Local Government
Woodanilling
Region
Great Southern
Katanning/Dumbleyung Rd Glencoe
(Cronin)
Woodanilling
Great Southern
Type | Status | Date | Documents | More information |
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Type | Status | Date | Documents |
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Type | Status | Date | Grading/Management | More information | |
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Category | Description | ||||
Municipal Inventory | Adopted | 18 Mar 2003 | Category 5 |
Category 5 |
The site is significant due to its association with postal deliveries and with pioneering families
Remnants marking the site include an ancient Mulberry tree and large pepper tree. The structure
became unstable and unsafe in the early 1980's and was demolished by the current owner. The
well which supplied the house was just to the east. This had a large (6m square) opening and was
lined with sheoak (4" diameter). Over the years it had gradually caved in and a dam was
constructed on the site (also incorporates part of the house site Further east is chimney remnants
of an old cottage. The homestead had a thatched straw roof with sheoak and pug walls.
The Glencoe property pioneered by Michael Cronin in 1874 was an outpost of European
settlement for many years. The isolation broken only by the passing of the occasional
sandalwood cutter or carter. In time several families ventured into the area and the opening of the
Great Southern Railway in 1889 brought a new impetus for settlement. The Cronins participated
actively in the affairs of the new town of Katanning in preference to the closer, but smaller Round
Pool settlement. Michael Cronin was a vounding member of the Katanning Road Board and was
later to strongly oppose the excision of part of that territory to form the Woodanilling Road
Board. Perhaps Cronin's loyalties lay with the Katanning Board, as he was a prime mover in the
creation of this Board in 1892, as in May 1891 he was appointed by a public meeting to organise
signatures for a petition to the Government. When Surveyor Oxley marked the Dumbleyung-
Katanning Road in 1891 he noted that the road was called 'Cronin's Road' even near Moojeping.
The early resident's connection with the outside world was through the weekly mail service from
Katanning. The service commenced in January 1892 with WR Harvey conveying the mail from
Katanning PO to Michael Cronin's and vice versa, calling in at the homesteads enroute on horse
back. At the Glencoe end, Michael Cronin's home continued to be used for many years as an
unofficial post office, with settlers not serviced by mail delivery, both receiving and leaving mail
at 'Glencoe'. The district took the name "Glencoe" with the school, oval and rifle range all
bearing this name.
Michael Cronin's third daughter added to the significance of the family establishment. Mary,
equally at home at her father's, side, accompanying him on sandalwood expeditions and became
an expert on native flora which she would press and sent to botanists in the Eastern colonies.
Three shrubs are thought to have been named in her honour - Consperum, Croninae, Daviesia
Croniniana and Traehymene Croniniana. The death of Michael Cronin at 'Glencoe' in 1931 came
as a sad loss to the district. His presence had been a bridge between the old pioneering days of
the Colony and the new century. As a Justice of the Peace he had sat on the bench at the
Katanning Court on many occasions. His son, Frank, lived in the old cottage at Glencoe, which
served as a school in the old days for the Cronin children, which had been built at the same time
as the main 'Glencoe'. The property passed to Lindsay Cronin after the death of his bachelor
uncles, Don and Frank. Lindsay's father, Eddy farmed at 'Paringa' which was a few miles to the
south west, opposite Bill Cronin's 'Yelyelling' form.
Ref ID No | Ref Name | Ref Source | Ref Date |
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Photos 17.18, 17.19, Round Pool to Woodanilling p 10 | 1985 | ||
John Bird, Round Pool to Woodanilling ps 45-46, 63, 105-106, 126, 279-280 | 1985 |
Historic Site
Epoch | General | Specific |
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Original Use | Transport\Communications | Comms: Post or Telegraph Office |
General | Specific |
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TRANSPORT & COMMUNICATIONS | Mail services |
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