North Coogee (Post Code: 6163)
Have a North Coogee Property Management Company contact you about managing your North Coogee Investment Property.Have North Coogee Real Estate Agents contact you about selling your North Coogee Investment Property.
Get a North Coogee Rental Appraisal for your North Coogee Investment Property.
Or Call Us Today On 08 9370 0888
Property Management North Coogee - Perth - Suburb Profile
North Coogee is a coastal, western suburb of Perth, Western Australia, located within the City of Cockburn.
The suburb is immediately to the north of Coogee, which takes its name from the lake, Lake Coogee, in the area, which translates to "Body of water" in the native Aboriginal Nyoongar language.
Originally this lake was named Lake Munster after Prince William, the Earl of Munster, and later King William IV.
The aboriginal name Kou-gee was recorded in 1841 by Thomas Watson and has been variously spelt Koojee, Coojee and Coogee.
North Coogee was created on 19 December 2005 and incorporated portions of the surrounding suburbs of Hamilton Hill, Spearwood and Coogee.
North Coogee is located 4 km south of Fremantle, and is bounded by the municipal boundary of the City of Fremantle to the north, Cockburn Road/Beeliar Regional Park to the east, Powell Road to the south and Cockburn Sound to the west.
North Coogee overlooks Cockburn Sound with views of Garden Island, Carnac Island and Rottnest Island.
The first development in the area may have been when Richard Goldsmith Meares who established a lime burning kiln in 1831, south of the Clarence townsite.
Meares had arrived at the Swan River Colony with Thomas Peel in the previous year.
Meares abandoned the site after a few months moving to Mt Helena, later becoming the Government Resident at York.
As the area was adjacent to the relatively safe harbour of Owen's Anchorage in Cockburn Sound, the area began to be used as an alternative destination point for ship arrivals.
The original land grant was to George Robb and stretched between Hamilton Hill and North Lake.
In 1899 it was further subdivided and by 1900 the area saw the establishment of a number of commercial lime kilns, to provide for the construction boom and population growth which had been brought about by gold discoveries.
The area continued to take on an industrialised character that continued until the early 1990s.
Features of the area included the Fremantle Smelting Works, just south of Island Street, which processed lead and base bullion from Kalgoorlie.
Next to the smelter was the slaughter house of Copley & Co, processing sheep and cattle on the same location where John Wellard had slaughtered sheep for the Convict establishment in the early 1850s.
Further south at Robb Jetty, slaughter houses operated by Forrest, Emanuel & Co, and Connor, Doherty and Durack existed, these slaughter houses essentially supplied all the meat to the metropolitan area and the expanding goldfields.
The livestock arriving from the north-west of the state including the Kimberley Region and were unloaded from the ships onto the jetty.
As there was no cold storage at the slaughter houses extensive pasturing for the animals as well as small market gardens were established in the region around the abattoir.
In 1898 a railway was built from Fremantle to Robb Jetty.
The slaughter houses expanded with a bone mill, blood manure and skin-drying sheds added.
Next to the slaughter houses an explosives magazine was built in the sandhills.
In addition a piggery, slaughter house and bacon factory were built by J.C Hutton & Co, south of Robb Jetty at James Rocks.
In 1903 the railway was extended to Woodman Point and the explosives magazine was moved there, further away from Fremantle.
The area steadily became the centre of much of Perth's heavy industry and comprised the coal-fired power station, railway marshalling yards, abattoir as well as numerous skin drying sheds.
From the 1980s however, pressures brought on by demands for residential housing began a process of removal of the various facilities.
Follow us and find us on...