Monte Cristo Homestead: The Widow Who Sealed Herself In and the House That Lights Itself
In 1963 a young couple named Reg and Olive Ryan drove out from Junee, in the wheat country of New South Wales, to look at a derelict mansion on a hill. It had stood empty for the better part of fifteen years. The windows were broken, the roof was going, and the power had been disconnected so long ago that the wiring was a museum piece. As they came up the road in the dusk, the house was lit up. Every window, blazing. They sat and looked at it. Then the lights went out, all at once, and Monte Cristo was a black ruin on a black hill, exactly as derelict as the agent had promised. Reg and Olive bought it anyway. They spent the next fifty years of their lives inside it. The Man Who Built the Hill Christopher William Crawley came up in the world the way men did in colonial New South Wales — land, sheep, and the railway. When the line came through Junee it came through his acreage, and Crawley became rich enough to do the thing that rich men in that time and place always did, which was...