(Redirected from Clontarf Hill)

Clontarf Hill is the prominent book-covered hill to the east of Hampton Road between Clontarf Road and Rockingham Road. One of a north-south series of limestone hills (called Booyeembara in Noongar) including Cantonment Hill, Church Hill, and the one on which the church of Christ the King stands.

The tree at the summit of Clontarf Hill.

The Friends of Clontarf Hill have a useful website (from which we've borrowed the photo above). The hill's name came from the Dublin location and would have been bestowed by Dubliner John Healy whose farm Winterfold was adjacent and whose cattle grazed on the hill. However, the Friends also say that "The earliest known British settler in the vicinity of Clontarf Hill was Sydney Smith, the agent of Captain George Robb. Smith built a homestead and established a farm at the foot of a small hill adjacent to and about 50 metres south of Clontarf Hill. In a letter dated August 27th, 1830, Smith gave his address as Hamilton Hill and this was the first recording of the name by which the suburb was to become known."

Heritage Council:
Clontarf Rd was named by John Healy, the owner of the Winterfold Estate. His land comprised 300 acres north of Healy Rd, 200 acres south of Bibra Lake, and 100 acres in Spearwood. Winterfold Rd was gazetted a public highway in 1937.
The reserve was part of a 2000 acre grant to George Robb in 1830. Robb developed a farm at the southern end of the reserve, near what is now Cardigan Street. In August 1830, the farm’s address was listed as Hamilton Hill, suggesting that the area now known as Clontarf Hill may have been the original Hamilton Hill for which the area east of there was later named.
The 1913 PWD plan shows no buildings in the area, which is beyond the edge of the residential subdivision. A southeast section of the reserve was used for market gardening up to the 1950s. The reserve was not developed as it had been set aside for the future expansion of suburban highways, originally Roe Highway and later the much-protested Eastern Bypass, which was eventually abandoned in 1992.
In 1993, the Clontarf Action Group described the place as a ‘relatively large area of publicly owned, undeveloped urban bushland’ and urged its conservation as it was no longer earmarked for future road use. The group noted that due to a lack of active management, with resulting dumping of rubbish, weed invasion, quarrying and human disturbance, the reserve had become degraded.
Clontarf Hill, originally set aside for the future expansion of suburban highways, has social value to the community, as evidence by Clontarf Action Group's efforts to stop the Eastern Bypass and conserve the area as undeveloped urban bushland.

References and Links

Heritage Council.

clontarfhill.org.

sites.google.com/site/friendsofclontarfhill.

Friends of Clontarf Hill in Facebook.

Freotopia

This page incorporates material from Garry Gillard's Freotopia website, that he started in 2014 and the contents of which he donated to Wikimedia Australia in 2024. The content was originally created on 10 July, 2018 and hosted at freotopia.org/places/clontarfhill.html (it was last updated on 9 April, 2024), and has been edited since it was imported here (see page history). The donated data is also preserved in the Internet Archive's collection.