Can Brisbane Remain a Subtropical City?

Authors

  • Peter Spearritt Brisbane Institute

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.1017/S1321816600003287

Keywords:

Brisbane, Australian colonies, agriculture, horticulture, resource exploitation

Abstract

'As the seasons change, public and private gardens become a riot of colour. Winter shows the scarlet flags of poinsettia – Brisbane's emblem, which, if really a Mexican beauty, has made itself very much at home. The lavender glow of jacaranda and the gold of laburnum, the green umbrella of poinciana crowned with gleaming scarlet, the massed magnificence of magenta bougainvillea, the creamy blossoms and heavy tropical scent of frangipani filling the air with sweetness, the glare of cannas, the pink and white of bauhinia, the old-gold feathers of silky oak and the red and green of hibiscus – these are but a few of the array of colours.'

C. C. D. Brammall

Brisbane has been relentlessly cleared since the first British soldiers and convicts set up at Redcliffe and then moved to the site we know as Brisbane today. As in other Australian colonies the new settlers were keen to grow crops and to exploit the timber both as a building material and later as a rich source of export income. While early explorers and botanists recorded the richness of the vegetation most new settlers saw the landscape as a resource to be exploited, not a pristine environment to be treated with respect.

Author Biography

  • Peter Spearritt, Brisbane Institute

    Peter Spearritt. Professor Peter Spearritt is Executive Director of the Brisbane Institute (since 2000) and from 1989 was foundation director of the National Key Centre for Australian Studies at Monash University. His publications include The Sydney Harbour Bridge: a life (1982) and Holiday Business: Tourism in Australia Since 1870 (2000). His most recent involvement has been an exhibition, Seeing Brisbane 1881-2001, at the Brisbane City Gallery. This exhibition focussed on the way populations develop their sense ofidentity through tourism and associated promotional imagery.

References

Brammall, C. C. D., ‘Brisbane, the City of Go-As-You-Please’, Walkabout, Jul. (1937): 32.

Gum, K. Spearritt, P., The Greenspace Audit, (Brisbane: Brisbane Institute 2003). On the destruction of mangroves and river mouths by canal development see P. Hutchings and P. Saenger, Ecology of Mangroves, (St Lucia: UQP, 1987): 175, 305-6. On land speculation see J. Forbes and P. Spearritt, ‘The National Hobby of Property Speculation’ in Griffith Review, Summer (2003).

Quoted in Johnston, R., Brisbane, the First Thirty Years. (Boolarong Publications 1988): 19.

Op cit: 34.

Garran's Australasian Illustrated, (1888): 45-46, reprinted in Brisbane History Group, Brisbane by 1888: the public image, (Brisbane 1988).

Garran, op cit: 46-47, 36-39. See also G. Washington Power, in Cassell's Picturesque Australasia, (1887), reprinted in Brisbane by 1888.

Traill, W. H., ‘Historical Review of Queensland’ in Australasia Illustrated, (1888), reprinted in Brisbane by 1888: 109–p110.

Op cit: 101.

Willougby, H., ed. Australian Pictures, (London, Religious Tract Society 1886), reprinted in Brisbane by 1888.

Morris, E. E. ‘South Queensland’ in Cassell, op cit: 122.

Steele, J. G., The Brisbane River, (Adelaide: Rigby 1984): 49.

On Jenner see Fry, Gavin and Mahoney, Bronwyn, Issac Walter Jenner, (Sydney: Beagle Press 1994). The illustration is reproduced in Peter Spearritt ed., Seeing Brisbane 1881-2001, (Brisbane: Brisbane Institute 2002).

See Fisher, R. B., B. Crozier eds, The Queensland House, (Brisbane: Queensland Museum 1994); see also Ian Evans and the National Trust of Queensland, The Queensland House: history and conservation, (Mullumbimby: Flannel Flower Press 2001).

On Bustard and Trompf see Australian Dictionary of Biography. On the use of Aboriginal figures and imagery by European painters and graphic artists see Roman Black, Old and New in Aboriginal Art, (Sydney: Angus and Robertson 1964), Peter Spearritt: ‘Australian Iconography in Poster Art’ in All the Rage: The Poster in Victoria 1850-2000, (State Library of Victoria 2001): 25-32 and ‘Western Australia in text and image, 1920s to 1960s’ in New Norcia Studies 11 (2003): 12–17.

Queensland Journey: Official Guide of the Queensland Government Tourist Bureau, (Brisbane: Meehan 1939). Born in Townsville in 1917, Christensen wrote this landscape format 272 page illustrated guide in his early twenties. He went on to found Meanjin in Brisbane in 1940. The guide was published in two different formats, the other with 146 pages. Both had paid advertisements.

Lack, Clem, ‘Australia's third city celebrates’, Walkabout, June (1959): 16. The umbrella tree (Schefflera actinophylla), is the only native tree that was commonly planted in Brisbane.

Published by Oswald Zeigler for the Brisbane City Council.

See Royal Australian Institute of Architects, Qld chapter, Buildings of Queensland, (Jacaranda Press 1959). The increasingly popularity of building directly onto the concrete slab and the spread of the neo-Tuscans is well documented in residential property magazines including Queensland Homes, (1985 to the present) and the Saturday property supplement in The Courier Mail.

On the extent of private land holdings, population densities and land clearing in South East Queensland see SEQ 2021.qld.gov.au and updates.

Published

2003-11-01

How to Cite

Spearritt, P. (2003). Can Brisbane Remain a Subtropical City?. Queensland Review, 10(2), 25-35. https://doi.org/10.1017/S1321816600003287