5 April to 15 May 2024

Come and see the  Toowong and District Historical Society’s display of historic household items at the Toowong Library. Do you know what a slide rule is? Have you ever seen an Avometer or a glove stretcher? Did you read the Abbey Girls mystery series? Do you know how ornate or cheeky old postcards can be? All of these items plus many more are on display. Take a walk down memory lane or show your kids and grandkids things you grew up with that will be a mystery to them. All item are on loan from members of our society.

 Old Postcards

Compiled by Philippa Stanford. Research by Leigh Chamberlain, Nick Feros and Genean Wildestein.

This is an ongoing piece of research and will be updated as we get more information and photos.

Abbotsbury Toowong (Cnr Milton road and Croydon street).

Constructed around 1876 the first occupant I can find was a Mr.C.S.Russell, the first secretary of the Queensland Club. Then came the Merrington’s and followed by Dr. Arthur Stanley Roe, the son of the 2nd and longest standing headmaster of Brisbane Grammar School.
This  house  was removed from Croydon street  in several pieces and relocated to Pullenvale. The  Status Quo apartments were built on the original Toowong location with Tusitala at 38 Croydon street  built on the tennis court of Abbotsbury.
Composite image from Qimagery and various real estate websites.
 

Airdrie on the corner of Coronation Drive and Landsborough Terrace (previously Paradise Ave) near the Regatta Hotel.

Courtesy Helen Benson whose great grandparents AS Barr and Family lived here

Family photo courtesy of Helen Benson

Mr Alexander Samson Barr and Mrs Annie Brown Barr lived at Airdrie, River Road, Toowong with their children in 1916.

 

Ardencraig Church St now Jephson St, Toowong.

“Ardencraig” was the residence of FDG Stanley (1838-1897), acclaimed 19th century Queensland architect, and was situated on Church (now Jephson) Street, Toowong. Fashionable Stanley followed the fashion of those who were notable in Brisbane Society by installing a telescope, in common with Toowong resident and architect Richard Gailey who had done likewise at “Glenolive” in Brisbane Street, Toowong.   There were two “Ardencraigs”, actually, as the house Stanley had built burnt down, and was replaced by a second residence.

Ardencraig was the original home of Churchie (Anglican Church Grammar School) in 1912 before it moved to East Brisbane. It was placed for sale in 1924 as part of the Ardencraig House and Grounds Estate. The home was later owned by the MacDonnell family.  Franic MacDonnell was a bookseller in Queen St. Their youngest son John Edward died in France in April 1918 and his name is on the Toowong memorial. Madeleine O’Hagan nee MacDonnell lived at Ardencraig until she married in 1919.

Later owned by Charles Elliott and Family. There was a fire in the mid 1960s which destroyed part of the house. The then owners sold the property and a unit block was built in its place.   The damaged house was removed and restored to its former glory in its new location outside of Brisbane.

 

Arley the Archer family residence in the 1880s.

Horse and carriage outside the Archer family residence, Arley, Toowong, ca. 1882. Image courtesy SLQ

Alexander and Minnie Archer lived in Toowong and gave their name to Archer Street. Alexander Archer (1828-1890), was the manager of the Bank of New South Wales in Brisbane and a member of the Queensland pioneering Archer family. Sadly the Archer family of Arley, in Archer Street, Toowong died on the RMS Quetta. On February 28th in 1890, the RMS Quetta hit an uncharted granite rock in the Adolphus Channel in Torres Strait at 9.14 pm on a clear night travelling towards Thursday Island from Cooktown. The damage to the hull was a gash 6ft wide by 175 ft. long from the bow to the engine room amidships. She plunged to the bottom in less than three minutes and of the 292 persons on board, 152 were lost and 139 saved.

Arlington/Endrim – c. 1905/1906. 28 Woodstock Rd, Toowong. Home of Badger

Arlington, 1906. Photographed by Frederick Munro Hull and courtesy of Genevieve Kennett

Arlington, 1906. Photographed by Frederick Munro Hull and courtesy of Genevieve Kennett

Courtesy real estate image

Real Estate image

Joseph Stillman Badger, General Manager of the Brisbane Tramways Company (BTC) moved to Arlington (as it was then known) around 1904. This was when work commenced upon the extension of the tramline from the gates of Brisbane General Cemetery, down Dean Street, and into Woodstock Road to terminate at the (Toowong) Tram Terminus situated just near his front gate.

For more information about Arlington see here

Auchenflower House – built in 1876 for the ironmonger John Ward. situated on the crest of a hill between the railway line and Milton Road, and Ridley and Dixon Streets.

Auchenflower House, 1969, courtesy TROVE

built in 1876 for the ironmonger John Ward. situated on the crest of a hill between the railway line and Milton Road, and Ridley and Dixon Streets. The property known as Auchenflower was purchased by Mr John Warde who built the original Auchenflower House. The property was then purchased by Sir Thomas McIlwraith in 1880 who extended it and christened it Auchenflower giving the suburb its name. For the ten years between 1880-1980  Auchenflower was a centre of social life for the political leaders and those who aspired to politics.  After McIlwraith’s death in 1900 it was sold to the family of  Sir Arthur Palmer. Later purchased by Mrs. TJ Ryan widow of a Queensland premier. Became a Carmelite Monastery in 1927. When the site was cleared for a church in 1967 auchenflower House’s ballroom and billiard room were rebuilt at Norman Park as the centrepiece of ‘Early Street Historical Village’. The rooms today can be found at Tamborine Estate Winery, in the Beaudesert Shire south-west of Brisbane, where they were moved in the 1990s.

For more information see here 

 

Braelands at Bellevue Parade and Ellerslie Crescent, Taringa (previously South Toowong)

Braelands, 1949

The residence of Helen and James Forsythe and later their niece Miss Helen ‘Ivy’ Philp, daughter of Sir Robert Philp. Braelands was commandeered from Miss Helen ‘Ivy’ Bannister Philip for the use General George H Brett during WWII. Miss Philp went to stay with her sister at Mallow in Toowong. Later Miss Ivy Philp sold the land to a group of men who bought it for Albert Street Methodist Church and it was used as a residential hostel for students at UQ.

For more information about Braelands during the war see here

Clayton House – standing on the back of the hill at the end of Patrick Lane

Image courtesy Nick Feros

Standing on the back of the hill at the end of Patrick Lane, Toowong  was Clayton House which was built in 1863. It was previously owned by A. M. G. Patrick who was an officer in the Police Force, but he sold and became the family home of the Dixons ca. 1865. It was the home of Dr   Graham Patrick Dixon (1873-1947) who had a distinguished career as a medical officer in WW1 (Gallipoli and middle east) and, in peace time, as a Brisbane surgeon.   It was also the home of  Dr Dixon’s mother, Louisa Jane Dixon, who died in October 1938 aged 91. The Dixons also operated a boarding house out of Clayton.  JB Fewings boarded here at Clayton before he purchased his property Karslake.

Chatswood on 7 Augustus Street, Toowong.

Chatswood, nd

Three Weatherlale sisters doing needlework on the verandah of their Toowong home, ca. 1918. SLQ image

Chatswood was the home of the Wetherlakes family, George and Elsie Weatherslake and their   daughters, Mavis, Ruth, Marion and Joyce. Marion married the 2nd son of Mr & Mrs Biggs of Dunmore Tce. Biggs was a former councillor for Toowong. The Weatherlakes were the maternal grandparents of Dr Bruce Bigge who had the Fiveways Surgery. The house later became the home of one of the Patterson family.

Curragh Bawn – home of William Landsborough? Curragh Bawn on the hill behind the Current Regatta Hotel

Curragh Bawn, nd

 

 

 

 

 

By Leigh Chamberlain
No, the name is not imperial in origin so it is not named after any of England’s queens such as Queen Elizabeth 1 or Queen Elizabeth 11 or even the Queen Elizabeth, the Queen Mother.
It is named for Mrs Elizabeth Hockings, the wife of Brisbane early settler and businessman A J Hocking (Alfred).
When Mrs Hockings attended an auction of crown lands in the west Toowong area, she successfully bid for a large block of land as an agent on behalf of Alfred Hockings. Later, the land was subdivided to create Wool, Elizabeth and Terrace Streets.
Alfred Hockings operated a seed nursery along the northern bank of the Milton and Auchenflower Reaches of the Brisbane River.
I once examined some of the early files of the Queensland Acclimatisation Society dated ca. mid-1860s at the SLQ and was interested to read a report that Hockings had imported a few specimens of a rare Chinese breed of sheep.
So I wondered if he had purchased his Toowong property to enable him to experiment with breeding these sheep to see whether this breed would acclimatise to the Brisbane climate,  and become an economic proposition to graze.
I interviewed an elderly resident in about 2004 whose late husband had had business dealings in the area in the 1920s. He had got to know an elderly resident who had had a farm growing crops along Wool Street opposite Anzac Park at the turn of the century. He had purchased a few blocks of land when the estate was subsidised.
I had also wondered who this elderly man could have been–maybe he was one of Samuel Earle’s cousins who had migrated to Brisbane and settled in the area.
So it seems as if the Wool -Terrace Street area had been certainly used as a farm in earlier times.
It would be wonderful to find some concrete evidence to prove this supposition is correct.