Online Encyclopedia

BRISBANE

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V04, Page 574 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
Spread the word: del.icio.us del.icio.us it!

BRISBANE  , the

capital of
See also:
Queensland,
See also:
Australia . It is situated in Stanley county, on the banks of the
See also:
river Brisbane, 25 M. from its mouth in Moreton
See also:
Bay . It is built on a series of hills rising from the river-banks, but some parts of it, such as Woollongabba and South Brisbane, occupy low-lying flats, which have sometimes been the scene of disastrous floods . The main streets and
See also:
principal buildings of the city are situated on a tongue of
See also:
land formed by a southward
See also:
bend of the river . The extremity of the tongue, however, is open . Here, adjoining one another, are the botanical gardens, the grounds surrounding Government House, the official residence of the governor of the colony, and the Houses of Parliament, and Queen's Park, which is used as a recreation ground . From this park Albert Street runs for about three-quarters of a mile through the heart of the city, leading to Albert Park, in which is the
See also:
observatory . Queen's Street, the main thoroughfare of Brisbane, crosses Albert Street midway between the two parks and leads across the Victoria
See also:
Bridge to the
See also:
separate city of South Brisbane on the other side of the river . The Victoria Bridge is a
See also:
fine steel structure, which replaced the bridge swept away by floods in
See also:
February 1893 . Brisbane has a large number of buildings of architectural merit, though in some cases their effect is marred by the narrowness of the streets in which they stand . Among the most prominent are the Houses of Parliament, the
See also:
great domed custom-house on the river-
See also:
bank, the lands office, the general
See also:
post-office, the
See also:
town halls of Brisbane and South Brisbane, and the opera house . The
See also:
Roman Catholic
See also:
cathedral of St Stephen (Elizabeth Street) is an imposing
See also:
building, having a detached campanile containing the largest bell in Australia .

The

foundation-stone of the
See also:
Anglican cathedral, on an elevated site in
See also:
Ann Street, was laid by the prince of Wales (as duke of York) in 1901 . The city is the seat of a Roman Catholic archbishop and of an Anglican bishop .. Many of the commercial and private buildings are also worthy of
See also:
notice, especially the Queensland
See also:
National Bank, a classic
See also:
Italian structure, the massive
See also:
treasury buildings, one of the largest erections in Australia, the Queensland Club with its wide colonnades in Italian Renaissance style, and the great buildings of the Brisbane Newspaper
See also:
Company . Brisbane is well provided with parks and open spaces; the Victoria Park and Bowen Park are the largest; the high-lying Mount
See also:
Coot-tha commands fine views, and there are other parks and numerous recreation grounds in various parts of the city, besides the admirable botanical gardens and the gardens of the Acclimatization Society . Electric tramways and omnibuses serve all parts of the city, and numerous ferries ply across the river . There is railway communication to north, south and west . By careful dredging, the broad river is navigable as far as Brisbane for ocean-going vessels, and the
See also:
port is the terminal port for the Queensland
See also:
mail steamers to
See also:
Europe, and is visited by steamers to
See also:
China,
See also:
Japan and
See also:
America, and for various inter-colonial lines . There is
See also:
wharf accommodation on both banks of the river, a graving
See also:
dock which can be used by vessels up to 5000 tons, and two patent slips which can take up
See also:
ships of l000 and 400 tons respectively . The exports are chiefly
See also:
coal, sheep, tallow, wool, frozen
See also:
meat and hides . The
See also:
annual value of imports and exports exceeds seven and nine millions* sterling respectively . There are
See also:
boot factories,
See also:
soap
See also:
works, breweries, tanneries,
See also:
tobacco works, &c . The
See also:
climate is on the whole dry and healthy, but during summer the temperature is high, the mean shade temperature being about 7o° F .

Brisbane was founded in 1825 as a penal

settlement, taking its name from
See also:
Sir Thomas Brisbane, then governor of Australia; in 1842 it became a
See also:
free settlement and in 18J9 the capital of Queensland, the town up to that time having belonged to: New South Wales . It was incorporated in the same
See also:
year . South Brisbane became a separate city in 1903 . The municipal government of the city, and also of South Brisbane, is in the hands of a mayor and ten aldermen; the suburbs are controlled by
See also:
shire
See also:
councils and divisional boards . The chief suburbs are
See also:
Kangaroo Point, Fortitude Valley, New
See also:
Farm, Red Hill,
See also:
Paddington, Milton, Toowong, Breakfast Creek, Bulimba, Woollongabba,
See also:
Highgate and Indooroopilly . The population of the metropolitan
See also:
area in 1901 was 119,907; of the city proper, 28,953; of South Brisbane, 25,481 .

End of Article: BRISBANE
[back]
BRIQUETTE (diminutive of Fr. brique, brick)
[next]
SIR THOMAS MAKDOUGALL BRISBANE

Additional information and Comments

There are no comments yet for this article.
» Add information or comments to this article.
Please link directly to this article:
Highlight the code below, right click and select "copy." Paste it into a website, email, or other HTML document.