WA’s oldest house lives on in bicentenary
Albany Historical Society’s Patrick Taylor Cottage, the oldest surviving dwelling in Western Australia, marks its bicentenary this year. Built in 1832 by John Morley, it showcases 2000 items reflecting settler life. The cottage is open daily and offers insights into the early 1830s history and the life of its namesake, Patrick Taylor.
Summary by OZbrief Editorial · The West Australian · Source
Take it further — get the full app and never miss a moment of what's happening in Australia.
This publisher's site can't be shown here due to their security settings.
Open full article →No source link available for this article.
Published 20 Jun 2026, 04:11 UTC · Updated 20 Jun 2026, 04:20 UTC
Summary by OZbrief Editorial. Original report: The West Australian. Editorial policy · Corrections
Related stories
- A leap of faith, a leap in time
- Antisemitism in schools must be stamped out
- Eighteen-year-old Cesare Liberatore dies in three-car crash in Attwood
- Israeli attack kills famed turtle sanctuary ecologist in Lebanon
- Ralph Lauren bridges generations with menswear tie-up in Milan
- 19-year-old charged in Melbourne for racially motivated AI-influenced attack
Trending
- Nollamara backyard development under investigation by City of Stirling amid neighbours’ concerns
- Royal Ascot 2026: horse racing updates from day five – live
- Andy Burnham wins Makerfield byelection, emerges as Labour leadership contender
- Europe's AI complacency risks economic collapse by 2031, warns think tank
- Tourists evacuated after fatal hotel fire in the Dominican Republic
- Transport Accident Commission faces scrutiny over costly legal battles and delays



