Mt Coonowrin c1889

George Seymour Owen, Mt Coonowrin c1889. Watercolour over pencil on paper, 33.8 x 25.7cm. Collection: Queensland Art Gallery

Location

Glasshouse Mountains, QLD
Australia
26° 54' 50.7276" S, 152° 55' 17.868" E

[Glass House Mountains], 1853

Thomas Harford, [Glass House Mountains], 1853. Drawing, ink, 16.1 x 24.6 cm. Rex Nan Kivell Collection NK6860/D, National Library of Australia

Location

Glasshouse Mountains, QLD
Australia
26° 54' 50.7276" S, 152° 55' 17.868" E

Glasshouse Mountains III, 1971

Glasshouse Mountains, QLD
Australia
26° 54' 50.7276" S, 152° 55' 17.868" E
1 January 1971
27 September 2012
27 September 2012

Location

Glasshouse Mountains, QLD
Australia
26° 54' 50.7276" S, 152° 55' 17.868" E

Collection: Queensland Art Gallery

Fred Williams, Glasshouse Mountains III, 1971, Gouache on paper, 55.5. x 76.5cm. Collection: Queensland Art Gallery

 

Glasshouse Mountains from the Nth. boat passage, 29 July 1853

Henry Douglas Scott-Montagu, Glasshouse Mountains from the Nth. boat passage, 29 July 1853. Watercolour on paper. Collection: John Oxley Library, State Library of Queensland

 

The striking, weathered volcanic plugs of the Glasshouse Mountains, to the north of Brisbane, have long dominated the cultural landscape of south-eastern Queensland.

Hugh Sawrey’s mud map of outback travels, 1993

QLD
Australia
1 January 1993
17 June 2011
17 June 2011

Location

QLD
Australia
Brisbane
University of Queensland Press

Collection of the University of Queensland Library

Hugh Sawrey’s mud map of outback travels, 1993. The Rockhampton born writer and journalist Lawrie Kavanagh met Hugh Sawrey at an art exhibition in the back bar of the Royal Hotel, Brisbane, in 1963. The two would later form a bond and travel extensively throughout Queensland and its remote places ‘beyond the glow of the city lights.’ This map appeared in Kavanagh and Sawrey’s record of their travels Outback (1993). Signed by Sawrey, the map features a rough sketch of a stockman which formed a salient motif in Sawrey’s imagined Queensland. Lawrie Kavanagh and Hugh Sawrey, Outback, Brisbane, University of Queensland Press, 1993

Brisbane and Suburbs showing Mount Coot-tha Park, 1905

Mount Coot-tha, QLD
Australia
27° 29' 6.5832" S, 152° 57' 33.0876" E
1 January 1905
4 May 2011
4 May 2011

Location

Mount Coot-tha, QLD
Australia
27° 29' 6.5832" S, 152° 57' 33.0876" E
Brisbane
Department of Lands

Department of Environment and Resource Management, Queensland 2011

Eight chains to an inch

Brisbane and Suburbs showing Mount Coot-tha Park, 1905. This map, sheet seven, formed part of a series of Brisbane sheet maps originally drawn by government lithographer A.R. McKellar and published by the Surveyor-General’s Office, Brisbane 1895. Comprised of 13 sheets, the 1895 edition was printed with the scale of six chains to an inch and contained minimal topographic information on Mount Coot-tha Park. Despite the larger scale of eight chains to an inch, the 1905 edition of McKellar’s maps provided significant detail. The topographic relief in this map gathers towards Mount Coot-tha (in the bottom left) and Taylors Range. One Tree Hill, that has the trigonometric station and the lookout-pavilion, are measured at 746 feet. On the base of the mountain a walking track and mine shaft are marked. Mount Constitution has a measured elevation of 844 feet. A track leads to the summit after crossing below ‘Ithaca Falls’. In 1905, the price of this map was six shillings and two pence. The entire set comprised 12 sheets and cost 25 shillings. The Collection of the Museum of Lands, Mapping and Surveying, DERM, Brisbane

Woodford Folk Festival, 2010

Woodford, QLD
Australia
26° 57' 14.094" S, 152° 46' 39.3816" E
1 January 2010
15 April 2011
15 April 2011

Location

Woodford, QLD
Australia
26° 57' 14.094" S, 152° 46' 39.3816" E
The Queensland Folk Federation

The Queensland Folk Federation

Woodford Folk Festival, 2010. This poster advertising the 2009-10 Woodford Folk Festival shows a fairyland of fun to be experienced by festival patrons. Notably, compared to posters from previous years, by 2009 the festival had become so popular that it required little explanation of the events taking place at the festival. Collection of the State Library of Queensland

Woodford Folk Festival, 2004

Woodford, QLD
Australia
26° 57' 14.094" S, 152° 46' 39.3816" E
1 January 2004
15 April 2011
15 April 2011

Location

Woodford, QLD
Australia
26° 57' 14.094" S, 152° 46' 39.3816" E
The Queensland Folk Federation

The Queensland Folk Federation

Woodford Folk Festival: celebrating 10 years at Woodford, 2004. Through the banner advertising the Woodford Folk Festival for 2003-2004 a cartoon map of the festival is laid out to show an exciting time to be had. At the festival there were international and national guests, as well as a musical ‘oasis’ of live performers. Collection of the State Library of Queensland

Bulcock estate land sale Caloundra, 1917

Caloundra, QLD
Australia
26° 48' 15.3252" S, 153° 7' 28.1532" E
8 April 2011
8 April 2011

Location

Caloundra, QLD
Australia
26° 48' 15.3252" S, 153° 7' 28.1532" E

Department of Environment and Resource Management, Queensland, 2011

Bulcock estate land sale at Caloundra, 1917. The advertising plan boasts 404 ‘superb sea view sites’ located at a tramway terminus and at a convenient distance from Brisbane. Overlooking the Bribie Passage, the Bulcock estate was the ‘sportman’s paradise for fishing, surfing and boating’. Vance and Nettie Palmer lived at Caloundra from 1925-29. The development from fishing villages to small allotments in the Sunshine Coast region was a feature of Vance Palmer’s well known novel The Passage (1930). Collection of the Museum of Lands, Mapping and Surveying, DERM, Brisbane

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