Brownhi ll C ree hu e Brownhi ll C ree hu e `Proud of our history and
Transcription
Brownhi ll C ree hu e Brownhi ll C ree hu e `Proud of our history and
Brownhill Creek Association Inc. Brownhill Creek has been used and treated in many different ways over the past 150 years, and concerns for its protection led to the formation of the Brownhill Creek Association. The Association is a non-profit incorporated body committed to enhancing and preserving the natural and built heritage of the Brownhill Creek catchment area. Brownhi walk br ll Cre och e ur k e The aims and activities of the Association are: City of Mitcham 131 Belair Road Torrens Park SA 5062 Phone : (08) 8372 8888 Facsimile (08) 8372 8101 www.mitchamcouncil.sa.gov.au Local History Service City of Mitcham This route, which begins at Belair and ends at Goodwood, is intended as a walking tour, but it can also be used by persons travelling by car, wheelchair or bicycle. The numbers on the maps refer to features described in the text. Enter and leave the route wherever you please. You can do single suburb sections at different times, or start and finish at any of four railway stations. Train stations can be used by walkers, cyclists and those using wheel chairs to access different points from Adelaide, or to return to their cars. Side trips are shown highlighted in the shaded boxes. ‘Proud of our history and Other walking tour brochures published by The City of Mitcham are available free from the Council Civic Centre at 131 Belair Road, Torrens Park. committed to our future’ © Text Marcus Beresford 2003 City of Mitcham Jan 2004 brownhill creek cover.indd 1 It is hard to visualise what an important feature the Brownhill Creek once was on the south-eastern Adelaide Plains. The route described in this brochure traces the watercourse through now disparate aspects and communities in the region, suggesting a unifying thread. Mighty River Red Gums mark its course, and along the way it passes through numerous leafy reserves, parks and heritage areas. In the adjacent streets many examples of simple colonial cottages and shops, as well as stately homes built by ‘the gentry’ can be found. • To promote the conservation and enhancement of Brownhill Creek as a watercourse and scenic feature of the environment. • To promote conservation and enhancement of the natural ecology, human historic and heritage attributes, and good management of land and activities in the catchment. • To promote circulation of information, execution of works, liaison with individuals and groups with a common purpose, and other activities. Enquiries to Marcus Beresford, Co-ordinator, P.O. Box 113, Mitcham Shopping Centre, Torrens Park, S.A. 5062. This brochure is proudly provided by the The Brownhill creek Walk Whistler’s Way A recreational route exploring the natural environment and the built heritage along a suburban waterway Toilets are available at: • Mitcham Reserve, Old Belair Road, Mitcham Village. • Mitcham Shopping Centre, Belair Road, Torrens Park. • Soldiers Memorial Gardens, corner of Belair Road and Angas Road, Hawthorn. • Heywood Park, near Addiscombe Place, Unley Park. • Rear of former Orphanage, Goodwood Road, Millswood. Cover photo- Brownhill Creek c1910. photo C.A. Petts. Now the site of the Brownhill Creek Caravan Park 24/10/2008 11:06:04 AM Park St 38 FINISH Goodwood Railway Station Main route Side trips Brownhill Creek Reserves/Parks Railway and Stations Victoria Northgate 34 32 UNLEY PARK Cross Road HAWTHORN 30 WESTBOURNE PARK 29 28 LOWER MITCHAM KINGSWOOD NETHERBY 27 26 Grange Rd Pr 22 24 Features described in the text 1 31 23 25 in ce MITCHAM VILLAGE s Rd 21 Fullarton Rd 36 35 33 18 19 17 13 TORRENS 1 5 PARK 2 0 Blythewood Rd SPRINGFIELD 12 14 BROWN HILL 11 16 CLAPHAM 10 so Elli ns elair Old B R d Goodwood Rd Belair Railway Station HYDE PARK 37 MILLSWOOD START Further reading Gu ll y Mitchell St UNLEY Unley Rd 40 Brownhill Creek Walking Tour Belair Rd 39 King William Rd 42 ne mli a r T ity to C FINISH 41 GOODWOOD d Springbank Rd 7 ill Creek Rd Brownh 5 3 BELAIR air Rd Bel idg eR d 8 START 1 Sheoak 2 Rd Pony B R air l e 6 4 9 Further information on the history of the Brownhill Creek area is available from the Mitcham Heritage Research Centre, City of Mitcham R NATIONAL PARK brownhill creek cover.indd 2 24/10/2008 11:06:05 AM Historical Background Brownhill Creek Walk Until 1836 the Adelaide Plains were territorial land of the Kaurna Aborigines. One of the favourite camping and gathering grounds was along a creek near the base of a gentlyrounded brown hill. To these people this area was Wirraparinga ‘scrub-and-creek place’. To the early European settlers it became known as ‘Brownhill Creek’ which provided rich alluvial soils and a good water supply for intensive cultivation. In 1837 the South Australian Company established its ‘No.1 Sheep Station’ along the Brownhill Creek Valley. The series of sheep stations were necessary to fatten animals overlanded from the eastern colonies before they were butchered for the settlers’ meals. In 1840 the Company established the Mitcham Village, named after the English home of William Giles, the London manager of the South Australian Company. Brownhill Creek The South Australian Company discontinued its interest in stock in the early 1840s. In the Adelaide Independent newspaper on 28 Oct 1841 it was reported that “a specimen of freestone considered to be of excellent quality was obtained by a quarry recently opened near Brownhill Creek.” This is one of the earliest references in the area to quarrying which became a major industry. Many old quarries will be seen during this walk. Brownhill Creek dec.indd 1 W A L K A month after the newspaper report in November 1841, Arthur Hardy, who had purchased a Land Order in England in 1838, wrote to the Surveyor General to take up his land. He was particularly interested in the creek running from the south side of Brownhill, however he was informed “that the reservation 1 24/10/2008 11:14:04 AM Historical Background of the Brown Hill Creek for Public purposes not having been abandoned … but is still being the intention of the government to appropriate it to the purposes for which it has been set apart.” The ‘public purposes’ may have been the potential building stone, water or timber, all necessary commodities for encouraging settlement in the colony at that time. Systematic surveying of the surrounding hills was carried out in the late 1840s and much of the land was quickly taken up by John Grainger. Although he returned to England in 1855, Grainger retained it until he died in 1872. When the District Council of Mitcham was proclaimed in May 1853 it was the first local governing body to be formed outside of the City of Adelaide. The original area was considerably larger than the present City of Mitcham. In 1871 the land north of Cross Road to the Parklands became the Corporate Town of Unley. Brownhill Creek W A L K Quality water was an essential commodity for the settlers in Adelaide. Calculations and measurements were made in the early 1850s and although the residents of Mitcham Village depended on it, over twenty years passed before a pipeline carried it to local households and on to Adelaide. Water from Brownhill Creek enabled orchards, market gardens, dairies and breweries to be established. It was in 1858 that present day Brownhill Creek Reserve appeared on maps as a Reserve by which time quarrying near Brownhill Creek was set to become a major industry for the district, providing building material, road metal and railway ballast over the next 100 years. 2 Brownhill Creek dec.indd 2 24/10/2008 11:14:04 AM Historical Background This walk along Brownhill Creek, Whistler’s Way is named after Thomas Whistler (18051896) a land speculator and ‘gentleman farmer’ who arrived in South Australia on the ‘Fairlie’ in 1840. He acquired Sections 236, 237 and 238 (a total of some 400 acres or 162ha) which now form the suburbs of Unley Park, Hyde Park and the southern part of Unley. Whistler built his thatched-roof cottage on the banks of Brownhill Creek near where it passes through present-day Heywood Park, and he frequently followed the watercourse up to its source in the hills to shoot birds. For over a year, following an accident, he resided in Mitcham Village with his cousin Mrs Elizabeth Bayley. They returned to England in 1856. W A L K Brownhill Creek dec.indd 3 Brownhill Creek During Thomas Whistler’s residence in the district between 1840 and 1856 he would have seen great changes along Brownhill Creek as settlers cleared their land for farming or built their cottages in the villages of Mitcham and Unley. He saw his cousin’s daughter Elizabeth Caroline Bayley marry Thomas Moulden, brewer of ‘Deepdell’ Brownhill Creek in 1850 and later have three children and also experience insolvency. He would also have seen the wealth from the Burra Copper mines, the discovery of silver and lead at Glen Osmond, speculation in Wheal Grainger mine, Brownhill Creek, and people leaving for the Victorian gold fields. The District Council of Mitcham was proclaimed, main roads were cleared of large trees and Princes Road was opened so that people could reach Mitcham without having to cross Brownhill Creek. During this era, over 127 children were born and 35 people died with their address as Brownhill Creek as it flowed through present day suburbs of Lower Mitcham and Hawthorn and then onwards to the sea. 3 24/10/2008 11:14:04 AM BELAIR Belair Railway Station (1879-83) is a good starting point for walkers and cyclists. Motorists and wheelchair users, after exploring Belair, can rejoin the tour at the end of Brownhill Creek Road. Sheoak Road ridge is geographically significant as the water from the south side drains into Sturt Creek while the north side drains into Brownhill Creek. From 1855 settlement at Belair was promoted by Gustav Ludewigs when he leased small portions of his property to others. W A L K The railway opening in 1883 and much later, a reticulated water supply to Belair in 1927, encouraged settlement in the hills. Belair Railway Station, 1910s photo CA Petts Brownhill Creek 1 The Belair Railway Station is part of a special precinct containing numerous other heritage-listed buildings along Sheoak Road, including the former Holy Innocents Church near the corner of James Road. Built in 1898, it is now the Chapel for nearby St John’s Grammar School. In 1912, many children from Brownhill Creek climbed the hill every day to attend the new Belair Public School on Sheoak Road. 4 Brownhill Creek dec.indd 4 24/10/2008 11:14:04 AM BELAIR Simple cottages built for railway workers and charming large homes such as ‘Willa Willa’ (1897) at No.49 Sheoak Road are examples of housing styles over a century represented along Sheoak Road. Dr TK Hamilton’s house ‘Willa Willa’ later ‘Birralee’ on Sheoak Road Belair, 1910 photo CA Petts Brownhill Creek 2 South of Belair Station is Belair National Park (Kaurna Aboriginal name Piradli), one of the oldest parks in the world. Established in 1891 on the site of the Government Farm, it includes the delightful former Governors’ summer residence (1860), with its spring-fed indoor pool. The 835ha park is forest (kerta) and woodland including Messmate Stringybark (yulti), Sheoak (karko), Blue Gum, Grey Box and Pink Gum and is a site of the endangered Leafy Greenhood Orchids. Many tributaries from the upper reaches of the hills run into Brownhill Creek. One from the north side of Sheoak Road was described in 1850, as “a fine stream of water running through the section” no doubt contributing to an orchard and kitchen garden, stockyard and small hay paddock, later becoming Halstead’s property from 1893 to the 1950s. Brownhill Creek dec.indd 5 W A L K Turn left down Pony Ridge Road, which becomes a hiking trail down the steep slope to the Brownhill Creek Valley (cyclists will need to walk this section). Note the small patch of bush with yaccas (Aboriginal name kurru) to the left and, in spring, native orchids to the right. 5 24/10/2008 11:14:05 AM belair In 1847, Section 1099, through which Pony Ridge Trail runs today, was taken up by brothers Uriah and Charles Whittle who quickly established ‘Highland Home Estate’ and offered it for sale two years later. An advertisement in May 1849 described it as featuring an “inexhaustible supply of water all the year round; at this moment it would supply Adelaide.” The Whittles were one of the first people to plant fruit trees along the creek. The sources of Brownhill Creek are in the Crafers/Stirling area near the H.K. Fry National Trust Reserve, Heath Road, Crafers West. 3 At the bottom of the Pony Ridge Trail are some small 19th-century houses. Brownhill Creek W A L K These homes and plots formed a colonial market gardening area that produced fruit and vegetables for the Adelaide market from the early 1850s until the 1970s. Some of the families who lived and worked these market gardens and orchards were Curtis, Richardson, Grigg, Williams, Foster, Squires, Merkel, Brooks, Copeland, Tilley, Orchard and Johnson. Many were related to each other. Williams market garden, 1980 photo PM Oborn 6 Brownhill Creek dec.indd 6 24/10/2008 11:14:05 AM brownhill creek recreation park 4 Walk west down the road, passing more small cottages (1860-80s), to the eastern end of the Brownhill Creek Recreation Park. This was proclaimed a Public Reserve as early as 1858, making it arguably one of the oldest parks in SA. It was named a ‘National Pleasure Resort’ in 1915 and is now a designated part of Yurrebilla, the Greater Mount Lofty Parkland. A row of huge Sugar Gums (normally found in the Mid North) were planted to commemorate Federation in 1901. Kookaburras frequent here. 5 Across the road is ‘Park End’ a metal-clad cottage built from recycled materials in the late 1920s at the beginning of the Great Depression. In March 1867, The Chronicle reported that, Brownhill Creek “a very serious accident occurred to a woman named Siekmann (sic) (possibly Louise Seigmund) living at Brownhill Creek, near Mitcham. It appears that as she was proceeding homewards from the Adelaide Market, with a load of manure, on the top of which she was seated, she was met by a dray loaded with stone, occupying the centre of the road. She at once drew off to her right side of the way, expecting the drayman to do likewise, instead of which the fellow continued on his way and ran his wheel into the cart, with such force as to precipitate the poor woman to the ground. Dr Spicer was sent for and upon examination found that several of her ribs were literally smashed in, besides other severe internal and external injuries. She at present lies in a most precarious state. The conduct of the driver of the dray is blameable in the extreme, for it appears that although the woman called to him for assistance he took no notice of her, but proceeded on his way leaving her laying on the ground injured and helpless.” W A L K No death was recorded in 1867. Brownhill Creek dec.indd 7 7 24/10/2008 11:14:05 AM brownhill creek recreation park 6 The manure pits were constructed in the early 1890s for local market gardeners to deposit loads of manure as their horses struggled up the hill. They were amongst the first environment protection measures in the state. Across the ford was a Baptist chapel school-room built in 1874, now replaced by a pise house. Manure pits sketch PM Oborn W A L K You are walking past an area being restored to River Red and Blue Gum woodland following removal of pest plants including olives and Aleppo Pines. Note the old dead River Red Gum, with its burn-marked interior, which would have been an Aboriginal shelter tree. Brownhill Creek The plantation of gum trees on the south side of Brownhill Creek Road, east of Munday’s stone crusher, was planted in the 1950s or 60s by Kev Hill who was the last Resident Ranger of the Brownhill Creek Reserve Caravan Park. 7 Further down on your left can be seen the stone wall ruins of Munday’s rock-crushing plant. The Munday or Mundy family operated a quarry from 1869 when Henry Mundy asked Council to be allowed to cut a road through to his property. Crushed bluestone was supplied to Council for road metal. Henry Mundy’s son David Henry married Ellen Hermina White, which may account for the name of the bridge near here (or was it simply painted white?). 8 Brownhill Creek dec.indd 8 24/10/2008 11:14:06 AM brownhill creek recreation park This bridge was replaced by the SA Reinforced Concrete Company which had also built a bridge downstream at Hawthorn a few years before in 1919. The remains of Munday’s rock-crushing plant Sulphur-crested and Yellow-tailed Black Cockatoos are often seen here. Brownhill Creek Relax for a while in the Mitcham Lions Club picnic area. 8 Behind the picnic area is a historic quarry from which stone was extracted in the early 1850s for lining gutters and kerbing in Hindley and Rundle Streets in Adelaide. W A L K Walkers can cross the bridge and continue the route as described on the next page, or take a delightful tree-lined walking trail along the western bank of the creek. This will exit at Neweys Road which then leads to the Mitcham Reserve to resume the main route. During the 1890s Mitcham District Council planted Willows and Walnut trees along Brownhill Creek. Brownhill Creek dec.indd 9 9 24/10/2008 11:14:07 AM brownhill creek recreation park 9 From the picnic area, the route crosses Brownhill Creek at White Bridge. Brownhill Creek W A L K Under the big old oak tree there is a cast-iron drinking fountain on your right. It was part of important colonial waterworks through the Brownhill Creek valley and its northern tributary, Ellison’s Gully. In this major undertaking in 1879 water fed by gravity from a spring into a brick tank then over 2 miles through a cast iron pipe, imported from Scotland, to an underground tank near McElligott’s Quarry. Some of the old piping is still visible near White Bridge. ‘White Bridge’ over Brownhill Creek and piping, on the far right, the waterworks, 1900 photo Mrs Moyle 10 Brownhill Creek dec.indd 10 24/10/2008 11:14:08 AM brownhill creek recreation park By the summer of 1882 Mitcham District Council had three drinking fountains installed - one at the ‘Big Tree’ Brownhill Creek, one at Mitcham Institute and one at the horse-tram terminus, Mitcham. The Oak tree was one of several exotic trees planted in 1888 by Mitcham District Council Chairman Bagshaw and Councillors Grimes, Hewett, Murray and Ralph together with Council Clerk Batt. 10 In the centre of the Caravan Park is the ‘Monarch of the Glen’, a 400-year-old River Red Gum which over the years sheltered Aborigines, colonists and a family until as late as the 1950s. Many early settlers lived in the Park, including women’s electoral reformer Catherine Helen Spence as a child. Brownhill Creek W A L K Brownhill Creek dec.indd 11 Monarch of the Glen, 1910s photo CA Petts 11 24/10/2008 11:14:09 AM brownhill creek recreation park Brownhill Creek W A L K During 1893 a weir was built across the creek for a swimming bath however, by 1901 notices were in place NOT allowing bathing between sunrise and half an hour after sunset. By 1912 council was lobbying for the Government to resume the Bathing Reserve. The old swimming hole near the present day caravan park, 1890s photo Mrs Moyle Shortly after exiting the Caravan Park, keen walkers can follow the ‘Peter Nelson Walking Trail’ up a steep, narrow path to McElligott’s Quarry Reserve at the top of Carrick Hill Drive where a lookout area provides marvellous views over the Adelaide Plains. 12 Brownhill Creek dec.indd 12 24/10/2008 11:14:10 AM mitcham village 11 In the side of the hill nearby is embedded the 27,000 gallon brick tank for the old water supply to Mitcham and beyond. This tank was State and National Heritage Listed in 1999. Walk down the road to Church Road and pick up the route at St Michael’s Anglican Church. Princes Rd Rd Evans Ave Rd 12 13 Pages Rd 15 Ne Brownhill Creek Rd Church Rd Norman Walk Old Be lai r 20 Muggs Hill Rd Albert St Carrick Hill Dr 17 High St 19 s or yl a T St Michaels Rd Maitland St Bradey St Rose Ln Gilpin Ln Welbourne St 18 we Hoggs Rd ys Rd 14 Blythewood Rd ill 11 ve kA r oo Rd eek Cr b rth nh ow Br No 16 W A L K The Mitcham Village Walk Brochure is available from the City of Mitcham giving details of walks in this area. Brownhill Creek dec.indd 13 Brownhill Creek Peter Nelson Walking Trail 13 24/10/2008 11:14:10 AM mitcham village There is a monument at the northern end of the Brownhill Creek Recreation Park marking the dedication of the Park. On the opposite side of the road is Grainger’s Quarry which supplied the stone for St Michael’s Church. Between here and Hoggs Road several old cottages remain of the six built in the 1870s for quarry workers and their families. Follow the road into the housing areas and turn right up (steep) Hoggs Road. Brownhill Creek W A L K 12 On the northern side is the arched, slate-roofed verandah of ‘Rust Hall’, built c1847 to the design of George Kingston, but remarkably modern in appearance. View north east towards Mitcham Village across Brownhill Creek. ‘Rust Hall’ middle distance on Hoggs Road and Grainger’s Quarry on the far right 13 Walk along Pages Road and up Church Road to historic St Michael’s Anglican Church which opened in 1852. 14 A short walk up Carrick Hill Drive leads to the entrance of ‘Carrick Hill’. This stately home and its lovely landscaped gardens are open to the public. 15 Go downhill again to Brownhill Creek Road and turn left into Mitcham Reserve, the former Village Green, now divided up by roads. 14 Brownhill Creek dec.indd 14 24/10/2008 11:14:10 AM mitcham village The road across the Village of Mitcham, through the Village Green or Reserve was opened in the mid 1860s, with a ford providing a crossing of the creek until 1875 when the keystone bridge was constructed by John Prince. A flood during construction washed the partly built bridge away and work had to begin again. Nearby cottages and market gardens were also flooded. Keystone Bridge over Brownhill Creek on Old Belair Road also showing the original ford photo CA Petts Brownhill Creek 16 Follow Old Belair Road uphill to the three Mitcham Cemeteries. The earliest graves date back to 1853. See the Mitcham Village Walk Brochure. The creek flowing through the Reserve gave public access to Mitcham Villagers before it entered the large estates. Water was used for the extensive gardens of ‘Kallawar’ and ‘Torrens Park’, now Scotch College. Brownhill Creek dec.indd 15 W A L K A thunderstorm one hot afternoon in February 1897 brought the creek down so quickly that two people, Annie Marie Hooper aged 23 years, and 22 year old John Sanders Moyse were drowned in separate incidents. A month later, John’s sister-in-law gave birth to a son whom they named after him. The creek water was 15 24/10/2008 11:14:11 AM mitcham village four feet over the bridge near the Torrens Arms Hotel and extended for about a quarter of a mile along Bulls Creek Road, (now Belair Road). Prince family in ‘Kallawar’ garden, c1890 Brownhill Creek W A L K This flood and the 1902 earthquake weakened ‘Kallawar’ the over 50-year-old two storey bluestone home of George Prince and it was demolished and replaced. ‘Kallawar’ homestead, c1885 of George Prince damaged by flooding and earthquake and demolished in the 1900s 16 Brownhill Creek dec.indd 16 24/10/2008 11:14:12 AM mitcham village From the Reserve the creek flows into Scotch College Junior School which is private property. 17 Go through Sutton Gardens to Albert Street, and you are in the heart of the Mitcham Village Historic (Conservation) Zone. The Village was laid out in 1840. Walk down Albert Street past the grand gates of ‘Kallawar’ (c1849). 18 To the north at the far end of Welbourne Street is the Mitcham Village Institute (1870) with a craft shop behind it. Along the way, note Stamps Restaurant (originally a drapery shop, 1894); a former manse at No.10 and Welbourne Antiques (formerly a bakery built c1880). Walk through Bradey Street to High Street for lunch or a drink at the Edinburgh Hotel which dates from 1869, then back to Albert Street which continues as Lochness Avenue. W A L K Brownhill Creek dec.indd 17 Brownhill Creek 19 Thomas Whistler lived at No.6 (built c1846) with Mrs Elizabeth Bayley and her family whilst he was convalescing after a bad fall from his horse. Opposite is the old ‘Kallawar’ stable. Around the corner in Muggs Hill Road a ford crosses Brownhill Creek. This was part of the original Adelaide–Belair route. No 6 Lochness Avenue 17 24/10/2008 11:14:13 AM Torrens Park 20 Walk up Muggs Hill Road as far as Evans Avenue and note the former East Lodge Gatehouse. It was the original entrance to ‘Torrens Park Estate’ (1853). Brownhill Creek W A L K Muggs Hill Road ford, Charles Petts home is in the distance, c1910 photo CA Petts At the end of Lochness Avenue a low stretch of the creek was dammed in the 1860s to create an ornamental lake in the ‘Torrens Park Estate’ A banana plantation and an orangery were irrigated and sometimes flooded by water from the creek. Torrens Park Lake, c1880 18 Brownhill Creek dec.indd 18 24/10/2008 11:14:14 AM Belair Rd Torrens Park Pr in 22 23 ce sR oa d N ew ar k Rd Ardeer Ayr Ave Carruth Rd Bela y H i l l s R a il w a Lin e ir Ballogie Paisley Ave 21 Lochness Ave Muggs Hill Rd Road Lochwinoch Ave Fife Av Scotch College Blythewood Road Brownhill Creek 21 At a tiny reserve on the banks of the creek, a plaque records the work done here by Mrs Betty Long who lived nearby, extending her garden along the banks of Brownhill Creek from 1967 until her death in 1999. Walkers, wheelchair users and cyclists can cross a footbridge into Paisley Avenue then almost immediately turn right and cross another footbridge into Fife Avenue. W A L K Motorists can follow Ballogie Road and Fife Avenue to the Lochwinnoch Road roundabout where the creek passes underneath the road. 22 Now take Ayr Avenue and Newark Road to the Mitcham Shopping Centre where the hidden course of Brownhill Creek will be indicated by huge River Red Gums. Brownhill Creek dec.indd 19 19 24/10/2008 11:14:15 AM torrens park 23 The fine Art Deco style Council Civic Centre to the south was designed by Dean Berry and built in 1934. The creek shows itself briefly north of Woolworths before disappearing under nearby shops and Belair Road. Cross Belair Road at the traffic lights and go west into Grange Road. Cross Road 30 Godden Devonshire St 27 28 Durdin 26 Angas Rd 25 24 20 Brownhill Creek dec.indd 20 Belair Road Frimley Gr George St Abbotshall Jervois St 29 Kent St Brownhill Creek W A L K Hampton St Wemyss Grange Rd 24/10/2008 11:14:15 AM Hawthorn See Abbotshall Walk brochure for more details of this area. 24 The former Mitcham Public School (1879). 25 Nearby is the Mitcham Railway Station (1883). 26 On to the corner of Grange Road and Abbotshall Road is the State Heritage listed industrial building. This was formerly Bosley’s Pottery. (now St Vincent de Paul). Turn right into Abbotshall Road. Brownhill Creek In 1913 Anthony S Kidman, a nephew of Sir Sidney Kidman bought ‘Abbotshall’ between Abbotshall and Belair Roads and, by straightening the creek, assisted subdivision of the area by providing more level blocks of land. The combination of water from the creek and the railway opening in 1883 encouraged people to take up allotments in Hawthorn. Some astute people bought a number of blocks along the creek and utilised the creek flats for grazing dairy cattle. Others planted extensive gardens and remnants of these can be seen as you proceed north. At the northern end of Abbotshall Road, turn right into Angas Road. The creek is again clearly visible in the Soldiers Memorial Gardens on the corner of Belair and Angas Roads adjacent to the Library. W A L K 27 Diagonally behind the Library is a scented garden and Mitcham Community Court, formerly ‘St Georges’. Its internal walls are thought to have been constructed from pug and stone collected from nearby Brownhill Creek. If you are travelling by car or in a wheelchair continue west along Angas Road past Brownhill Creek dec.indd 21 21 24/10/2008 11:14:15 AM Hawthorn the handsome two-storey mansion ‘Willow Brook’. It had a billiard room, ballroom, marble swimming pool and a tunnel acting as a breezeway from the dairy. 28 Turn right into Frimley Grove and note the magnificent River Red Gum in the middle of the road, then along leafy Durdin and Cameron Roads to George Street. From the Soldiers Memorial Gardens walkers can follow the creek as it passes behind ‘St Georges’ two-storey stable, past the Mitcham Air Force Association Bowling Clubrooms and the Mitcham 50 Plus Clubrooms, then walk over two footbridges into a park. Brownhill Creek W A L K 29 J.W.S. Morris Park. Between the two bridges there is a small weir across the creek and a branch of the creek loops around this area. This once complemented the garden of ‘Ardmeen’, the home of father and son doctors, Arthur and Kyle Gault. Kyle and Ruth Gault playing in Brownhill Creek, near ‘Ardmeen’, 1910s photo M Hone 22 Brownhill Creek dec.indd 22 24/10/2008 11:14:15 AM Hawthorn From the 1850s several generations of the Thomas family lived in this area and they ran dairy cows along the creek flats. The park exits onto George Street where in 1916 the bridge over the creek was washed away and replaced with a temporary footbridge. The small Delwood Reserve is on the corner of Kent Street. Brownhill Creek 30 Go along Kent to Devonshire Street, then west to Jervois Street where in 1894 Mitcham District Council obtained road metal from extensive gravel pits along the creek flats. In 1911 a £95 tender was accepted from the SA Reinforced Concrete Company to build a bridge at Devonshire Street and a grand opening was proposed. The creek here flows through lawned Godden Reserve. John Henry Godden took up a large block in this vicinity in 1883. When he died in 1921 the property was left to his wife Frances. Following her death in 1945 the family subsequently transferred the area along the creek to the City of Mitcham in 1947 for use as a reserve. Dog-leg cross Hampton Street and continue along Jervois Street passing 19th century villas as you go towards Cross Road. Travel west along Cross Road and cross the road into Whistler Avenue, which was at the heart of Thomas Whistler’s colonial landholding. Motorists will need to turn right into Heywood Avenue then left into Grove Street to reach Heywood Park. W A L K Brownhill Creek dec.indd 23 23 24/10/2008 11:14:15 AM Unley Park 42 King William 41 40 Mitchell St Wooldridge 37 Malcolm St Wood St Douglas 3 8 Andrew Avenue St Goodwood Road Park 36 35 Victoria Ave Whistler Ave W A L K Cross Road Brownhill Creek Northgate St 31 32 33 Heywood Grove St Regent St 39 Cross Road 34 31 Brownhill Creek flows between the backs of the large houses lining Whistler Avenue and Grove Street, before re-appearing in the south-west corner of Heywood Park next to historic ‘Heywood House’ (1858) in Addiscombe Place. 24 Brownhill Creek dec.indd 24 24/10/2008 11:14:16 AM Unley Park View west from present day Heywood Park towards Brownhill Creek, c1885 photo RA Bluff Collection 32 Thomas Whistler’s cottage, with its extensive orchard and large vegetable garden, was situated in this general area. Brownhill Creek W A L K Brownhill Creek dec.indd 25 Brownhill Creek at Whistler’s Bush near present day Heywood Park, c1885 photo RA Bluff Collection 25 24/10/2008 11:14:16 AM Unley Park In about 1854 the Mitcham District Council employed a man to cut a dyke in Brownhill Creek by the new bridge at Whistler’s Bush, as Heywood Park was known at the time. By the end of the year the bridge already needed to be repaired according to Councillor Overton. “Repairs to the new bridge were constantly undertaken throughout 1855”. At that time the Mitcham District Council area included the whole of present-day City of Unley. Heywood Park is an outstanding suburban reserve with River Red Gums and a few remnants of the ‘black forest’ of Grey Box that once covered these south-eastern suburbs. They have a rough black-grey bark. Here is also found an Aboriginal shelter tree, now used as part of a playground. Brownhill Creek W A L K 33 Travel west along Northgate Street to beautiful Victoria Avenue which contains some of Adelaide’s finest houses, such as ‘Yurilla Hall’ (1899) at No.20. 34 The Unley Park Railway Station is only a short distance west of the southern end of Victoria Avenue. 35 Retrace your steps and note the small bridge bearing the dates ‘1892 – 1932’ where Brownhill Creek goes under Victoria Avenue near its northern end. Turn left into Northgate Street - the site of more beautiful homes. ‘Eringa’ at No.76 (built 1934) was once the home of grazier Sidney Kidman, ‘The Cattle King’, who is buried in the Mitcham General Cemetery. Note also ‘Northgate House’ at No.80 and ‘Boscobel’ at No.84.] 26 Brownhill Creek dec.indd 26 24/10/2008 11:14:16 AM Millswood 36 From Heywood Park go across Northgate Street and turn north along Wood Street as far as Avenue Street. Note No.34 Wood Street, ‘Coonawarra’, built in 1898, the home of the 1880s Northern Territory explorer David Lindsay. Unless you are travelling by car, continue along Avenue Street and go up Douglas Street, crossing the creek again, to Percy Street. Follow the creek through a large public reserve, or go west along Mitchell Street, to Goodwood Road. 37 Motorists turn north along Regent Street (stop in Wooldridge Avenue to look at ‘Belle Vista’ , a slate-roofed 1863 farmhouse at No.13, with its outbuildings at the rear) then west along Mitchell Street to Goodwood Road. 38 Both routes will end at the imposing former Roman Catholic Orphanage (1889) with its outstanding brickwork. It is now the Tabor College Christian Education Centre. Brownhill Creek W A L K Brownhill Creek looking west towards Goodwood Road, c1910 photo Unley Museum Collection Brownhill Creek disappears into an underground culvert soon after this. It then reappears in a concrete culvert in Farnham Road, Ashford, Brownhill Creek dec.indd 27 27 24/10/2008 11:14:16 AM Goodwood near Ashford Special School on Anzac Highway. Its course can be identified by a stunning dead River Red Gum, a remnant of the ‘Black Forest’. The creek once flowed through swamps and paperbark forests near the southern part of Adelaide Airport. Ultimately it enters the Patawalonga basin which was an important Aboriginal meeting spot. Continue north along Goodwood Road. See City of Unley’s ‘Pathways to the Past’ Walk brochure for more details of this area. 39 Note the Goodwood Institute. (1887-1928) built on land donated by George Mills, after whom the suburb of Millswood was named. Take the time to admire the facades of the buildings along this section of Goodwood Road. Brownhill Creek W A L K 40 The Capri Cinema built in 1941 is now maintained by the Theatre Organ Society. 41 A moulded bull’s head over the two-storey shops at Nos.126-128 denotes they were built in 1872 for a butcher. This is better viewed from the east side of Goodwood Road. 42 The Glenelg tramline to the City crosses Goodwood Road here. Alternatively walkers can turn west at the tramline down Railway Terrace North to get to Goodwood Railway Station and then back up the Belair line (or into the City). Wheelchair users and cyclists can also use the train. ‘it is hoped that you enjoyed your walk’ 28 Brownhill Creek dec.indd 28 24/10/2008 11:14:16 AM