DANDENONG STAR JOURNAL
Home » Looking Back

Looking Back

100 years ago

30 November 1922

Vandalism on Croquet Lawn

Mischievous boys have been at work on the Dandenong croquet lawn, and amongst other acts of vandalism they have smashed the water meter, which means costing the club money to replace it. A sharp lookout is going to be kept for these destructive lads, and should they be caught, the result will probably be a visit to a place less inviting and congenial than the croquet lawn.

50 years ago

23 November 1972

Dandenong Valley Authority Blasted

A scathing attack on the DVA was made by Mr Towers, a member of the Port Phillip Conservation Council and the Seaford Landscape Preservation Group in an article published in the council’s Newsletter. Mr Towers claims that the rates paid to DVA by the 10 city councils and four shires could be lowered. Mr Towers said the DVA’s annual report showed that last year the authority did not use $300,000 of the $750,000 collected, finishing the year with a credit balance of $1½million in its general revenue account. He said this means it could lower its rates by 40% and still balance its general revenue account. Rates could be lowered even more if the authority were willing to use its bank overdraft allowance of $3m. Mr Towers suggested the shortage of funds in the municipalities forces them to cut down on important works which could benefit them.

20 years ago

25 November 2002

Sod turned to mark hospital construction

Construction of the 229-bed Berwick Hospital has officially begun. Health Minister John Thwaites was at the Kangan Road site last Thursday to turn the first sod. The public hospital will offer a range of medical service. It will also help deal with the demand on Dandenong Hospital and Monash Medical Centre. Mr Thwaites said that it would provide good quality medical service and boost the local economy. “The project will generate a significant number of employment opportunities for local residents both during the construction phase and when the hospital starts operation in 2004. The hospital will offer a full range of medical, surgical, paediatrics, obstetric, aged care and mental health services, and maternity and emergency wards.

5 years ago

27 November 2017

Spaghetti Junction

Springvale’s spaghetti junction will go underground if the Coalition wins next year’s state election. The Liberal and National parties announced their Get Victoria Moving Plan on Monday 20 November. Leader Matthew Guy pledged to remove traffic lights and roundabouts at 35 intersections including Princes Hwy, Springvale, Centre and Police Roads and Heatherton and Hallam Roads in Endeavour Hills. The overall project will cost $4.1 and $5.3 billion, and Mr Guy said it would cut congestion and make roads safer. Roads Minster Luke Donnellan said Mr Guy’s “embarrassing thought bubble would cut Endeavour Hills in half”. “He’d ban right hand turns at the intersection of Heatherton and Hallam Roads pumping traffic into surrounding streets,” he said. “An underpass would make the intersection a no-go zone for pedestrians while simply shifting traffic down to the next intersection.”

Compiled by Dandenong & District Historical Society

Digital Editions


More News

  • Critical nursery in need of a home

    Critical nursery in need of a home

    Purchase this photo from Pic Store: 532813 A volunteer nursery helping to propagate the South East’s disappearing flora is now itself under threat. Greenlink Sandbelt Nursery has been supplying the…

  • Three arrested following alleged stabbing in Narre Warren

    Three arrested following alleged stabbing in Narre Warren

    Three teenage boys were arrested last week following an alleged stabbing in Narre Warren. Police believe the altercation took place between a group of boys at a shopping centre on…

  • Galloping into a New Year with style

    Galloping into a New Year with style

    Purchase this photo from Pic Store: 531866 Under a blazing blue sky, thousands of revellers celebrated the Year of the Horse at the annual Springvale Lunar New Year festival. More…

  • Sign of the times: Record crowd expected at Bring Your Bills

    Sign of the times: Record crowd expected at Bring Your Bills

    Purchase this photo from Pic Store: 403433 February is piling up with credit card debt, back-to-school bills and higher interest rates – so the time is more than ripe for…

  • Funding call to further combat racism

    Funding call to further combat racism

    An anti-racism support network has provided its first insights after a year of documenting racism across the state, the first of its kind in Australia. The network, established in 2025…