The Camel's Hump, Mount Macedon, 1949
The Camel's Hump, Mount Macedon, 1949

Mount Macedon is a rural and residential locality east of the Mount Macedon summit, 60 km north-west of Melbourne.
The mount was named by the New South Wales Surveyor-General, Thomas Mitchell, on his return journey from Victoria's Western District, 'Australia Felix'. The inspiration for the name was apparently through Phillip II, the ruler of Macedon (359-336BC). (At the same time a name was given to the coastal, Port Phillip, bay which Mitchell saw from the summit.)
The Camel's Hump, Mount Macedon, 1949
Osterley Park Guest House, Mount Macedon, 1947-48
Panorama from the Cross, Mount Macedon, 1949
Memorial Cross, Mount Macedon, 1959
The Golf House, Mount Macedon, 1949
Braemar House, Woodend side of Mount Macedon, c1910
Near the Summit, Mount Macedon, 1955
Splitters, Mount Macedon
The Gardens at the Summit, Mount Macedon, 1955
The Cross, Mount Macedon
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