Public Transport | Planning Permit | Business | Property Sold Price
  
Winchelsea Median Price
House$732,300
Unit$307,600
Land$462,900
The House price is 4% lower than last year.
Surrounding suburbs
Birregurra$938,500
Inverleigh$1,124,000
Winchelsea Median Rent
House$427
Unit$286
The Unit rent is 1% higher than last year.
Winchelsea property sold price
Winchelsea 3241 Profile
A765 INGLEBY ROAD, Winchelsea
Distance:108.3 km to CBD; 10.2 km to Birregurra Station [Transport]

Neighbour Photos
Map | Street view | Nearby property price
Planning History:
Registered as Victorian heritage
Last updated on - June 29, 2005
What is significant?
The exploration of Hamilton Hume and William Hilton Hovell into inland New South Wales and Victoria on route to the Port Phillip District in 1824-25 and the favourable reports of the land they had seen was a significant event in the colonization of Victoria. While Hume and Hovell discovered major inland rivers and first sighted the mountains of the Great Dividing Range in Victoria, it was the adventurous Launceston sealers, whalers and pastoralists who informally took up land to further their commercial interests on the southern coastal areas of Victoria. In 1835 two exploring parties, representing the interests of settlers John Batman and John Fawkner from Tasmania, established themselves in Port Phillip district. As more settlers followed, the authorities in Sydney were forced to acknowledge their existence and government officers were sent to the settlement to undertake the surveying and planning for a town.
The land on which the Ingleby homestead now stands was first settled by Thomas Armytage, Armytage was one of the earliest pastoralists to follow Batman and Fawkner into the Port Phillip District, initially arriving at Port Phillip in 1836 before, with his partners Charles Franks and Thomas Ricketts, shipping stock across Bass Strait to a site near Werribee shortly after. Their venture began disastrously when Franks and a shepherd were killed by aboriginals and the stock dispersed. At about the same time, Armytage's friend and mentor Joseph Gellibrand, who, along with John Batman had been a member of the Port Phillip Association, disappeared while exploring country west of Geelong. Armytage organised a search party which proved to be unsuccessful. During the search, however, the party came across excellent pastoral land on the upper reaches of the Barwon River and Armytage proceeded to take up the run which he named Ingleby.
His occupation of the run proved to be short-lived however, as he died in 1842 after contracting typhoid fever. Ingleby then passed into the hands of his brother, George Armytage Jnr. George Armytage Jnr prospered on the estate, and, encouraged by the potential of the Port Phillip District, George Armytage Jnr urged his father to join him at Ingleby. George Armytage Snr left Tasmania for Ingleby in 1847 and stayed there for four years before moving to Geelong where, in 1859-60, he built the a large residence which he named The Hermitage. At the same time, George Armytage Jnr decided to replace his original house with a substantial home on the Ingleby property. Both father and son chose the accomplished Geelong architect Edward Prowse for the design of their homes. In 1882-83, important additions were made to the station when the substantial woolshed and a further range of station buildings were added to the design of architect AT Moran. In the early years of the twentieth century, th
Nearby Public Transport:
Stop nameTypeDistance
BirregurraTrain10.2 km
Austin St/Warncoort-Birregurra RdBus10.5 km
Austin St/Warncoort-Birregurra RdBus10.5 km
WinchelseaTrain10.5 km
WinchelseaBus10.5 km
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