Baxter
Small town in the heart of the Mornington Peninsula
Baxter is a small settlement of 2500 people on the
edges of Melbourne's ever-increasing suburban sprawl. It is part of the
municipality of Frankston and is
located 48 km south-east of Melbourne on the Mornington Peninsula.
Prior to European settlement the area was inhabited
by Wiradjuri Aborigines. The town was named after the first European
settler in the area - a Lieutenant Benjamin Baxter who appears to have
given himself a promotion as most sources now refer to him as Captain
Benjamin Baxter - who, in 1840, took up the 'Carrup Carrup' run where
he successfully bred shorthorn cattle. Baxter's daughter married John
Sage who took up an adjoining property, 'Eurutta'. The slab house on
the land is one of Victoria's oldest farm houses.
Today Baxter is a small settlement which has been
overwhelmed by the major seaside attractions at Frankston and Mornington and the southern suburban
sprawl of Melbourne.
Baxter can claim two significant literary
connections. Joan Lindsay, who wrote 'Picnic at Hanging Rock', lived at
Mulberry Hill near the town from the late 1920s until her death in 1984
and the popular novelist Nevil Shute lived in the town in the 1950s.
Things to see:
Eurutta (Sages Cottage)
This homestead, one of the oldest farm houses in
Victoria, dates from 1853 and is a rare surviving example of a quality
home constructed from vertical sawn slabs. It has timber verandahs
which support a hipped shingled roof and was built by John Edward Sage,
the manager of Captain Benjamin Baxter's 'Carrup Carrup' station, who
overlanded cattle to the district in the 1840s. Sage married a Baxter
daughter and took up an adjoining property on which he built this
cottage which is located on the corner of Moorooduc and Sages Road.
Historic stables overlook the lake and there are extensive gardens with
peacocks, ducks and geese. Now principally an eatery it is open for
lunches, tel: (03) 5971 1337.
Mulberry Hill
'Mulberry Hill' is the former home of Sir Daryl Lindsay
(brother of Norman Lindsay) and Joan Lindsay (the author of Picnic at
Hanging Rock). It is an American-colonial style weatherboard house
perched atop a hill in rural surrounds, offering views of Western Port
Bay. The Lindsays inherited the original four-room 1880s cottage when
they purchased the property from cousins of the painter Frederick
McCubbin in 1 926, building their elegant home that same year. The
property was originally part of the Carrup Carrup estate, established
by Captain Baxter in 1840.
Guests at the house have included Vivien Leigh, Sir Robert
Helpmann and Dame Nellie Melba. As both Lindsays were artists, there
is, not surprisingly, a fine collection of art by the likes of the
Lindsays, Frederick McCubbin, Rupert Bunny, John Perceval, Constance
Stokes and Margaret Preston, as well as Georgian furniture, literary
items and memorabilia. Joan Lindsay's writing room has also been
preserved.
The house and property were bequeathed intact to the National
Trust which opens it to the public every Sunday. Tours are conducted at
1.30 p.m., 2.15 p.m. and 3.00 p.m. Tours for groups can be organised
any day by making a booking, tel: (03) 5971 4138. Mulberry Hill is
located in Golf Links Road which connects the Moorooduc Highway with
the Baxter-Tooradin Rd.
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Motels
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Baxter Tavern Motel/Hotel
Baxter-Tooradin Rd
Baxter
VIC
3911
Telephone: (03) 5971 2207
Facsimile: (03) 5971 2407
Rating: **
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Cottages & Cabins
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Sages Cottage Farm
85 Sages Rd
Baxter
VIC
3911
Telephone: (03) 5971 5964
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Restaurants
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Golden Garden Chinese Restaurant
Frankston - Flinders Rd
Baxter
VIC
3911
Telephone: (03) 5971 1757
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Cafés
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Remember Food!
88 Baxter - Tooradin Rd
Baxter
VIC
3911
Telephone: (03) 5971 5217
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Sages Cottage
85 Sages Rd
Baxter
VIC
3911
Telephone: (03) 5971 5964
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