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Lota

Towns

Brisbane City Council QLD, GPO Box 1434, Lota, QLD 4179
07 3403 8888

Description

Lota is an eastern outer coastal suburb in the City of Brisbane, Queensland, Australia.

Lota is an eastern outer coastal suburb in the City of Brisbane, Queensland, Australia. In the 2016 census, Lota recorded a population of 3,256 people.

History

This part of Moreton Bay was originally occupied by the semi-nomadic Mipirimm subclan of the Quandamooka people. Lota and neighbouring suburb Manly were and continue to be known as Narlung to the Quandamooka people, likely meaning 'the place of long shadows'. The name ningi ningi (meaning 'oysters') may also have been used in relation to the area of Lota near the creek.Lota was acquired by Irish-born politician and pastoralist William Duckett White in 1860, following sub-division of the lands from Lytton to Fig Tree Point. The first Queensland Premier, Robert Herbert, entered into a partnership with Duckett White for some of the land. The suburb is named after Duckett White's residence, Lota House, built in 1863. Lota House was the heart of a productive estate, with sugar cane and fodder grown on the flats near the creek and orchards planted on higher ground near Macdonald Street. Aboriginal and South Sea Islander people worked the property, camping to the west of Lota House. Other major Quandamooka campsites in the area in the mid-1800s were located in Manly and Wynnum.

Duckett White's land was first subdivided in 1911 to the east of the present railway line. The Lota Park Estate, west of the line, was sold in 1918. Lota School of Arts opened on the corner of Alexander and MacDonald Streets in 1927, and played host to dance evenings, film screenings and classes. The Rix-Farmer Memorial Presbyterian Church opened in opposite Lota House Oceana Terrace in 1931. The same year, Great Depression 'relief work' led to the reclamation of land along the Esplanade, and the building of Lota's seawall.The former St Agnes' Anglican Church on The Esplanade (near Orallo Street, approx 27.4682°S 153.19269°E? / -27.4682; 153.19269? (St Agnes' Anglican Church (former))) was dedicated on 16 May 1957 by Archbishop Halse. Its closure was approved on 21 January 1994 by Assistant Bishop Ron Williams. The building was moved to Alexandra Hills Parish.Bayside Uniting Church was established in 1990 in Wondall Road, Manly West, combining four Uniting Churches located at:

Ashton Street, Wynnum, a former Methodist Church

Kingsley Terrace, Manly, a former Methodist Church

Preston Road, Manly West, a former Methodist Church

Yamboyna Street, Manly, a former Congregational ChurchDue to earlier or later closures, theBayside Uniting Church also incorporated congregations from:

"The Springs" Methodist Church in Manly Road, Manly West

Lota Methodist Church in Ambool Street, Lota

Lindum Methodist Church at Sibley Road, Wynnum West

Hemmant Methodist Church in Hemmant-Tingalpa Road, HemmantIn the 2011 census, Lota recorded a population of 3,255 people.In the 2016 census, Lota recorded a population of 3,256 people.

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Details

Type: Suburbs

Population: 1001-10000

Time zone: UTC +10:00

Area: 1.987 km2

Elevation: 11-50 metres

Town elevation: 19 m

Population number: 3,256

Local Government Area: Brisbane City Council

Location

Brisbane City Council QLD, GPO Box 1434, Lota, QLD 4179

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Attribution

This article contains content imported from the English Wikipedia article on Lota, Queensland

Lota - Localista

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