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Sherwood Arboretum

Sherwood Arboretum
Moreton Bay figs and path at Sherwood Arboretum.jpg
Moreton Bay figs and path, 2014
Location 39A Turner Street, Sherwood, Queensland, Australia
Coordinates 27°31′52″S 152°58′28″E / 27.5311°S 152.9745°E / -27.5311; 152.9745Coordinates: 27°31′52″S 152°58′28″E / 27.5311°S 152.9745°E / -27.5311; 152.9745
Official name: Sherwood Arboretum (including the John Herbert Memorial Vista)
Type state heritage (landscape)
Designated 3 May 2007
Reference no. 602456
Significant period 1922 -
Sherwood Arboretum is located in Queensland
Sherwood Arboretum
Location of Sherwood Arboretum in Queensland
Sherwood Arboretum is located in Australia
Sherwood Arboretum
Location of Sherwood Arboretum in Queensland
External video
Sherwood Arboretum flyover
Wetland flyover

Sherwood Arboretum is a heritage-listed arboretum at 39A Turner Street, Sherwood, Queensland, Australia. A 1946 addition to the site is also known as the John Herbert Memorial Vista. It was added to the Queensland Heritage Register on 3 May 2007.

The Sherwood Arboretum covers an area of 15 hectares, containing approximately 1,100 trees from about 300 species. The arboretum comprises parkland, artificial freshwater wetland and has an extensive frontage to the Brisbane River.

In keeping with an international trend toward the application of scientific methods to forestry, and over concern for the depleting stock of Queensland's forests and commercial timbers, Sherwood Arboretum was established at the urging of a number of community interest groups, the Local Government Authorities and the Queensland Government.

In June 1922, the Curator of the Botanical Gardens, Ernest Walter Bick F.L.S. wrote to the Brisbane Deputy Town Clerk outlining the need to establish "...an Arboretum near the city where the growth of native and other trees could be studied." The Government Botanist, Cyril Tenison White, raised public awareness, when he wrote to the daily papers on 13 July 1922. The proposal was sponsored by the Empire Forest Association, and gathered the support of the Royal Society of Queensland, the Queensland Naturalists' Club, the Horticultural Society, the Australian Association for the Advancement of Science, the Public Health Association, and through a number of articles in the A & B Journal of Queensland.

No suitable land was initially identified within Brisbane Shire. In 1925, the Greater Brisbane Scheme saw the amalgamation of local councils and shires to establish the City of Brisbane. Land previously purchased by Sherwood Shire Council was considered suitable, and a proposal to dedicate land for arboretum purposes was strongly supported by the outgoing Sherwood Shire Council.


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