William Creek Hotel
When the Great Northern Railway pushed into South Australia's interior in 1887, William Creek rose to meet it—a modest settlement built around the water stop that would service the line's locomotives and the people they carried. The William Creek Hotel came with the town, an iron structure raised in that boom period when such buildings were freighted across the continent and assembled piece by piece. It remains one of the few iron hotels still trading in South Australia, a material choice that speaks to the frontier practicality of its moment: durable, transportable, proof against the extremes of the inland climate. Walking through its doors is to step into a room that has absorbed more than a century of use without affectation. The counter still serves cold beer to travellers and locals alike, and the veranda—that essential feature of the Australian pub—offers respite from the weight of the northern sun. There is nothing theatrical about the place. The patina on the walls and floorboards is genuine, the accumulation of decades rather than design. You will find counter meals here, and a bed upstairs if you need one, and space to camp if the night is warm and you have nowhere else to be. The heritage listing recognises what anyone who enters already knows: this is a building that has earned its place. The landscape around William Creek remains much as it always was—sparse, austere, indifferent to human ambition. In that context, the iron hotel takes on a different character: not a quaint relic, but a small monument to the determination required to open a room to strangers in such country, and to keep it open. It is still doing exactly what it was built to do.