- Eden Hills, South Australia
Infobox Australian Place | type = suburb
name = Eden Hills
city = Adelaide
state = sa
caption = Eden Hills CFS Station
lga = City of Mitcham
postcode = 5050
pop =
est =
area =
propval =
stategov = Davenport
fedgov = Boothby
near-nw = St Marys
near-n = Pasadena
near-ne = Panorama
near-w = Bedford Park
near-e = Blackwood
near-sw = Bellevue Heights
near-s = Blackwood
near-se = Blackwood
dist1 =
location1=Eden Hills is a suburb in the Mitcham Hills area, 12 km. south of
Adelaide ,South Australia in the local government area of theCity of Mitcham .History
Whilst the derivation of the name is not conclusive, the Department of Lands Grant Book reveals the first land owner in the area was William Detmar Cook who purchased a property on October 29, 1839. Cook was Master of the barque "Eden".
There was little settlement of the area until the early 1880s, when the railway from Adelaide to Nairne opened, being the first stage in the plan to link Adelaide to
Melbourne . [cite book|first=Janet|last=Callen|year=2005|isbn=0-9595356-3-2|publisher=self-published|title=Forgotten Industries - the Brick-works of Eden Hills|pages=p.6] In 1883, a syndicate comprising John Whyte, James Cowan, Ebenezer Ward, John Hill, R.D. Moore, Seth Ferry and G.H. Catchlove acquired the sections of land where the suburb is now centred, and following a survey laid out the land into allotments. [cite web|publisher=State Library of South Australia|title=Manning Index of South Australian History - Eden Hills|accessdate= 2008-07-13|url= http://www.slsa.sa.gov.au/manning/pn/e/e1.htm#edenH]Around that time
Edwin Ashby moved into the area. Ashby and fellow land agent and financier Ernest Saunders owned and largely developed much of Eden Hills from 1890 and Ashby established the property Wittunga (now theWittunga Botanic Garden ) in Blackwood. [cite web|url=http://www.asap.unimelb.edu.au/bsparcs/biogs/P000986b.htm| publisher=University of Melbourne eScholarship Research Centre - Bright Sparcs|title=Ashby, Edwin (1861 - 1941)| accessdate=2008-07-12]The opening of the Eden Hills railway station in 1911 hastened development in the area. A post office and store opened in 1912 and a school (now Eden Hills Primary School) opened in 1916. [cite web|publisher=Blackwood Business Network|accessdate=2008-07-12|title=History of Blackwood|url= http://www.blackwoodbiz.com.au/index2.php?option=com_content&do_pdf=1&id=17] The school's original stone classroom survives as a reception area. [cite web|url=http://www.edenhillps.sa.edu.au/|publisher=Eden Hills Primary School|title=History|accessdate=2008-07-13] The Ashby family instigated the building of a
Friends meeting house in 1912 which served as a venue for several religious denominations, the local dramatic society and other community events. It was demolished in 1956. [cite book|last=Callen|first=Janet|title=Another Way of Life - Eden Hills 1883-1950|date=1983|publisher=self-published|isbn= 0-85864-074-0|pages=pp.33-37] An Anglican Parish Hall was built in 1927, and a Methodist church established in 1937, moving to its current location (now Eden Hills Uniting Church) in 1957. [cite web|publisher=Uniting Church SA|title=New Times|date=November 2007|accessdate=2008-07-14|url=http://www.sa.uca.org.au/webdata/resources/files/NT_November_2007.pdf]A brickworks was established near the railway line and Shepherds Hill Road in 1881 to facilitate the building of railway tunnels and remained in operation until 1933. A smaller brickyard operated near Parham Road from 1884-1930. [cite book|first=Janet|last=Callen|year=2005|isbn=0-9595356-3-2|publisher=self-published|title=Forgotten Industries - the Brick-works of Eden Hills] Nearby in Wade Road is "Seaview", the oldest known residence in Eden Hills, built in 1849. [cite book|last=Callen|first=Janet|title=Another Way of Life - Eden Hills 1883-1950|date=1983|publisher=self-published|isbn= 0-85864-074-0]
Places of interest
Blackwood High School , Blackwood Primary School and Eden Hills Primary School are located in Eden Hills. Eden Hills railway station is on theBelair railway line . Eden Hills also has aCountry Fire Service Station, established in 1951. [cite web|publisher=South Australian Country Fire Service|title=Eden Hills Brigade History|accessdate=2008-07-14|url=http://www.fire-brigade.asn.au/about-sacfs-history/pages/sacfs-ednh.asp]Watiparinga Reserve
Watiparinga Reserve and adjacent land near Gloucester Avenue in Eden Hills was added to the
Register of the National Estate in 1996. It comprises approximately 32 hectares and is considered a significant cultural landscape, exhibiting a diverse range of flora and provides an early example of nature conservation efforts in South Australia from the 1950s. The Reserve also contains remnants of the original 1880s Adelaide to Melbourne railway line, including an original single-track tunnel and concrete viaduct buttresses. The Reserve contains the first National Trust plaque to be erected in South Australia, which was unveiled in 1959. Watiparinga Reserve was developed as farmland in 1850-51 and acquired by Ernest Saunders and Edwin Ashby in 1911. The South Australian Railways bought some of the land for the single-track railway line and viaduct in 1880. DuringWorld War Two the former railway tunnel in the reserve was used for safe storage of South Australian art treasures and is now used to grow mushrooms commercially. The property was transferred to Edwin Ashby in 1922 and farmed as part of his Wittunga property. In the late 1950s his daughter Alison Ashby began planting thousands of seedlings of Australian plants in Watiparinga. She eventually donated Watiparinga to the National Trust in 1957. [cite web|publisher=Australian Heritage Database|title=Watiparinga Reserve and adjacent land|accessdate =2008-07-12|url=http://www.environment.gov.au/cgi-bin/ahdb/search.pl?mode=place_detail;search=place_name%3DWatiparinga%2520%3Bkeyword_PD%3Don%3Bkeyword_SS%3Don%3Bkeyword_PH%3Don%3Blatitude_1dir%3DS%3Blongitude_1dir%3DE%3Blongitude_2dir%3DE%3Blatitude_2dir%3DS%3Bin_region%3Dpart;place_id=19097]Colebrook Reconciliation Park
Colebrook Reconciliation Park in Eden Hills was established from 1998 as a memorial to the children who were removed from their families and housed at Colebrook Home, a "United Aborigines" mission which had originated in Oodnadatta in 1924, moved to Quorn, then finally relocated to Eden Hills in 1942. [cite web|publisher=Flinders Ranges Research|title=Colebrook Home|url=http://www.southaustralianhistory.com.au/colebrook.htm|accessdate=2008-07-13] At its Eden Hills location, Colebrook Home continued to house children, including prominent Aboriginal Australian health worker and public administrator
Lowitja O'Donoghue . [cite web|publisher=Film Australia - Australian Biography TV series|title=Interview with Lowitja O'Donoghue (transcript)|date=1994-03-22|accessdate=2008-07-13|url=http://www.australianbiography.gov.au/subjects/odonoghue/interview1.html] By 1956 the property was in poor condition and the home was finally closed in 1972 and demolished in 1973.The Reconciliation Park was born out of meetings in the 1990s between a local reconciliation study group and the "Tji Tji Tjuta" (former residents) of Colebrook Home. This led to memorial works including "Fountain of Tears", created in 1998 by Silvio Apponyi and "Grieving Mother" in 1999. [cite web|publisher=City of Mitcham|title=Colebrook Blackwood Reconciliation Park|accessdate=2008-07-13|url=http://www.mitchamcouncil.sa.gov.au/site/page.cfm?u=336]
Notes
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