The first inhabitants of the greater Adelaide area, the Kaurna people, referred to Sturt River as
Warri Parri, or 'the windy place by the river'. They used it as a movement corridor between the Adelaide Hills and the sea. The river is also significant in Kaurna
Dreaming, especially the area known as
Warriparinga, where the river leaves its gorge to cross the Adelaide Plains. Other important Kaurna campsites were located south of the Sturt-Patawalonga
confluence, and at
Chambers Gully in
Coromandel Valley. In April 1831,
Captain Collet Barker a British Military Officer named the river after fellow officer and the explorer
Charles Sturt. In the early days of British settlement, the new colony appointed Colonel
William Light as
Surveyor General; one of his tasks was to find a suitable location for the colony's capital. Light's first rough sketch, made in 1836, placed the city on the Sturt River, where the suburb of Marion is now located. He later changed his plans to locate the city on the
River Torrens instead. The river is lined with many buildings of historic and cultural value, especially in the Coromandel Valley and
Craigburn Farm areas, which mostly date back to the 1850s. The first bridge to be built over the river is Horner's Bridge, constructed in 1866 in Coromandel Valley. In 1879, flood mitigation works were carried out to prevent damage to properties in Glenelg, and to the
Morphettville Racecourse. A trapezoidal concrete channel was constructed to line the river from Sturt Road to the Patawalonga Basin in 1965. A flood control
dam was also constructed in 1965, in the part of the Sturt Gorge Recreation Park which falls in
Flagstaff Hill. ==Present day==