The pasturage selected by Andrew was not ideal for cattle grazing, since it was at the base of a small forested mountain. Nor did he initially have enough cattle to make the lease a paying proposition. However, at this point much of the best pasturage in the
Port Phillip district had been occupied. (Andrew also appeared to prefer scenic beauty over more practical considerations). As at Mayfield, the house was not complete when Georgiana moved in. Her three older boys had been living there since January with their tutor John McLure, sleeping in huts and assisting in the construction of the house. The
homestead (still in existence and now owned by the National Trust) had a floor plan designed by Georgiana and was built with local timbers, including messmate, stringybark and wattle. The next six years at Arthur’s Seat were spent living simply, with the surrounding area providing them with enough fish, game, vegetables and wheat to be almost self sufficient. The family continued to entertain visitors, ranging on the social scale from
Charles and Sophie La Trobe to passing travellers. They also had cordial relations the local
Bunurong tribe, who often camped near their homestead at certain times of the year. Georgiana and oldest son George learnt many native words, and she painted two of them, Benbenjie and Eliza. Her biographer notes how these portraits are sympathetic and avoid the usual stereotypes of native people at this time. Unable to make the lease a paying proposition, the McCrae’s were forced to give up
Arthurs Seat in 1851. This was a blow to Georgiana, who had invested a lot of time and effort into their home, which included a pleasure garden. ‘
I must bid farewell to my Mountain Home – and forsake the garden I had formed & the trees that I planted’. The cottage that Andrew and Georgiana originally built at the foot of Arthur's Seat was later renamed
McCrae Homestead following its donation by Andrew McCrae to the
National Trust of Victoria in 1970. It was initially repurchased in 1961 by Georgiana's great-grandson, George Gordon McCrae and then left to his son, Andrew. ==Melbourne (1851–1867)==