Rockview, Pokolbin sold by Deasy family after 150 years

Rockview, Pokolbin sold by Deasy family after 150 years
Staff reporterDecember 7, 2020

After 150 plus years of ownership by the same family, the Deasy family have sold their 322-hectare Hunter Valley property.

Rockview has been run by five generations of the Deasy family.

It’s now the largest grazing property in the Pokolbin area.

It’s the first time the Deasys Road land has been marketed since Jeremiah Deasy hopped off a boat from Ireland and took ownership of the property in the days of selection in the 1860s.

In subsequent years the property was used as a fruit bottling company called Lighting, which was run from the back sheds of the property by indentured, orphaned labourers. The remnants of this bottling plant still remain.

At one point a school was built on the property.

The bodies of children who died at the property over the years are buried in the property in an area called The Cultivation.

The property is a cattle grazing property but given its location in the Hunter Valley it does come with a vineyard.

In a grove of fig trees sits the original timber homestead, which is currently used as a weekend getaway for the Malouf and Quinn families – descendants of the Deasy family.

The well-grassed rolling hills of Rockview are only interrupted by a patch of eucalyptus trees.

The farm is equipped with cattle yards and water from a number of dams. An allocation is available from the Lower Hunter Wine Country Private Irrigation district.

The property was being marketed to developers. There is a current development approval from Cessnock City Council for an eight lot (40 hectare) rural subdivision.

The property’s zoning allows for resorts, wineries and restaurants.

Jurd's Real Estate Cessnock had initial hopes of more than $5 million, with its 2012 expressions of interest campaign.

 

 

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