Alberton was established as a property for New Zealand landowner
Allan Kerr Taylor in 1849. In 1863, Kerr Taylor had a farmhouse constructed on the property as a centre-point for his 203-hectare estate. The house was rebuilt in the 1870s by architect Matthew Henderson into an elaborate country manor influenced by
Anglo-Indian architecture. Recently widowed, he married the 18-year-old
Sophia Taylor in 1865. In 1890, Kerr Taylor died, while the Alberton house and farm were still highly mortgaged. Therefore, Sophia Taylor continued to administer the estate and experienced many obstacles as a woman landowner. With the help of one son (Hector), and three of the daughters (Winifred, Milfred, and Muriel), the family were able to maintain and uphold Alberton. Sophia Taylor continued to live at Alberton until she died in 1930. In January 1939, a portion of the Alberton estate was acquired by the
New Zealand Government, which established the Plant Diseases Division of the
Department of Scientific and Industrial Research on the site. The site was chosen due to its variety of soils, and research on how to protect crops against disease commenced. The DSIR gradually took more of the Alberton grounds during the 20th century through compulsory purchases as a part of the Public Works Act. Muriel Kerr Taylor, the youngest daughter of Allan Kerr and Sophia Taylor, continued to live at Alberton for the rest of her life. Much of the family had moved elsewhere, and Kerr Taylor's children often spent summer holidays at the estate or lived there while attending
Mount Albert Grammar School. In 1970, Muriel learnt that the DSIR intended to purchase the land the house was on. The family moved to prevent this from happening by bequeathing the home to the National Historic Places Trust, who received it after her death in 1972. The Historic Places Trust reopened Alberton on 8 December 1973. Alberton now operates as a heritage house open for public visitation. == Functions & celebrations ==