Our History
Friends of Damper Creek Conservation Reserve
Friends of Damper Creek Conservation Reserve
Damper Creek is located on Wurundjeri land. The Wurundjeri people are the traditional custodians of the land in which Damper Creek is located. For at least the last 60,000 years they have held a deep spiritual connection to the land.
By the 1830s, it also became a rest place and water source for stockmen. Today Damper Creek takes the storm water from the surrounding area to Gardiners Creek, on into the Yarra River and eventually Port Phillip Bay. Alongside and under the actual creek stream there is the sewer main for the surrounding area. This takes the sewerage down to East Malvern where it connects with the south east trunk sewer to the Eastern Treatment Plant at Carrum.
Damper Creek’s resources played a small part in the building of St Stephens Anglican Church (now St Stephens and St Marys) in High Street Road Mt Waverley. The plans for the church were drawn up in 1864 and donations were requested to pay for the building. The congregation contracted a William Stevenson (Stephensons Road (name variation) was named after him) to make the bricks for the church construction. The bricks were fired in a kiln built near Damper Creek (and the church members carried them up the hill).
Up until the 1950s the intersection of Stephensons and High Street Roads was difficult to negotiate as the south-east tributary of Damper Creek passed through the centre of the intersection and there was a deviation to the west in Stephensons Road to by-pass the “hole”.
Orchards, market gardens and farms soon surrounded the creek up until after World War II when the city began to spread eastward. Alvie Hall (the current meeting place of the Friends of Damper Creek Reserve) at the corner of Alvie and High Street Roads was originally created as a motor garage which included plans for a future residence above. The addition of the residence was never built. The building was subsequently used as a church meeting hall and then purchased by the Council.
In the 1930s, a local farmer created a large dam in Damper Creek (just north of High St.Rd.) which was used for stock and crop irrigation. Later, with subdivision of the land in St Johns Wood Road, the dam was removed.
In September 2018, the Friends Group celebrated its 50th year and a plaque was placed at the south end of Park Rd to mark the occasion. A jubilee pictorial book was produced to recognise the growth of the group.
On Sunday 28 May 2023 we celebrated the 30th anniversary of the formation of the Friends of Damper Creek Reserve with a planting day, sausage sizzle celebration and an awards ceremony. During the celebrations, Local Federal Member for Chisholm, Dr Carina Garland, thanked members of the group for their continuing interest in the maintenance of the reserve. A similar endorsement of appreciation was made by Matt Fregon, local state member for Ashwood, who had participated in the planting session.
Carina Garland subsequently made a speech to Federal Parliament on 1 June praising the work of the FODCCR and emphasised the contribution of local groups to the community.