The Glenella Connection Road enters through the locality from south (crossing over the river from West Mackay on the Edmund Casey Bridge) and exits to the north (Eralaka / Glenella).[3]
The land is low lying and flat and prone to flooding, but well-suited to growing sugarcane which is the predominant land use.[3]
History
Foulden Sugar Mill operated from 1872 to 1887. It was on the northern bank of the Pioneer River.[7]
There was previously a bridge, known as the (Old) Hospital Bridge, which connected Talty Road in Foulden to Bridge Street in West Mackay (adjacent to the Mackay Base Hospital). It was the first bridge over the Pioneer River (and was originally known as the Pioneer Bridge). Construction commenced in 1875. The low bridge was prone to flooding. In April 2009, its replacement was open to the west of the Hospital Bridge carrying the newly constructed Glenella Connection Road over the Pioneer River.[8] On 5 December 2009, the new bridge was named the Edmund Casey Bridge in honour of long-serving local Member of the Queensland Legislative Assembly, Ed Casey, as part of the Q150 celebrations.[9] Local residents campaigned to retain the Old Hospital Bridge for recreational use such as walking, cycling and fishing, but the council insisted the costs of making it safe were too great and that only a short segment connected on the West Mackay side would be preserved as a fishing pier.[10] However, in March 2017, Cyclone Debbie damaged the fishing pier,[11] necessitating a new fishing pier to be built. The new pier will be L-shaped and more resistant to flood damage.[12]
The present-day locality was officially named and bounded on 3 September 1999.[2]
Demographics
In the 2016 census, Foulden had a population of 3 people.[13]
In the 2021 census, Foulden had "no people or a very low population".[1]