Dunwich Benevolent Asylum male division, 1942

Dunwich, QLD
Australia
27° 29' 55.2264" S, 153° 24' 11.8224" E
1 January 1942
3 May 2011
3 May 2011

Location

Dunwich, QLD
Australia
27° 29' 55.2264" S, 153° 24' 11.8224" E

Collection of the Queensland State Archives

50 feet to an inch

Dunwich Benevolent Asylum male division, 1942. More extensive than the female division, the male division of the Dunwich Benevolent Asylum on Stradbroke Island had a large number of buildings and a variety of facilities. According to this map, the asylum had separate wards for the mentally ill, blind and Asiatics. Collection of the Queensland State Archives

Dunwich Benevolent Asylum female division, 1942

Dunwich, QLD 4183
Australia
27° 29' 55.2264" S, 153° 24' 11.8224" E
1 January 1942
3 May 2011
3 May 2011

Location

Dunwich, QLD 4183
Australia
27° 29' 55.2264" S, 153° 24' 11.8224" E

Collection of the Queensland State Archives

50 feet to an inch

Dunwich Benevolent Asylum female division, 1942. This map shows the layout of the female division of the Dunwich Benevolent Asylum on Stradbroke Island. The Divisional warden’s post and first aid station were located at the entrance. The matrons, nurses, housemaids and ‘V.A.Ds’ (Voluntary Aid Detachment) quarters were located outside. Collection of the Queensland State Archives

Mater Hospital, c1930

South Brisbane, QLD
Australia
27° 28' 29.1" S, 153° 1' 0.9732" E
1 January 1927
3 May 2011
3 May 2011

Location

South Brisbane, QLD
Australia
27° 28' 29.1" S, 153° 1' 0.9732" E
Brisbane
State Government Insurance Office

Collection of the Queensland State Archives

40 feet to an inch

Mater Hospital, c1930. Established by the Sisters of Mercy, the Mater Private hospital at South Brisbane was officially opened by the Queensland governor Sir William MacGregor on the 14 August 1910. Blessed by Cardinal Moran, the main building commanded a hilltop around which the hospital expanded. The Mater Public hospital was the second facility established at the site in 1911. In 1925, the archbishop of Brisbane, James Duhig, laid the foundation stone for the Mater chapel and convent. In July 1931, the Mater Children’s Hospital was opened and immediately started treating patients. Collection of the Queensland State Archives

Cullin-la-ringo run, selection 68, 1877

Gindie, QLD
Australia
23° 43' 22.3572" S, 148° 8' 36.132" E
23 June 1877
29 April 2011
29 April 2011

Location

Gindie, QLD
Australia
23° 43' 22.3572" S, 148° 8' 36.132" E

Queensland State Archives

20 chains to an inch

Cullin-la-ringo run, selection 68, 1877. This map of the final selection of Cullin-la-ringo station, number 68, was ‘Applied for by the trustees of the late H.S. Wills’. The run was surveyed on 23 June 1877 after instructions from the trustees of Wills. Selection 67 joins this part of the run in the north-west corner. Marked with patches of trees and in open downs country, the south-east corner of this map shows a hut marked as ‘Broughton’s or Murdering Camp’, with an annotation that reads, ‘Murder of Wills and party of 19 souls by Blacks Oct 17th 1861’. Nearby, graves are marked on the map. Collection of the Queensland State Archives

Cullin-la-ringo run, selection 67, 1877

Gindie, QLD
Australia
23° 43' 22.3572" S, 148° 8' 36.132" E
23 June 1877
29 April 2011
29 April 2011

Location

Gindie, QLD
Australia
23° 43' 22.3572" S, 148° 8' 36.132" E

Queensland State Archives

20 chains to an inch

Cullin-la-ringo run, selection 67, 1877. This was the third selection that was ‘Applied for by the Trustees of the late H.S. Wills in right of their run called Cullin-la-ringo’. Although the northern portion of this selection shows Duncan’s or Swallows Tail Creek which has ‘open forest’, descending into ‘open undulating downs with a few saplings and trees’, the south-western portion was deemed as ‘worthless perished country’. In selection 68 the location of the ‘Murder of Wills and party’ is marked. Collection of the Queensland State Archives

Cullin-la-ringo run, selection 66, 1877

Gindie, QLD
Australia
23° 43' 22.3572" S, 148° 8' 36.132" E
23 June 1877
29 April 2011
29 April 2011

Location

Gindie, QLD
Australia
23° 43' 22.3572" S, 148° 8' 36.132" E

Queensland State Archives

20 chains to an inch

Cullin-la-ringo run, selection 66, 1877. The land in this part of the selection is made up of ‘open undulating downs’. The Clermont Road runs through the southern portion and joins selection 65 on the eastern boundary – the far side of the map shows a diagram of this connection along Six Mile Creek. In selection 68 the location of the ‘Murder of Wills and party’ is marked. Collection of the Queensland State Archives

Cullin-la-ringo run, selection 65, 1877

Gindie, QLD
Australia
23° 43' 22.3572" S, 148° 8' 36.132" E
23 June 1877
29 April 2011
29 April 2011

Location

Gindie, QLD
Australia
23° 43' 22.3572" S, 148° 8' 36.132" E

Queensland State Archives

20 chains to an inch

Cullin-la-ringo run, selection 65, 1877. Sixteen years after the death of Horatio Spencer Wills the trustees of the family estate applied for control of the station. This transfer required that the trustees had the run mapped accurately which was completed on 23 June 1877. The map shows the ‘open downs’ which were the primary landscape features of this part of the run. On the eastern boundary on Stony Creek there are drafting yards, stables, the head station, woolshed and shearers hut. The road from Rockhampton to Clermont can be seen running through the station. This map was among four portions of Cullin-la-ringo which were surveyed in 1877, the final year that the leases for Cullin-la-ringo remained with the sons of Wills. In the accompanying map of selection 68 the location of the ‘Murder of Wills and party’ is marked. Collection of the Queensland State Archives

White children and their Pacific Islander attendants at the Hambledon Sugar Plantation outside Cairns, c1891.

Collection of the John Oxley Library, State Library of Queensland image 172486

Anti-recycled water campaign, Toowoomba

Merchandise to support the Save the Mary River campaign.

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