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Seaton's Farm
For lovers of history and those interested in bush culture
Seaton’s Farm located close to Ben Hall’s Cave campground is on the
north west of the
Weddin Mountain National Park. The farm is an important landmark
that was built using only material that was readily available.
Seaton’s Farm is 150 acres of poor country running up into the
Weddin Mountains.
The
farm was purchased in 1936 at the height of the Great Depression.
The house was built in 1939 by Jim Seaton and his father from second
hand iron, mill off-cuts, mud earth and hand-cut timber. Jim’s
frugalness is evident with corrugated iron having been flattened to
make it go further, sheets of iron turned into down pipes and
gutters feeding into recycled water tanks and the fencing being made
of off cuts joined together. Jim and his father dug the dams by hand
while Jim’s mother made a garden.

On a bicycle trip to Mudgee in 1948 Jim met a waitress called
Bertha, after a two week courtship they married and Bertha
moved to the Weddin Mountains with Jim. After many years they
gradually developed the farm by hand from scraps and second hand
supplies. Bertha and Jim had no family, to them their pet dogs, cats
lamb and chickens were their family. For about 20 years the Seaton’s
used a Model T Ford to cart grain and travel in the district. The
vehicle was affectionately known as ‘Lizzy’ and became a legend in
the district because it was so loud you would often hear it coming
before you ever saw it.
Jim
earned a good reputation for his honesty, respect and hard work. He
had many odd jobs other than the farm including rabbit trapping,
fencing, shearing and timber felling. Bertha was just as involved
around the farm as Jim and she used to climb to the top of the tree
to cut branches for the stock to eat. These climbing spikes are
still visible on the trunks of many trees around the farm.
Jim died in 1983 and this was when Bertha sold the property
to the
National Parks and Wildlife Service. Bertha moved to Grenfell
and grew her fingernails long and painted them bright colour-
something she was never able to do while working so hard on the
farm. Bertha lived a hard but happy life and passed away in 2002.
Seaton’s
Farm is fascinating testimony to manual skill and ingenuity
and to a great partnership on the economic edge. The farm gives a
sense of Jim Seaton as a person, a man who didn’t have much money
but knew how a property should operate. Farm machinery, sheds and
yards still exist virtually unchanged however excellent interpretive
signage has now been installed.
‘That was before my time’ NSW National Parkes and Wildlife
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