Mosman Park, Western Australia
Mosman Park is a western suburb of Perth, Western Australia on the north bank of the Swan River in the local government area of the Town of Mosman Park. It was historically known as Buckland Hill, then Cottesloe Beach and again Buckland Hill. From 1937 it was named Mosman Park, derived from Mosman in Sydney, the birthplace of Richard Yeldon, a member of the Buckland Hill Road Board. Mosman Park is now considered an affluent suburb, but prior to the 1970s was one of Perth's major industrial centres.
Geography
Mosman Park is bounded by the Indian Ocean and the Fremantle railway line to the west, a line south of Johnston Street to the north, and the Swan River to the east and south with approximately of river frontage. To the west of the railway line Mosman Park includes a section of approximately of ocean frontage, south of the extension of Boundary Road and north of the extension of McCabe Street.History
Following the 1827 expedition by Captain James Stirling on HMS Success to assess the suitability of the Swan River district for a settlement, it was the original plan for the 1829 expedition to use the area around Buckland Hill as the site for a town for the proposed settlement. The expedition's botanist Charles Fraser wrote:This view, however, was later superseded by Captain Stirling on his arrival with the first immigrants in Parmelia in June 1829, by placing the capital, Perth, about from the port.
Mosman Park was established with the first survey of town lots in 1889 as Buckland Hill, taking its name from the prominent local hill that was a major maritime navigation mark for shipping from the earliest days of colonization.
Mosman Park was a major industrial centre for the state with a Holden car and truck assembly plant, the Colonial Sugar Refinery, the Mount Lyell Farmers' Fertilisers superphosphate works, the W.A. Rope and Twine Works and the West Australian Brushware Co. factory. All were closed by the 1970s. Today, almost all of Mosman Park is residential, with significant parklands at Buckland Hill and along the river.
In 2009, a riverside mansion in Mosman Park was sold for $57.5 million, setting a new Australian property record. The house was bought by mining entrepreneur Chris Ellison from mining heiress Angela Bennett.
In the, Mosman Park had a population of 9,169 people living in 4,113 private dwellings.
The mansions lining the waterfront parklands of Mosman Park, tracing the Swan River, highlight its high status. The median house value is.
Transport
Mosman Park is served by the Mosman Park and Victoria Street railway stations. Various public buses, including the CircleRoute bus route travel along Stirling Highway and through Mosman Park's eastern section.Bus
- 107 Fremantle Station to Claremont Station – serves Stirling Highway, Gibbon Street, Victoria Street, Owston Street, Beagle Street, Manning Street and Palmerston Street
- 998 Fremantle Station to Fremantle Station – CircleRoute clockwise, serves Stirling Highway, Victoria Street Station and Mosman Park Station
- 999 Fremantle Station to Fremantle Station – CircleRoute anti-clockwise, serves Stirling Highway, Mosman Park Station and Victoria Street Station
Rail
- Fremantle Line
- * Mosman Park Station
- * Victoria Street Station
Politics
Since 1980 it has been part of the federal division of Curtin. Curtin has historically been regarded as a safe seat for the centre-right Liberal Party, which held the seat mostly continually since its inception. However, the seat was won by the independent Kate Chaney at the 2022 federal election. In the parliament of Western Australia, its Legislative Assembly electoral district is Cottesloe, held by David Honey, also of the Liberal Party.
Notable residents
- Angela Bennett, mining heiress and businesswoman
- Lang Hancock, iron ore mining developer
- Harriet Hooton, women's activist and editor
- John Hughes, businessman
- Jessica Marais, actress
- Rose Porteous, widow of Lang Hancock
- Ralph Sarich, orbital engine and orbital combustion process inventor
- Sir Albert Wolff, chief justice and lieutenant-governor of Western Australia