Cyclists' Road Map, Brisbane and Surrounding Districts, 1896

Brisbane, QLD
Australia
1 January 1896
5 August 2010

Location

Brisbane, QLD
Australia
Brisbane
Surveyor General's Department

Collection of the National Library of Australia

1 mile to an inch

The Cyclists’ Road Map of Brisbane and Surrounding Districts, 1896 was produced by the Surveyor General’s Department in two sheets and priced at one shilling per sheet. It stated, ‘All roads shown on this map have been ridden over by Officers of the Survey Department’. The map key indicates ‘Roads, Railways, Telegraph Stations, Omnibus Stands and Finger Posts’.  It contains comments, speculation and personal observations relating to the state of the roads, amenities and features of the landscape. This is sheet one of two. Collection of the National Library of Australia.

The bicycle revolutionised movement through the landscape for hundreds of avant-garde Queenslanders during the closing years of the nineteenth century.

Protocol dictates that I must ‘place’ myself properly so other Aboriginal people can identify me and my knowledge base.

After her first visit in 1954, the Queen visited Queensland again in 1963, 1970 and 1977, this time venturing inland to places including Mount Isa and Longreach. Slides from Collection of the Centre for the Government of Queensland

Collection of the Centre for the Government of Queensland

Decorations for Queen Elizabeth's first Brisbane visit, Treasury Building, Brisbane, 1954. Slide by Allan Webb, Collection of the Centre for the Government of Queensland.

Copyright © Allan Webb and Collection of the Centre for the Government of Queensland

The Queen in Queensland was the feature subject in Pix magazine on 27 March 1954. The cover showed the Queen arriving at the State Recepiton at Parliament House, Brisbane, greeted by the State Premier Vince Gair. Other pages featured photographs of Queen Elizabeth II and the Duke of Edinburgh in Brisbane, Toowoomba, Townsville, and Cairns. Much was made of the weather and the mix of formality and informality surrounding the tour. Collection of the Centre for the Government of Queensland.

Royal Visit, Townsville, 1954

Townsville, QLD
Australia
1 January 1954
4 August 2010
4 August 2010

Location

Townsville, QLD
Australia

Collection of the State Archives of Queensland

12 chains to 1 inch

Map of the City of Townsville, overprinted with the route in red to be taken by the Queen through Townsville. After landing at the airport, the Royal Tour proceeded by car down Flinders Street West to the Sports Ground Reserve and then via the Strand, Wickham and Palmer streets to the Wharf to board the Royal Yacht for Cairns. Such maps gave visitors the best vantage points to see the Queen. From a collection of maps, 'Maps of Queensland and Places to be visited', 1954, Collection of the State Archives of Queensland.

Air route of the Queen's visit, 1954

QLD
Australia
1 January 1946
4 August 2010
4 August 2010

Location

QLD
Australia
Brisbane
Survey Office, Department of Public Lands

Collection of Queensland State Archives

1: 2,534,400

This map was produced by the Survey Office, Department of Public Lands, Brisbane, in March 1946 and issued in conjunction with the Royal Visit, 1954. The map has been overprinted in red with details of the Royal Visit showing the route, mode of transport, distance in miles and dates of the itinerary. Although the Queen travelled more than 3000 km, her itinerary only reached as far inland as Toowoomba, with Queenslanders travelling from inland areas to see her in coastal regional cities. Collection of Queensland State Archives.

Although many members of the British Royal family had visited Queensland since Queen Victoria reportedly decreed her own title to the name of the Colony in 1859, Queen Elizabeth II was the first re

Timetable for Air Queensland, 1982. Timetables were more colourful by the 1980s, when Bush Pilots were operating. Collection of Valerie Dennis.

Syndicate content