Murgoo Station Homestead

Author

Heritage Council

Place Number

01703

Location

Jingemarra-Murgoo Rd Murchison

Location Details

Includes: Original Cottage; Manager's House; Station Office; Meat House; Bush Shed; 2 Old Cottages & newer house with Kitchen & Verandahs

Local Government

Murchison

Region

Midwest

Construction Date

Constructed from 1877, Constructed from 1920

Demolition Year

N/A

Statutory Heritage Listings

Type Status Date Documents
Heritage List Adopted 15 Oct 2015

Heritage Council Decisions and Deliberations

Type Status Date Documents
RHP - To be assessed Current 26 Oct 2007

Other Heritage Listings and Surveys

Type Status Date Grading/Management
Category
Municipal Inventory Adopted 27 Jun 1996 1
Register of the National Estate Indicative Place
Classified by the National Trust Classified 08 Sep 1985

Values

Murgoo Station has high historic significance as one of the oldest stations in the Murchison district and for its association with Frank Wittenoom and later the Atkins Bros, who owned it for nearly 70 years. The place has further historic significance for its use as firstly a Post Office and then a Telephone Exchange, effectively becoming the communication hub for the district. Furthermore, Murgoo Station is well known as a Merino Stud and for the Murgoo Horse Races.

Physical Description

The Murgoo Station Homestead comprises a group of buildings within a fenced garden area, including (in a clockwise direction) the original cottage, an office (which was utilised as a post office and telephone exchange), the current house, meat house, generator shed, store/laundry, guest cottage, bough shed, quarters as well as a swimming pool all forming a quadrangle. The original Murgoo cottage is of local stone construction with a steeply pitched gable thatched roof, later covered by a corrugated iron roof, with the iron bent over to form ridge capping. A concrete block wall to window sill height may have been a measure to curb the effects of rising damp and/or flood damage. The corrugated iron clad office was a later addition to the western elevation and is unusually tall in proportion. The current house (c1920s) is. of concrete block construction. The corrugated iron roof, which features vented gablets and a centrally placed chimney, extends to cover surrounding verandahs. The Store/Laundry is a simple timber framed corrugated clad building with a hipped roof and verandah to the southern facade. The Guest Cottage is of stone construction with a hipped corrugated iron roof and separate verandah roof over a flagstone floor. The Quarters is of mud brick construction with surrounding verandahs partly enclosed with a combination of fibro, weatherboard and shade-cloth. The outbuildings include single men's quarters, an old magazine of corrugated iron construction, stone stables, cart shed and a blacksmith's shop. Remnants of the tennis court and original swimming pool are located to the south west of the homestead group. The current shearing shed is located south of the homestead. Approximately 18 kilometres south of the Murgoo Homestead Group are the remnants of the original mud brick store and post office, built in 1877-8 at Cheangwa. The Murgoo Race Course is located approximately 8 kilometres to the south of the Murgoo Homestead Group andaadjacent to the shearing shed. A bough shed and jockey's room remain in place at the site.

History

Murgoo Station, one of the oldest stations in the Murchison, was first selected in 1873 by Frank Wittenoom. In 1874 Frank and his brother Edward leased Yuin Station from their uncle, Thomas Burges for a period of 10 years to assist with the early settlement. Originally referred to as `Cheangwa Station', it was soon necessary to establish a homestead and other facilities on the property which was too far from Yuin to manage (511 iciently from there. A stone hut was built for use as a store in 1877 and the following year it was extended when a post office was established there. In 1879 Frank Wittenoom decided to build a horse paddock about twelve miles towards the Sanford River which was to become the first real homestead site. Some of the mulga fences of the horse paddock still survive today. Built of local stone quarried from a nearby creek the cottage had a thatched roof made from grass rushes sourced from Nangarong Pool, east of Yuin. In 1890 the Post Office was transferred to this homestead site from `Cheangwa' and in c1903 the Murgoo Post Office became a telephone exchange. Murgoo effectively became the hub of a very extensive private communication system throughout the district. Wittenoom sold Murgoo in 1891 to H.M. Molony and R. Homes who set about constructing brush fences, some of the remains of which are stiff evident. Henry Molony, member of the Roads Board and one time Chairman, bought Holmes out but died in 1903. Two years later Murgoo was purchased by the Atkins Bros., a family company which owned the property until 1974 when it was sold to James Seaman. The Atkins Bros. established a first class merino stud at Murgoo, which was also known for the Murgoo Horse Races. The c1920s concrete block kitchen-dining building is believed to have been built by John Crothers, who later founded the Geraldton Building Company. His work can be identified by evidence of a fault in the brick mould, also evident at Twin Peaks and Yuin.

Place Type

Individual Building or Group

Uses

Epoch General Specific
Original Use FARMING\PASTORAL Homestead
Original Use Transport\Communications Comms: Telephone Building
Original Use Transport\Communications Comms: Post or Telegraph Office
Present Use FARMING\PASTORAL Homestead

Construction Materials

Type General Specific
Roof METAL Corrugated Iron
Wall STONE Local Stone
Wall EARTH Adobe {Mud Brick}

Historic Themes

General Specific
OCCUPATIONS Grazing, pastoralism & dairying
DEMOGRAPHIC SETTLEMENT & MOBILITY Land allocation & subdivision

Creation Date

30 May 1989

Publish place record online (inHerit):

Approved

Last Update

12 Jul 2022

Disclaimer

This information is provided voluntarily as a public service. The information provided is made available in good faith and is derived from sources believed to be reliable and accurate. However, the information is provided solely on the basis that readers will be responsible for making their own assessment of the matters discussed herein and are advised to verify all relevant representations, statements and information.