Books Alphabatically by Place

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Books Alphabatically by Place Logan River and Districts Family History Society Library Catalogue Dec 2013 Books (place order) Country State City/Town/Village Item Title Cat. No. AUS ACT Canberra Gregory's Canberra 2000 Street Directory 15th Edition ACT/A001-2000 AUS ACT Canberra Gregory's Canberra 2004 Street Directory 19th Edition ACT/A001-2004 AUS ACT Canberra Visit to Blundell's Farmhouse, A ACT/H001-001 AUS Norfolk Island Norfolk Island; An Outline of its History 1774 - 1981 NOR.IS/H002-001 AUS Norfolk Island Paintings of Norfolk Island By Stanley Visick NOR.IS/H001-001 AUS NSW Appin and Picton Tour of Appin & Picton District: Parramatta HS Sep 1967 NSW/H001-001 AUS NSW Armidale Armidale Apex NSW/H053-002 AUS NSW Armidale Historical Names of Armidale & District NSW/P027-001 AUS NSW Armidale History of the Armidale Golf Club 1899 - 1999, A NSW/H053-001 AUS NSW Armidale Recollections; Wesley Church Armidale NSW/V012-001 AUS NSW Balmain Balmain Catholic Cemetery and St. Columba's Church & Parish 1857 - 1988 NSW/V013-001 AUS NSW Barraba Barraba & District Hospital 1891 - 1991, The NSW/H047-002 AUS NSW Barraba History of Barraba NSW/H047-001 AUS NSW Blacktown Brief Outline of Blacktown District History, A NSW/H063-001 AUS NSW Blue Mountains Excursion into History NSW/H016-004 AUS NSW Blue Mountains Let's Look at The Blue Mountain Area 'Getaway to the West' NSW/H016-003 AUS NSW Blue Mountains Pictorial History of The Blue Mountains, A NSW/H016-001 AUS NSW Blue Mountains Story of Mt. Wilson, The NSW/H016-002 AUS NSW Booloominbah House on the Hill; Booloominbah; Home and University 1888 - 1988 NSW/H054-001 AUS NSW Broken Hill Broken Hill, The Silver City NSW/H029-001 AUS NSW Brunswick Head Brunswick: Another River and its People, The NSW/H043-001 AUS NSW Carcoar Carcoar and District NSW/H027-002 AUS NSW Carcoar Carcoar Historical Village NSW/H027-001 AUS NSW Casino West Street Cemetery Casino NSW/C002-001 AUS NSW Central Coast UBD Central Coast 2000 10th Edition NSW/A003-2000 AUS NSW Central Western NSW Exploring the Golden West NSW/G003-001 AUS NSW Dubbo Early Pioneers of Dubbo Pre 1882 NSW/P030-004 AUS NSW Dubbo & Western Region NSWPioneer Register, Dubbo and Western Region Vol. 1 NSW/P030-001 AUS NSW Dubbo & Western Region NSWPioneer Register, Dubbo and Western Region Vol. 2 NSW/P030-002 AUS NSW Dubbo & Western Region NSWSettlers' Register, Dubbo and Western Region of NSW 1881 - 1920 Vol. 1 NSW/P030-003 AUS NSW Dungowan Dungowan Valley Education Centenary 1874 - 1974 NSW/S002-001 AUS NSW Dural Tour of Dural: Parramatta History Society May 1966 NSW/H003-001 AUS NSW Ebenezer History of Ebenezer, Australia's Oldest Church, The NSW/V010-001 AUS NSW Eden Shore Whaling at Twofold Bay Assisted by the Renown Killer Whales NSW/H036-001 AUS NSW Eden Wellings of Eden, The NSW/P023-001.1 AUS NSW Fairfield Fairfield Public School Centenary 1889 - 1989 NSW/S001-001 AUS NSW Glebe Historical Glebe NSW/H033-001 AUS NSW Goulburn Gilmore, Mary (Dame): NSW/P007-001 Logan River and Districts Family History Society Library Catalogue Dec 2013 Books (place order) Country State City/Town/Village Item Title Cat. No. AUS NSW Goulburn History of St. Clair, The NSW/V005-001 AUS NSW Goulburn Lilac City; The Story of Goulburn New South Wales NSW/H020-002 AUS NSW Goulburn Riversdale. A National Trust Property NSW/H020-001 AUS NSW Griffith From Wilderness to Eden; A History of the City of Griffith; Its Region and its People NSW/H056-001 AUS NSW Gulgong Written in Gold: The Story of Gulgong; Fifth Edition 1975 NSW/H004-001.5 AUS NSW Gulgong Written in Gold: The Story of Gulgong; Sixth Edition 1982 NSW/H004-001.6 AUS NSW Gundagai True Story of Gundagai's Dog on Tucker Box, The NSW/H034-001 AUS NSW Hartley Historic Hartley NSW/H032-002 AUS NSW Hartley Story of Hartley and its Historic Court-House, The NSW/H032-001 AUS NSW Hawkesbury Cathedral of Hawkesbury, The NSW/V008-001 AUS NSW Hawkesbury Ghosts and Myths of the Hawksbury NSW/H031-003 AUS NSW Hawkesbury Hawkesbury River - A Waterway of Magnificent Contrast NSW/H031-002.1 AUS NSW Hawkesbury Hawkesbury River - Boats and People NSW/H031-002.2 AUS NSW Hawkesbury Historic Hawkesbury NSW/H031-001.1 AUS NSW Hawkesbury Historic Hawkesbury NSW/H031-001.2 AUS NSW Hill End Guide to Historic Hill End and its Environs, A NSW/H030-002 AUS NSW Hill End Hill End Historical Site - A Set of Six Drawings by Greg Turner NSW/H030-001 AUS NSW Hill End Souvenir Map of the Historical Village of Hill End and Environs NSW/H030-003.1 AUS NSW Hill End Souvenir Map of the Historical Village of Hill End and Environs NSW/H030-003.2 AUS NSW Hillgrove Hillgrove; A Photographic Study of a New South Wales Mining Town 1893 - 1912 NSW/H039-002 AUS NSW Hillgrove Tramways down the Gorge. The Story of Hillgrove 1887 - 1921 NSW/H039-001 AUS NSW Illawarra Coast 200 Facts About Historic Illawarra NSW/H026-001 AUS NSW Inverell World of its Own; Inverell's Early History NSW/H049-001 AUS NSW Kameruka Welcome to Kameruka NSW/V007-001 AUS NSW Katoomba Katoomba Coal Mine NSW/H005-001 AUS NSW Katoomba Old Katoomba, Peeps into the Past NSW/H005-002 AUS NSW Kiama Christ Church Kiama NSW/V001-001 AUS NSW Kurrajong Louisa Atkinson of the Kurrajong NSW/P001-001 AUS NSW Kyogle Kyogle - Brisbane Golden Jubilee 1930 - 1980 NSW/H042-002BP AUS NSW Kyogle Kyogle and District's Early Selectors and Settlers 1840 - 1920 NSW/H042-003BP AUS NSW Kyogle Kyogle: A Part of Paradise NSW/H042-001 AUS NSW Lambton Lambton 1862 - 1872; Glimpses into Life in a Colliery Township NSW/H062-001 AUS NSW Lidcombe Living in Liddy: Edward Stafford NSW/P019-001 AUS NSW Lismore Teachers College to University NSW/H057-001 AUS NSW Lithgow Lithgow Zig Zag Railway, The NSW/H014-001 AUS NSW Lithgow Zig Zag Railway Co-op Ltd Official Newssheet Vol. 3 No. 3 Mar/Apr 1976 NSW/H014-002 AUS NSW Macleay Macleay Chronicle Newspaper Index 1899 to 1908 NSW/B002-001 AUS NSW Maitland Maitland Burial Register NSW/C001-001 Logan River and Districts Family History Society Library Catalogue Dec 2013 Books (place order) Country State City/Town/Village Item Title Cat. No. AUS NSW Maitland Maitland City Council Burial Register NSW/C001-002 AUS NSW Maitland Maitland: Hub of the Hunter NSW/H006-001 AUS NSW Manning River Manning River Times Newspaper Index 1898 to 1907 NSW/B003-001 AUS NSW Morpeth Story of Parish of Morpeth, The NSW/V003-001 AUS NSW Moruya Then and Now NSW/H022-001 AUS NSW Mudgee Mudgee "A Nest in the Hills" NSW/H023-002 AUS NSW Mudgee Mudgee Sesqui - Centenary Celebrations 1821 - 1971 NSW/H023-001 AUS NSW Nambucca Heads Nambucca District Historical Society (History of Nambucca District) NSW/H024-001 AUS NSW Nandewars Early Settlers in the Nandewars NSW/P031-001 AUS NSW Nandewars More Early Settlers in the Nandewars NSW/P031-002 AUS NSW New England Legacy in New England 1945 - 1998 NSW/H060-001 AUS NSW New England Pioneer Register of New England from First Settlement to Federation NSW/P033-001 AUS NSW Newcastle Christ Church Cathedral: Newcastle NSW/V006-001 AUS NSW Newcastle Federal Directory of Newcastle and District 1901 NSW/D003-1901 AUS NSW Newcastle/ Lake Macquarie Bygone Days in Newcastle and Lake Macquarie; Photographs from the Snowball Collection NSW/H061-001 AUS NSW Nowra Meroogal, Nowra NSW/H025-001 AUS NSW Nundle Shire Grit and Gold; A History of Nundle Shire Council 1906 - 1981 NSW/H059-001 AUS NSW Parramatta Experiment Farm Cottage - Restored and Preserved NSW/H035-001 AUS NSW Parramatta My Schooldays in Parramatta: W.S. Campbell NSW/P003-001 AUS NSW Parramatta Old Government house Parramatta NSW NSW/H006-003 AUS NSW Parramatta Parramatta - Castle Hill Tramway - Railway 1902 - 1932 NSW/H007-002 AUS NSW Parramatta Tour of Parramatta: Parramatta Hist Society Jun 1968 NSW/H007-001 AUS NSW Perthville In the Footsteps of Private Lynch NSW/P012-001 AUS NSW Port Macquarrie History of Port Macquarie, The NSW/H019-001 AUS NSW Port Macquarrie Port Macquarrie. The Winding Sheet NSW/V002-001 AUS NSW Port Macquarrie Restoration of the Parish Church of St. Thomas NSW/V002-002 AUS NSW Ryde Tour of Ryde: Parramatta History Society Jul 1969 NSW/H008-001 AUS NSW Sofala Gold Nuggets Galore at Sofala NSW/H021-001 AUS NSW Sutherland Shire From Sails to Atoms; First Fifty Years of Sutherland Shire 1906 - 1956 NSW/H058-001 AUS NSW Sydney Army Museum, Victoria Barracks, The NSW/M003-001.1 AUS NSW Sydney Autobiography of Kylie Tennant: Missing Heir., The NSW/P020-002 AUS NSW Sydney Beginnings of Settlement in Parish of Castle Hill, The NSW/H013-007.2 AUS NSW Sydney Castle Hill Rebellion of 1804, The NSW/H013-007.1 AUS NSW Sydney Castle Hill Show 1886 - 1970 NSW/H013-007.3 AUS NSW Sydney Catholic Religious and Social Life in the Macquarie Era NSW/V004~001 AUS NSW Sydney Coxswains' Barrack Known as Cadman's Cottage, The NSW/H013-009 AUS NSW Sydney Day at HMAS Watson, A NSW/M003-002.2 AUS NSW Sydney Destination Circular Quay. A Pictorial Review of Sydney Tramcars NSW/H013-004 Logan River and Districts Family History Society Library Catalogue Dec 2013 Books (place order) Country State City/Town/Village Item Title Cat. No. AUS NSW Sydney Gregory's 200 Kilometres around Sydney: Your Essential Guide to Sydney and Surrounds NSW/G002-001 AUS NSW Sydney Gregory's Sydney Street Directory 43rd Edition NSW/A002-043 AUS NSW Sydney Guide to the Tramway Museum of the South Pacific Electric Railway NSW/H013/001 AUS NSW Sydney History of Garrison Church, Miller's Point, The NSW/V009-001 AUS NSW Sydney Journal of a Voyage to Sydney, N.S.W.
Recommended publications
  • Colonists and Aborigines in the Early Australian Settlements
    Colonists and Aborigines in the Early Australian Settlements WILLIAM DAMPIER, so far as I know the first Englishman to describe the Australian Aborigines, did not take a very favourable view of them. The Inhabitants of this country,' he wrote, 'are the miserablest People in the world. The Hodmadods of Monomatapa, though a nasty People, yet for wealth are Gentlemen to these, who have no Houses and skin Garments, Sheep, Poultry and Fruits of the Earth, Ostrich Eggs, etc. as the Hodmadods have.' Yet he gives a good physical description of them and notes that they 'live in Companies, 20 or 30 men, women and children together'. 'Their only Food,' he adds, 'is a small sort of Fish' — but we must remember that he was speaking of the north-western coast of Australia. There he saw 'neither Herb, Root, Pulse nor any sort of Grain for them to eat... nor any sort of Bird or Beast that they can catch, having no Instruments wherewithal to do so'.1 Further east the Aborigines climbed trees and snared opossums and hunted the kangaroo. Cook had not much intercourse with the Aborigines, but he makes one comment of some interest. 'Their features were far from disagreeable, the voices were soft and tunable and they could easily repeat many words after us, but neither us nor Tupia could understand one word they said.'2 Banks, who saw more of them, devotes some pages of his 'account of that part of New Holland now called New South Wales' to a description of their way of life, artifacts and hunting.
    [Show full text]
  • Community Directory Volume I 2003 - 2016
    Standards Community Directory Volume I 2003 - 2016 The Standards Review Program has been developed by Museums & Galleries of NSW and Museums & Galleries Queensland and funded by Arts NSW and Arts Queensland. 2 Welcome to the Standards Community 2017 What is the Standards Review How do I use the Standards Program? Community Directory? This program, implemented by Museums & Galleries of NSW The Standards Community Directory features a profile of each (M&G NSW) in 2003, and since 2005 in partnership with museum and gallery that has gone through the Standards Review Museums & Galleries Queensland (M&G QLD), supports Program. The profile includes a description of each organisation, museums and galleries through a process of self-review and contact details and how they benefitted from participating in the external feedback. Standards Review Program. It provides an exciting opportunity for museums and galleries Each organisation listed in this directory: to assess their practices and policies against the National • Is promoting its unique profile to the “Standards Community” Standards for Australian Museums and Galleries. The program and wider audiences aims to establish a long term network for sustainable community • Is available to assist and answer any questions you may museums and galleries as well as acknowledging the hard work have as you undertake each stage of the Standards Review undertaken by volunteers and paid staff to maintain Australian Program heritage. • Is contactable via the details and hours as per their profile page What are the key components? • Will share with all other “Standards Community” members (including new members) their achievements and outcomes • Working with regional service providers to develop ongoing from participating in the Standards Review Program support for museums and galleries • Has provided words of support and encouragement to new • Self-assessment by participants guided by the National participants in the Standards Review Program.
    [Show full text]
  • LIFE of CAPTAIN PATRICK LOGAN [By LOUIS R
    302 LIFE OF CAPTAIN PATRICK LOGAN [By LOUIS R. CRANFIELD.] (Read at a meeting of the Society on July 23, 1959.) Probably no other person played such an impor­ tant role in the developing and colonizing of early Queensland, as did Captain Patrick Logan. His name is inseparably linked with the State, not only for CAPT. PATRICK LOGAN —By kind permission of the Trustees of the Mitchell Library. his untiring energy in exploring the totally unknown regions of Southern Queensland and his efforts to bring about some practical development, but also the faith that he showed in the infant colony, that it would some day become a great State. He was a member of an ancient Scottish family— the Logans of Burncastle, who can trace their ancestry back to the 14th century, when two representatives were selected by Sir James Douglas to accompany him in the famous "Bruce's Heart" expedition to the Holy 303 Land in 1329. He was also a direct descendant of Sir Robert Logan of Restalrig, the supposed Gowrie con­ spirator who plotted to murder or kidnap James I at Gowrie House about the year 1600. Strange to relate. Sir Robert's grandson, Patrick, took an active part with Wilham Penn in founding the Quaker religion in America. Captain Logan was the youngest of nine children, of Abraham Logan, by his second marriage to *'Janet" (nee Johnstone) of Templehah, Caldingham. There is some doubt as to the date of Logan's birth, as the personal information is somewhat conflicting. Accord­ ing to his grand-daughter. Miss L.
    [Show full text]
  • Richard Carroll Thesis
    Re-presenting the Past: Authenticity and the Historical Novel A novel and exegesis by Richard Carroll BA (UQ), Honours First Class (QUT) Creative Writing and Literary Studies Discipline Creative Industries Faculty Queensland University of Technology Submitted as a requirement of the degree of Doctor of Philosophy 2014 ii Keywords Aboriginal people, appropriation, authenticity, Brisbane, creative writing process, culture studies, fact/fiction dichotomy, genre studies, historical novel, historiography, literary studies, practice-led research, protocols for non- Indigenous authors, Queensland history, representation, research and aesthetics in fiction, Tom Petrie, whiteness, white writing black. iii Abstract The practice-led project consists of a 51,000 word historical novel and a 39,000 word exegesis that explores the defining elements of historical fiction and the role it plays in portraying the past. The creative work Turrwan (great man), tells the story of Tom Petrie, an early Queensland settler who arrived at the Moreton Bay Penal Colony in 1837 at the age of six. Tom was unusual in that he learnt the language of the local Turrbal people and was accepted as one of their own. The novel explores relationships between the Aboriginal people and settlers with the aim of heightening historical awareness and understanding of this divisive era in Queensland’s history. I believe that literature has neglected the fictionalising of the early history of Brisbane and that my novel could fill this gap. The project is a combination of qualitative and practice-led research: qualitative through the exegesis which consists of mainly discursive data, and practice-led through the creative work. In response to questions raised in the process of writing the story, the investigation explores the historical novel in an attempt to better understand the nature of the genre and how this knowledge could inform the creative work.
    [Show full text]
  • Download Teacher Pack
    The Commissariat Store and Moreton Bay Penal Settlement Teacher Pack Year 5 History Australian Curriculum Updated by: Caitlin Allsopp; Edited by: Val Donovan 21 January 2016 Royal Historical Society of Queensland 115 William Street Brisbane Commissariat Store Museum: 10am to 4pm Tuesday to Friday Royal Historical SocietyPhone: of Queensland (07) 3221 4198 The Commissariat Store and Moreton Bay Penal Settlement Teacher Pack | Version 3.0 Page 1 of 32 [email protected] Version 3.0 Royal Historical Society of Queensland The Commissariat Store and Moreton Bay Penal Settlement Teacher Pack | Version 3.0 Page 2 of 32 Table of Contents Introduction ............................................................................................................................................ 4 Visiting the Museum ............................................................................................................................... 4 Curriculum Links ...................................................................................................................................... 6 Student Outcomes .......................................................................................................................... 6 Background Information for Teachers .................................................................................................... 7 Establishment of the Settlement ........................................................................................................ 7 Climate & Environment ..................................................................................................................
    [Show full text]
  • Early Commandants of Moreton
    385 EARLY COMMANDANTS OF MORETON BAY [By LOUIS CRANFIELD] (Read before a meeting of the Society on 24 October 1963.) The Moreton Bay Convict Settlement was one of five prin­ cipal convict stations in early AustraUa, the others being located at Port Macquarie, N.S.W., Macquarie Harbour and Port Arthur in Tasmania, and Norfolk Island. The Moreton Bay station was established following an enquiry conducted by John Thomas Bigge, who visited New South Wales between the years 1819 and 1821. The purpose of the enquiry was to investigate the possibility of abolishing the transportation system. The visit, however, appears to have had the opposite effect, for the 1820's are recognized as the worst years in the convict era. Bigge estimated the cost of buUding the settlement at Moreton Bay to be £4,150, and the annual cost of main­ taining it to be £27,500. Lt. Henry MiUer was appointed first Commandant and he arrived at Redcliffe, in company with the Surveyor-General, John Oxley, on 14 September 1824. He had charge of approximately 50 soldiers and convicts. UNSUITABLE LOCALITY The locality proved completely unsuited for the station and it was transferred to the present site of Brisbane in November of that year. The reason for the selection of the unsatisfactory site was probably due to Miller's observing the official instructions too closely. The instructions, which were dated 27 August 1824, are as follows: "To provide security and subsistence for the runaways from Port Macquarie." The Commandant was to be guided by the judgment of the Surveyor-General in the selection of the location, which was preferably to be an airy situation, close to fresh water, and not a moment to be lost in the construction of huts for soldiers and convicts.
    [Show full text]
  • 'A Sort of Inland Norfolk Island'? Isolation, Coercion and Resistance on the Wellington Valley Convict Station, 1823-261
    Journal of Australian Colonial History, Vol.2, No.1, April 2000 'A sort of inland Norfolk Island'? Isolation, Coercion and Resistance on the Wellington Valley Convict Station, 1823-261 Removed as I am at so remote a distance from the immediate seat of government and the assistance of magistrates, it is most essentially requisite that sternness, and perhaps some degree of severity should be adopted for the good order and well being of all here...[N]o humane or gentlemanly conduct...nothing but fear will prevent them committing excesses. Lt Percy Simpson, Commandant, Wellington Valley.2 David Andrew Roberts etween 1823 and 1832 the New South Wales colonial government founded and maintained a remote convict Bsettlement on the lower Macquarie River at Wellington Valley in the central-west of New South Wales. It was a small and relatively insignificant settlement and its rôle in the colonial penal system was negligible, a circumstance which may account for its neglect by historians.3 During its formative stage between 1823 and 1826, before it assumed the rôle of the 'Valley of Swells'4 for which it became notorious, the settlement operated as a government agricultural farm, 1 I am indebted to Hilary Carey, Brian Fletcher, Erik Eklund, Dennis Williams and James Stephenson for their comments on earlier drafts. My thanks to the editor and the referees. 2 Simpson to Goulburn, 25 April 1823, 26 August 1823, Colonial Secretary In Letters (hereafter CSIL, AONSW) bundle 4/1818. This is the principal source for the early phase of the Wellington Valley establishment. 3 There have only been fleeting references to the settlement's later rôle for the special or educated convicts, who from 1827 were segregated and banished to Wellington Valley by Governor Darling for a probationary term of light labour before their assignment to the private sector.
    [Show full text]
  • Database of Influential British Army Officers in the Australian Colonies Who Were Veterans of the Peninsular War, and Their Cohort
    Appendix I: Database of Influential British Army Officers in the Australian Colonies who were Veterans of the Peninsular War, and their Cohort Name Regiment Date Where Comment Death Arrival Allman, Francis 48th April Sydney 1860 Yass 1818 NSW Anderson, 78th, 24th, 1834 Sydney sold 1877 Melb. Joseph 50th £6,000 Anderson, Surgeon 1819 Sydney 1850 Sydney Matthew Antill, 73rd 1810 Sydney 1852 Sydney Henry C. Balfour, 40th 1825, Sydney, 1838 William 1826 VDL London Barker, Collett 39th Feb. Sydney 1831 South 1828 Aust. Barney, Royal 1835, Sydney sold 1862 Sydney George Engineers 1846 1846 Bayly, 21st 1824 VDL 1840 1850 Maria Benjamin Island Bell, Thomas 48th 1817 Sydney 1866 England Bishop, Peter 5th, 40th 1824 Sydney Ireland Blomfield, 48th 1817 Sydney sold 1857 Sydney Thos. V. 1825 Bourke, 2ndQM 1831 Sydney General 1855 Ireland Richard General; 1851 64th Boyd, Royal Staff 1829 VDL 1871 UK Edward Corps Boyes, G.T.W.B. Commissariat 1824 Sydney DACG 1853 1813 Tasmania (continued) 179 180 Appendix I Name Regiment Date Where Comment Death Arrival Brisbane, Sir 38th, 69th Nov. Sydney General 1860 Thomas 1821 1841 Edinburgh Brotheridge, 48th Reg. 1817 Sold in 1827 NSW Thomas India Bunbury, 90th, 80th 1837 Sydney England Thomas Butler, James 40th Ens.07 1824 Sydney 1840 Lt.09 Tasmania Cameron, 92nd, 3rd 1821 Hobart Comm. 1827 India Charles Port Dalrymple Cheyne, Royal Eng. 1834 W.A. Sold 1833 1858 VDL Alexander Childs, Joseph Royal 1843 Norfolk 1870 Marines Island Cornwall UK Cimitiere, 48th Cp04 Sept. Sydney GM 1842 Jersey Gilbert BMaj11 1817 Albuera UK Close, Edward 48th Aug.
    [Show full text]
  • Getting Lost in Logan
    KERITH POWER GETTING LOST IN LOGAN One Sunday morning, as I went walking, by Brisbane waters I chanced to stray. I heard a convict his fate bewailing, as on the sunny river bank he lay. I am a native of Erin’s island, and banished now from my native shore. They tore me from my aged parents, and from the maiden I do adore. For three long years I was beastly treated, and heavy irons on my legs I wore. My back with flogging is lacerated, and often painted with my crimson gore. And many a man from downright starvation lies mouldering now underneath the clay. And Captain Logan he had us mangled at the triangles of Moreton Bay. (Anon.) Before I came to Logan the only thing I knew about it was this dark song about its name. The Governor of the former penal colony of Moreton Bay (now Brisbane, the capital city of Queensland on the north-east cost of Australia), Captain Patrick Logan, is immortalised as a brutal tyrant who was eventually killed by the spear of an Indigenous resistance warrior, to the rejoicing of the convicts. To me, on arrival in the place, it seemed no coincidence that the song refers to exile as well as to crime. I came to Logan as a newcomer from a small country town at the beginning of 2005 to work as a teacher educator in an outer suburban campus of Griffith University. For the first two months my most consistent experience of place was getting lost in Logan. I would set out along the freeway (in itself a terrifying experience), drive rapidly for half an hour, turn off at Exit 23 and confidently follow the signs to one of many shopping centres, assuming that I could easily conduct my “settling in” business and then proceed to my new workplace.
    [Show full text]
  • Stradbroke : a Brief History
    STRADBROKE: A BRIEF HISTORY MARION DIAMOND SURVEYS THE EVENTFUL HISTORY OF STRADBROKE ISLAND. tradbroke Island is the most southerly of the the Southport Spit. Thomas Welsby2 reported Above: ‘Early Amity’. three great sand islands—Bribie, Moreton that Toompani, who died in 1888, was told by his UQFL122, box 9, Sand ‘Straddie’—that guard the entrance to father that he remembered when his Noonuccal image 32 Moreton Bay. It has been the home of Aboriginal people, and the people of Moreton Island, could people for thousands of years; the oldest shout to each other across a small gap that later evidence of Aboriginal occupation dates from grew to become the South Passage. perhaps 20 000 BCE. Europeans first discovered and occupied the island in the early nineteenth Matthew Flinders first recorded the South century. Passage during his exploration of the area in 1799. Four years later, coming south from the In 1770, sailing the Endeavour north along the wreck of the Porpoise in the cutter Hope, he east coast of Australia, James Cook passed to came ashore on Cylinder Beach, where the the east of Moreton Bay. The names he gave Noonuccal people showed him where to collect to features of the coastal landscape—Mount water. Warning, Point Danger, Point Lookout—tell us something of his state of mind as he struggled The first Europeans to spend any time on with contrary winds and weather in this area. the island were Thomas Pamphlett and John Consequently he stayed well out from the shore, Finnegan, two timber-getters from Sydney whose and while he knew from the currents that a large boat was wrecked nearby, and who were trying river must empty into the bay, he didn’t venture to find their way home to Sydney.
    [Show full text]
  • The Commissariat Store and Moreton Bay Penal Settlement Teacher Pack
    The Commissariat Store and Moreton Bay Penal Settlement Teacher Pack Year 5 History Australian Curriculum Updated by: Caitlin Allsopp; Edited by: Val Donovan 21 January 2016 Version 3.0 Royal Historical Society of Queensland 115 William Street Brisbane Commissariat Store Museum: 10am to 4pm Tuesday to Friday Royal Historical SocietyPhone: of Queensland (07) 3221 4198 The Commissariat Store and Moreton Bay Penal Settlement Teacher Pack | Version 3.0 Page 1 of 30 [email protected] Table of Contents Introduction ............................................................................................................................................ 3 Visiting the Museum ............................................................................................................................... 3 Curriculum Links ...................................................................................................................................... 5 Student Outcomes .......................................................................................................................... 5 Background Information for Teachers .................................................................................................... 6 Establishment of the Settlement ........................................................................................................ 6 Climate & Environment ................................................................................................................... 7 Daily Life of Convicts ..........................................................................................................................
    [Show full text]
  • The Logan River
    The Logan River History of the Logan River The Logan river region was originally inhabited by Aborigines from two major language groups; the Yugambeh and the Jaggera. There was also another tribe that lived along the Logan River in Jimboomba area called Gugingin. These groups and tribes were expert makers of nets, using fine cone-shaped nets to trap fish and larger nets 15 metres wide to trap kangaroos. Like other families in the region, they moved throughout their territory according to the season. They had semi- permanent camps and sometimes left their excess equipment behind in a small shelter made like a tripod covered with bark. It was a point of honour that no-one ever stole the belongings left in this way. Their first contact with the Europeans occurred when the Commandant of the Moreton Bay Penal Settlement, Captain Patrick Logan. Patrick Logan was a compulsive explorer and in 1826 on his first expedition he discovered the Logan River. Patrick Logan noted the river was well suited to large- vessel traffic and was a first-class avenue to access the high-quality arable land along its banks. He named the country Darling, in honour of the Governor. The Governor renamed the river after Logan in recognition of Logan's enthusiasm and efficiency. Logan City still has many descendants of early settlers who passed down family stories. These usually indicate a friendly relationship. They are simple and fragmentary stories which give only a small glimpse of Aboriginal life at this time. Location of the Logan River The Logan River is in southeast Queensland starts below Mount Ernest at an elevation of 380m.
    [Show full text]