Tuesday, May 19, 2026

Narre Warren East wants a new name

Narre Warren East is just over the border from the City of Casey in the Shire of Yarra Ranges. It was previously part of the Shire of Fern Tree Gully / Sherbrooke (1). Narre Warren East is located off Wellington Road in the Berwick Road and Mountain Flat, Edebohls and Haysey Roads vicinity. 

In the late 1950s, Helen Coulson, in her book The Story of the Dandenongs (2) wrote the following about Narre Warren East -
Narre Warren East, known originally as Muddy Creek, is a rural hamlet boasting only a school, hall, sports ground and store. The Muddy Creek, a stream of crystal clear water which traverses the area, derived its name from the fact that in the early days horses crossing the stream in winter were often covered in mud up to their bellies, Few changes - except in ownership - have occurred in the district since 1839, when cattle from the Monbulk run roamed the poor-type scrubby country, in the vicinity of Mountain Flat Road. In the early days one or two well defined tracks run through the district, the best known of these being the old road to the Emerald Diggings, which crossed the Eumemmerring, Muddy and Cardinia Creeks en route to Emerald, following roughly the route of present Old Emerald (Westland) Road.

Some 55 years ago Muddy Creek boasted a post office, which was located at the home of E. Cunningham. It remained in service for only two or three years and letters were then delivered by the contractor carrying mail from Narre Warren to Macclesfield. The district once possessed a church
(3), which was erected about 1907 and remained in use for 20 years. The small Church of England congregation was served by the clergyman stationed at Emerald and today the arbitrary manner in which the district was deprived of its church still rankles with some old-timers. Almost overnight the building was sold for £35 and spirited away to Springvale. About 1921 (4)  the Muddy Creek (now Narre Warren East) School was erected on a site adjoining the church. 

The Narre Warren East hall was erected in 1926 (5) and compulsorily acquired by the Council at the request of the committee in 1951.

A picnic ground of two acres, adjoining the Muddy Creek, was purchased by the Council in 1924 and named Kerr Park in honour of R.H. Kerr (6). In 1947 A.R. A'Beckett (7) gave to the Narre Warren East Progress Association a lease in perpetuity of some 7 acres of Kalora Park for use as a sports ground, in a fulfilment of a promise made to that body by his father, W.G. A'Beckett. In 1949, under threat of compulsory acquisition, A.R. A'Beckett sold this land and the adjoining three acres to the Fern Tree Gully Shire Council, which was anxious to secure tenure for all time by outright ownership, and the area is known as A'Beckett Park in honour of this pioneer family (8).

As Mrs Coulson has written, Narre Warren East began life as Muddy Creek. In October 1946 the name of the town was again an issue for discussion. The Dandenong Journal reported -
Narre Warren East wants to change its name - Owing  to the confusion caused through its distance from Narre Warren proper, and so many “Narre Warrens” an idea is afoot to change the name of the district, and in this regard a special meeting is being held in the local hall on Friday, October 11th, when residents will discuss the merits of the various names suggested. All interested are invited to attend. (9)


Meeting to change the name of Narre Warren East
Dandenong Journal, October 2, 1946 http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article214795742

As you can see, the residents felt  they were too far from Narre Warren proper - the town on the railway line.  Narre Warren originally referred to the township of Narre Warren North, which was surveyed around 1860 (and Narre Warren East, is actually east of this town.) The original settlement was later known as Old Narre Warren to distinguish it from New Narre Warren which developed around the Railway Station, which opened on March 10, 1882; when the school in the 'new' town opened in 1889, it was called the Narre Warren Railway Station school, No. 2924 to distinguish it from the original Narre Warren school, No. 1901, which changed its name to Narre Warren North in 1925. (10)

The Dandenong Journal reported on the outcome of the meeting - 
Narre Warren East Selects New Name - As a result of the meeting held on Friday evening, 11th inst, to change the name of the district three names proposed in order of preference were Melville, Pendrill and Lyndisfarme, and these have now been submitted to the Post Office for approval. (11)


New names for Narre Warren East
Dandenong Journal, October 23, 1946 http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article214796145

I cannot find any connection between these suggested names -   Melville, Pendrill or Lyndisfarme - and the local area. None of them are listed in Mrs Coulson's extensive index as either surnames or property names. In November, Dandenong Journal reported on this issue again-
Narre Warren East Still Looking For A Name - The Postal Department has rejected all three suggested new names for Narre Warren East, and the Progress Association will now submit the remaining half-dozen names put forward. A special meeting is being held on Friday, December 13th, to consider the names. Any objections or suggestions will have to be made at that meeting. (12)


Names rejected
Dandenong Journal, November 20, 1946 http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article214796557

However in a report of the meeting held on December 13 we find that - A new name for the district has not yet been found and the association would be very pleased if any of the local residents would help in this matter. (13) That is the last report I can find on the matter, and as Narre Warren East is still called that, then presumably the residents gave up, or could not think of a name that the Post Office would approve. 

Footnotes
(1) In 1963 the Shire of Fern Tree Gully split and the Shire of Knox was formed on November 16 (it became a City on July 4, 1969). The remains of the Shire of Fern Tree Gully was renamed Shire of Sherbrooke and this was announced in the Victorian Government Gazette of December 23, 1964.
(2) Coulson, Helen Story of the Dandenongs, 1838-1958 (Cheshire 1959), p. 246-247
(3) The Church was called St Mungos.
(4) The State School No. 3719, opened in February 1912, in the Anglican Church Hall. It initially operated half time with Menzies Creek, No. 2457, but they both became full-time in 1914. In February 1921, a new school building was erected. [Source: Vision and Realisation: a centenary history of State Education in Victoria, edited by L.J. Blake. Published by the Education Department of Victoria, 1973]
(5) The Hall was opened on November 30, 1928, by Sir George Knox, M.L.A, who later gave his name to the Shire of Knox.


Opening of the Narre Warren East Hall
Dandenong Journal November 29, 1928 http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article200678402

(6) R.H. Kerr - Robert Hart Kerr. His father, Hamill Kerr arrived in the area around 1869, his property was called Aura and was adjacent to Kerr's Lane (source: Coulson - Story of the Dandenongs) Robert Kerr was a Councillor of the Fern Tree Gully Council for over 30 years and was also a Councillor at Dandenong Shire. He died October 1944, read his obituary in The Argus of October 27, 1944, here.
(7) A.R. A'Beckett - Arthur Richard Walstab A'Beckett (1914 - 2004) was the son of William Gilbert A'Beckett (1864 -1941) and his wife Gertrude Walstab (1880 - 1962). William Gilbert A'Beckett was the son of William Arthur Callandar A'Beckett, M.L.C., J.P. (1833-1901).
(8) Coulson, op. cit pp 246-247
(9) Dandenong Journal, October 2, 1946, see here 
(10) The name was used in the area as early as 1837 when the Native Police Force was established at Nerre Nerre Warren, this area later became an Aboriginal Protectorate to protect the Aborigines from the white settlers. It is now the Dandenong Police Paddocks Reserve. Narree Worran is a Parish name in the County of Mornington. 
Sources for footnote 10 - 
Early days of Berwick and its surrounding districts (Berwick & District Agricultural and Horticultural Society, 3rd edition, 1979)
Thomson, Max Little Hills 1839-1977 (Narre Warren North State School No.1901 Centenary committee, 1977)
Vision and Realisation: a centenary history of State Education in Victoria edited by Les Blake (Education Department of Victoria, 1973)
(11) Dandenong Journal, October 23, 1946, see here. There is another report of the meeting held on October 11, 1946 where the three names - Melville, Pendrill or Lyndisfarme - were selected - Fern Tree Gully News, October 25, 1946, see here
(12) Dandenong Journal, November 20, 1946, see here.  
(13) Fern Tree Gully News, December 20, 1946, see here.


This is an expanded version of a post, which I wrote and researched, that first appeared on my work blog, Casey Cardinia Links to our Past.

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