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Lachlan Macquarie was born in 1761 on
the Isle of Ulva. He later became one of the most recognisable characters of
Colonial Australia and was described as “The Father of
Australia,” due to his work as Governor of
New South Wales from 1810-1821.
The
American War of Independence prompted
Macquarie, aged 16 at the time, to enrol in active military service
with his father in 1775. By 1781 he was promoted to
Lieutenant. This signalled the start of an impressive
military career that lasted over 30 years and saw him
achieve the rank of Major General. His service not only
earned him a small fortune but provided him with the
opportunity to travel. He visited North America, Jamaica
and Egypt before beginning a long period of association
with India.
While in Bombay, he met and married Jane Jarvis, the
heiress daughter of a former Chief Justice of Antigua.
Jane died of tuberculosis a few years after the
marriage.
Macquarie
became deeply depressed and decided to go back to Mull.
Here he met
Elizabeth Campbell, who in 1807 became his second wife. Macquarie was
soon after offered the position of Governor of New South
Wales by the British Crown and he went back to Australia in 1809. In March 1814, Elizabeth gave birth to
Lachlan Junior, heir to the Mull estate.
Macquarie took office in 1810 and set
about improving the morale and the physical
infrastructure of the Colony. He and Elizabeth toured widely,
forging strong relationships and establishing a
positive, progressive tone that soon saw the creation of
a civilised and stable society.
Ill health led Macquarie to tend his resignation three
times during his term in office; his third offer was
accepted and the family returned home in 1822. A tour of
the continent followed and afterwards they came back to Mull. In 1824, sensing his death
approaching, Lachlan put his affairs in order and chose
a burial site on the Gruline Estate in Mull. He died on
1 July 1824.
For many years the mausoleum was sadly neglected. But in
1948, Lady Yarborough, the owner of a nearby estate,
gifted the mausoleum site to the people of New South
Wales. Today, the tomb is preserved and protected by
both The National Trust of Scotland and The National
Trust of Australia. In 1851 the Drummond family, a
socially prominent family, built a final mausoleum on
the site.
Set
in a grassed area surrounded by a circular stone wall
with wrought iron gates, the Macquarie Mausoleum is a
plain sandstone structure with two marble panels
enclosing the entrance doorways. It holds the remains of
Lachlan and Elizabeth Macquarie and their children, Lachlan
- and Jane, who died in infancy. |
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