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Research the history of your house: www.publications.qld.gov.au/dataset/brief-guides-at-qsa/r...
The Mount Gravatt district comprises three suburbs adjoining Logan Road, extending from Nursery Road (the boundary with Holland Park) southwards to the western branch of the Bulimba Creek (the boundary with Eight Mile Plains). 'Mount Gravatt' is a rise (195m) to the west of Logan Road in a reserve that was set aside in 1893. It adjoins a Griffith University campus which leads westwards to a larger reserve, Toohey Forest Park, which includes 'Toohey Mountain' in Moorooka. This extensive swathe of open space belies the relative scarcity of local open space in the post-World War II Mount Gravatt suburbs that grew along Logan Road, now comprising Mount Gravatt (west of Logan Road), Mount Gravatt East and Upper Mount Gravatt (south of Broadwater Road). (In the 1920s the area now comprising Holland Park was known as Lower Mount Gravatt.)
Lieutenant George Gravatt (1815-43) was for a few months in 1839 the Commandant of the Moreton Bay penal settlement, and for his short-lived leadership received the compliment of having Mount Gravatt named in his honour.
Logan Road, formerly Slacks Track and Slacks Road, was the route from Brisbane to southern settlements such as Beenleigh. (The Slack family settled at Slacks Creek in the 1850s.) Until the opening of railways in 1885 it was a much frequented route. In 1865 farm lots along Slacks Road were sold and the beginnings of a closer-settlement emerged: the German Bridge Hotel (1865, Holland Park), a provisional school (1874) and a post office (1877). The first church, Congregational, was opened in 1880. A ribbon village along Logan Road from Nursery Road to Selborne Street included the Mount Gravatt Hotel, post office, Underwood's store and the State primary school. A horse bus took residents from Mount Gravatt to the Woolloongabba tram terminus (1887).
Development along Logan Road was set back when the Beenleigh railway (1885) took away much of its traffic, and Mount Gravatt settled into several decades of rural life. Extension of the tram line from Greenslopes to Holland Park (1926) left Mount Gravatt too far from the terminus until another extension in 1951 to Selborne Road.
In 1915 the Mount Gravatt showground was reserved, creating a space that inhabitants would treasure for decades as a gathering place and a reminder of their rural origins. The first annual show was in 1918. In the 1920s soldier settlement farms were allotted in Lower Mount Gravatt (north of Nursery Road), and a Catholic church (1921) joined the pre-existing Congregational and Anglican buildings. A soldiers' memorial hall was opened in 1923, and development further south along Logan Road required the opening of Upper Mount Gravatt school in 1929. In the 1930s Mount Gravatt reached the status of an outer suburb when a crematorium in Nursery Road was opened and the Brisbane City Council acquired the site of the Toohey Forest Park.
Almost immediately after World War II the Chester estate near Selborne Street was subdivided for housing and the Housing Commission began building north-west of Creek Road. In 1951 the tram service was extended, terminating there at a new shopping centre on Logan Road. Schools followed the postwar housing boom: at Upper Mount Gravatt the St Bernard's Catholic school was opened in 1953, the Mount Gravatt East State primary school opened in 1955 and the Mount Gravatt high school opened in 1960. Another Catholic primary, St Agnes', opened in 1962 in Mount Gravatt. The ethnic composition also changed, as Lutheran farm folk moved to a new church and their old building was acquired by the Greek community. Suburban modernity arrived with the opening of the Big Top drive-in shopping centre (1960), the first of four Logan Road drive-ins opened between 1960 and 1981. Central Fair (1966) has a supermarket and 22 shops, and Mount Gravatt Plaza (1981) has a discount department store, supermarket and 37 shops. Both are at Logan Road and Creek Street. The largest, Garden City (1970) in Upper Mount Gravatt, has a department store, two discount department stores and 210 other shops.
At one stage there was a possibility of a fifth when the Brisbane City Council proposed to dispose of the showground for a Myer shopping centre development. Nine years and a Privy-Council decision later, in the teeth of determined local opposition, the development was withdrawn.
Mount Gravatt primary school changed from a rural outpost to an over-crowded suburban school in 25 postwar years. Its attendances numbered 112 (1945), 1005 (1959) and 1660 (1972). A teachers' college was opened on the western part of Mount Gravatt reserve in 1967, later converting to a campus of Griffith University. In 2013 the State government announced plans to close nine schools including Old Yarranlea State School, located on the grounds of the Griffith University campus.
Further beyond the present boundary of Mount Gravatt, but at the time an outlying part, a stadium was erected south of the cemetery for the 1982 Commonwealth Games. It later became the temporary home of the Brisbane Broncos and also hosted a number of Davis Cup tennis matches. The Mount Gravatt Outlook Reserve is east of the university campus.
Numerous feeder bus lines brought residents to the Logan Road tram terminus. In 1966 the Brisbane City Council took over the feeder buses, joining them to their own bus network when the tram service ended in 1969. South-east suburban growth was soon too much for Logan Road or its buses, and a freeway (begun 1973) reached Klumpp Road, Upper Mount Gravatt, in 1980, ending at Slacks Creek in 1985. By then Mount Gravatt was a mature suburb, populations having stabilised or beginning to decrease as young family members moved out to newer subdivisions. In the late 1990s a dedicated busway was added on the eastern side of the southeast freeway, providing much quicker travel times to and from the city.
Mount Gravatt history: Queensland Places – Mount Gravatt
That time of year when it's popular to wear plaid shirts, tan shorts, glasses and flip flops.
Here's the 2015 update.
Members of the slacklining club, The Slack Devils, unwind on Hayden Lawn on ASU's Tempe campus after classes.
"photographer Lisa Bartoli"
Slack brings all your communication together in one place. It’s real-time messaging, archiving and search for modern teams.
We’re on a mission to make your working life simpler, more pleasant and more productive.
We're a San Francisco-based company founded by core members of the original Flickr team. Our principal investors are Accel Partners, Andreessen Horowitz and The Social + Capital Partnership. Our mission is to make people's working lives easier, simpler, and more enjoyable.
Slack is a new platform for team communication — "All your team communication in one place, instantly searchable, and available wherever you go" — which launched in February 2014. It is used daily by tens of thousands of people, including the incredible teams at Stripe, Rdio, Medium, Airbnb, Braintree, Expedia and Buzzfeed. It's growing like crazy and we need to keep up.
We want great talent and inspiring leaders in all areas: from business operations to product design and general management. If you want to join a small startup that's making an outsized impact (and that's making a lot of people happy) please get in touch. We value diversity, experience, gumption and panache. And a good vocabulary.
Since the weather was against me and suitable for indoor activities, I decided to do some practicing instead.
When getting my target in return, the word "slack" popped up in my mind.
I blame it on the audience behind my back, all of them wearing patterned, over-sized shirts and driving crown vics.
Slack brings all your communication together in one place. It’s real-time messaging, archiving and search for modern teams.
We’re on a mission to make your working life simpler, more pleasant and more productive.
We're a San Francisco-based company founded by core members of the original Flickr team. Our principal investors are Accel Partners, Andreessen Horowitz and The Social + Capital Partnership. Our mission is to make people's working lives easier, simpler, and more enjoyable.
Slack is a new platform for team communication — "All your team communication in one place, instantly searchable, and available wherever you go" — which launched in February 2014. It is used daily by tens of thousands of people, including the incredible teams at Stripe, Rdio, Medium, Airbnb, Braintree, Expedia and Buzzfeed. It's growing like crazy and we need to keep up.
We want great talent and inspiring leaders in all areas: from business operations to product design and general management. If you want to join a small startup that's making an outsized impact (and that's making a lot of people happy) please get in touch. We value diversity, experience, gumption and panache. And a good vocabulary.
This Public Way (Marked on the O.S. Map as, "Other routes with public access (not normally shown in urban areas)".) follows Clargill Burn from its source (to the left on Slack's Rigg) to where it joins the South Tyne near Tynehead Farm.
Taken on way back.
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For many generations Winster men earned their living as Lead Miners, initially in the small mines dotted in and around the village and latterly in the late C19/20 at Mill Close Mine, South Darley. The mine closed in 1939.
Winster men (and boys) used to walk to and from the mine through Clough Wood. Traces of the part-paved path may still be trodden today, mainly by ramblers.
Eric Brassington (who kindly agreed to the use of this image here) recalls:
"I remember being taken down to the stile (past the School, always known as the "miners stile"), and watching for the miners coming out of the wood and up the fields in the evening. Sometimes they had sticks for firewood or long sticks for bean poles. What a life and they still had time and energy for football and morris dancing."
In this photograph Eric's father, Ben Brassington, is at left, then Bill Slack. The boss is the man in the suit, might be Mr. Taylor.
Eric recalls that this framed photograph hung on the back room wall of his family home at Woodland View, East Bank.