Ellensbrook is a heritage-listed property in Leeuwin-Naturaliste National Park in the locality of Yebble, Western Australia near Margaret River.[1][2] Also known as Ellensbrook House[2] or Ellensbrook Homestead,[3] the property is managed by the National Trust of Western Australia.[2]

Ellensbrook
Ellensbrook in May 2006
Ellensbrook is located in Western Australia
Ellensbrook
Ellensbrook
Location of Ellensbrook in Western Australia
General information
TypeStation
LocationYebble, Western Australia
Coordinates33°54′37″S 114°59′31″E / 33.9103°S 114.992°E / -33.9103; 114.992 (Ellensbrook)
Website
www.nationaltrust.org.au/places/ellensbrook/ Edit this at Wikidata
Designated17 August 2012
Reference no.115

History edit

The site where Ellensbrook is located was historically a Noongar camping ground named Mokidup,[1] close to the sacred site of Meekadarribee Cave.[4]

In 1857, settlers Ellen and Alfred Bussell decided to build a new home on the site. The location was desirable due to its protection from storms, supply of fresh water, and the fertility of the soil. The homestead was built in stages over several decades using the labour of ticket-of-leave convicts, sailors who had deserted, and the local Noongar people, and was named after Ellen Bussell.[1]

While Alfred and Ellen moved away from Ellensbrook in 1865, the Bussell family remained involved. Their eldest daughter Fanny managed the property from 1871 to 1877, expanding the homestead, and it was later the home of the second-born daughter Edith. Edith started the Ellensbrook Farm Home for Aboriginal Children at the property in 1899, which lasted for seventeen years. During this time there were further extensions to the main building.[1]

Restrictions on females owning property meant that Alfred's daughters were unable to inherit the property following his death in 1882; however, Edith eventually succeeded in acquiring the freehold title to Ellensbrook, including 900 acres of land, by the late 1920s.[4]

A third generation, Lennox Terry (Alfred and Ellen's grandson) and his wife Frances owned the property from 1950 to 1956. They privately funded restoration and conservation works, as did a subsequent owner from c. 1967 to 1979, John Norman (Jack) Williams.[4]

Ellensbrook was donated to the National Trust in 1979.[5] The trust, through a six-year conservation program beginning in 1984, restored the site and converted it into a museum.[4] It was added to the State Register of Heritage Places in 2012.[4] A Lotterywest grant in 2016 funded further restoration of the property; it was reopened in February 2019.[6][7]

Description edit

The Ellensbrook homestead is a single storey vernacular style building. It is constructed from locally sourced materials, including granite, limestone, paperbark, and timber. the homestead is situated in a grassed clearing, close to the Ellen Brook, natural bushland, and coastal dunes.[5]

Other features are a family grave site from the 1850s, a stone dam wall flume and waterwheel dating from the 1950s. Various trees and other flora are present, having grown from plantings in the 1950s or earlier. These include a mulberry tree, Moreton Bay figs, Norfolk Island pine, flame tree, pepper tree, and hydrangeas. A tea tree hedge previously existed, but was destroyed in a 2011 fire.[5]

Despite various alterations, the original use of the property remains evident, and the site is largely intact with a high degree of authenticity.[5]

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d "Ellensbrook". National Trust of Western Australia. Retrieved 14 February 2020.
  2. ^ a b c Parks and Wildlife Service. "Ellensbrook House". Government of Western Australia. Retrieved 14 February 2020.
  3. ^ Parks and Wildlife Service. "Leeuwin-Naturaliste". Government of Western Australia. Retrieved 14 February 2020.
  4. ^ a b c d e Heritage Council of Western Australia (17 August 2012). "Register of Heritage Places - Assessment Documentation: Ellensbrook" (PDF). Government of Western Australia. Retrieved 14 February 2020.
  5. ^ a b c d Shire of Augusta-Margaret River (10 May 2019). "Ellensbrook". inHerit. Government of Western Australia. Retrieved 14 February 2020.
  6. ^ "Restoration for historic Ellensbrook property". Government of Western Australia. 29 September 2016. Archived from the original on 19 October 2021. Retrieved 14 February 2020.
  7. ^ "Ellensbrook community open day with the National Trust". Augusta-Margaret River Mail. 19 February 2019. Retrieved 14 February 2020.

Further reading edit

External links edit