South Australia Military Records

Online South Australia Records

 * 1917-1931 - for GRG35/320 - Record of land held by soldier settlers, 1917-1931 - A-Z

Online Australia Collections

 * Australia's Redcoat Settlers
 * Commonwealth War Graves Commission
 * Office of Australian War Graves
 * All Australia Memorial at FindMyPast - index ($)
 * South Australia, Heroes Of The Great War, Chronicle Newspaper at FindMyPast - index ($)
 * Australian War Memorial digitized collections at awm.gov.au
 * Discovering Anzacs
 * Graves and memorials of Australians in the Boer War
 * Australians in the Boer War
 * British Garrison Deserters in South Australia at FindMyPast - index ($)
 * 1899-1900 South Australia Boxer Rebellion Contingent at FindMyPast - index ($)
 * 1914-1918 Australian ANZACS in the Great War 1914-1918 at aif.adfa.edu.au
 * 1914-1918 Australian Imperial Force Nominal Roll 1914-1918 at FindMyPast - index ($)
 * 1914-1918 Australian Imperial Force Embarkation Roll 1914-1918 at FindMyPast - index ($)
 * 1914-1920 Australia, WWI Service Records, 1914-1920 at Ancestry - index & images ($)
 * 1914-1918 Australian Imperial Force Embarkation Roll 1914-1918 at FindMyPast - index ($)
 * 1914-1918 Australian Imperial Force Nominal Roll 1914-1918 at FindMyPast - index ($)
 * 1917-1920 Australian Imperial Force, Nominal Roll Of The First Railway Section 1917-1920 at FindMyPast - index ($)
 * 1939-1945 Australian World War II Nominal Roll, 1939-1945 at MyHeritage - index ($)
 * Australian Military Forces WW2 Missing and Prisoners Of War at FindMyPast - index ($)
 * World War II Nominal Rolls website
 * Korean War Nominal Roll
 * Nominal Roll of Vietnam War Veterans

Soldier Settlement

 * Soldier settlement, also known as the Soldier Settlement Scheme or Soldiers Settlement Scheme, administered by the Soldier Settlement Commission, was the settlement of land throughout parts of Australia by returning discharged soldiers under schemes administered by the state governments after World War I and World War II.
 * By 1924, 23.2 million acres (93,900 km²) had been allotted 23,367 farms across Australia.
 * Other than supporting soldiers and sailors that were returning from those wars, the various governments also saw the opportunity of attracting both Australians and specific groups of allied service personnel to some of the otherwise little inhabited, remote areas of Australia.
 * The states took responsibility for land settlement and thus enacted separate soldier settlement schemes.
 * In addition to soldiers, nurses and female relatives of deceased soldiers were also able to apply for the scheme.
 * The procedure of supporting such soldiers was repeated after World War II with all Australian state governments.