Chute Street articles

New Horticultural Hall Opening – 1887

When the Diamond Creek Horticultural Society held its third annual exhibition on Thursday, 10th March 1887, there must have been a great deal of excitement that it was to be in the newly-erected Horticultural Hall. The hall was purpose built for horticultural displays and measured 50 feet by 26 feet. It was built on land […]

Machine Gun on St John’s Porch Roof

How Did it Get up here? Some of you may be aware of the location of Diamond Creek’s war memorial but some people may not be aware that this is actually the cenotaph’s third location. The cenotaph was originally erected in the middle of the intersections of Main Road, Collins Street and Hyde Street in […]

Town Without a Name

An extract from Edward Bage, Diamond Creek: surveyor, adventurer and gentleman by Jock Ryan (Nillumbik Historical Society 2001) Victoria’s booming population led to houses and farms springing up haphazardly with little regard to the location of future townships or roads. One such community had developed twenty five kilometres north east of Melbourne where, in 1862, […]

Diamond Creek’s Police Stations

How many times has Diamond Creek Police Station moved? The answer is four. Starting with the first permanent police presence in Diamond Creek in 1879 until the move to the newly built Emergency Services Centre on the corner of Main Hurstbridge Road and George Street in 2005, Diamond Creek’s police station has been in five […]

Looking down Chute Street in Diamond Creek around 1915

This historic photo is in the collection of the Nillumbik Historical Society.  Taken from paddocks below Collins Street some time around 1915, it shows how much the village of Diamond Creek has evolved. The original Royal Mail Hotel, licensed to William Inglis in 1867, was located on the corner of Inglis and Chute Streets.  It […]

Crossing a Flooded Creek When You Need to Get to Work

When Diamond Creek was cut in half by floodwaters in the early 1960’s, water would spread up the hill in Chute Street and those living on that side of town had no access to the railway station. So, what could you do if you needed to get to catch the train to work? Fortunately for […]