Originally part of the suburb of
Karawara, the area south of Manning Road was renamed Waterford in the 1980s. The area is named after the birthplace in
Ireland of
Edmund Rice, the founder of the Christian Brothers. From 1901, the
Christian Brothers were allocated land for the
Clontarf Orphanage, a
school and farm for
orphaned and disadvantaged boys, situated on 2 square kilometres of land south of Manning Road and along the shores of the Canning River. The college is now known as the "Clontarf Aboriginal College" and is governed by a representative Board of Management which is responsible to the Catholic Archbishop of Perth through the Director of Catholic Education of Western Australia. The day-to-day running of
Clontarf Aboriginal College, including the hiring of all staff and the enrolment of students, is the responsibility of the College Principal. From 1981, portions of the land were progressively sold by
Trinity College, an independent boys school in Perth which owned the land, and subdivided for housing. Streets within Waterford reflect the Irish theme, and are named after places in Ireland. Trinity College holds a remaining portion of the land which has been developed into the school's playing fields for training and
PSA sport fixtures. The 1984 five-bedroom, two-bathroom Perth Telethon Home was built by Statesman Homes in Waterford, on Cashel Way. It was auctioned live on TVW-7 and sold for , equivalent to in . This was a new record, as the previous Telethon Home in 1983 sold for . == Education ==