcroft's process
- Edward Charles Cracknell Superintendent of Electric Telegraphs, NSW
- Olive Kathleen Crane artist greeting cards etc married Kenneth Macqueen
- Cricket Captains' Walk at Cootamundra
- The Critic (Hobart) newspaper mentions James Paton (editor)
- Patti Crocker actress on Blue Hills and Number 96, DOB perhaps 1930, no DOD yet found
- Frank Crossley (actor) comedian member of Anzac Coves
- Frank R. Crozier WWI soldier who became official war artist
- Edward S. Cunningham editor of the Melbourne Argus
- Lyndon Dadswell Sydney sculptor and war artist
- Daily Telegraph (Melbourne) defunct newspaper
- The Daily Telegraph (Launceston) defunct newspaper
- Dr. Robert Dalley-Scarlett organist, choirmaster and composer in Sydney but mostly Brisbane
- George Dancey cartoonist with Melbourne Punch
- John Danks & Son Melbourne iron and brass founders, hardware merchants; includes David Danks, genetics researcher
- Leo Darnton G.& S. tenor, played Franz Schubert in "Lilac Time"
- Thomas Davey (mayor) of Melbourne, a David Low caricature
- Frankie Davidson singer Have you ever been to see Kings Cross
- John S. Davie sculptor of Burns statue in Canberra
- D. J. Davies (archdeacon) Anglican president, NSW Council of Churches
- David Stewart Dawson (1849–1932) Sydney manufacturing jeweller and property tycoon
- Auguste Joseph François de Bavay brewer and inventor of a froth flotation process for zinc separation
- J. P. Deane pioneering musician in Sydney and Hobart
- Terry Dear Amateur Hour compere
- John Dease Quiz Kids compere
- Una Deerbon Sydney studio potter and humorous postcard designer. Created stub rather than delete redlink. Several loose ends
- John A. Delany organist at St Mary's Cathedral, Sydney and conductor. see also Banks, Cordner
- Ellen Desailly Sydney kindergarten admin
- A. M. Dickie Melbourne Presbyterian minister and peace activist with Victor James (minister) and F. J. Hartley (stub)
- Maggie Dickinson, ballet dancer associate of Minnie Everett married Sydney Culverhouse after breach of promise scandal
- William Dind theatre lessee and founder Dind's Hotel, Milsons Point. grandfather of M. J. Dind cricketer?
- Dictionary of Australian Artists incorporates Joan Kerr
- Lady Don singer actress wife of Sir William Don, 7th Baronet
- SS Douglas Mawson ship lost in tropical cyclone, Gulf of Carpentaria. Rumors of two women survivors adopted by tribe
- W. H. Downing wrote book on WWI diggers' slang
- Maiva Drummond actress in Blue Hills stub
- Uriah Dudley mine manager in Broken Hill, and in Day Dawn, Western Australia. First secretary, Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy
- Francis Houssemayne du Boulay, concertina player and beetle collector in Vic and WA
- Harriet Alice Dumolo Principal, Sydney Kindergarten Teachers' College
- George Duncan (painter) married to Alison Rehfisch
- Frank Dunne political cartoonist and oil painter
- John Dunn (actor) Marcus Clarke married his daughter Rosa Dunn
- William Dutton (captain) "William Pelham Dutton", whaler and settler of Portland, Victoria
- Ambrose Dyson political cartoonist
- Edward Ambrose Dyson political cartoonist son of Ambrose Dyson
- Isaac Earnshaw racehorse trainer
- E. M. G. Eddy, NSW chief commissioner of railways
- Walter J. Eddy, Baptist minister in NSW, leprosy activist
- William Elton, English comic actor, comedian in Melbourne
- Empire Theatre, Sydney cinema and musicals near Central Station
- The Evening Star (Boulder, Western Australia), Kalgoorlie-Boulder newspaper stub
- Minnie Everett ballet mistress, G.& S. producer
- Lance Fairfax singer in G.& S. , Desert Song
- Warwick Oswald Fairfax one of the famous family
- Farmers' and Settlers' Association of New South Wales founded two newspapers, The Farmer and Settler and The Land (newspaper)
- Federation (miniseries) 3-part TV documentary film and DVD
- Arthur Feez Queensland lawyer, another of Low's caricatures
- William Fehon NSW Railway Commissioner
- Adrian Feint artist known for bookplates
- George Finey political cartoonist and collagist
- Doris Fitton actress and theatre founder of Sydney's Independent Theatre (substantial additions)
- Bill Fitz Henry secretary at The Bulletin
- Pattie Fotheringhame "Mab" of The Bulletin social pages, later ran Young Australian and Splashes
- J. Beresford Fowler, Melbourne little theatre director
- Len Fox author and painter married to Mona Brand
- Richard Penrose Franklin headmaster of Melbourne Grammar School
- Sir Colin Fraser (mining) businessman on dozens of boards
- James Fraser (administrator) NSW railways commissioner
- Oscar Fristrom portrait painter in Queensland and South Australia, painted aborigines
- Lilian Frost Tasmanian church organist in Sydney
- John Fullard Welsh tenor in Australia, new to G.& S., Lilac Time
- Gaiety Theatre, Melbourne associated with Bijou Theatre, Melbourne
- Garrick Club (Melbourne) amateur theatricals though many members professional
- Frederick Charles Garside NSW railways commissioner
- Thomas Gaunt clockmaker (inc. Adelaide Town Hall)
- Harold Gaze nonsense verse, children's illustrator, brother of Leslie
- Leslie Gaze baritone in The Chocolate Soldier
- Leon Gellert poet
- James Brunton Gibb elocutionist married to Ethel Lang (actress)
- Giblin family Hobart family included a judge/premier, doctors, cricketer, banker, embezzler, economist, military
- Mabel Gibson singer in musicals and operetta
- The Girl Who Loved a Soldier play by Wilton Welch
- Girls' Own War Stories women in WWII Australia
- Mary Gladstane American stage actress with manager husband L. M. Bayless
- Lionel Glendenning architect behind Powerhouse Museum - stub
- Neva Carr Glyn singer actress
- Phil Goatcher scenic artist in UK, US, Oz. drop-scene in Boulder Town Hall
- George Gordon (scenic artist) and son John Gordon (scenic artist) worked for JCW
- Harry Gould (editor) of communist Tribune (Australian newspaper)
- Graziers' Association of New South Wales aka Pastoralists' Union of New South Wales
- Sol Green Jewish bookmaker racehorse owner philanthropist in Melbourne
- Thomas John Greenway mine manager, metallurgist in Broken Hill, elsewhere, moved to Canada
- Grenville College, Ballarat Bob Menzies was a student
- John Rodger Greville comic actor and stage manager for Coppin
- John Brown Gribble missionary to Aborigines, met antagonism in WA
- Bridget Griffen-Foley (stub) professor of Australian media research (Come In Spinner) missing link in Family
- Beatrice Grimshaw writer based in Papua New Guinea (8th article 27 August 2009)
- Montague Grover Sydney Sun editor champion of James Bancks
- Alexander George Gurney cartoonist creator of "Bluey and Curly"
- Jim Gussey trumpeter and leader of ABC Dance Band, followed Jim Davidson
- Henk Guth created Panorama Guth, Alice Springs
- A. C. Habbe Danish scene painter, brother of Nichola Habbe, artist
- Earle Hackett medical broadcaster and ABC administrator
- Tom Hales (jockey) Victorian jockey with roots in Robe, South Australia
- John Thomson Hall violinist and conductor, confused with John Hall (conductor)
- Sandra Hall (writer) film critic reviewer stub
- Richard Hamilton (winemaker) mine manager at Boulder, Western Australia
- Stanley Hammond (sculptor) worked on Australian War Memorial, Shrine of Remembrance
- Louise Hanson-Dyer (1884–1962) arts patron, founder of Éditions de l'Oiseau-Lyre (hyphenated later)
- John Harper (administrator) NSW railway commissioner
- William Hart (politician) (1825–1904) Wealthy Tassie politician
- F. J. Hartley Melbourne Methodist minister and peace activist with Victor James (minister) and A. M. Dickie (stub)
- Cecil Hartt cartoonist for Smith's Weekly
- Henry R. Harwood actor manager of Theatre Royal, Melbourne
- Frank Harvey (Australian screenwriter) also playwright and radio actor
- Haymarket Theatre, Melbourne built for Coppin, destroyed by fire nine years later
- James Hebbard mine manager in Broken Hill
- Robert Heir actor who married Fanny Cathcart died in NZ, buried in unmarked grave
- Andrew Harriot Henning lawyer and politician in WA, married grand-daughter of James Stewart (Australian politician)
- John Hennings scene painter manager on Theatre Royal, Melbourne
- Thomas Henty (Australian politician) (stub) son of James Henty
- John Hepworth (writer) of Nation Review
- Tom Stanley Hepworth Qld and NSW teacher, author, and editor of ABC Children's Hour books
- Adolphus M. Hertzberg Brisbane businessman stub created during Low caricature season
- John Hill (conductor) organist choral conductor married
- William Duguid Hill mayor of Ballarat and founder of South Street Society competitions
- Henry Hodges (jurist) Victorian Supreme Court judge in David Low collection
- Ursula Hoff arts administrator
- Bob Holder rodeo competitor of Cootamundra
- Charles Holloway (stage) actor, manager, brother of W. J.
- Edmund Holloway actor, manager. no relation to these other Holloways
- W. J. Holloway actor, manager, brother of Charles, stepfather of Essie Jenyns
- Jack Holt (trainer) the "Wizard of Mordialloc", left fortune to Catholic charities
- Florence Hood Melbourne violinist, student of Hermann T. Schrader, moved to Canada. Grand-daughter of John Hood MP, daughter of judge Sir Joseph Hood
- Joseph Henry Hood Victorian judge
- Minnie Hooper ballet mistress
- John Rout Hopkins Geelong politician
- Anthony Hordern and Sons the Sydney emporium (added early history as drapers)
- Hordern family originally part of above but made separate article by User:Castlemate
- William Hoskins (actor) Shakesperean who gave lessons and intro to Henry Irving
- Claude Hotchin Perth businessman and art benefactor
- William Howe (mayor) editor, Port Melbourne Tribune
- Howson family of singers and actors in Tas, Vic, NSW
- Thomas P. Hudson clog dancer and theatre manager
- Ross A. Hull radio pioneer with "Wireless Weekly"; electrocuted in U.S.A.
- If You're Listening ABC radio program and podcast by Matt Bevan
- I Know How Many Runs You Scored Last Summer comedy horror film
- A. E. Illingworth Church of Christ minister
- Independent Theatre founded by Doris Fitton
- Robert Inman (actor) born in NZ, married daughter of F. C. Appleton
- J. A. Isaacs Victorian MP brother of Isaac Isaacs, died insolvent with angry wife
- Harry Jacobs (conductor) for Ada Reeve; wife Madame Saranova; daughter Wendy Lee Jacobs was ice skater
- Florence James writer associated with Dymphna Cusack (3rd article 9 August 2009)
- Mathew Buchan Jamieson civil engineer in Broken Hill, previously in British Guiana
- Victor James (minister) Melbourne Unitarian minister and peace activist with F. J. Hartley and A. M. Dickie
- William Jamieson (mining) surveyor, co-founder of Broken Hill Proprietary mines, brother of Mathew
- W. L. Jarvis "Evangelist Jarvis" Baptist preacher and gospel singer
- C. A. Jeffries journalist caricatured by Low
- Reginald Jerrold-Nathan painted portraits of famous women
- Alexander William Jessep director of the Royal Botanic Gardens, Melbourne
- Peter Johns founder of Johns Waygood
- Tom Richard Johnson commissioner of railways, NSW
- Margaret Jones (journalist) trailblazing journalist
- William Henry Jones (Methodist) minister turned NSW church executive
- Joe Jonsson cartoonist creator of Uncle Joe's Horse Radish
- Phil Judd (sound engineer) worked on Happy Feet, The Wog Boy, many other movies
- George A. Judkins, Methodist teetotal activist
- Harry Julius artist associate of Ure Smith
- Carl Kaeppel Classical language scholar associated with R. P. Franklin
- Letty Katts composer "Never Never" and "A Town Like Alice" husband Stan Mellick should have own article
- Louis Kaye wrote bush novels
- Heinrich Wilhelm Ferdinand Kayser mine manager, Mount Bischoff Tin Mining
- Keen as Mustard (documentary) film about mustard gas trials in Queensland
- A. S. Kenyon civil engineer, anthropologist, numismatist etc
- Arthur V. Kewney secretary VRC (previously with SAJC and Kalgoorlie Racing Club)
- Darrel Killen ACT cinema developer and film enthusiast
- King's Hall, Sydney Theosophists building
- James Roy Kinghorn naturalist and broadcaster
- Nat Kipner US record producer and songwriter in Australia
- Basil Kirke 2BL, 6WF radio pioneer and ABC executive
- Maggie Knight New Zealand actress in Sydney
- J. C. Lambert actor/manager stub
- W. J. Lambie William John Lambie, journalist, first Victorian casualty of Boer War
- Nellie Lamport actress in Blue Hills stub
- Ethel Lang (actress) actress married to James Brunton Gibb
- Launceston Courier, short-lived Tasmanian newspaper
- Will Lawson bush poet, not related to Henry Lawson
- The Leader (Melbourne) another newspaper stub
- Renee Lees piano prodigy then theatre organist
- Jack Legge biochemist, pacifist communist
- George Leitch actor-manager playwright assoc. Charles MacMahon (theatre), James MacMahon
- George B. W. Lewis circus rider and theatre manager; Mrs G. B. W. Lewis aka Rose Edouin
- Mary Liddell Irish journalist and feminist in Sydney
- Ernest Lidgey geologist in Victoria. Last years are a mystery
- The Lone Hand (magazine) monthly magazine founded by J. F. Archibald
- Steve Lopes painter stub (rescued from List of Australian artists)
- The Lorgnette, theatre magazine in Melbourne. Lots of photo-engravings in wikitable
- Caricatures by Low 1915 lots of drawings
- Lyceum Theatre, Sydney aka Queen's Theatre, Sydney, other names
- Lynch Family bellringers
- William McCulloch (Australian politician) Victorian coach, tram, steamboat operator, politician (edits)
- C. Leslie Macdonald racehorse owner, won two Melbourne Cups, suicide by pistol
- Hugh D. McIntosh theatre and boxing entrepreneur
- Claude Eric Fergusson McKay (1878–1972) journalist and publicist
- Norman Macgeorge Melbourne painter and art critic born in SA, founded scholarship
- Lady Macnaghten the "fever ship" of 1837
- Macquarie Galleries prominent private gallery
- Kenneth Macqueen watercolorist farmer married Olive Kathleen Crane
- George Main (horse racing) property "Retreat" at Illabo w/ Hugh Main MLA. daughter married fighter ace Clive Caldwell
- Eduardo Majeroni Italian actor with Adelaide Ristori, later in Sydney, associate of W. J. Wilson
- Alice Mallon Adelaide soprano accepted by JCW's G.& S. company but married a doctor and moved to Perth
- Gother Kerr Mann, civil engineer, first NSW railway commissioner
- John Frederick Mann, surveyor on Leichhardt's second expedition
- Bernard Manning (singer), G.& S. singer settled in WA
- Frank Marien editor of Smith's Weekly
- George Marlow (1877?–1939) theatrical entrepreneur
- Martini-Henry (horse), a Melbourne Cup winner
- Arthur John Mason Sydney Town Hall organist, London agent for ABC
- George Birkbeck Mason dance musician founded Brisbane's first theatre
- Joseph Massey sen. had five sons, all church organists
- Emma Matthews operatic soprano
- Peter McBride (Australian politician) Victorian MLA, another David Low caricature
- Neil McCusker last NSW Commissioner of Railways
- Samuel Henry McGowan Bendigo gold mine manager, mayor. Nothing links to this one. Why did I start it?
- William Ponsonby McMahon editor Catholic Tribune, Melbourne
- Dame Nellie Melba Scholarship prizes for singers in London and Melbourne
- Melbourne Punch satirical magazine
- Melbourne Savage Club gentleman's club for artists
- Joe Melvin resourceful reporter, present at Glenrowan shootout, Sudan war
- Vladas Meškėnas sculptor
- Alan D. Mickle essay writer
- Mildura Cultivator weekly newspaper
- Richard Charles Mills economist and University of Sydney professor
- Minties (additions) series of links to cartoons, deleted by someone, but accessible through History
- Irene Mitchell actress director with Melbourne Little Theatre, St Martin's Youth Theatre
- Alexander Montgomery (geologist) government geologist in New Zealand, Tasmania and Western Australia
- H. Byron Moore secretary of Victorian Racing Club (VRC)
- Frederick Morley (organist) also designed church organs
- Ethel Morrison G.& S. singer, stage actor from NZ
- Ellen Mortyn actress with Younge, Brooke. Died of consumption, maybe had abortion
- Frank A. Moss mine manager in Western Australia
- Hugh Munro (trainer) incorporates sons Jimmie Munro, Darby Munro, both jockeys
- Nina Murdoch founder of Argonauts Club
- Jack Murray (racing driver) "Gelignite Jack", NSW rally driver
- R. M. Murray mining engineer at Mt Lyell, Queenstown, Tas. lived at Penghana
- Robert Lucas Nash financial editor of Sydney Telegraph
- Richard West Nash briefly WA Advocate-General and owner Perth Inquirer (stub)
- National Amphitheatre, Sydney became Roxy Theatre, Sydney, Mayfair Theatre, Sydney
- David Nettheim actor
- Margot Neville pseudonym of Goyder sisters of Melbourne; murder novelists
- NSW Bookstall Company newsagents and paperback publishers
- New Guinea Exploration Expedition (1885) rumored killed by natives and gunboat despatched
- Alan Newton (surgeon), in full Sir Hibbert Alan Stephen Newton, surgeon in Victoria
- Robert B. Nicholson goldmine manager, a David Low caricature
- Arthur Nickson (musician) Melbourne organist won Clarke Prize (sim. Elder Travelling Scholarship
- Noyes Brothers engineering company built electric tram systems in Adelaide and elsewhere
- Russell J. Oakes Sydney playwright short story writer, praised by "Gregory Parable" (Frank Murphy)
- Kathleen O'Connor (painter) impressionist in France; daughter of C. Y. O'Connor
- Ernest O'Ferrall humorous writer
- Patrick I. O'Leary Catholic poet with The Advocate
- Charles Nicholson Jewel Oliver, cricketer and NSW railway commissioner
- Opera for the People, Hector Crawford's attempt to make opera popular
- Opera House, Sydney, 100 years before Utzon
- Max Osbiston actor married Babs Mayhew
- John Walter Osborne Irish inventor of photolithography in Melbourne
- Ida Elizabeth Osbourne founded and ran Argonauts Club
- Otira Methodist Home Missionary Training College Methodist theological college (stub)
- Langer Owen NSW lawyer; another of Low's caricatures
- The Oxford Companion to Australian Folklore stub
- The Oxford Companion to Australian History stub
- The Oxford Companion to Australian Jazz stub
- Ozwords newsletter stub
- Lenton Parr (1924–2003) sculptor and teacher
- R. E. Pashen Presbyterian minister in Brisbane
- Pastoralists' Union of New South Wales aka Graziers' Association of New South Wales
- Frank H. L. Paton, Presbyterian missionary to New Hebrides
- Robert T. Paton public health official in NSW, a David Low caricature
- James Patrick (shipowner) Patrick line of freighters, big game hunter
- Robert C. Patterson (engineer) was Robert Patterson (Australian politician) stub
- W. H. Paxton Mackay mayor and sugar pioneer involved in "blackbirding" of Island labourers. Mentions ships "Jabberwock" and "Borough Belle" occasionally attributed to him
- William Silas Pearse (minister), Victorian (mostly) Congregationalist clergy
- William Peascod abstract artist in Wollongong, miner from Cumbria, died in Wales
- Augustus Baker Peirce American steamboat captain, painter and entertainer
- Emélie Polini English actress who failed to regain custody of her 5yo daughter
- Louise Pomeroy American Shakespeare actress married in Australia
- Frederick Danvers Power lecturer in geology and metallurgy
- Power Without Glory (2015 book) created stub following [deletion]
- Ambrose Pratt prolific novelist
- Prince Edward Theatre (Sydney) grandiose movie theatre
- Prince of Wales Theatre, Melbourne (1862–1864)
- Thea Proctor painter
- Arthur Purnell Melbourne architect for a time in China, then partner of Isidor Beaver
- Winifred Purnell, pianist prodigy taught by Arthur John Mason left for England
- Chris Qua jazz bassist, helped found The Basement
- Queen's Hall, Melbourne little theatre on Collins Street
- Queen's Hall, Perth corner William and Murray streets. stub.
- Queen's Theatre, Melbourne first playhouse, Queen Street
- James Peter Quinn (1869–1951) portrait painter
- Edward Quin (pastoralist) MP for Wentworth, ran Tarella station
- Frederick James Rae director of the Melbourne Botanic Gardens
- John Ralston (baritone) played Franz Schubert in Lilac Time, G.& S. operas
- Brett Randall founder Melbourne Little Theatre
- Edgar Ray founder Melbourne Punch and Sydney Punch lost money managing Prince of Wales Theatre, Sydney
- Glenda Raymond operatic soprano, married Hector Crawford
- Alexander Rea (organist) arrived as pastor, associated with Sydney Town Hall Grand Organ
- Robert William Rede militiaman involved in Eureka Rebellion
- Coralie Clarke, later Coralie Clarke Rees, married to Leslie Rees (author) WA authors
- Willy Redstone French and English composer of light music, moved to Oz with Hugh J. Ward wrote film scores for Chauvel
- Edward Reeve founder of NSW Art Gallery
- Alison Rehfisch painter married to George Duncan (painter)
- G. A. Richard (George Anderson Richard or Richards), "Captain Richard" metallurgist, managing director Mount Morgan gold mine
- William Glendinning Riddell NZ magistrate (David Low subject)
- Grattan Riggs US-Australian actor, stage Irishman
- Frank Rigo American opera director associated with JCW, Melba, Mummery, Phillipini. Died broke in Melbourne
- Albert Rivett (pastor) Congregational minister, pacifist, anti-Fascist when they were the good guys, died addressing Sydney crowd
- Rohan Rivett journalist, author and editor
- John Robb (civil engineer) built railways, owned Royal Exchange, King William Street, Adelaide; Robb's Building, Melbourne
- Robbery Under Arms (play)
- Harry R. Roberts actor who married Maggie Moore after she divorced JCW
- Nelle Rodd Sydney cartoonist illustrator married lawyer Selwyn Betts
- Betty Roland playwright
- John Roper (explorer) with Leichhardt's successful first expedition
- Kate Rooney (singer) Catholic contralto in London and New York, friend of contralto Ella Caspers
- Anne Ross (Australian sculptor) Alexander Bunyip in Gunghalin
- George Fawcett Rowe actor playwright died in New York
- Penelope Rowe author, sister of Gerard Windsor.
- Helena Rubinstein portrait prize short lived prize based in W.A.
- George Alfred Russell businessman, created while searching for Patti Russell's origins
- Patti Russell star Sydney soprano active for ten years. nothing before, nothing later
- William Wilkins Russell Hobart music teacher, operetta composer, discovered Amy Sherwin
- St James' Hall, Sydney aka Mercury Theatre (Australia) venue for amateur groups, notably John Alden (theatre)
- Henry Salkauskas printmaker and abstract artist in watercolors, a refugee from Lithuania
- Bill Salmon (painter) "Apelles" of Argonauts Club
- Salt Clay Creek railway disaster seven killed near Cootamundra
- G. K. Saunders writer of science fiction and travel subjects
- Athelstan Saw W.A. politician and University administrator
- Eduard Scharf (musician) German pianist and Melbourne Conservatorium teacher victimized in WWI
- Jan Hendrik Scheltema Dutch-Australian painter. Created to rescue deleted list entry, expanded greatly by User:Peter Reynders
- Phillip Schuler WWI war correspondent, son of The Age editor
- James Scobie (horseman) Victorian jockey turned trainer
- Scope soldering iron now made by Warren & Brown
- Montague Scott versatile Sydney artist who died stone deaf and bankrupt.
- Ben Selinger chemist author of Chemistry in the Marketplace
- Michael Shanahan (Australian Army officer) rode "Bill the Bastard"
- William Sharp (organist) in Launceston, Sydney and Goulburn. Three sons were organists.
- David Shearer (minister) founder of the Presbyterian Church in W.A.
- Shell Aria classical vocal competition 1955 to 1986
- John F. Sheridan Irish-American pantomime dame
- Shitbox Rally auto challenge fund raiser
- Henry Short (editor) of The Leader a David Low subject
- John T. Short railways commissioner in WA, David Low subject
- W. H. Simmonds editor of The Mercury (Hobart) David Low subject
- Joseph Simmons (actor) Australia's first Macbeth; Jewish hotel owner, made art of insolvency
- Fanny Simonsen opera soprano married Martin Simonsen violin and impresario grandparents of Frances Alda
- A. H. Simpson NSW Supreme Court judge
- Six Directions, Sydney art group, all "displaced persons" Edgar Eduard Aavik, Uldis Abolins, Giuseppe Fontanelli Bissietta, Dzem Krivs, Jurgis Miksevicius, August Mölder, and Henry Salkauskas
- H. C. Sleigh, shipping and Golden Fleece oil business founder
- Richard Sly NSW Supreme Court judge, for David Low collection
- George Wishart Smith railway manager in WA; commissioner in Tasmania; sacked for incompetence
- G. H. Snazelle, opera singer, raconteur
- The Standard (Port Melbourne), weekly newspaper stub
- George Sutherland Smith steamboat pioneer of Wahgunyah and wine maker of Rutherglen
- Sydney Ure Smith arts publisher
- Sayers, Allport & Potter veterinary pharmaceuticals "Thal-Rat" and "S.A.P." poisons based on thallium, phosphorus
- H. C. Smart publicist at Australia House, London, associated with Charles Bean
- Sydney Wigham Smith Melbourne architect
- Nathan Spielvogel Jewish teacher and author of Ballarat
- The Sportsman (Melbourne) sporting newspaper founded by S. V. Winter
- George Sprod POW cartoonist, a Cudmore descendant
- Standard (Frankston) Mornington Peninsula weekly newspaper
- Royal Standard Theatre on Castlereagh Street. Also known as Little Theatre and The Playhouse
- Stars of Opera Australia historic DVD focusing on Emma Matthews' La traviata — reduced to redirect following AfD
- Marjorie Stedeford female baritone
- Colin Stephen Sydney lawyer and horseracing official AJC chairman
- Patrick John Stephen Methodist minister in Sydney
- Arthur A. Stephens founder Queen's College, Hobart
- Harry J. Stephens editor of various country newspapers, founded first (abortive) Country Party
- William James Stewart mayor and businessman of Northam, WA, took over George Throssell's business
- Mary Page Stone female doctor in Victoria, died after collision and fall from her bicycle
- Reginald Stoneham aka Alberto Agrati Victorian composer of (inter alia) "FFF" associated with C. J. De Garis
- Stripper (agriculture) invented by John Ridley
- Gregory Stroud English G.& S. singer. Like Bernard Manning (singer), settled in Oz
- Christine Sullivan jazz singer
- The Sunny South (play)
- John Waters Sutherland mine manager and metallurgist in Kalgoorlie, introduced Dehne filter press
- Sydney Express (passenger train)
- Sydney Punch founded by Edgar Ray
- Sydney Savage Club members inc. Lindley Evans, Harry Julius
- Sydney Unitarian Church
- Edward Joseph Tait theatre entrepreneur, one of four Tait brothers
- Frank Samuel Tait theatre business married Viola Wilson
- Tattersall's clubs, Melbourne gambling joints briefly run by rivals Sol Green and John Wren
- Howard Taylor (painter) WA painter and sculptor
- Violet Teague portraitist
- Georgina Temperley founder One Woman, One Recruit in WWI, later qualified as medico
- Theatre Royal, Ballarat, greatly expanded; sim map to South Street Society
- Wilfrid Thomas corrected name, birthplace, more details
- Gerald Marr Thompson music drama arts critic for SMH
- Joe Thompson (bookmaker) Melbourne Jewish bookie left for England
- Hall Thorpe artist and printmaker in Sydney then London. Elsewhere spelled "Hal Thorpe"
- C. J. Tinsley Baptist preacher in NSW, son was preacher in SA, another Tinsley was preacher in Canberra
- Tivoli Follies vaudeville revue during WWI
- James Tolmie (Australian politician) QLD MLA linked to Yeates, Cudmores
- Touch the Sun (Australian TV series) TV movies for children
- Frank Towers actor and manager. Rosa Towers was precocious daughter
- J. R. Tranthim-Fryer Hobart sculptor and art teacher, founding principal of Swinburne Technical College
- Victorian Review (Australia) literary magazine 1860–1880 run by con-man Franklyn and Henty, his dupe. Stub
- Victorian Sculptors' Society founded 1948 mentions Yarra Sculptors Society, Association of Sculptors of Victoria
- Vincent Chemical Co. makers of Vincent's powders and tablets
- Alfred Vincent (1874–1915) cartoonist
- Charles Vincent (theatre) at Theatre Royal, Melbourne, died when thumb got infected
- Jenny Wagner (author) children's writer Bunyip of Berkeley's Creek
- Roland Wakelin modernist painter
- J. Walch and Sons publisher stationer of Hobart (strong sense of deja vu when starting this one)
- A. J. Waldock first Baptist minister in Canberra
- Arthur John Alfred Waldock his son, professor of English literature
- Phil K. Walsh actor of Mudgee, Bathurst etc. and US. Made films Around the Boree Log and The Birth of White Australia
- Frederick Ward (theatre) founded Sydney Repertory, leased Little Theatre, chicken farmer, manager Regent Theatre, Adelaide, nothing further
- Hugh J. Ward American dancer, comic actor and producer with JCW
- The Warning (play) white slavery play at Little Theatre, Sydney by Wilton Welch and Louise Carbasse
- John Warren (mining) manager Block 10 mine, Broken Hill, for 10 years
- J. S. Watkins Sydney art teacher
- Andrew Robert James Watt Sydney barrister
- George A. J. Webb portrait painter
- Johanna Weigel, "Madame Weigel", paper dress pattern designer in Melbourne
- Wilton Welch comic actor, playwright, with Louise Lovely in America
- Charles Wenman (theatre) producer, managing director of JCW
- John West (theatre) theatre critic historian and broadcaster
- West of Sunshine father and son movie filmed in Melbourne
- Western Australian Bank founded 1838, sold in 1841 then restarted with original promoters; purchased by Bank of NSW in 1927 (stub)
- The Western Grazier Wilcannia weekly newspaper - substantial edits (created Western Grazier before finding existing page)
- Harry J. Weston poster painter who ran correspondence school in drawing
- Charles White (writer) Bathurst journalist who wrote on bushrangers
- Charles Alfred White Presbyterian minister wrote church history
- Unk White cartoonist
- R. P. Whitworth compiled gazetteers, wrote plays about Maori culture
- Allan Wilkie Shakespeare actor and producer
- Auguste Wiegand Belgian organist, first Sydney City Organist, sacked by the council
- Andrew Wilkie (zoo director) followed Le Souef at Melbourne zoo; uncle of Leslie Wilkie
- R. J. Williams Methodist minister in Sydney
- George Willoughby (theatre entrepreneur) full name George Willoughby Dowse (substantial additions)
- James Wilson (trainer) founder of the St Albans Stud in Geelong, trained cup winner Briseis, Don Juan
- son James Wilson Jr. was captain of Geelong Football Club, founder Bonny Vale Stud, trained 1889 Cup winner Merriwee. Same person as James Wilson (Australian rules footballer)
- Viola Wilson nee Hogg, Scots soprano in G.& S. married Frank Tait.
- W. J. Wilson scene painter, actor and manager
- Reg Winsor NSW railway commissioner
- Samuel Vincent Winter founder of The Advocate (Melbourne) and mayor of Richmond, Victoria
- C. J. Z. Woinarski or Zichy-Woinarski, Melbourne lawyer and judge. Another Low cartoon subject
- T. S. B. Woodfull Methodist minister, father of the cricketer
- H. J. Woodhouse painted horses
- F. W. Woodhouse painted horses
- Emmeline M. D. Woolley pianist organist (was stub)
- Eric Worrell snake expert and supplier of venom to CSL (additions)
- Albert Yeates QLD pastoralist.
- Sidney Yeates SA, QLD pastoralist, his father. Married Dymphna Cudmore. Both associated with J. F. Cudmore
- Yorick Club (Melbourne) a gentlemen's club. Mentions unrelated Adelaide dramatic society of the same name
- Fred Younge English actor; brother Richard Younge, Frank Younge (aka Frank Harlow) in Melbourne
Elsewhere
[edit]- Askari (film) deleted by AfD process
- MV Balmoral Castle (1910) passenger ship
- Arthur Henry Behrend Polish-born song composer
- Moriz Benedikt (1849–1920) Austrian Jewish editor of Neue Freie Presse
- Edward Berry (soldier) Canadian Rhodes Scholar. created stub rather than delete
- André Birabeau (1890-1974) French novelist, playwright and screenwriter.
- Vice-admiral Sir Harold Arthur Brown (1878–1968), engineer with the Royal Navy (was redlink surname entry)
- P. B. Burgoyne marketed Australian wines in UK
- Burney's Academy Royal Navy prep school
- Natalie Caine English woodwind player
- John Capper (editor) owner/editor of The Times of Ceylon, wrote The Emigrant's Guide to Australia
- Ciro's (London) nightclub stub
- Edward Clark (writer) US playwright stub (wrote one of Emelie Polini's successes)
- William Clark (anatomist) Cambridge academic (was redlink surname entry)
- Tony Clennell Canadian potter (was redlink surname entry)
- Philip Tennyson Cole English society portraitist who got a start in Australia
- Comme facette mammeta Matt Abraham's theme song, used in OK Garage
- Eugène Cosserat (1866–1931) French mathematician and astronomer (7th article 21 August 2009)
- Gary W. Cox political scientist at Stanford University (was redlink surname entry)
- John Crook (conductor) English conductor and composer of The New Barmaid/Lady Barmaid
- Jean Danysz (biologist) French researcher into rabbit control
- Jean Danysz French physicist, developer of beta spectrometry. Some additions
- Charles Darrell English playwright confusion with George Darrell, Australian playwright
- Captain Disney-Roebuck theatre manager in South Africa. link to T. S. O'Halloran
- John Duncan (harpist) Canadian harpist (was redlink surname entry)
- J. B. Fagan (1873–1933) Irish-born actor, theatre manager, producer and playwright in England. Collaboration with User:Ssilvers
- Boothroyd Fairclough American Shakespearean, married Elsa May, Australian soprano
- Chester Bailey Fernald US/UK playwright, short story writer
- R. E. Francillon prolific short story writer
- Frou-Frou (play) English translation from the French
- Gallery (theatre) (Balcony, though mentioning internal structures, only spoke of externals of buildings
- Jean Gérardy Belgian prodigy cellist married Sydney girl, several tours
- Albert Goossens Belgian baritone in Sydney during WWI
- Harold Griffith Canadian anaesthesiologist associated with Enid Johnson Macleod
- Karl Haas (conductor) English conductor
- John Caulfield Hannyngton inventor of a very long slide rule
- Philip Harben (1906–1970) English TV celebrity chef
- George Hart (luthier) London violin maker and agent
- Frank Harvey (playwright) father and grandfather of screenwriters
- Jack Haskell (producer) American stage producer in Australia
- Cuyler Hastings American actor played Sherlock Holmes in Australia
- S. C. Homersham English civil engineer and hydrologist
- William Hughes (geographer) (1818–1876) English geographer, mapmaker and author
- J. Ord Hume brass band adjudicator
- Thomas Hutchins (naturalist) (1742?–1790) British physician and naturalist (1st article 6 August 2009)
- Cecil James English bassoonist
- Enid Johnson Macleod (1909-2001) Canadian anaesthetist (4th article 14 August 2009)
- Herrick L. Johnston (1898-1965) American scientist specializing in cryogenics (5th article 15 August 2009)
- Joseph Jay Jones academic with University of Texas
- King's Theatre, Hammersmith was BBC studio for a few years; stub
- A. K. Langridge wrote about missionary John Gibson Paton, Kanakas, New Hebrides
- League of the Empire patriotic organization (SA only branch so far)
- W. H. Leake American actor died in Adelaide Hospital, as did comedian Edwin Kelly many years later. stupid rumors they were lovers.
- Edward Locke (1869–1945) American playwright born in England
- Brendan Maher (director) TV director; maybe Australian; stub
- Achille Majeroni (theatre) brother of Eduardo Majeroni and father of film actor with the same name
- Mary (musical) American musical stub
- Daniel Mayer (impresario) German-born talent agent and mayor of Bexhill-on-Sea
- George Stewart McManus, US pianist in Australia 1923 stub
- Emelie Melville American actress sued JCW and lost
- Midnight Cop dubbed German-language film noir with comic moments
- George C. Miln American Shakespearean actor in Australia
- Philip Moeller US stage director and playwright
- Thomas Baden Morris prolific British playwright stub
- George Potter Neele English railway executive
- Frances Newton American early childhood educator influenced Australian kindergartens
- The November Men 1993 film marketed by Flashback Entertainment as Double Exposure
- Omar Khayam (silent film) maybe Australian title for A Lover's Oath held up by Prohibition ?
- Waldemar Otto German sculptor stub rather than delete redlink
- William J. Phillipps, New Zealand ichthyologist (was redlink surname entry)
- Charles H. Purday hymnwriter "Lead Kindly Light"
- Maurice Howe Richardson American surgeon stub (was redlink surname entry)
- Road (2014 film) BBC documentary about Dunlop family motorcycle racers
- Frederick Albert Saunders Canadian-born American far infra-red spectroscopist stub (was redlink surname entry)
- Gerald Savory English playwright
- Scottish Naval and Military Academy trained young gentlemen for careers with East India Company forces
- A. C. Shaw Anglican missionary in Tokyo
- Geza Silberer Gustav A. Silberer (1876–1938) Austrian Jew wrote under pseudonym Sil-Vara.
- Lucien Simon (1861–1945) French painter and teacher
- Mário Henrique Simonsen Brazilian economist stub (was redlink surname entry)
- Jack Spurling marine artist for The Blue Peter (magazine) (Basil Lubbock wrote for them)
- Edward Stirling (playwright) pirated Dickens novels to the stage
- Eugenia Stone society journalist, married wealthy Sir George Doughty
- Sugarbaby (film) by Percy Adlon, starring Marianne Sagebrecht
- Suspicion (American TV series) added list of episodes available commercially on DVD
- William Cave Thomas, painter associated with Pre-Raphaelite Brotherhood
- George Parker Tuxford English publisher of farmers' magazines, brothers in Adelaide
- Una (film) added plot
- Voicing (pipe organ) stub, in 2021 rated top importance
- William Wales (astronomer) (1734?–1798) British mathematician; collaboration with User:Flowerpotman (2nd article 7 August 2009)
Miscellaneous
[edit]Categories, dab pages, definitions, lists, places, surnames
[edit]- Categories: Australian accompanists; auctioneers; ABC executives; animal artists; bigamists; bookmakers; coachbuilders; early childhood education; commercial artists; distillers; engravers; flour millers and merchants; grocers; horse racing officials; hoteliers; ironmasters; jam and preserved fruit makers; manufacturing businesspeople; Mayors of Ballarat; mine managers; mining businesspeople; motor vehicle dealers; ; oil businesspeople; printers; real estate agents; riverboat captains; ship owners; textbook writers; theatre owners; timber merchants; tobacconists; wine and spirit merchants; wool merchants; History of Broken Hill; Murray-Darling related lists; Pipelines in Australia; History of Port Adelaide; protectionists; Radio personalities from Adelaide; Railway commissioners of New South Wales; Television personalities from Adelaide; Unitarian ministers; Unitarian churches; Vice-chancellors of the Australian National University; Vice-chancellors of the University of Tasmania; Vice-chancellors of Western Sydney University Global Bookplate designers; Films about adult education; Associates of the Royal College of Music UK 19th-century English comedians19th-century English composers
- Dab pages: Allan (surname); Ashfield Boys' High School; Associated Newspapers; Bice; Grecian; LMSC; Leane; Marval; Shouting; Brendan Maher; Queen's Hall
- Definitions: Block (rural Australia); Dam (rural Australia); Loose box; Shout (paying); Tin hare
- Lists: Adelaide obsolete suburb names; Plants named "native"; Political families of South Australia; Entertainers who married titled Britishers; Political families of South Australia; First Fleet of South Australia; Murray-Darling steamboats; Murray-Darling steamboat people; Darling River distances; List of Melbourne Sun Aria winners; Murray River distances; Murrumbidgee River distances; Australian AM radio stations; Survey parties to the Northern Territory 1864-1870
- Places: Adam Bay, Northern Territory; Angas Park, South Australia; Bagot Well; Chambers Bay, Northern Territory; Calca, South Australia; Concordia; Kainton, South Australia; Kameruka, New South Wales; Point Sturt; Rawlinson Ranges in WA, near Petermann Ranges; Salter Springs; Sunnyvale, South Australia; Winulta, South Australia Woodchester, South Australia
- Surnames: Barritt Bew or Bews (surnames) Blackler Buring Chinner Brandon-Cremer Conigrave Custance Dalwood (surname) Finnis Gollin Haimes (surname) Hebbard Heinicke Hübbe (surname) Kirkcaldie Luxmoore Mallen (surname) Mazure Macgeorge Modra (surname) Morphett Motteram Mumme Osbiston Overbury (surname) Paltridge Pettinger Pile (surname) Pybus Reed (surname) (rebuilt) Rischbieth Savill (surname) Seagar Snoddy (surname) Southee Sowden Taplin Teece Torr (surname) Tothill (surname) Want (surname) Whitington Younge