Pulteney Grammar School is an independent, Anglican, co-educational day school. Founded in 1847 by members of the Anglican Church, it is the second oldest independent school in South Australia. It is located on South Terrace in Adelaide.
Pulteney Street School soon after its completion in 1848
Revd Edmund Miller, the school's first headmaster, 1847–1850
Herbert Hynes in the uniform of Pulteney Street School, about 1885
Pulteney Street School, pictured in 1919 before the premises were compulsorily acquired by the Australian Government
Pulteney Street is a main road which runs north-south through the middle of the eastern half of the Adelaide city centre, in Adelaide, South Australia. It runs north-south from North Terrace, through Hindmarsh and Hurtle Squares, to South Terrace, where it becomes Unley Road. It is the only one of the city centre's major north-south thoroughfares that does not continue northwards over North Terrace.
Pulteney Street
Foy and Gibson's department store (formerly the Grand Central Hotel), decorated for the centenary of Adelaide in 1936
The plaque commemorating the former Hanson Street
Ruthven Mansions