- Upwey, Victoria
Infobox Australian Place | type = suburb
name = Upwey
city = Melbourne
state = vic
caption =
lga = Shire of Yarra Ranges
postcode = 3158
pop = 6760 (2006)Census 2006 AUS | id = SSC21695 | name = Upwey (State Suburb) | accessdate = 2007-10-01 | quick = on]
area = 7
est =
propval = $291,000 [ [http://www.domain.com.au/public/suburbprofile.aspx?suburb=Upwey&postcode=3158 Upwey] , accessed 27 November 2006]
stategov = Monbulk
fedgov = La Trobe
dist1 = 34
location1=Melbourne
dist2 = 2
location2= Belgrave
near-nw = Tremont
near-n = Ferny Creek
near-ne = "Dandenong Ranges"
near-w = Upper Ferntree Gully
near-e = Tecoma
near-sw = Lysterfield
near-s = Lysterfield
near-se = Belgrave HeightsUpwey, Victoria is a residential
suburb in hilly surrounds 34 km east ofGeneral Post Office, Melbourne and 2 km west ofBelgrave, Victoria . In 1996 Upwey's population was 7,149.History
The area of Upwey was originally known as "Mast Gully" as several masts for ships were cut down in the 1850s. To this day Mast Gully Creek and Mast Gully Road still remain. The Tullidge sisters bought a homestead in 1897 and named it after an English village on the River Wey—Upwey. On the
18 December 1900 the 2'6"narrow gauge railway fromUpper Ferntree Gully toGembrook was opened and they requested theVictorian Railways build a stopping place nearby, which was agreed to and on Monday,3 June 1901 , a station named Upwey was opened. The name was adopted locally, with the UpweyChurch of England opening in 1904 and a post office opening on 1 July 1909. Citation
last = Premier Postal History | title = Post Office List | url = https://www.premierpostal.com/cgi-bin/wsProd.sh/Viewpocdwrapper.p?SortBy=VIC&country= | accessdate = 2008-04-11 ] In 1918, the Upwey Convention started holding annual gatherings over the Christmas – New Year period—initially held at the Upwey Union (now Baptist) Church and later moving to their own property next to the High School. It finally moved in 1950 toBelgrave Heights .By the 1920s both a Progress Association and a fire brigade had been established and by the end of the 1920s and early 1930s many weekenders had been built in the area. When the Great Depression occurred the Victorian Government opened up Dandenong Ranges to housing and the population of Upwey and the surrounding foothills grew steadily. Upwey Primary School opened in 1934 and still exists today. Upwey Higher Elementary School opened in 1937 and became Upwey High School in 1945. Today it serves as the main secondary education provider in the Dandenong Ranges, taking students from around the foothills and Mount Dandenong.
In 1954 the railway was closed due to a landslide the previous year further along the line past Selby only to see it reopened as far as Belgrave in 1955 for three years as the first effort to run it as a preserved tourist railway, again closing in 1958. In 1962 the railway from Upper Ferntree Gully to Belgrave was reopened as part of the 5'3"
broad gauge suburban electric network, giving Upwey a direct link toMelbourne . With the reopening of the railway, the main road (Monbulk Road) no longer crossed the railway next to the station, but continue further on going under a railway bridge. Some years later, Upwey was by-passed with Collier Avenue on the north of the railway being upgraded and renamed Monbulk Road—later to be renamed Burwood Highway. The main street on the south side of the railway became a quiet local shopping strip.In 1997 the Dandenong Ranges suffered devastating bushfires that threatened Upwey and its neighbouring towns, however Upwey was spared from the onslaught. After the last branch of the Commonwealth Bank closed Upwey's local banking services were reduced to an ATM in the old bank building. In 1998 the abandoned bank building became the first metropolitan and third ever Community Bank branch of Bendigo Bank, a model that returns branch profits into the community.
Business & Community
Today Upwey is a thriving community. Main Street boasts a wide variety of shops and services, instilling a traditional community village nature into an outer eastern suburb of Melbourne.
Together with its neighbouring township Tecoma Upwey has an
Australian Rules football team (Upwey-Tecoma) competing in theYarra Valley Mountain District Football League .Citation | last = Full Points Footy | title = Upwey-Tecoma| url = http://www.fullpointsfooty.net/Upwey-Tecoma.htm | accessdate = 2008-07-25 ] 3158Transport
Upwey is on the Belgrave Railway line and has one Railway Station which is located adjacent to Main Street, Upwey's main shopping strip.
Trivia
local guitarist, song writer and singer Anthony Cecil based himself in Upwey and reknowned percussionist / musician Sue Haylock now lives there.
See also
References
External links
* [http://www.upweycfa.org.au/ Upwey CFA]
* [http://www.doi.vic.gov.au/doi/doielect.nsf/2a6bd98dee287482ca256915001cff0c/9213d345da8d14084a2569d8002b19c2/$FILE/Upwey.pdf Extract of Suburbs In Time]
* [http://www.bendigobank.com.au/public/community_bank/index.asp Bendigo Bank Community Banks]
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