The Bowes

Author

Shire of Northampton

Place Number

03270

Location

1950 Nabawa East Bowes

Location Details

Other Name(s)

Chilimony Bowes
Knockbrack

Local Government

Northampton

Region

Midwest

Construction Date

Constructed from 1860

Demolition Year

N/A

Statutory Heritage Listings

Type Status Date Documents
Heritage List Adopted 15 May 2020
State Register Registered 06 Sep 1996 HCWebsite.Listing+ListingDocument

Heritage Council Decisions and Deliberations

Type Status Date Documents
(no listings)

Other Heritage Listings and Surveys

Type Status Date Grading/Management
Category
Municipal Inventory Adopted 19 Apr 1996 Category 1A

Statement of Significance

'The Bowes' Estate, its homestead, associated outbuildings and cemetery, is highly significant historically, socially and aesthetically for the role the property and its owners have played in the pioneering and development of the region and the State. The homestead buildings, shearing shed and cemetery are particularly significant for their condition, influence on similar buildings in the district and the important role the people associated with them have played both locally and throughout the State.

Physical Description

The Bowes Homestead is located on the Bowes River approx. 10 kms south east of Northampton on the Northampton - Nabawa Road. The homestead has a long rectangular floor plan, one room wide with lean-to enclosures to the rear and a long open verandah facing the river. The verandah is supported on timber posts and is an extension of the main, hipped, CGI roof over the homestead. French doors open from each room onto the verandah to catch the breeze and provide access. Originally, access between most rooms was gained using the verandah as an external 'passageway', although there appears to have been some direct access between several rooms as there is now. This was a common design format for the early homesteads of the period and it is said ' The Bowes', being the first, formed a model for the other large pastoral homesteads of the district such as Oakabella (Site No. 147) There are a collection of outbuildings adjacent to the homestead including the original separate kitchen and dining room with painted rendered stone walls (possibly originally limewashed) located off the rear verandah (now enclosed). These buildings now appear to be used as staff accommodation and provide something of a quadrangle around the back of the homestead which could have been intentional for security against aboriginal attack or ease of access. A little further away there is also a more recent managers house and several metal clad farm sheds. On the other side of the river from the homestead is a large, white painted, stone shearing shed with CGI roof. The shearing shed is elegantly proportioned with tall internal spaces punctuated with timber columns supporting the roof. It is located just off the Northampton-Nabawa Road near to where a railway siding, on the Geraldton- Northampton government line, originally serviced The Bowes. Further upstream from the homestead, and on the same side of the river is a small family cemetery. A stone retaining wall along the river bank to minimise the affects of flooding. The cemetery contains the graves of pioneer settlers and several prominent headstones remain intact. Fortunately, the graves have been protected from stock by a steel fence which although functional is too confining and somewhat unsympathetic in its design.

History

William Burges was the first permanent land settler in the Northampton District, establishing the first pastoral property there in 1850. Burges was born in 1807 in the little Irish town of Tipperary. In 1830 William, along with his brothers Samuel and Lockier Burges, arrived at Fremantle on the 'Warrior'. After their arrival the government made a grant of 1920 acres of land along the Swan River to William, the eldest of the three brothers. A little later a further grant of 3000 acres on the Avon River was made, followed by another 6000 acres. This property was named 'Tipperary' after their home town in Ireland. In 1848 Lockier Burges, the youngest of the three brothers, accompanied the A.C. and F.C. Gregory expedition which penetrated as far north as the Murchison River and confirmed the rich pastoral prospects of the land between the Irwin and Murchison Rivers. On his return to the York property Lockier Burges emphasised to his brothers the suitability for grazing of that country. Messrs William Burges and John Drummond visited the Geraldine Mine in November 1849, while at the same time evaluating the land thereabouts for pastoral potential. Both Burges and Drummond were impressed by what they saw. Consequently, in 1850 both William and Lockier Burges left 'Tipperary' and set off for the Champion Bay district with 2000 sheep and 200 head of cattle. The brothers were met at Dandaragan by Augustus and Henry Gregory who acted as guides while John Drummond went along as police escort of what became the town of Northampton, where William and Lockier took up a pastoral lease of 132 000 acres. Initially calling the property' Knockbrack' after his old home in Ireland, William eventually renamed the estate 'The Bowes' because of its position on the Bowes River. The Bowes was widely known as the centre of hospitality for those passing through the district. John Forrest, on his epic journey to Adelaide in 1874, wrote of the "hospitable residence of Thomas Burges. When the Geraldton-Northampton Railway was constructed 1874-1879, a siding was located at 'The Bowes', a quarter of a mile from the homestead. In July 1900 the partnership of WM & SL Burges was dissolved and the 100,000 acre lease was put up for sale. Bowes and Yuin were purchased by William Burges for 30,000 pounds in December 1900. In the early 1900s the Government made a decision not to renew pastoral leases in the area and much of The Bowes' was resumed and subdivided into 600 and 1000 acre farms. Many other large pastoral properties in the Victoria district, including Oakabella, Mt Erin and Narra Tarra, suffered the same fate. The Bowes Estate was reduced to 16 927 acres and in 1911 Thomas Drage purchased from the property from the Burges family. Elizabeth Drage, widow of Thomas Drage sold The Bowes in 1940 to the Lee Steere family who still control the property. As the first pastoral property in the Northampton District, The Bowes is representative of both the pastoral and agricultural industries as well as the significant influence of the Burges family in the development of the area. The private cemetery on the bank of the Bowes River contains the graves of members of this pioneer family. Chronology Entries 1850 William Burges moved from the Avon Valley to Champion Bay and established a pastoral tease called 'The Bowes'. Source Pages Ancient Landmarks, Bain, M. A., UWA Press, Perth, 1975 ISBN:0 85564 090 1 46 1853 William Burges wrote to the Governor, without success, seeking consideration for the right to crop land without tillage lease or payment of rent, and a lifting of the restrictions regarding the size and shape of cultivated paddocks. 1866 E. T. Hooley trekked from Champion Bay to Pt Walcott seeking a stock route. Source Pages E. T. Hooley, Pioneer Bushman, Sharp, E. I.„ 1985 ISBN:0 9588829 0 8 1874 John and Alexander Forrest's exploration party passed through the Northampton area amidst enthusiastic celebrations.

Integrity/Authenticity

Integrity: High Modifications: Some enclosures and alterations Orig'l Fabric: Mostly intact

Condition

Good

References

Ref ID No Ref Name Ref Source Ref Date
"Fire guts historic cottage" Geraldton Guardian 14/02/1996.
BL Acc 1133 B/45 Photograph; "Bowes" Station showing the homestead owned by William Burges,". Battye Library 1900
BL Acc 4010 B, c.r. 67714 P - 6716 P Photograph: "the Bowes' Homestead,,". Battye Library 1927
BL Acc 3379 B Photograph; "the Bowes' Homestead, front view,e". Battye Library 1967
BL Acc 994.12 Bain, M.A; "Ancient Landmarks: A Social and Economic History of the Victoria District of Western Australia, 1839-1894". UWA Press
BL Acc 816 BIB 509-510 Photograph: "the Bowes' Homestead,,". Battye Library 1929
Feilman & Associates; "A Survey of Places of Historic and Landscape Significance in Northampton, Dongara, Geraldton, WA", 1977
Considine & Griffiths; "The Four Homesteads" 1994

State Heritage Office library entries

Library Id Title Medium Year Of Publication
5753 Homesteads of the mid west region of Western Australia. Book 1997
11712 The Bowes (Knockbrack) Northampton, Western Australia Heritage Study {Cons'n Plan} 2019
9407 The Bowes - final report. Conservation works report 2009
621 Four homesteads: Oakabella, the Bowes (Knockbrack),Willi Gulli and Trevenson, Northampton District. Heritage Study {Other} 1995
7146 The Bowes, Northampton, Western Australia : conservation works (final report). Conservation works report 2004

Place Type

Individual Building or Group

Uses

Epoch General Specific
Original Use FARMING\PASTORAL Homestead
Original Use FARMING\PASTORAL Shed or Barn
Present Use FARMING\PASTORAL Homestead

Architectural Styles

Style
Victorian Georgian

Construction Materials

Type General Specific
Wall STONE Other Stone
Roof METAL Corrugated Iron
Wall RENDER Cement Dressed

Historic Themes

General Specific
OCCUPATIONS Grazing, pastoralism & dairying
PEOPLE Early settlers

Creation Date

28 Aug 1992

Publish place record online (inHerit):

Approved

Last Update

30 Apr 2021

Disclaimer

This information is provided voluntarily as a public service. The information provided is made available in good faith and is derived from sources believed to be reliable and accurate. However, the information is provided solely on the basis that readers will be responsible for making their own assessment of the matters discussed herein and are advised to verify all relevant representations, statements and information.