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Withycombe - Patrick White's
childhood home
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Mount Wilson
Gracious and elegant village in the Blue
Mountains famous for its gardens.
Mount Wilson is located 8 km north of Bell's Line of
Road and 126 km west of Sydney. It is a charming and gracious village
with many beautiful cold climate gardens nestled in the Australian
bush. This small village is famous today for the fact that between 1912
and 1937 Patrick White's parents lived in a house called Withycombe (it
still stands and is located on the corner of The Avenue and Church
Avenue). In his book Flaws in the Glass White recalled his time at
Mount Wilson in terms of 'gullies crackling with smoky silence, rocks
threatening to explode, pools so cold that the breath was cut off
inside your ribs as you hung suspended like the corpse of a pale frog.'
The first European into the area may have been the
convict Matthew Everingham who may have reached the ridge as early as
1795. Certainly the confirmed first European into the general area was
Archibald Bell, Jr, who in 1823 when he was only nineteen, crossed the
mountains along what was to become Bell's Line of Road. This was not a
solitary achievement. Sensibly he used the knowledge of the local
Aborigines who had been crossing the mountains for tens of thousands of
years. Although the mountains has been crossed at Katoomba a decade
earlier, there was still no satisfactory route through the mountains
from Richmond at this time. Bell reached Mount Tomah on his first
attempt but could not find a way across the mountains. On his second
attempt he followed the ridge across to the present site of Bell and
from there made his way down into Hartley Vale where he joined up with
Cox¹s road.
Nine years later, in 1832, William Romaine Govett (of
Govett¹s Leap fame) climbed Mt Wilson and subsequently described it as
a 'high mass of range of the richest soil covered with almost
impenetrable scrub'. It was surveyed in 1868, subdivided into 62
portions, and named after John Bowie Wilson who, at the time, was the
Minister for Lands. The railway arrived in 1875 and by 1880 there were
eight houses in the village.
Over the years Mount Wilson became a village for the
wealthy. It was the perfect hill station. A cool, misty area with soils
and a climate which were ideal for the recreation of England in a
foreign land.
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Statues in the garden at Mt Wilson
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In her
cooking/history book on the town, Mount Wilson: A Potted History,
Audrey O'Ferrall notes 'Around the original houses built by 1880 were
planted gardens which contained oaks, elms, beeches and pines from
Britain rhododendrons, magnolias, cedars and spruces from the
Himalayas and red oaks, tulip trees and conifers from North America.'
It is this diversity of flora which makes Mount Wilson one of the most
unusual and beautiful villages in the Blue Mountains.
Mount Wilson is a basalt capped ridge. Although it was
difficult for Europeans to reach there is evidence that the local
Aborigines camped in the forests. There has been the discovery of stone
axes.
Things to see:
Exploring the Gardens
The best strategy for any visitor is to get out of
the car and start walking. The experience of the town is the experience
of its gardens, its avenues of trees, its lookouts and its walking
trails and picnic areas. The time to visit Mount Wilson is either
spring or autumn. At these times many of the locals open their gardens
- some of which are over 100 years old - to the public.
Of particular note are Church Avenue, Queen's Avenue
and The Avenue with their rows of plane trees, limes, elms, beeches,
liquidambars and pink cherries.
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Walls of spring flowers in Mt Wilson
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Other Attractions
Walks to Wynne's Rocks Lookout, the Cathedral of
Ferns and the Waterfalls Picnic Ground all offer excellent views and
pleasant picnic locations.
Wynne's Rocks Lookout can be reached via Queen's
Avenue and Wynne's Rocks Road. It is named after Richard Wynne, an
early settler, and is notable for its views across the Blue Mountains.
The Cathedral of Ferns is a delightful section of rainforest
along Mount Irvine Road. There is a 'giant tree' as well as huge tree
ferns, sassafras, a wide range of eucalypts and coachwood trees
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Bed & Breakfast/Guesthouses
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Mount Wilson Guest House & Cottages
Mount Wilson
NSW
2786
Telephone: (02) 4756 2164
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Cottages & Cabins
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Yengo Cottage
Queens Ave
Mount Wilson
NSW
2786
Telephone: (02) 4756 2002
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Lodges & Chalets
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Blueberry Lodge
Waterfall Rd
Mount Wilson
NSW
2786
Telephone: (02) 4756 2022
Facsimile: (02) 4756 2022
Rating: ****
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Cafés
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Mountain Goat Deli/Cafe
31 Thhe Avenue
Mount Wilson
NSW
2786
Telephone: (02) 4756 2181
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