CONVICT-MADE buildings will be opened to the public at an historic property at O’Connell this Saturday.
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Macquarie, the former home of Blue Mountains explorer William Lawson, has been restored to its former glory by new owners Paul and Bonny Hennessy over the past six years, along with the two-storey convict barracks beside it.
The Hennessys will open several of the restored rooms of the homestead and surrounding buildings to the public during an open day.
Macquarie was built on 1000 acres of land granted to Lawson by Governor Lachlan Macquarie after he charted a road across the Blue Mountains with Gregory Blaxland and William Charles Wentworth in 1813.
Lawson was also granted convicts to help establish the property, though just how many remains something of a mystery.
“An experienced bricklayer who worked on the restoration estimated there are approximately one million bricks here that would have been all made on-site by the convicts from materials sourced on the property,” Mr Hennessy said.
“Lawson recorded that he had 28 convicts at a time here and about 100 spread over his various properties, but how do you reconcile those numbers?”
Dame Marie will become the third governor to have visited Macquarie.
Governor Macquarie’s diaries reveal he visited the property when it was owned by William Lawson and Sir Charles FitzRoy spent 10 days at the property in the 1840s.
Hundreds of people are expected at Saturday’s open day, which will feature tours of the formal rooms of the homestead and also the outside buildings.
Along with the plaque to be unveiled by Dame Marie, the Hennessys will unveil a display of the names of all the convicts known to have stayed at the barracks.
The day will start at 10.30am and admission is $10.
Proceeds will be donated to the Bathurst Community Op Shop.