During the 19th century, Maddington was owned by John Randall Phillips, one of the wealthier colonists to arrive in Perth during the 1830s. Maddington Park, which Phillips named after a
town in Wiltshire, England, was subdivided 70 years later as Perth dealt with the population explosion following the
gold rush. Maddington Park became "Maddington" – an area of varied agricultural uses including market gardens, poultry and orchards. In the 1950s and 1960s, Maddington and surrounding suburbs were further subdivided and developed into residential suburbs. During the 1960s the Canning Park race course, located in Maddington, was abandoned. William Davison, an English property developer bought up the land and developed the area into an industrial estate, a light industrial area that can be seen along
Albany Highway and the
train line today. The suburb also was the site of one of 24 new
Australian Technical Colleges proposed by the
Howard government in 2005. ==Maddington Central==