The Well Station in the   Gungahlin district of the ACT is one of the very early, but little known, rural   properties to the north of the city. With all the developments taking place in   the new suburb of Harrison, however, the history of this long-settled locality   has become important to Canberra residents.
 
Until recently, it was   known as the Well Station, because it had only one well on it. In the early   days, a spring had been opened up, stoned all round and at one stage fitted with   pumps. It provided good permanent water and was the pioneers’ main source of   water until dams and water tanks were introduced later. More recently, an ‘s’   [Wells] has been added to the name. However, no family by the name of Wells has   ever owned or lived at Well Station.
 
While John Flinn, E Ryan, A   Cameron and James Burton were early purchasers of land in the area, the name   most strongly associated with Well Station is that of Archibald McKeahnie who   purchased block 72, on which as early homestead stood, some time in the 1870s or   1880s. This block had previously been owned by John Scott and it is believed   that the house on it had been erected there by George Rolfe, perhaps as early as   the 1850s. The whole area had probably been grazed by other people before   that.
 
Archibald McKeahnie kept   extending his property until, by 1915, he had acquired 2723 acres of freehold   land in the area. This property, along with others in the same district, was   resumed by the Commonwealth in March 1915.  McKeahnie’s son-in-law,   Charles Peden, then leased the land from the Commonwealth from 1915 to 1926,   followed by John Joseland, the Gungaderra Pastoral Co, E A G Mawson and the Rose   family. Part of the old homestead is still leased.
 
The homestead complex   comprised three separate components grouped around a courtyard. The buildings   were erected at various times and altered or added to, demonstrating how it   evolved to meet the needs of different occupants over a long period. While all   of the original structures have been changed in some way, parts of the original   slab and adobe work are still present. The setting consists mainly of a pastoral   landscape, with scattered trees and dams.
 
The homestead precinct and   its landscape are on the ACT Government’s Heritage Places Register and also on   the Register of National Estate.
Places to see in Australian Capital Territory