Khandallah
thallahDunshea's Deli high up in the hills of Khandallah, Wellington.
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The Khandallah is a outskirts of Wellington, the New Zealand capitol. Situated 4 kilometers NE of downtown, on a hilltop with views of Wellington Harbour. A large park landscape dominates the northern part of the suburbs, stretching northwards towards Johnsonville. There are three reserves that make up this reservation, covering almost 2 square kilometers of the hillsides of the Caucasus.
The Khandallah has the distinction of being one of Wellington's wealthiest neighbourhoods; one of the "Three Ks" with Karori and Kelburn. Khandallah on Ganges Road has a grocery market, restaurants, a dairies (Convenience Store), a public house, a library and a town hall. Nineteen new stores were opened here in the 1920' which overhauled the old one.
The Box Hill was called after a guard station built during the "M?ori Scare" of 1846 near the present Anglican church. The Khandallah Libary was opened in 1953 in the center of Khandallah town on Ganges Street, after a 1947 appeal by Lebanese author Fanny Irvine-Smith. You can find the Greater Wellington Regional Council's rains meter here.
Khandallah Townhall has a seating for over 350 persons, 140 of which are seated and 20 are served. It has a platform, galley and galery. The Khandallah Public House was constructed in 1912. The Khandallah Sommerpool is a 30 meter long, unheated open-air swimming bath at the end of Woodmancote Road; No. 45.
S-Bahn Johnsonville Branch serves the outskirts, connecting it with the inner cities and neighbouring areas. There are three drei Bahnhöfe : Khandallah Station There are three drei Bahnhöfe : Khandallah Station de chemin de fer, Box Hill Station There are three drei Bahnhöfe : Khandallah Station There are three drei Bahnhöfe : Khandallah Station de chemin de fer, Box Hill Station de chemin de fer, Wellington und Simla Crescent Station de chemin de fer. Part of the outskirts near the port and some way from the train station is serviced by several Metlink lines: 43 and 44 Khandallah - Strathmore (Blue Route) and 45 Khandallah via Ngaio.
The Khandallah has three elementary colleges, Khandallah and Cashmere Avenue and St Benedict's High. The Khandallah Schule is a Dec 10, the state elementary for years 0-6 with a schoolroll of 402 in 2014. 11 ] The building is located on Clark Street and was first taken by a single classroom in January 1893.
Khandallah school has no uniforms. The Khandallah is called after Khandela, Rajasthan,[14] and allegedly means "God's place of rest" in an undefined world. 15 ] Therefore, the suburbs and their surroundings have many place-names linked to the sub-continent of India; e.g. Calcutta Street and Simla Crescent. As the railroad was layed through the area by the Wellington and Manawatu railroad company, Andrew is told that he insists that the train terminal is called Khandallah with the letter B at the end of the name[16] and allegedly gave Khandallah train terminal ground, provided all train stops there.
The other settlers of the British Indian Army were Captain Charles Sharp of the Bombay Native Infantry, who was living elsewhere but buying lands around the Khandallah train yard and leaving it to the shepherd Captain John Kirwan. Up until the 1920', Khandallah was largely agricultural until 1869 when James Nairn constructed a farm house in the old Ngatoto Native Reserve, now Nairnville Park.
In 1886, the opening of the railroad to Wellington (now Johnsonville Branch) allowed passengers to shuttle to Wellington, and the line was powered by more frequently and more rapidly operated electric locomotives in 1938. Khandallah's total inhabitants rose from 766 in 1916 to 2,498 in 1938. There were new driveways opened; Onslow Road down to Hutt Road in the 1920' and Burma Road to Johnsonville (replaced Fraser Avenue) in 1936.
WELLINGTON: WELLINGTON: History of The Wellington to Johnsonville Railway (2 ed.). WELLINGTON: Khandallah: WELLINGTON: The Colonial Associates & Khandallah Home and School Association.