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Timeline: Formation of the Jondaryan Woolshed Historical Museum
and Park Association
To most people of the Jondaryan district, the huge woolshed that
belonged to old Jondaryan station, was just part of the landscape,
something that they saw every time they passed that way, but took
little notice of. It was not until 1972, when a celebration was
held to mark the centenary of the Jondaryan state school that the
Woolshed was drawn to the attention of the people, when the organizers
of the celebration were looking for a suitable place to hold a large
ball.
These celebrations caused an awakening of their sense of heritage
in the people of the district. On the night of the ball, which was
held in the woolroom of the Woolshed, over 1100 of the districts
residents and guests turned up. Such was the sense of atmosphere
in the old shed that everyone was affected by it. A spontaneous
feeling grew among the people that something should be done to preserve
this magnificent relic from the early European settlement of the
district. Long after the ball and the school celebrations were over,
the people continued to talk about the event and the need to do
something about preserving the old Woolshed.
The owners of the Woolshed, the Rutledge family, were moved by
the enthusiasm of the people and offered the Woolshed and 12 acres
of land on which it stood, as a gift to the people of the district,
if they were prepared to restore and preserve the Woolshed for the
future.
Public meetings were called to gauge the feelings and potential
support of the community for the project and to look at ways of
bringing the project into being. Other similar historical projects
were looked at, particularly Sovereign Hill -- the Woolshed Association's
constitution is based on the Sovereign Hill constitution. A great
deal of research was carried out to ascertain the practicality of
undertaking such a project. At the public meeting called in 1974,
which unanimously accepted the gift of the Woolshed and the 12 acres
of land, 117 people attended the meeting out of the local population
that comprises just over 500 citizens, which indicated the district's
enthusiasm for the project.
An incorporated public association was formed. The members of the
new Woolshed Association, however, had little to assist them other
than their enthusiasm and a great deal of commonsense. They had
no money -- the Association's original capital was $850, a loan
contributed by the first board of directors, so the Association
could begin operations. There was an almost total lack of practical
experience among members in operating such an enterprise and they
had to learn from mistakes that were inevitably made.
Right from the beginning, it was realised that if the project was
going to be able to survive, it had to be able to stand on its own
feet. For that to happen, the project had to attract large numbers
of visitors, which meant that the attraction had to be broadened.
The concept had to be expanded to take in more than the Woolshed,
sheep and shearing, it had to include the whole gamut of pioneering
station life and the whole complex had to be made to live, so people
could relate to it.
Unlike similar visionary historical projects begun in the southern
states, the Jondaryan Woolshed project attracted almost no help
from government at any level. The members and friends of the Association
had to provide most of the labour for restoration work, all development
of the project and for every facet of running it. On top of that
they had to raise all the finance necessary to carry out that work.
Although the members of the Association might not have appreciated
it in the early days, it was this struggle for survival which engendered
a tremendous spirit of cooperation and self-help amongst all those
who were involved. That same dogged determination to succeed and
attitude of self-help was instrumental in attracting the support
of the public and the business community.
Wherever possible, the buildings obtained to reconstruct the station
village complex were original buildings and were associated in some
way with Jondaryan station. As part of the living history concept,
all types of old machinery used in the development of Jondaryan
station and the Darling Downs were collected, restored and put to
use. Although the dreams were never fully realised, the project
created a rural pastoral complex with a unique atmosphere which
was felt and remarked on by most visitors to the Woolshed project.
The spirit of cooperation and self-help and the determination to
succeed against all odds, awakened in those involved the spirit
of the early pioneers, contributing to the atmosphere that pervades
the whole complex. While ever this remains, the project will survive
and will go on to prosper.

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