Kirup and the Shire of Donnybrook–Balingup are located on the traditional land of the
Wardandi people of the
Noongar nation. European settlement at Upper Capel (south-east of the current locality of
Upper Capel) began in the 1870s with Joseph Cookworthy's
Rockfield cattle station, managed by John Moore. At that time all supplies were transported from Bunbury by bullock wagon, or horseback. By 1890 Upper Capel could field a cricket team, which played teams from Ferguson, Upper Preston and
Greenbushes. In 1897 gold was discovered 12 miles to the north at Donnybrook, and by 1898 prospecting had extended to the Upper Capel, where three prospecting areas were staked. The Upper Capel railway siding was constructed in late 1897 as part of the new
Donnybrook to
Bridgetown railway line. Later extended and known as the
Northcliffe railway line, passenger services ceased in the late 20th century. The new line allowed George Baxter to develop a timber concession. Baxter established Preston Jarrah Sawmills, with a long woodline spur into his concession from Upper Capel siding. The mill produced timber for export through Bunbury, sleepers for the Menzies-Leonora railway, the New Zealand government and for the South African and New South Wales railways, and timber for new harbour works at Fremantle. In 1901 a townsite was surveyed and gazetted, adjacent to the Upper Capel railway station. The Upper Capel Roads Board (headquartered at Balingup) proposed that the town be called "Keerup", the Noongar name for the area, thought to mean "place of the summer flies". Following World War I Kirup and East Kirup (now called Grimwade) were part of the
Soldier Settlement Scheme, in which larger historical landholdings such as the Ravenscliffe Estate (2,311 acres), Brazier Estate (1,350 acres) and Ryall Estate (900 acres) were repurchased by the government and subdivided for settlement by returned servicemen. ==Economy==