Holly Lea and Plough Inn | |
Coordinates: | -34.0481°N 150.8291°W |
Map Relief: | yes |
Location: | Holly Lea Road, Leumeah, City of Campbelltown, New South Wales, Australia |
Beginning Label: | Design period |
Built: | 1816 - |
Designation1: | New South Wales State Heritage Register |
Designation1 Offname: | Holly Lea & Plough Inn; Plough Inn; 'Three Brothers' (inn); 'The Travellers' Home' (inn); Borobine House; Hollylea; William Ray's Cottage Inn Coolroom |
Designation1 Type: | State heritage (complex / group) |
Designation1 Date: | 2 April 1999 |
Designation1 Number: | 343 |
Designation1 Free1name: | Type |
Designation1 Free1value: | Inn/Tavern |
Designation1 Free2name: | Category |
Designation1 Free2value: | Commercial |
Designation1 Free3name: | Builders |
Designation1 Free3value: | William Ray |
Holly Lea and Plough Inn is a heritage-listed site at Holly Lea Road, Leumeah in the City of Campbelltown, New South Wales, Australia. The heritage listing includes a former residence, an inn and a storage shed. It was built from 1816 by William Ray. It is also known as Plough Inn; Three Brothers (inn); The Travellers' Home (inn); Borobine House; Hollylea; and William Ray's Cottage Inn Coolroom. The property is privately owned. It was added to the New South Wales State Heritage Register on 2 April 1999.[1]
The Plough Inn was constructed on 600NaN0 of land purchased by William Ray (1772-1835), a convict transported for burglary. He arrived in Sydney on 13 October 1791 on the Albermarle,[2] married Sarah M Harrigan (1793-) and had three children between 1809 and 1822.[3]
There are references in the Campbelltown & Airds Historical Society Journal volume 1 no. 3 to William Ray conducting the Plough Inn as early as 1821. Descendants of Ray have claimed that his daughter Maria was born in a sandstone cottage on the site in 1822.[1]
Ray built the inn between 1816–21 and sold it in February 1826 to Nathaniel Boon (1791-1839), a convict transported for burglary (arrived 29 September 1811 in Sydney), who was recorded in the November 1828 Census as living in Airds.[3] [1] William Ray died on 18 October 1835 aged 63 and was buried in St. Peter's Cemetery, Campbelltown.
Boon arranged an 1829 mortgage of A£252 on the property which is believed to have been used to build the present two storey brick residence.[1]
Boon married Sarah Wade on 27 July 1831 and c.1830 had triplet sons. Boon built "Holly Lea" and that same time he was licensee of "The Three Brothers".[3] Boon licensed the property in July 1832 as "The Three Brothers" and this license was renewed until at least 1835.[1] Nathaniel Boon died on 15 February 1839.
On 25 December 1845[4] William Ray Jr. (one of William & Sarah's two sons) leased the Plough Inn and Holly Lea from Boon's widow, Sarah. In 1857 William Ray Jr. was named in the Publicans' Index for "The Travellers" Home' (also leasing the inn off Sarah Harrigan (Boon). By 1869 he was declared insolvent. That year John Jenkins bought the site due to Hay's insolvency. Jenkins had married Sarah's daughter Maria Ray and acquired the property from William Ray Jr in 1869.
By 1884 the site was called "Borobine House" and had a new owner, The Hon. John Davies CMG. Davies renamed it "Holly Lea" and continued to live there until he died in 1896. Sarah Boon died on 5 July 1887, aged 93. By the site was operating as a private boarding school. By it was again a private residence.
In 1922 Arthur Payten was its owner and used the site as a farm and his widow continued to live there almost until 1957 when it was bought by Mervyn Whitten The buildings were derelict by then. After 1957 M. & K. Whitten, his wife and family made a great deal of repairs to renovate the property and make it habitable, painting, laying a concrete floor, installing hessian ceilings and rebuilding the chimneys. They continued to run the property as a dairy farm until the late 1960s when most of the land was resumed for industrial purposes by Campbelltown City Council.
Since then Mr & Mrs Whitten have used the buildings and a small area of land about them as a private home. In recent years the buildings were listed by the National Trust of Australia (NSW) and the Heritage Council of NSW. The property was placed on the market for sale in .[1]
The immediately-previous owner Alwyn Hutchinson used the property for nominal storage purposes.[5] That owner indicated that prior to purchasing the property in, it had been used for "casual retail" functions.[6] [1]
There are presently six buildings on the site, of which three only have been considered by the National Trust of Australia (NSW) as being of some historic significance. The other three are a timber framed garage, a detached fernery and a corrugated iron farm shed, all built by Mr Whitten and not of apparent historic significance.[1]
The remaining three buildings are composed of:
Floors are cement-paved. It has two fireplaces and chimneys to the northern face. All wall faces are painted. The pitched roof is covered with corrugated iron sheets and matching roof covers.[7] [1]
The roof is constructed of trimmed tree poles, covered in she-oak (Casuarina sp.) shingles, now sheeted in corrugated iron. Gutters and downpipes are modern. Roof timber members appear to be original including wide and close centre battens, round section rafters and collar ties and some ceiling joists.[7] [1]
The ceiling is of canvas on a timber frame and both this and the walls have been lime-washed. When purchased by Mr Whitten the north-west corner had partly collapsed as had one of the chimneys and these were rebuilt.[1]
The building is used as a store room, workshop and family entertaining areas. It is in excellent condition although there is some evidence of sandstone fretting to the south wall probably caused by rising damp. The ground outside this area appears to have been built up and paved with pre-cast concrete pavers.[1]
There is a hip roof of she-oak shingles under corrugated iron. The floors are timber, presently covered with body carpet and concrete floors at the rear are tiled. Because of its derelict state when purchased, Mr Whitten rebuilt the ground floors, replaced the lath-and plaster ceilings with fibrous plaster, remade the ground floor doors and part of the staircase to the original pattern and rebuilt the verandah and balcony. While the cast iron columns are original the decorative ironwork has been replaced by cast aluminium of similar pattern. The verandah is now cement-paved and external walls have been given a rough-cast rendered finish.[1]
Internally the plaster walls show some evidence of dampness but otherwise the condition of the building appears to be very good. The front door is six-panelled with a rectangular fanlight over, internal doors are four-panelled, windows are two panes of double hung sash pattern and there are paired French windows opening onto the balcony. The building has been used as a self-contained dwelling for approximately 26 years.[1]
This small, sandstock brick building has a she-oak (shingle) hip roof sheeted with corrugated iron and a single, vertically-boarded timber door. IT has a floor partly of brick and is without a ceiling and appears to be only in fair condition. Its date is uncertain but taking into consideration its materials, it would appear to have been built prior to 1880.[1]
Records and photographs have indicated that a ball room was built between the inn and the main road and there were a number of timber outbuildings at the rear but these have all now disappeared.[1]
major changes of a concrete floor infill to each room, installation of plywood and painted hessian ceilings was made. The roof of the inn was corrugated iron by this time.[1]
Holly Lea and Plough Inn was listed on the New South Wales State Heritage Register on 2 April 1999.[1]