Wikipedia
Yardea Station is a pastoral lease in the Australian state of South Australia that operates as a sheep station.
It is situated approximately north east of Minnipa and west of Iron Knob in the Gawler Ranges. Yardea was the first property taken up in the Gawler Ranges and at one time an estimated 80-90,000 sheep were shorn there.
Established at some time prior to 1865 the station overseer, Mr. John Edmondson, was lost in the bush that year.
A police camp was established at Yardea in 1871 after being transferred from the nearby Paney Station homestead. James Moseley owned Yardea in 1904 when he acquired Paney Station and it became part of Yardea Station.
The property was owned by Main, Sells and Company in 1881 when they sold 750 head of cattle and 7,000 wethers to A. Wooldridge of Arcoona Station. Main and Sells placed Yardea up for auction along with Wilgena Station in 1882. Yardea occupied an area of and was stocked with 54,000 sheep.
In the early 1890s when the lease expired the run was deserted. By 1901 the lease was still abandoned like many others in the area but left under a caretaker, the property encompassed an area of . It remained unlet until it was re-established by Andrew Tennant and James Moseley in 1904. The property was sold to A.J. and P.A. McBride in 1916 after much improving for a sum of £72,000 when it was stocked with 40,000 sheep.
The McBrides cut the property into five blocks in 1926 and sold three blocks by auction to Harry Bouily and the other two to T. H. MacKay and son of Thurlga Station.
The land occupying the extent of the Yardea pastoral lease was gazetted as a locality on 26 April 2013 under the name 'Yardea'.