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Murarrie

Towns

Brisbane City Council QLD, GPO Box 1434, Murarrie, QLD 4172
07 3403 8888

Description

Murarrie (formerly Mooraree) is an eastern riverside suburb in the City of Brisbane, Queensland, Australia.

Murarrie (formerly Mooraree) is an eastern riverside suburb in the City of Brisbane, Queensland, Australia. In the 2016 census, Murarrie had a population of 4,303 people. Queensport is a neighbourhood within Murarrie (27.4500°S 153.1000°E? / -27.4500; 153.1000? (Queensport)). Gibson Island is a neighbourhood within Murarrie (27.4364°S 153.1224°E? / -27.4364; 153.1224? (Gibson Island)) and, despite its name, is no longer an island.

History

The district was originally known as Mooraree after Mooraree House, a home built by Christopher Porter in 1861. The name is thought to be mudherri, a word from the Yuggera language (Yugarabul dialect) meaning sticky or muddy. The name of the locality and the railway station were changed to Murarrie in 1907.It is uncertain when the Queensport Hotel (now Queensport Tavern) was established; the hotel claims it was 1864, making it one of Brisbane's oldest continuously-operated hotels. The present hotel building at 49 Gosport Road (now in the suburb of Hemmant) (27.4404°S 153.1302°E? / -27.4404; 153.1302? (Queensport Tavern)) was constructed in 1890-1891 for publican Martin Kavanagh by Brisbane architect Charles McLay and was one of his first private commissions. It is listed on the Brisbane Heritage Register. The Lytton Hotel was operating in 1878 and Kavanagh bought the Lytton Hotel in 1879. Kavanagh had been living in the district growing sugarcane since at least 1874. Kavanagh's daughter Bridget continued to operate the Lytton Hotel when her father opened the Queensport Hotel.The Queensland Freezing and Food Export Company established a meatworks at Queensport in 1881.In 1889 Queensport Aquarium opened in Hemmant (the present-day location is Aquarium Avenue in Murarrie, 27.447°S 153.102°E? / -27.447; 153.102? (Queensport Aquarium)). It had a zoo, an aquarium and dance halls and other entertainments. Visitors arrived by riverboats until the 1893 flood during which the animals were rescued but the attractions were damaged closed down. It had closed by the late 1890s, but a dance hall continued to operate until 1901.In 1900, Gibson Island was used as a burial site for some of the victims of the bubonic plague epidemic due to concerns that the bodies of the dead could infect the living, so there was an initial reluctance to bury the dead in normal cemeteries (cremation not being available in Queensland at that time). The Colmslie Plague Hospital had been rapidly constructed in Morningside to handle plague victims. The dead were transferred by boat to Gibson Island for burial. The bodies were wrapped in sheets soaked in carbolic acid and their coffins were filled with a mix of quicklime and water which has the effect of killing micro-organisms. The authorities carried out the burials quickly and family members could not be present nor visit the graves. The number and location of those graves are now unknown. The policy of burying the dead on Gibson Island was subsequently changed as it was felt to be inhumane.In order to provide a straighter deeper channel in the lower reaches Brisbane River, it was decided in 1889 to relocate the mouths of creeks and eliminate all of islands by a combination of removal by dredging and incorporation as part of the river bank. In the case of Doughboy Creek (now Bulimba Creek) and Gibson Island, it was decided to relocate the creek mouth then at approximately 27.4440°S 153.1096°E? / -27.4440; 153.1096? (Bulimba Creek (original creek mouth)) (to the west of Gibson Island) to the eastern end of Gibson Island (its current mouth) by closing the original mouth with a training wall diverting the flow of the creek into the Aquarium Passage (27.4394°S 153.125562°E? / -27.4394; 153.125562? (Aquarium Passage)) which separated Gibson Island from the southern bank of the Brisbane River. The Doughboy training wall was built from 1900 to June 1902 and was 7,040 feet (2,150 m) long. As a result of the training wall, an isthmus (approximately 104 metres (341 ft) wide as at 2020) formed at the original mouth of the creek permanently connecting Gibson Island to Murarrie. Paringa Road now crosses the isthmus to provide access to the industrial facilities that were developed circa 1980s on the former island. A spur railway line (now abandoned) was also developed to the north of Paringa Road to provide these facilities with a link to the Cleveland railway line. The line terminated at 27.4324°S 153.1231°E? / -27.4324; 153.1231? (Terminus of railway line) beside the Brisbane River. Sections of track are still visible along the route as at 2020.Murarrie State School opened on 2 July 1928.On 11 August 1975 Queensport and Gibson Island were officially designated as neighbourhoods within Murarrie by the Queensland Place Names Board.St Clare's Anglican Church was dedicated on 11 August 1985 by Bishop Ralph Wicks. The church building was relocated from Primrose Parade, Wynnum, to 16 Penelope Street in Murrarie (27.4569°S 153.1029°E? / -27.4569; 153.1029? (St Clare's Anglican Church (former))), where it was originally St Margaret's Anglican Church Hall which operated from 1964 to 1985. The closure of St Clare's was approved on 5 September 2009 by Archbishop Phillip Aspinall. It was subsequently redeveloped as housing.In the 2016 census, Murarrie had a population of 4,303 people.

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Details

Type: Suburbs

Population: 1001-10000

Time zone: UTC +10:00

Area: 8.459 km2

Elevation: 11-50 metres

Town elevation: 21 m

Population number: 4,303

Local Government Area: Brisbane City Council

Location

Brisbane City Council QLD, GPO Box 1434, Murarrie, QLD 4172

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Attribution

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

Murarrie - Localista

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