Merrijig Inn
The limestone walls of Merrijig Inn have stood witness to Port Fairy's transformations since 1844, their pale stone darkened by nearly two centuries of weather and time. Built in an era when such establishments served as anchors to colonial towns—part hospitality, part civic institution—this one has carried its responsibilities seriously, having once housed the police offices and courts that kept the peace of a growing settlement. That weight of purpose lingers in the building's presence, a quiet authority that no amount of modern refurbishment can entirely soften. Today the inn operates as a restaurant and accommodation house, its bar and dining spaces open to those seeking an evening out or a night's rest in one of Port Fairy's heritage precincts. Walking through its doors means stepping into a room that has absorbed decades of conversation, the kind of patina that belongs only to places where generations have gathered—locals and travellers alike, all finding their way to a cold drink and a meal. The garden spaces offer relief from the interior's contained history, places to sit and breathe while remaining tethered to the building's story. The town itself, with its character preserved in weathered streetscapes and established institutions, has a way of making old buildings feel both particular and timeless. The Merrijig Inn fits naturally into this landscape, neither self-consciously heritage-conscious nor entirely indifferent to its age. It is simply there, offering dinner service from Friday through Monday, rooms upstairs for those who wish to linger, a bar that operates according to the rhythms of a working establishment rather than a museum. In a country where so much is new, there is something steadying about a building that has simply endured, accommodating itself to each generation's needs while remaining fundamentally itself.