The name is derived from Francis William Stokes, a member of the South Australian Parliament.Its extent includes the entirety of Cockaleechie in the northwest, part of Ungarra in the northeast, part of Tumby Bay in the southeast and the northern end of Yallunda Flat in the southwest.[1][2][3][4] The traditional owners of the land within the hundred are the Nauo peoples.[6] In 1906 the hundred, along with its southern and eastern neighbours, including the township of Tumby Bay, seceded to form the new District Council of Tumby Bay.This South Australia geography article is a stub.