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Town by town snapshot – Maldon

January 30, 2022 BY

A revitalisation project for the Maldon Streetscape has been underway for several years.

Maldon is approximately 45 square kilometres and has many parks covering nearly 16 per cent of total area.

The population in 2011 was 1432 people and by the 2016 Census it was 1517 showing growth of 5.9 per cent in the area during that time.

Maldon is a rural town 120 kilometres north-west of Melbourne and 25 kilometres beyond Castlemaine.

A former gold town, situated away from major arterial roads and railways.

It was declared Australia’s first notable town in 1966 by the National Trust, and an interim development order was placed on Maldon in 1970 to prevent the demolition of buildings.

Maldon is situated on the former Cairn Curran pastoral run, established in 1840, which was owned by the Simson family who also had the Tarrangower run immediately to the south.

Mount Tarrangower overlooks Maldon from the west, and it was near the foot of the mountain that gold was found by a Polish prospector, John Mechosk, in December 1853.

This former Freemasons Hall in High Street Maldon sold recently for $620,000.

A rush occurred in 1854 and a township was surveyed and it is thought that the name Maldon was proposed by a member of the survey party, perhaps inspired by the hilly country resembling Maldon in Essex, England.

A municipality was created in 1858, in turn becoming a district in 1863 and a shire on 12 January 1864.

A brewery and several hotels were built in 1854 and a Wesleyan church was opened in 1855.

A particularly rich gold field was found in 1855 in the hills north of Maldon.

Named Nuggetty, it was a source of easily won wealth, and the Mines Department calculated that over 300,000 ounces of gold were taken.

Another notable area, immediately east of Maldon’s commercial centre, was the Beehive Company.

In 1865 Bailliere’s Victorian gazetteer recorded Maldon as having the Tarrangower Times newspaper, numerous hotels and banks, two schools, a hospital and an athenaeum.

Profitable mining continued until the turn of the century, but the years of peak population were the 1870s.

CoreLogic data indicates that the predominant age group in Maldon is 60-69 years with households being primarily childless couples and are likely to be repaying $1000 – $1399 per month on mortgages. In general, people in Maldon work in a professional occupation.

In 2011, 80.4 per cent of the homes in Maldon were owner-occupied compared with 80.9 per cent in 2016.

 

TIDBIT:

Maldon was declared Australia’s first notable town in 1966 by the National Trust.

 

Population: 1517

Male: 48.3%

Female: 51.7%

Median age: 58

5-year population change: 5.9%

House median value: $677,000

Change in Median Price: (5yrs) is 69.8%

Median asking rent per week: $480

Average length of ownership: 7 years

Owner occupiers:84%

Renters: 16%

 

House median sale price:

October 2021: $620,000

October 2020: $502,000

October 2019: $510,000

October 2018: $420,000

October 2017: $407,500

 

House sales per annum:

Period ending October 2021: 63

Period ending October 2020: 51

 

Land median sale price:

October 2021: $245,500

October 2020: $267,000

 

Land sales per annum:

Period ending October 2021: 9

Period ending October 2020: 12