, the division's namesake The Division was one of the seven established when the multi-member
Division of South Australia was redistributed into single-member seats on 2 October 1903. The Division comprised the
South Australian House of Assembly District of Port Adelaide, with the addition of Goodwood from the
District of Torrens. There were 13 Polling Places for the
1903 Australian federal election located within the Division — Port Adelaide, Lefevre's Peninsula, Alberton, Rosewater, Woodville, York, Hindmarsh, Thebarton, Hilton, Henley Beach, Plympton, Goodwood and Grand Junction. The Division together with the seats of
Adelaide and
Boothby covered the metropolitan area of Adelaide until 1949. The south-east state border rural seat of
Barker was then considered a "hybrid urban-rural" seat, stretching all the way from the southern tip of South Australia at least as far as Glenelg and the Holdfast Bay area, and at times even stretched as far as the western metropolitan suburbs of
Keswick and
Henley Beach. Redistributions from the late 1940s onward have moved Hindmarsh clear of its initial boundaries over time to include increasingly wealthy seaside suburbs in and around
Glenelg and the
Holdfast Bay area to the south. Though initially based on the greater
Port Adelaide area to the north of the present boundary this locality was now represented by the
Division of Port Adelaide which was created in 1949 following an increase in the
Australian House of Representatives from 74 to 121 seats. After 1949 some of the area had variously been covered by
Boothby,
Kingston and now-abolished
Hawker which was created in 1969. The present Hindmarsh has changed little geographically since neighbouring Division of Hawker was abolished in 1993, though the north-western coastal strip was added from 2004. Since 1984, federal electoral division boundaries in Australia have been determined at redistributions by a redistribution committee appointed by the
Australian Electoral Commission. Redistributions occur for the boundaries of divisions in a particular state, and they occur every seven years, or sooner if a state's representation entitlement changes or when divisions of a state are malapportioned. A redistribution ahead of the 1984 election made Hindmarsh far less safe for Labor. From then on, successive redistributions gradually gave it a voting pattern similar to mortgage belt seats, which tend to be fairly marginal. Though now a marginal seat, for nearly a century it had been one of the safest
Labor seats in the country, and was in Labor hands for all but three years from the
1903 election to the
1993 election. As a measure of the strength of Labor support at the time, it was the only seat in the state won by Labor in the massive
United Australia Party landslide of
1931, with Labor incumbent
Norman Makin winning enough primary votes to retain the seat outright. One of the few times that Labor's hold on the seat was seriously threatened in this time came in
1966, when the Labor margin was pared down to 1.7 percent after a 20% swing. Even then, sitting member
Clyde Cameron still won enough primary votes to retain the seat outright. Hindmarsh had long been dominated by working-class families and aged pensioners. Progressive boundary redistributions over many decades transformed Hindmarsh from a safe
Labor seat in to a marginal seat often won by the government of the day. ==Prominent members==