Wonga Park, Victoria

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Wonga Park
MelbourneVictoria
Yarra River Wonga Park.jpg
Yarra River, Wonga Park
Wonga Park is located in Victoria
Wonga Park
Wonga Park
Coordinates Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
Population 3,833 (2011 census)[1]
 • Density 421.2/km2 (1,091/sq mi)
Postcode(s) 3115
Area 9.1 km2 (3.5 sq mi)
Location 29 km (18 mi) from Melbourne
LGA(s) City of Manningham
State electorate(s)
Federal Division(s) Menzies
Localities around Wonga Park:
Warrandyte North Kangaroo Ground Bend of Islands
Warrandyte Wonga Park Chirnside Park
Warrandyte South Croydon Hills Croydon North

Wonga Park is a locality within Greater Melbourne, beyond the Melbourne Metropolitan Urban Growth Boundary area,[2] 29 km north-east from Melbourne's Central Business District. Its local government area is the City of Manningham. At the 2011 census, Wonga Park had a population of 3,833.

Wonga Park is bounded in the west by Jumping Creek, in the north by the Yarra River, in the east by Brushy Park and Old Homestead Roads and in the south by Holloway Road.

The name comes from the Wonga Park grazing property, which itself derives from Simon Wonga, elder of the Wurundjeri indigenous people of Melbourne. The area was part of Mooroolbark until the 1890s.

Fifi Box from the radio station Fox FM grew up in Wonga Park

History

In 1889 the Wonga Park property came into the hands of an insurance company and, along with other holdings, the land was sold by the Wonga Park Land Co. Four years later, when small settlements were a way of relieving unemployment after the failure of the land boom, about twenty members of an Eight Hours Pioneer Memorial Association took up small holdings on a former timber reserve.[citation needed]

In 1895 a primary school first opened, called Warrandyte East, but later changed to Wonga Park in 1898. The area was a mixture of orchards and grazing properties and timbered land. Most smaller properties had been started with income from firewood that came from clearing the land.[citation needed]

Eight Hour Pioneer Settlement Post Office opened in 1902, was renamed Wonga Park around 1907 and closed in 1989. It reopened in its current location in 1994.[3]

One of the grazing properties, Yarra Brae, was acquired by the Lord Clifford in 1942. He made part of it available for Australia's first Pan Pacific Scout Jamboree in 1948. Clifford Park hosted another Jamboree in 1955 and is now a major Scout campsite, available for use by non-Scouting organisations as well.[4]

In 1972 Yarra Brae was the site of a proposed Lower Yarra River Reservoir, but residents of the nearby Bend of Isles bushland estate persuaded the Victorian Government to abandon the proposal. The allied Sugarloaf Reservoir at Christmas Hills went ahead.[citation needed]

The residential development of Wonga Park came after the subdivisions in Croydon and Mooroolbark, which were on the Maroondah Highway and a railway line. Residential living is most concentrated around the old village settlement where the church, hall, sports facilities, fire station and local shops are found.

The northern boundary of Wonga Park, where land was acquired for the Yarra Brae storage, is a linear riverside part of the Warrandyte State Park. Wonga Park is also home to the largest residential block of land within metropolitan Melbourne, with many of the residential blocks being large in size, creating a private sanctuary for many of its residents. John Farnham currently resides in Wonga Park, as does Mark Lydiard and V8 Supercar driver Garth Tander

Activities

Wonga Park has a tennis club, a cricket club, a golf course and numerous horse riding clubs. With the Yarra River being so close, canoeing is also a popular activity. The Clifford Park Scout Camp is also located in Wonga Park.

See also

References

  1. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  2. Urban Growth Boundary map
  3. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  4. https://www.vicscouts.asn.au/CliffordPark/history.html