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Claremont, Western Australia

Claremont
PerthWestern Australia
Christ church claremont gnangarra-10.jpg
Christ Church, Claremont. Built 1892.
Claremont is located in Perth
Claremont
Claremont
Coordinates 31°58′48″S 115°46′55″E / 31.98°S 115.782°E / -31.98; 115.782Coordinates: 31°58′48″S 115°46′55″E / 31.98°S 115.782°E / -31.98; 115.782
Population 7,594 (2011 census)
 • Density 2,109/km2 (5,460/sq mi)
Established 1890s
Postcode(s) 6010
Area 3.6 km2 (1.4 sq mi)
Location 9 km (6 mi) WSW of Perth CBD
LGA(s) Town of Claremont
State electorate(s) Cottesloe
Federal Division(s) Curtin
Suburbs around Claremont:
Mount Claremont Mount Claremont Karrakatta
Swanbourne Claremont Nedlands
Cottesloe Peppermint Grove Dalkeith

Claremont is a western suburb of Perth, Western Australia on the north bank of the Swan River.

Prior to European settlement, the Noongar people used the area as a source of water, for fishing and for catching waterfowl.

In 1830, John Butler, a settler, set up an inn at Freshwater Bay (in modern-day Peppermint Grove) to attract travellers on the road from Perth to Fremantle. A wetland became known as Butler's Swamp (later Lake Claremont). After the arrival of convicts in the colony in 1850, work began on constructing the Fremantle Road. The government allocated land on the foreshore and at Butler's Swamp to 19 pensioner guards and their families, and a permanent convict depot operated at Freshwater Bay (until 1875).

A state school (1862) and church were built, and a community grew around what is now Victoria Avenue. A settler named James Morrison acquired a property at Swan Location 702, and named it Claremont Estate, after his wife, Clara (née de Burgh). During the 1870s, a number of prominent families, including the Triggs, Sandovers and Stirlings, acquired land in the district, around the later site of Christ Church Grammar School; some of their homes were later bought and used by the school.

In 1881, the railway line from Perth to Fremantle was built, along with a station at Butler's Swamp; the name of the station was changed to Claremont in 1883. The focus of the community shifted to the area between the railway line, Fremantle Road (Stirling Highway) and Bay View Terrace. The Freshwater Bay school ceased to play a central role; it became a boarding house nicknamed "Appy One" in 1892 (and in 1975 a museum).

Land speculators bought in the area and subdivided blocks at varying sizes, leading to a wide class diversity within the suburb. By about 1903, the entire suburb, other than a dozen or so streets, had been subdivided, and by the Second World War, the community was firmly established.


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