Barwon Park

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TypeHomestead / Mansion, associated built facilities and grounds
LocationWinchelsea, Victoria, Australia
Nearest cityGeelong
Coordinates38°13′29″S 143°59′43.8″E / 38.22472°S 143.995500°E / -38.22472; 143.995500
Barwon Park
Barwon Park Mansion, December 2025
TypeHomestead / Mansion, associated built facilities and grounds
LocationWinchelsea, Victoria, Australia
Nearest cityGeelong
Coordinates38°13′29″S 143°59′43.8″E / 38.22472°S 143.995500°E / -38.22472; 143.995500
Built1871
Built forThomas & Elizabeth Austin
Restored byNational Trust
Current useHouse museum operated by the National Trust
Architect George Henderson and Alexander Davidson
Architectural styleItalianate
Official nameBarwon Park Mansion & Garden
TypeState heritage (built and natural)
Designated5 November 1964
Reference no.H0492
Barwon Park is located in Surf Coast Shire
Barwon Park
Location in the Surf Coast Shire, Victoria

Barwon Park is a large nineteenth-century bluestone mansion and pastoral estate located outside of Winchelsea, in the Surf Coast Shire of Victoria, Australia. Constructed between 1869 and 1871 for prominent pastoralist Thomas Austin and his wife Elizabeth Austin, the house is regarded as one of the finest surviving examples of a Italianate rural mansion in Victoria's Western District.[1] The infestation of European rabbits across Australia originated from Thomas Austin's decision to release a dozen of them into the wild for hunting purposes in 1859.[2] Barwon Park is listed on the Victorian Heritage Register and is owned and managed by the National Trust of Australia (Victoria), operating as a house museum open to the public.[3][4]

The Austin family background and early history

See also

References

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