Английская Википедия:Brickhouse Station

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Шаблон:Short description Шаблон:Use Australian English Шаблон:Use dmy dates Шаблон:Location map Шаблон:Coord Brickhouse Station, formerly spelt Brick House Station, is a pastoral lease in Western Australia. It once operated as a sheep station but now operates as a cattle station, with some Шаблон:Cvt turned over to mango cultivation .

It is located Шаблон:Convert north east of Carnarvon and Шаблон:Convert south of Coral Bay in the Gascoyne region. It occupies an area of Шаблон:Convert with Шаблон:Convert of Indian Ocean frontage.[1] The Gascoyne River runs through the property for Шаблон:Convert of its length and it is bounded to the east by Doorawarrah Station.[2]

In 1888 the property was owned by Forrest, Burt and Co., who were sending consignments of sheep, including one of 2,040 sheep, to Frederick Piesse in Williams.[3] A heat-wave during January 1896 produced temperatures as high as Шаблон:Convert in the shade, with hundreds of birds dying.[4] No rain fell at the property between August 1896 and May 1897, and only Шаблон:Convert fell over the preceding 22-month period.[5] By 1898 the station was being stocked up, taking delivery of 10,000 sheep from Mundabullangana station.[6]

The first bores were sunk at the property in 1905.[7] One bore recorded a flow of Шаблон:Convert per hour when sunk to a depth of Шаблон:Convert.[8] It was later sunk down to Шаблон:Convert to obtain flows of Шаблон:Convert per hour, which Burt found disappointing and insufficient for him to open up thousands of extra acres of land for stock.[9]

A shearer named Lonton was murdered at Brick House in 1906 when another shearer named Fleming shot him in the chest in a drunken argument. Fleming committed suicide a few hours afterwards.[10] During shearing later in October 189 bales of wool were produced from the 10,565 sheep sheared.[11]

Following the death of Septimus Burt in 1919 the property was left to one of his four surviving sons, Reginald Edward Burt.[12] Reginald had worked at Brick House from 1901 to 1903 as a station hand and became the manager in 1904, a position he held until 1922. He remained a co-owner of the station until his own death in 1957.[13]

Massive bushfires swept through the area in 1927 with Brick House, Doorawarrah, Ella Valla, Callagiddy and other properties all losing large areas of feed to the fires.[14]

Tragedy occurred at the station in 1971 when a light plane crashed during mustering, killing the two men flying.[15]

The property has been flooded several times; severe flooding occurred in 1961 and in the flood of 2000 the water rose high enough to enter the kitchen by about Шаблон:Convert. During the 2010 flood, water entered many of the outbuildings and the Burt family expected to lose about a quarter of the 5,000 head of cattle depastured on the property.[16]

The station was owned or co-owned by the Burt family since the 1880s, but was put up for sale in 2013.[1] The property was acquired by Andrew Forrest in 2015 along with Minilya Station for an estimated Шаблон:AUD10 million,[17] and is now spelt Brickhouse Station. In 2017 Forrest obtained approval to put Шаблон:Cvt under irrigation to grow mangoes.[18]

See also

References

Шаблон:Reflist Шаблон:Stations of the Gascoyne Western Australia