Residency Museum, York

The Residency Museum in York, Western Australia is single storey heritage listed building in the Victorian Georgian style. It is associated with the also heritage listed Old York Hospital.

Residency Museum
General information
Address4 Brook St
Town or cityYork, Western Australia
Coordinates31°53′34″S 116°46′31″E
Construction started1852
TypeState Registered Place
Designated9 February 1996
Reference no.2870
References
York municipal inventory

The Residency

Built around 1852 as a cottage housing the Depot Superintendent, this building is now the last remaining part of York's Convict Depot.

The oldest section was built from hand-made bricks that bore the stamp of the broad arrow, meaning they were the property of the Crown, but which came to represent structures constructed by convicts.

In the 1860s the cottage was occupied by the medical officer attached to the Depot Hospital, Dr Robert McCoy. In 1867, after several complaints to the colonial governor about the lack of suitable official accommodation for himself and his family, Resident Magistrate Walkinshaw Cowan moved from his property at Mile Pool to the cottage. During his tenancy, the cottage was extended to accommodate his large family and became known as The Residency.

After the Old York Hospital, located on the adjacent site, was constructed in 1896, it did not have the space to provide a maternity hospital and the building was adapted for this use. As a maternity hospital, the building accommodated a maternity and labour ward, nurses' bed/sitting room, duty room and in the adjoining structure, a store, kitchen and maid's room.

In 1926, a bathroom, toilet and new verandah were added to the northern wall of the central court and the building became the Matron's Quarters.

The building continued to be used as part of the Old York Hospital complex until 1963, when a new hospital and nurses' quarters were built in York.

The building was unoccupied and neglected until the early 1970s, when the building was saved from disrepair by the efforts of The York Society which raised $6,000 to have the building preserved and it became The Residency Museum.[1] The funds were used for restoration. "Temporary additions and lean-tos were removed and the building renovated as nearly as possible to [its state] when Walkinshaw Cowan was Resident Magistrate in the 1860s."[2]

The Residency Museum

The building opened as a Municipal Museum in 1972, managed by the Shire of York, with help from community volunteers.

The Residency Museum houses early colonial artefacts and has changing exhibitions.

gollark: Also, based on the times in the screenshot and spirit's time zone the picture is from 6 minutes ago.
gollark: ꫝꪖꫀꫝ. is everywhere and cannot be escaped.
gollark: ꫝꪖꫀꫝ. did not "come from" anywhere, but has always existed and will always exist.
gollark: Also, accusing anyone who prefers one side of a thing over another of being biased seems problematic.
gollark: Everything must be kept exactly as it is now, by any means necessary.

References

  1. Compiled from material in AM (Tony) Clack and Jenni McColl, York Sketchbook, The York Society, 2003, p.14, Wroth B and Wilson HH: Avon Valley Sketchbook, Rigby, 1977, p.41, and the Heritage Council assessment documentation in relation to the hospital complex.
  2. The Avon Echo, August 1993.
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