The Brisbane River divides Queensland’s capital city and threads its way through the suburbs and into its hinterland.

Of the estimated 12,000 deaths in Australia from the Spanish or pneumonic influenza in 1918-19, 1030 were Queenslanders, 315 of whom were known to be Aborigines, representing 30 per cent of the State death toll.  In Queensland, the pandemic had arrived first at the main seaports of the middle and southern coast and had then moved inland to urban and rural regions. Initially, it affected white people then began affecting Aborigines, coming for them on top of an epidemic of pneumonia.

Copyright © Gordon Briscoe, AO

Map of Queensland indicating Aboriginal ration depots, compounds, missions and government settlements, 1890s-1940s, 2003

QLD
Australia
1 January 2003
27 August 2010
27 August 2010

Location

QLD
Australia
Canberra
Aboriginal Studies Press, AIATSIS

Copyright © Gordon Briscoe, AO

Map of Queensland indicating the Aboriginal ration depts, compounds, missions and government settlements, 1890s-1940s, from Gordon Briscoe, Counting, health and identity: a history of Aboriginal health and demography in Western Australia and Queensland, 1900-1940, Canberra, Aboriginal Studies Press, AIATSIS, 2003.

Gordon Briscoe, Counting, health and identity: a history of Aboriginal health and demography in Western Australia and Queensland, 1900-1940, Canberra, Aboriginal Studies Press, AIATSIS, 2003

Queensland possesses two Indigenous groups: Australian Aborigines and Torres Strait Islanders.

Georgetown Hospital, 1978. Slide by Michael Keniger, Collection of the Fryer Library, the University of Queensland.

Copyright © Michael Keniger, Collection of the Fryer Library, the University of Queensland

Emerald Hospital, 1964. Slide by Ross Phillis, Collection of the Centre for the Government of Queensland.

Copyright © Ross Phillis and the Centre for the Government of Queensland

Main acute care block, Princess Alexandra Hospital, Buranda, 1966. Slide by Ruth Read, Collection of the Centre for the Government of Queensland

Copyright © Ruth Read and the Centre for the Government of Queensland

New 'Geriatric Unit', Princess Alexandra Hospital, Buranda, 1966. Slide by Ruth Read, Collection of the Centre for the Government of Queensland

Copyright © Ruth Read and the Centre for the Government of Queensland

Mossman District Hospital, 1972. Slide by Ruth Read, Collection of the Centre for the Government of Queensland

Copyright © Ruth Read and the Centre for the Government of Queensland

The General Hospital at North Ward Townsville, with L-shaped new nurses quarters behind. The two storey wooden building in the centre is the old Townsville hospital, demolished soon after this photograph was taken in 1958. Slide by Peter Petersen, Collection of the Centre for the Government of Queensland.

Copyright © Peter Petersen and the Centre for the Government of Queensland

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