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Suburb by suburb snapshot – Harcourt

October 2, 2021 BY

Located in the centre of Harcourt is the Harcourt Post Office.

Harcourt is approximately 28.5 square kilometres and has seven parks covering nearly 1.2 per cent of total area.

The population of Harcourt in 2011 was 872 people and by the 2016 Census the population was 949 showing a population growth of 8.8 per cent in the area during that time.

Harcourt is a rural township on the Calder Highway and the railway line from Melbourne to Bendigo and is nine kilometres north-east of Castlemaine and on the western side of the Mount Alexander range.

To the east of the town is Barkers Creek, a stream which flows towards Castlemaine and which was the site of much easily won alluvial gold during gold rushes in 1851-52.

This four-bedroom Harcourt home sold recently for $608,000.

Mount Alexander is the dominant landscape element at Harcourt and was named by the New South Wales Surveyor-General in 1836 after Alexander the Great.

In 1845 Dr William Barker acquired the Mount Alexander pastoral run and built a homestead beside Barkers Creek, Harcourt North.

The gold discovery at Specimen Gully, on the Barkers Creek, was reputedly made by employees of Barker in 1851.

Harcourt township was surveyed in 1853, on the junction of the roads to Bendigo and Castlemaine near the Barkers Creek.

Harcourt activities were chiefly agricultural, supplying vegetables and dairy goods to Castlemaine.

A school was opened in 1859, a Methodist church in 1864 and a railway station in 1863 when the line was opened between Kyneton and Bendigo.

During the 1860’s orchards were planted for pome and stone fruits and by the 1880’s the chief planting were apples, pears and cherries.

In 1881 a water-supply channel from the Coliban system for sluicing gold at Specimen Gully was tapped for irrigation of the Harcourt Orchards.

A reservoir had been built north of Harcourt on Barkers Creek by 1868 and a local irrigation trust was established in 1889.

The real benefits of irrigation came with the State Rivers and Water Supply Commission (1905) which took over the Coliban water storage and irrigation system.

The Harcourt valley, between Mount Alexander and Bald Hills, became an apple orchard area which produced export quality crops, and much of the town’s housing stock can be dated form that period.

The town’s prosperity is visible in the well laid-out Stanley Park (1914) with monuments and mature exotic trees.

CoreLogic data indicates that the predominant age group in Harcourt is 50- 59 years with households in Harcourt being primarily couples with children and are likely to be repaying $1400 – $1799 per month on mortgage repayments. In general, people in Harcourt work in a professional occupation.

In 2011, 82.3 per cent of the homes in Harcourt were owner-occupied compared with 85.5 per cent in 2016.

 

TIDBIT: Harcourt was named after Sir William Harcourt, English Chancellor of the Exchequer.

 

Population: 949

Male: 50.1%

Female: 49.9%

Median age: 46

5-year population change: 8.8%

House median value: $623,000

Change in Median Price: (5yrs) is 37.8%

Median asking rent per week: $370

Average length of ownership: 8 years

Owner occupiers:87%

Renters: 13%

 

House median sale price:

June 2021: $569,000

June 2020: $455,000

June 2019: $432,000

June 2018: $419,000

June 2017: $397,500

 

House sales per annum:

Period ending June 2021: 20

Period ending June 2020: 9

 

Land median sale price:

June 2021: N/A

June 2020: N/A

 

Land sales per annum:

Period ending June 2021: 7

Period ending June 2020: 3