A young family has snapped up a Richmond residence that was home to Great Depression-era prime minister James Scullin while he was in the top job.
Scullin even held cabinet meetings from his sickbed at the four-bedroom house, which fetched an undisclosed sum just short of $1.7m a few days after passing in at auction in late June.
The 6 Park Avenue property was listed with a $1.68-$1.82m price guide.
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After moving from Ballarat to Richmond in the early 1920s to take up a vacant Labor seat, Scullin went on to become Australia’s ninth prime minister.
He was elected in 1929, just days before a Wall Street stock market crash triggered the Great Depression.
Opting to remain at the 1911-built Richmond home rather than waste taxpayer money on a move to The Lodge in Canberra, Scullin and his wife, Sarah, “used the dwelling for Labor Party and parliamentary functions,” the Victorian Heritage Database notes.
Mrs Scullin also organised a number of cabinet meetings at her husband’s bedside in 1930, while he was ill with pleurisy.
Jellis Craig director Elliot Gill said Scullin’s great granddaughter had even inspected the property before its sale.
Mr Gill said the “quite unique” house had a single-fronted Edwardian facade and double-fronted rear.
Vendor George Panoussis sold the site with approved plans for a rear extension.
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