THE AGE OF MOTORING ALONG THE COORONG ROAD
            taken from European Heritage of the Coorong, Penny Rudduck May 1982  
                          The Coorong road developed a reputation as a difficult track becoming  the challenge of early south Australian motorists.   
             In 1903, Ben Thomson, a founding member of the R.A.A., was the first  person to drive a motor vehicle between Adelaide to Melbourne, in a 6  h.p. De Dion Bouton. The 596 mile trip took three days, nineteen hours  and he arrived at Melbourne with eyes so sore he could hardly see and cut  and swollen lips. John Steel, who in 1904 rode a 23/  4 h.p. Clyde  motorcycle between Adelaide to Melbourne described the track as a  "continuous series of fearful sand patches ploughed up by cross  tracks in all directions through vehicles vainly endeavouring to find  a place where the ground was firmer" (Nicol, S. 1978 p.l7)  Nicol reports the tribulations of one early motorist who covered  twelve metres in four hours and took eighteen hours to cross a single  sand drift.   
            Perhaps one of the most well noted trips is that of Murray Aunger and  Bertie Barr Smith, who on 8th February, 1909, made a successful attempt  in their 60 h.p. Napier on the Adelaide to Melbourne record, setting a  new time of twenty two hours twenty four minutes. These motoring  pioneers made a stopover at Cantara Homestead.   
            Early road maps give the mileage distance from Meningie and Kingston  and the mile posts along the lengthy Coorong stretch became landmarks for  travellers. The road maps also warn of the hazardous sections of the  road and of the various gates along the route. One landmark was the cove  or Titree Archway where teatrees enclosed the motorist. This was located  near the southern tip of the southern Lagoon. At the second gate from  Salt Creek, the traveller was told to look for the pipeclay lakes. The  smooth pipeclay lakes, which gave respite to the early motorist,  witnessed speed trials in the 1930s. Triumph motorcycles and Alfa Romeo  racing cars were put through their paces on the southern-most lake of the  Coorong. 
            After the First World War, the motoring traffic along the Coorong  road increased and Mr. Jim Trevarrow, who lived at Policemans Point, had  an adjunct to his income, helping motorists tow their cars from the sand  drifts and potholes. Even after the Second World War, the Coorong Road  could be a gruelling crossing with sections of the road being unmade  tracks. It was the completion of the new road in 1957 that facilitates  the motorist's present ease of access along the Coorong.  
		      
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