Gun, Green Hill Fort, Thursday Island, 2009. Copyright, collection of the University of Queensland

Copyright © Collection of the University of Queensland, 2012

Green Hill Fort, Thursday Island, 2009

Copyright © Collection the University of Queensland

Defences of Queensland - Original Scheme, codified by Sir Peter Scratchley, from C.

British interests in the Western Pacific Ocean, 1887

Australia
1 January 1887
9 October 2012
9 October 2012

Location

Australia

British interests in the Western Pacific Ocean, detail from larger map 'Australia and the Pacific Islands', in C. Kinloch Cooke, Australian defences and New Guinea, compiled from the papers of the late Major-General Sir Peter Scratchley, R.E., K.C.M.G., London, Macmillan and Co, 1887

Plan of Lytton township and adjacent country for defence force purposes, 1886

Lytton, QLD
Australia
27° 25' 20.6904" S, 153° 8' 52.7208" E
1 January 1886
9 October 2012
9 October 2012

Location

Lytton, QLD
Australia
27° 25' 20.6904" S, 153° 8' 52.7208" E
Brisbane

Collection of Queensland State Archives, 620408

Plan of Lytton township and adjacent country for defence purposes. Surveyed and drawn by Lieutenant Owen, Queensland Defence Force, 3 chains to an inch. Government Engraving and Lithographic Office, Brisbane, c1886. Collection of Queensland State Archives, 620408

Grassy hills, concrete battlements and gun emplacements in Brisbane, Townsville and Thursday Island evoke the British imperial presence of the late nineteenth century.

Queensland state election, 1992

QLD
Australia
1 January 1993

Location

QLD
Australia

© State of Queensland, Dept of Lands, 1993

Queensland State Election Map, 1992

Queensland state election, 2004

QLD
Australia
7 February 2004
30 June 2011
30 June 2011

Location

QLD
Australia
Electoral Commission of Queensland

Collection of the University of Queensland Library

Queensland state election, 2004. By the 2004 state elections, One Nation’s presence in the political landscape shrunk to just one electorate: Tablelands. This was a remnant of the party’s spectacular success in the 1998 elections when One Nation captured 11 seats and received nearly one quarter of Queensland’s primary vote. This map shows a pattern of political division where Brisbane and the urban core (shaded grey) tend to be controlled by the Labor or Liberal parties. The larger rural and northern electorates tend to be dominated by the Nationals, Labor and to a lesser extent, One Nation. Details of polling at Queensland general election, Electoral Commission of Queensland, 2004

Queensland state election, 1995

QLD
Australia
15 July 1995
30 June 2011
30 June 2011

Location

QLD
Australia
Electoral Commission of Queensland

Collection of the University of Queensland Library

Queensland state election, 1995. Three years before Pauline Hanson’s One Nation Party exploded onto the political scene, Queensland was divided between three major parties: the Australian Labor Party, the Liberal Party and the National Party. As indicated by this map of the 1995 State election results, Brisbane and metropolitan areas in the south east were dominated by the Labor and Liberal Parties. The larger rural and less populated electorates tended to be dominated by the Nationals. In the following 1998 elections, Pauline Hanson’s One Nation Party captured nearly a quarter of the state’s primary vote and emerged as a new political force. The spectacular success of One Nation accentuated deep divisions in the political and social landscape. Details of polling at Queensland general election, Electoral Commission of Queensland, 1995

Queensland state election, 2001

QLD
Australia
17 February 2001
30 June 2011
30 June 2011

Location

QLD
Australia
Electoral Commission of Queensland

Collection of the University of Queensland Library

Queensland state election, 2001. Following the 2001 state election, One Nation’s primary vote collapsed to less than ten percent of the vote. As shown by this map of the election result, One Nation held onto just three seats: Lockyer, Gympie and Tablelands. These were remnants of the party’s electoral success in 1998 when One Nation stormed onto the political scene and captured 11 seats highlighting new divisions in the political landscape. Details of polling at Queensland general election, Electoral Commission of Queensland, 2001

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