Inhabited by the
Kaurna people before settlement by Europeans, the area became known as '''Pile's Paddock''', after James Pile, who was born in the county of
Yorkshire, England, in 1800 and arrived in South Australia in 1849. Pile's Paddock was popular as a
picnic ground for a long time, before part of the land was reserved as a public recreation ground in perpetuity, as originally suggested by a Mr H.J. Holden, a member of the Tramways Trust, on condition that a
tramline be run to the ground. also referred to as Kensington Gardens, created around 1908–1909 A tramline for
electric trams, part of the network of
Adelaide trams and on the first line of the network to be electrified in 1909, was built as an extension to the
Kensington Line, which had previously terminated at the Parade/Gurrs Road intersection. The extension was built to serve the recently created reserve that the
MTT had developed as a tourist attraction for extra ticket sales.
Stonyfell Creek runs through Kensington Gardens reserve. The south-eastern corner and part of South Terrace were once part of a Kaurna burial ground. An annual
sweet-pea exhibition was held in the reserve between 1910 and 1920, and in 1920, trees were felled in order to create the
bowling green in the north-east corner. By 1923, part of the park had been laid out as a garden by a Mr A.H. Matthews of the Tramways Trust, and the name Kensington Gardens was used to refer to the suburb or the reserve. The artist and musician
Gustave Barnes lived in Kensington Gardens before his death in 1921. It was undertaken with extensive consultation with Kaurna
traditional owners, whose also approved the use of its new dual name, Wama (wah-ma), meaning plain, or flat country. ==Lawn bowls and tennis club==