Nora Creina is a locality in the Australian state of
South Australia located on the state’s south-east coast overlooking the
Southern Ocean. It is about 99 kilometres (62 miles) to the north-west of the city of
Mount Gambier and about 290 kilometres (180 miles) south-east of the state capital of
Adelaide.[1][4][9][10]
Nora Creina was originally the name given to a
shack site. Its boundaries were established in 1997 and 1999 respectively for the portions within the
Wattle Range Council and the
District Council of Robe and include both the Nora Creina Shack Site and Little Dip Shack Area. The locality was given “the long established name” which is presumably derived from Nora Creina Bay which is located within the locality and which was named after Nora Creina Bacon, the daughter of
Major General Anthony Bacon and
Lady Charlotte Bacon and the wife of
Charles Burney Young who was ‘an early settler in the area.’[1][11][12]
Nora Creina occupies land along the coastline between the southern shore of
Lake Robe in the north and in part by Lake George Road in the south. It is bounded to the east in the north by
Lake Eliza and in south by the
Southern Ports Highway in the south. It includes the full extent of
Lake St Clair.[1][13]
Land use within the locality consists of
agriculture with a strip of land along the coastline being zoned for
conservation which includes the protected area known as the
Little Dip Conservation Park at its northern end and land on the east side of Lake St Clair which includes the protected area known as the
Lake St Clair Conservation Park. A settlement is located to the south-east of the coastline of Nora Creina Bay within the jurisdiction of the District Council of Robe.[14][15][1][16]
The
2016 Australian census which was conducted in August 2016 reported that Nora Creina shared a population of 36 people with the portion of the locality of
Bray located within the Wattle Range Council.[17][a]
^For the 2016 census, the ‘State Suburb of Nora Creina’ consisted of the locality of Nora Creina and the portion of the locality of
Bray located within the Wattle Range Council.[17][1]
^Boating Industry Association of South Australia (BIA); South Australia. Department for Environment and Heritage (2005), South Australia's waters an atlas & guide, Boating Industry Association of South Australia, p. 180,
ISBN978-1-86254-680-6