maroon

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With income from his position as Postmaster-General, TLM-P was able once again to afford a grazing property. In November 1864, after selling other property/properties, he acquired the 20,000-acre Melcombe property, close to his old property of Bromelton. With its new name Maroon, it would become home to four generations of Murray-Priors.

Maroon is near Beaudesert in the Logan district, south-west Queensland. Mt Lindesay was on Maroon's south boundary. It was country belonging to the Yuggerabul (or Yugarapul or Ugarapul) indigenous group.1) Evidence of a rock shelter dates their occupation at least back to 1300 BC.2) By 1864 the indigenous owners had been dispossessed and largely decimated though 'tension' continued until the 1880s.3) Originally, the property name was spelt Marroon. Rosa Praed thought the name could be a corruption of the indigenous name for iguana - murrun - due to a legend that an imposing local mountain was created after a girl ate one against tribal rules.4) She described Maroon in a number of her books, including as the Doondi station in her novel The Head Station. As Patricia Clarke described it, Maroon had rich river flats but in its outer reaches 'the imposing Mounts Maroon, Barney, Ballow and Clunie overlooked wild, thickly timbered rainforest, rocky gorges and ravines, crater lakes, waterfalls, and rugged scrub country.'5) 6)

The following map from Collin Pfeffer's well-researched The Fassifern Story shows Maroon and adjoining properties.
7)

When TLM-P bought Maroon, the area was sparsely settled. Rosa Praed recalled that the family went via Ipswich, and had to hack their way through the Dugandan Scrub to reach their new home.8) TLM-P paid £3,000 for Maroon and £1,200 for another property, Heads of Logan. The latter was located between Maroon and his eastern neighbour Telemon: TLM-P incorporated it into Maroon station. Maroon came with 110 cattle, 12 horses and some working bullocks, while Heads of Logan carried 600 cattle and 7 horses.9)

TLM-P used Maroon for cattle and also imported horses to form a stud there.10) His timing was unfortunate. He bought Maroon just before the British financial turmoil of 1866 restricted colonial investment, and just in time for a prolonged drought.11) Maroon satisfied his desire for land, and provided a rich source for Rosa when writing about Australia, but never bought easy prosperity. It is notable too, that TLM-P acquired it from the Bank of Australasia after the previous owner forfeited it.12) TLM-P had enough money left over to build a new house. TLM-P and Matilda soon had a new, red-cedar lined, extensive house built. As the 1871 census recorded it as having two houses for 20 people present, presumably they keep the original homestead for workers quarters.13) By 1880, the local council's rate book valued the buildings at £52.10.14) As with all such properties, there were other buildings nearby: quarters for the male employees; stores for meat and other goods, and workshops. As well, country hospitality was generally offered to travellers.15) Sadly the homestead was destroyed by fire in 1947, some 27 years after Thomas B. M-P sold it.16) The local Fassifern Guardian described it as one of Queensland's 'most historic homesteads', with 'walls of locally dressed cedar, its impressive fireplaces of Ipswich limestone slabs and its single roof'.17)

An account book for Maroon c.1865-72 has been donated to the ML.

An undated photograph of the drawing room at Maroon with family paintings etc.to re do18) The player piano remains in the family, along with the large painting of TLM-P's father, and two of the ornamental vases on the mantelpiece. Note there are three swords and one battleaxe hanging on the wall.19)
A threat to Maroon's viability from the late nineteenth century was the spread of the exotic plant, prickly pear. It was not effectively contained until the mid-1920s with the introduction of cactoblastis.20)

TLM-P's love of art means that we have a number of paintings of and around Maroon. These two are by artist George Hart Taylor21) There are other smaller paintings of the local area by Taylor in the M-P Papers in the Mitchell Library, Sydney.
For more paintings of and around Maroon, click on landscapes.

For sketches of Maroon by an unknown person/s, click on sketches.

The following photos of Maroon homestead was probably taken in the 1910s when TLM-P's grandson Thomas B. M-P, his wife Lizzie and family lived there.22)

The next photo comes with the information that it is Lizzie and her young son Thomas at Maroon with the Governor's daughter, c. 1914-15. The most likely candidate is that the governor in question was Sir Hamilton John Goold-Adams as he married in 1911 and had two children. He arrived in Queensland to take up his appointment as Governor of Queensland in March 1915, and left in 1920. From the look on the children's faces, they did not appreciate having to hold hands and stay still for the photograph.23)

A copy of the 1914 subdivision sale poster from Collin Pfeffer, The Fassifern Story: a history of Boonah Shire and its surroundings24)

This photo from Collin Pfeffer, The Fassifern Story: a history of Boonah Shire and its surroundings25) is of Maroon c.1920, shortly after T.B. M-P sold the property.


1)
Angela Collyer, Templin: a German settlement in Queensland, Fassifern District Historical Society, 1992, p.1.
2) , 3)
Collin Pfeffer, The Fassifern Story: a history of Boonah Shire and surroundings to 1989, Boonah Shire Council, c.1991, p.14.
4)
letter to The Courier-Mail, 5 March 19??, in possession J. Godden.
5)
p.22
6)
Roderick, In Mortal Bondage, p.36.
7)
Collin Pfeffer, The Fassifern Story: a history of Boonah Shire and surroundings to 1989, Boonah Shire Council, c.1991, p.21.
8)
Angella Collyer, Rathdowney: federation history of an Australian rural border community Rathdowney, Qld.: Rathdowney Area Development and Historical Association, 2001 p.17.
9)
Angella Collyer, Rathdowney: federation history of an Australian rural border community Rathdowney, Qld.: Rathdowney Area Development and Historical Association, 2001, pp.17-18.
10)
[H. Krause], The Story of Maroon. A Souvenir Review of its History and Development 1827-1961, Maroon Centenary Celebrations Committee, 1961, p.12.
11)
Ross Fitzgerald, From the Dreaming to 1915. A History of Queensland, St Lucia: University of Queensland Press, 1982, p.143.
12) , 14)
Collin Pfeffer, The Fassifern Story: a history of Boonah Shire and surroundings to 1989Boonah Shire Council, c.1991, p.27.
13)
Collin Pfeffer, The Fassifern Story: a history of Boonah Shire and surroundings to 1989, Boonah Shire Council, c.1991, p.20.
15)
Roderick, In Mortal Bondage, pp.41-42.
16)
The Courier-Mail, 14 November 1947, p.3
17)
Fassifern Guardian, 19 November 1947, p.1.
18)
Provenance: T.A. & M.T. M-P
19)
pers. comm. M.T.M-P
20)
for an analysis of the threat posed by the prickly pear, see Jodi Frawley, 'Prickly Pear Land. Transnational networks in Settler Australia', Australian Historical Studies, 130, October 2007, pp.323-38.
21)
Provenance: Glenn M-P
22)
Provenance for all the following: T.A.&T.M-P
24)
Boonah Shire Council, 1991, p.26
25)
Boonah Shire Council, 1991, p.22
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