Guildford
Now a suburb of Perth, it was once the
favoured site for the first Swan River settlement.
Guildford is now a suburb of Perth located on the
Great Eastern Highway 14 km from the city centre. Given that it is now
part of Greater Perth it is hard to imagine that its origins lie in
Captain Stirling's determination to establish three settlements in the
Swan River area - a port at Fremantle, an administrative centre at
Perth, and a rural centre at Guildford. Thus the market town and inland
port of Guildford is as old as Perth and Fremantle. There is even some
evidence to support the idea that Guildford would have been Stirling's
first choice for a settlement and certainly, when the Government
established the first schools in the area in 1834 they appointed three
teachers - one for Fremantle, one for Guildford and one for Perth.
The importance of Guildford at this time was a
combination of the fact that it was located at the upper limit of
navigation on the Swan River and that the land around the infant
settlement was sufficiently good (good clay loam soils) to sustain agriculture.
Stirling was so impressed with the region around
Guildford that he chose a piece of land between the Swan and Helena
Rivers for his country retreat and it was here that he built
'Woodbridge' (it no longer exists but was a mudbrick structure which
stood where the Governor Stirling High School Assembly Room now stands).
Stirling obviously loved the area. In 1827, before
the Swan River colony had been established, he travelled up river and
standing on the site now occupied by the All Saints Church, he
observed: 'Here then, on a high bank, we pitched our tent. The richness
of the soil, the bright foliage of the shrubs, the majesty of the
surrounding trees, the abrupt, red-coloured banks of the river
occasionally seen, the view of the blue summits of the mountains from
which we were not far distant, made the scenery round this spot as
beautiful as anything of the kind I had ever witnessed'.
As the land to the east - Toodyay, Northam, York
in the Avon Valley - was opened up, Guildford became an important
transportation centre. Initially boats brought settlers and supplies to
Guildford. Later, after the arrival of convict labour in 1850, the
roads from Perth improved and it was possible to travel from Fremantle,
via Perth and Guildford, to the Avon Valley by road.
In her excellent book, The Swan Valley: A Perspective in
Time and Place, Dorothy B. Robinson notes: 'Until the 1880s, Guildford
was a flourishing market town and river port, with warehouses and
wharves and many stores and hotels. Teamsters brought down loads of
wheat and oats, hides, skins and tallow, and timber and sandalwood, and
went back to the country loaded with clothes and clothing materials,
stores, hardware and household goods, and implements for use on the farms.'
Guildford's importance declined with the construction
of the railway line. The town of Midland grew as the railhead in the
district and slowly the port facilities at Guildford fell into decline.
Today Guildford is rich in history and reminders of
the early development of the Swan Valley.
Things to see:
Swan Valley Heritage Trail
The best way to see the major historic sites in
Guildford is to follow the excellent Swan Valley Heritage Trail:
Settlement of the Swan River Valley, Western Australia which combines a
40 km drive up the Swan Valley from Guildford to Upper Swan as well as
a Historic Guildford Walk. It takes five or six hours to do justice to
the trail.
The journey up the Swan Valley is basically a retracing
of Captain Stirling's expedition in 1827. It was on the basis of this
journey that Stirling managed to persuade people in England that the
Perth area was a land of boundless potential.
In 1827 Stirling moored his ship Success in
Cockburn Sound and made his way upstream past the present site of Perth
until he found a 'spring of delicious water' at the base of a hill
which he named, with a nice sense of a pun, 'Success Hill'. Success
Hill Reserve, where the Heritage Trail commences, is located in Seventh
Avenue, Bassendean on the western side of the Swan River. This place
which caused Stirling to enthuse about the Swan Valley was also the
point where Stirling and his party first made contact with the
Aborigines of the area. Success Hill was an important sacred site for
the local Aborigines. It was believed that a snake-like spirit of the
Dreaming lived in a nearby cave. Today there is a track through the
reserve which offers excellent views of the Swan River, includes
opportunities to inspect the flora of the district, and crosses the
spring which persuaded Stirling that the area would be suitable for settlement.
An Historic Walk around Guildford
The walk around Guildford encompasses a number of
important sites and buildings.
1. The Guildford Hotel
The Guildford Hotel (1886 with additions in 1899) is a
superb hotel. Much of the original hotel is now obscured by the
extravagant additions and the unusual octagonal belvedere. The
extravagance of the hotel is a symbol of the wealth which flowed across
Western Australia as a result of the gold boom in Kalgoorlie and Coolgardie.
Stirling Square, originally called Church Square,
was set aside and surveyed in 1829. It was originally twice its current
size but in the 1840s and 1860s sections were sold off and trees were
planted in 1874 and 1897.
2. St Matthew's Church
In the centre of Stirling Square is St Matthew's
Church. This is the third St Matthews Church in the area. The first,
built of mudbricks in 1836, was replaced by a wooden building which was
blown down by a hurricane in 1860. The current building was constructed
in 1873 and is notable for the way the bricks have been laid
alternately lengthwise and pointing inwards to reinforce the structure.
It was designed by Frederick Sherwood.
3. Riversleigh
Riversleigh, sometimes known as Crosslands House,
at 132 Swan Street was built in 1896 and is a good example of the
luxurious homes which were built in Guildford around the turn of the
century when it became a fashionable outer suburb of Perth. The house
was built for Charles Crossland, a surveyor and land agent in Perth,
who wanted to live in relative rural tranquillity. It is not open for inspection.
4. Andrew Moulton's Cottage
Around the corner at 27 Meadow Street (it is not open
for inspection) is Andrew Moulton's cottage which dates from 1842.
Moulton was a successful merchant in the days when Guildford was an
important river port and transportation centre. He exported local
produce - sandalwood, leather, wool and timber - to Asia until he was
killed by his Malay crew while shipping sandalwood to Hong Kong in 1846.
5. Guildford Town Wharf
Further down Meadow Street, beside the Swan River, is
the old Guildford Town Wharf, sometimes known as Moulton's Landing. The
wharf on this site was part of the planning for Guildford and dates
from 1829. It was used as the central transport node of the town until
the arrival of the railway at Midland in
the 1880s. After that it fell into disrepair and disuse. A replica was
built and opened in 1984. Barker's Bridge dates from 1948 although
there has been a bridge continuously at this point on the river since
1854. The first bridge was built with convict labour and was named
Barker's Bridge after the local storekeeper, Samuel Barker.
5. Barker's Store
Barker's Store at 124 Meadow Street near the corner
with Swan Street, dates from 1854. It was originally a complex of six
buildings which combined a general store with a warehouse. The complex
dominated the economic life of the town from the 1850s until the 1880s.
6. The Old Courthouse and Gaol
Further up Meadow Street are the old Courthouse and
Gaol. The Gaol was constructed in 184041 with additions in 1866
and, until the construction of the Courthouse in 1867, operated as both
court house and gaol. The Gaol was built at the request of the local
Government Resident who felt that Guildford's three hotels caused
enough bad behaviour in the town to need a gaol. The Courthouse is now
used by a number of community groups and the gaol is a museum run by
the SwanGuildford Historical Society.
7. Mechanics Institute
The local Mechanics' Institute (1865) in Meadow
Street was originally built to improve the education of the local
tradesmen and is now the headquarters of the Swan-Guildford Historical
Society. It is open on Sundays from 2.00 p.m. - 5.00 p.m. Nearby, on
the corner of Meadow and Stirling Streets, is the Post Office, an
imposing building with a clock tower which was built in 1900 on a site
originally occupied by the old Convict Depot hospital.
8. Other Buildings
Across the railway line in Meadow Street are the
Commissariat Store, Du Cane's House (14 Meadow Street) and King's
Cottage (11 Meadow Street). The Commissariat was built in 1853-53 by
Lieutenant Edmund du Cane who supervised the convict work parties in
the district. Du Cane's house, which is much altered from its original
structure, dates from the time he arrived in Guildford.
King's Cottage (1860s) built by the local bootmaker, George
Ogilsby King, is a fine example of a modest tradesman's house from the
period. It has not been significantly altered.
The Swan Shire Council has published a brochure
Guildford: A guide to some historic buildings and landmarks which,
apart from including these prominent buildings also includes a number
of interesting historic hotels and private homes. It lists a total of
22 buildings between the Swan River and Helena Street which are of
significant historical interest.
The Heritage Trail does have some notable omissions
the most significant of which would be the superb Rose and Crown Inn
(originally built in 1840, rebuilt in the 1850s with additions in the
1880s) at 104 Swan Street. It was originally used for public meetings
until the Mechanics' Hall was built. The alterations in the 1880s
converted it into a fine example of a Colonial Georgian hotel. It is
one of the oldest hotels in Western Australia.
Woodbridge and Midland
The Swan Valley Heritage Trail then leaves Guildford
town centre and moves along the river to Woodbridge (not the house
built by Stirling) which was built by Charles Harper, a successful
local businessman and parliamentarian, in 18835 and given to the
National Trust in 1968. This magnificent late Victorian house on the
banks of the Swan River has been restored to its original glory with
extensive displays of paintings, furniture and antiques. It was here,
in 1896 in the billiard room, that the school which would eventually
grow into Guildford Grammar School, was started. The building was
opened to the public in 1970 and can be inspected Monday to Saturday
(closed Wednesday) from 1.00 p.m. - 4.00 p.m. and Sunday 11.00 p.m. -
5.00 p.m. Take Third Avenue off the Great Eastern Highway. Nearby is
the Governor Stirling High School - the site of the original 'Woodbridge'.
Beyond Midland the
Heritage Trail stops at St Mary's Church and Graveyard in Yule Road,
Middle Swan, a small Gothic Revival Church which was built in 1868-69
and the Houghton Homestead, Dale Road, Middle Swan (1863) described as
an outstanding example of homestead architecture of the period. It is
now part of the famous Houghton vineyards and is open from 10.00 a.m. -
5.00 p.m. Monday to Saturday and 11.00 a.m. - 4.00 p.m. Sunday. For
more details on the vineyards of the Upper Swan Valley see Midland.
The final stop on the Swan Valley Heritage Trail is
All Saints Church in Henry Street, Upper Swan. This was the furthest
that Captain Stirling and his party reached in 1827. The church's
foundation stone was laid in 1839, the first service was held in 1841,
and due to its original construction of rammed earth it was effectively
rebuilt with bricks in 1860.
Guildford to York Heritage Trail
For people heading towards York there is the
interesting Guildford to York Heritage Trail brochure which has 13
stopping points on the route from Guildford to York via the Great
Eastern and Great Southern Highways.
Anyone interested in the geology of the Swan Valley, and for
that matter the whole of the western coastline around Perth, should
read The Swan Valley: A Perspective in Time and Place by Dorothy B.
Robinson. It is an excellent and very readable account of the history
and geology of the Swan Valley with lots of interesting and unusual
pieces of information of the whole region including Midland and
Mundaring.
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Hotels
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Guildford Hotel
161 James St
Guildford
WA
6055
Telephone: (08) 9279 1008 or 9279 1399
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Rose and Crown Hotel/Motel
105 Swan St
Guildford
WA
6055
Telephone: (08) 9279 8444
Facsimile: (08) 9377 1628
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Woodbridge Tavern
50 East St
Guildford
WA
6055
Telephone: (08) 9377 1199
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Cottages & Cabins
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Swan Valley Holiday Cottages
10070 West Swan Rd
Henley Brook
Guildford
WA
6055
Telephone: (08) 9296 1007
Facsimile: (08) 9296 3141
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Willow Cottage
89 Swan St
Guildford
WA
6055
Telephone: (08) 9279 9093
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Restaurants
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China Garden Chinese Restaurant & Take Away
Queens Rd
Guildford
WA
6055
Telephone: (09) 279 8565
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Rose and Crown Hotel/Motel
105 Swan St
Guildford
WA
6055
Telephone: (08) 9279 8444
Facsimile: (08) 9377 1628
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Sugar Gum Restaurant
105 Terrace Rd
Guildford
WA
6055
Telephone: (09) 377 2262
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