The Adelaide Park Lands (commonly Adelaide Parklands) are the parklands that surround the City of Adelaide, the capital of South Australia.
Since 1852, the parklands have been managed and maintained by the City Council. In the past, public use of the parklands was controlled by a ranger who patrolled the parks, regulating sporting and recreational activities in the parks and supervising the depasturing of stock grazing there.
The parklands saw very little development during the nineteenth century. Extensive felling of trees, quarrying and dumping of rubbish took place, which combined to give the parklands an unsightly appearance. In the late 1800s J.E. Brown, the government's Conservator of Forests, was commissioned by the City Council to prepare a blueprint for the beautification of the parklands. Brown presented his report in 1880, but was not acted upon until the turn of the century when A.W. Pelzer became the City Gardener. Major progress was made in planting and landscaping the parklands during his tenure (1899-1932) and further improvements such as creation of new gardens and boating lakes were carried under the authority of W.C.D. Veale, the Town Clerk (1947-1965).
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"Adelaide Park Lands".
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