Park 28
Video credits: Script: Sophie Yelland. Narrator: Marion Yelland
English name: Palmer Gardens
Kaurna name: Pangki Pangki (a Kaurna tracker and guide who assisted early European settlers)
Features: wide axial pedestrian pathway (from the 1860's) connecting Kermode St to the Christ Church laneway; a massive sugar gum tree, probably dating from the 1870's or 80's; and cast iron bollards dating from 1922.
Bounded by: Palmer Place
Guided Walks
A Park Ambassador takes a Guided Walk through this Park, and the adjacent Brougham Gardens, once per year. See our Guided Walk page for the schedule of Guided Walks.
But don’t wait for the next scheduled Guided Walk. Take your own, self-guided walk at any time, using our Trail Guide. Click or tap on the image below.
Park Ambassador Orso Osti leads a Guided Walk in this Park (and the adjacent Brougham Gardens) once per year. Check our Guided Walks page for the schedule.
Park 28 was named after South Australian Colonisation Commissioner Colonel George Palmer (1799-1883). The Mid-Murray town of Palmer, just east of the Adelaide Hills region, is also named after the Colonel.
There's a brass plaque on a Victorian-era park bench celebrates a breakthrough by a German-born Adelaide scientist, Albert Koebele, in 1888 with the first biological control of insects that started with a discovery in this Park
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