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Wolston Park Hospital, 1865–2001: A Retrospect

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  26 February 2016

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We know about the first day at Wolston Park from a report in the Brisbane Courier of 1865. On 12 January of that year, seven prison warders (two of them women) and ten police constables escorted 57 male and twelve female lunatics from Brisbane Gaol ‘to the new Asylum at Woogaroo’. Since 1859, Queensland's insane had no longer been sent to Sydney, but were lodged instead at the Brisbane Gaol. Now the asylum was ready, its residents were loaded into cabs and taken down to the river. There they boarded a steamer named Settler and were conveyed down the river to the landing point near Woogaroo Creek. The name of the asylum hinted at the reality that this was Aboriginal land: the word Woogaroo, so it was remembered in the 1930s, being a corruption of an Aboriginal word meaning ‘to step over a person lying down’. Aboriginal people would be among the earliest inhabitants of the asylum, but not in great numbers. Instead, the institution was rapidly filled from its earliest days with the immigrant settlers who made up most of the colony's growing population.

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Research Article
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Copyright © Cambridge University Press 

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References

Notes

1 Annual Report, 1935–36, 51.Google Scholar

2 Brisbane Courier, 9 February 1864: Queensland Legislative Assembly Papers, 1867, ‘Lunatic Asylum Woogaroo’, 22.Google Scholar

3 For other accounts of the development of the asylum and hospital, see R. Evans, Charitable Institutions of the Queensland Government to 1919, Brisbane, unpublished MA thesis, University of Queensland, 1969: Queensland Heritage Register, ‘Wolston Park Hospital Complex’, 2006, retrieved 18 December 2007 from www.epa.qld.gov.au/projects/heritage/indes.cgi?place=600340&back=1.Google Scholar

4 Circular from Secretary of State for Colonies, 14 January 1864 — Colonial Hospitals and Lunatic Asylums’ EXE/E10, 64/37, Queensland State Archives (QSA).Google Scholar

5 Executive Council Minute 13 August 1864, EXE/E10, 64/37, QSA,Google Scholar

6 For a detailed account of the history of the site and its buildings, see Queensland Heritage Register, ‘Wolston Park Hospital Complex’.Google Scholar

7 Queensland Parliamentary Debates, 14 October 1938, 941 (Mr Maher, MLA, West Moreton).Google Scholar

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9 There is now a large international literature on the history of the asylum. For Australia, see especially Evans, Charitable Institutions of the Queensland Government; Garton, S., Medicine and Madness: A Social History of Insanity in New South Wales 1880–1940 (Sydney: UNSW Press, 1988); Lewis, M.J., Managing Madness: Psychiatry and Society in Australia 1788–1980 (Canberra: Australian Government Publishing Service, 1988): C. Coleborne, Reading ‘Madness’: Gender and Difference in the Colonial Asylum in Victoria, Australia, 1848–1880 (Perth: Network Books, 2007). For a recent collection of international studies, see D. Wright and R. Porter, The Confinement of the Insane: International Perspectives, 1800–1965 (Cambridge, Cambridge University Press. 2003)Google Scholar

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21 A/31781, 14, QSA.Google Scholar

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25 For example, Annual Report 1944–45, 41–42.Google Scholar

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29 QSA, A/31782.Google Scholar

30 Annual Report, 1967–68, 43–44.Google Scholar