Murray Bridge, South Australia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by GSTQ (talk | contribs) at 00:39, 17 January 2007. The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

Murray Bridge (35°07′S 139°16′E / 35.117°S 139.267°E / -35.117; 139.267) is a city in South Australia about 80 kilometres (50 miles) southeast of Adelaide and 1 hour drive north of Meningie. It is the service town for a farming area including dairy, pigs, chickens, cereal crops and vegetables (including "stay crisp lettuces"). It is where the Princes Highway crosses the Murray River on the main road and rail routes from Adelaide to Melbourne.

Murray Bridge
South Australia
The Murray Bridge that crosses the Murray
Population12,998 (2001)
Established1924
Location80 km (50 mi) from Adelaide
LGA(s)Rural City of Murray Bridge
State electorate(s)Hammond
Federal division(s)Barker
Location of Murray Bridge in South Australia (red)
Driving across the bridge

Murray Bridge is in the traditional lands of the Ngarrindjeri people. The first European explorer was Charles Sturt who camped here on 8 February 1830.

The first road bridge across the lower Murray was completed here in 1879 and has a 40 km/h (~25 mph) speed limit. The bridge also became a shared road and rail bridge in 1886 until the separate rail bridge was completed in 1927. The Swanport Bridge was completed 5 kilometres (3 miles) downstream in 1979, removing most through traffic from the historic bridge. The town was originally known as Mobilong, then Edwards Crossing before finally becoming Murray Bridge in 1924.

Murray Bridge is in the Rural City of Murray Bridge, the state electoral district of Hammond and the federal Division of Barker.

Local Schools include Murray Bridge North School, Murray Bridge South School, Murray Bridge High, Murray Bridge Christian College and Unity College.

Sport and recreation

In 1924 the Murray Bridge rowing team was chosen to represent Australia at the Paris Olympics. The Murray Cods as they were known won the Australian Eight Oared Championships (the King's Cup) and were invited to compete in a test race at Port Adelaide between Western Australia, Tasmania, Victoria and South Australia. Although accustomed to rowing over 3 miles, the Murray Cods were able to defeat the other crews on the 1 mile and 420 yards (2km) course. The story of their fundraising and exploits in Paris are detailed on the Australian Rowing History website [1].


Murray Bridge is also home to the River Murray Football League, which plays Australian Rules Football. The league consists of the Murray Bridge based clubs of Ramblers and Imperials and the district teams of Mypolonga, Mannum, Tailem Bend, Jervois and Meningie.


In 2005 the town's golf course, Murray Bridge Golf Club, held the State's premier regional junior team event, the Brett Ogle Cup (named after the Australian Professional golfer Brett Ogle). The home team, through the heroics of leading local juniors Constantine Papaevagelou and Craig McCulloch, went undefeated and qualified for the state final, losing narrowly. The team had not previously experienced such success; junior golf in the region has since obtained a higher profile.

Murray Bridge is also the home of the Murray Bridge Racing Club.

Sister Cities

Murray Bridge has two sister cities, according to the Australian Sister Cities Association.


The Overland (Melbourne - Adelaide)
Bordertown Murray Bridge Keswick terminal (Adelaide)

Template:Geolinks-AUS-suburbscale