Conon, Lutwyche

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Location29 Conon Street, Lutwyche, City of Brisbane, Queensland, Australia
Coordinates27°25′28″S 153°02′10″E / 27.4245°S 153.036°E / -27.4245; 153.036
Design period1840s - 1860s (mid-19th century)
Built1863
Conon
Conon, Lutwyche is located in Queensland
Conon, Lutwyche
Location of Conon in Queensland
Conon, Lutwyche is located in Australia
Conon, Lutwyche
Conon, Lutwyche (Australia)
Location29 Conon Street, Lutwyche, City of Brisbane, Queensland, Australia
Coordinates27°25′28″S 153°02′10″E / 27.4245°S 153.036°E / -27.4245; 153.036
Design period1840s - 1860s (mid-19th century)
Built1863
Official nameConon
Typestate heritage (landscape, built)
Designated21 October 1992
Reference no.600346
Significant period1860s-1930s (fabric)
1860s-1950s (historical)
Significant componentscellar, garden/grounds, residential accommodation - main house, service wing

Conon is a heritage-listed detached house at 29 Conon Street, Lutwyche, City of Brisbane, Queensland, Australia. It was built in 1863. It was added to the Queensland Heritage Register on 21 October 1992.[1]

This low-set masonry and timber residence was constructed in a number of stages, with the brick and stone core dating to 1863.[1]

Originally the site was part of a 10-acre (4.0 ha) subdivision acquired by Robert Cribb, Brisbane politician and property dealer, in 1861. In 1863, Cribb sold this to fellow Scottish immigrant Kenneth McLennan, a stonemason from the town of Conon in Scotland, who had arrived in Brisbane in 1855. On the transfer document, McLennan listed his occupation as builder, and his descendants believe that McLennan built the house himself in 1863.[1]

In 1878, McLennan raised a £300 mortgage on the property from Brisbane land speculator James Gibbon, which may have financed the addition of a northern brick and stone wing to the house about this time.[1]

By the early 1890s, the property included an orchard and vineyard, bowling green, tennis court, stables and various outbuildings. bunya pines lined the front drive, which is now Conon Street, down to McLennan Street.[1]

Around 1900, a timber extension was added to the southern side of the kitchen, and two internal walls were removed in 1917 to create a larger bedroom.[1]

At Conon, McLennan and his wife Ann Grant, whom he had married at Ipswich in 1855, raised a family of ten children. McLennan appears to have derived his Queensland income from property dealing rather than building. He took a keen interest in church and community affairs, and served as a Windsor Shire councillor and as the first mayor of the Town of Windsor in 1904.[1]

Following the death of his wife in 1912, McLennan moved from Conon and died at New Farm, aged eighty-seven years, on 1 November 1916.[1]

While a small allotment was excised from the original allotment in 1895 it was only after McLennan's death that his sons subdivided the original estate retaining for the family two allotments totaling 2 acres (0.81 ha) 3 roods 14 perches (3,400 m2) containing the house and its garden, the tennis court and bowling green.[1]

The house block remained in the McLennan family until 1934, when it was sold to Sir Neil O'Sullivan, a Brisbane solicitor and federal cabinet minister. The northern allotment remained in the family until 1947. The O'Sullivans added a brick bedroom off the southern verandah in 1935.[1]

Lady O'Sullivan sold the property in 1972, but it remains a family residence. In 1980, a larger brick bedroom wing was added at the rear.[1]

Description

Conon occupies a hilltop position in Lutwyche overlooking Breakfast Creek. It is a low-set masonry and timber residence which, because of its evolutionary nature, employs a variety of materials and styles.[1]

The earliest section of the house comprises a three-roomed (formerly four) brick core with a timber verandah which formerly encircled the whole. It rests on a rubble foundation of Brisbane tuff which was collected from the property, and is capped by a galvanised iron roof which was shingled originally.[1]

Portions of the verandah survive at the front, southern side and at the rear, and were either conserved or reconstructed in 1987. Dowel balustrading, square timber posts and fretwork brackets of an unusual thistle pattern supply the exterior decoration to this section.[1]

A small cellar is located under the side verandah and a separate basement cellar lies beneath the two early bedrooms.[1]

No visible evidence remains of any early kitchen house, probably timber, associated with the 1863 building.[1]

The rendered brick northern wing with coursed stone foundations and a corrugated iron roof was added in the late 1870s. It comprises an entrance hall, two large sitting rooms (probably formerly drawing and dining rooms) which are divided by an unadorned archway, and a large former kitchen, maid's room and pantry at the rear. Each sitting room has a bay window which also is separated from the body of the room by an arch.[1]

The grounds have been reduced following subdivisions however sufficient has been retained to preserve its garden and sense of space reflecting a 19th-century ambience. Despite the subdivision of the original holding, the garden setting of the house is important in the understanding and appreciation of the significance of the place and its long history.[1]

Within the grounds there is a sense of isolation from more recent development. Some early plantings and garden features from the mid 19th century remain and indeed the general arrangement of the early garden is reflected in more recent plantings of the 1970s and 1980s.[1]

The association with the McLennan family for almost seventy years is perpetuated in the names of the neighbouring streets: McLennan, Kenneth and Conon.[1]

Heritage listing

References

Further reading

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