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The Homestead was built in 1909 by Robert McDowell using beech sourced from Kinloch, at the head of Lake Wakatipu. It had 16 rooms and was fitted with acetylene lamps throughout - this was before Queenstown installed such lighting and a long time before electricity came to the district. There were very few houses of this scale in the district at the time and only a handful of these homesteads still remain in the district today.

The first owner, Robert McDowell, was an important figure in the development of Arrowtown, Macetown and the wider Wakatipu area providing the essential service of supply of provisions through his carrier business. This business must have been extremely successful to allow him to branch out and purchase such a large farm and to then build a new house on the property at the cutting edge of design and technology.

The Homestead was purchased by the Lee family in 1910, just one year after it was built. Robert Lee was an important figure in the district at that time, being active in gold, coal and sheelite mining as well as farming. His standing in the community is evidenced by the erection of the Robert Lee Memorial, which still stands on Ladies Mile, after his death.

The Lees sold the farm and The Homestead to Eric and Mary Strain, of Dunedin. The Strain family became, and still are, well-known personalities in the local community and have made considerable contributions to farming such as the introduction of the first tractors and electric shearing machines. In 1993, the Strains sold The Homestead and 200 hectares of the farm to an American investment group. The Strain family retained 40 hectares and continue to live in the area.

In 2005, the farm and Homestead was bought by Queenstown businessman and current mayor, Jim Boult.

In 2015 the current owners, Justin Crane and Kirsty Mactaggart bought The Homestead, The Woolshed and The Stables from Jim and began an extensive restoration and extension of the home and the grounds. The renovation took over three years to complete and Justin and Kirsty moved in with their son Rory in 2018. 25 years after the Strains had sold to the American investment group, the current owners became only the fourth family to live in the Homestead in over 100 years.

The Strains remain neighbours and are friends of the current owners. The great grandson of Robert Lee, also Robert Lee, has become a friend of the current owners and recently bought a neighbouring section to The Homestead where he will build a home on land his grandfather used to farm.

Marina Mathews Photography
Otago
View of The Homestead soon after completion in 1909.<br />(Source - Lakes District Museum)

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The Homestead at Lake Hayes

About the
Professional

Based in obscenely beautiful Queenstown, New Zealand since 2003, I am a commercial photographer who specialises in architecture & interiors photography for residential and commercial clients.  

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