in 1870,
Benjamin Herschel Babbage identified Strangways Springs (along with
Beltana and
the Peake) as a possible site for a telegraph station on the
Overland Telegraph Line. The original homestead was requisitioned and additional buildings and infrastructure were added, including a very large, stone tank which provided rain water for the telegraph batteries and the residents. The presence of a telegraph station meant that Strangways Spring became a more permanent settlement and the population grew considerably. Before the arrival of the railway in the late 1880s, camel trains delivered goods to Strangways Springs from
Marree, and there is archaeological evidence of a camel depot at the Springs. The Great Northern Railway (the
Ghan) extending from
Marree to Strangways Springs was completed late in 1886. The railway station was just to the south and east of the Springs. This brought an influx of hundreds of workers, and there was briefly a hotel, an eating house, and a police station. The first trains arrived in March 1887 with a weekly service from Adelaide. In October 1896, the Telegraph station was decommissioned, and its functions were moved nearby to
William Creek. The buildings were abandoned and fell into significant disrepair. In 1979, the railway line was relocated closer to the Stuart Highway. == Pangki Warrunha today ==