South Brisbane, together with West End and Highgate Hill, is known as Kurilpa (meaning water rat) by the local Indigenous people, and the area remains important in Aboriginal life. Musgrave Park has been for many years a place of congregation for the Murri peoples of south-east Queensland. It is the site of a bora ring that has been buried. The Ngundari (possibly a Turrbal group[7]) and Jagara peoples were drawn to the river at South Brisbane for fishing and gunyah building.[8]
European settlement commenced with the first land sales in 1843, followed by the development of wharves along the bank of the Brisbane River. The first street in the area was called Stanley Quay, later to become Stanley Street.[8]
In December 1849, the Church of England obtained a block of land facing Melbourne Street and extending to Grey Street and Stanley Street (approx 27°28′25″S153°01′07″E / 27.4736°S 153.0185°E / -27.4736; 153.0185 (St Thomas' Anglican Church (1st site)), now the site of the Queensland Museum), a total of 1 acre, 3 roods, 8 perches of land, on which to erect a church, a school and a parsonage.[9][10] However it is not until August 1858 that the school house was constructed on the site with the expectation that it would also be used for "occasional" public worship. The building was 43 by 23 feet (13.1 by 7.0 m) of hammer-dressed stone.[11] On 6 September 1858 Miss Clothier opens a school there.[12] In 1859 it is described as an "English Church" at "South Brisbane".[13] By May 1862 the church has a resident minister enabling regular services.[14] The church was adversely impacted by the construction of the 1874 Victoria Bridge as the bridge was higher and the approach roads had to be built up accordingly, resulting in the church being below the new road level, forcing the parishioners to approach the church from the rear.[9] It is unclear when the church was named for St Thomas but that name is in use by October 1877.[15]
Commercial buildings and hotels developed around the Russell Street area. By the 1850s there were over 100 residences in the area.[16] Due to its proximity to wharves the area became the place where bullock drovers stayed and relaxed. Thomas Baines visited Brisbane in 1855 and depicted South Brisbane in a painting titled 'South Brisbane from North Brisbane', 13 years later.[8] South Brisbane Recreation Reserve (now known as Musgrave Park) was created in 1856.[16]
The first Presbyterian church in the district was built in Grey Street near Melbourne Street (approx 27°28′28″S153°01′06″E / 27.4745°S 153.0183°E / -27.4745; 153.0183 (Grey Street Presbyterian Church)) by John Graham. It was a small weatherboard church and was officially opened on 25 May 1851 by the Reverend Thomas Mowbray. After the congregation relocated to the Park Presbyterian Church in 1885, the Grey Street building was sold and used for storage. The old Grey Street church was sold to a private firm and used for storage. Later the site was resumed and the church building demolished for the construction of the present South Brisbane railway station.[17]
A Baptist Sunday school operated in South Brisbane from 1857, but it was not until July 1872 that a congregation was formed, meeting in the South Brisbane Mechanics Institute.[18] On Sunday 17 May 1974 the Vulture Street Baptist Church opened at 218 Vulture Street (corner of Christie Street, 27°28′59″S153°01′39″E / 27.4831°S 153.0275°E / -27.4831; 153.0275 (Vulture Street Baptist Church)).[19][20][21][22] It was later renamed the South Brisbane Baptist Church. The church was rebuilt in 1966, reopening on 10 December 1966. In 2003 it was renamed the South Bank Baptist Church to reflect its proximity to the South Bank Parklands. It was demolished in early 2013 when the congregation moved to a new church at 859 Stanley Street, Woolloongabba, renaming itself as Church@TheGabba.[23][24][25]
South Brisbane School opened around 1865. At some time it split into South Brisbane Boys State School and South Brisbane Girls and Infants State School. In 1929 the Boys School and the Girls and Infants were amalgamated to form two new schools, South Brisbane State School for Preparatory to Grade 5 and South Brisbane Intermediate State School for Grades 6 and 7. In 1953 the Intermediate School was amalgamated into South Brisbane State School. The school closed in 1963.[33]
South Brisbane Wesleyan Methodist Church opened in July 1866.[34]
The South Brisbane Congregational Church was officially opened in Grey Street on 13 January 1867. The congregation was originally established at the Mechanics Institute in Stanley Street on 9 July 1865 and this was their first church building. It was made of timber. It was badly damaged in the 1893 Brisbane floods and subsequently demolished as the congregation decided to abandon this low-lying site.[35]
In 1874, John Cani established St Kilian's College in Raymond Terrace at the site now occupied by St Laurence's College.[36][37][38][39] On Tuesday 20 December 1904 it was partially demolished in a severe storm and its buildings were sold for removal.[40][41][42]
In 1884, the railway to the south was opened with a terminus at South Brisbane. As a result, South Brisbane experienced a construction boom. In 1888, South Brisbane became an independent municipality, initially as the Borough of South Brisbane and then becoming the City of South Brisbane in 1903. In 1925 the City of South Brisbane was amalgamated into the City of Greater Brisbane.[51]
The South Brisbane Reach portion of the Brisbane River was once the city's main port, located along riverfront underneath today's Captain Cook Bridge. The Queensland Maritime Museum was opened in a dry dock in 1881. Depots and wharves were gradually closed over the following century, culminating in the area's transformation for Expo 88.
By the 1880s, the Presbyterian church in Grey Street had grown too small for its congregation. In October 1884 a foundation stone for a new church was laid. On 11 October 1885 the new Park Presbyterian Church was opened at 31 Glenelg Street on the corner of Cordelia Street (27°28′43″S153°01′04″E / 27.4787°S 153.0179°E / -27.4787; 153.0179 (Park Presbyterian Church)) by Robert Steel, senior member of the Presbyterian Church in Sydney. The name Park reflects the location of the church directly opposite Musgrave Park. It was designed by architect FDG Stanley and could accommodate 550 seated in the church and 300 seated in the Sunday school in the basement. Over time the area became increasingly used for industrial and commercial purposes and families moved away to more residential areas. The congregation sold the church in early 1950 in order to build a new Park Presbyterian Church in the more residential location of 21 Hampstead Road, Highgate Hill. The church at Glenelg Street was used by the Plymouth Brethren Christian Church for some years, then for commercial purposes, and as at 2020 by the iSee Church (Pentecostal).[17][52][53]
Similarly St Mary's Catholic Church became too small for its congregation. From 1884 to 1889 the Catholic Church had acquired more land adjoining St Mary's Catholic, eventually owning all of the northern end of the block bounded by Cordelia, Peel and Merivale Streets, enabling it to raise funds for a new St Mary's church in 1890. Architects George Simkin and John Ibler prepared designs for a cruciform church with Italianate and Romanesque Revival features able to seat 800 people. The foundation stone was laid by Cardinal Patrick Francis Moran on 25 September 1892. When the second St Mary's Church (27°28′25″S153°00′54″E / 27.4737°S 153.0151°E / -27.4737; 153.0151 (St Mary's Catholic Church (2nd church))) was blessed and opened by Archbishop Robert Dunne on 2 July 1893, St Mary's had already cost £2,150 to build and it had been decided to defer the construction of the tower, transepts and chancel to a later time, but they were never built. However, in 1929 a sanctuary (including vestry and sacristy) designed by architects Cavanagh and Cavanagh was added to the eastern side of the church.[28][54] The Sisters of Mercy opened a new St Mary's School in 1909. The school closed in 1964.[33][28][55]
In June 1888 the first Catholic Apostolic Church in Queensland was opened at 16 Manning Street (27°28′30″S153°00′51″E / 27.4750°S 153.0141°E / -27.4750; 153.0141 (Catholic Apostolic Church)). Designed by architect Leslie Corrie, the church interior was 55 by 25 feet (16.8 by 7.6 m) with one third of its length used for the chancel. The building was designed with the expectation of enlarging it at a later stage.[56] The church was burned down on Saturday 21 July 1917.[57] In October 1917 architect George Addison called for tenders to construct a new brick church on the site.[58] Their minister Joseph Todd Young died on 22 February 1932 and the church continued to operate under its deacons until the death of the last deacon in 1957. In 1962 the church building was bought by the Anglican Church.[59]
South Brisbane was badly affected by the flood of the Brisbane River in February 1893. It is estimated that 350 hectares (860 acres) were inundated in South Brisbane. The water rose up to 4.8 metres (16 ft) and only the tops of some roofs remained visible.[60] Stanley Street, then the main thoroughfare, was described as "one long stretch of ruin and desolation".[61]
As the Congregational Church in Grey Street (built in 1863) had been severely damaged in the February 1893 Brisbane flood, the decision was made to relocate to a higher location at 245 Vulture Street (27°28′58″S153°01′20″E / 27.4827°S 153.0223°E / -27.4827; 153.0223 (South Brisbane Congregational Church (former 1893) burned down))). The Grey Street church was dismantled and the building materials re-used in constructing the new Vulture Street church. On Sunday 23 July 1893 the Vulture Street church was opened.[62] On 16 October 1931 the Vulture Street church was destroyed in a fire, but the hall was spared and the congregation used it for worship until a new church was constructed in 1933.[35][63]
The first electric tramway in Brisbane ran along Stanley Street in South Brisbane on 16 June 1897.[64]
In 1925, Brisbane State High School moved to its current site at Vulture Street, South Brisbane,[71] a location which had been proposed as a site for a public grammar school back in 1867.[72] The school was originally established on 1 July 1921 at the old Brisbane Normal School building on the corner of Adelaide and Edward Streets in the Brisbane CBD) as an amalgamation of the High School Department of the Brisbane Central Technical College and Brisbane Junior State High School. The first students were admitted on 4 July 1921.[33]
On 10 May 1931, a second St Thomas' Anglican Church was established at 68 Grey Street (approx 27°28′24″S153°01′05″E / 27.4733°S 153.0181°E / -27.4733; 153.0181 (St Thomas' Anglican church (2nd site))) to the immediate north of Fish Lane (which then extended through to Stanley Street),[73] very close to the site of the first St Thomas' church. It was under the control of St Andrew's Anglican Church. It was built from white stucco. It was to serve as a mission church in a largely industrial area with many wharves.[74] It is unclear when this church closed (presumably before the third St Thomas's Anglican Church opened in 1962) and this church building no longer exists.[50]
Following the destruction of the timber Congregation Church in Vulture Street in the 1931 fire, the congregation decided to build a new brick church and commissioned prominent Brisbane architect Brenan Gargett who proposed an unusual octagonal structure. The congregation faced a difficult time in funding a new church during the Great Depression. The new church was opened on Saturday 9 September 1933 by Reverend S. Roberts, the President of the Queensland Congregational Union.[75] The octagon building was 35 feet (11 m) between its sides and could seat 142 people in the main area with a further 40 in the choir, with a stair to an upper gallery seating 58 people.[76] Demographic changes in South Brisbane after World War II saw the congregation move away from South Brisbane to be replaced by European and Asian immigrant communities, who were not Congregationalists. The remaining congregation decided to join the Mount Gravatt Congregational Church, holding their last service in the Vulture Street Church in December 1975.[35]
South Brisbane gained a seedy reputation with many pubs, brothels and boarding houses among warehouses with few homes. During World War II when there was a large American military presence in Brisbane, the desire to separate the white and black American troops (segregation being the norm in some parts of the United States at that time) saw South Brisbane unofficially declared the city's 'black' area, leaving the white troops to enjoy the better parts of the city.[8]
The Greek Association of Brisbane was established in 1913. In May 1921 it established a community centre in Charlotte Street in the Brisbane CBD, followed by St George's Greek Orthodox Church on the same site in 1929.[84][85] However, the growth in Brisbane's Greek population, particularly after World War II, resulted in a need for a larger church. A new St George's Greek Orthodox Church was built at 33 Edmondstone Street (corner Besant Street) in South Brisbane.[86] The foundation stone was laid on 4 May 1958 by Archbishop Theophylactos.[87] The finished church was opened and dedicated on 24 April 1960 by Archbishop Ezekiel.[88][89] The architect was Ronald Martin Wilson. The church is octagonal with an octagonal dome and is richly decorated internally in the Greek Orthodox tradition. A new Greek community centre (now known as The Greek Club) was built beside the church at 37 Edmondstone Street (27°28′47″S153°00′55″E / 27.4796°S 153.0153°E / -27.4796; 153.0153 (The Greek Club)), opening in 1976.[90][91]
In 1962, the Anglican Church established their third St Thomas' Church at 16 Manning Street (27°28′30″S153°00′51″E / 27.4750°S 153.0142°E / -27.4750; 153.0142 (St Thomas' Anglican Church (3rd site))) to replace the second St Thomas's Church of England in Grey Street by purchasing the Catholic Apostolic Church. The Anglican Church ceased to use Manning Street Church in 1979 and sold it in 1984 and, although the 1920s church building still exists, it is no longer used for religion purposes and has been used as commercial premises and as a private home. The name Callan House is displayed on the front of the building.[59][50][92][93]
The suburb became heavily industrialised. Being adjacent to the Brisbane River, the suburb and its industries suffered in the 1974 Brisbane flood.[94]
In 1977, the former Congregational church in Vulture Street was sold to the Serbian Orthodox Church, who added two cupolas to the building and opened it as Saint Nicholas Free Serbian Orthodox Church. The building is now listed on the Brisbane Heritage Register.[35]
Mater Hospital Special School opened on 3 January 1981.[33] On 1 December 2014 it was renamed the Lady Cilento Children's Hospital School.[95] On 1 January 2019 it was renamed Queensland Children's Hospital School.[95]
The Museum of Contemporary Art (MOCA), incorporating the Young Artists Gallery, was a private gallery that existed from 1987 to 1994. Situated in adjacent buildings in South Brisbane, MOCA's address was 164 Melbourne Street, while Young Artists Gallery's entrance was at 23 Manning Street.[96]
South Brisbane's regeneration began when it was selected as the location of World Expo '88, which was built on former wharves along the riverside and the adjacent industrial land. Following Expo '88, South Bank Parklands was built on the former Expo site. South Brisbane has emerged as fashionable, high density, modern residential area, given its proximity to the city centre and good public transport links.[97]
Demographics
In the 2011 census, South Brisbane had a population of 5,416 people, 48.8% female and 51.2% male. The median age of the South Brisbane population was 30 years, seven years below the Australian median. One-third of the population (33.3%) were aged in their twenties, compared to 13.8% nationally. 44.2% of people living in South Brisbane were born in Australia, compared to the national average of 69.8%.[98] The other top responses for country of birth were England 3.8%, New Zealand 3.7%, China 3.3%, Korea, Republic of 3%, India 2%. 57.2% of people spoke only English at home; the next most popular languages were 5.5% Mandarin, 2.8% Korean, 2.7% Cantonese, 2.1% Greek, 1.9% Arabic. The most common religious affiliation was "No Religion" (30%); the next most common responses were Catholic (19%), Anglican (8.5%), Buddhism (4.6%) and Islam (3.8%).[98]
In the 2016 census, South Brisbane had a population of 7,196 people.[99]
In the 2021 census, South Brisbane had a population of 14,292 people.[1]
Lady Cilento Children's Hospital School is a specific-purpose primary and secondary (Prep–12) school at Raymond Terrace (27°29′04″S153°01′38″E / 27.4844°S 153.0272°E / -27.4844; 153.0272 (Lady Cilento Children's Hospital School)).[100] It provides schooling to children being treated in the hospital and also for other children in the family whose schooling has been disrupted by the hospitalisation and to assist in their transition to/from their regular school.[103] In 2019, the school had an enrolment of 3,567 students across all of its campuses with 42 teachers (34 full-time equivalent) and 24 non-teaching staff (15 full-time equivalent).[104]
South Brisbane is also served by the new Brisbane South State Secondary College, a government secondary (7-12) school for boys and girls in neighbouring Dutton Park to the south.[107] The 2021 initial intake was Year 7 students only, with each successive calendar year extending the range of school years on offer until 2026 when the full Years 7-12 schooling will be provided.[108][109]
There are two tertiary institutions in South Brisbane:
A number of Brisbane's most popular restaurants and fashion boutiques are located on Grey Street, and Little Stanley Street which it runs parallel to.[111][112] The South Bank Cinemas are also located on Grey Street, along with two five star hotels.[113]
Brisbane Convention & Exhibition Centre
The Brisbane Convention & Exhibition Centre contains 24 meeting and event spaces including four exhibition halls with a combined area of 20,000m² and an auditorium capable of seating 8,000.[114] The venue has received 107 industry awards, making it the most awarded convention centre in Australia.[115][116] The centre has been named the World's Best Convention Centre on three occasions (2016, 2017, 2018) by the Association Internationale des Palais de Congres (AIPC).[117]
Mater Health Services provides a wide range of public and private medical services in the area to the south of the suburb around Mater Hill and close to its border with Woolloongabba.[citation needed]
A number of major corporations have recently[when?] established offices in new buildings along Grey Street and Melbourne Street.[citation needed]
Events
The annual Paniyiri Festival has been held at Musgrave Park since 1976.[118] The festival provides an opportunity for the Greek community to share its culture with the rest of Australia. It is Queensland's longest running cultural festival and the longest running Greek festival in Australia.[119]
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Kerr, John; Armstrong, John; Australian Railway Historical Society. Queensland Division (1978), Destination Sth Brisbane : an illustrated history of the southside railways of Brisbane, Australian Railway Historical Society, Qld. Div, ISBN978-0-909937-09-6
"BRISBANE'S HISTORIC CHURCHES.—VIII". The Brisbane Courier. Vol. LXI, no. 14, 685. Queensland, Australia. 4 February 1905. p. 12 – via National Library of Australia. — includes the first St Thomas' Anglican church and St Andrew's Anglican Church
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Wikispecies mempunyai informasi mengenai Heliotropium indium. Artikel ini bukan mengenai Jarong. Sangketan Heliotropium indicum TaksonomiSuperkerajaanEukaryotaKerajaanPlantaeDivisiTracheophytaOrdoBoraginalesFamiliBoraginaceaeGenusHeliotropiumSpesiesHeliotropium indicum Linnaeus, 1753 Sangketan atau buntut tikus[1] (Heliotropium indicum) adalah spesies tanaman berbunga dari genus Heliotropium. Tanaman ini termasuk ke dalam gulma yang tumbuh secara liar dan dapat ditemukan di ladang, p...
Gambaslinguaggio di programmazioneAutoreBenoît Minisini Data di origine1999 Ultima versione3.19.2 (28 maggio 2024) Utilizzogenerico ParadigmiProgrammazione orientata agli oggetti TipizzazioneForte, statica Influenzato daVisual Basic, Java Implementazione di riferimentoSistema operativoLinux LicenzaGPL Sito webgambas.sourceforge.net/ Modifica dati su Wikidata · Manuale L'esempio MineGame incluso in Gambas 3. In esecuzione è la versione 3.8.0 su sistema Linux Mint 17.2. Gambas è un lin...
Victoire de Donnissan de La Rochejaquelein Född25 oktober 1772[1]VersaillesDöd15 februari 1857 (84 år)Orléans, FrankrikeMedborgare iFrankrikeSysselsättningFörfattareMakeLouis de Salgues de Lescure(g. 1791–1793, makas/makes död)Louis du Vergier de La Rochejaquelein(g. 1802–1815, makas/makes död)BarnHenri-Auguste-Georges du Vergier de La Rochejaquelein (f. 1805)Louis Lescure du Vergier de La Rochejaquelein (f. 1809)FöräldrarGuy Joseph de DonnissanMarie-Françoise de...
Nombre de StrahlerClassification des réseaux hydrographiques d'après Strahler.PrésentationType Tree propertymodifier - modifier le code - modifier Wikidata Le nombre de Strahler d'une arborescence[1] est une mesure numérique de sa complexité de branchements. Cette propriété est utilisée, par exemple, en classification des réseaux hydrographiques des cours d'eau pour indiquer le niveau de complexité de son réseau d'affluents et de sous-affluents et en théorie de la compilation pour...
Den här artikeln behöver källhänvisningar för att kunna verifieras. (2019-08) Åtgärda genom att lägga till pålitliga källor (gärna som fotnoter). Uppgifter utan källhänvisning kan ifrågasättas och tas bort utan att det behöver diskuteras på diskussionssidan. Nationella gymnasieprogram Gy 2011 Barn- och fritidsprogrammet Bygg- och anläggningsprogrammet Ekonomiprogrammet El- och energiprogrammet Estetiska programmet Fordons- och transportprogrammet Försäljnings- och service...
Flessingue Vlissingen Armoiries. Drapeau. Le port historique de Flessingue Administration Pays Pays-Bas Province Zélande Bourgmestre Bas van den Tillaar (CDA) Code postal 4380-4389 Indicatif téléphonique international +(31) Démographie Gentilé Flessingois Population 44 980 hab. Densité 130 hab./km2 Géographie Coordonnées 51° 27′ 00″ nord, 3° 35′ 00″ est Superficie 34 498 ha = 344,98 km2 Localisation Géol...
Pressley Harvin IIINazionalità Stati Uniti Altezza180 cm Peso119 kg Football americano RuoloPunter Squadra Pittsburgh Steelers CarrieraGiovanili 2017-2020 Georgia Tech Yellow Jackets Squadre di club 2021- Pittsburgh Steelers StatistichePartite15 Media per punt42,6 Statistiche aggiornate all'11 marzo 2022 Modifica dati su Wikidata · Manuale Pressley Harvin III (Alcolu, 17 settembre 1998) è un giocatore di football americano statunitense che milita nel ruolo di punte...
Ancient religious monument in Rome, Italy Temple of VestaReconstructed remains of the Temple of VestaTemple of VestaShown within Augustan RomeClick on the map for a fullscreen viewLocationRegio VIII Forum RomanumCoordinates41°53′30″N 12°29′10″E / 41.8917°N 12.4862°E / 41.8917; 12.4862TypeRoman Old kingdomHistoryBuilderUnknown builderFoundedunknown old Kingdom era The Temple of Vesta, or the aedes (Latin Aedes Vestae; Italian: Tempio di Vesta), is an ancient...