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North Brisbane Burial Ground

Coordinates: 27°27′52″S 153°00′36″E / 27.4645°S 153.0100°E / -27.4645; 153.0100
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Looking across the former Paddington Cemetery, circa 1870

The North Brisbane Burial Ground was a former cemetery in the Town of Brisbane in the area now known as the suburbs of Milton and Paddington. It was also known as North Brisbane Cemetery, Paddington Cemetery and Milton Cemetery.

Geography

The burial ground was located across four blocks bounded by Beatrice Street on the north, Hale Street on the east, Church Street on the south and the present-day Castlemain Street on the west. This land is now used as Lang Park stadium and Ithaca Swimming Pool and children's parkland. Maps showing the burial ground and its later reuse are published by the Brisbane City Council.[1]

History

The First Brisbane Burial Ground was established in 1825 when Brisbane was established as the Moreton Bay penal colony at present-day Skew Street (near the William Jolly Bridge northern endpoint). It was in use until 1843 when the North Brisbane Burial Ground opened.[2]

The North Brisbane burial ground was in use from 1843 to 1875, during which time up to 10,000 people may have been buried there.[3] After 1875, the burial ground was closed and new burials were to take place in the newly established Toowong Cemetery.

Paddington Cemetery, 1917, now underneath Lang Park stadium

In 1907, the Ithaca Shire Council began to plan to convert the cemetery, by then a community eyesore, into a recreational reserve. However, the council did not control the land, as individual religious denominations continued to have control of their burial ground area.[4] By the 1910s, relatives were offered the opportunity to exhume and reinter deceased family members or to relocate their headstone or other monumental masonry. The first removals took place in 1913.[5] Later it was developed as an athletics field and progressively redeveloped into Brisbane's major sporting stadium, Lang Park.

Operation

The North Brisbane burial ground was not a single cemetery, but rather a collection of cemeteries operated by different religious denominations.

References

  1. ^ "Showing the Old Paddington Cemeteries and the Present Reserves" (PDF). Brisbane City Council. Retrieved 10 March 2015.
  2. ^ "First Brisbane Burial Ground (entry 700009)". Queensland Heritage Register. Queensland Heritage Council. Retrieved 1 August 2014.
  3. ^ "Dr Jonathan Prangnell". University of Queensland. Retrieved 10 March 2015.
  4. ^ "ITHACA TOWN COUNCIL". The Brisbane Courier. National Library of Australia. 29 October 1907. p. 6. Retrieved 11 March 2015.
  5. ^ "Paddington Cemetery". The Brisbane Courier. National Library of Australia. 7 June 1913. p. 4. Retrieved 11 March 2015.

Further reading

Media related to Paddington cemetery, Queensland at Wikimedia Commons

27°27′52″S 153°00′36″E / 27.4645°S 153.0100°E / -27.4645; 153.0100