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City of Prospect Document Translation Service
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City of Prospect Suburbs
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Local Government Areas
- City of Adelaide
- City of Burnside
- City of Campbelltown
- City of Charles Sturt
- City of Holdfast Bay
- City of Marion
- City of Mitcham
- City of Norwood Payneham St Peters
- City of Onkaparinga
- City of Playford
- City of Port Adelaide Enfield
- City of Prospect
- City of Salisbury
- City of Tea Tree Gully
- City of Unley
- City of West Torrens
- Corporation of the Town of Walkerville
Language Translation Services for City of Prospect
Adelaide Translation work with clients from various industries requiring different types of documents translated.
We work hard to maintain high quality and reliability in all translation projects delivered. We also have resources specific to each industry, and keep record of the consistency and strength of our translators in delivering translations clients are satisfied in.
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NAATI Translators for City of Prospect
Certified translation services prepared by NAATI accredited translators, commonly requested:
- NAATI driver license translation
- NAATI bank statement translation
- NAATI birth certificate translation
- NAATI marriage certificate translation
- NAATI name-change certificate translation
- NAATI degree translation
- NAATI diploma translation
- NAATI school transcript translation
- NAATI police check translation
- NAATI personal letters and cards
- NAATI utility bill translations
Adelaide Translation provides fast and affordable certified translation services for all types of personal documents by NAATI accredited translators.
City of Prospect
(2016)
City of Prospect people: 20,527
Male: 50.2%
Female: 49.8%
Median age: 37
City of Prospect families: 5,200
Average children per family for families with children: 1.8
for all families: 0.7
City of Prospect private dwellings: 8,919
Average people per household: 2.5
Median weekly household income: $1,576
Median monthly mortgage repayments: $1,863
Median weekly rent: $295
Average motor vehicles per dwelling: 1.7
The City of Prospect
Prior to European settlement in 1838, the Prospect area was a tiny part of the traditional lands of the Kaurna people, who lived in small bands across the Adelaide Plains.
To the new settlers, the locality presented a "beautiful prospect", being described as "well timbered, with waving gum and shady trees". Thus Prospect Village was named by Colonel William Light shortly after the colonisation of South Australia in 1838. George Fife Angas was given the right to make first choice of "country section", to which he and other early investors in South Australia were entitled by their purchase of land orders prior to settlement (see Lands administrative divisions of South Australia § Land division history). Under Light's plan for the city and adjoining rural areas, the present-day inner metropolitan area was laid out as hundreds which were further divided into sections, of about 80 acres (32 ha) in size. Prospect was to fall within the Hundred of Yatala when it was proclaimed in 1846, but prior to this the section were simply referred to as "country section" and the number.
At a meeting in March 1838, Angas made his choice, selecting the triangular section 474, now the Collinswood but earlier split between Collinswood and the historic suburb of Rosebery. Later in 1838 further selections were made and six sections (four in the southernmost parts of present-day City of Prospect) were purchased by the Mechanics Land Company, including section 349 in which the village of Prospect arose. The company divided the 80-acre sections into 8-acre (3.2 ha) blocks, and sold them for £10 a block.
Section 348 immediately south of Prospect Village was known as Little Adelaide.
As early as November 1838, plots of land "fronting the new road to the harbour" had been created from subdivisions in the new village of Prospect and were being publicly advertised for sale. These subdivided sections came to be known as Prospect Village. Early attempts to garden in the vicinity of Prospect failed as the soil is naturally dry, the nearest source of water then being the River Torrens. For many years blocks of land in the area remained unfenced and, in springtime, livestock from nearby areas were not prevented from feeding on the thick grass growing on the hills of Prospect.
Established in 1872, the City of Prospect is one of the oldest local government bodies in South Australia.