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Mount Nasura is a suburb of
Perth, Western Australia Perth is the capital and largest city of the Australian state of Western Australia. It is the fourth most populous city in Australia and Oceania, with a population of 2.1 million (80% of the state) living in Greater Perth in 2020. Perth is ...
, located within the City of Armadale. The suburb occupies hilly terrain bounded on the north by Brookton Highway and Hill Street (1.6 km), west by Paterson Road (1.1 km), south-west by Canns and Carradine Roads (1.6 km), south by property boundaries on the north side of the Neerigin Brook (0.3 km), and east by Albany Highway (2.7m). With the exception of the
Armadale Kelmscott District Memorial Hospital Armadale Hospital is a general public hospital in Armadale, in Perth's south-eastern suburbs. The hospital, which includes an emergency department with 47 patient spaces, is located on the Armadale Health Service campus. The campus also include ...
, the suburb is primarily residential.


History

The suburb takes its name from a vineyard, named the Derry NaSura (gateway or doorway to the south), which formerly occupied the hillside above Albany Highway just north of the Narrogin Inn. This vineyard was established in the early 1890s by a partnership of Martin E. Jull, then Chief Clerk of the Railway Construction Department, and Dr J . M. Fergusson-Stewart. In 1896, Fergusson-Stewart's share was bought out by Sir Arthur Stepney, an English baronet, and for a time the vineyard was known as the Stepney Jull Armadale Vineyard. Jull sold out to Stepney in 1899. Under Stepney's ownership, the vineyard was significantly expanded and renamed the Derry NaSura Vineyard. Stepney also developed an extensive orchard alongside the vineyard, and in 1904 erected a substantial cellar building, which was a landmark on the hillside above the infant township. In the early years of the 20th century, the vineyard was one of Armadale's leading industries along with the Armadale Brickworks. When Stepney died in 1909, the vineyard was taken over by Messrs H. C. Sewell and C. Crocker who continued to invest in the development of this enterprise. In 1946 the vineyard was purchased by Messrs G. Hack and W. Clowes, and at that time comprised 268 acres, of which 100 acres were planted with vines. Vines were removed in the 1950s and some time later the redundant cellars were demolished. The property was purchased by a private syndicate and in 1966 it was rezoned for residential subdivision. In the decades that followed the distinctively terraced hillside was gradually covered by suburban housing.Carter, J & B; ''Settlement to City: A history of the Armadale district and its people''; City of Armadale, 2011, p. 326. During the 1980s and 1990s, residents successfully campaigned to have the name of the area changed from Armadale to Mount Nasura.


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Suburbs of Perth, Western Australia Suburbs in the City of Armadale {{PerthAU-geo-stub