Berri, South Australia
{{other uses|Berri, South Australia (disambiguation)}}
{{Use dmy dates|date=February 2023}}
{{Use Australian English|date=March 2013}}
{{Infobox Australian place | type = town
| name = Berri
| state = sa
| image = BerriFromScenicLookout.JPG
| caption = Looking over Berri and the Murray River from the scenic lookout
| coordinates = {{coord|34|17|S|140|36|E|display=inline,title}}
| pushpin_label_position =left
| lga = Berri Barmera Council
| postcode = 5343
| pop =
| est = 1911
| elevation= 31
| maxtemp = 23.4
| mintemp = 10.2
| rainfall = 261.7
| stategov = Chaffey
| fedgov = Barker
| dist1 = 238
| location1= Adelaide
| near-n = Monash
| near-e = Lyrup
| near-w = Glossop
| near-s = Gurra Gurra
|footnotes={{cite web |url=https://location.sa.gov.au/viewer/?map=hybrid&x=140.63368&y=-34.29625&z=13&uids=19&pinx=&piny=&pinTitle=&pinText= |work=Location SA Map Viewer |title=Suburbs and Localities |access-date=28 August 2021 |publisher=Government of South Australia}}
}}
Berri is a town in the central area of the Riverland region of South Australia. It is 238 kilometres north-east of Adelaide, the capital of the state of South Australia, and a few kilometres west of the SA-Victoria border. It is primarily an agricultural and viticultural town on the north bank of the Murray River. It is the original home of the juice company, Berri Ltd.
History
The name "Berri" originated from the word, “bery bery" from the local Aboriginal tribe, Meri, meaning "a wide bend in the river".[https://www.berribarmera.sa.gov.au/discover-our-district/history/berri-barmera-in-brief#:~:text=The%20town's%20name%20is%20derived,and%20an%20indigenous%20bridge%20mural Berri Barmera council] The area was first explored by European settlers when Charles Sturt navigated the Murray River. Its first impetus for settlement came when paddle steamers came down the River Murray and a refuelling stop was developed. This was to become Berri. The area was also part of Cobdogla Station pastoral run before it was broken up for closer farming.
In 1910, irrigation was established and Berri was proclaimed as a town in 1911.[http://www.slsa.sa.gov.au/manning/pn/b/b13.htm#berri The Manning Index of South Australian History] {{webarchive |url=https://web.archive.org/web/20091007215636/http://www.slsa.sa.gov.au/manning/pn/b/b13.htm#berri |date=7 October 2009 }} Irrigation subsequently led to the establishment of vineyards and fruit orchards (such as citrus, apricots and peaches). A distillery was established in 1918 and rail arrived in 1928. In 1943, "Berri Juices" (Berri Ltd) were first produced. By the 1950s, Berri and other Riverland towns dominated the local economy with fruit and their products.
Transport from one side of the Murray to the other consisted of two parallel ferries. These were replaced by a bridge in 1997 which was opened by the Premier of South Australia, John Olsen. It is the largest of its type in South Australia.{{Clarify|date=July 2018}} It was estimated that 10,000 people attended the official opening on 27 July 1997.{{cite news |url=https://www.murraypioneer.com.au/berri-bustling-for-bridge-opening/ |title=Berri bustling for bridge opening |newspaper=The Murray Pioneer |date=21 July 2017 |access-date=30 July 2018}} The bridge cost $17 million after 30 years of lobbying. The bridge spans the Murray River between Berri and Loxton.
Berri was served by the Barmera railway line when it opened from Meribah in the 1920s. The railway was closed on 31 December 1990 and dismantled not long after.
Geography and climate
Berri has a warm temperate semi-arid climate (Köppen: BSk), with very warm, dry summers and mild, slightly wetter winters. Mean maxima vary from {{convert|31.1|C}} in January to {{convert|15.5|C}} in July, while mean minima fluctuate between {{convert|15.2|C}} in January and {{convert|5.3|C}} in July. Annual precipitation is rather low, averaging {{convert|261.3|mm|in|abbr=on}} between 68.1 precipitation days.{{cite web
|url = https://www.farmonlineweather.com.au/climate/station.jsp?lt=site&lc=24002 |title = Berri Irrigation Climate (1915-1965) |website = FarmOnline Weather |access-date = August 12, 2024}} The climate is evident by its location, north of Goyder's Line and surrounded by mallee scrub. Berri is also near Renmark, South Australia and Mildura. It is 31 metres above sea level.
{{Weather box
|location = Berri (34º16'48"S, 140º36'00"E, 66 m AMSL) (1915-1965 normals)
|metric first = Yes
|single line = Yes
|Jan high C = 31.1
|Feb high C = 30.2
|Mar high C = 28.1
|Apr high C = 22.6
|May high C = 18.9
|Jun high C = 15.8
|Jul high C = 15.5
|Aug high C = 17.2
|Sep high C = 20.8
|Oct high C = 23.5
|Nov high C = 26.9
|Dec high C = 29.7
|Jan low C = 15.2
|Feb low C = 15.0
|Mar low C = 13.4
|Apr low C = 10.1
|May low C = 7.9
|Jun low C = 6.2
|Jul low C = 5.3
|Aug low C = 5.9
|Sep low C = 7.7
|Oct low C = 10.0
|Nov low C = 12.1
|Dec low C = 14.2
|precipitation colour = green
|Jan precipitation mm = 16.5
|Feb precipitation mm = 22.1
|Mar precipitation mm = 11.4
|Apr precipitation mm = 16.5
|May precipitation mm = 27.6
|Jun precipitation mm = 26.0
|Jul precipitation mm = 24.3
|Aug precipitation mm = 27.1
|Sep precipitation mm = 26.8
|Oct precipitation mm = 24.3
|Nov precipitation mm = 19.9
|Dec precipitation mm = 19.2
|year precipitation mm = 261.3
|unit precipitation days = 0.2 mm
|Jan precipitation days = 2.8
|Feb precipitation days = 3.2
|Mar precipitation days = 2.6
|Apr precipitation days = 4.6
|May precipitation days = 7.1
|Jun precipitation days = 8.3
|Jul precipitation days = 9.2
|Aug precipitation days = 9.3
|Sep precipitation days = 6.7
|Oct precipitation days = 6.2
|Nov precipitation days = 4.5
|Dec precipitation days = 3.6
|Jan afthumidity = 25
|Feb afthumidity = 29
|Mar afthumidity = 31
|Apr afthumidity = 41
|May afthumidity = 51
|Jun afthumidity = 57
|Jul afthumidity = 55
|Aug afthumidity = 47
|Sep afthumidity = 37
|Oct afthumidity = 33
|Nov afthumidity = 28
|Dec afthumidity = 27
|source 1 = Bureau of Meteorology (1915-1965 normals){{cite web
|url = http://www.bom.gov.au/climate/averages/tables/cw_024002_All.shtml
|title = Berri Irrigation Climate Statistics (1915-1965)
|publisher = Bureau of Meteorology
|access-date = August 12, 2024}}
}}
Berri today
Berri is a multicultural town{{citation needed|date=August 2021}} with a café and a hotel on the riverside, a main street that overlooks the river and other shopping facilities elsewhere in the town, such as the Riverland Plaza.
The Berri Visitors Centre shares a spot on the waterfront at the bottom of Vaughan Terrace with River Jacks cafe. This is a popular gathering point for Berri professionals and tourists alike, not undue to its waterfront location, alfresco dining and proximity to the visitors centre itself.
The river itself offers fishing, waterskiing and boating. A boat launching marina is located opposite the Berri caravan park on the waterfront. The Martin's Bend wetland offers educational walk and water sports. Nearby is the "Katarapko" section of the Murray River National Park which is a popular area for camping, birdwatching, canoeing and bushwalking.
A past local tourist attraction was the Big Orange, it offered a three-storey high observation deck over the plains and river. The facility also offered souvenirs, refreshments and local produce. It opened in 1980 and closed to visitors in 2004. Development ideas for the future of the site included an orchid nursery, waterfall, butterfly house, tropical garden and bird cages.{{cite news|url=http://www.abc.net.au/riverland/stories/s1558915.htm |title=The Big Orange, sold, sold, sold |publisher=Australian Broadcasting Corporation |date=2006-01-31 |access-date=2006-04-11 |author=Glen O'Brien |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20060211040819/http://www.abc.net.au/riverland/stories/s1558915.htm |archive-date=11 February 2006 |url-status=dead }}
Horticulture, in particular oranges and grapes is still strong in the area. Berri is situated in an area of 3000 hectares of irrigated fruit orchards. Secondary industries include fruit packing, fruit juice, and wine.
Other events held in Berri are the annual Riverland Wine and Food Festival and Tour of Riverland Cycling.{{Citation needed|date=July 2018}}
Art and culture
The Country Arts SA River Lands Gallery in Berri has a new exhibition each month, with touring visual arts shows and Riverland based artists.
Berri also has public art work, like the Riverland Vietnam & Post WWII veteran's war memorial, the Aboriginal Dreamtime mural underneath the Berri Bridge, and Jimmy James Memorial on the Berri riverfront.
Jimmy James was a famous blacktracker, who was born around 1910 and belonged to the Pitjantjatjara people. He moved to the Riverland in the 1940s and took his name from his equally famous father-in-law. He was used extensively by the Police in South Australia, Victoria, New South Wales and Northern Territory, to track felons, escapees and missing people. A monument is sculptured out of two slabs of finely polished black granite and engraved with images of birds and animals – a part of Jimmy's spirit world.{{cite web |url=https://www.theage.com.au/lifestyle/berri-20040208-gdkqim.html |title=Berri |work=The Age |date=8 February 2004 |access-date=30 July 2018}}
Media
Berri was home to a community newspaper, the Berri Community News (3 October 1951 – 19 April 1962), which was later released as Berri News (9 May 1962 – 30 January 1963), subtitled with which is incorporated "the Berri community news". The publication, issued by Berri War Memorial Community Centre Incorporated, concentrated on news and events from Berri, Glossop, Monash, and Winkie.{{Cite web|url=http://guides.slsa.sa.gov.au/c.php?g=410317&p=2796325|title=LibGuides: SA Newspapers: A-B|last=Laube|first=Anthony|website=guides.slsa.sa.gov.au|language=en|access-date=2018-08-18}}
Channels from the following television networks are available in Berri:
- ABC Television (ABC)
- SBS Television (SBS)
- WIN Television (7, 9 and 10) as RTS-5A and LRS-34 relays the programming from Seven Network (Seven SA), Nine Network (Nine SA) and Network Ten (10 SA), Sky News Regional and Fox Sports News, with local commercials inserted
The town is also home to radio stations Magic 93.1 (93.1 FM) and 5RM (801 AM, 91.5 FM), which broadcast across the Riverland and Murray Mallee regions. Other commercial radio stations in the area include KIX Country (1557 AM), Radio TAB (95.5 FM) and Riverland Life FM (100.7 FM). The multitude of ABC stations include ABC News Radio (93.9 FM), ABC Radio National (1305 AM), ABC Riverland (1062 AM), ABC Classic (105.1 FM), and Triple J (101.9 FM).
Governance
Berri is in the Berri Barmera Council local government area. It is in the state electorate of Chaffey and the federal Division of Barker.
Born in Berri
- Russell Ebert, champion Australian rules footballer
- Rhys Stanley, AFL player with Geelong Football Club
- Luke Saville, professional tennis player
- Kate Morton, author
- Kaiden Brand, Australian Football League
- Alexander Hill, world champion rower
- Ron Battams, Australian rules football played with St Kilda Football Club
Notable residents
- Archie Roach, singer/songwriter
- Ruby Hunter, singer/songwriter
- Hayden Stoeckel, local swimmer
See also
References
{{reflist}}
External links
{{Commons category|Berri, South Australia}}
- [http://theage.com.au/news/South-Australia/Berri/2005/02/17/1108500204154.html/ The Age travelguide – Berri]
- [https://web.archive.org/web/20050330074745/http://dax.com.au/bbr/social.html#Berri/ Berri – Bookmark Biosphere]
{{Berri Barmera Council localities |state=collapsed}}
{{Towns of the Riverland}}
{{authority control}}
Category:Towns in South Australia