The
Wonnarua People were the first known people of this land. They called the area where Maitland is now situated, by the name Bo-un after a species of bird. From around 1816, cedar logging parties from the convict settlement of
Newcastle were the first Europeans to stay on the site. Governor
Lachlan Macquarie visited the area in 1818, naming it Wallis Plains after
Captain James Wallis who was commandant of the Newcastle penal colony at the time. In 1819, convict farmers were allowed to select land at Wallis Plains, the most notable of which was
Molly Morgan. Tom White Melville Winder was one of the largest proprietors on the Hunter. Winder held 7400 The oldest house (commenced 1821) in the greater Maitland LGA was called “Windermere” and also referred to the adjacent farmlands which were for agriculture and later a “boiling-down works”. Windermere estate was established before East Maitland and West Maitland were established as suburbs and so is of historical significance. By 1821 the first British government buildings, consisting of a cottage and barracks, were constructed, and in 1823
James Mudie financed the construction of a wharf. Two years later
William Powditch opened the first general store at Wallis Plains. ; one of the earliest surviving residences in the Maitland region In 1829, assistant surveyor
George Boyle White, officially laid out a township on the site of Wallis Plains. The village was called Maitland possibly in honour of
Frederick Lewis Maitland. The nearby town of Morpeth developed at the same time from the Green Hills land grant given to Lieutenant
Edward Charles Close, a
Peninsular War veteran.
Morpeth served as the head of navigation for larger ships (later, steamships), and goods were
transhipped upriver to West Maitland on barges and smaller vessels. Originally the river route between Morpeth and West Maitland was , today after various floods and river course changes this has reduced to just . West Maitland was therefore the point at which goods were unloaded for, and distributed to, the prosperous riverland of the Hunter Valley. Accordingly, there were large warehouses (some of which still exist) built, which faced onto the main High Street and backed onto the Hunter River. One famous business being
E.P Capper & Sons founded in 1841. The Cappers “prospered mightily, branching out into property and financing but the large store in High Street was the foundation of their empire. Built in 1888, it consisted of four stories in the front and three in the rear” it even included a lift. This impressive building was destroyed by fire in 1971. The arrival of the
railway from Newcastle in the 1850s, coupled with the increasing silting of the river and larger ships spelt the end of the traditional river traffic. The municipalities of West and East Maitland were merged in 1944 and the name of West Maitland was officially reverted to Maitland in 1949, from which the present city is now known. The city's boundaries have been increased by incorporating parts of other local government areas since then (most notably Kearsley Shire which from 1946 to 1949 was the only local government area in Australia's history to have a
Communist majority of councillors). The first electricity connected in the area was to Maitland Town Hall in 1922, to the hall's front light.
Belmore Bridge side The first bridge to link West Maitland with what is now the suburb of
Lorn was opened in 1869 and named in honour of the then
Governor of New South Wales, the 4th Earl of Belmore. Although the bridge proved vital to the city's development, the floods of 1893, 1913 and 1930 began to heighten the need for a new bridge that could withstand periodic flooding. A second Belmore Bridge, designed to withstand the impact of debris during floods, was built adjacent to the 1869 bridge in 1964. The new bridge, which redirected traffic away from St Andrews Street to a new intersection at the Maitland Court House, is one of the city's three main river crossings. Between 1830 and 1834 Maitland experienced five floods. The 1832 flood was severe with water reaching about and killing seven people. The 1834 flood water reached the same height. In the winter of 1857 the Hunter River rose again to record heights, reaching . Flooding continued for the next 30 years with the floods of the 1890s being the most disastrous. Much of the riverbank collapsed and many people were left without homes or personal possessions. The 1940s and 1950s saw an increase in rainfall and the river rose again and again. The waters reached and caused catastrophic damage and loss of life. The volume of flood water was approximately and the cost of damage, in today's currency, would have been over
A$2 billion. Seven thousand buildings and homes were damaged and the flood claimed the lives of 14 people. In early June 2007 an
intense low pressure system which caused
devastating storms to hit the city of
Newcastle and the
Central Coast also caused major flooding throughout the lower Hunter Region including the Maitland area. During the flooding in 2007, the Hunter River was expected to reach a peak of at Maitland's Belmore Bridge and break levee banks. Some 4000 residents of the suburb of
Lorn were evacuated before the floodwaters became stable at and did not inundate central Maitland. Other areas did not escape with waters inundating homes in
Branxton, Louth Park and
Raymond Terrace. The flood has been compared to the devastating 1955 Hunter Valley floods. From 20 to 22 April 2015, heavy rainfall in the Hunter, Central Coast and Sydney regions of New South Wales resulted in
flash flooding and extended power outages to over 200,000 homes. Maitland was badly affected and the flood gates at
Maitland railway station were reinforced with sandbags to prevent flooding in central Maitland. Four people died as a result of the storms and a further four died in traffic related incidents. The towns of
Dungog and
Gillieston Heights, the homes of the four flood victims, were also badly affected, becoming isolated from other communities.
Jewish community was built for Benn Levy and Neville Cohen, who were both important Jewish merchants in Australia and internationally The
Maitland Jewish Cemetery in Louth Park, one of only two provincial Jewish cemeteries in New South Wales, is testament to the Jewish community that was active in Maitland up until the 1930s. Between about 1846 and 1934, 53 Jewish people were buried in the low-lying cemetery. Burials ceased after this time due to dispersion of the community and the cemetery reaching capacity. One exception was Lea Abadee in 2010. The former
Maitland Synagogue, located on Church Street, was the place of worship for about 70 families between 1879 and 1898. == Hospital ==