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Mugga-Mugga — Attraction in District of Jerrabomberra

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Mugga-Mugga
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Sundown Villas
205 Narrabundah Ln, Symonston ACT 2609, Australia
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Mugga-Mugga things to do, attractions, restaurants, events info and trip planning
Mugga-Mugga
AustraliaAustralian Capital TerritoryDistrict of JerrabomberraMugga-Mugga

Basic Info

Mugga-Mugga

129 Narrabundah Ln, Symonston ACT 2609, Australia
4.7(17)
Closed
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Cultural
Family friendly
Accessibility
attractions: , restaurants:
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Phone
+61 2 6237 6500
Website
historicplaces.com.au
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Things to do nearby

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Lee's LensLee's Lens
Fabulous piece of local history. For a small fee you gain insight into how life once was and follow a very knowledgeable tour guide. The buildings are full of character and they have painstakingly recreated some of the furnishings and household items from the time. You should buy tickets online before you go and it is not really wheelchair friendly due to uneven floors and inaccessible door ways. They have made extensions to this house over time and they weren't exactly built to code!
Gilbert ParkGilbert Park
It is the present to the future generation and lucky to keep the historic place of rural life.
JanJan
Great little old cottage with loads of history. Our guide was great. Recommend a visit
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hotel
Find your stay

Pet-friendly Hotels in District of Jerrabomberra

Find a cozy hotel nearby and make it a full experience.

Fabulous piece of local history. For a small fee you gain insight into how life once was and follow a very knowledgeable tour guide. The buildings are full of character and they have painstakingly recreated some of the furnishings and household items from the time. You should buy tickets online before you go and it is not really wheelchair friendly due to uneven floors and inaccessible door ways. They have made extensions to this house over time and they weren't exactly built to code!
Lee's Lens

Lee's Lens

hotel
Find your stay

Affordable Hotels in District of Jerrabomberra

Find a cozy hotel nearby and make it a full experience.

Get the Appoverlay
Get the AppOne tap to find yournext favorite spots!
It is the present to the future generation and lucky to keep the historic place of rural life.
Gilbert Park

Gilbert Park

hotel
Find your stay

The Coolest Hotels You Haven't Heard Of (Yet)

Find a cozy hotel nearby and make it a full experience.

hotel
Find your stay

Trending Stays Worth the Hype in District of Jerrabomberra

Find a cozy hotel nearby and make it a full experience.

Great little old cottage with loads of history. Our guide was great. Recommend a visit
Jan

Jan

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Reviews of Mugga-Mugga

4.7
(17)
avatar
4.0
7y

Mugga-Mugga This simple cottage stands as a testament to the workers who made their lives on the pastoral properties of the Limestone Plains. Originally built for the head shepherd of Duntroon estate, it is preserved as it was in the time of the Curley family who made it their home from 1913 to 1995.

History of a cottage The first shepherd’s hut built at Mugga-Mugga has not survived, but like the current cottage it was perched on the gentle hillside with views of the plains below where the sheep grazed.

The original four room stone cottage lies at the heart of the building. Extensions were added around it in the 1860s including the slab bedroom and verandah at the front, and the kitchen and dining room at the back. Further additions were made in the 1950s and 60s.

Kitchens were often separated from the main house as a precaution against the spread of fire. At Mugga-Mugga the two parts of the house are linked by a breezeway covered with corrugated iron and chicken wire to give some protection from the winds that sweep across the plains. The apartment attached to the main house was added to provide modern conveniences in the 1950s, after which the original cottage was not lived in.

THE CURLEY FAMILY Patrick Curley became a junior shepherd at Duntroon in 1866 when he was thirteen, living as a worker on the estate first with his Irish immigrant parents and later with his wife, Annie Elizabeth whom he married in 1893. Patrick and Annie had three children, all girls and all born at Duntroon: Ada, Sylvia and Evelyn.

By 1911 Duntroon estate had been acquired by the Commonwealth Government and converted into the Royal Military College of Australia. The Curley family moved to Mugga-Mugga on a cold, wet, windy day in August 1913. Their new home was relatively isolated compared to the close-knit village life of Duntroon. Shopping was a day-long excursion by buggy to Queanbeyan, 12 kilometres away. The family made the property their own, ordering wallpaper and large household items from Sydney by mail order. A vegetable garden was established near the creek, and fresh vegetables and strawberries were added to the existing quince trees and berry bushes. Mrs Curley’s realm was the flower garden surrounding the house. Lilac trees bordered the garden path and honeysuckle draped across the verandah, while flowers and bulbs provided a drifting evening perfume.

THREE SISTERS The eldest sister, Ada Curley moved to Sydney in 1914 after receiving a scholarship to train as a teacher. She worked as a distance teacher before marrying Frederick Coster in 1942. Widowed, she returned to Mugga-Mugga in 1975 to live with her sister Evelyn.

Evelyn Curley, the youngest sister, lived most of her life at Mugga-Mugga. She worked in the accounts office of Cusack’s furniture store for more than forty years, also managing the farm after her mother’s death in 1948. She had bought a car in 1926 which not only transported the family, but sometimes took expectant mothers to hospital for the birth of their babies.

Sylvia Curley OAM started her nursing career in Goulburn in 1918 and also worked at Leeton, Narrandera and Gundagai. In 1938 she returned to Canberra as Sub-Matron at the Canberra Hospital. Throughout her career she worked tirelessly for better conditions for nurses and patients, often organising fundraising events to pay the costs of implementing change. After retiring from nursing she enjoyed a twenty-year long second career as an employment consultant before selling her agency in 1985.

CONSERVING OUR HERITAGE When Patrick Curley leased Mugga-Mugga in 1920 the property was 307 acres, but just five years later that was reduced to 28 acres through Government acquisition. Although Mugga-Mugga was no longer large enough to sustain a family, the Curleys wished to retain the property. The three Curley sisters fought against pressure to sell and in 1995 Sylvia Curley finally managed to transfer the lease to the ACT Government. Due to her persistence, Mugga-Mugga is now preserved by the ACT Government as an historic place on behalf of...

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5.0
1y

Fabulous piece of local history. For a small fee you gain insight into how life once was and follow a very knowledgeable tour guide. The buildings are full of character and they have painstakingly recreated some of the furnishings and household items from the time. You should buy tickets online before you go and it is not really wheelchair friendly due to uneven floors and inaccessible door ways. They have made extensions to this house over time and they weren't exactly...

   Read more
avatar
5.0
5y

Such a wonderfully preserved place. The guides John and Jane are amazing and we'll informed. Remember to wear closed in shoes during the summer so you can venture further into the landscape and get the...

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