| In 1894, Alexander Whyte (great grand father of the present Baranduda Homestead owner) his wife Mary and children Jane, William and John bought the homestead. Alexander was born in Scotland in 1831, migrated to Canada as a boy with his parents and joined the gold rush in Australia in the 1850s. John and William farmed the land after Alexanders death in 1907. He and his wife are buried at the Yackandandah cemetery.
William died in 1924 and John in 1929. The brick homestead was demolished in 1934 by Johns family. The old homestead was prone to flooding in the winter and the Kiewa Valley road, once beside the homestead, had been moved making access difficult. 45,000 bricks, doors, ceilings and other fixtures were salvaged and used in the construction of the present Baranduda Homestead.
Johns son, also named John, supervised the construction of the present homestead and lived there most of his adult life. His daughter, Liz and her husband Ken and family are now the owners of Baranduda Homestead and the hosts of the Bed and Breakfast. The descendants of John Whyte (senior) still farm the roughly 2000 acres at the junction of the Yackandandah Creek and the Kiewa River. This is the centre of the original 15000 acre Baranduda Station established by Frederic Street in 1852.
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