Hall, Australian Capital Territory

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Hall
CanberraAustralian Capital Territory
Hall ACT Oct 2015 Aerial.JPG
Aerial Photo of Hall
Hall is located in Australian Capital Territory
Hall
Hall
Coordinates Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
Population 332 (2011 census)[1]
Established 1882
Postcode(s) 2618
Territory electorate(s) Ginninderra
Federal Division(s) Fraser
Suburbs around Hall:
Wallaroo (New South Wales) Springrange (New South Wales)
Hall
Kinlyside

Hall is a small village in the north of the Australian Capital Territory (ACT), Australia. At the 2011 Census, the village had a population of 332 people. It is surrounded by open country and has a rural appearance. It has a village character though it is practically a suburb on the edge of Canberra. The village itself features historic buildings that existed before the establishment of Canberra.

History

George Palmers established his Palmerville Estate in 1826 in Ginninginderry with a homestead located on the banks of Ginninderra Creek adjacent to the presentday suburb of Giralang. The estate encompassed much of what is now Belconnen and southern Gungahlin. It adjoined the Charnwood Estate to the west and Yarralumla Estate to the east. The combined area of the Ginninderra and Charnwood Estates was nearly 20,150 acres (8155 ha).

By 1861 a store, post office, cottages and homestead had been set up on a property owned by William Davis, about 3 km south of Hall at Ginninderra. This settlement was known by residents as Ginninderra village. In 1881 the NSW Government surveyed the area for an official village and chose a site on Halls Creek. [2]

The new village called Ginninderra was officially proclaimed in 1882, but after protests from local residents was renamed Hall, in honour the first landholder in the area, Henry Hall. The village was planned on a rectangular grid. The first sale of land occurred in 1886.

In 1911 the Australian Capital Territory was gazetted and Hall was within the boundary of the land allocated, near the New South Wales border. It was also one of the sites considered for a capital city in the Yass district. Hall did not grow as it suffered with few amenities and it was not provided with town water until 1967.[2] In 1954 the main street of Hall (which had been part of the state highway system since 1935) was named the Barton Highway.

In 1980 the highway alignment was shifted to the west as part of a dual carriage upgrade, bypassing Hall completely.

Features and Attractions

Some features of note within Hall village are:[2]

  • Hall Pavilion and Showground. The showground area plays host to the Hall Markets, a popular monthly charity market showcasing hand-produced goods.
  • Equestrian park and polo Crosse grounds
  • Hall Premier Store and Post Office
  • Hall Brigade- ACT Rural Fire Service
  • Numerous historic buildings and cottages including the Cooee (1900), Glenowa (1900), Winarlia (1901) and Ottocliffe (1907).
  • Historic Catholic and Anglican Churches
  • Memorial Avenue of Trees
  • Hall School Museum and Heritage Centre located in the former Hall Primary School
  • The Rotary Club of Hall, a rural focused Rotary Club that runs the Capital Region Farmers Market (as a community service project with the aim of helping to grow agri-business opportunities in the region)[3]

Geology

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In the Hall area the rocks are all Silurian age volcanic rocks. Green grey and purple quartz andesite and dacite from the Hawkins Volcanics are under the village and extending up the Halls Creek valley. Green-grey dacite and quartz andesite from the Hawkins Volcanics cover the surrounding areas including up to the New South Wales border, north to One Tree Hill, south east to the Harcourt Hill and south to the north edge of Belconnen. Dark grey to green grey dacitic tuff is found over the other side of the New South Wales border, and also within the Australian Capital Territory near Gooromon Ponds Creek.

References

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External links