Junee Railway Station
opened 1878
Railway going from Sydney to Melbourne,
via Goulburn, Junee, Wagga Wagga and Albury
Junee’s heyday was in 1870 yet even then, the mines continued quite strongly in the 1880s and 1890s. In 1876 Christopher Crawley selected land on both sides of the upcoming railway line, the western part directly in front of the new station. So when the railway line to Wagga Wagga (see map) actually started in 1878, it by-passed the mines and a new town grew around the railway station. In 1878 he opened his Railway Hotel and did very well. Many newcomers wished to buy land, so he sold a few blocks at hugely inflated prices. He then sold his hotel and with the proceeds was able to retire, to build his grand homestead and to lead the life of a gentleman farmer.
Christopher and Elizabeth Crawley
Monte Cristo Homestead, Junee
Christopher Crawley (1841–1910) took up his first 840 acres as his pastoral estate. He built a home in 1876 which later became the servants’ quarters, kitchen & dairy. A few years were financially tough for the Crawleys but fortunes changed in 1878 when the Great Southern Railway Line opened.
The government took 80 acres of his land for a town, and to find an alternative business, Crawley opened the Railway Hotel by the railway. By 1884 he'd sold his successful hotel and with the boom-era money, built a grand Victorian 2-storey residence with cast iron lace work on the verandas.
Called Monte Cristo Homestead, the colonial, double-storey late-Victorian-style manor stands on a hill overlooking the town, a high status property. The whole town benefited enormously from the train service and the agricultural trade! Crawley was becoming a very rich gentleman farmer with 7 children; eventually he was called one of the towns founders, and a major donor to his beloved Catholic Church. This generous man with a big sense of civic responsibility was much respected. Very special.
Christopher Crawley died in 1910 from a combination of heart failure and blood poisoning from a neck carbuncle. His wife, Elizabeth Crawley, couldn’t cope with her husband’s death; she locked herself inside the house, up in the attic where she had built a small chapel, always dressed in black. She died in 1933, from a ruptured appendix. The Crawley children lived in the house until 1948. The contents were sold in 1952 and the house left vacant which allowed vandals to almost destroy it. It was purchased with 2+ acres by Reg and Olive Ryan family in 1963 and they began the difficult task of a full restoration that finished only in the 1980s.
In 1993 the Ryans turned the fully restored house into a museum for tours, including dolls and antiques. The story about this house seemed one of good fortune and successful families. So why does it advertise itself as Australia's most haunted house? When the Ryans moved into the estate, they noticed something strange. When they went up to the house with their belongings and animals, he animals wouldn’t go into the house and fled. But that wasn’t the worst.
Apparently Monte Cristo is haunted by at least 10 ghosts. The beautiful C19th mansion saw heaps of tragedies that occurred on the estate. Christopher Crawley apparently made two of his maids pregnant. One pregnant maid committed suicide by jumping from the balcony and was instantly killed. Her ghost haunts the veranda, and bloodstains mark the spot where she fell. The other maid gave birth to a son named Harold. When Harold was young, he was hit by a coach on the premises. The child survived, but sustained head trauma which disabled him for life. The poor lad was kept on chains and local children called him a monster because he screamed all day. He was eventually locked in an asylum and died there, but still haunts the estate by the sound of chains. No wonder Christopher Crawley’s ghost now haunts the room in which he died.
The coach house is haunted by Morris, a young stable boy. One day, Morris decided to stay in bed at the coach house but his master didn’t approve and taught him a lesson. He lit the boy’s straw mattress to get Morris to work. But Morris was too ill and died in bed. His screams are still heard today.
Crawley’s infant granddaughter Ethel died in 1917, because the nursemaid dropped her on the stairs. The nursemaid claimed she was pushed by an unseen force, but she wasn’t believed. Even today children who visit the museum become upset on those stairs.
The Crawleys were said to hate animals. When the Ryans came home one night, they found all their chickens strangled to death in a poultry run. The parrot was choked to death in its cage. And a litter of kittens in on room lay brutally killed.
A recent ghost is that of Jack Simpson, a Monte Cristo caretaker, shot to death in 1960 on the porch. The killer had been watching Alfred Hitchcock’s film Psycho before committing his crime, carving “Die Jack ha ha” on the shed door.
Visit Monte Cristo each week day, or join a ghost tour each Sat evening. Lights flicker; visitors feel overwhelming sadness; there are disembodied whispers; see unexplained mists in the house; and note some poltergeist activity. IF you believe in ghosts! Photo credits, Daily Mail
one of the bedrooms
1 comment:
Hello Hels, Monte Cristo is a beautiful house, but that did not prevent tragedies from happening there, even if you exclude the supernatural ones. Sometimes if a major tragedy happens in a house it will be razed, but here the sad events added up over time so seem more disconnected.
The house itself seems like some others you featured here, attractive, and in a villa style that seems more in keeping (in England or America at least) with a few decades earlier. The ironwork reminds me of many houses in New Orleans. Also, the small train station in a Mansard cottage style is very cute . If I were in Junee I would love to take a look around and brace myself for the Monte Cristo tour.
--Jim
Post a Comment