Cheltenham 3192 |
Cheltenham is a residential suburb 18 km. south-east of Melbourne adjoining the bayside suburbs of Beaumaris and Mentone. Its name came from the Cheltenham Inn, opened by Charles Whorral from Cheltenham, Gloustershire, England, in 1853 in the place known as Two Acre Village (1852).
The land-owner, Josiah Holloway, who subdivided the land into two-acre lots formed a northwards track, now Chesterville Road, from the Brighton Road (now Nepean Highway). The intersection of these two routes formed the nucleus of Cheltenham.
An Anglican school and a Wesleyan school were opened in 1854 and 1855 respectively, the Anglican one serving as a place of worship until 1876. The Anglican school was about 700 metres east of the present day township. Today it is the Cheltenham East primary school. The Anglican church built in 1876 is in the township where the main roads intersect and where in 1881 the railway line was opened. The Uniting and Presbyterian churches, the Old Cheltenham Cemetery and the Cheltenham, primary school are also in the township. A little south in Glebe Avenue there was the most reliable of several springs in the area.
By 1865 Cheltenham had two hotels, a mechanics' institute, a post office and coach or omnibus services to Brighton, Mornington and Melbourne. The lightly timbered and grassed countryside was much cultivated by farmers and market gardeners, and the district's estimated population was 250 persons.
Cheltenham's position on the railway line after 1881, as well as on Nepean Highway, brought a steady gain in population.
Cheltenham's location attracted charitable institutions in need of large sites for accommodating homeless or incapacitated persons: the Methodist Church moved its Livington House for children from Carlton and the Melbourne Home and Hospital for Men relocated from North Melbourne to Cheltenham in 1910. It later became the Kingston Centre and Geriatric Hospital. the Victoria and the Cheltenham Golf Clubs were established west of the township, adjoining the Sandringham and the Royal Melbourne Golf Clubs. Commercial activities also grew.
During the 1950s and 1960s the market gardens were filled with housing and some manufacturing activities. Primary schools at east and west Cheltenham were opened in 1956 and 1957, and a high school three years later. In 1968 Myer opened its Southland drive-in shopping centre, about 500 metres north of the township across the Nepean Highway, and by 1995 it had 63,000 square metres of gross lettable area. The Australian Tax Office occupies a large building on the Nepean Highway.
The last part to be developed was Cheltenham North. It had two primary schools (1957 and 1965), the second one continuing as Le Page primary school and the other being made a housing estate in the 1990s. The surviving primary school is near the unusual Friendship Square, a one-time village site of Josiah Holloway's, now consisting of four streets around an open space with a few neighbourhood shops. A retirement village and Anglican homes are nearby.
The median house prices in Cheltenham in 1987 and 1996 were about 6% above the median price for metropolitan Melbourne.
Cheltenham district's census populations were 1,755 (1911) and 4,067 (1933).
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