The McCraes were early settlers to the new colony of Victoria, Australia. Andrew arrived from England in 1839, and Georgiana also emigrated to Australia following her husband in 1841 with their four young sons. As did Georgiana, her eldest son,
George Gordon McCrae (1833–1927) recorded many of
his experiences at Arthur's Seat both in diary form and as sketches and paintings. They were one of the first families to settle on the
Mornington Peninsula and they built their new home near the future location of
McCrae Lighthouse, overlooking Port Phillip. The McCraes also knew Arthur's Seat as Wango, the name given this large granite
outcrop, by the
Bunurong. In 1934, one of Georgiana's grandsons, the poet
Hugh McCrae, published her journals, under the title "Georgiana's Journal." The journal chronicled her pre– departure from England in 1838 on the
Argyle in 1840 to the year 1865, including the years at Arthur's Seat from 1844 to 1851. Letters included in the diary that she received from Arthur's Seat from her children, George Gordon, Willie, Sandy, and Perry who were sent on ahead of their parents from Melbourne, with their tutor John McClure, express their excitement as they helped build huts, fished from the beach below the homestead and explored what was then a pristine environment teeming with bush creatures. They also befriended the
Bunurong, the indigenous people of the Port Phillip area who taught them their language and songs. The four boys learned how to fish with wooden spears. In 1847, George wrote a detailed description of a
Corroboree. John McClure was born on the
Isle of Skye and had received an education in the classics and therefore the McCrae's sons received a fine education in conjunction with living a pioneer lifestyle. The Schoolhouse, one of the original huts on the property, was nicknamed "The University of Arthur's Seat", also referred to later by this same title by the Burrell family children. In the 1920s John Twycross made a pictorial photograph of the hut which at this stage was leaning somewhat. A watercolour painting was done in the late 1850s by
Edward La Trobe Bateman entitled "Mr McClure's Hut." On 19 July 1846 Georgiana wrote one of many entries in her diary, this describing the homestead.
Construction of the homestead "It is more than a year since we squatted, or as the aborigines say,
Quambied (camped) on Arthur's Seat - the antipodes of that ilk. Our house is built of gum-tree slabs supported, horizontally, by grooved corner-posts, and the same artifice (used again) for windows and doors. The biggest room has been furnished with a table and chairs, but no pictures - long lines of actual landscape appearing in interstices between the planks, instead! In addition to the house proper, we have recently erected a suite of wattle and daub rooms, which only need plastering" The interior rooms of the homestead that were completed soon after this reflect Georgiana's artistry and good taste in design and furnishings. It is furnished with original artefacts and furniture handed down by Georgiana McCrae to her descendants.
The view "......Situated on a terrace of sandy soil, about two hundred yards up from the beach, we command a view of
Shortlands Bluff lighthouse, the two points...
Nepean and
Lonsdale...and, in clear weather,
Cape Otway, faintly sustained in the west." This magnificent view has now been obscured by development although it can still be viewed from Seawinds, at Arthurs Seat State Park further up the mountain above the homestead.
The life of a pioneer woman "July 22nd, 1845 Dead calm. The bay like a mirror. Lanty and Neale went out to fish. Tuck fastened the two halves of our door to the hinges, thus excluding the dogs and geese; also Master Tommy. Obliged to give up my last packet of sperm candles, otherwise the school-hut will have to close on account of darkness." 23 July 1845 "Since the flour sacks are full of holes, I have removed my dresses from the tinned chest and filled it with flour instead." 23 January 1850 "While the boys were away at the beach, I heard somebody shout excitedly, five or six times, and, on going out of the house, I noticed Mr McLure ahead of me, running towards the saw-pit. I followed as fast as I could and was astonished to see our dray, tipped up, with the two shafter-bullocks hanging by the bows from the pole which had become caught in a native "cherry".
Her family "Arthurs's Seat, June 6th, 1849. Mr Courtney measured our heights on the wall of the dining- room, as follows: Fanny-Two years old, less 14 days, 2 feet 8 inches Poppety-Five years, less 19 days, 3 feet 4 inches. Lucia- Seven years and a half, 4 feet Perry- Ten years, seven months, 4 feet 3 3/4 inches Willie-Fourteen and a half, 4 feet 7 inches Sandy-Twelve and a half, 4 feet, 11 1/2 inches George -Sixteen years, 5 feet 2 1/2 inches I, myself, me-5 feet 3 1/2 inches Mr. McLure- 5 feet 7 inches Mr. Courtney, and Mr. McCrae- 5 feet 10 inches"
On leaving "The Seat" "Arthur's Seat, October 6th, 1851. Yet a deeper sorrow has now arrived when I must say good-bye to my mountain home, the house I have built, the garden I have formed.". == Burrell family ==