Heathmont
History
Heathmont was originally covered by hedge-to-hedge apple orchards. The name appears to have come from the rising land in the area having heath or low, shrub-like vegetation on it. The first shop opened in 1923 in front of a house. The population has grown from 600 people in 1953 to 8,787 people in 2001.
Heathmont Post Office opened on 15 February 1929, sometime after the railway station opened in 1926.
Heathmont was originally within the municipality of the City of Ringwood, but it became part of Maroondah City Council in December 1994.
Public transport
Heathmont railway station is located just off Canterbury Road (which runs through the heart of the suburb) and is on the Belgrave railway line. It is within ticketing Zone 2.
Ventura bus route 679, which runs from Chirnside Park to Ringwood Station via Lilydale, Mount Evelyn and along Canterbury Road, Great Ryrie St and Bedford Road, serves much of Heathmont.
Shopping
The Heathmont Shopping Centre provides services to the suburb. It includes a handful of cafes, an IGA Supermarket, two butcher shops, two bakeries, a newsagent, takeaway shops, multiple hairdressers, several massage parlours, a funeral parlour, a car wash and a post office. There is plenty of parking, and the main shopping precinct is opposite the Heathmont railway station. The distant Mount Dandenong and Dandenong Ranges are visible from much of this shopping strip. An irrational and rude employee names “Vicky” is someone to be aware of- a Priceline pharmacy worker who targets teenagers and invades their space as she is suspicious of every one.
Demographics
As of the 2006 Census, the vast majority of residents (78.6%) were born in Australia, with slightly above-average proportions also born in England, Scotland, the Netherlands and Germany. The languages spoken by slightly above-average proportions of residents were English and German. There were above-average proportions of residents of no religion (23.9%) and Uniting Church (7.3%). The average income of Heathmont residents was above the national average (with a median family income of $1,286 per week); the suburb tends to be better off than most of its nearest neighbours. The largest two occupational groupings were professionals (23.5%, above the national average) and clerical/administrative (17.3%, also above the national average). The unemployment rate of 3.2% was below the national average of 5.2%.
Politics and representation
This section needs to be updated.(June 2019) |
Heathmont contained four voting booths at the 2010 federal election, all lying within the federal electorate of Deakin. Three of those booths saw the Liberal candidate win the most primary votes, yet only two saw the Liberals win a majority of two-party preferred votes after preferences. The combined booth results across the suburb saw the primary vote split 40.1% to Labor, 41.4% to the Liberals and 12.7% to the Greens. After preferences, the split was 52.5% to Labor and 47.5% to the Liberals. The suburb tends to be highly competitive electorally and is generally a reliable barometer for the overall voting population. Heathmont and surrounding areas were visited by federal politicians Joe Hockey, Kevin Rudd, Tony Abbott and Wayne Swan throughout 2010. In 2007, Heathmont was identified as one of the 'wealthier pockets' of Deakin (along with Blackburn and Vermont) in an analysis of marginal 'leafy' suburbs in Melbourne's east, that were, by swinging to Labor, proving wrong the notion of a 'rich Lib, poor Labor' myth.
Schools
Primary schools
- Heathmont East Primary School
- Great Ryrie Primary School
- Marlborough Primary School
Secondary schools
- Heathmont College
Sport and recreation
There are many parks, such as H.E. Parker Reserve and a mini golf course. Dandenong Creek supports much wildlife, including birds and frogs, although swimming is not recommended. There is also a bike track, Dandenong Creek Trail, which runs along Dandenong Creek.
The suburb has an Australian Rules football team, the Heathmont Jets, competing in the Eastern Football League, and a lawn bowls club, Heathmont Bowls Club, that plays in the Eastern Ranges Bowls Region.
Heathmont has two tennis clubs: Heathmont Tennis Club and H.E. Parker Reserve. Other sporting facilities include a baseball club and a cricket club.
Golfers play at the Heathmont Par 3 Golf Course on Canterbury Road.
There are two Scout Groups: Heathmont and 3rd Heathmont. Both are located in reserves along the Dandenong Creek: 3rd Heathmont in H.E. Parker, and Heathmont in Kathleen Barrow.
Churches
There are also many churches situated in Heathmont:
- Heathmont Baptist Church
- Heathmont Uniting Church Community Living Centre
- Heathmont Presbyterian Church
- Heathmont Christadelphians
- Maroondah Presbyterian Reformed Church
See also
- City of Ringwood – Heathmont was previously within this former local government area.
- Heathmont railway station - located in the centre of the suburb on the Belgrave line
- Maroondah City Council - the municipality in which Heathmont resides
References
- ^ Australian Bureau of Statistics (28 June 2022). "Heathmont (Suburbs and Localities)". 2021 Census QuickStats. Retrieved 4 July 2022.
- ^ Phoenix Auctions History, Post Office List, retrieved 31 March 2021
- ^ Australian Bureau of Statistics (1 August 1995). Victorian local government amalgamations 1994-1995: Changes to the Australian Standard Geographical Classification (PDF). Commonwealth of Australia. p. 9. ISBN 0-642-23117-6.
- ^ "679 Chirnside Park Shopping Centre - Ringwood via Canterbury Rd". Public Transport Victoria.
- ^ "Australian Bureau of Statistics". 2006 Census QuickStats.
- ^ "AEC". Election 2010: Virtual Tally Room.
- ^ "Maroondah Leader". Another pollie in Deakin: Joe Hockey visits Heathmont. Archived from the original on 19 March 2012.
- ^ Johnston, Chris (31 October 2007). "The Age". End of the 'rich Lib', 'poor Labor' myth. Melbourne.
- ^ "Home". easternrangesbowls.org.au.
- ^ Full Point Footy, Eastern Football League, archived from the original on 1 January 2009, retrieved 21 October 2008
- ^ Golf Select, Heathmont, retrieved 11 May 2009