The town is believed to be named after
Beverley in
Yorkshire, from where some of the earliest explorers of the
Avon valley originated, including Colonial Surgeon Charles Simmons, an early landowner in the district. Land at Beverley was set aside for a townsite in 1831, just two years after the
Swan River Colony's foundation, after a glowing report to
Governor James Stirling by Ensign (later Lieutenant)
Robert Dale, who made three trips to the
York-Beverley area. The district was surveyed in 1843. While settlers arrived from the 1860s onwards, and a town was established in 1868, it wasn't until the arrival of the
Great Southern railway line with a
railway station in 1886 that the town started to grow, and with the completion of the railway in 1889 to
Albany, Beverley became an important centre. By early 1898 the population of the town was 190, 93 males and 97 females. In 1908, the
Goldfields Water Supply Scheme was extended to supply the town with water, and by
World War I, the town had four hotels, four banks, two bakeries, two tailors, three tearooms, a jeweller and two hairdressers, amongst other businesses, and in 1938, a new town hall opened. However, since the 1950s, with improved transport, communications and farming methods, the population of the Shire of Beverley fell from 1,968 in 1954 to 1,433 in 1991, and several banks and other town services closed. The population has started to grow again due to the popularity of rural residential estates and the town's proximity to Perth. ==Present day==