Blyth, South Australia


Blyth is a small town in the Mid North of South Australia, located west of the renowned Clare Valley. The town is located on the lands of the Kaurna people, the Indigenous people who lived there before European settlement. In the 2021 Australian census, the town had a population of 442.

History

The Padnaindi group of the Kaurna people lived on the Blyth Plains for thousands of years before the British colonisation of South Australia.
Settler David Hughes happened upon the plains in 1842, which were named Jacob’s Plains after Hughes’ employer, John Jacob.
The Hundred of Blyth was proclaimed in 1860, carved out of land that was then a huge pastoral lease. It was named after Sir Arthur Blyth, who had three terms as Premier of South Australia. Fifteen years later, in 1875, the township was laid out on Section 198, with the railway line running through the centre of the

Railway

In 1876, Blyth was the terminus of the narrow gauge railway to Port Wakefield. This line ultimately was extended to Gladstone and converted to the broad gauge of in 1927 as the Gladstone railway line. The railway closed on 29 March 1989 and was removed shortly after.
Adjacent stations were Brinkworth to the north and Hoyleton and Halbury to the south.

Location and description

The farming community around Blyth spans the plains between the Clare Hills and the Barunga/Hummocks ranges.
Located approximately north of Adelaide, the district's climate and soils are well suited to wheat, barley, legumes, hay, sheep, cattle and pigs. Altitude is, and rainfall is approximately per annum.
As of 2008, Blyth had a general store, post office, pub, and gallery/studio, as well as sporting facilities for football, netball, bowls, cricket, tennis and golf. Several businesses based in Blyth service the region. The Blyth Cinema is housed in a renovated Masonic Hall.

Dean Nicolle Eucalypt Walk

In August 2025, the Dean Nicolle Eucalypt Walk was opened along a section of the old railway corridor. The walk is the brainchild of local resident, artist Ian Roberts, who named it after renowned eucalypt scientist Dean Nicolle. The trail features more than 2,000 Australian plant species, including 300 varieties of rare eucalypt, planted by volunteers between 2010 and 2019. As of September 2025, Roberts had painted around 770 of the 900 species of eucalypts.

Notable people