Woody Point Memorial Hall | |
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Side of building, 2016
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Location | Hornibrook Esplanade, Woody Point, Moreton Bay Region, Queensland, Australia |
Coordinates | 27°15′36″S 153°06′13″E / 27.26°S 153.1036°ECoordinates: 27°15′36″S 153°06′13″E / 27.26°S 153.1036°E |
Design period | 1919 - 1930s (interwar period) |
Architect | Hubert George Octavius Thomas |
Official name: Woody Point Memorial Hall | |
Type | state heritage (built) |
Designated | 14 March 2014 |
Reference no. | 602828 |
Significant period | 1922-present |
Significant components | flagpole/flagstaff, memorial - honour board/ roll of honour, stage/sound shell |
Woody Point Memorial Hall is a heritage-listed school of arts at Hornibrook Esplanade, Woody Point, Moreton Bay Region, Queensland, Australia. It was designed by Hubert George Octavius Thomas. It was added to the Queensland Heritage Register on 14 March 2014.
The former Woody Point Memorial School of Arts, now known as the Woody Point War Memorial Hall, is a timber building located at the corner of Hornibrook Esplanade and Oxley Avenue, Woody Point. It was officially opened on 4 March 1922 and contains an honour board listing 94 men from the Redcliffe Peninsula who enlisted in World War I (WWI), along with the names of three war workers. The hall, which initially included a library and reading room, is a product of both the school of arts movement, and post-WWI efforts in Queensland to commemorate those who served and those who died in WWI. It demonstrates the "utilitarian" approach to war memorials, and continues to be used by the local community for multiple purposes, including WWI commemoration.
For many years the Redcliffe Peninsula was known as Humpybong, the name that the local Aboriginal people, the Ningy Ningy gave to the abandoned convict settlement (1824–25) at Red Cliff Point. In 1861 23,000 acres (9308 hectares) of the peninsula and the Petrie area were declared an agricultural reserve, and from 1862 onwards a number of farm portions were sold. Land at Woody Point was first sold in 1864. Very little development occurred on the Redcliffe Peninsula until the 1880s when the land speculation boom in Brisbane during this decade extended to the peninsula, and the area's identity as a seaside resort solidified at this time. However, agricultural use of much of the area continued into the 1940s.
A small township sprang up at Woody Point, principally because it was the closest point to Sandgate - to which a railway line opened in May 1882. A jetty was completed at Woody Point by March 1882, allowing ferries, carrying both passengers and goods, to arrive from Sandgate. The Woody Point jetty was extended in 1889-90; a new jetty opened in 1922, and a third incarnation opened in 2009. A number of vessels, including the Redcliffe, Pearl and Garnet, and later the Emerald, Olivine and Beryl, ran regular services between Sandgate and Woody Point. Ferry services continued until 1930.