Woodloes Homestead - Municipal Heritage Inventory - City of Canning Langford, Western Australia, Australia
By jinta29 on 21-Jan-18. Waypoint GA11854

Cache Details

Difficulty:
Terrain:
Type: History
Container: Virtual
Coordinates: S32° 1.624' E115° 56.545' (WGS 84)
  50H 400132E 6456075N (UTM)
Elevation: 4 m
Local Government Area: Canning

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Description

To claim this smiley, please simply post a photo of you at (or as near as possible) to GZ.

DESCRIPTION

The building is a square plan Victorian Georgian homestead consisting of six rooms at ground floor, an attic room and a cellar. The building is typical of homesteads of the period with a central passage and rooms on either side.

The building has steeply pitched she-oak shingle roof that is penetrated by two white painted brick chimneys and a small dormer window to the eastern pitch. There are open verandahs to all four sides supported by timber posts. The verandah sits on limestone masonry dwarf walls and has timber boards. The construction is primarily rubble limestone with brick quoining around openings.

Internally the building is largely original. There has been some change during the 1970s restoration, with the partial removal of the original lath and plaster ceilings and partial new timber floorboards. The décor is an interpretation of a Victorian period home.

The homestead is located on a site adjacent to the Canning River. The landscaping and character of the site has been altered, however some remnants of the original plantings remain, including a mature Bunya Pine, which is considered to be a fine example of its type.

The site currently contains a number of more recently acquired features, which are not original including a replica of the Congregational Church (also known as the Church with a Chimney) and a telephone box.

HISTORICAL INFORMATION

The history of Woodloes Homestead is entwined with that of Benjamin Mason and Francis Bird. The Mason Bird & Company was a prominent, albeit short lived, business operation in the early Western Australian timber industry. After felling timber in the Darling Ranges the company would float the timber on flat bottomed barges down the Canning River to Mason’s Landing which existed a short distance upstream from Woodloes.

Francis Bird arrived from England into Fremantle in October 1869. Upon arriving he invested in the Mason Bird & Co, which supplied the timber for much of the State’s early infrastructure including the timber for the roof of Perth Town Hall, Fremantle Lunatic Asylum (now Fremantle Arts Centre) and the Geraldton to Northampton Railway.

Following the liquidation of the Mason Bird & Company partnership on the 18 June 1873 it appears Francis Bird continued on his own for some years.

Francis Bird, who was a trained architect, designed and built Woodloes Homestead in the early 1870s; some accounts place the date at 1874. He named the house after one in which he lived for a portion of his early adulthood in England.  Francis Bird married Augusta Maud Earnshaw in 1871. Seven of their fifteen children were born at Woodloes. Three children died at birth and at least one of these is believed to have been buried there. In 1882 Francis Bird sold Woodloes Homestead and became Chief Government Architect in 1883.

In 1882 Woodloes was purchased by Joseph Shaw. The Homestead had nine owners between 1883 and 1974. The lot was subdivided from the original land holding several times and subsequently became much reduced to its current size. In 1974 it was purchased by the City of Canning with the intention of providing a venue for the Historical Society and establishing a museum.

A schedule of repair works was prepared by D. Brearey, the Town of Canning Property Officer, dated 31st March 1976. The works were undertaken over a number of phases and were completed in 1978. These works included (but are not limited to) removing the iron sheet roofing and City of Canning Municipal Heritage Inventory 13 reinstating shingle roof cladding; defective paint and render was removed  to better reveal the stonework; and Jarrah finishes were repaired and partly replaced including floors, skirtings, door thresholds and framing. Woodloes was opened to the public on the 5th June 1978.

To the north-west of the site there is the Congregational Church (also known as the Church with a Chimney), which was relocated to Woodloes in the 1990s when Albany Highway was widened by 17 metres. Some materials from the original church were used in this reconstruction. The Church is managed by the Canning District Historical Society and hired out for functions.

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Logs

27-Feb-21
As It is Mr dimor’s weekend off we decided to stay nearby for a couple of nights and partake in a few firsts for us, Gloucester Park and Cannington greyhounds with time spent in between grabbing a few GA and GC caches.

Sadly the gates weren’t open so just had to be content with a photo from a distance.
My favourite hobby is family genealogy so I love looking at and through old buildings, as well as old cemeteries. Seeing how our ancestors lived back in the day really opens your eyes to see how easy we have it these days with mod cons with just the push of a button.

Thanks for bringing us to another location that we hadn’t been to before, now just to come back one day when it is open to Smile

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06-Dec-20
Enjoyed myself for the day - took some photo. Here the attach:-

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Thanks Jinta29. SmileSmile
 
06-Dec-20
Called in here (and several other close by caches) before the event at the landing today. I stopped on the 'other' side of the road and took a photo across it. Thanks to Jinta29 for the cache.
 
23-Feb-18
After finishing night shift at 6am decided to go and find a few gca caches around the metro area. So headed over to East Perth and then onto Cannington to start the big collection here. Another one of the many great homesteads that are completely hidden away in the suburbs. Such a shame as it looks a magnificent place and would like to have a look through it. Shame it is not open to the public to view and and publicised more.

Thanks for the great series Jinta29 and bringing me to many places and sites that i did not know existed. I certainly learnt a lot today in the Cannington area. Incredible amount of history goes unseen by multitudes. Geocaching changes that for many.
 
22-Jan-18
ready to go