Stonington mansion

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Stonington Mansion
Stonington Mansion

Stonington (formerly Stonnington) is a private residence and former Government House located in the Melbourne suburb of Malvern. The house was built for John Wagner, a partner in Cobb and Co coaches.

Wagner purchased the property in 1886, and built the house in 1890. The house was designed in the Italian Renaissance style by architect Charles D'Ebro. The house was named for the birthplace of Wagner's wife, Mary, in Stonington, Connecticut, USA. Wagner and his family lived in the house until his death in 1901.

At the Federation of Australia in 1901 Melbourne became the location of government, and Government House, Melbourne became the home of the Governor General. Stonnington Mansion was acquired by the Victorian Government as a home for the Governor of Victoria. The house was maintained as Victoria's Government House until 1931. During that time the house hosted many famous guests, including Nellie Melba, the Duke and Duchess of York (King George VI and Queen Elizabeth), the Prince of Wales (Edward VIII), Lord and Lady Baden-Powell, Lord Kitchener, Sir John Monash, Keith Murdoch, and Ernest Shackleton.

In 1925 Christopher Rous, the nine-year-old son of the then Governor the Earl of Stradbroke, died of leukaemia in the house and was buried in the grounds. His ghost is reputed to still haunt the house.

In 1931 the house was taken over by St Margaret's School, which occupied the site until 1938. It then became an aftercare centre for polio patients and was used by the Australian Red Cross during World War 2. The Health Department then occupied the site between 1953 and 1957.

In 1957 the property became the campus for the Toorak Teachers College, then the State College Toorak in 1973 and finally the Toorak campus of Victoria College in 1981. Stonnington became a campus of Deakin University in 1992 when Victoria College merged with that university. By 2006 the campus became surplus to Deakin University's requirements, and was placed up for sale. This created a protest from local residents, who believed the property should be retained by a government body. The property was sold for $18 million, and is being restored as a private residence.

In June 2007, businessman and former President of the Liberal Party in Victoria, Michael Kroger, announced that he and other Australian businessmen, a group dubbed the "Melbourne Lodgers", would examine properties in Melbourne for the Prime Minister of Australia to use as a residence while in that city. Kroger stated that Stonington Mansion was the most sought-after residence on that list.[1]

Stonington gave its name to the City of Stonnington, a Melbourne municipality.

[edit] References

  1. ^ Elder, John, "A place to call home? Maybe, prime minister", The Age, 17 June, 2007. Accessed 31 August, 2007.

[edit] External links