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WA Portuguese Club

2 Strang St, Beaconsfield, 1890 + modern additions

In 2017 the Portuguese Club was set to move from Beaconsfield into the St John's Ambulance building in Parry Street. The Beaconsfield building is on 8093m^, and was leased to the club by Mains Roads, which terminated the lease. In 2020, the Fremantle Gazette reported that the Club was considering moving to Goodchild Reserve in Hamilton Hill.

portugueseclub

The heritage 1890 core of the club building, including the belvedere which is visible in the photo above, was the farmhouse of John Healy, who owned a large farm called Winterfold.

portugueseclub

portugueseclub

ambos

St John's Ambulance has moved out of these premises in Parry St, between the present Tennis Club and the former Power Museum (now the facade of a large block of apartments), and it was thought that the Portuguese Club might be moving there - but according to a report in The Herald, 6 April 2019, 'the latest plan is to co-locate them with the Italian Club'. Presumably the writer was referring to the possibility of the building in Marine Terrace being shared.

Portuguese Club sells up
Stephen Pollock

Fremantle Herald 9 September 2016

HARD times have hit the WA Portuguese Club which is trying to sell up and move out of Fremantle.
The club, which was established 50 years ago, has put its 8000sqm land holding in Beaconsfield on the market for about $8 million and hopes to build a new ethnic hub elsewhere, including a Catholic church, school, indoor sports and welfare centre, community hall and soccer academy.
The Beaconsfield site has ocean views and is zoned R100.
Club president John dos Santos says when Fremantle Spirit Soccer Club stopped using soccer pitches beside the club 20 years ago, its fortunes declined.

john dos santos

No drawcard

“We had three people in the other day and on Saturday the bar only took $60,” he says.
“When the soccer left it killed us; there was no drawcard for people after that.
“The maintenance alone on the building is around $30,000 a year.
“We have 400 members, but attendance is poor.”
Club officials are looking at potential sites with Cockburn council, including the corner of Russell and Rockingham roads in Munster.
Cockburn has a significant Portuguese community, but Mr dos Santos hasn’t ruled out moving to Melville, which is also popular with Portuguese immigrants.
Club officials say Freo’s real estate is too expensive and there aren’t any big sites left for its proposed hub, but mayor Brad Pettitt is hopeful he can keep the historic club in the city.
“Fremantle Council is keen to find the Portuguese Club a new home in Fremantle and has been having regular, constructive discussions with them about this,” he says.
“They have had a long history in Beaconsfield but there may be an opportunity to bring them closer to the Fremantle CBD, which we are excited about.”
Mario De Silva Antonio, one of the club’s first secretaries, says the new centre would galvanise the Portuguese community.
“The centre would unite all the former Portuguese speaking colonies, including Africa, Timor and Goa, and be a home for the Portuguese Catholic association and its multicultural organisation,” he says.
“But it wouldn’t just be for Portuguese people and the facilities would be available to everyone in the community.
“We have some of the best young soccer players in WA and would love to create a soccer academy.”

References and Links

Corlett, Aaron 2020, 'Portuguese Club continues plan to sell its headquarters and move to new facility' Fremantle Gazette, 22 January.

Pilo, Shreya 2019, 'Ambos off', The Herald, 6 April 2019, page 9.

Pollock, Stephen 2016, 'Portuguese Club sells up', Fremantle Herald, 9 September.

Photo of John dos Santos by Stephen Pollock, thanks to Fremantle Herald.

Portuguese Club website

Heritage Council page

John Healy page

Healy house page

Ambulances.


Garry Gillard | New: 1 October, 2014 | Now: 8 December, 2023