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Snowtown, SA

Quiet wheatbelt town made infamous by the Snowtown murders.

Under different circumstances, Snowtown would probably have slipped off the "this town should be included" list. It is one of those Australian wheatbelt towns, in an area which is ideal for the agricultural combination of sheep grazing and wheat growing, where its quality of being a quiet, rural settlement means that the traveller can easily pass through, pause briefly to admire the old Institute building and the unusually named St Canice's Catholic church, and continue north towards Crystal Brook and Port Pirie. Horrifically, in 1999, Snowtown wrote itself into the history books when it became the site where the bodies were found that had been the result of the largest serial killing in Australian history. By the time all of the bodies had been found - eight in the town's disused bank building - a total of eleven people had been murdered.

Location

Snowtown is located 147 km north of Adelaide and 103 metres above sea level on Highway One.

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Origin of Name

No one is sure which member of the Snow family was being honoured when, in 1878, South Australian Governor William Jervois named the town after either Thomas Snow, who at the time was Jervois' aide de camp or Sebastian Snow who was the governor's private secretary. The Snows were reputedly his cousins.

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Things to See and Do

History in the Main Street
The town's main street, Fourth Street, is notable for a number of attractive public buildings - notably the Snowtown Memorial Hall (1919) which is attached to the Old Institute (1889). Over the road is the town's tribute to the pioneers. The street is a fine example of a veranda-ed rural street in a wheatbelt town with many of the single storey buildings offering shady protection from the fierce South Australian summer sun.

The Snowtown Murders
In 1999 the remains of eight people were discovered in six barrels of acid inside a disused bank in the main street. The murderers were John Bunting, Robert Wagner and James Vlassakis and the people had been killed between August 1992 and May 1999. Only one of the victims was killed in Snowtown. The murders created a complex response from the local community. The serial killer was not a local and therefore the murders did not reflect on the town. Some locals wanted to change the name to Rosetown but others, seeing an opportunity, produced barrels with legs sticking out and made stickers with Snowtown is a "barrel of fun". The trial of the killers lasted for twelve months - the longest in South Australian history - and Bunting, who was seen as the leader of the killers, was given eleven life sentences. He is never to be released.

Snowtown - The Movie
The movie was made in 2011, won a heap of awards (six awards at the 2012 Australian Film Institute awards and the director won two awards at Cannes) and received a number of favourable reviews. Eleven murders is not really much of a story arc so the movie, which is compelling without ever aspiring to greatness, focuses on the way John Bunting ingratiated himself into the family of James Vlassakis, dallianced with Vlassakis’s very damaged mother, and “groomed” young James until he was capable of murder. It’s not really all that ghoulish, apart from one murder where the poor sod is tortured and killed in a bath. It is true. They did torture their victims. Apparently Bunting was waging a vendetta against “sickos” without, obviously, having a look at himself. So the people he tended to kill were either “poofters”, "pedophiles" or “druggies” … who, according to Bunting, “deserved it”. The film actually uses the exterior of the bank where they hid the bodies. It is opposite the local hotel, is still there, and strangely, was sold for $180,000 to a couple who now live in it as a home.

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Other Attractions in the Area

Bumbunga Lake
Lying to the south of Snowtown near the village of Locheil is Bumbunga Lake, a fine example of a Pink Lake coloured by the strange pink lichen. On the Locheil-Ninnes Road is an excellent lookout over this impressive salt lake.

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History

* Prior to the arrival of Europeans the area around Snowtown had been occupied by members of the Kaurna Aboriginal language group.

* The first pioneers arrived between 1867 and 1869.

* It was around 1868 that the original Snowtown Hotel was built.

* It wasn't until 1869 that the government took much interest in the area. At that time they planned to establish towns throughout the district and to divide the land into smaller holdings.

* Snowtown was formally proclaimed by Governor William Jervois in 1878.

* A railway station was established on the Brinkworth-Wallaroo line in 1879.

* In 1889 the Snowtown Institute was built.

* 1919 saw the completion of the town's Memorial Hall.

* The town achieved infamy in 1999 when it became the site where the bodies of the largest serial killing in Australia were found - eight bodies were found in the town's disused bank building. After more bodies had been found in suburban Adelaide the total came to eleven.

* In 2011 the movie, Snowtown, about the murders was released.

* In 2013, around the time when the town was celebrating its 135th birthday, Stage 2 of the Snowtown wind farm was opened. It was capable of supplying 10% of all South Australia's electricity needs.

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Visitor Information

Snowtown has no visitor information centre. The closest is Clare Valley Visitor Information Centre, cnr Main North Road and Spring Gully Road, tel: 1800 242 131 or (08) 8892 2154.

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Useful Websites

There is a small "official" site at http://www.snowtown-sa.org. It has useful information on the town.

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Got something to add?

Have we missed something or got a top tip for this town? Have your say below.

15 suggestions
  • In your mentioning of the old interesting buildings in Snowtown, you have not included the particularly nice building at Number 3, Fourth Street which was originally the English, Scottish & Australian Bank Ltd, from 1882. The building was repainted in heritage colours during 2013 & sign written in the original bank name, in 2015. The local residents have praised the owner’s efforts to have the building looking so lovely.

    Barbara Muirhead
  • Much needed tourist attractions, like maps,directions to all areas, more history signs and information, would be very helpful.

    l. Rolfe
    • Dear Anthea, Moves are afoot (suspended only briefly due to the 2020 pandemic) to create an archive of local historical photos and memorabilia from Snowtown and surrounds. If you are able to contact me regarding your photographs and your father’s role, it would be most appreciated. My email address is SnowtownHAC@outlook.com. Regards.

      Snowtown Barunga
  • Hi my name is Anthea Carter. I have some photos of the salt lakes at Snowtown, when they used to harvest the salt. My Dad took the photos when he came out to Australia in the early 1950’s. I have a copy of the photos and was wondering if you would like them or you might know of a historical centre that might like them. I would appreciate your help in this matter.

    Anthea Carter
  • Brunswick (Victoria) is a beautiful place too. Many of the high profile crime’s committed in the area over the years did not originate there. Angelo Goussis, the person who killed Lewis Moran in the Brunswick Club, was from Geelong, and Carl Williams lived on the other side of town. It is a progressive area, now that Pentridge prison has been decommissioned, and redeveloped. Snowtown is the perfect setting for a low risk offender, youth training facility, given its high profile. This would help the locals reconnect with the next generation, and would be a boost for the local economy, and business’s enroute from Adelaide, and beyond, when their loved one’s come to visit. An offender rehabilitation service, would attract Government funding, and encourage misspent youth to resettle in the town, creating jobs.

    Anthony Guy
  • Snowtown was NOT the site of serial killing.
    Get your facts straight.
    This description blackens Snowtown, which was once Black Point – aboriginal occupation site, with a freshwater lagoon.

    Jon
  • The web site of the school used to have a photograph of the school building from the 1950s, but it is no longer there. I began my schooling there in 1957, and am now about to make a presentation just before retirement. I would like to include a photograph of the old school building. My e-mail requests so far have not received any replies, so you are my last chance. Please let me know if you can help.

    David E. Lewis
    Professor of Chemistry and Biochemistry, University of Wosconsin-Eau Claire, U.S.A.

    David E. Lewis
  • Just to compliment the author of the Snowtown report for his entertaining and humorous details, especially in regard to a not-so-pleasant event in the towns history.

    Anne
  • What is the liveability score for Snowtown??

    Eliza
  • It is mentioned that the “first pioneers arrived between 1867 and 1869”. This obviously happened with catastrophic consequences for the Kaurna people who only get scant mention in the first dot point. There should be some recognition of what happened to the original inhabitants of the area when the ‘pioneers’ came and stole their lands?

    Margaret Piper
  • Snowtown was ‘Black Point’ until the township was surveyed. See snowtownmuseum.org

    Jon Ruwolt