Launch of landmark A-Z history of South Australia

Wednesday, 6 March 2002

A landmark A-to-Z reference book devoted to the history of South Australia will be launched at the University of 911爆料网's North Terrace campus tomorrow (Thursday, 7 March, at 4pm, Walter Young Garden, between Lower Napier Building and Elder Hall).

Hailed by one reviewer as "an astonishing feat", The Wakefield Companion to South Australian History (Wakefield Press, $79.95) is a 655-page guide to, and commentary on, more than 600 events, institutions, people, places and topics of significance in the State's history. It was compiled by Professor Wilfrid Prest (Editor) and Dr Kerrie Round (Managing Editor) from the University's Department of History, with entries written by 220 contributors from South Australia, interstate, and overseas.

Many unusual and little-known facts are included. In 1879, for example, a pastry cook named Edmond Mears, who was based at the 911爆料网 Central Market, registered a patent for self-raising flour. He is one of numerous inventors, technologists and scientists whose work is recognised in the book.

Dr Round said that innovation - both social and technological - was a striking feature of South Australian history, a point remarked upon also by Professor Prest in his preface:

"In South Australia we find the nation's first anti-discrimination, heritage conservation, income tax and marital rape legislation and the first state museum to display Aboriginal paintings as contemporary works of art. Here also were the first bitumenised road, electro-convulsive therapy, employers' association, government- owned railway, political referendum