Para Hills, South Australia

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Para Hills
Adelaide,  South Australia
ParaHillsgully-20may2006.JPG
A gully next to Para Hills primary school
Population6,793 (SAL 2021) [1]
Established1959
Postcode(s) 5096
Area3.21 km2 (1.2 sq mi)
Location16 km (10 mi) from Adelaide
LGA(s)
State electorate(s) Playford
Federal division(s) Makin
Suburbs around Para Hills:
Salisbury East Gulfview Heights Wynn Vale
Para Hills West Para Hills Modbury Heights
Ingle Farm Para Vista Modbury North

Para Hills is a residential suburb of Adelaide, South Australia. There is a light aircraft airport close to its boundary, and numerous sporting facilities, abundant parks and schools and two medium-sized shopping centres. Most of the suburb is in the City of Salisbury while some is in the City of Tea Tree Gully.

Contents

History

An early settler family were the Goodalls, who established a farm at the base of the hills in 1850. When Andrew Melville Goodall expanded the farm in 1853 he named the property Para Hills Farm, building a farmhouse near what is now the corner of St Clair Avenue and Goodall Road. [2]

Para Hills Post Office opened on 28 June 1961. [3]

Demography

Historical population
YearPop.±%
2001 9,034    
2006 7,722−14.5%
2011 7,594−1.7%
2016 6,554−13.7%
2021 6,793+3.6%
Source: [4] [5] [6] [7] [8]

According to the 2021 census of Australia, Para Hills has a population of 6.793, of which 51.7% is male and 48.3% is female. The median age is 36, two years below the national average of 38. The most common ancestries were English (36.1%), Australian (29.1%), German (6.4%), Scottish (6.1%) and Irish (5.9%). The most common countries of birth include Australia (64.7%), England (6.7%), India (4.8%), Afghanistan (2.8%), the Philippines (1.6%) and Vietnam (0.9%). 69.4% of the population only spoke english at home. Other commonly spoken languages were Arabic (3.0%), Hazaraghi and Punjabi (both 2.4%) and Vietnamese and Hindi (both 1.1%). [8]

Landscape

Geology

Para Hills is built on an escarpment of the Para Fault Block at the edge of the Adelaide plains, rising 61 metres (200 ft) above the plains. The formation of this escarpment has led to short, steep-sided gullies which are characteristic of Para Hills. [9] The gullies are usually dry, running only shortly after rain, and have mostly been left as public parks. Outcrops of exposed pre-Cambrian rocks have been quarried for use in roadmaking and construction since the late 19th century.[ citation needed ] The outcrops within Para Hills are not extensive and only one quarry operated in the suburb's residential area.

Flora

Para hills street map Parahills-streetmap.svg
Para hills street map

Prior to subdivision there is very little recorded about the vegetation of the hills. What records exist report that the plains where mostly covered in kangaroo grass, with the hills being lightly covered in Eucalyptus Porosa (Mallee box), Acacia paradoxa (Kangaroo thorn wattle) and Acacia pyncantha (Golden Wattle). [10] Public parks in para hills are now landscaped with Australian native vegetation. Most of the streets show Salisbury council's practice of lining roadsides with Eucalypts, Acacias and other Australian native trees. [ citation needed ]

Geography

The boundary of Para Hills is defined by McIntyre Road and the Para Hills reserve to the north, Kelly Road to the east, Bridge Road to the west, and Maxwell Road and Milne Road to the south. The northern boundary moved south from Wynn Vale Drive in 2002 when Gulfview Heights was declared.

History

Kester's Farmhouse in 2006 AllenKestersfarmhouse-20May2006.JPG
Kester's Farmhouse in 2006

The area was originally inhabited by the Kaurna tribe of Indigenous Australians. By the time the area was settled by Europeans in the 1840s, introduced diseases such as smallpox had already spread from the eastern states and decimated the population. [10]

Land grants in the Para Hills area began in 1847. Notable farming families first settling the area were the Goodalls (on 12 August 1850), the Kesters (1893), and the MacIntyres (1865). [11] From settlement as distant farming land, to subdivision for residential development, the land increased greatly in value. The land was valued at £4.10 per acre in 1900, £16 in 1937, £420 and £1200 for some of the flatter land shortly after its subdivision. [2]

Farming and quarrying continued, as the sole activities on the land, until Reid Murray Developments (R.M.D.) began acquiring land for subdivision in 1959. The development was, at the time, the largest private housing development in Australia and had a budget of £6 million. [12] R.M.D. was not the only developer active in the suburb with most of the Goodall and McIntyre farmland being sold to, or subdivided by, other companies. [10] In total R.M.D. purchased 430 acres (1.7 km2). [2] R.M.D. copied a new concept from the South Australian Housing Trust's new development at Elizabeth, constructing the suburb as a self-contained neighbourhood from the outset. Unusually fifteen percent of the land was set aside for parks, [13] arrangements were made with Woolworths (S.A.) Ltd to provide a supermarket, and with the State government for the speedy provision of a post office and school. Land allotments were set to a minimum of 697 square metres (7,502 sq ft) and, to transform the bare farm land, a street tree-planting and nursery program was begun with new residents being given six plants to start a garden. [10] R.M.D. did not sell any vacant land, but only complete house, land and some furnishings packages (prices ranging from £4,000 to £5,500). The houses all had three or more bedrooms, flat corrugated iron or angled tile roofs, and were constructed from bricks, modular concrete blocks or Mount Gambier freestone.

R.M.D. set up offices in London to attract new British migrants prior to their trip to Australia. Salesmen met new immigrants at Fremantle dock. Flats were built in Barcoo Street to temporarily house intending purchasers, many of whom were travelling under assisted passage. Some settlers were not prepared for the frontier conditions they met, with no amenities or trees, and surroundings of little more than open paddocks. Many of the migrants came from established cities, and expressed dismay at the prospect of having to form a community from scratch. [10] A vendor finance scheme was begun allowing a some newlyweds to purchase homes with a deposit as low as £500. [14] An extensive marketing effort to sell the homes included, a home donated to the crippled children's association, subsidised bus services, free use of the olympic size swimming pool for residents, twenty-five furnished display homes and £10,000 of Television advertising. [12]

The suburb developed quickly, fifty-five homes completed in the first six months and seventy under construction, along with sealed roads, storm water and sewerage services and gas and electricity supply. [15] All three original farming families have main roads in Para Hills named after them. The farmhouse of Allen Kesters (built in 1934) is still in use, on the corner of Kesters and Bridge roads as a real-estate office, and the McIntyre farmhouse was, as of 1985, occupied by the McIntyre family. [10]

Timeline

The suburb of Para Hills also has a school R-7, and was made in 1961 so it is over 47 years old. The school is on Francis Ave.

Trivia

Para Hills was used to showcase an 'expandable house' that allowed for rooms to be added in four stages. The house was part of the Housing Trust of South Australia's demonstration village opened in 1982. [16]

Transport

The suburb is accessible from Adelaide by bus, (partly using Adelaide's O-Bahn Busway). A train station is approximately 2 kilometres to the west.

Public transport began in 1961 with a once-daily, privately run return bus service to Adelaide. The service was run by "Lewis Brothers", initially with a £60 weekly subsidy from Reid Murray Developments. By 1974, when the Municipal Tramways Trust took over all buses and services in Para Hills, it had expanded to 44 buses and numerous routes. [17]

Bus routes in Para Hills provide connections to Elizabeth Shopping Centre, Lyell McEwin Hospital, Royal Adelaide Hospital, Women's and Children's Hospital and Westfield Tea Tree Plaza

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References

  1. Australian Bureau of Statistics (28 June 2022). "Para Hills (suburb and locality)". Australian Census 2021 QuickStats. Retrieved 28 June 2022.  OOjs UI icon edit-ltr-progressive.svg
  2. 1 2 3 Lewis, H. John (1980). Salisbury South Australia, a history of town and district. Hawtornedene, South Australia: Investigator Press. pp. 168–171. ISBN   0-85864-049-X.
  3. Premier Postal History. "Post Office List". Premier Postal Auctions. Retrieved 26 May 2011.
  4. Australian Bureau of Statistics (9 March 2006). "Para Hills (state suburb)". 2001 Census QuickStats. Retrieved 11 December 2023. OOjs UI icon edit-ltr-progressive.svg
  5. Australian Bureau of Statistics (25 October 2007). "Para Hills (state suburb)". 2006 Census QuickStats. Retrieved 11 December 2023.
  6. Australian Bureau of Statistics (31 October 2012). "Para Hills (state suburb)". 2011 Census QuickStats. Retrieved 11 December 2023. OOjs UI icon edit-ltr-progressive.svg
  7. Australian Bureau of Statistics (27 June 2017). "Para Hills (state suburb)". 2016 Census QuickStats. Retrieved 11 December 2023. OOjs UI icon edit-ltr-progressive.svg
  8. 1 2 Australian Bureau of Statistics (28 June 2022). "Para Hills (state suburb)". 2021 Census QuickStats. Retrieved 11 December 2023. OOjs UI icon edit-ltr-progressive.svg
  9. DEPARTMENT OF MINES.Geology and Underground Water Resources of the Adelaide Plains Area Adelaide: Geological Survey of South Australia. Bulletin No.27, 1952 (As cited in SETTLERS ON THE HILL, City of Salisbury Publication, 1985)
  10. 1 2 3 4 5 6 SETTLERS ON THE HILL, A Local History of Para Hills, A City of Salisbury Publication, 1985
  11. South Australian Lands Titles Office Records, R.P.A. LXXIV, Folio 132
  12. 1 2 How marketing built a town. Adelaide: Reid Murray Developments (SA) Pty Ltd. May 1962.
  13. At the time para hills was subdivided, the usual percentage of land set aside for parks was 5% (The Builder, 19 August 1960, p. 13)
  14. "Financing Plans (RMD, Boulevard of Homes feature section)". The Advertiser. 16 December 1961. p. 20.
  15. "Private enterprise in new Para Hills development". The Builder. Publishers Ltd (Adelaide). 19 August 1960. p. 13.
  16. "South Australian Housing Trust Chronological History" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 29 April 2006. Retrieved 25 June 2006.
  17. Steele, Christopher (1986). From Omnibus to O-Bahn, The tramways and buses of Adelaide's North-East suburbs. Norwood, South Australia: Australian electric traction association. p. 75. ISBN   1-86252-089-5.

See also

34°49′0″S138°40′0″E / 34.81667°S 138.66667°E / -34.81667; 138.66667