Lost Hotels: The Junction Hotel - Roseworthy.
In 1867, plans were submitted to the Bench of Magistrates
for licensing of a proposed hotel at Roseworthy. George Powning had his submission
rejected as the board thought the dining room and bedrooms were too small for a
hotel catering to the region at the time, especially one across from a train
station.[1]
Licensing for the hotel took almost a year to be approved. The first
applications were presented in January 1867, but as the construction of the
hotel needed to be completed the board did not think it appropriate to be open to
service. It took a memorial signed by numerous people of the Roseworthy
community to be presented to the licensing bench for approval to open be
granted on 15 December 1868. The first publican was William Steed who ran the
hotel from 1868 to 1902.[2]
As an interesting side note, the Bunyip newspaper printed in
1871 that the Roseworthy school was built through the efforts of Mr Steed,
publican of the Junction Hotel, Roseworthy.[3]
H.T. Kurtz was the publican after Steed, having the hotel from
1903 to 1905. From 1906 to 1909, J. McFayden was the publican. E.A. Wickens was
publican between 1910 and 1911, followed by Florence Jennings (1912), Chas.
Nottle (1913) and then H.A. Payne 1914- 1916. Between 1917 and 1923 the publican
was C. J. M. Lucas.[4]
Mrs J Roberts was then publican between
1924 and 1926, followed by Mrs W. Roberts (1927) and William Roberts between
1928 and 1933. From 1936 until 1955, the publicans were Ethel Joyce and Colin
Campbell Leitch. In December 1954 the Publican licensing board granted a
transfer of the license to Colin Campbell Leitch from the Junction
Hotel, Roseworthy to Leitch’s Hotel.[5]
The Junction Hotel license was transferred to Leitch’s
Hotel, which was situated on Main North Road. The Hotel cost £20, 000 and
was built at the junctions of roads that led to the Riverland, Gawler and
Tanunda (pre-existing highways.) The hotel had 12 rooms with 6 bedrooms with
ensuites and was designed by architects Walkley and Welbourn. It was built by the construction company J. Jenkins and Sons.[6]
The Hotel considered local farmers and the rising wine industry, with the News
reporting that the hotel had a specialised round bar and a wine-tasting
terrace. Steven Clark MP officially opened the new hotel on 18 March 1954.[7]
A Bunyip newspaper report stated that the ‘lounge accommodates
40 people and dining room 32…Outside the beer garden is set on a lawn, and the
playground, with shell grit pit, includes a children’s slide and kanga-plane.”[8]
The former Junction Hotel was demolished in the 1960s.
Researched and written by Allen Tiller © 2023
Roseworthy
Junction Hotel [B 45255], State Library of South Australia,
(2023), https://collections.slsa.sa.gov.au/resource/B+45255
[1]
'BENCH OF MAGISTRATES.', South Australian Register, (24 September
1867), p. 3.
[2]
J.L. Hoad, Hotels and Publicans in South Australia, (1986), p. 341.
[3]
'ROSEWORTHY SCHOOL DEMONSTRATION.', Bunyip, (2 December 1871), p. 3.
[4] J.L.
Hoad, Hotels and Publicans in South Australia, (1986), p. 341.
[5]
'2 hotels granted licences', News, (7 December 1954), p. 33.
[6]
'START ON HOTEL IN FORTNIGHT', News, (23 October 1953), p. 10.
[7]
'Bar outstanding', News, (15 December 1954), p. 37.
[8]
'NEW HOTEL HAS GALA OPENING.', Bunyip, (24 December 1954), p. 5.
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