The area beside the creek in the suburbs of Mitcham and Brown Hill Creek was known to the
Kaurna people of the
Adelaide Plains as
Wirraparinga, meaning "creek and scrub place". The creek valley south of Brown Hill is home to
Brownhill Creek Recreation Park and has been the site of a recreation park since the late 1800s. A bathing hole was established at a constructed dam on the creek near Mitcham village in 1894 but was removed eight years later to protect the interests of market gardeners. A camping ground at the entrance to the valley was declared in 1954 in the "National Pleasure resort" and a stone plaque declaring a "pleasure resort" from the early part of the 20th century still stands at the site. A caravan park is presently located at the site of the original camping ground and the recreation reserve extends several kilometres upstream into the main creek valley. The upper reaches of the creek are utilised especially for
market gardening and also watering
pasture. In the 1870s, some of the upper gullies of the creek were considered as a possible location for a
reservoir to supply Adelaide's growing population with
water.
Thorndon Park Reservoir was eventually built instead. ==See also==