[9] The Old Police Station and Court House stands at 61 High Street, its foundations laid in 1855 using stone quarried nearby.
Its original single-story segment, erected in 1857, housed the essential services of the Post Office, Telegraph Station, and the Postmaster's living quarters.
However, its legacy endured as it underwent meticulous restoration in 1986,[11] preserving its historical significance for future generations.
Businesses in Willunga include coffee shops, eateries, a post office, a general store, three hotels, and one fuel station.
The Coast to Vines Rail Trail skirts the golf course and connects cyclists and walkers to the town of McLaren Vale.
[12] Historic buildings open to the public include the Old Willunga Courthouse and Police Station complex, the Slate Museum, the Bassett Boys Schoolroom and Waverley Park Homestead.
The team responsible for the winning program includes the South Australian parliamentarian, Katrine Hildyard.
A generic medical broadsheet, it was essentially a four-page promotion for the American-based Dr Sheldon's medicines.
The one train per week freight service, introduced in 1963, was scheduled so that locomotives did not stable at Willunga overnight and consequently, tenders were called for demolition of the employee's barracks and other engine facilities.
[23] Notable people who are from or who have lived in Willunga include Fanny Elizabeth de Mole, author and illustrator of Wild flowers of South Australia (1861), the first book on wildflowers in the state.