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Bellevue, Western Australia

Coordinates: 31°53′56″S 116°01′23″E / 31.899°S 116.023°E / -31.899; 116.023
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Bellevue
PerthWestern Australia
Old housing near Military Road, Bellevue
Map
Coordinates31°53′56″S 116°01′23″E / 31.899°S 116.023°E / -31.899; 116.023
Population1,514 (SAL 2021)[1]
Established1880s
Postcode(s)6056
Location
LGA(s)
State electorate(s)Midland
Federal division(s)Hasluck, Pearce
Suburbs around Bellevue:
Midland Midvale Swan View
Midland Bellevue Koongamia
Hazelmere Helena Valley Boya

Bellevue is an eastern suburb of Perth, Western Australia in the local government areas of the City of Swan and the Shire of Mundaring. It is at the foot of the slopes of Greenmount, a landmark on the Darling Scarp that is noted in the earliest of travel journals of the early Swan River Colony.

Community

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Bellevue has been bisected by the Roe Highway, railway, and substantial changes in the eastern parts of Midland. The Bellevue Primary School was closed and amalgamated with the Koongamia Primary School to form the new Clayton View Primary School slightly up the hill towards Greenmount.

It was the location of the original offices of what became the Mundaring Shire Council.[2] It was also the location of the Catholic Church that preceded the St Anthony's church in Greenmount.[3]

A significant point of contact in the twentieth century for the local community was the Darling Range Hotel.

Geography

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Bellevue is bounded by the Helena River to the south, Great Eastern Highway to the north and Military Road and Cowie Close to the west. The suburb is an even mix of residential, industrial and parkland (mainly along the Helena River).

Being at the eastern part of the Swan Coastal Plain, Bellevue is also at the foot of the Darling Scarp with Greenmount Hill as the point of access to the region to the east.

Change

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Bellevue has changed over the duration of its existence due to a number of factors - the extensive claypits of the early twentieth century (most having been since filled in), and the industrial locations adjacent to the railway lines.[4]

The creation of the standard gauge railway and the removal of the railway station in the mid-1960s removed it from the railway map. Construction of the Roe Highway embankment in the western part removed a section of the suburb. The Midland Military Markets were located in the west of the suburb, but were destroyed by a fire in April 2007.[5][6]

Railways

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Eastern Rail reserve (first line) in Bellevue. Looking east from near the site of the Bellevue station, behind is Greenmount.

Originally known as the 24-mile (39 km) siding in 1896, it became known as Bellevue on 24 May 1897. It was the railway station at the foot of the hills through which the Eastern Railway climbed, first for the line that proceeded east to Greenmount then Boya, Darlington and on to Mundaring, then for the line through Blackboy Hill, Swan View, the Swan View Tunnel and on to Chidlow. The third and final route of the railway that goes through the Avon Valley passes over the site where the railway station was located.

During the First World War the branch line to the Helena Vale Race course was used for transporting troops between Blackboy Hill and Fremantle.

Although the old Mundaring loop was closed for passenger traffic in 1954, trains were still utilising the line to Boya, where the Mountain Quarries siding was still in use. This operation closed in 1962.

Up until the 1960s it was the terminus of the passenger services from Perth. From 1960 to 1962 a new railway station was made at Koongamia, which was half-way to the old Greenmount Railway station. The suburban service now terminates at Midland.

In 2021, a new railcar manufacturing facility was opened to locally assemble C-series trains for Metronet.[7][8]

Transport

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Bus

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  •    322 Midland Station to Glen Forrest – serves Clayton Street[9]

Bus routes serving Great Eastern Highway:

Bus routes serving Military Road:

References

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  1. ^ Australian Bureau of Statistics (28 June 2022). "Bellevue (WA) (suburb and locality)". Australian Census 2021 QuickStats. Retrieved 28 June 2022. Edit this at Wikidata
  2. ^ Elliot, Ian; Elliot, Ian (1983), Mundaring : a history of the shire, Shire of Mundaring, ISBN 978-0-9592776-0-9
  3. ^ Sekulla, George P; Legge, Krystyna (2007), Our dream, our future : a history of the Midland-Bellevue Polish community, 1950-2006 (Limited 1st ed.), G. Sekulla and K. Legge, ISBN 978-0-646-47869-2
  4. ^ "Progress Plans - Bellevue (CCE No. 6849)". State Records Office of WA. 31 December 1943. Series S2238 - Plans - Civil Engineering, Item 022. Retrieved 4 June 2018.
  5. ^ Swan Valley Tours website, Markets in the Shire of Swan Archived 10 August 2007 at the Wayback Machine, retrieved 23 July 2007
  6. ^ ABC News, 25 April 2007, "Blaze Destroys Perth Markets". Accessed 23 July 2007.
  7. ^ "Railcar manufacturing returns to Western Australia". Metronet. Archived from the original on 8 June 2021. Retrieved 8 June 2021.
  8. ^ Law, Peter. "Mark McGowan and Transport Minister Rita Saffioti open Metronet Railcar Facility at Bellevue". The West Australian. Archived from the original on 8 June 2021. Retrieved 8 June 2021.
  9. ^ "Route 322". Bus Timetable 96 (PDF). Transperth. 16 January 2024 [effective from 4 February 2024].
  10. ^ "Route 320". Bus Timetable 97 (PDF). Transperth. 26 April 2023 [effective from 12 June 2023].
  11. ^ "Route 321". Bus Timetable 96 (PDF). Transperth. 16 January 2024 [effective from 4 February 2024].
  12. ^ "Route 326". Bus Timetable 86 (PDF). Transperth. 26 April 2023 [effective from 12 June 2023].
  13. ^ "Route 328". Bus Timetable 97 (PDF). Transperth. 26 April 2023 [effective from 12 June 2023].
  14. ^ "Route 277". Bus Timetable 110 (PDF). Transperth. 11 July 2024 [effective from 11 August 2024].
  15. ^ "Route 278". Bus Timetable 110 (PDF). Transperth. 11 July 2024 [effective from 11 August 2024].
  16. ^ "Route 307". Bus Timetable 96 (PDF). Transperth. 16 January 2024 [effective from 4 February 2024].

Further reading

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  • Elliot, Ian (1983). Mundaring - A History of the Shire (2nd ed.). Mundaring: Mundaring Shire. ISBN 0-9592776-0-9.
  • Spillman, Ken (2003). Life was meant to be here: community and local government in the Shire of Mundaring. Mundaring: Mundaring Shire. ISBN 0-9592776-3-3.
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