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Genesis of a Capital: Conrad Martens' Brisbane in 1851 — An Overview

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  26 February 2016

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Extract

As the schooner Toroa carried its only passenger, Conrad Martens, up the Brisbane River on 7 November 1851, he would have seen many places subsequently depicted in his art works, including the then recently erected large residences Newstead and Bulimba (both extant). Approaching the main settlement further upstream, the ship passed New Farm and North Brisbane on the right, and Bulimba and Kangaroo Point on the left, before finally berthing at South Brisbane. The most prominent landmark in Brisbane was a derelict windmill (extant) on a hill at North Brisbane overlooking the settlement. Martens' illustrations show us, through the artist's eye, Brisbane's appearance in late 1851. This, combined with other documentary evidence, enables us to paint our own mental picture of Brisbane at the time.

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Special Themed Section: Conrad Martens
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 

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References

Notes

1 Many of Martens’ original works are held in public art galleries and libraries in Australia and in private collections. For ready reference, see Steele, J.G., Conrad Martens in Queensland: The Frontier Travels of a Colonial Artist (St Lucia: University of Queensland Press, 1978.)Google Scholar

2 See Johnston, W. Ross, Brisbane: The First Thirty Years (Bowen Hills: Boolarong, 1988), 38.Google Scholar

3 See Hogan, Janet, The Windmill of Brisbane Town: A Study of the Social and Structural History of the Windmill Building, Wickham Terrace, Brisbane (Brisbane: The National Trust of Queensland, 1978); Hogan, Janet, ‘Brisbane's Historic Windmill’ in Brisbane: Mining, Building, Story Bridge, The Windmill, Brisbane History Group Papers 10 (1991): 151–68; and Janet Hogan, Living History of Brisbane (Brisbane: Boolarong, 1982.)Google Scholar

4 Fitzgerald, Ross, From the Dreaming to 1915: A History of Queensland (St Lucia: University of Queensland Press, 1975), 81.Google Scholar

5 See Hogan, , The Windmill of Brisbane Town; Hogan, ‘Brisbane's Historic Windmill’ and Hogan, Living History of Brisbane.Google Scholar

6 Johnston, , Brisbane, 62; Mamie O'Keeffe, A Brief Account of the Moreton Bay Penal Settlement 1824–1839 (Brisbane: Oxley Memorial Library of Queensland, 1974), 9.Google Scholar

7 New South Wales Government Gazette, 11 Feb. 1842: 249.Google Scholar

8 Sir George Gipps, letter to Lord Stanley, 11 Feb. 1842, HRA 1, 22: 35.Google Scholar

9 Johnston, Brisbane, 76, 106–7.Google Scholar

10 Sweatman, J.K., ‘Journal of a Surveying Voyage to the North East Coast of Australia and Torres Strait in Her Majesty's Schooner “Bramble” 1824–1847’, ML MSS FM 424860: 134–6.Google Scholar

11 Illustrated London News 12 Aug. 1848, cited in Hogan, Living History, 24–5; Johnston, Brisbane, 161.Google Scholar

12 Johnston, , Brisbane, 63–4.Google Scholar

13 MacKenzie-Smith, John, Moreton Bay Scots 1841–58 (Virginia, Qld: Church Archivists’ Press, 2000), 140.Google Scholar

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15 See Hogan, , The Windmill of Brisbane Town and ‘Brisbane's Historic Windmill’.Google Scholar

16 For the technique of constructing a bark hut, see Thorpe, Bill, Colonial Queensland: Perspectives on a Frontier Society (St Lucia: University of Queensland Press, 1996), 71–2.Google Scholar

17 For further information on Newstead and Bulimba, see Hogan, Janet, Historic Homes of Brisbane: A Selection (Brisbane: National Trust of Queensland, 1979.)Google Scholar

18 Johnston, Brisbane, 184–6.Google Scholar