PDF Download Island of Graves Ebook, Epub

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

PDF Download Island of Graves Ebook, Epub ISLAND OF GRAVES PDF, EPUB, EBOOK Lisa McMann | 528 pages | 15 Sep 2015 | Aladdin | 9781442493346 | English | United States Island of Graves PDF Book Get a FREE e-book by joining our mailing list today! Radoncic ultimately traced the stench to the unit next to the elevator, 5G, which belonged to Ellen Torron, a slight year-old woman with short gray hair and piercing dark brown eyes who had lived alone in the building for more than 20 years. Alex looked within himself. Japanese divers made a significant contribution to the development of the pearl-shell industry in the Torres Strait. A local census taken c. The cemetery run on the island has always been part of this place. During , the Trustees had shade trees planted and further work on clearing and making cemetery paths was undertaken. Solar panels — not gas bottles — now power the refrigerators, although residents still have no central heating. Family-member graveside visits are allowed only twice a month, require weeks of careful planning and must be authorized by the DOC, which for much of the past years has been responsible for providing the labor and oversight for the burials at Hart Island. The reserve was expanded yet again on 29 April to 26 acres 1 rood 4 perches, when the northern boundary of the eastern half of the reserve was also extended as far as the military road. Early headstones in the cemetery were imported from well known monumental masons in southern centres, mostly from Melrose and Fenwick Townsville , but also from firms such as John Petrie and J Clements of Brisbane. An undated photo of Ellen Torron discovered by investigators at her Queens apartment unit. On this section, at the top of the hill adjacent to Summers Street and overlooking Ellis Channel Area L , are the graves of some of Thursday Island's early European "elite", including the Hon. I took a seat at one of the handful of picnic tables outside — the cafe — as Jo brought coffee from the kitchen. Hunt's mission right now is to demystify and destigmatize city burials for people, and she plans to continue to tell the stories of the people buried on the island with the Hart Island Project. Roughly 1, unclaimed bodies are buried there each year in graves dug by jail inmates. An unforgiveable offense. I love all the books but I love the unwanted series also because my aunt wrote them! No one knows who will be carried across the water to Hart Island on the next waves of the dead. Comments Graves Light Station is included in the thematic nomination, Lighthouses of Massachusetts. And to people who oversee the graveyard, burial is a more sensible option than cremation. And while 20, graves may seem like a stretch for landmass that measures just 1. The truck lurches forward onto the island and turns east down a gravel road below a lane of willows, scattering a family of deer. Torron was seen as something of a loner around the office but also known to be intelligent and well traveled—though she also traveled alone. No one knows who will be brought back from its anonymous earth by shovel-bearing workers in hazmat suits. Check out Lisa's website at LisaMcMann. The place has strong aesthetic appeal, engendered by the variety and detail of the headstones and other grave markers which range from the s to the present day contemporary Islander graves are particularly colourful and dynamic , and the romantic island setting, with views to the water from most parts of the reserve. Most of the early graves face east, as is traditional in European burial grounds. They voluntarily undertake the ceremony pursuant to Jewish law. The most recent graves are located here, in Area B and in some of the central sections of the reserve, and generally are well maintained. What was Alex supposed to do, ignore it? The place has potential to yield information that will contribute to an understanding of Queensland's history. The degree of cultural diversity and the existence of a substantial and early Japanese Cemetery within the reserve is rare in Queensland. Torron is laid to rest at Mount Richmond Cemetery on Staten Island, more than two months after she died. In the s boats equipped with helmeted apparatus for divers appeared, and in the s the pearl-shellers turned to a more skilled, often more daring, and less confronting labour supply - Japanese divers often ex-sailors recruited principally from Hong Kong and Singapore. After all, he and Lani had just managed to rid the entire island—Quill included—of the ice spell Gondoleery had cast upon the land. Prior to , all non-Christian interments were recorded as "pagan", despite the large number of other religions represented on the island including Shinto , Buddhism and Islam. In the ancient times some of holiest saints of Christianity were buried on the island and nearly 20, such graves populate the island at such a high density that digging anywhere on the island is bound to turn up a human grave. Not here. The original inhabitants of the Muralag islands, the Kaurareg people , shared some cultural characteristics with Cape York Aborigines and spoke the same basic Australian language, Kalaw Lagaw Ya. Thursday Island Cemetery contains between and graves bearing Japanese names. Once there were nine farms in operation here. By clicking 'Sign me up' I acknowledge that I have read and agree to the privacy policy and terms of use. The Coronavirus Brief. Share on Reddit. When the van arrives, funeral director James Donofrio steps out, smiling. Island of Graves Writer The number can go up to 80 in summer. The island only became accessible to families in About Lisa McMann. The island soon became a famous pilgrimage site and it was claimed that visiting the Bardsey Island thrice was equivalent to visiting Rome. Sep 27, Julia rated it really liked it. My favourites are Simber and Sky. Snapchat icon A ghost. This was a good book and it showed the characters bonding it was wasn't my favorite the first 3 still are my favorite in the series. When they found out the task at hand, 28 people left. Everything Aaron has worked so hard to build in Quill has crumbled. The book is about people who are about to have war with a very strong mage but they get stuck on an island and they have to find a way off to save their friends from the mage. I feel like this book was well planned, everything feels like it had happened before, I just am amazed at Lisa McManns This book was an mind blowing and amazing book, from start to end I was amazed by Lisa McManns detail and emotion in her story. But it's a rare, unique occurence for twins to be separated between Wanted and Unwanted, and as Alex and Aaron's bond stretches across their separation, a threat arises for the survival of Artime that will pit brother against brother in an ultimate, magical battle. They were uncomfortable with the grim task. Jan 15, Philip Le added it. The only catch is that they will need to save Aaron, Alex's evil twin brother, from the Island of Shipwrecks first. Dec 09, Paige Alaishuski rated it really liked it. Archaeologists have recorded no fewer than 45 likely prehistoric sites on the island, including cremation burials, flint blades and earthworks that may have been round houses. Learn more. Bardsey Island is currently connected to the mainland by ferry services. Inside, Donofrio, Plafker and a group of men don head-to-toe protective gear, and Donofrio uses a power drill to remove the 12 screws holding the lids onto each of the two coffins. Island of Graves Reviews In late , for example, about Japanese divers were recorded at Thursday Island. Most of the early graves face east, as is traditional in European burial grounds. The Coronavirus Brief. Introduction-Chapter 3. The Land of Open Graves. Apr 18, Ashley rated it it was amazing Shelves: likes. Torron was born in Manhattan on Jan. Friend Reviews. One source suggests over 1, divers lost their lives in Torres Strait to " the bends ", from drowning or through shark attack. There are some mishaps and tear inducing moments, but everything comes together at the end. Most have concrete grave surrounds, and many also have metal railings embedded in the concrete. Heroes or miracle makers come from the most unexpected people sometimes. The island off the Bronx is now managed by the city's Department of Correction. Follow Us Facebook Twitter Instagram. City workers put unidentified or unclaimed corpses in simple wooden coffins, load them onto a ferry and entomb them in trenches across the island. Thursday Island Cemetery is a Account Options Sign in. I am having a great time reading this series and am so looking foward to This installment was leaps and bounds better then the previous entries in the series. I had a lot of fun reading this, though it definitely wasn't one of my favourites in the series. The reserve was expanded yet again on 29 April to 26 acres 1 rood 4 perches, when the northern boundary of the eastern half of the reserve was also extended as far as the military road. I have followed this series from book one and needless to say, it is a charming book for young readers with a bit of everything. The place demonstrates rare, uncommon or endangered aspects of Queensland's cultural heritage. Short History The tallest of the three lighthouses in Boston Harbor, the Graves is sited at the main entrance to Boston Harbor, and continues its tradition as a navigational aid, though now automated.
Recommended publications
  • Navigating Boundaries: the Asian Diaspora in Torres Strait
    CHAPTER TWO Tidal Flows An overview of Torres Strait Islander-Asian contact Anna Shnukal and Guy Ramsay Torres Strait Islanders The Torres Strait Islanders, Australia’s second Indigenous minority, come from the islands of the sea passage between Queensland and New Guinea. Estimated to number at most 4,000 people before contact, but reduced by half by disease and depredation by the late-1870s, they now number more than 40,000. Traditional stories recount their arrival in waves of chain migration from various islands and coastal villages of southern New Guinea, possibly as a consequence of environmental change.1 The Islanders were not traditionally unified, but recognised five major ethno-linguistic groups or ‘nations’, each specialising in the activities best suited to its environment: the Miriam Le of the fertile, volcanic islands of the east; the Kulkalgal of the sandy coral cays of the centre; the Saibailgal of the low mud-flat islands close to the New Guinea coast; the Maluilgal of the grassy, hilly islands of the centre west; and the Kaurareg of the low west, who for centuries had intermarried with Cape York Aboriginal people. They spoke dialects of two traditional but unrelated languages: in the east, Papuan Meriam Mir; in the west and centre, Australian Kala Lagaw Ya (formerly called Mabuiag); and they used a sophisticated sign language to communicate with other language speakers. Outliers of a broad Melanesian culture area, they lived in small-scale, acephalous, clan-based communities and traded, waged war and intermarried with their neighbours and the peoples of the adjacent northern and southern mainlands.
    [Show full text]
  • Cape York Peninsula
    LAND USE PROGUM (LUP) TOURISM STUDY OF CAPE YORK PENINSULA P. C. James HJM Consultants Pty Ltd, Hobart CYPLUS is 8 joint Wative of tk Queembd ud(hamon- Cmammm CAPE YORK PEN~Ns~A USE STRATEGY ' ... <.. TOURISM-STUDY .::,.-g:;:?i,,j. j . .: ;;,.-:OF CN!E Y& PENINSIX&,; . .. .I5. _, . ,, ., . .d. " P. C. James HJM Consultants Pty Ltd, Hobart J. Courtenay Probe, Cairns 199s CYPLUS is a joint initiative of the Queensland and Commonwealth Governments T,F'3 C ':., ,.: ,F-j,%y- -i""'i'. +- j; ;: . ,. .,- , - .. .. ,. .. .* - y; ?;&&>$gQ-<e~-;;D;;-;,;$.;$: ;3 :. ,. ,- , . .j & .I,$ , : .. :, .. ... .. .... hiT+g.&y 2 f;-y;itac. -Q &Ti ;i:pyf g; <, ::;;, ::,.:! ;3$<.,.tisa ci:: : : : .:is ;: I,: , . , , a.*,c*y'~:~;t;~2<'...$-. - '-..'+.d,\>,?C ; ~i~~~~,j@~;~,y&,2~~jE,7~3c~v,Td2;;:~< .;,?- -., .....,. &. .,,., ............: ... .... - < .. :.. ,i.,,$.?;ti.+, ... r .....:,.r ...... -.{.:,, , e,;.- --,,?? :-i+tpcx.:-,'>. .- . , . *. .. a. A .y~,pjt~$;&~-,. i'7~~~;-f~~$b~@T~$~~$j&@~~j~3$+: ,:, ;. .-., .... :* >.>,:; ::+>.I; zz~k5-$:. :( :, ,,. .- !: ; ...6 .. , ,,., '' -' .- 3.. <- . .i .. Ld,?: 5:;- :> &.A<: :: 2:; -. :.i , f . , : . .-. ;,: : ,. .* ' '.:'.Reisommendedcitation: , > ~ ..: :.* .*., ......?. : ,. .;i:j:::. ;:-L .. , ?'i..i!j . :1- ... p. C. & ~~&~$f:f~f$~&p;~~~~~~_.~,$&~~da;(Cape York ..... 'peninsula'Land use :&-at,egi,: offceZ&tfie i:~&dinato~ General of Quegnsland, .... .... .... &isbane, ;,~I'-ep~,rllent of the Environment, Sport and Territories, Canberra, HIM , ~ , ,, ,,.?$, . .': a+~ons,&&&21r'j$b~&, ;l,,-.-,r 7- (;. , , ,. :.
    [Show full text]
  • The Sri Lankan Settlers of Thursday Island 163
    CHAPTER SEVEN The Sri Lankan Settlers 1 of Thursday Island Stanley J. Sparkes and Anna Shnukal Introduction The dismantling of the White Australia Policy in the early 1970s, allied with periodic civil strife in their homeland, brought significant numbers of Sri Lankan immigrants to Australia. Few Australians, however, are aware that, a century before, hundreds of mostly male ‘Cingalese’ (as Sri Lankans were then called),2 mainly from the southern coastal districts of Galle and Matara in the British colony of Ceylon, came as labourers to the British colony of Queensland.3 The first of these arrived independently in the 1870s to join the Torres Strait pearling fleets, but larger numbers were brought to Queensland a decade later as indentured (contract) seamen on Thursday Island and, shortly thereafter, as farm workers for the cane fields around Mackay and Bundaberg, where many of their descendants still live. The arrival of the first batch of 25 indentured Sri Lankan seamen on Thursday Island in 1882 coincided with the importation of ‘Malays’ and Japanese. Yet, unlike the latter, comparatively little has been published on their origins, lives and destinies, nor their contributions to the business, social and cultural life of Thursday Island. Some of those first arrivals demonstrated a remarkable entrepreneurial flair, taking up employment as ‘watermen’ (boatmen), ferrying passengers and 162 Navigating Boundaries cargo from ship to shore and subsequently taking out licences as small businessmen: boarding-house keepers, billiard-room proprietors, shopkeepers, pawnbrokers, boat-owners, gem and curio hawkers and commercial fishermen. They were joined by professional jewellers, part of the Sri Lankan gem-trade diaspora into the islands of South-East Asia during the last decade of the 19th century.
    [Show full text]
  • Minutes of the Ordinary Meeting of the Torres Shire Council Held in the Shire Offices, Douglas Street, Thursday Island on Tuesday, 21 August 2018 ______
    MINUTES OF THE ORDINARY MEETING OF THE TORRES SHIRE COUNCIL HELD IN THE SHIRE OFFICES, DOUGLAS STREET, THURSDAY ISLAND ON TUESDAY, 21 AUGUST 2018 _____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ PRESENT Mayor Vonda Malone (Chair) Deputy Mayor Yen Loban, Cr. John Abednego, Cr. Gabriel Bani, Cr. Thomas Loban, Dalassa Yorkston (Chief Executive Officer), Richard McKeown (Director Engineering and Infrastructure Services) Colin Duffy (Acting Director Corporate and Community Services) and Nola Ward Page (Minute Secretary) The meeting opened with a prayer by Cr. Bani at 9am. ACKNOWLEDGEMENT Mayor Malone acknowledged the traditional owners of the Kaurareg people and all Torres Strait island elders both past and present. DISCLOSURES OF INTEREST UNDER THE LOCAL GOVERNMENT ACT Cr. John Abednego In Committee – TRAWQ Community Hall CONFIRMATION OF MINUTES Min. 18/8/1 Moved Cr. Abednego, Seconded Deputy Mayor Loban “That Council receive the Minutes of the Ordinary Meeting 17 July 2018 and confirm as a true and correct records of the proceedings.” Carried BUSINESS ARISING AND MATTERS FOR ACTION FROM PREVIOUS MEETING CEO referred to the ‘Matters for Action following a Council Meeting’ document for the month of July 2018 provided to Councillors with updated information. Business Arising and Matters for Action from previous Meeting Zar Zar Shed, Rosehill Cr. Abednego – need for lighting to deter gathering after hours Mayor Malone – suggested lighting be given priority
    [Show full text]
  • Torres Strait Island Biosecurity Action Plans
    Torres Strait Island Biosecurity Action Plans 2018-2023 Acknowledgements This document was developed by the Torres Strait Invasive Species Advisory Group and produced by Torres Strait Regional Authority. The Torres Strait Invasive Species Advisory Group would like to acknowledge the following organisations for their contribution and support in developing the Torres Strait Regional Biosecurity Plan: Torres Strait Island Regional Council Torres Shire Council Northern Peninsula Area Regional Council Torres Strait Regional Authority Biosecurity Queensland Department of Agriculture and Water Resources Individual Torres Strait islands Registered Native Title Bodies Corporate Kaurareg Native Title Aboriginal Corporation Copyright 2018 Published by Torres Strait Regional Authority on behalf of the Torres Strait Invasive Species Advisory Group The Copyright Act 1968 permits fair dealing for study research, news reporting, criticism or review. Selected passages, tables or diagrams may be reproduced for such purposes provided acknowledgment of the source is included. Major extracts of the entire document may not be reproduced by any process without the written permission of the Chief Executive Officer, Torres Strait Regional Authority. Please reference as: Torres Strait Invasive Species Advisory Group 2015, Torres Strait Island Biosecurity Action Plans 2018-2023, Report prepared by the Land and Sea Management Unit, TSRA, March 2018, 158 pp. Disclaimer: This Plan has compiled in good faith as a basis for community and stakeholder consultation and is in draft form. The reader is advised and needs to be aware that such information may be incomplete or unable to be used in any specific situation. No reliance or action must therefore be made on that information without seeking prior expert professional, scientific and technical advice.
    [Show full text]
  • Annual Report 2015-2016
    TORRES SHIRE COUNCIL TORRES SHIRE COUNCIL - SHIRE COUNCIL TORRES Annual Report 2015 to 2016 2015 to Annual Report ANNUAL REPORT | 2015 to 2016 To lead, provide & facilitate Disclaimer: Torres Shire Council advises that this publication may contain images of information of deceased Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people. TORRES SHIRE COUNCIL ANNUAL REPORT 2015 - 2016 INDEX 04. Introduction 05. The Torres Strait 06. History 08. Torres Shire in Brief 09. Torres Shire 11. Strategic Direction 12. Partnerships 13. Contacting the Council 14. Report from the Mayor 16. Message from the CEO 18. Our Councillors 21. Advisory Committees 22. Councillors’ Remuneration 24. Council Meetings & Attendances 25. Executive Management Team 26. Organisation Chart 27. Corporate Governance 30. Statistics & Other Information 31. Community Snapshots APPENDICES 43. Appendix 1 - Financial Statements 86. Appendix 2 - Independent Auditor’s Report 88. Appendix 3 - Current Year Financial Sustainability Report 90. Appendix 4 - Current Year Financial Audit Report 92. Appendix 5 - Long Term Financial Sustainability Statement INTRODUCTION This Torres Shire Council Annual Report provides after the end of the financial year to which the an account of the organisation’s performance, report relates. activities and other information for the financial year from 1 July 2015 to 30 June 2016 The Annual Report shows transparency in COPIES accountability for all financial and operational Objectives and strategies addressed in this performances throughout the year and contains Annual Report are contained in the Torres Shire important information for Residents and Council 2014 -2018 Corporate Plan. Ratepayers, Councillors and Staff, community groups, government, developers / investors Copies of both the Corporate Plan and this and other interested parties, on operations, Annual Report are available from: achievements, challenges, culture, purposes and plans for the future.
    [Show full text]
  • Navigating Boundaries: the Asian Diaspora in Torres Strait
    CHAPTER 10 Confluence Asian cultural contributions to ailan pasin1 Anna Shnukal Introduction Ailan pasin (‘island custom’) is a potent symbol of pan-Torres Strait Islander identity; it is also a cultural hybrid. Its core consists of a cluster of ‘traditional’ Melanesian cultural elements filtered through 19th-century Pacific Islander Christian sensibility and practice, with accretions from Europe and Asia. That ailan pasin is not restricted entirely to pre-contact custom is evident from the inclusion of two symbolic unifiers brought by European-influenced Pacific Islanders during the last half of the 19th century: Christianity and Torres Strait Creole, a nativised variety of Pacific Pidgin English, which has become the regional lingua franca. The other significant, though often overlooked, contribution made by Asian immigrants is the subject of this chapter.2 The preconditions for extensive cultural interchange with Asians, Pacific Islanders and Europeans existed in Torres Strait long before contact. The region was a locus of west-east and north-south migration and trade and the island economies were underpinned by widespread exchange complexes, maintained by interrelationships with neighbours based on shifting alliances, warfare and intermarriage. Inter-island and coastal trade provided essential objects of material culture — canoes, vegetable food, ochre, cassowary feathers, stone for the gabagaba ‘club’, pearl shell for the dibidi ‘breast ornament’ — as well as less tangible elements, such as innovative technology, myth and cosmology.3 Traditional 248 Navigating Boundaries Islanders, like their contemporary descendants, were pragmatic and eager to adopt, adapt and elaborate cultural elements generated elsewhere for sustenance, performance and display. Moreover, the island peoples of Torres Strait, Asia and the Pacific shared social and cultural affinities, which predisposed them to cultural exchange.
    [Show full text]
  • Navigating Boundaries: the Asian Diaspora in Torres Strait
    Navigating Boundaries THE ASIAN DIASPORA IN TORRES STRAIT Navigating Boundaries THE ASIAN DIASPORA IN TORRES STRAIT EDITED BY ANNA SHNUKAL, GUY RAMSAY AND YURIKO NAGATA Published by ANU eView The Australian National University Acton ACT 2601, Australia Email: [email protected] This title is also available online at press.anu.edu.au We dedicate this book to the people of Torres Strait. National Library of Australia Cataloguing-in-Publication entry Title: Navigating boundaries : the Asian diaspora in Torres Strait / Anna Shnukal, editor ; Guy Ramsay, editor ; Yuriko Nagata, editor. Edition: Second Edition. ISBN: 9781921934377 (paperback) 9781921934384 (ebook) Notes: Includes bibliographical references and index. Subjects: Asian diaspora. Asians--Migrations--Queensland--Torres Strait Islands. Asians--Queensland--Torres Strait Islands. Asia--Emigration and immigration. Torres Strait Islands (Qld.)--Emigration and immigration. Other Creators/Contributors: Shnukal, Anna, editor. Ramsay, Guy Malcolm, editor. Nagata, Yuriko, editor. All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying or otherwise, without the prior permission of the publisher. Cover design and layout by ANU Press Cover: Donald Friend (1915–89) [Thursday Island] Manuscript Collection MS5959/33/113 For an account of Friend’s visit to the Torres Strait in 1946–47 see The Diaries of Donald Friend, Volume 2, Paul Hetherington, ed., Canberra: National Library of Australia, 2003. Reproduced courtesy of the National Library of Australia. First published 2004 by Pandanus Books This edition © 2017 ANU eView We dedicate this book to the people of Torres Strait. Acknowledgements We wish to acknowledge the support we have been given over many years by the people of Torres Strait and we dedicate this book to them.
    [Show full text]
  • The Asian Diaspora in Torres Strait
    Navigating Boundaries THE ASIAN DIASPORA IN TORRES STRAIT Navigating Boundaries THE ASIAN DIASPORA IN TORRES STRAIT EDITED BY ANNA SHNUKAL, GUY RAMSAY AND YURIKO NAGATA Published by ANU eView The Australian National University Acton ACT 2601, Australia Email: [email protected] This title is also available online at press.anu.edu.au National Library of Australia Cataloguing-in-Publication entry Title: Navigating boundaries : the Asian diaspora in Torres Strait / Anna Shnukal, editor ; Guy Ramsay, editor ; Yuriko Nagata, editor. Edition: Second Edition. ISBN: 9781921934377 (paperback) 9781921934384 (ebook) Notes: Includes bibliographical references and index. Subjects: Asian diaspora. Asians--Migrations--Queensland--Torres Strait Islands. Asians--Queensland--Torres Strait Islands. Asia--Emigration and immigration. Torres Strait Islands (Qld.)--Emigration and immigration. Other Creators/Contributors: Shnukal, Anna, editor. Ramsay, Guy Malcolm, editor. Nagata, Yuriko, editor. All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying or otherwise, without the prior permission of the publisher. Cover design and layout by ANU Press Cover: Donald Friend (1915–89) [Thursday Island] Manuscript Collection MS5959/33/113 For an account of Friend’s visit to the Torres Strait in 1946–47 see The Diaries of Donald Friend, Volume 2, Paul Hetherington, ed., Canberra: National Library of Australia, 2003. Reproduced courtesy of the National Library of Australia. First published 2004 by Pandanus Books This edition © 2017 ANU eView We dedicate this book to the people of Torres Strait. The Acknowledgements We wish to acknowledge the support we have been given over many years by the people of Torres Strait and we dedicate this book to them.
    [Show full text]
  • The Asian Diaspora in Torres Strait
    CHAPTER FOUR ‘They don’t know what went on underneath’ Three little-known Filipino/Malay communities of Torres Strait1 Anna Shnukal This chapter introduces three little-known Filipino/Malay ‘outstation’ communities, which arose on islands in Torres Strait between about 1890 and 1942. Smaller and more transient than their home communities on Thursday Island, they existed at a time when Europeans exercised stringent control over the movements, marriages and marine employment of the Asian population of Torres Strait. They have their own intrinsic historical interest, as well as shedding light on the activities of two numerically large and culturally rich, though economically and politically subordinated, Asian groups and the contributions made by their locally born wives and children. They are the only Asian communities that were established independently by their members away from Thursday Island, although they had the tacit official sanction that was essential for their survival. Once that sanction was withdrawn, they could not endure. Self-initiated, self-reliant, self-governing Asian (and Pacific Islander) communities such as these illustrate some of the ways in which immigrants pursued their economic and family interests in prewar Torres Strait. Such communities subverted the control of the dominant European minority and call into question previous assumptions about the apparently passive response to it. Two of them demonstrate intriguing continuities and discontinuities between first- and second-generation residents and thus illustrate the emergence of 82 Navigating Boundaries a new social identity, predicated less on ethnic origin than on local connections and a common sensibility bred from physical proximity and shared life experiences.
    [Show full text]
  • Torres Strait Islands & the Remote Reef
    Torres Strait Islands & the Remote Reef The archipelago of over 100 Torres Strait Islands scatter between Northern Queensland and Papua New Guinea – they are Australia’s most northerly frontier. Offering travellers a truly remarkable island experience, the unique history of the islands seafaring native inhabitants with an exciting fusion of Melanesian and Australian Aboriginal culture is just the beginning. Famed for its pearling and fishing, the pristine environment paired with an almost forgotten WWII history will captivate you. Stand on Australia’s most northern point at Cape York, explore the most northern reaches of the Great Barrier Reef – you are so remote here, it is likely you will not encounter another traveller. Weave between secluded islands, eat the freshest seafood you have ever tasted and learn of life on the water. Soak in the sapphire waters and tread on talcum beaches. Swim amongst wild turtles and learn of one of Australia’s richest regions in untold history and raw, natural beauty. Crooked Compass Pty Ltd www.crooked-compass.com Phone: 1300 855 790 (AU) [email protected] ABN: 91 608 054 646 Day 1 - Arrival Welcome to the Torres Strait Islands! You will begin your adventure by flying into Horn Island (flight not included). This flight will be a great introduction to your Torres Strait Island experience as you take in birds eye views over a sprinkle of islands and islets below. Upon arrival in Horn Island, you will be greeted and transferred to the colourful M/Y Wildcard where you will meet your crew and check into your cabin.
    [Show full text]
  • Schedule 7 Heritage Places
    SCHEDULE 7 HERITAGE PLACES Schedule 7 Heritage Places Table SC7.1 lists all places shown on Map OM-701 to Map OM-705b as a Local Indigenous heritage place or a Local non-Indigenous heritage place of the Heritage Overlay. The ID number for each heritage place is shown on Map OM-701 to Map OM-705b. Table SC7.2 provides a statement of significance for places listed in Table SC7.1, where these are available. Where a (tick) appears in the right hand column of Table SC7.1, a statement of significance has been provided in Table SC7.2. Note – The below listing is limited only to places of local significance. The below listing does not include State heritage places, which are also shown on Map OM-701 to Map OM-705b. For State heritage places reference should be made to the Queensland Heritage Register. Table SC7.1 – Heritage Places ID Place Type Place Name 1 Local non-Indigenous heritage place Ken Brown Oval 2 Local non-Indigenous heritage place Possession Island National Park (including Cooks flag site, memorial erected 1988, historic gold/guano mine) 3 Local non-Indigenous heritage place Children's Memorial Park 4 Local non-Indigenous heritage place Remnant Rainforest 5 Local non-Indigenous heritage place Stand of Carbeen (Eucalyptus tessellaris) 6 Local non-Indigenous heritage place Remnant stands of Thursday Island bloodwood (E. cambageana) and wongai 7 Local non-Indigenous heritage place Bayo Beach 8 Local non-Indigenous heritage place Green Hill Fort 9 Local non-Indigenous heritage place Lion's Lookout 10 Local non-Indigenous heritage
    [Show full text]