The station was established in 1877, in the area of
Rungarungawa tribal lands along with several other well known properties in the
Channel Country as pastoralists expanded westward from the grasslands at the headwaters of the Diamantina. Other properties established at the same time included
Glenormiston Station,
Headingly Station, Herbert Downs, Noranside and Roxburgh Downs. In 1878 then owner, Mr F. Scarr, sold the property to a
New South Wales investor, Mr Andrew Tobin, for £6000 cash. Tobi and company bought the property without any stock and without inspection, so well regarded was the country, thought to be particularly suited to
sheep with its "abundance of saline herbage and lime". Tobin thought otherwise and began to stock the area with
cattle, buying over 1,000 store cattle in an 1880 sale that were delivered shortly afterwards. One of Tobin's partners in the station, John Leach Manning, died in 1883 leaving Tobin and the last partner, Daniel MacKinnon, with Marion Downs. The station manager in 1891, George McLeod, committed suicide by cutting his own throat. By 1893, the property was owned by the MacKinnon brothers (
Donald and
James) who were still regularly selling bullocks off the property to markets in
Adelaide,
Rockhampton and
Sydney. In 1900, the property experienced a dry spell and put down two
wells to water their cattle. Better conditions soon returned and by 1908 the property was carrying 10,000 head of cattle. A
boundary rider named Andrew Johnstone, employed at neighbouring
Coorabulka Station, went missing in 1920. His body was found a couple of months later by a
stockman along the Merrdiderri Channel, but his bones had been scattered by
dingos. By the following year the property occupied an area of and was carrying 20,000 cattle with 300 horses. The area was struck by
drought in 1926. Although Marion Downs was faring well in 1926, this changed as the drought continued, and by 1928 the property had been left in the hands of care-takers and had been mostly destocked. A man from
South Australia, Daniel Richardson, died of thirst at Marion Downs in 1932. The property was purchased by the
North Australian Pastoral Company in 1934, following some tough times after
World War I, a market downturn and the prolonged drought. Neighbouring
Coorabulka and nearby Monkira were purchased in 1939. The area experienced heavy rains in 1953, and Marion Downs along with other properties nearby were
flooded. Many employees trapped at the station contracted
dysentery, probably from drinking contaminated water. The Georgina and Burke Rivers both flooded in 2010, following good rains further north. The station manager, Robert Jansen, described the waters as "handy", probably meaning there would be more water available to stock. Jansen and the manager of
Glenormiston Station, Stephen Bryce, have jointly managed the Mulligan River Nature Reserve, which straddles both of the properties, since 2007. ==See also==