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Hollow Tree, Tasmania

Hollow Tree is a rural locality in the local government area of Central Highlands in the Central region of Tasmania. It is located about 17 kilometres (11 mi) north-east of the town of Hamilton and about 16 kilometres (9.9 mi) south-west of the town of Bothwell in one of Tasmania's key pastoral districts.[2] The 2021 census determined a population of 33 for the locality.[1]

Hollow Tree
Tasmania
Landscape of Hollow Tree, Tasmania
Hollow Tree
Coordinates42°29′08″S 146°56′19″E / 42.4855°S 146.9385°E / -42.4855; 146.9385
Population33 (2021 census)[1]
Postcode(s)7140
Location17 km (11 mi) NE of Hamilton
LGA(s)Central Highlands
RegionCentral
State electorate(s)Lyons
Federal division(s)Lyons
Localities around Hollow Tree:
Bothwell Bothwell Bothwell
Ouse Hollow Tree Dysart
Hamilton Hamilton Pelham

History edit

Hollow Tree is located within the country of the Big River nation.[2] They actively resisted the takeover of their land by the British, notably during the period 1828-1830. The terrain in the valley of the Clyde River was especially conducive to farmhouse raids. The tree-covered ridges provided cover for raiding parties, while the narrow width of the valleys made it possible for them to cross the cleared ground and reach farm houses before settlers could react. The valleys also isolated each settler from their neighbour over the ridge, enabling Aboriginal raiding parties to create a local numerical superiority against a particular farm.[3]

It was gazetted as a locality in 1959,[4] though the area became known as Hollow Tree from the early 1800s.[5]

The first Europeans to live in the area were shepherds, or stockmen, overseeing livestock belonging to owners who mainly resided in Hobart Town or in the New Norfolk district. The first land grants were three small acreages granted in 1821 - 50 acres granted to Patrick McCarthy[6] (who had arrived as a convict in 1804), 50 acres to John Barnes (who had arrived 1808) and 60 acres to his step-son James Holland (aka Barnes, who also arrived in 1808). Only Patrick McCarthy settled on his land grant at Hollow Tree. The only other European in the district to occupy a land grant at that time was James Robertson. Robertson, who also arrived in the district in 1822, named his 1,000 acre grant 'Katrine Vale' (Robertson received an additional 500 acres in 1824[7]).

A large land grant of 1,500 acres was issued to Captain William Langdon in 1823, however, he did not occupy his grant until late 1835, when his wife Anne and daughter Jane also came to Van Diemen's Land.[8] Also in 1823, an even larger grant of 2,000 acres was issued to siblings Sarah and Joseph Bradbury, who had arrived from London the previous year with their mother. The Bradbury's eventually occupied the land grant later in the 1820s, and by 1832 had constructed a substantial two-storey sandstone home, later known as 'Strathborough' and now known simply as 'Hollow Tree House'.[9]

In August 1828, the largest parcel of land to be granted at Hollow tree was issued to retired Royal Navy Lieutenant Henry Boden Torlesse, who received 2,460 acres which he named 'Rathmore'. In 1830, Torlesse asked to exchange his land grant for one closer to the protection of the town of Hamilton, after being raided by members of the indigenous Big River nation.[3] Despite this, he arranged the construction of a grand sandstone house at the property. Torlesse and his family appear to have moved into their new house at Hollow Tree in about November 1831, but remained there only a short time, relocating to Hamilton in early 1833, where Torlesse was the local Police Magistrate.[10]

Land grants at Hollow Tree were progressively issued by the colonial authorities until, by 1831, the district was entirely in private hands. Many owners, however, remained absent and leased their land to others.

Architecture edit

Hollow Tree has several architecturally and historically significant buildings, in Georgian and Gothic revival styles dating from the 19th century.

Llanberis edit

Formerly Calton Hill, Llanberis is a two-storey Gothic revival house built before 1875, with the twin gables being added in about 1890. It is constructed primarily of sandstone and has a timber verandah on three sides. It was built in front of an older cottage on the site. The house is prominently located on a small knoll and is highly visible from the road between Bothwell and Hamilton.[11]

In 1915, the Hallet brothers William, Frederick and Isaac purchased the property, with Isaac later taking Llanberis.[9]

Montacute edit

Captain William Langdon established a single storey, slate roofed, sandstone homestead which he named 'Montacute' after the village where he was born in Somerset.[8][12]

In 1830, Langdon had captained the ship Thomas Laurie from England to Van Diemen's Land, on board was John Glover, who was to become one of the first landscape painters in Australia and who sketched Langdon in one of his sketchbooks.[13] In 1838, Glover painted Montacute. The painting shows the main house, secondary buildings and the surrounding wall within the wider landscape.[14][15] Montacute was one of three colonial homesteads painted by Glover in 1837–38, including Ratho in Bothwell and Cawood in Ouse. The paintings capture vividly the isolation of the properties, surrounded by wilderness, while also suggesting the success of their owners running them productively.[16] Art curator and author David Hansen has written of these three paintings show what was a theme in Glover's works: "the triumph of colonial order in the unruly antipodean Paradise" and are among his most beautiful depictions of the Australian countryside.[17]

While the house itself is now an abandoned ruin,[18] Langdon, a devoted supporter of the Church of England, also built a church on the property, St James' in 1856–57, which still stands in good condition, with services conducted there occasionally.[19] St James' was consecrated on the 11th of November 1858, in a ceremony led by Tasmania's first bishop, Francis Nixon, and was described in an article in The Courier:

“The church is in the Gothic style, beautiful in its simplicity, as churches should be. The old church porch and the fine old arched doorway have their proper places. The windows are all of the lancet kind. On the roof, at the east end, there is a stone cross - the token of which we are not to be ashamed - and on the opposite end is a raised niche for the bell. The whole building is of light but durable sandstone, well wrought. There is everything in this little church to remind the devout of the 'House of Prayer,' where our forefathers worshiped in England”.


"The inside is even more striking than the outside. No pains or expense have been spared. From end to end, from floor to roof, all is complete. Every thing has been done which the servant of God should do to build a temple meet for the worship of Him who dwelleth in the heavens. The pulpit, the reading desk, the scats, are all of dark wood, well wrought and varnished. The roof is open and lofty. The rafters are of dark varnished wood like the seats. The church is beautifully adapted for the voice. The lowest tones are perfectly audible in the furthest corner."

"The site of the church is on a rising ground, not very far from Montacute House. The ascent has been made easy by a carriage drive and bridge. Some high rocks rise perpendicularly above the hill on which the church stands and these, bold and protecting, throw an air of peace and stillness around, a very pleasant atmosphere for a church."[20]

The Hallett family have owned Montacute since 1897, they, like Langdon, had come from Montacute in Somerset.[19]

Rathmore edit

Rathmore is a single storey sandstone house with attic, built by convicts in a transitional style. The house is located on a knoll and has a sandstone paved verandah and iron roof.[21]

The 2,650 acre estate was established by Henry Boden Torlesse, a Lieutenant in the Navy who had served in the Napoleonic Wars, who had arrived in Hobart in 1828 and served as the manager of Montacute until 1834. He built Rathmore around 1830. The house is named after his wife, Frances Hawthorn's, mother's family property in Ireland. Torlesse's own family had become wealthy through investments in the East India Company.[22][23]

Torlesse was forced to mortgage Rathmore in 1837 and sell it shortly after, to Mr George Cartwright, a Hobart lawyer.[24] Cartwright became insolvent and the property was again sold, this time to the Allwright family, who owned the estate for over 150 years[25][26][27]

In 2015, Rathmore was sold and converted to a guesthouse.[23]

Sherwood edit

Sherwood is a Georgian sandstone house with associated sandstone outbuildings constructed in 1842 for John Sherwin, a settler from Staffordshire. It is located on land that was part of 800 acres on the Clyde River granted to Sherwin in 1823 and replaced a previous timber house, which was burned to the ground in 1830 during a raid by the indigenous Big River people in the Black War conflict.[28][29][3]

The house has a hipped iron roof and impressive front door with sidelights and arched fanlight set into the three bay north-west facing facade, which looks up along the adjacent river. The extensive outbuildings include a kitchen, bakery, coach house, barn and freestanding cottages. It has a cellar that runs below the house and back into the hill. The house is set within a deep valley of the Clyde River on an old road that ran along the river to Bothwell.[30][31][32]

The house was described by Michael Sharland in his 1952 book Stones of a Century:

"It was difficult to account for his (John Sherwin) taste so far as it concerned the situation of his home. Here was a stately house hidden in the depths of a narrow valley, almost in the nature of a gulch, on the edge of a river subject to flooding, and with access presenting difficulties for the transport of the day ... But if, like Langdon, he expected the fertile valley to bring further settlement and neighbours, he was disappointed, for Sherwood has remained isolated and concealed by the folded hills for nearly 120 years."[33]

In March 1843, bushranger Martin Cash, along with two accomplices, occupied and robbed Sherwood during a robbery spree in the Hamilton area, tying up all the occupants, including George Sherwin and three visitors in one room while they searched the property for valuables.[34][35] Cash's own account of the incident refers to the house as a garrison and gives an indication of the number of people required to run and maintain the property:

"While luxuriating in our present encampment we resolved upon paying a friendly visit to Mr. Sherwin, of Sherwood, whom we considered able, if not willing, to contribute to the funds; and intending if possible to secure one of the men in his employment, in order to ascertain the strength of the enemy, we fixed upon a convenient place, where, with the assistance of a good field telescope I could see the most vulnerable part of the garrison, and thereby arrange the plan of attack."


"On joining Kavanagh, we both escorted our formidable body of prisoners into the house and placed them in the company of their betters, but in a very humble position, as we obliged them to sit upon the floor, and from information received from one of our captives, I repaired to the garden, where I found two men who all this time had been perfectly ignorant of what was taking place at the house, and having placed them also in company with the rest, I was satisfied that we had all hands in safe custody, and a numerous body they appeared, the room being scarcely large enough to contain them, being twenty-five in number."[36]

In 1845, John Sherwin's other son Isaac returned to Sherwood from Launceston and directed the construction of one of the first irrigation systems in Tasmania, a 137m long tunnel cut by hand with pick and shovel through sandstone.[29]

The house was restored in the 1970s by the Sandy Bay Scouts, but has not been consistently lived in since the 1950s.[30]

Strathborough edit

Strathborough is a two-storey Georgian style house built sometime between 1827 and 1832. It was constructed with convict labour on land granted to siblings Joseph and Sarah Bradbury who had come to Van Diemen's Land on the Minerva with their mother in 1822. The Bradbury's had first been granted 2,000 acres of land in Hollow Tree in 1823 by Lieutenant Governor Sorell and successfully applied to Governor George Arthur for a further five acres, on which to construct a home, in 1825. Joseph and Sarah Bradbury both died in 1857. The property was then leased to Thomas Axford. The name Strathborough first appears in 1882. From at least 1883 to William Sprackett Hallet leased the Strathborough, he then purchased the property with his brothers Frederick and Isaac in 1911, they already owned Llanberis and Montacute. In 1914 William took Strathborough. The house itself has since been sold separately from the original property that surrounds it.[9]

The house is constructed of pale ashlar sandstone and has five bays with a central front door. There are stylistically uncharacteristic buttresses at either end of the front of the house, indicating that the front facade may have been rebuilt at some stage, with the buttressing necessary for structural stability.[37] The roof is a shallow pitched double hip, with four symmetrical chimneys. There is a single storey scullery with its own chimney at the rear of the building. The original floors are Tasmanian oak with original joinery in cedar.[9]

Strathborough was sold in 2017. In 2019 a renovation was completed by Core Collective architects for the new owners,[38] which in 2020 won both the Tasmanian Architecture Award for Heritage Architecture and the highest Australian National Architecture Award for Heritage Architecture.[39]

Geography edit

The Clyde River forms the north-western boundary before flowing through to the south-west.[40]

Road infrastructure edit

The B110 route (Hollow Tree Road) enters from the north and runs through to the south, where it exits. Route C181 (Marked Tree Road) starts at an intersection with B110 and runs south-east until it exits.[4][41]

References edit

  1. ^ a b "2021 Census Quick Stats Hollow Tree (Tas.)". quickstats.censusdata.abs.gov.au. Australian Bureau of Statistics. 10 August 2021. Retrieved 31 January 2024.
  2. ^ a b "Tasmanian Heritage Register Datasheet" (PDF). Tasmanian Heritage Register. Government of Tasmania. Retrieved 30 January 2022.
  3. ^ a b c Connor, John Stephen (1999). Armed conflict between Aborigines and British armed forces in Southeast Australia, 1788-1831 (Masters Thesis thesis). University of New South Wales. pp. 124–125. doi:10.26190/unsworks/6704. Retrieved 31 January 2024.
  4. ^ a b "Placenames Tasmania – Hollow Tree". Placenames Tasmania. Select “Search”, enter "1045P", click “Search”, select row, map is displayed, click “Details”. Retrieved 5 June 2020.
  5. ^ "Colonial Secretary Correspondence". Libraries Tasmania. Government of Tasmania. Retrieved 30 January 2022.
  6. ^ "Libraries Tasmania - LSD409-1-1". stors.tas.gov.au. Retrieved 7 July 2022.
  7. ^ "Colonial Secretary Index, 1788-1825 - Roberts, William (1816) to Robertson & Maude, Messrs". colsec.records.nsw.gov.au. Retrieved 9 July 2022.
  8. ^ a b "Langdon, William (1790–1879)". Australian Dictionary of Biography. Australian National University. Retrieved 23 April 2022.
  9. ^ a b c d "DISCRETIONARY APPLICATION" (PDF). Central Highlands Council. Government of Tasmania. Retrieved 30 January 2022.
  10. ^ "Torlesse, Henry Boden" . A Naval Biographical Dictionary – via Wikisource.
  11. ^ "Llanberis". Australian Heritage Database. Australian Government Department of Agriculture, Water and the Environment. Retrieved 30 January 2022.
  12. ^ Dickens, Greg. "Abandoned slate-roofed homestead at Montacute". Images of Tasmania. University of Tasmania. Retrieved 24 April 2022.
  13. ^ Hansen, David. "MOULTING LAGOON AND GREAT OYSTER BAY, FROM PINE HILL". Sotheby's. Retrieved 23 April 2022.
  14. ^ Lum, Julia (29 November 2018). "Fire-Stick Picturesque: Landscape Art and Early Colonial Tasmania". British Art Studies (10). doi:10.17658/issn.2058-5462/issue-10/jlum. Retrieved 23 April 2022.
  15. ^ "Montacute, Bothwell". Artory. Retrieved 23 April 2022.
  16. ^ "Cawood" (PDF). Tasmanian Heritage Council. Government of Tasmania. Retrieved 23 April 2022.
  17. ^ Hansen, David (2003). John Glover and the Colonial picturesque. Hobart, Tasmania: Tasmanian Museum and Art Gallery ; Art Exhibitions Australia Limited. pp. 104, 114, 118 & 22. ISBN 0975054511.
  18. ^ "Montacute". Australian Heritage Database. Australian Government Department of Agriculture, Water and the Environment. Retrieved 23 April 2022.
  19. ^ a b Dickens, Greg. "St James chapel at Montacute". Images of Tasmania. University of Tasmania. Retrieved 23 April 2022.
  20. ^ "CONSECRATION OF ST. JAMES'S CHURCH, MONTACUTE". The Courier. No. 3304. 18 November 1857. Retrieved 23 April 2022.
  21. ^ "Rathmore". Australian Heritage Database. Australian Government Department of Agriculture, Water and the Environment. Retrieved 24 April 2022.
  22. ^ Carter, Judith (September 2015). "THE HAWTHORN FAMILY IN VAN DIEMEN'S LAND" (PDF). Tasmanian Ancestry. 36 (2): 100.
  23. ^ a b "Home". Rathmore. KGA Trust. Retrieved 24 April 2022.
  24. ^ "Classified Advertising". The Hobart Town Courier. Vol. X, no. 583. Tasmania, Australia. 20 October 1837. p. 4. Retrieved 24 April 2022.
  25. ^ "Advertising". Launceston Advertiser. Vol. XV, no. 808. Tasmania, Australia. 8 September 1842. p. 2. Retrieved 24 April 2022.
  26. ^ "CUMBERLAND". The Courier (Hobart). Vol. XXX, no. 2872. Tasmania, Australia. 8 April 1856. p. 3. Retrieved 24 April 2022.
  27. ^ "OBITUARY PARAGRAPHS". The Advocate (Australia). Tasmania, Australia. 23 May 1950. p. 4. Retrieved 24 April 2022.
  28. ^ "Copies of Land Grants Issued 1823" (1970) [Textual record]. Copy of Land Grants Issued 1801-1823, ID: LSD351/1/8, p. 15. Geilston Bay GQ 15 5: Tasmanian Archives, Land and Surveys Department.
  29. ^ a b Fysh, Ann. "Sherwin, Isaac (1804–1869)". Australian Dictionary of Biography. Australian National University. Retrieved 25 April 2022.
  30. ^ a b "Sherwood". Australian Heritage Database. Australian Government Department of Agriculture, Water and the Environment. Retrieved 24 April 2022.
  31. ^ Dickens, Greg. "Front door of Sherwood at Hollow Tree". Images of Tasmania. University of Tasmania. Retrieved 24 April 2022.
  32. ^ Dickens, Greg. "View of Sherwood, homestead in Clyde River Valley". Images of Tasmania. University of Tasmania. Retrieved 24 April 2022.
  33. ^ Sharland, Michael Stanley Reid (1952). Stones of a Century. Hobart, Tasmania: Oldham, Beddome and Meredith.
  34. ^ "POSTSCRIPT". The Austral-asiatic Review, Tasmanian And Australian Advertiser. Vol. XV, no. 874. Tasmania, Australia. 24 March 1843. p. 3. Retrieved 24 April 2022.
  35. ^ "THE BUSHRANGERS". Launceston Examiner. Vol. II, no. 26. Tasmania, Australia. 1 April 1843. p. 7 (EVENING). Retrieved 25 April 2022.
  36. ^ Cash, Martin; Burke, James Lester (1870). The adventures of Martin Cash : comprising a faithful account of his exploits, while a bushranger under arms in Tasmania, in company with Kavanagh and Jones in the year 1843. Hobart, Australia: "Mercury" Steam Press Office. pp. 82–83. Retrieved 25 April 2022.  This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the public domain.
  37. ^ "Strathborough". Australian Heritage Database. Australian Government Department of Agriculture, Water and the Environment. Retrieved 30 January 2022.
  38. ^ "Hollow Tree House". Core Collective. Core Collective. Retrieved 30 January 2022.
  39. ^ "NATIONAL ARCHITECTURE AWARD WINNERS 1 of 84 NATIONAL ARCHITECTURE AWARDS WINNERS 1981 - 2021" (PDF). Australian Institute of Architects.
  40. ^ Google (5 June 2020). "Hollow Tree, Tasmania" (Map). Google Maps. Google. Retrieved 5 June 2020.
  41. ^ (PDF). Department of Primary Industries, Parks, Water & Environment. May 2017. Archived from the original (PDF) on 1 August 2017. Retrieved 18 May 2020.

hollow, tree, tasmania, hollow, tree, rural, locality, local, government, area, central, highlands, central, region, tasmania, located, about, kilometres, north, east, town, hamilton, about, kilometres, south, west, town, bothwell, tasmania, pastoral, district. Hollow Tree is a rural locality in the local government area of Central Highlands in the Central region of Tasmania It is located about 17 kilometres 11 mi north east of the town of Hamilton and about 16 kilometres 9 9 mi south west of the town of Bothwell in one of Tasmania s key pastoral districts 2 The 2021 census determined a population of 33 for the locality 1 Hollow Tree TasmaniaLandscape of Hollow Tree TasmaniaHollow TreeCoordinates42 29 08 S 146 56 19 E 42 4855 S 146 9385 E 42 4855 146 9385Population33 2021 census 1 Postcode s 7140Location17 km 11 mi NE of HamiltonLGA s Central HighlandsRegionCentralState electorate s LyonsFederal division s LyonsLocalities around Hollow Tree Bothwell Bothwell BothwellOuse Hollow Tree DysartHamilton Hamilton Pelham Contents 1 History 2 Architecture 2 1 Llanberis 2 2 Montacute 2 3 Rathmore 2 4 Sherwood 2 5 Strathborough 3 Geography 4 Road infrastructure 5 ReferencesHistory editHollow Tree is located within the country of the Big River nation 2 They actively resisted the takeover of their land by the British notably during the period 1828 1830 The terrain in the valley of the Clyde River was especially conducive to farmhouse raids The tree covered ridges provided cover for raiding parties while the narrow width of the valleys made it possible for them to cross the cleared ground and reach farm houses before settlers could react The valleys also isolated each settler from their neighbour over the ridge enabling Aboriginal raiding parties to create a local numerical superiority against a particular farm 3 It was gazetted as a locality in 1959 4 though the area became known as Hollow Tree from the early 1800s 5 The first Europeans to live in the area were shepherds or stockmen overseeing livestock belonging to owners who mainly resided in Hobart Town or in the New Norfolk district The first land grants were three small acreages granted in 1821 50 acres granted to Patrick McCarthy 6 who had arrived as a convict in 1804 50 acres to John Barnes who had arrived 1808 and 60 acres to his step son James Holland aka Barnes who also arrived in 1808 Only Patrick McCarthy settled on his land grant at Hollow Tree The only other European in the district to occupy a land grant at that time was James Robertson Robertson who also arrived in the district in 1822 named his 1 000 acre grant Katrine Vale Robertson received an additional 500 acres in 1824 7 A large land grant of 1 500 acres was issued to Captain William Langdon in 1823 however he did not occupy his grant until late 1835 when his wife Anne and daughter Jane also came to Van Diemen s Land 8 Also in 1823 an even larger grant of 2 000 acres was issued to siblings Sarah and Joseph Bradbury who had arrived from London the previous year with their mother The Bradbury s eventually occupied the land grant later in the 1820s and by 1832 had constructed a substantial two storey sandstone home later known as Strathborough and now known simply as Hollow Tree House 9 In August 1828 the largest parcel of land to be granted at Hollow tree was issued to retired Royal Navy Lieutenant Henry Boden Torlesse who received 2 460 acres which he named Rathmore In 1830 Torlesse asked to exchange his land grant for one closer to the protection of the town of Hamilton after being raided by members of the indigenous Big River nation 3 Despite this he arranged the construction of a grand sandstone house at the property Torlesse and his family appear to have moved into their new house at Hollow Tree in about November 1831 but remained there only a short time relocating to Hamilton in early 1833 where Torlesse was the local Police Magistrate 10 Land grants at Hollow Tree were progressively issued by the colonial authorities until by 1831 the district was entirely in private hands Many owners however remained absent and leased their land to others Architecture editHollow Tree has several architecturally and historically significant buildings in Georgian and Gothic revival styles dating from the 19th century Llanberis edit Formerly Calton Hill Llanberis is a two storey Gothic revival house built before 1875 with the twin gables being added in about 1890 It is constructed primarily of sandstone and has a timber verandah on three sides It was built in front of an older cottage on the site The house is prominently located on a small knoll and is highly visible from the road between Bothwell and Hamilton 11 In 1915 the Hallet brothers William Frederick and Isaac purchased the property with Isaac later taking Llanberis 9 Montacute edit Captain William Langdon established a single storey slate roofed sandstone homestead which he named Montacute after the village where he was born in Somerset 8 12 In 1830 Langdon had captained the ship Thomas Laurie from England to Van Diemen s Land on board was John Glover who was to become one of the first landscape painters in Australia and who sketched Langdon in one of his sketchbooks 13 In 1838 Glover painted Montacute The painting shows the main house secondary buildings and the surrounding wall within the wider landscape 14 15 Montacute was one of three colonial homesteads painted by Glover in 1837 38 including Ratho in Bothwell and Cawood in Ouse The paintings capture vividly the isolation of the properties surrounded by wilderness while also suggesting the success of their owners running them productively 16 Art curator and author David Hansen has written of these three paintings show what was a theme in Glover s works the triumph of colonial order in the unruly antipodean Paradise and are among his most beautiful depictions of the Australian countryside 17 While the house itself is now an abandoned ruin 18 Langdon a devoted supporter of the Church of England also built a church on the property St James in 1856 57 which still stands in good condition with services conducted there occasionally 19 St James was consecrated on the 11th of November 1858 in a ceremony led by Tasmania s first bishop Francis Nixon and was described in an article in The Courier The church is in the Gothic style beautiful in its simplicity as churches should be The old church porch and the fine old arched doorway have their proper places The windows are all of the lancet kind On the roof at the east end there is a stone cross the token of which we are not to be ashamed and on the opposite end is a raised niche for the bell The whole building is of light but durable sandstone well wrought There is everything in this little church to remind the devout of the House of Prayer where our forefathers worshiped in England The inside is even more striking than the outside No pains or expense have been spared From end to end from floor to roof all is complete Every thing has been done which the servant of God should do to build a temple meet for the worship of Him who dwelleth in the heavens The pulpit the reading desk the scats are all of dark wood well wrought and varnished The roof is open and lofty The rafters are of dark varnished wood like the seats The church is beautifully adapted for the voice The lowest tones are perfectly audible in the furthest corner The site of the church is on a rising ground not very far from Montacute House The ascent has been made easy by a carriage drive and bridge Some high rocks rise perpendicularly above the hill on which the church stands and these bold and protecting throw an air of peace and stillness around a very pleasant atmosphere for a church 20 The Hallett family have owned Montacute since 1897 they like Langdon had come from Montacute in Somerset 19 Rathmore edit Rathmore is a single storey sandstone house with attic built by convicts in a transitional style The house is located on a knoll and has a sandstone paved verandah and iron roof 21 The 2 650 acre estate was established by Henry Boden Torlesse a Lieutenant in the Navy who had served in the Napoleonic Wars who had arrived in Hobart in 1828 and served as the manager of Montacute until 1834 He built Rathmore around 1830 The house is named after his wife Frances Hawthorn s mother s family property in Ireland Torlesse s own family had become wealthy through investments in the East India Company 22 23 Torlesse was forced to mortgage Rathmore in 1837 and sell it shortly after to Mr George Cartwright a Hobart lawyer 24 Cartwright became insolvent and the property was again sold this time to the Allwright family who owned the estate for over 150 years 25 26 27 In 2015 Rathmore was sold and converted to a guesthouse 23 Sherwood edit Sherwood is a Georgian sandstone house with associated sandstone outbuildings constructed in 1842 for John Sherwin a settler from Staffordshire It is located on land that was part of 800 acres on the Clyde River granted to Sherwin in 1823 and replaced a previous timber house which was burned to the ground in 1830 during a raid by the indigenous Big River people in the Black War conflict 28 29 3 The house has a hipped iron roof and impressive front door with sidelights and arched fanlight set into the three bay north west facing facade which looks up along the adjacent river The extensive outbuildings include a kitchen bakery coach house barn and freestanding cottages It has a cellar that runs below the house and back into the hill The house is set within a deep valley of the Clyde River on an old road that ran along the river to Bothwell 30 31 32 The house was described by Michael Sharland in his 1952 book Stones of a Century It was difficult to account for his John Sherwin taste so far as it concerned the situation of his home Here was a stately house hidden in the depths of a narrow valley almost in the nature of a gulch on the edge of a river subject to flooding and with access presenting difficulties for the transport of the day But if like Langdon he expected the fertile valley to bring further settlement and neighbours he was disappointed for Sherwood has remained isolated and concealed by the folded hills for nearly 120 years 33 In March 1843 bushranger Martin Cash along with two accomplices occupied and robbed Sherwood during a robbery spree in the Hamilton area tying up all the occupants including George Sherwin and three visitors in one room while they searched the property for valuables 34 35 Cash s own account of the incident refers to the house as a garrison and gives an indication of the number of people required to run and maintain the property While luxuriating in our present encampment we resolved upon paying a friendly visit to Mr Sherwin of Sherwood whom we considered able if not willing to contribute to the funds and intending if possible to secure one of the men in his employment in order to ascertain the strength of the enemy we fixed upon a convenient place where with the assistance of a good field telescope I could see the most vulnerable part of the garrison and thereby arrange the plan of attack On joining Kavanagh we both escorted our formidable body of prisoners into the house and placed them in the company of their betters but in a very humble position as we obliged them to sit upon the floor and from information received from one of our captives I repaired to the garden where I found two men who all this time had been perfectly ignorant of what was taking place at the house and having placed them also in company with the rest I was satisfied that we had all hands in safe custody and a numerous body they appeared the room being scarcely large enough to contain them being twenty five in number 36 In 1845 John Sherwin s other son Isaac returned to Sherwood from Launceston and directed the construction of one of the first irrigation systems in Tasmania a 137m long tunnel cut by hand with pick and shovel through sandstone 29 The house was restored in the 1970s by the Sandy Bay Scouts but has not been consistently lived in since the 1950s 30 Strathborough edit Strathborough is a two storey Georgian style house built sometime between 1827 and 1832 It was constructed with convict labour on land granted to siblings Joseph and Sarah Bradbury who had come to Van Diemen s Land on the Minerva with their mother in 1822 The Bradbury s had first been granted 2 000 acres of land in Hollow Tree in 1823 by Lieutenant Governor Sorell and successfully applied to Governor George Arthur for a further five acres on which to construct a home in 1825 Joseph and Sarah Bradbury both died in 1857 The property was then leased to Thomas Axford The name Strathborough first appears in 1882 From at least 1883 to William Sprackett Hallet leased the Strathborough he then purchased the property with his brothers Frederick and Isaac in 1911 they already owned Llanberis and Montacute In 1914 William took Strathborough The house itself has since been sold separately from the original property that surrounds it 9 The house is constructed of pale ashlar sandstone and has five bays with a central front door There are stylistically uncharacteristic buttresses at either end of the front of the house indicating that the front facade may have been rebuilt at some stage with the buttressing necessary for structural stability 37 The roof is a shallow pitched double hip with four symmetrical chimneys There is a single storey scullery with its own chimney at the rear of the building The original floors are Tasmanian oak with original joinery in cedar 9 Strathborough was sold in 2017 In 2019 a renovation was completed by Core Collective architects for the new owners 38 which in 2020 won both the Tasmanian Architecture Award for Heritage Architecture and the highest Australian National Architecture Award for Heritage Architecture 39 Geography editThe Clyde River forms the north western boundary before flowing through to the south west 40 Road infrastructure editThe B110 route Hollow Tree Road enters from the north and runs through to the south where it exits Route C181 Marked Tree Road starts at an intersection with B110 and runs south east until it exits 4 41 References edit a b 2021 Census Quick Stats Hollow Tree Tas quickstats censusdata abs gov au Australian Bureau of Statistics 10 August 2021 Retrieved 31 January 2024 a b Tasmanian Heritage Register Datasheet PDF Tasmanian Heritage Register Government of Tasmania Retrieved 30 January 2022 a b c Connor John Stephen 1999 Armed conflict between Aborigines and British armed forces in Southeast Australia 1788 1831 Masters Thesis thesis University of New South Wales pp 124 125 doi 10 26190 unsworks 6704 Retrieved 31 January 2024 a b Placenames Tasmania Hollow Tree Placenames Tasmania Select Search enter 1045P click Search select row map is displayed click Details Retrieved 5 June 2020 Colonial Secretary Correspondence Libraries Tasmania Government of Tasmania Retrieved 30 January 2022 Libraries Tasmania LSD409 1 1 stors tas gov au Retrieved 7 July 2022 Colonial Secretary Index 1788 1825 Roberts William 1816 to Robertson amp Maude Messrs colsec records nsw gov au Retrieved 9 July 2022 a b Langdon William 1790 1879 Australian Dictionary of Biography Australian National University Retrieved 23 April 2022 a b c d DISCRETIONARY APPLICATION PDF Central Highlands Council Government of Tasmania Retrieved 30 January 2022 Torlesse Henry Boden A Naval Biographical Dictionary via Wikisource Llanberis Australian Heritage Database Australian Government Department of Agriculture Water and the Environment Retrieved 30 January 2022 Dickens Greg Abandoned slate roofed homestead at Montacute Images of Tasmania University of Tasmania Retrieved 24 April 2022 Hansen David MOULTING LAGOON AND GREAT OYSTER BAY FROM PINE HILL Sotheby s Retrieved 23 April 2022 Lum Julia 29 November 2018 Fire Stick Picturesque Landscape Art and Early Colonial Tasmania British Art Studies 10 doi 10 17658 issn 2058 5462 issue 10 jlum Retrieved 23 April 2022 Montacute Bothwell Artory Retrieved 23 April 2022 Cawood PDF Tasmanian Heritage Council Government of Tasmania Retrieved 23 April 2022 Hansen David 2003 John Glover and the Colonial picturesque Hobart Tasmania Tasmanian Museum and Art Gallery Art Exhibitions Australia Limited pp 104 114 118 amp 22 ISBN 0975054511 Montacute Australian Heritage Database Australian Government Department of Agriculture Water and the Environment Retrieved 23 April 2022 a b Dickens Greg St James chapel at Montacute Images of Tasmania University of Tasmania Retrieved 23 April 2022 CONSECRATION OF ST JAMES S CHURCH MONTACUTE The Courier No 3304 18 November 1857 Retrieved 23 April 2022 Rathmore Australian Heritage Database Australian Government Department of Agriculture Water and the Environment Retrieved 24 April 2022 Carter Judith September 2015 THE HAWTHORN FAMILY IN VAN DIEMEN S LAND PDF Tasmanian Ancestry 36 2 100 a b Home Rathmore KGA Trust Retrieved 24 April 2022 Classified Advertising The Hobart Town Courier Vol X no 583 Tasmania Australia 20 October 1837 p 4 Retrieved 24 April 2022 Advertising Launceston Advertiser Vol XV no 808 Tasmania Australia 8 September 1842 p 2 Retrieved 24 April 2022 CUMBERLAND The Courier Hobart Vol XXX no 2872 Tasmania Australia 8 April 1856 p 3 Retrieved 24 April 2022 OBITUARY PARAGRAPHS The Advocate Australia Tasmania Australia 23 May 1950 p 4 Retrieved 24 April 2022 Copies of Land Grants Issued 1823 1970 Textual record Copy of Land Grants Issued 1801 1823 ID LSD351 1 8 p 15 Geilston Bay GQ 15 5 Tasmanian Archives Land and Surveys Department a b Fysh Ann Sherwin Isaac 1804 1869 Australian Dictionary of Biography Australian National University Retrieved 25 April 2022 a b Sherwood Australian Heritage Database Australian Government Department of Agriculture Water and the Environment Retrieved 24 April 2022 Dickens Greg Front door of Sherwood at Hollow Tree Images of Tasmania University of Tasmania Retrieved 24 April 2022 Dickens Greg View of Sherwood homestead in Clyde River Valley Images of Tasmania University of Tasmania Retrieved 24 April 2022 Sharland Michael Stanley Reid 1952 Stones of a Century Hobart Tasmania Oldham Beddome and Meredith POSTSCRIPT The Austral asiatic Review Tasmanian And Australian Advertiser Vol XV no 874 Tasmania Australia 24 March 1843 p 3 Retrieved 24 April 2022 THE BUSHRANGERS Launceston Examiner Vol II no 26 Tasmania Australia 1 April 1843 p 7 EVENING Retrieved 25 April 2022 Cash Martin Burke James Lester 1870 The adventures of Martin Cash comprising a faithful account of his exploits while a bushranger under arms in Tasmania in company with Kavanagh and Jones in the year 1843 Hobart Australia Mercury Steam Press Office pp 82 83 Retrieved 25 April 2022 nbsp This article incorporates text from this source which is in the public domain Strathborough Australian Heritage Database Australian Government Department of Agriculture Water and the Environment Retrieved 30 January 2022 Hollow Tree House Core Collective Core Collective Retrieved 30 January 2022 NATIONAL ARCHITECTURE AWARD WINNERS 1 of 84 NATIONAL ARCHITECTURE AWARDS WINNERS 1981 2021 PDF Australian Institute of Architects Google 5 June 2020 Hollow Tree Tasmania Map Google Maps Google Retrieved 5 June 2020 Tasmanian Road Route Codes PDF Department of Primary Industries Parks Water amp Environment May 2017 Archived from the original PDF on 1 August 2017 Retrieved 18 May 2020 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Hollow Tree Tasmania amp oldid 1212475323, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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