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don't allow negative people to steal your joy.
when you lose your joy, you lose your strength.
( joel osteen/ livelifehappy.com)
happy sweet 17th birthday beauty...../unc dm.
Tomorrow is never promised, so love and appreciate each day we are given.
livelifehappy.com
Photographed in Blue Ridge, Georgia
"People say you dont know what you've got till it's gone. Truth is you knew what you had you just never thought you'd lose it!!"-www.livelifehappy.com
#quoteoftheday #instaquote #motivationalquotes #behappy #followyourdream #wordsofwisdom #lifequotes #quotestoliveby #courage #friendship #friendshipquotes #faith #strength #growth #peace #love #motivate #hope #happiness #christianquotes #livelifehappy #life #quotedaily #friends #inspiration #bestrong #relationshipquotes #inspirationalquotes #friendship - roomwithviews
37 Walker Street, Maryborough.
Guests once showered in beer in this famous hotel. Originally built in 1864, by 1875 it was advertising additional accommodation at its stables, with separate forage rooms and loose boxes for the special convenience of racehorses. It was rebuilt in two stages in 1885 and 1887 and had a moment in history several decades ago when a plumber mixed up the water pipes with the lines to the keg. In the old accommodation rooms upstairs guests were startled to find themselves showering in beer. The hotel was remodelled in the 1950s using the same method as that used for the Shamrock – a brick exterior put up first and the hotel rebuilt from inside to out.
Wharf Street, Maryborough.
The Post Office Hotel was built in 1870 and by 1888 the hotel was in an ‘unhealthy state’ and was refused a licence renewal until a new building was erected. In 1889, ‘free running of the taps’ celebrated the opening of the new Post Office Hotel, described in the press as an ornament to the town.
Iinternal features include leadlight glazing, french doors and the dining room fireplace. The elegant balcony with iron railings and verandah with cast iron columns were removed in the 1930s when the Council decided to modernise the appearance of the town. (What a shame!)
Gympie Road, Tinana, Maryborough, Qld.
The first hotel built here in 1868, at the southern end of the ferry crossing from the city, was called the Erin-go-Bragh. It was replaced by a two-storey hotel 10 years later and named the Diggers Arms. It was rebuilt after burning down in 1941.
In 1958 the name was changed to the Tinana Hotel. In 1963 it burned down for the second time and a fourth building appeared. In recent years its name was changed to Riverview, formerly the name of the lounge overlooking the Mary River. The hotel had merry times when floods submerged the Lamington Bridge, stranding residents and north-bound Bruce Highway travellers for days. A flood-free bridge built upstream in 1990 brought the flood pub heydays to an end.
33 Ferry Street, Maryborough, Qld.
Cocky the Cockatoo is the resident character at the Lamington Hotel. A hotel built in 1864 on the site on the northern side of the Mary River was named the Ariadne after the ship that brought the first immigrants to Maryborough direct from England in 1862. It burnt down in 1928, was rebuilt and renamed to honour Governor Lord Lamington and link it to the new bridge built across the Mary River three years after the 1893 flood washed away the original Maryborough Bridge.
Locals often pull in for a yarn with cheeky Cocky, who now has the grill restaurant named after him. The entertaining bird has been in his big cage at the Lammy for 25 years and is reputed to swear only at night.
98 Wharf Street, Maryborough.
Haunted and heritage listed, the hotel began in 1864 when a single storey wooden boarding house was granted a licence. Called the Melbourne Hotel, it commanded ‘a magnificent view of the shipping of the port’, with the décor ‘quite the smack of Victoria’. A special sitting of the licensing court in 1872 overcame reservations about granting the licence to a single woman, Sarah Gregory who married one of her regulars, Scotsman Neil Blue.
It was rebuilt as a two-storey brick hotel after burning down in 1878, with the third storey added five years later. Neil died at the hotel in 1893 aged 48. Ghostly footsteps pacing third storey floorboards late at night are said to be his.
In 1915 the name changed to Riverview and in 1941 to Criterion.
Corner of March and Bowen Streets, Maryborough.
Reminiscent of early pubs in Sydney, this former hotel was built in 1889 to suit the wedge shaped block replacing an earlier wooden hotel c.1865. It is rumoured to be haunted by members of the tragic Dillane family. Husband Thomas died seven years after taking over the hotel in 1870, followed by his daughter, 11 years, and son aged 17. Wife Anne continued as publican until she too died in the city’s worst flood of 1893. Remaining son Michael died the following year.
The heritage listed building is now a restaurant and Bed & Breakfast.
405 Alice Street, Maryborough.
Bullock wagons trundling the western route to the early settlement of Gayndah made the Carriers Arms a favourite watering hole for both man and beast, with stock watered at the nearby Ululah Lagoon.
The pioneer style hotel with verandahs was demolished in 1954 and its excellent timber recycled. The present two-storey building was completed the following year, with accommodation upstairs.
Staff swear that the ghost of “Cliffy”, a former resident, is responsible for lights turning on and off and other odd happenings.
116 Wharf Street, Maryborough.
The two-storey brick building built opposite the Custom House in 1868 is the oldest surviving original hotel building in Maryborough. It escaped fire and remodelling that changed the features of many of the city’s other 19th Century hotels. Two extra bays extending further along Wharf Street were added in 1883 and original wooden verandah railings were replaced with iron lace in 1901.
Many say the heritage-listed building is haunted. It was closed as a hotel in 2004 and now operates as a bar and restaurant, Lounge 1868.
100 Adelaide Street, Maryborough.
This pub had a shaky start when it was built in 1875 as the Young Australian. The first owner declared himself insolvent when he could not pay the builders.
The hotel was rebuilt as a two-storied brick structure after a fire in 1889 and reopened as the Australian, a name that stayed for about 100 years. It was more recently known as the Red Roo and now the Aussie.
Mayne Street, Tiaro.
Discovery of gold at Gympie in 1867 spawned many bars between Maryborough’s port and Gympie’s mines. The two day trip to transport the gold was broken by an overnight stop in Tiaro where the valuable cargo was secured in the police station. Nine hotels flourished in the little town of Tiaro alone between 1868 and 1896. The Royal Hotel was one of the last in that period, built in 1896. It was rebuilt on its current site in 1932.
173 Adelaide Street, Maryborough.
A publican in the bustling 1860s came home one afternoon and found his wife lying behind the bar of the hotel that was first known as the Carpenters Arms. Accustomed to seeing her in that state, he took little notice and went out again. When he returned he took a closer look, found she was dead and mourned her briefly, if at all. He remarried two weeks later.
The Carpenters Arms was opened in 1863, later named the Shakespeare and then the Royal Exchange. It catered for patrons of the Theatre Royal next door, was rebuilt in 1885 and became the Central in 1916.
Walter Street, Tiaro.
Trading as a hotel since 1881, the Hideaway, officially still the Station Hotel, is tucked away on the south side of the railway line. A fine example of a single storey hotel of that period, it has wide verandahs, original doors and detached kitchen. Once the haunt of gold miners and timber workers, it is now popular with tourists and friendly locals. www.livelifehappy.com.au/admin/uploads/PubTrail
96 Richmond Street, Maryborough.
The ghost of a woman is said to wander through this two-storey hotel, built in 1884. Despite extensive remodelling in the 1930s, it retains many characteristics of a 19th Century city pub with some original handmade bricks still visible upstairs and downstairs.
Previously the Oxford Hotel, renamed in 2010.
170 Ferry Street, Maryborough.
Between 500 and 600 people gathered at the Shamrock Hotel in 1900 to see the goat races, a popular form of entertainment in Queensland in that era.
The Shamrock was built in 1877 in what was known as Irishtown and has retained its original name. It was burnt down in 1910 and replaced with a two-storey wooden building. It continued trading through extensive remodelling in 1952, when a brick exterior wall was put up so it could be rebuilt from the inside out.
Corner of Kent and Adelaide Streets, Maryborough.
After the original hotel was lost in the 1876 fire, this building went up in 1883. It closed as a hotel in the mid 1990s.
195-207 Gympie Road, Tinana, Maryborough.
Built at Tinana in 2002, this is currently Maryborough's newest pub.
34 Ellena Street, Maryborough.
The first Sydney Hotel was built in 1865. A second storey was added in 1883 but it was ruled not up to scratch by authorities in 1917 and was rebuilt in 1919.
Corner of Kent and Bazaar Streets, Maryborough.
Completed in 1902, for many years this was the leading hostelry in Maryborough with its grand foyer and staircase. It replaced an earlier two storey wooden hotel first called the Bush Inn built in 1858, and renamed the Royal in 1863.
70 Ellena Street, Maryborough.
The first pub built on this site was the Ballarat, built in 1868. When the street was widened it was moved back and a second storey built. The Ballarat was demolished and the two-storied solid masonry Carlton built in 1939 in the classic hotel style of its time, with tiled exterior walls and internal features characteristic of the pre-war period.
23 Odessa Street, Maryborough.
When the great flood of 1893 swept through Maryborough, the Granville Arms and Fig Tree Hotel building were swept away but the resourceful Granville Arms publican kept his bar open. Fortunately the town’s Steindl brewery was in Granville so was able to supply the hastily erected temporary bar as residents waited for the Mary to subside enough for the ferry to run again. The licence was transferred to a new hotel built on higher land at the present site. It burned down in 1904, was rebuilt and then rebuilt again in 1966.
221 Lennox Street, Maryborough.
Built in 1887 across from the railway station, the hotel was named to acknowledge the work of opening up the Western Railway Line. Its name was changed to Civic in 1959 and it closed in 1991.
Corner of Kent and Richmond Streets, Maryborough.
This former hotel building is on the site of the first hotel built in the new township of Maryborough in 1853. The lower storey was built in 1878 and named the Metropolitan. A second storey was added after the First World War and was re-named the Francis in the 1930s.
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In this video, Pujya Deepakbhai explains that one must not hurt anyone, but due to ignorance, anger,pride,deceit,greed,revenge people hurt each other. People want happiness but they end up giving unhappiness to others.The principle says that if you give happiness to others you will get happiness automatically.Dont hurt anyone by thoughts, speech or action is the essence of all religions. If you hurt anyone then ask for forgiveness and decide not to repeat the mistake again. Anger, pride, deceit, greed hurts others. If we get hurt by someone then we should understand that person may be hurt by me in the past. So we should decide we dont want to hurt anyone hence forth and that is a simple key to be happy.