Aboriginal uses Aboriginal tribes occupied the area around Perth for around 40,000 years before European settlement, using the wetlands as a source of food (fish, waterfowl, crayfish and turtles) and fresh water. Local
Nyungar tribes continued to use the lakes for resources and as a meeting place up until they were reclaimed for housing developments in the 1940s, with meetings of up to 400 people recorded in
corroborees at Lakes Monger and Henderson as well at
Hyde Park.
European settlement Perth was founded by
Captain James Stirling in June, 1829. The area on which Perth was built was described by
George Seddon in
Sense of Place (1972) as follows: Following the arrival of the first Europeans in 1829, the township of Perth was gradually expanded. The area to the north of the township, was not considered ideal for settlement due to the extensive wetlands that stretched for almost immediately north of the town site. Gradually, lakes closer to the city were drained, with the first drainage work commencing in 1832. Some wetlands were reclaimed by individual settlers on whose land the lakes encroached, others were reclaimed to be used for public works and housing. At the same time, the
Swan River foreshore was reclaimed to ease transportation along the river. The last of the lakes were drained in the 1880s. However, some areas including Herdsman Lake, Lake Monger and Third Swamp (now Hyde Park) were unable to be drained due to their location, size or depth. ==List of features==