Camberwell 3124 |
Camberwell is a residential suburb 9 km east of Melbourne, between Hawthorn and Burwood.
Until the 1850s the area was occupied for grazing, being described as "light sandy country, timbered with gum and oak,"Roads were rudimentary, but at one point three roads intersected, and in 1853 an inn was erected at one of the corners. Its owner recollected that several roads converged at Camberwell Green, London, and he called it the Camberwell Inn The Intersection, known as the Burke Road or Camberwell Junction. is on the western boundary of Camberwell, all the district adopted the name of the inn.
Immigrants and former gold diggers took up farms in the Camberwell area, producing hay, fruit and vegetables. In the 1860s there were two small settlements, one around tile inn and the Anglican church and another to the east at Hartwell about 2 kin. away. The district's first school (1858) and post office (1862) were at Hartwell, but the school closed when one was opened in 1867 a few hundred metres from the junction.
By the 1870s Camberwell's neighbour, Hawthorn, had a substantial population, but Camberwell remained an area of small farms with a few sites for fine residences at its more elevated northern end. It was at that end in 1882 where the railway was extended from Hawthorn to Camberwell I A year later the line was extended to Lilydale. In 1891 a north-south railway line from Oakleigh to Fairfield was opened, crossing the earlier one at East Camberwell.
The railway lines attracted land subdivision in a landscape that was picturesque and free of industry. The Burke Road shopping centre between the junction and the railway station began in the 1880s, Residential land was generously proportioned, relatively cheap and within convenient commuting distance of Melbourne. Camberwell became suburbanised.
As well as being suburban Camberwell was Sabbatarian. All major denominations had large followings. The local Council turned its face against noxious industry, building on small allotments and disfiguring advertising billboards, The community had a strong temperane movement which in 1920 succeeded in carrying a poll of residents for the closure of hotels and wine saloons The Camberwell lnn was replaced by a milk bar. At about that time more subdivisions were under way along the routes of recent tram lines along Riversdale and Burke Road (1916).
The main street shopping centre along Burke Road became a complete strip from the junction to the railway and has continued to dominate the district's retailing. Land behind the Burke road strip was acquired for parking, a supermarket and discount department Store in the 1960s In the 1990s similar development occurred behind Burke Road on the other side, in Hawthorn.
The area's housing is in good condition. Large blocks which are redeveloped may have a modern (usually two-storey) house duaI occupancy, or units if near a public transport route. The older (western) part of Camberwell lies a few neighbourhood reserves and the football and cricket oval, whereas the later (Hartwell and Willison) areas have more reserves, a number of which adjoin water courses The Camberwell High School (1941) is nearby.
Camberwell was also a municipality of 36 square km, bordered by Burke and Warrigal Roads on the east and west. The Yarra River on the north and Gardiners Creek on the south. Originally Boroondara shire (severed from the Boroondara District Road Board), on 17 November, 1871. it became Camberwell and Boroondara shire (1902), then a borough Camberwell town and finally a city on 20 April, 1914. The municipality's earliest areas of urban settlement were along its public transport tonics, particularly the Camberwell to Box Hill railway line. In the north of the municipality were Balwyn, Balwyn North, Deepdene and Greythorn, Burwood. Canterbury, Hartwell, and Surrey Hills occupied the older middle area, and in the south were Ashburton and Glen Iris.
By the 1980s and 1990s Camberwell had a higher than average aged population, with redevelopment of older housing blocks as aged residents departed The median housing price in the Camberwell municipality were above the metropolitan average - 52% higher for houses and 30% higher for flats in 1991. In Camberwell itself the median house price in 1987 was double the metropolitan median, and in 1996 it was 217% of the metropolitan median. Open space was 8.7% of the area of the municipality. In 1990 there were 30 government and 36 non-government school campuses in Camberwell, and the proportion of non-government school students was 19% higher than the metropolitan average.
In 1992 the Council entered in to a contract for redevelopment of land at the rear of the Burke Road shops. Strong resident reaction led to a re-elected Council repudiating the contract and having damages awarded against it. On 22 June, 1993. the Council was suspended and replaced with a Government appointee. During his term of office the CounciI was amalgamated with Hawthorn, and Kew cities. which avoided the State Government's preferred option of splitting Camberwell and amalgamating the parts with other Councils. The Kew Council, Boroondara, came into effect on 22 June, 1994, and occupies an area approximating the original Road Board District.
Camberwell municipality's census populations were 12551 (1911), 50,052 (1934), 76,125 (1947), 99,353 (1961) and 83,799 (1991).
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