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+Project Gutenberg's Our First Half-Century, by Government of Queensland
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Our First Half-Century
+ A Review of Queensland Progress Based Upon Official Information
+
+Author: Government of Queensland
+
+Release Date: April 21, 2012 [EBook #39495]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK OUR FIRST HALF-CENTURY ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by far Nick Wall, Lesley Halamek, and the Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This
+file was produced from images generously made available
+by The Internet Archive/American Libraries.)
+
+
+
+
+
+
+[Illustration: GOVERNMENT HOUSE]
+
+
+ JUBILEE MEMORIAL VOLUME
+
+
+
+
+ OUR FIRST HALF-CENTURY
+
+
+ A REVIEW OF QUEENSLAND PROGRESS
+
+
+
+
+ BASED UPON OFFICIAL INFORMATION
+
+
+ [Illustration: QUEENSLAND JUBILEE 1859-1909]
+
+
+ BY AUTHORITY OF THE GOVERNMENT OF QUEENSLAND
+
+
+
+
+ BRISBANE
+
+ PRINTED AND PUBLISHED BY ANTHONY J. CUMMING, GOVERNMENT PRINTER
+
+ 1909.
+
+
+
+
+PREFACE.
+
+
+The object of this work, as the title implies, is to furnish the
+reader with a succinct review of the salient facts of Queensland
+progress, first as an autonomous British colony of the Australian
+group, and second as a State of the Commonwealth of Australia,
+retaining all constitutional rights unimpaired save in so far as they
+may be qualified by the provisions of "The Commonwealth of Australia
+Constitution Act of 1900." In treating of federation as thus
+accomplished the object has been to set forth dispassionately, yet
+clearly, the general results of the change upon the well-being of the
+State, and the reasonable anticipations of its future when the objects
+of federal union have been more completely attained.
+
+This is not a volume of statistics, yet in a fifty-year review it
+would be impossible entirely to avoid the use of figures. These,
+however, have been availed of sparingly; and, to avoid encumbering the
+text, tables compiled by the Government Statistician contrasting the
+progress made, by presenting the figures for the first, middle, and
+last (available) years of the fifty-year period, have been included
+as appendices. Every effort has been made to ensure accuracy, and to
+embody in the volume all the information possible without overloading
+it with detail.
+
+For the series of diagrams illustrative of the subdivision of
+Australia into separate colonies between 1787 and 1863 acknowledgment
+is due to the Under Secretary for Lands of New South Wales, under
+whose authority they were compiled from data in the Public Library,
+Sydney.
+
+
+
+
+TABLE OF CONTENTS.
+
+
+ PAGES.
+
+ PREFACE iii
+
+ TABLE OF CONTENTS v-x
+
+ LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS xi-xiv
+
+ INTRODUCTION xv-xx
+
+ THE SUBDIVISION OF AUSTRALIA xxi-xxiv
+
+ JUBILEE ODE--"QUEEN OF THE NORTH" xxv-xxviii
+
+
+
+
+_PART I.--OUR NATAL YEAR._
+
+
+CHAPTER I.
+
+THE BIRTH OF QUEENSLAND.
+
+ Issue of Letters Patent and Order in Council.--Appointment
+ of Sir George Ferguson Bowen as First Governor.--Continuity
+ of Colonial Office Policy.--Instructions to Governor.
+ --Munificent Gift of all Waste Lands of the Crown.
+ --Temporary Limitation of Electoral Suffrage.--Responsible
+ Government Unqualified by Restrictions or Reservations.
+ --Governor-General of New South Wales Initiates Elections 1-4
+
+CHAPTER II.
+
+INITIATION OF RESPONSIBLE GOVERNMENT.
+
+ Arrival of Sir George Bowen in Brisbane.--The First
+ Responsible Ministry.--Injunctions to Governor by
+ Secretary of State in regard to Choice of Ministers.
+ --Ex-members of New South Wales Legislature take Umbrage.
+ --The Governor on the Characteristics of Various Classes
+ of Colonists.--The Governor a Dictator.--The Microscopic
+ Treasury Balance.--Gladstone as Site of Capital.
+ --Mr. Herbert as a Parliamentary Leader 5-7
+
+CHAPTER III.
+
+DIFFICULTIES OF EARLY ADMINISTRATIONS.
+
+ Meeting of First Parliament.--Amendment on Address in
+ Reply defeated by Speaker's Casting Vote.--Adoption of
+ Address in Reply.--Compromise between Parties
+ Indispensable.--Successful Inauguration of Responsible
+ Government.--The Governor's Egotism.--Mr. Herbert's
+ Retirement.--Mr. Macalister Succeeds.--Financial and
+ Political Crisis.--Proposed Inconvertible Paper
+ Money.--Governor Undeservedly Blamed 8-10
+
+
+CHAPTER IV.
+
+THE FIRST SESSION OF PARLIAMENT.
+
+ Work of the First Session.--Four Land Acts Passed.
+ --Summary of Land "Code."--Pastoral Leases.--Upset
+ Price of Land £1 per acre.--Agricultural Reserves.
+ --Land Orders to Immigrants.--Cotton Bonus.--Lands
+ for Mining Purposes.--Renewal of Existing Leases.
+ --Governor's Laudation of "Code."--Praises Parliament.
+ --Abolition of State Aid to Religion.--Primary and
+ Secondary Education.--Wool Liens.--First Estimates and
+ Appropriation Act 11-14
+
+CHAPTER V.
+
+QUEENSLAND IN 1860.
+
+ Rush of Population.--High Prices for Stock for occupying
+ New Country.--Sparse Population.--Rockhampton most
+ Northerly Port of Entry.--Navigation inside Barrier Reef
+ Unknown.--Tropical Queensland Unexplored.--Ignorance of
+ Climate, Resources, and Conditions.--Primary Industries
+ in 1860.--Primitive Means of Communication.--Public
+ Revenue, Bank Deposits, and Institutions 15-18
+
+
+_PART II.--FROM NATAL YEAR TO JUBILEE._
+
+
+CHAPTER I.
+
+THE LEGISLATURE.
+
+ The Governor.--His Functions: Political and Social.
+ --His Emoluments.--Administrations that have held
+ Office.--Number of Members of Council and Assembly.
+ --Emoluments of Assembly Members.--Good Results of
+ Responsible Government in Queensland 19-32
+
+CHAPTER II.
+
+PUBLIC FINANCE (1859-1884).
+
+ Importance of Sound Finance.--A Great Colony Starts upon
+ a Bank Overdraft.--First Year's Revenue.--Land Sales as
+ Revenue.--Deficits in First Decade.--Transfer of Loan
+ Moneys to Revenue to Balance Accounts.--Heavy Public
+ Works Expenditure.--Crisis of 1866.--Inconvertible Paper
+ Currency Proposals.--Flotation of Treasury Bills.
+ --Higher Customs Duties.--Wiping Out a Deficit by Issue
+ of Debentures.--Transfer of Surplus to Surplus Revenue
+ Account to Recoup Loan Fund.--Incidental Protection.
+ --Railway Land Reserves.--Proceeds Used as Ordinary
+ Revenue.--Three-million Loan.--Condition of Affairs at
+ Close of First Quarter-Century.--Phenomenal Progress;
+ Prospects Bright 33-38
+
+CHAPTER III.
+
+PUBLIC FINANCE (1884-1893).
+
+ The Ten-million Loan.--Ministers Practically Granted
+ Control of Five Years' Loan Money.--Vigorous Railway
+ Policy.--Effect of Over-spending.--Inflation of
+ Values.--Increased Taxation.--Succession of Deficits.
+ --Second McIlwraith Ministry.--A Protectionist Tariff.
+ --Temporary Increase of Revenue.--Heavy Contraction
+ in 1890.--Another Big Loan; Failure of Flotation.
+ --The First Underwritten Australian Loan.--Amended
+ Audit Act Limiting Spending Power of Government 39-42
+
+
+CHAPTER IV.
+
+PUBLIC FINANCE (1893-1898).
+
+ Sir Hugh Nelson at the Treasury.--Credit of Colony
+ Restored.--Assistance to Financial Institutions and
+ Primary Industries.--Savings Bank Stock Act.--Public
+ Debt Reduction Fund.--Treasurer's Cautious and Prudent
+ Administration.--Money Obtained in London at a Record
+ Price 43-45
+
+
+CHAPTER V.
+
+PUBLIC FINANCE (1898-1903).
+
+ The Philp Ministry.--Large Surplus.--Loan Acts for Seven
+ and a-half Millions Sterling.--Drought Disasters and
+ Sacrifices for Federation.--Accumulated Revenue Deficits
+ of over £1,000,000.--Rebuff on London Stock Exchange.
+ --Resignation of Philp Ministry 46-48
+
+
+CHAPTER VI.
+
+PUBLIC FINANCE (1903-1909).
+
+ The Morgan-Kidston Ministry.--Economy in Revenue
+ Expenditure.--Great Reduction in Loan Outlay.
+ --Equilibrium Established at the Treasury.
+ --Retrenchment and Taxation.--Improvement of
+ Finances.--A Record Surplus for Queensland.--Land
+ Sales Proceeds Act.--Abstention from Borrowing.
+ --First Loan Floated since 1903.--Sound Position
+ of Queensland.--Value of State Securities.
+ --Reproductiveness of Railways Built out of Loan
+ Money.--Public Estate Improvement Fund.--How
+ Recourse to Money Market has been Avoided 49-53
+
+
+CHAPTER VII.
+
+THE BOOM DECADE (1880-1890).
+
+ A Great Boom Decade.--Causes of Inflation of Values.
+ --Excessive Rating Valuations.--False Basis of
+ Assessing Capital Value.--Prodigality Succeeded by
+ Financial Stringency and Collapse of Boom.
+ --Difficulty in Determining Real Values.--Sir Hugh
+ Nelson's Legislation.--Sound Finance.--Stability of
+ State.--Prospects Good To-day 54-56
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII.
+
+CROWN LANDS LEGISLATION.
+
+ The Code of 1860.--Crown Lands Alienation Act of
+ 1868.--Pastoral Leases Act of 1869.--Homestead Areas
+ Act of 1872.--Crown Lands Alienation Act and Settled
+ Districts Pastoral Leases Act of 1876.--The
+ Griffith-Dutton Land Act of 1884.--Co-operative
+ Communities Land Settlement Act.--Land Act of 1897
+ --Forms of Selection.--Act to Assist Persons to
+ Settle on Land by Advances from the Treasury.
+ --Extension of Pastoral Leases.--Closer Settlement
+ Act.--Land Orders 57-65
+
+
+CHAPTER IX.
+
+APPROPRIATION OF LAND REVENUE.
+
+ Land Sales Receipts; not Consolidated Revenue.
+ --Arguments used in favour of Treating Proceeds as
+ Ordinary Revenue.--Auction Sales have now Practically
+ Ceased.--Certain Proceeds Payable into Loan Fund.
+ --Special Sales of Land Act; Appropriation of Receipts 66-68
+
+
+CHAPTER X.
+
+LOCAL GOVERNMENT IN QUEENSLAND.
+
+ First Municipality Established.--Brisbane Bridge Lands.
+ --Grant for Town Hall.--Consolidating Municipalities
+ Act.--Provincial Councils Act.--Government Buildings
+ not Rateable.--Brisbane Bridge Debentures and Waterway
+ Acts.--Municipal Endowment.--Local Government Act of
+ 1878.--Divisional Boards Act of 1879; Success of the
+ Act.--Local Works Loans Act.--Two Pounds for One Pound
+ Endowment Repealed.--Rating Powers Extended by Local
+ Authorities Act of 1902.--Cessation of Endowment.
+ --Valuation and Rating Act.--Decline in Land Values.
+ --Unequal Incidence of Rates Levied.--Efficiency
+ of Local Authorities 69-77
+
+
+CHAPTER XI.
+
+PUBLIC INSTRUCTION.
+
+ Primary Education: Board of National Education; Education
+ Act of 1860; Board of General Education; Education Act of
+ 1875; Department of Public Instruction; Higher Education
+ in Primary Schools; Itinerant Teachers; Status of
+ Teachers; Statistics.--Private Schools.--Secondary
+ Education: Grammar Schools Act; Endowments, Scholarships,
+ and Bursaries; Success of Grammar Schools; Exhibitions to
+ Universities; Expenditure.--Technical Education:
+ Beginning of System; Board of Technical Instruction;
+ Transfer of Control to Department of Public Instruction;
+ Statistics; Technical Instruction Act; Continuation
+ Classes; Schools of Arts and Reading Rooms.--University:
+ Royal Commissions; University Bill; Standardised System
+ of Education 78-85
+
+
+_PART III.--OUR JUBILEE YEAR._
+
+
+CHAPTER I.
+
+GENERAL REVIEW.
+
+ Good Seasons and General Prosperity.--Land Settlement and
+ Immigration.--The Sugar Crop.--Gold and Other Minerals.
+ --Reduction in Cost of Mining and Treatment of Ores.
+ --Vigorous Railway Extension.--Mileage Open for Traffic.
+ --Efficiency of 3 ft. 6 in. Gauge.--Our Railway Investment.
+ --The National Association Jubilee Show.--The General
+ Election.--The Mandate of the Constituencies.--Government
+ Majority.--Practical Extinction of Third Party.--Labour a
+ Constitutional Opposition.--Federal Agreement with States.
+ --Federal Union Vindicated 86-91
+
+
+CHAPTER II.
+
+THE FEDERAL OUTLOOK.
+
+ Proclamation of the Commonwealth.--The Referendum
+ Vote.--Queensland's Small Majority in the Affirmative.
+ --Representation in Federal Parliament.--The White
+ Australia Policy.--Temporary Effect on Queensland.
+ --An Embarrassed State Treasury.--Assistance to Sugar
+ Industry.--Continued Protection Necessary.--Unequal
+ Distribution of Federal Surplus Revenue.--The
+ Transferred Properties.--Effect of Uniform Tariff.
+ --Good Times Lessen Federal Burden on State.--The
+ Agreement between Prime Minister and Premiers.--Better
+ Feeling Towards Federation.--National Measures of Deakin
+ Government 92-96
+
+
+_PART IV.--THE PRIMARY INDUSTRIES._
+
+
+CHAPTER I.
+
+THE PASTORAL INDUSTRY.
+
+ Importance of Industry.--Small Beginnings in New South
+ Wales.--Extension of Industry.--Stocking of Darling Downs
+ and Western Queensland.--Rush for Pastoral Lands.
+ --Difficulties of Early Squatters.--Influx of Victorian
+ Capital.--Changes in Method of Working Stations.--Boom
+ in Pastoral Properties.--Checks from Drought.--Discovery
+ of Artesian Water.--Conservation of Surface Water.
+ --Introduction of Grazing Farm System.--Closer Settlement
+ of Darling Downs.--Cattle-Rearing.--Meat-Freezing Works.
+ --Over-stocking.--Dairying.--Station Routine.--Charm of
+ Pastoral Life.--Shearing.--Hospitality of Squatters.
+ --Attraction of Industry as Investment and Occupation 97-112
+
+
+CHAPTER II.
+
+AGRICULTURE IN QUEENSLAND.
+
+ Tripartite Division of Queensland.--Climate.--Development
+ of Agriculture in Queensland.--Wide Range of Products.
+ --Early History.--Exclusion of Farmers from Richest Lands.
+ --Origin of Mixed Farming.--Extension of Industry Westward.
+ --Inexperience of Early Settlers.--Cotton-growing.--Chief
+ Crops.--Dairying.--Cereal-growing.--Farming in the Tropics.
+ --Farming on the Downs.--Farming in the West.--Irrigation.
+ --Conservation of Water.--Timber Industry.--Land Selection.
+ --Assistance Given by the Government.--Immigration.
+ --Attractions of Queensland.--Defenders of Hearth and Home 113-131
+
+
+CHAPTER III.
+
+THE SUGAR INDUSTRY.
+
+ Sugar-cane in the Northern Hemisphere.--The Rise of the
+ Beet Industry.--Abolition of Slave Labour in West
+ Indies.--Reorganisation of Industry on Scientific
+ Basis.--Establishment of Industry in Queensland.
+ --Difficulties of Early Planters.--Stoppage of Pacific
+ Island Labour.--Evolution of Small Holdings and Erection
+ of Central Mills.--Reintroduction of Pacific Islanders.
+ --Stoppage of Pacific Island Labour by Commonwealth
+ Legislation.--Bonus on White-grown Sugar.--Benefits
+ Arising from Separating Cultivation and Manufacture.
+ --Contrast between Past and Present Methods.--Scientific
+ Cultivation.--Recent Statistics.--The Future of the
+ Industry.--Queensland Leading the Van in Establishing
+ White Agriculturists in Tropics 132-143
+
+
+CHAPTER IV.
+
+A HALF-CENTURY OF MINING.
+
+ The Quest for Gold a Colonising Agency.--Earliest
+ Discoveries of the Precious Metal in Queensland.--Port
+ Curtis.--Rockhampton District.--Peak Downs.--Gympie.
+ --Ravenswood.--Charters Towers.--Palmer.--Mount Morgan.
+ --Croydon.--Later Discoveries.--Yield at Charters
+ Towers and Mount Morgan.--Copper Mining.--Tin.--Silver.
+ --Queensland the Home of All Kinds of Minerals and
+ Precious Stones.--Mineral Wealth in Cairns Hinterland.
+ --Copper Deposits in Cloncurry District.--The Etheridge.
+ --Anakie Gem Field.--Opal Fields.--Extensive Coal
+ Measures.--Railway Communication with Mining Fields.
+ --Value of Queensland Mineral Output.--Prospects of
+ Industry 144-152
+
+
+CHAPTER V.
+
+OUR ASSET IN ARTESIAN WATER.
+
+ Erroneous Judgment of Western Queensland.--Scarcity of
+ Surface Water.--Water Supply Department.--Discovery of
+ Artesian Water in New South Wales.--Prospecting in
+ Queensland.--Difficulties Experienced by Early Borers.
+ --First Artesian Flowing Bore.--Dr. Jack's First
+ Estimate of Artesian Area.--Revised Figures.--Number of
+ Bores and Estimated Flow.--Area Capable of being
+ Irrigated with Artesian Water.--Cost of Boring.--Value
+ of Artesian Water.--Extent of Intake Beds.--Waste of
+ Water.--Necessity for Government Control of Wells.
+ --Value of Water for Irrigation, Consumption, and
+ Motive Power.--Artesian Water a Great National Asset 153-161
+
+
+_APPENDICES._
+
+ APPENDIX A--READJUSTMENT OF WESTERN BOUNDARY 162-163
+
+ APPENDIX B--THE FIRST PARLIAMENT 164
+
+ APPENDIX C--THE EIGHTEENTH PARLIAMENT 165-166
+
+ APPENDIX D--FIFTY YEARS OF LEGISLATION 167-183
+
+ APPENDIX E--LAND SELECTION IN QUEENSLAND 184-195
+
+ APPENDIX F--IMMIGRATION TO QUEENSLAND 196-197
+
+ APPENDIX G--SOME STATISTICS AND THEIR STORY 198-209
+
+ APPENDIX H--DIGEST OF HYDRAULIC ENGINEER'S REPORTS 210-230
+
+ APPENDIX J--CLIMATIC CONTRASTS 231-237
+
+ APPENDIX K--EDUCATION STATISTICS 238
+
+ APPENDIX L--INAUGURATION OF THE UNIVERSITY OF QUEENSLAND 239-257
+
+
+
+
+INDEX TO ILLUSTRATIONS.
+
+
+ Government House (_C. E. S. Fryer_) _Frontispiece_
+ Facing Page
+
+ First Gazette, 10th December, 1859 xiv
+
+ Writ of Summons for First Election xx
+
+ Governors of Queensland (_C. E. S. Fryer_) xxiv
+
+ Premiers of Queensland " " xxviii
+
+ Houses of Parliament, Brisbane " " 4
+
+ View from River Terrace, Brisbane " " 8
+
+ Barron Falls, Cairns Railway, North Queensland " " 12
+
+ Treasury Buildings, Brisbane " " 16
+
+ Coal Wharves, South Brisbane " " 20
+
+ Executive Buildings, Brisbane " " 24
+
+ Views of Rockhampton, Central Queensland " " 28
+
+ Townsville: Flinders Street, looking West " " 32
+
+ Hinchinbrook Channel, North Queensland " " 36
+
+ The Narrows and Mount Larcombe, near Gladstone " " 36
+
+ Barron Gorge below the Falls, Cairns Railway " " 40
+
+ On the Road to Market, Central Queensland (_W. E. Perroux_) 44
+
+ Fat Cattle, Central Queensland " " 44
+
+ Maroochy River and Ninderry Mountain, N.C. Railway (_C. E. S. Fryer_) 48
+
+ Scene on Barcaldine Downs, Central Queensland (_W. E. Perroux_) 52
+
+ Barcaldine Downs Homestead, Central Queensland " " 52
+
+ Swan Creek Valley, near Yangan, Warwick District (_C. E. S. Fryer_) 56
+
+ Surprise Creek Falls, Cairns Railway " " 60
+
+ Forest Scene near Woombye, North Coast Railway " " 64
+
+ Hauling Timber, North Coast Railway " " 68
+
+ Stony Creek Bridge and Falls, Cairns Railway (_C. E. S. Fryer_) 68
+
+ Timber Getting, North Coast Railway " " 72
+
+ Cairns Range and Robb's Monument, N. Queensland " " 76
+
+ View of Gympie from Nashville Railway Station " " 80
+
+ Coke Ovens, Ipswich District " " 80
+
+ Gulf Cattle Ready for Market (_H. J. Walton_) 84
+
+ Brigalow Country, Warra, Darling Downs 84
+
+ Hereford Cows, Darling Downs 84
+
+ Above Stony Creek Falls, Cairns Railway (_C. E. S. Fryer_) 88
+
+ Mount Morgan: Open Cut and Dumps (_Mount Morgan G.M. Co._) 92
+
+ Mount Morgan: Mundic and Copper Works " " 92
+
+ Cattle Country, West Moreton 100
+
+ Fat Cattle, Central Queensland (_C. E. S. Fryer_) 100
+
+ Horses at Gowrie, Darling Downs 104
+
+ Sheep at Gowrie, Darling Downs 104
+
+ Horses, Western Queensland (_H. J. Walton_) 104
+
+ Fat Cattle, Burrandilla, Charleville " " 104
+
+ Wool Teams, Wyandra, Warrego District (_C. E. S. Fryer_) 108
+
+ Hauling Cedar, Atherton, North Queensland " " 108
+
+ Dairy Cattle on Darling Downs 112
+
+ Sheep, Jimbour, Darling Downs 112
+
+ Horses, Ivanhoe Station, Warrego 112
+
+ Harvesting Wheat, Emu Vale, near Warwick (_C. E. S. Fryer_) 116
+
+ Surprise Creek Cascade, Cairns Railway " " 120
+
+ Pineapple Farm, Woombye, North Coast Railway " " 124
+
+ Sugar-Mill, Huxley, Isis Railway " " 124
+
+ Field of Maize, Eel Creek, Gympie " " 124
+
+ Threshing Wheat, Emu Vale, Killarney Railway " " 128
+
+ Coffee Plantation, Kuranda, Cairns Railway " " 128
+
+ Sugar-Mill, Childers, North Coast Railway " " 132
+
+ Sisal Hemp and Cane Fields, South Isis " " 136
+
+ Canefields, Isis Railway (_C. E. S. Fryer_) 136
+
+ Sugar Cane and Mill, Huxley, Isis Railway " " 136
+
+ Cambanora Gap, Head of Condamine, Killarney " " 140
+
+ Minto Crag, Dugandan, Fassifern District " " 140
+
+ Mount Morgan: Copper Works, looking North (_Mt. Morgan G.M. Co._) 144
+
+ Mount Morgan: General View of Works " " 144
+
+ Charters Towers: Plant's Day Dawn (_C. E. S. Fryer_) 148
+
+ Gympie: Scottish Gympie Gold Mine " " 152
+
+ Gympie: No. 1 North Oriental and Glanmire " " 152
+
+ Flowing Artesian Wells, Western Queensland:
+
+ 1. Beel's Bore, Cunnamulla (_Kerry_) 156
+
+ 2. Bore on Thurulgoona Station " " 156
+
+ 3. Charleville Bore (_C. E. S. Fryer_) 156
+
+ Aberdare Colliery, Ipswich District " " 160
+
+ Cocoa-Nut Palms, Johnstone River, North Queensland " " 164
+
+ Custom House and Petrie Bight, Brisbane " " 164
+
+ In the Scrub Country, Kin Kin, North Coast Railway " " 168
+
+ On the Blackall Range, North Coast Railway " " 168
+
+ Barron Gorge, Cairns Railway, North Queensland " " 176
+
+ Farm Scene, Blackall Range " " 184
+
+ Sisal Hemp, Childers, North Coast Railway " " 184
+
+ Wool Teams, Longreach, Central Queensland " " 184
+
+ View on Barron River, Cairns Railway " " 192
+
+ Hauling Timber, Barron River, North Queensland " " 200
+
+ Falls near Killarney " " 208
+
+ Aboriginal Tree Climbers " " 208
+
+ Scene on Logan River, South Queensland " " 216
+
+ Cooktown and Endeavour River, North Queensland " " 224
+
+ Pearling Fleets off Badu Island, Torres Strait 224
+
+ Government House, now Dedicated to University purposes
+ (_C. E. S. Fryer_) 238
+
+ View of Dedication Ceremony (_H.W. Mobsby_) 242
+
+ The Premier (Hon. W. Kidston) Opening the Proceedings " " 244
+
+ His Excellency Sir W. MacGregor Addressing the Audience " " 248
+
+ His Excellency Unveiling the Dedication Tablet " " 250
+
+ Lady MacGregor Planting the University Tree " " 256
+
+
+MAPS.
+
+ (_Prepared by Survey Office, Department of Public Lands._)
+
+ Subdivision of Australia xxii, xxiii
+
+ Australia before Captain Cook 96
+
+ Australia, Showing First Settlement 96
+
+ Queensland in 1859 96
+
+ Queensland in 1909 96
+
+ Australia in 1859, Showing Self-Governing Colonies 96
+
+ The World, Showing Relative Position of Australia 96
+
+ Queensland, with British Islands Superimposed 232
+
+
+
+
+[Illustration: Royal Coat of Arms]
+
+
+ QUEENSLAND
+
+
+ =Government Gazette.=
+
+
+ PUBLISHED BY AUTHORITY.
+
+ No. 1.] SATURDAY, 10 DECEMBER, 1859.
+
+
+
+
+PROCLAMATION
+
+ By His Excellency SIR GEORGE FERGUSON BOWEN, Knight Commander
+ of the Most Distinguished Order of St. Michael and St. George,
+ Captain-General and Governor-in-Chief of the Colony of
+ Queensland and its Dependencies, and Vice-Admiral of the same,
+ &c., &c., &c.
+
+WHEREAS by an Act passed in the Session of Parliament holden in the
+eighteenth and nineteenth years of the Reign of Her Majesty, entitled,
+"_An Act to enable Her Majesty to assent to a Bill as amended of the
+Legislature of New South Wales 'to confer a Constitution on New South
+Wales, and to grant 'a Civil List to Her Majesty,'_" it was amongst
+other things enacted that it should be lawful for Her Majesty, by
+Letters Patent, to be from time to time issued under the Great Seal
+of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland, to erect into a
+separate Colony or Colonies, any territories which might be separated
+from New South Wales by such alteration as therein was mentioned, of
+the northern boundary thereof; and in and by such Letters Patent, or
+by Order in Council, to make provision for the Government of any such
+Colony, and for the Establishment of a Legislature therein, in manner
+as nearly resembling the form of Government and Legislature which
+should be at such time established in New South Wales as the
+circumstances of such Colony will allow; and that full power should
+be given in and by such Letters Patent, or Order in Council, to the
+Legislature of the said Colony, to make further provision in that
+behalf. And whereas Her Majesty, in exercise of the powers so vested
+in Her Majesty, has by Her Commission under the Great Seal of the
+United Kingdom, bearing date the sixth day of June, in the year of Our
+Lord one thousand eight hundred and fifty-nine, appointed that from
+and after the publication of the said Letters Patent in the Colonies
+of New South Wales and Queensland, the Territory described in the said
+Letters Patent should be separated from the said Colony of New South
+Wales and be erected into the separate Colony of Queensland: Now,
+therefore, I, SIR GEORGE FERGUSON BOWEN, the Governor of Queensland,
+in pursuance of the authority invested in me by Her Majesty, do hereby
+proclaim and publish the said Letters Patent in the words and figures
+following, respectively.
+
+
+
+
+QUEENSLAND.
+
+ _LETTERS PATENT erecting Moreton Bay into a Colony, under
+ the name of_ QUEENSLAND, _and appointing_ SIR GEORGE FERGUSON
+ BOWEN, K.C.M.G., _to be Captain-General and Governor-in-Chief
+ of the same_.
+
+ VICTORIA, by the Grace of God, of the United Kingdom of Great
+ Britain and Ireland, Queen, Defender of the Faith, to Our
+ trusty and well-beloved SIR GEORGE FERGUSON BOWEN, Knight
+ Commander of Our most distinguished Order of St. Michael and
+ St. George,--
+
+ GREETING:
+
+ WHEREAS by a reserved Bill of the Legislature of New South
+ Wales, passed in the seventeenth year of our reign, as amended
+ by an Act passed in the Session of Parliament holden in the
+ eighteenth and nineteenth years of our reign, entitled, "An
+ Act to enable Her Majesty to assent to a Bill, as amended, of
+ the Legislature of New South Wales, to confer a Constitution
+ on New South Wales, and to grant a Civil List to Her Majesty,"
+ it was enacted that nothing therein contained should be deemed
+ to prevent us from altering the boundary of the Colony of New
+ South Wales on the north, in such a manner as to us might seem
+ fit; and it was further enacted by the said last recited Act,
+ that if We should at any time exercise the power given to Us
+ by the said reserved Bill of altering the northern boundary of
+ our said colony, it should be lawful for Us by any Letters
+ Patent, to be from time to time issued under the Great Seal of
+ our United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland, to erect into
+ a separate Colony or Colonies any territories which might be
+ separated from our said colony of New South Wales by such
+ alterations as aforesaid of the northern boundary thereof, and
+ in and by such Letters Patent, or by Order in Council, to make
+ provision for the Government of any such separate colony, and
+ for the establishment of a Legislature therein, in manner as
+ nearly resembling the form of Government and Legislature which
+ should be at such time established in New South Wales as the
+ circumstances of such separate Colony would allow, and that
+ full power should be given by such Letters Patent or Order in
+ Council to the Legislature of such separate Colony to make
+ further provision in that behalf. Now know you, that We have,
+ in pursuance of the powers vested in us by the said Bill and
+ Act, and of all other powers and authorities in Us in that
+ behalf vested separated from our colony of New South Wales,
+ and erected into a separate Colony, so much of the said colony
+ of New South Wales as lies northward of a line commencing on
+ the sea coast at Point Danger, in latitude about 28 degrees 8
+ minutes south, and following the range thence which divides
+ the waters of the Tweed, Richmond, and Clarence Rivers from
+ those of the Logan and Brisbane Rivers, westerly, to the great
+ dividing range between the waters falling to the east coast
+ and those of the River Murray; following the great dividing
+ range southerly to the range dividing the waters of
+ Tenterfield Creek from those of the main head of the Dumaresq
+ River; following that range westerly to the Dumaresq River;
+ and following that river (which is locally known as the
+ Severn) downward to its confluence with the Macintyre River;
+ thence following the Macintyre River, which lower down becomes
+ the Barwan, downward to the 29th parallel of south latitude,
+ and following that parallel westerly to the 141st meridian of
+ east longitude, which is the eastern boundary of South
+ Australia, together with all and every the adjacent Islands,
+ their members and appurtenances, in the Pacific Ocean: And do
+ by these presents separate from our said Colony of New South
+ Wales and erect the said territory so described into a
+ separate Colony to be called the Colony of Queensland.
+
+ And whereas We have by an Order made by Us in our Privy
+ Council, bearing even date herewith, made provision for the
+ government of our said Colony of Queensland, and we deem it
+ expedient to make more particular provision for the government
+ of our said Colony: Now know you, that We, reposing especial
+ trust and confidence in the prudence, courage, and loyalty
+ of you, the said Sir George Ferguson Bowen, of our especial
+ grace, certain knowledge, and mere motion, have thought fit
+ to constitute and appoint, and do by these presents constitute
+ and appoint you, the said Sir George Ferguson Bowen, to
+ be, during our will and pleasure, our Captain-General and
+ Governor-in-Chief in and over our said Colony of Queensland,
+ and of all forts and garrisons erected and established, or
+ which shall be erected and established within our said
+ Colony, or in its members and appurtenances; And we do hereby
+ authorise, empower, require, and command you, the said Sir
+ George Ferguson Bowen, in due manner, to do and execute all
+ things that shall belong to your said command and the trust
+ We have reposed in you, according to the several powers,
+ provisions, and directions granted or appointed you by virtue
+ of our present Commission, and of the said recited Bill, as
+ amended by the said recited Act; and according to our Order
+ in our Privy Council, bearing even date herewith, and to such
+ instructions as are herewith given to you, or which may from
+ time to time hereafter be given to you, under our Sign Manual
+ and Signet, or by our Order in our Privy Council, or by Us,
+ through one of our Principal Secretaries of State; and
+ according to such laws and ordinances as are now in force in
+ our said Colony of New South Wales and its dependencies,
+ and as shall hereafter be in force in our said Colony of
+ Queensland.
+
+ 2. And whereas it is ordered by our said Order, made by Us
+ in our Privy Council, bearing even date herewith, that there
+ shall be within our said Colony of Queensland a Legislative
+ Council and a Legislative Assembly, to be severally
+ constituted and composed in the manner in the said Order
+ prescribed; and that We shall have power, by and with the
+ advice and consent of the said Council and Assembly, to make
+ laws for the peace, welfare, and good government of our said
+ Colony in all cases whatever: And it is provided by the above
+ recited Act, that the provisions of the Act of the fourteenth
+ year of Her Majesty, chapter fifty-nine, and of the Act of the
+ sixth year of Her Majesty, chapter seventy-six, intituled,
+ "An Act for the Government of New South Wales and Van Diemen's
+ Land," which relate to the giving and withholding of Her
+ Majesty's assent to bills, and the reservation of bills for
+ the signification of Her Majesty's pleasure thereon, and the
+ instructions to be conveyed to Governors for their guidance
+ in relation to the matters aforesaid and the disallowance of
+ Bills by Her Majesty, shall apply to Bills to be passed by the
+ Legislative Council and Assembly constituted under the said
+ Reserved Bill and Act, and by any other Legislative body or
+ bodies which may at any time hereafter be substituted for
+ the present Council and Assembly: Now We do, by virtue of the
+ powers in Us vested, hereby require and command, that you do
+ take especial care that in making and passing such laws, with
+ the advice and consent of the said Legislative Council,
+ and Legislative Assembly, the provisions, regulations,
+ restrictions, and directions contained in the said Acts of
+ Parliament, and in Our said Order made in Our Privy Council,
+ bearing even date herewith, and in Our instructions under
+ Our Sign Manual, accompanying this Our Commission, or in such
+ future Orders as may be made by Us in Our Privy Council, or in
+ such further instructions under Our Sign Manual and Signet as
+ shall at any time hereafter be issued to you in that behalf,
+ be strictly complied with.
+
+ 3. And whereas it is expedient that an Executive Council
+ should be appointed to advise and assist you, the said Sir
+ George Ferguson Bowen, in the administration of the Government
+ of our said Colony: Now We do declare Our pleasure to be, that
+ there shall be an Executive Council for Our said Colony, and
+ that the said Council shall consist of such persons as you
+ shall, by instruments to be passed under the Great Seal of our
+ said Colony in Our name and on our behalf, from time to time,
+ nominate and appoint, to be members of the said Executive
+ Council, all which persons shall hold their places in the said
+ Council during Our pleasure: But We do expressly enjoin
+ and require that you do transmit to Us, through one of Our
+ principal Secretaries of State, exemplifications of all such
+ instruments as shall be by you so issued for appointing the
+ members of the said Council.
+
+ 4. And we do hereby authorise and empower you, the said Sir
+ George Ferguson Bowen, to keep and use the Great Seal of our
+ said colony for sealing all things whatsoever that shall pass
+ the Great Seal of our said colony.
+
+ 5. And we do hereby give and grant to you, the said Sir George
+ Ferguson Bowen, full power and authority, by and with the
+ advice of the said Executive Council, to grant in Our name
+ and on Our behalf, any waste or unsettled lands in Us vested
+ within Our said Colony, which said grants are to be passed
+ and sealed with the Great Seal of Our said colony, and being
+ entered upon record by such public officer or officers as
+ shall be appointed thereunto, shall be effectual in law
+ against Us, Our heirs or successors: provided nevertheless,
+ that in granting and disposing of such lands you do conform to
+ and observe the provisions in that behalf contained in any
+ law which is or shall be in force within our said colony, or
+ within any part of our said colony, for regulating the sale
+ and disposal of such lands.
+
+ 6. And we do hereby give and grant unto you, the said Sir
+ George Ferguson Bowen, full power and authority, as you shall
+ see occasion, in our name and on our behalf, to grant to any
+ offender convicted of any crime in any court, or before any
+ judge, justice, or magistrate within our said colony, a
+ pardon, either free or subject to lawful conditions or any
+ respite of the execution of the sentence of any such offender,
+ for such period as to you may seem fit, and to remit any
+ fines, penalties, or forfeitures which may become due and
+ payable to us, but subject to the regulations and directions
+ contained in the instructions under Our Royal Sign Manual
+ and Signet accompanying this our Commission, or in any future
+ instructions as aforesaid.
+
+ 7. And We do hereby give and grant unto you, the said
+ Sir George Ferguson Bowen, full power and authority, upon
+ sufficient cause to you appearing, to suspend from the
+ exercise of his office, within our said colony, any person
+ exercising any office or place under, or by virtue of, any
+ Commission or Warrant granted, or which may be granted by Us,
+ or in Our name, or under Our authority, which suspension shall
+ continue and have effect only until Our pleasure therein shall
+ be made known and signified to you: And We do hereby strictly
+ require and enjoin you in proceeding to any such suspension,
+ to observe the directions in that behalf given to you by Our
+ present or any future Instructions as aforesaid.
+
+ 8. And in the event of the death or absence of you, the
+ said Sir George Ferguson Bowen, out of Our said colony of
+ Queensland and its dependencies, We do hereby provide and
+ declare Our pleasure to be, that all and every the powers and
+ authorities herein granted to you shall be, and the same are
+ hereby vested in such person as may be appointed by Us,
+ by Warrant under Our Sign Manuel and Signet, to be Our
+ Lieutenant-Governor of our said colony, or in such person
+ or persons as may be appointed by Us, in like manner, to
+ administer the government in such contingency; or, in the
+ event of there being no person or persons within our said
+ colony so commissioned and appointed by Us as aforesaid, then
+ Our pleasure is, and We do hereby provide and declare, that in
+ any such contingency the powers and authorities herein granted
+ to you shall be, and the same are hereby granted to the
+ Colonial Secretary of our said colony for the time being,
+ and such Lieutenant-Governor, or such person or persons as
+ aforesaid, or such Colonial Secretary, as the case may be,
+ shall exercise all and every the powers and authorities
+ herein granted, until Our further pleasure shall be signified
+ therein.
+
+ 9. And We do hereby require and command all our officers and
+ ministers, civil, and military, and all other the inhabitants
+ of our said colony of Queensland, to be obedient, aiding and
+ assisting unto you, the said Sir George Ferguson Bowen, or, in
+ the event of your death or absence, to such person or persons,
+ as may, under the provisions of this our Commission assume
+ and exercise the functions of Captain-General and
+ Governor-in-Chief of our said colony.
+
+ 10. And We do declare that these presents shall take effect so
+ soon as the same shall be received and published in the said
+ colonies.
+
+ In Witness whereof we have caused these our Letters to be made
+ Patent. Witness Ourself at Westminster, the sixth day of June,
+ in the twenty-second year of Our Reign. By warrant under the
+ Queen's Sign Manual.
+
+ C. ROMILLY.
+
+
+ Given under my hand and Seal at Government House, Brisbane,
+ this tenth day of December, in the year of our Lord one
+ thousand eight hundred and fifty-nine, in the twenty-third
+ year of Her Majesty's Reign.
+
+ (L.s.) G. F. BOWEN.
+
+ _By His Excellency's Command_,
+
+ R. G. W. HERBERT.
+
+ GOD SAVE THE QUEEN!
+
+
+
+
+PROCLAMATION
+
+ By His Excellency SIR GEORGE FERGUSON BOWEN, Knight Commander
+ of the Most Distinguished Order of St. Michael and St.
+ George, Captain-General and Governor-in-Chief of the Colony of
+ Queensland and its Dependencies, and Vice-Admiral of the same,
+ &c., &c., &c.
+
+ WHEREAS Her Majesty has been graciously pleased, by Letters
+ Patent, under the Great Seal of the United Kingdom of Great
+ Britain and Ireland, bearing date at Westminster, the sixth
+ day of June, in the twenty-second year of Her Majesty's Reign,
+ to separate from the Colony of New South Wales the territory
+ described in the said Letters Patent, and to erect the same
+ into a separate Colony, to be called the Colony of Queensland,
+ and has further been pleased to constitute and appoint me,
+
+ SIR GEORGE FERGUSON BOWEN, _Knight Commander of the Most
+ Distinguished Order of St. Michael and St. George_,
+
+ to be Captain-General and Governor-in-Chief, in and over
+ the said Colony of Queensland and in Dependencies: Now,
+ therefore, I, the Captain-General and Governor-in-Chief,
+ aforesaid, do hereby proclaim and declare that I have
+ this day taken the prescribed oaths before His Honor,
+ Alfred James Peter Lutwyche, Esquire, Judge of the
+ Supreme Court, and that I have accordingly assumed the
+ said office of Captain-General and Governor-in-Chief.
+
+ Given under my hand and seal at the Government House,
+ Brisbane, this 10th day of December, in the Year of Our
+ Lord one thousand eight hundred and fifty-nine, and in
+ the twenty-third year of Her Majesty's Reign.
+
+
+ (L.s.) G. F. BOWEN.
+
+ _By His Excellency's Command_,
+
+ R. G. W. HERBERT.
+
+ GOD SAVE THE QUEEN!
+
+
+
+
+ _Government House,
+ Brisbane, 10th December, 1859._
+
+ HIS EXCELLENCY THE GOVERNOR will hold
+ a Levee at Government House, on
+ WEDNESDAY, December 14th, at 11 o'clock,
+ a.m.
+
+ _By Command_,
+ C. E. HARCOURT VERNON,
+ Commander, R.N., A.D.C.,
+
+ REGULATIONS FOR THE LEVEE.
+
+ All gentlemen attending the Levee, to be
+ dressed in uniform or evening costume.
+
+ Each gentleman to be provided with two
+ cards with his name legibly written thereon;
+ one card to be left in the Entrance Hall, and
+ the other to be given to the Aide-de-Camp.
+
+
+
+
+ _Colonial Secretary's Office,
+ Brisbane, 10th December, 1859._
+
+ HIS EXCELLENCY THE GOVERNOR has been
+ pleased to appoint
+
+ ROBERT GEORGE WYNDHAM HERBERT, ESQ.,
+
+ to be Colonial Secretary of Queensland.
+
+ _By His Excellency's Command_,
+ R. G. W. HERBERT.
+
+
+
+
+ _Colonial Secretary's Office,
+ Brisbane, 10th December, 1859._
+
+ HIS EXCELLENCY THE GOVERNOR has been
+ pleased to appoint
+
+
+ ABRAM ORPEN MORIARTY, ESQUIRE,
+
+ to be His Excellency's Acting Private Secretary.
+
+
+ _By His Excellency's Command_,
+ R. G. W. HERBERT.
+
+
+
+
+ _Colonial Secretary's Office,
+ Brisbane, 10th December, 1859._
+
+ HIS EXCELLENCY THE GOVERNOR has been
+ pleased to appoint
+
+ COMMANDER CHARLES EGERTON HARCOURT
+ VERNON, R. N.,
+
+ to be His Excellency's Acting Aide-de-Camp.
+
+ _By His Excellency's Command_,
+ ROBERT G. W. HERBERT.
+
+
+
+
+ _Colonial Secretary's Office,
+ Brisbane, December 10, 1859._
+
+ HIS EXCELLENCY THE GOVERNOR has been
+ pleased to appoint
+
+ RATCLIFFE PRING, ESQUIRE,
+
+ of the Inner Temple, Barrister-at-Law, to be
+ Attorney-General of Queensland.
+
+ _By His Excellency's Command_,
+ ROBERT G. W. HERBERT.
+
+
+ BRISBANE: By Command: T. P. PUGH, Printer,
+ George Street.
+
+
+
+
+INTRODUCTION.
+
+ Terra Australis: The Fifth Continent.--Dampier lands on
+ North-west Coast.--Cook lands at Botany Bay.--Annexes entire
+ Eastern Coast North of 38 deg. S.--Phillip annexes whole
+ of Eastern Coast and part of Southern Coast, including
+ Tasmania.--Fremantle annexes all the rest of the Continent.
+ --Erroneous Impressions of Early Explorers regarding
+ Australia.--Discovery of Bass Strait.--Completion of Coast Map
+ of Australia.--Six Colonies constituted.--Queensland's Natal
+ Day.--Proclamation of Commonwealth.--Inland Exploration.
+
+
+Without disparagement to the adventurous foreign navigators who
+for centuries earlier than the British occupation had suspected the
+existence of "Terra Australis," the "fifth continent" of the globe,
+and had done their best to discover it, it may be safely contended
+that the honour of the delineation of the coast-line belongs to
+Englishmen, the chief of whom were William Dampier and James Cook. In
+1688 Dampier, as super-cargo of the "Cygnet," a trading vessel
+whose crew had turned buccaneers, landed on the north-west coast of
+Australia in lat. 16 deg. 50 min. S. In the year 1699 he again visited
+the coast in charge of H.M.S. "Roebuck," landing at Shark Bay, and
+sailing thence northward to Roebuck Bay.[a] Afterwards Captain James
+Cook, in voyages which extended until 1777, delineated the eastern
+coast-line, and opened up the continent to European enterprise
+and settlement. On 29th April, 1770, Cook, in the little barque
+"Endeavour," 370 tons burthen, entered Sting-ray Harbour (Botany Bay),
+remaining there until 6th May, when he sailed northwards, and, not
+entering Port Jackson, named Port Stephens, "Morton Bay," Bustard
+Bay, and Keppel Islands, landing at several places for the purpose of
+obtaining fresh water and making observations. Thus, coasting along
+for nearly 1,300 miles, on 11th June he narrowly escaped the total
+loss of his vessel when north of Trinity Bay by striking a coral reef.
+After enduring great hardships, and jettisoning all surplus gear, the
+vessel was sailed into the mouth of the Endeavour River, and there
+careened. During the succeeding two months she was thoroughly
+repaired. In August the captain set his course again for the north;
+and on the 23rd of that month, after navigating among the dangerous
+rocks of the Barrier Reef Passage, he safely reached open water and
+landed on Possession Island, near Cape York. There he took formal
+possession, "in right of His Majesty King George III.," of the land he
+had discovered from lat. 38 deg. S. to lat. 10 deg. 30 min. S.
+Sailing through Torres Strait, Cook reached the English Channel in
+the "Endeavour" on 18th June, 1771[b]. It was not until 7th February,
+1788, however, that Captain Phillip, as Governor-General of the vast
+territory then called New South Wales, read to the people whom he had
+brought to Port Jackson in the first fleet his commission proclaiming
+British sovereignty over the whole of the eastern coast of Australia
+and Tasmania, and also over the then unknown southern coast as far
+west as the 135th degree of E. longitude.[c] On 2nd May, 1829, Captain
+Fremantle, hoisting the British flag on the south head of the Swan
+River, took possession of all those parts of Australia not included in
+the territory of New South Wales.
+
+Thus a new continent was added to the British Empire. It was occupied
+by only a few score thousand native blacks, and was believed to be
+uninhabitable by civilised people unless possibly along a strip of
+land south of the Tropic of Capricorn on the eastern, western, and
+southern shores of the continent. Of the north-west Dampier had
+written: "The land is of a dry, sandy soil, destitute of water,
+unless you make wells, yet producing divers sorts of trees." Cook
+occasionally found difficulty in getting water unless by sinking in
+the shore sand; he made no attempt to penetrate the fringe of coast
+or even to explore its inlets. It was not until 1798 that Flinders
+and Bass discovered the channel through Bass Strait, and the former's
+discoveries may be said to have completed the coast map of Australia.
+
+By successive proclamations six colonies were subsequently
+constituted, the last being that of Queensland on 10th December,
+1859. On 1st January, 1901, Queen Victoria's proclamation of the
+Commonwealth of Australia was formally made at Melbourne, the
+prescribed place for the sitting of the Parliament until the federal
+seat of government had been determined. This important step was
+taken 131 years after Captain Cook had annexed the eastern coast
+at Possession Island, and 72 years after Captain Fremantle made the
+possession of the continent as British territory complete by hoisting
+the flag at Swan River.
+
+The story of Australian land exploration is a long one, and it would,
+if complete, reveal many a startling tale of privation and death.
+The earliest exploring expeditions were those of Governor Phillip, in
+1789, when he set out from Sydney to discover Broken Bay first, and
+then explore the Hawkesbury River.[d] At that time the undertaking no
+doubt seemed great, but to-day Broken Bay may almost be regarded as a
+suburb of Sydney. In the same year Captain Tench discovered the Nepean
+River. By the end of the eighteenth century, despite many expeditions,
+the total of the discoveries were the rivers Hawkesbury, Nepean,
+Grose, and Hunter, and the fertile Illawarra district to the south of
+Sydney. In 1813 Blaxland, Lawson, and Wentworth discovered a pass over
+the Blue Mountains, and opened the way to the interior. Later in
+the same year, following in their footsteps, George William Evans
+discovered a river flowing inland, which he named the Macquarie, and
+that led to the discovery of the Bathurst Plains, and other country
+beyond the Blue Mountains. John Oxley, who in 1817 penetrated the
+country until he struck rivers flowing to the south-west, found
+himself in shallow stagnant swamps, with no indication that the rivers
+reached the sea. Oxley and Evans made further discoveries to the
+north-west of Sydney during the next seven years, the principal result
+being the finding of Liverpool Plains. Cunningham, the botanist,
+also was in the field of exploration in 1823. In the year 1824 Hume,
+accompanied by W. H. Hovell, crossed the Murrumbidgee River, and some
+time afterwards saw the snow-capped mountains of the Australian Alps.
+In their progress to Port Phillip they discovered the Murray River,
+and ultimately reached their destination, which proved to be the
+seashore near the site of Geelong.
+
+In 1828 Captain Charles Sturt discovered the Darling River. In the
+next year he reached the Murray near its confluence with the Darling;
+in 1830 he went down the stream by boat, and finally reached the sea
+at Encounter Bay, east of St. Vincent Gulf. In 1826 Major Lockyer
+founded King George Sound Settlement; in 1828 Captain Stirling
+examined the mouth of the Swan River, and was afterwards, in 1831,
+appointed Lieutenant-Governor at Perth, the settlement established in
+1829 by Captain Fremantle. Other explorers traced the country for some
+distance to the northward, and a settlement, called Port Essington,
+which had an ephemeral existence, was formed on the northern coast. In
+1831 Major Mitchell explored the country north-west from Sydney, and
+in 1845-6 he traversed the Darling Downs, afterwards penetrating as
+far north as the Drummond Range. Allan Cunningham had previously, in
+1827, discovered the Darling Downs, and in the next year, by locating
+Cunningham's Gap, he connected the Downs with the Moreton Bay
+Settlement. A year later he explored the source of the Brisbane River,
+that being his last expedition.
+
+In 1831 Major Bannister crossed from Perth to King George Sound.
+In 1836 John Batman landed at Port Phillip, and permanently settled
+there. The same year Adelaide was founded by Captain Sir John
+Hindmarsh, the first Governor of South Australia. In 1838 E. J.
+Eyre discovered Lake Hindmarsh on his journey from Port Phillip to
+Adelaide. Next year George Hamilton travelled overland from Sydney to
+Melbourne, and Eyre penetrated from the head of Spencer's Gulf to Lake
+Torrens.
+
+In 1840 Patrick Leslie settled on the Condamine; in the year following
+Stuart and Sydenham Russell formed Cecil Plains station. In 1842
+Stuart Russell discovered the Boyne River, travelling from Moreton
+Bay to Wide Bay in a boat. In 1844-5 Captain Sturt conducted his Great
+Central Desert expedition. In the same year Dr. Ludwig Leichhardt
+started on his first expedition from Jimbour station to Port
+Essington; and in the next year Sir Thomas Mitchell went on his Barcoo
+expedition. In 1846 A. C. Gregory entered upon his first expedition in
+Western Australia. In 1848 Leichhardt set out upon his last journey,
+from which he never returned. In the same year Kennedy made his fatal
+venture up the Cape York Peninsula, and A. C. Gregory explored the
+Gascoigne. Next year J. S. Roe, Surveyor-General of Western Australia,
+travelled from York to Esperance Bay. In 1852 Hovenden Hely, in charge
+of a Leichhardt search party, started from Darling Downs. In 1855
+Gregory and Baron von Mueller started on an expedition to North
+Australia in the same search, and discovered Sturt's Creek and the
+Elsey River.
+
+In 1858 Frank Gregory reached the Gascoigne River, Western Australia,
+and discovered Mount Augustus and Mount Gould. A. C. Gregory in the
+same year, when searching for Leichhardt, confirmed the identity of
+the Barcoo River with Cooper's Creek. In 1858 also McDouall Stuart
+started on his first expedition across the continent; in the following
+year he started again, and one of his party, Hergott, discovered and
+named Hergott Springs. In 1859 G. E. Dalrymple discovered the main
+tributaries of the Lower Burdekin, also the Bowen and the Bogie
+Rivers, and in the year following Edward Cunningham and party explored
+the Upper Burdekin.
+
+In 1860 the ill-fated Burke and Wills expedition left Melbourne, and
+reached the Gulf of Carpentaria, but their return journey resulted in
+the death of Burke, Wills, and Gray.
+
+In 1861 McDouall Stuart crossed the continent; Frank Gregory
+discovered the Hammersley Range, and the Fortescue, Ashburton, de
+Grey, and Oakover Rivers in Western Australia. In the same year
+William Landsborough left the Gulf of Carpentaria in search of Burke
+and Wills; and Alfred Howitt started from Victoria on the same errand.
+Edwin J. Welch, Howitt's second in command, found King, the only
+survivor of the expedition; and McKinlay, with W. O. Hodgkinson as
+lieutenant, started from Adelaide in the search, and crossed the
+continent, reaching the coast at Townsville. In 1863 John Jardine
+formed a settlement at Somerset, Cape York; and in the next year
+his adventurous brothers, Alexander and Frank, travelled overland to
+Somerset along the Peninsula, which Kennedy had failed to do.
+
+In 1864 Duncan McIntyre travelled from the Paroo to the Gulf of
+Carpentaria, and died there. Next year J. G. Macdonald visited the
+Plains of Promise, and Frederick Walker marked the telegraph line from
+Rockingham Bay to the Norman River. In 1869 Mr. (now Sir John) Forrest
+made his first expedition to Lake Barlee; in 1870 he travelled the
+Great Bight from Perth to Adelaide, and in 1871 took charge of a
+private expedition in search of pastoral country. In 1872 William
+Hann, a Northern squatter, led an expedition equipped by the
+Queensland Government, and discovered the Walsh, Palmer, and Upper
+Mitchell Rivers, and found prospects of gold which led to great
+mineral discoveries in North Queensland. Hann reached the coast at
+Princess Charlotte Bay. In the same year J. W. Lewis travelled round
+Lake Eyre to the Queensland border. Ernest Giles also made his first
+expedition in 1872, discovering Lake Amadeus, and on a second trip in
+1873 discovered and named Gibson's Desert, after one of his party who
+died there. In 1873 Major Warburton crossed from Alice Springs, on the
+overland telegraph line, to the Oakover River, Western Australia. In
+1875-6 Ernest Giles made a third and successful attempt from Adelaide
+to reach Western Australia. In the same year W. O. Hodgkinson started
+on a north-west expedition to the Diamantina and Mulligan Rivers, on
+which he officially reported.
+
+In 1878 Prout brothers, looking for country across the Queensland
+border, never returned. In 1878 N. Buchanan, on an excursion to
+the overland telegraph line from the Queensland border, discovered
+Buchanan's Creek. In 1878-9 Ernest Favenc, starting from Blackall
+in charge of the "Queenslander" transcontinental expedition, reached
+Powell's Creek station, on the overland telegraph line; four years
+later he explored the rivers flowing into the Gulf, particularly the
+Macarthur, and then crossed to the overland telegraph line. In 1878
+Winnecke and Barclay, surveyors, started to determine the border lines
+of Queensland and South Australia, returning in 1880 with their work
+done. In 1879 Alexander Forrest led an expedition from the de Grey
+River, Western Australia, to the overland telegraph line, discovering
+the Ord and Margaret Rivers.
+
+By this time there was little left of the continent, save Western
+Australia, to explore, though men in search of pastoral country still
+found occupation in expeditions to discover the unknown in Queensland
+and the Northern Territory. In 1896 Frank Hann, younger brother of the
+explorer, who had left Queensland, traversed the country to the
+north of King Leopold Range, discovering a river which he named
+the Phillips, but which was afterwards renamed the Hann by the
+Surveyor-General of Western Australia. Afterwards Hann travelled from
+Laverton, Western Australia, to Oodnadatta, in South Australia. F. S.
+Brockman is another explorer who was leader of a Kimberley expedition
+a few years ago, and discovered in North-west Australia 6 million
+acres of basaltic country clad with blue grass, Mitchell and kangaroo
+grasses, and other fodder vegetation. The Elder expedition, projected
+on an ambitious scale in 1891 to complete the exploration of the
+continent, started under David Lindsay, but the results were less
+valuable than its generous and enterprising originator anticipated.
+From a second Elder expedition under L. A. Wells no great results were
+recorded. The same may be said of the Carnegie expedition in Western
+Australia. Yet the sum total of the information obtained was valuable.
+Australia owes much to her adventurous explorers, as well as to
+the men who, following up their tracks, placed stock on much of the
+country that produced great wealth to the people, though as a rule
+neither explorers nor pastoral pioneers personally benefited much by
+their labours and privations.
+
+ [Footnote a: See Dampier's "Collection of Voyages, 1729."]
+
+ [Footnote b: See Cook's "Journal during his First Voyage Round
+ the World, 1768-71." W. J. L. Wharton, 1893.]
+
+ [Footnote c: Historical Records of New South Wales, vol. i.]
+
+ [Footnote d: See "History of Australian Exploration," 1888;
+ and "Explorers of Australia," 1908, both by Ernest Favenc.]
+
+
+[Illustration (hand-written letter):
+
+Victoria by the Grace of God of the United Kingdom of Great Britain
+and Ireland, Queen, Defender of the Faith, &c.
+
+In pursuance of Our Order made by and with the advice of our Privy
+Council on the 6th day of June in the year of Our Lord 1859, We do by
+these presents summon and call together a Legislative Assembly in and
+for Our Colony of Queensland to advise and give consent to the
+making of Laws for the peace, welfare and good Government of our said
+Colony.----
+
+And we do enjoin and require Our subjects, inhabitants of Our said
+Colony, and being duly qualified in that behalf, to proceed to the
+Election of Members to serve in the said Legislative Assembly in
+pursuance of Our Writs to be issued in Our name, in the first instance
+by Our Governor of Our Colony of New South Wales, and thereafter by
+Our Governor of Our said Colony of Queensland.----
+
+----And We do further enjoin and require the Members who shall be so
+elected, to assemble and meet together and to be and appear before Us
+for the purposes aforesaid at the Court House Buildings Brisbane on
+the 22nd day of May in the present year.
+
+----In testimony whereof we have caused the Great Seal of Our Colony
+of Queensland to be affixed to this Our Writ.----
+
+----Witness our trusty and well-beloved Sir William Thomas Denison,
+Knight Commander of the Most Honorable Order of the Bath, Governor
+General in and over all Her Majesty's Colonies of New South Wales,
+Tasmania, Victoria, South Australia, Western Australia and Queensland,
+and Captain General and Governor-in-chief of the Territory of New
+South Wales and Vice Admiral of the same &c. &c. &c. at Government
+House Sydney, in New South Wales aforesaid this twentieth day of March
+in the Twenty third year of Our reign, and the year of our Lord one
+thousand eight hundred and sixty--
+
+
+W. Denison
+
+By His Excellency's Command
+
+Robert G. W. Herbert
+
+God save the Queen!]
+
+
+
+
+THE SUBDIVISION OF AUSTRALIA.
+
+
+(MAPS 1 AND 2.)
+
+Since the issue of Captain Arthur Phillip's Commission as Governor
+in 1786 there have been no less than ten successive modifications in
+Australian boundaries, all internal save the first, which severed
+Van Diemen's Land from New South Wales. Map 1 represents Australia as
+depicted before the time of Captain Cook. Map 2 shows the territory as
+divided into two parts by Governor Phillip's Commission. The continent
+was severed by a north-and-south line along the 135th meridian of east
+longitude, and all the eastern part declared to be the territory of
+New South Wales.
+
+
+VAN DIEMEN'S LAND (MAP 3).
+
+Under an Imperial Act of 1823 a Royal Commission was issued to
+Governor Arthur on 14th June, 1825, erecting Van Diemen's Land into a
+separate colony, as shown in Map 3.
+
+
+NEW SOUTH WALES--ALTERED BOUNDARY (MAP 4).
+
+On 6th July, 1825, a Commission appointing Sir Ralph Darling Governor
+of New South Wales, after describing the boundary of the colony as
+then existing, declared that the western boundary should be extended
+6 degrees further west to the 129th meridian of east longitude,
+including all the adjacent islands in the Pacific Ocean.
+
+
+WESTERN AUSTRALIA (MAP 5).
+
+Although Western Australia had been occupied in 1826 by Major Lockyer,
+and a settlement had been established at Swan River in 1829, the
+boundaries of the colony were not definitely described until 1831,
+when Sir James Stirling's Commission of appointment as Governor gave
+him authority over all that part of the continent to the west of 129
+degrees east longitude. A supplementary Commission issued in 1873
+included all the adjacent islands in the Indian Ocean.
+
+
+SOUTH AUSTRALIA (MAP 6).
+
+South Australia was proclaimed a British Province by Letters Patent on
+the 28th December, 1836; bounded on the north by the 26th parallel of
+south latitude; on the south by the Southern Ocean; on the west by the
+132nd meridian of east longitude; on the east by the 141st meridian.
+
+
+VICTORIA (MAP 7).
+
+In 1851 the territory previously known as Port Phillip was separated
+from New South Wales. In July, 1851, the legal symbol of the fact was
+found in the issue of writs of election for members of the
+Legislative Council. This was done under an Act of the New South Wales
+Legislature, passed to give effect to the Act passed in 1850 "for the
+Better Government of Her Majesty's Australian Colonies." Boundaries:
+On the north and north-east by a straight line from Cape Howe to the
+nearest source of the River Murray; thence by the course of that river
+to the eastern boundary of South Australia; and on the south by the
+sea: the River Murray to remain within New South Wales.
+
+
+NEW SOUTH WALES--ALTERED BOUNDARY (MAP 8).
+
+By a later statute passed in 1855, the boundaries of New South Wales
+were defined as follows:--"All the territory lying between the 129th
+and 154th meridians of east longitude, and north of the 40th parallel
+of south latitude, including all islands and Lord Howe Island, except
+the territories comprised within the boundaries of the province of
+South Australia and the colony of Victoria as at present established."
+
+
+[Illustration: Map 1 (1770).]
+
+[Illustration: Map 2 (1786).]
+
+[Illustration: Map 3 (1825).]
+
+[Illustration: Map 4 (1825).]
+
+[Illustration: Map 5 (1831).]
+
+[Illustration: Map 6 (1836).]
+
+[Illustration: Map 7 (1851).]
+
+[Illustration: Map 8 (1855).]
+
+[Illustration: Map 9 (1859).]
+
+[Illustration: Map 10 (1862).]
+
+[Illustration: Map 11 (1861-3).]
+
+[Illustration: Map 12 (1863).]
+
+
+QUEENSLAND (MAP 9).
+
+In 1859 Queensland was severed from New South Wales by Letters
+Patent issued to Sir George Bowen, the boundaries being given as
+follows:--"So much of the said colony of New South Wales as lies
+northward of a line commencing on the sea coast at Point Danger, in
+latitude about 28 degrees 8 minutes south, and following the range
+thence which divides the waters of the Tweed, Richmond, and Clarence
+Rivers from those of the Logan and Brisbane Rivers, westerly, to the
+Great Dividing Range between the waters falling to the east coast
+and those of the River Murray; following the Great Dividing Range
+southerly to the range dividing the waters of Tenterfield Creek from
+those of the main head of the Dumaresq River; following that range
+westerly to the Dumaresq River; and following that river (which is
+locally known as the Severn) downward to its confluence with the
+Macintyre River; thence following the Macintyre River (which lower
+down becomes the Barwan) downward to the 29th parallel of south
+latitude; and following that parallel westerly to the 141st meridian
+of east longitude, which is the eastern boundary of South Australia;
+together with all and every the adjacent islands, their members and
+appurtenances, in the Pacific Ocean; and do by these presents separate
+from our said colony of New South Wales and erect the said territory
+so described into a separate colony to be called the 'Colony of
+Queensland.'"
+
+
+ANNEXATION TO QUEENSLAND, 1862 (MAP 10).
+
+On 12th April, 1862, the Duke of Newcastle advised Governor Bowen that
+Letters Patent, of which a copy was enclosed, had been issued annexing
+to Queensland the following territory--namely, "so much of our colony
+of New South Wales as lies to the northward of the 21st parallel of
+south latitude, and between the 141st and 138th meridians of east
+longitude, together with all and every the adjacent islands, their
+members and appurtenances in the Gulf of Carpentaria." The area thus
+annexed added to Queensland about 120,000 square miles of territory,
+which now comprises such centres as Birdsville, Boulia, Cloncurry,
+Camooweal, and Burketown.
+
+
+ANNEXATION TO SOUTH AUSTRALIA (MAP 11).
+
+An Imperial Act of 1861 enacted that "so much of the colony of New
+South Wales, being to the south of the 26th degree of south latitude,
+as lies between the western boundary of South Australia and 129
+degrees east longitude, shall be and the same is hereby detached
+from the colony of New South Wales and annexed to the colony of South
+Australia, and shall for all purposes whatever be deemed to be part of
+the last-mentioned colony from the day in which the Act of Parliament
+is proclaimed."
+
+
+THE NORTHERN TERRITORY ANNEXED TO SOUTH AUSTRALIA (MAP 12).
+
+There still remained, nominally belonging to New South Wales though
+detached from that colony, the country now known as the Northern
+Territory and forming part of South Australia, lying northward of
+the 26th parallel of south latitude, and between 129 degrees and 138
+degrees east longitude. That area was by Letters Patent, dated 6th
+July, 1863, issued under the Imperial Act of 1861, annexed to South
+Australia until it was "the Royal pleasure to make other disposition
+thereof."
+
+
+
+
+[Illustration]
+
+
+GOVERNORS OF QUEENSLAND.
+
+
+ (1) SIR GEORGE FERGUSON BOWEN, G.C.M.G.: Dec. 1859--Jan. 1868.
+
+ (2) COLONEL SAMUEL WENSLEY BLACKALL: Aug. 1868--Jan. 1871.
+
+ (3) MARQUIS OF NORMANBY: Aug. 1871--Nov. 1874.
+
+ (4) WILLIAM WELLINGTON CAIRNS, C.M.G.: Jan. 1875--Mar. 1877.
+
+ (5) SIR ARTHUR EDWARD KENNEDY, G.C.M.G., C.B.: April 1877--May 1883.
+
+ (6) SIR ANTHONY MUSGRAVE, G.C.M.G.: Nov. 1883--Oct. 1888.
+
+ (7) SIR HENRY WYLIE NORMAN, G.C.B., G.C.M.G., C.I.E.: May
+ 1889--Dec. 1895.
+
+ (8) LORD LAMINGTON, G.C.M.G.: April 1896--Dec. 1901.
+
+ (9) SIR HERBERT CHARLES CHERMSIDE, G.C.M.G., C.B.: Mar. 1902--Oct.
+ 1904.
+
+ (10) LORD CHELMSFORD, K.C.M.G.: Nov. 1905--May 1909.
+
+ (11) SIR WILLIAM MACGREGOR, G.C.M.G., C.B.: Dec. 1909--
+
+
+
+
+QUEEN OF THE NORTH.
+
+
+ESSEX EVANS.
+
+ Stand forth, O Daughter of the Sun,
+ Of all thy kin the fairest one,
+ It is thine hour of Jubilee.
+ Behold, the work our hands have done
+ Our hearts now offer unto thee.
+ Thy children call thee; O come forth,
+ Queen of the North!
+
+ Brow-bound with pearls and burnished gold
+ The East hath Queens of royal mould,
+ Sultanas, peerless in their pride,
+ Who rule wide realms of wealth untold,
+ But they wax wan and weary-eyed:
+ Thine eyes, O Northern Queen, are bright
+ With morning light.
+
+ Fear not thy Youth: It is thy crown--
+ The careless years before Renown
+ Shall load its tines with jewelled deeds
+ And press thy golden circlet down
+ With vaster toils and greater needs.
+ Fear not thy Youth: its splendid power
+ Awaits the hour.
+
+ Stand forth, O Daughter of the Sun,
+ Whose fires through all thine arteries run,
+ Whose kiss hath touched thy gleaming hair--
+ Come like a goddess, Radiant One,
+ Reign in our hearts who crown thee there,
+ With laughter like thy seas, and eyes
+ Blue as thy skies.
+
+ Ah, not in vain, O Pioneers,
+ The toil that breaks, the grief that sears,
+ The hands that forced back Nature's bars
+ To prove the blood of ancient years
+ And make a home 'neath alien stars!
+ O Victors over stress and pain
+ 'Twas not in vain!
+
+ Jungle and plain and pathless wood--
+ Depths of primeval solitude--
+ Gaunt wilderness and mountain stern--
+ Their secrets lay all unsubdued.
+ Life was the price: who dared might learn.
+ Ye read them all, Bold Pioneers,
+ In fifty years.
+
+ O True Romance, whose splendour gleams
+ Across the shadowy realm of dreams,
+ Whose starry wings can touch with light
+ The dull grey paths, the common themes:
+ Hast thou not thrilled with sovereign might
+ Our story, until Duty's name
+ Is one with Fame!
+
+ Queen of the North, thy heroes sleep
+ On sun-burnt plain and rocky steep.
+ Their work is done: their high emprise
+ Hath crowned thee, and the great stars keep
+ The secrets of their histories.
+ We reap the harvest they have sown
+ Who died unknown.
+
+ The seed they sowed with weary hands
+ Now bursts in bloom through all thy lands;
+ Dark hills their glittering secrets yield;
+ And for the camps of wand'ring bands--
+ The snowy flock, the fertile field.
+ Back, ever back new conquests press
+ The wilderness.
+
+ Below thy coast line's rugged height
+ Wide canefields glisten in the light,
+ And towns arise on hill and lea,
+ And one fair city where the bright
+ Broad winding river sweeps to sea.
+ Ah! could the hearts that cleared the way
+ Be here to-day!
+
+ A handful: yet they took their stand
+ Lost in the silence of the land.
+ They went their lonely ways unknown
+ And left their bones upon the sand.
+ E'en though we call this land our own
+ 'Tis but a handful holds it still
+ For good or ill.
+
+ What though thy sons be strong and tall,
+ Fearless of mood at danger's call;
+ And these, thy daughters, fair of face,
+ With hearts to dare whate'er befall--
+ Tall goddesses and queens of grace--
+ Fill up thy frontiers: man the gate
+ Before too late.
+
+ Sit thou no more inert of fame,
+ But let the wide world hear thy name.
+ See where thy realms spread line on line--
+ Thy empty realms that cry in shame
+ For hands to make them doubly thine!
+ Fill up thy frontiers: man the gate
+ Before too late!
+
+ Prepare, ere falls the hour of Fate
+ When death-shells rain their iron hate,
+ And all in vain thy blood is poured--
+ For dark aslant the Northern Gate
+ I see the Shadow of the Sword:
+ I hear the storm-clouds break in wrath--
+ Queen of the North!
+
+
+
+
+[Illustration]
+
+
+PREMIERS OF QUEENSLAND.
+
+
+ (1) SIR R. G. W. HERBERT: Dec. 1859--Feb. 1866; July 1866--Aug. 1866.
+
+ (2) HON. ARTHUR MACALISTER: Feb. 1866--July 1866; Aug. 1866--Aug.
+ 1867; Jan. 1874--June 1876.
+
+ (3) SIR R. R. MACKENZIE: Aug. 1867--Nov. 1868.
+
+ (4) SIR CHARLES LILLEY: Nov. 1868--May 1870.
+
+ (5) SIR A. H. PALMER: May 1870--Jan. 1874.
+
+ (6) HON. GEORGE THORN: June 1876--Mar. 1877.
+
+ (7) HON. JOHN DOUGLAS: Mar. 1877--Jan. 1879.
+
+ (8) SIR THOMAS MCILWRAITH: Jan. 1879--Nov. 1883; June 1888--Nov.
+ 1888; Mar. 1893--Oct. 1893.
+
+ (9) SIR S. W. GRIFFITH: Nov. 1883--June 1888; Aug. 1890--Mar. 1893.
+
+ (10) HON. D. B. MOREHEAD: Nov. 1888--Aug. 1890.
+
+ (11) SIR H. M. NELSON: Oct. 1893--April 1898.
+
+ (12) HON. T. J. BYRNES: April 1898--Sept. 1898.
+
+ (13) SIR J. R. DICKSON: Oct. 1898--Dec. 1899.
+
+ (14) HON. A. DAWSON: 1st Dec. 1899--7th Dec. 1899.
+
+ (15) HON. R. PHILP: Dec. 1899--Sept. 1903: Nov. 1907--Feb. 1908.
+
+ (16) SIR A. MORGAN: Sept. 1903--Jan. 1906.
+
+ (17) HON. W. KIDSTON: Jan. 1906--Nov. 1907: Feb. 1908 (still in
+ office).
+
+
+[Illustration]
+
+
+
+
+PART I.--OUR NATAL YEAR.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I.
+
+THE BIRTH OF QUEENSLAND.
+
+ Issue of Letters Patent and Order in Council.--Appointment of
+ Sir George Ferguson Bowen as First Governor.--Continuity of
+ Colonial Office Policy.--Instructions to Governor.--Munificent
+ Gift of all Waste Lands of the Crown.--Temporary Limitation
+ of Electoral Suffrage.--Responsible Government Unqualified by
+ Restrictions or Reservations.--Governor General of New South
+ Wales Initiates Elections.
+
+
+Fifty years ago an emphatic expression of confidence in the
+self-governing competence of the people of North-eastern Australia
+was given by the British Government of Lord Derby. On 6th June, 1859,
+Queen Victoria in Council adopted Letters Patent--which had been
+already approved in draft on 13th May--"erecting Moreton Bay into
+a colony under the name of Queensland," and appointing Sir George
+Ferguson Bowen to be "Captain-General and Governor-in-Chief of the
+same." On the same day an Order in Council was made "empowering the
+Governor of Queensland to make laws and provide for the administration
+of justice in the said colony"; also to constitute therein a
+Government and Legislature as nearly resembling the form of Government
+and Legislature established in New South Wales as the circumstances of
+the colony would allow. This meant that representative and responsible
+government had been granted to the people of the new colony to the
+full extent that it was enjoyed by the people of New South Wales under
+the epoch-making Constitution Act of 1855. It meant also that the
+whole of the unalienated Crown Lands of the colony were vested in the
+Legislature.
+
+Next day, the 7th June, the annual session of the Imperial Parliament
+was opened, and four days later an amendment upon the Address in Reply
+was carried in the House of Commons, whereupon Lord Derby and his
+Conservative colleagues forthwith resigned, and were succeeded by a
+Liberal (or Whig) Ministry under Lord Palmerston. The new Government
+included men of such distinction as Mr. W. E. Gladstone, Lord John
+Russell, and the Duke of Newcastle, the last-mentioned assuming the
+office of Colonial Secretary. The change of Ministry, however, caused
+no interruption in the continuity of Colonial Office policy; and no
+time was lost in despatching Sir George Bowen to discharge the highly
+responsible duties imposed upon him by the Queen's Commission.
+
+In notifying Sir George Bowen of his appointment, Sir Edward Bulwer
+Lytton tendered him some friendly advice. He said that Sir George
+would experience the greatest amount of difficulty in connection with
+the squatters, and he went on in these words:--"But in this, which is
+an irritating contest between rival interests, you will wisely abstain
+as much as possible from interference. Avoid taking part with one
+or the other.... The first care of a Governor in a free colony," he
+continued, "is to shun the reproach of being a party man. Give
+all parties and all Ministries formed the fairest play." In
+public addresses Sir George was advised to "appeal to the noblest
+idiosyncracies of the community--the noblest are generally the most
+universal and the most durable. They are peculiar to no party.
+Let your thoughts never be distracted from the paramount object of
+finance. All states thrive in proportion to the administration of
+revenue." A number of excellent maxims followed, among them--"The more
+you treat people as gentlemen the more 'they will behave as such.'"
+Again, "courtesy is a duty which public servants owe to the humblest
+member of the community." And, in a postscript, "Get all the details
+of the land question from the Colonial Office, and master them
+thoroughly. Convert the jealousies now existing between Moreton Bay
+and Sydney into emulation." All these generous didactics from the
+great novelist and Tory statesman, followed by congratulations and
+good wishes, must have been stimulative to the aspirations of the
+embryo Governor charged with the foundation of a new colony at the
+Antipodes.
+
+The value of autonomous government is generally appreciated; but
+the free gift of land made by the Imperial authority to the various
+self-governing colonies has no parallel in human history. In the case
+of Queensland the recipients were a mere handful of people, mostly
+settled at one end of a vast territory, at least half of which was
+unexplored. Plenary authority was in fact given to manage and control
+the waste lands belonging to the Crown, as well as to appropriate the
+gross proceeds of the sales of any such lands, and all other proceeds
+and revenues of the same from whatever source arising, including all
+royalties, mines, and minerals, all of which by the Letters Patent
+and the Order in Council were vested in the Legislature. This vesting,
+however, was subject to a proviso validating all contracts, promises,
+and engagements lawfully made on behalf of Her Majesty before the
+proclamation took effect. The proviso also stipulated that there
+should be no disturbance of any vested or other rights which had
+accrued or belonged to the licensed occupants or lessees of Crown
+Lands under any repealed Act, or under any Order in Council issued in
+pursuance thereof.[a] This reservation was really for the protection
+of a number of people in the colony, and not for the benefit of the
+Imperial Government. The licensed occupants would be subject to the
+mandates of the Legislature; while the reservation in favour of the
+owners of freehold lands was of a comparatively trivial nature, the
+total area alienated from the Crown a year after the establishment
+of the new colony amounting to only 108,870 acres, which had yielded
+£305,250 as purchase-money chiefly to the New South Wales Treasury.
+Taking the 670,500 square miles within the colony thus handed over to
+be worth five shillings per acre, or £160 the square mile, the total
+value of the Imperial gift to Queensland would be £107,280,000. Of
+course that price was not immediately realisable, and before much of
+the vast area could be utilised millions of capital must be expended
+in reclamation and development; but as some indication of ultimate
+value it may be pointed out that the land sold up to 31st December,
+1860, realised at the rate of nearly £3 per acre. That the "waste"
+land was not a dead asset was shown by the fact that the public
+revenue of the colony for the first year of its existence was
+£178,589, to which rents and sales of land contributed a substantial
+proportion. It was not surprising, therefore, that Sir George Bowen's
+early despatches to the Secretary of State testified to the grateful
+and enthusiastic loyalty of the people of the colony to the Queen and
+the mother country.
+
+When the previously established Australian colonies were severally
+constituted the people were kept for years in a state of tutelage, so
+to speak, power being exercised in each case by a Governor advised by
+Ministers appointed by and responsible only to the Crown. The single
+Chamber of the Legislature, if not wholly nominated, included a
+prescribed number of members appointed by the Governor, and was
+practically under his control. It had therefore been supposed by
+many colonists that separation having been hotly opposed by some
+influential residents of the territory concerned--and having been
+emphatically condemned by an official despatch received in England
+from Sir William Denison, then Governor-General of New South Wales,
+almost at the last moment--conditions in restraint of popular
+government would have been imposed on the establishment of Queensland.
+For the separation struggle had been long continued, and marked by
+much personal and party bitterness. The agitation had been originated
+and chiefly maintained by people on the seaboard led by ardent
+patriots introduced a few years previously under the auspices of Dr.
+John Dunmore Lang, who while undoubtedly a great Australian patriot
+was unhappily not a _persona grata_ with the controlling authority at
+the Colonial Office. The movement was from its initiation protested
+against by the enterprising Crown tenants who had driven their flocks
+and herds overland from New South Wales, and had, taking their
+lives in their hands, adventurously formed stations in the remote
+wilderness. They not unnaturally dreaded the effect of popular
+sovereignty upon what they deemed their vested interests. But British
+statesmen, whether Conservative or Liberal, appear to have felt that,
+responsible government having been granted to and enjoyed by the
+people of New South Wales--and consequently to the people of that part
+of its territory about to be separated--any Imperial limitation of
+popular rights already conferred would be regarded as an unjustifiable
+encroachment upon public liberty achieved after many years of ardent
+struggle in the parent colony. True, the language of the Letters
+Patent and Order in Council was afterwards construed to involve some
+temporary limitation of the manhood suffrage which had been affirmed
+by the Parliament of New South Wales; but whether this limitation
+was actual or inadvertent does not clearly appear. It was not of much
+practical consequence, perhaps, in a new country that was rapidly
+multiplying its scant population, whether or not the electors for
+the first Legislative Assembly were required to have some other
+qualification than adult age and six months' residence; but the
+incident operated prejudicially against the Government, and gave a
+rallying cry to Opposition politicians.
+
+A somewhat singular course adopted by the Home Government was the
+authorisation of the Governor-General of New South Wales to appoint
+the first members of the Queensland Legislative Council, with a term
+of five years, although subsequent appointments were to be made by the
+Governor of Queensland for the term of the members' natural lives.
+Sir William Denison was also empowered to summon and call together the
+first Legislative Assembly of Queensland; to fix by proclamation the
+number of members; to divide the colony into convenient electoral
+districts; to prepare the electoral rolls; to issue the writs of
+election; and to make all necessary provision for the conduct of the
+first elections. It was required, moreover, that the Parliament should
+be called together for a date not more than six months after the
+proclamation of the colony, and should remain in existence, unless
+previously dissolved by the Governor, for a period of five years. Yet
+there was practically no limitation of popular authority except
+in respect of the preliminary arrangements, for the Queensland
+consolidating and amending Constitution Act of 1867 reaffirmed all
+rights and privileges conferred by the New South Wales Constitution
+Act.
+
+ [Footnote a: These powers were given in the New South Wales
+ Constitution Act, 1855, Sect. 2.]
+
+[Illustration: HOUSES OF PARLIAMENT, BRISBANE]
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II.
+
+INITIATION OF RESPONSIBLE GOVERNMENT.
+
+ Arrival of Sir George Bowen in Brisbane.--The First
+ Responsible Ministry.--Injunctions to Governor by Secretary
+ of State in regard to choice of Ministers.--Ex-members of New
+ South Wales Legislature take Umbrage.--The Governor on the
+ Characteristics of Various Classes of Colonists.--The Governor
+ a Dictator.--The Microscopic Treasury Balance.--Gladstone as
+ Site of Capital.--Mr. Herbert as a Parliamentary Leader.
+
+
+When on 10th December, 1859, Governor Bowen, accompanied by Mr. Robert
+George Wyndham Herbert, his private secretary, had landed amidst great
+popular rejoicings at Brisbane, read the Queen's proclamation of the
+new colony, and been sworn in as Governor by Mr. Justice Lutwyche (the
+Resident Supreme Court Judge for Moreton Bay), he was compelled to
+choose Ministers and then govern the colony for nearly six months
+before they could be constitutionally approved by the representatives
+of the people in Parliament assembled. Sir George Bowen was faced by
+the dearth of seasoned public men, and by the dread of enlisting the
+services of strong partizans whose opinions and personal qualities
+were alike unknown to him. But as a constitutional Governor he could
+do no executive act until he had secured responsible advisers, and
+therefore the immediate appointment of Ministers was imperative. Hence
+on the day of the official landing a "Gazette" notice contained the
+proclamation of the Queen's Letters Patent, and notification of the
+appointment of Mr. Herbert as Colonial Secretary with Mr. Ratcliffe
+Pring as Attorney-General. Thus with the Governor and his two
+Ministers an Executive Council was at once formed; and five days later
+Mr. (afterwards Sir) Robert Ramsay Mackenzie was gazetted Colonial
+Treasurer.[a]
+
+These appointments gave umbrage to certain colonists, particularly to
+those who, having represented Moreton Bay constituencies in the New
+South Wales Assembly, were deemed in many respects most eligible as
+advisers of the Queen's representative. Mr. Herbert had come out from
+England with Sir George Bowen as private secretary at the moderate
+salary of £250 a year. He was a scholarly young man of 28 years, and
+among other advantages had enjoyed the privilege of holding for a
+time the post of private secretary to Mr. Gladstone. Indeed, both the
+Governor and his secretary, although the former had been selected
+by Sir E. B. Lytton, Colonial Secretary in the superseded Derby
+Administration, may be classed among the Gladstone school of
+politicians. Sir George Bowen probably recollected the injunction of
+Sir E. B. Lytton against partizanship, and the danger of identifying
+himself with the "squatters." For not only were they, speaking
+generally, partizans of a pronounced type, but the reservation of
+tenant rights made by the Order in Council of 6th June was calculated
+to taint them with a strong personal, or at least class, bias in land
+legislation and administration.
+
+In his official despatches to the Colonial Secretary Sir George Bowen
+did not mention at length these initial difficulties; but to Sir E.
+B. Lytton he wrote more fully. "I have often thought," he said, under
+date 6th March, 1860, "that the Queensland gentlemen-squatters bear a
+similar relation to the other Australians that the Virginian planters
+of 100 years back bore to the other Americans. But there is a
+perfectly different class of people in the towns. Brisbane, my present
+capital, must resemble what Boston and the other Puritan towns of
+New England were at the close of the last century. In a population
+of 7,000[b] we have 14 churches, 13 public-houses, 12 policemen. The
+leading inhabitants of Brisbane are a hard-headed set of English
+and Scotch merchants and mechanics; very orderly, industrious, and
+prosperous; proud of the mother country; loyal to the person of the
+Queen; and convinced that the true federation for these colonies is
+the maintenance of the integrity of the Empire, and that the true
+rallying-point for Australians is the Throne."
+
+To the Under Secretary for the Colonies (Mr. Chichester Fortescue)
+Sir George Bowen wrote on 6th June, 1860:--"At the first start of all
+other colonies the Governor has been assisted by a nominated Council
+of experienced officials; he has been supported by an armed force;
+and he has been authorised to draw, at least at the beginning, on the
+Imperial Treasury for the expenses of the public service. But I was an
+autocrat; the sole source of authority here, without a single soldier,
+and without a single shilling. There was no organised force of
+any kind on my arrival, though I have now, by dint of exertion and
+influence, got up a respectable police on the Irish model, and a very
+creditable corps of volunteers. And as to money wherewith to carry
+on the Government, I started with just 7½d. in the Treasury. A
+thief--supposing, I fancy, that I should have been furnished with some
+funds for the outfit, so to speak, of the new State--broke into the
+Treasury a few nights after my arrival, and carried off the 7½d.
+mentioned. However, I borrowed money from the banks until our revenue
+came in, and our estimates already show (after paying back the sums
+borrowed) a considerable balance in excess of the proposed expenditure
+for the year."
+
+Sir George Bowen's initial difficulties were not chiefly financial,
+however; neither was the lack of material force to give effect to the
+law a serious embarrassment. He was empowered practically to select
+the seat of government by determining where the Parliament should
+first assemble. Among the opponents of separation had been certain
+squatters who sought to place the capital of the new colony in some
+more geographically central place than Brisbane. Of these Mr. William
+Henry Walsh, of Degilbo, Wide Bay, one of the most able and virile of
+the Moreton Bay ex-members of the New South Wales Parliament, was very
+prominent. Offended by the Governor's selection of Mr. Herbert for
+the Premiership, Mr. Walsh refused a seat in either House of the new
+Parliament, and sought to create an agitation in the more northerly
+ports of Maryborough and Rockhampton, each containing about 500
+inhabitants, in favour of Gladstone as the capital--a place which
+Sydney political influence had always indicated as the future seat of
+government when a new northern colony came to be established. But
+each of the towns mentioned had ambitions of its own, and regarded
+Gladstone as a rival. The movement therefore failed; but the colony
+for years lost the benefit of Mr. Walsh's services at a time when
+every capable man was needed to assist in organising the government
+and directing the Parliament of political novices who took their
+seats a few months later. Mr. Arthur Macalister, solicitor, another
+ex-member of the New South Wales Parliament and an excellent debater,
+was perhaps equally disappointed, but he was at least more diplomatic.
+As member for Ipswich he took his seat on the Opposition benches, and
+after two years' service in the Assembly was invited by Mr. Herbert to
+join the Government. This invitation he accepted, and four years later
+he became the party leader. The sequel proved that the Governor had
+made no mistake in selecting Mr. Herbert for his Premier. He proved
+a first-rate parliamentary leader, and succeeded in giving the
+new colony the inestimable advantage of over six years of stable
+government at the outset of its career, in marked contrast to the
+kaleidoscopic Administrations which so greatly hindered political
+progress in more than one of the southern colonies.
+
+ [Footnote a: For personnel of first Ministry and Parliament,
+ see Appendix B, post.]
+
+ [Footnote b: The census of 1861 showed that then the
+ population was only a little over 6,000.]
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III.
+
+DIFFICULTIES OF EARLY ADMINISTRATIONS.
+
+ Meeting of First Parliament.--Amendment on Address in Reply
+ defeated by Speaker's Casting Vote.--Adoption of Address in
+ Reply.--Compromise between Parties Indispensable.--Successful
+ Inauguration of Responsible Government.--The Governor's
+ Egotism.--Mr. Herbert's Retirement.--Mr. Macalister
+ Succeeds.--Financial and Political Crisis.--Proposed
+ Inconvertible Paper Money.--Governor Undeservedly Blamed.
+
+
+On the 7th of May, 1860, the 26 members of the first Legislative
+Assembly--among them the three Ministers of the Crown--having been
+returned, Parliament was summoned to meet at Brisbane on the 22nd
+of that month, just a few days before the maximum limit of delay
+specified by the Queen's Order in Council. On 1st May Sir William
+Denison had appointed 11 members for a five years' term to the
+Legislative Council, and three weeks later Sir George Bowen,
+conceiving the number insufficient, appointed four members additional
+for a life term, raising the total number to 15. Thus the first
+Parliament of Queensland was at length fully constituted, and all
+preliminaries had been completed for entering upon the work of the
+first session.[a]
+
+On the 22nd of May the session opened, and after members had been
+sworn in Sir Charles Nicholson, for some years Speaker in the Sydney
+Parliament, was elected President of the Council, and Mr. Gilbert
+Eliott--formerly an officer of the Royal Artillery--the member for
+Wide Bay, Speaker of the Assembly. Both Houses then adjourned for a
+week.
+
+The Governor's Speech, which was of great length, having been
+delivered, the Address in Reply was moved in both Houses. In the
+Council the leadership had been entrusted to Captain Maurice Charles
+O'Connell, Minister without portfolio, who had long been in the
+Port Curtis district as a trusted official of the New South Wales
+Government, and in early life had served with great distinction as
+a British soldier in Spain. In the Council no difficulty arose in
+adopting the Address. But in the Assembly an amendment moved for the
+adjournment of the debate at an early stage was only defeated by the
+Speaker's casting-vote, one member being absent. It thus appeared that
+the Assembly was almost equally divided. This was a dangerous position
+to be faced by a new Premier without a day's previous experience in
+Parliament, and with the two most formidable debaters in the House,
+Mr. Macalister and Mr. (afterwards Sir) Charles Lilley, in active
+opposition. Mr. Herbert made a diplomatic speech, however, and the
+Address passed without much further contention. The division list
+showed that, despite the efforts of the Governor and his Premier to
+avoid identification with the squatters, the votes of the latter were
+essential to the existence of the Ministry, since the members of the
+Opposition consisted almost exclusively of town representatives. The
+following day (30th May) the Government nominee for the Chairmanship
+of Committees, Mr. C. W. Blakeney, was defeated by 15 votes to 7, and
+Mr. Macalister, who was nominated by the Opposition, was thereupon
+elected on the voices. The division of parties evidently made
+compromise indispensable to the passing of much-needed legislation.
+But much had been gained by the Government. All its members had
+been elected by the constituencies, and the Assembly had practically
+acknowledged that it was entitled to a fair trial. Seeing that
+for nearly six months Ministers had held their portfolios without
+parliamentary sanction, and had naturally made many executive mistakes
+during that time, it may be held that the first session of the first
+Parliament had been inaugurated successfully from the Ministerial
+standpoint. In his official despatches, as well as in private letters
+to friends in England, Sir George Bowen revealed himself as a genial
+though apparently unconscious egotist. His assumption of what must
+strike the discriminating reader as a dominating influence in the
+political and executive affairs of the colony was scarcely consistent
+with his position as a ruler representing the Queen, and competent
+to act only on constitutional advice. An impartial survey of Mr.
+Herbert's six years of office as Premier leads to the conclusion
+that chiefly to his judicious counsel and incomparable tact in the
+management of men the Governor owed the exemplary success attained in
+the organisation and government of the colony.
+
+[Illustration: VIEW FROM RIVER TERRACE, BRISBANE]
+
+The Governor's complete if rather florid reports to the Colonial
+Office, however, justly evoked cordial responses from the Secretary of
+State. Sir George Bowen was a most capable man, but sometimes betrayed
+want of both reticence and dignity. He was enthusiastic as well as
+optimistic, and his retention in Queensland for the unusually long
+period of eight years is an unanswerable certificate of his official
+merit. Yet it is undoubted that when bad times overtook the colony in
+1866 both the Governor and his Premier appeared to have outlived their
+popularity, though their combined action at that time for restoring
+the public credit was perhaps the most eminent service that either of
+them had ever rendered. Mr. Herbert had formed no ties in Australia;
+he had exercised supreme influence in the local Legislature; but
+now that there were several members with both natural capacity and
+parliamentary experience aspiring to the Premiership, believing that
+he had better prospects of preferment in the Imperial service, he
+determined to return to England. His subsequent long career at the
+Colonial Office justified his anticipations, and it may be safely
+said of his departure from Queensland that the colony's loss was the
+Empire's gain.
+
+The ex-Premier did not leave the colony abruptly, however, on handing
+over, on the 1st of February, 1866, all ministerial responsibilities
+to Mr. Arthur Macalister, his senior colleague in the Cabinet. He
+occupied his seat for nearly six months, in fact, and conducted
+himself with native dignity and becoming self-effacement as an
+unofficial member of the Assembly. Unhappily he was not to leave
+Australia without having a wholly unexpected shadow suddenly cast over
+his long administration of affairs. In mid-July the news reached the
+colony of the catastrophic failure of the Agra and Masterman's Bank,
+which had undertaken to finance the Queensland railway loan then being
+rapidly spent. The financial crisis of 1866 played havoc in London; it
+was of crushing effect in Queensland, for the Treasurer could not
+meet his obligations, and the railway workmen threatened a riot
+in consequence of non-payment of their hard-earned wages. In this
+emergency, Parliament being in session, the Treasurer, Mr. (afterwards
+Sir) Joshua Peter Bell desired to adopt the recent American expedient
+of issuing an inconvertible paper currency. The Cabinet approved, but
+on the Governor being consulted before the introduction of the bill he
+emphatically declined to promise the Royal assent to the measure, if
+passed. This he did for the all-sufficient reason that his Imperial
+instructions compelled him to reserve the assent to all measures
+affecting the currency. Ministers immediately resigned, and the
+Governor became the victim of irrational public obloquy for a time.[b]
+Mr. Herbert consented to lead a stop-gap Administration, and under his
+guidance a bill was at once passed empowering the Government to raise
+£300,000 by the issue of Treasury bills bearing not more than 10
+per cent. interest per annum. They were forthwith disposed of at a
+premium, and the credit of the Government was restored. The temporary
+Government then resigned, and Mr. Macalister resumed office. Thus
+Queensland was saved from the double peril of paralysed credit and a
+debased paper currency.
+
+ [Footnote a: The names of the first Ministers, and of members
+ of both Houses of the first Parliament, will be found in
+ Appendix B. It may be of interest to mention that of all these
+ representative men one, Mr. A. W. Compigne, who resigned his
+ seat in the Council in 1864, alone survived till the Jubilee
+ Year; and that he died at his residence, Brisbane, on Sunday,
+ 4th July, 1909, in the 92nd year of his age.]
+
+ [Footnote b: Sir George Bowen, writing to the Right Honourable
+ Robert Lowe, afterwards Lord Sherbrooke, said:--"Several
+ leading members of Parliament were ill-treated in the streets;
+ and threats were even uttered of burning down Government
+ House, and of treating me 'as Lord Elgin was treated at
+ Montreal in 1849.'"]
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV.
+
+THE FIRST SESSION OF PARLIAMENT.
+
+ Work of the First Session.--Four Land Acts Passed.--Summary
+ of Land "Code."--Pastoral Leases.--Upset Price of Land £1
+ per acre.--Agricultural Reserves.--Land Orders to Immigrants.
+ --Cotton Bonus.--Lands for Mining Purposes.--Renewal of
+ Existing Leases.--Governor's Laudation of "Code."--Praises
+ Parliament.--Abolition of State Aid to Religion.--Primary
+ and Secondary Education.--Wool Liens.--First Estimates and
+ Appropriation Act.
+
+
+The first session closed on the 18th of September, having extended
+over nearly four months. On the 28th of August, Sir Charles Nicholson
+having determined to retire and go to England, Captain O'Connell
+was appointed President of the Legislative Council by the Governor's
+Commission. Mr. John James Galloway at the same time accepted the
+appointment of Minister without portfolio, and held the leadership of
+the Council for the remainder of the session. Without other change in
+the personnel of the Cabinet the session was brought to a close with
+the position of the Government considerably improved. They had not
+carried all the measures promised in the Opening Speech, but the
+new Acts passed numbered sixteen, some of them important, and all
+necessary. Seeing that both Houses were new to their work, the result
+went to prove that the confidence of the Imperial Government in the
+self-governing competence of the colonists had not been misplaced.
+Even the "Moreton Bay Courier," then hostile to the Government,
+admitted that much good work had been done, the chief exception taken
+being to the Act authorising the granting of a five years' additional
+term for existing pastoral leases. The Act reserved power of
+resumption during the currency of the lease, but the Opposition
+contended that the power would never be exercised.
+
+No less than four Land Bills were passed during the session, and the
+Governor, writing to the Secretary of State, said, referring to them,
+that these Acts might be called "The Land Code of Queensland." The
+first of the "Code," which was entitled the Unoccupied Crown Lands
+Occupation Act, repealed the New South Wales pastoral leasing law of
+1858, and the Orders in Council then in force in Queensland in so far
+as they were repugnant to the new Act. Any person was to be permitted
+to apply for an occupation license for one year for a run of 100
+square miles, and if there were more than one applicant for the same
+run preference was to be given to any person who had occupied it for
+two months previously. Within nine months after the granting of the
+license application might be made by the occupier for a 14 years'
+lease conditionally on the run having been stocked to one-fourth its
+assumed carrying capacity of 100 sheep or 20 head of cattle per square
+mile. An absolute power of resumption at any time during the lease
+on 12 months' notice was given. The second was the Tenders for Crown
+Lands Act, authorising the issue of 14 years' leases to lessees of
+runs already liable for rent; also authorising the acceptance of
+tenders (which had been held over awaiting legislation) for runs
+occupied since 1st January, 1860, and the granting to the tenderers of
+14 years' leases.
+
+The third measure of the "Code" was the Alienation of Crown Lands Act,
+which fixed the minimum upset price at auction or otherwise at £1 per
+acre; and which provided for the setting apart, within six months from
+the bill becoming law, of not less than 100,000 acres on the shores
+or navigable waters of Moreton Bay, Wide Bay, Port Curtis, and Keppel
+Bay, and also within five miles of all towns with upwards of 500
+inhabitants, as agricultural reserves of not less than 10,000 acres
+each, which should not be for sale by auction, but surveyed and opened
+to selection as farms of not less than 40 nor more than 320 acres
+at the fixed price of £1 per acre; the purchase money to be paid in
+advance, and the Crown grant issued at the end of six months if the
+selector had occupied the land and commenced to improve it during
+that term. If a selector failed so to occupy and improve, the
+purchase-money was to be returned to him, less 10 per cent., and the
+land again opened for selection. A selector was also entitled to lease
+three times the area of his farm--but so that the whole should not
+exceed 320 acres--in one lot or conterminous lots within the same
+reserve, for a term of five years, at sixpence per acre rent, with
+right of purchase, if fenced in, at £1 per acre at any time during the
+currency of the lease. A further provision of importance in the
+same Act was the granting of a land order for £18 on arrival to each
+immigrant from Europe who paid his own passage, and a further land
+order for £12 at the end of two years' residence in the colony. It was
+also provided that two children between the ages of four and fourteen
+should be reckoned as one statute adult. Further provision was made
+by which a bonus in land was to be paid during the next three years of
+£10 per bale of good cleaned Sea Island cotton, and for the two years
+next following £5 per bale. And finally any person or company was
+empowered to purchase land not exceeding 640 acres in one block for
+mining purposes, other than for coal or gold, at the upset price of
+20s. per acre.
+
+The fourth measure of the "Code" was the Occupied Crown Lands Leasing
+Act, which enabled the lessee of any Crown land held under previously
+existing regulations, or under the Tenders for Crown Lands Act of the
+current session, to get a five years' renewal at the end of his term.
+The principle of compensation was recognised in these leasing Acts,
+but no provision was made for the continuance of the pre-emptive right
+of purchase, conferred by the old Orders in Council.
+
+[Illustration: BARRON FALLS, CAIRNS RAILWAY, NORTH QUEENSLAND]
+
+Sir George Bowen wrote to the Secretary of State in terms of exalted
+laudation of these four Acts. "I regard them," he said, "as a
+practical and satisfactory settlement of this much-vexed question,
+which is still embittering the social life and retarding the material
+advance of the neighbouring and elder colonies." To a friend in
+England he wrote,--"The legislation of our first Parliament has
+settled the long quarrel between the pastoral and agricultural
+interests which has raged in all new countries ever since the days of
+Abel, the 'keeper of sheep,' and Cain, the 'tiller of the ground!'" To
+the Secretary of State he added,--"This Parliament may fairly boast
+of having passed, with due caution and foresight, a greater number
+of really useful measures, and of having achieved a greater amount of
+really practical legislation, than any other Parliament in any of
+the Australian colonies since the introduction of parliamentary
+government." Sir George quotes a Sydney journal,[a] which before
+separation was antagonistic to that movement, as saying,--"The
+Government of Queensland has been either very fortunate or very
+judicious. The last to enter the race, Queensland has shot ahead, and
+taken the first place. While in Melbourne the popular rage has been
+worked up by its guardians into riot, and while in Sydney the tactics
+of the popular party have succeeded in placing the land question in a
+position of chronic blockade, in Queensland it has been settled on
+a moderate and reasonable basis, and without so much as a single
+ministerial crisis."
+
+In the prorogation speech Sir George Bowen reviewed at length the work
+of the session. From that and other sources it may be stated that
+the limitation of the number of salaried officials capable of being
+elected to the Legislative Assembly had been fixed so as not to
+exceed five; the collection of parliamentary electors' names had been
+discontinued, and facilities provided for self-registration; State
+aid to religion had been abolished, the rights of existing incumbents
+being preserved; the existing system of primary education had been
+abolished, and provision made for the appointment by the Governor in
+Council of a "Board of General Education," a body corporate authorised
+to expend such sums as Parliament might vote for primary education.
+The Board was empowered to assist any primary school that submitted
+to its supervision and inspection, and conformed to its rules and
+by-laws; but it was forbidden to contribute to the repair or building
+of any school unless the fee-simple thereof had been previously vested
+in the Board. And nothing in the Act could be held to authorise any
+inspection of or interference with the special religious instruction
+which might be given in such school during the hours set apart for
+such instruction. Not more than 5 per cent. of the Board's funds might
+be applied to granting exhibitions at any grammar school to primary
+scholars who had passed the competitive examination prescribed by the
+Board.
+
+The Board was also authorised to devote a portion of its funds to
+assist in the establishment of normal or training schools, or to
+industrial schools. The Grammar Schools Act of 1860, which with a few
+amendments is still in force, was passed. An Act for taking the
+census of the colony on 1st April, 1861, became law. An Act for the
+appointment of Commissioners to adjust accounts with New South Wales
+was another measure of the session. It may be remarked, however, that
+an adjustment was never reached, but the amount in dispute became
+so comparatively small when mutual credits had been allowed that the
+question was permitted to lapse. Another measure of some practical
+importance was the Liens on Wool Act, which extended also to mortgages
+on sheep, cattle, and horses; and the Scab in Sheep Act, the main
+provisions of which are still in force. The gold export duty was
+abolished by an Act which merely validated the then official practice
+of omitting to collect the duty imposed by a New South Wales Act
+passed seven years previously.
+
+It must be admitted that this record of work done by a new Parliament,
+in a colony that had no existence as a self-governing entity twelve
+months before, deserved much of the approbation expressed of its
+proceedings by the Governor. Indeed, the "Courier" of the day, in
+commenting upon the work of the session, gave honourable members
+of both Houses hearty credit for the assiduity with which they had
+attended to public duty, even to the neglect in many cases of their
+own personal and business affairs. There was then no payment of
+members in any form. And there were other matters than legislation
+which deserve notice. The Estimates had been passed, totalling
+£220,808 for the service of the year; and the Governor had
+congratulated the Assembly upon having appropriated one-fourth of the
+total estimated revenue to roads, bridges, and other public works,
+besides ample sums to hospitals, libraries, botanic gardens, and
+schools of arts. No less than £31,261 was voted for police, of which
+£13,516 was absorbed for the native troopers then necessary for the
+protection of the adventurous pioneers who were conducting what may be
+termed exploratory settlement in the remote interior.
+
+ [Footnote a: "Sydney Morning Herald," September, 1860.]
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V.
+
+QUEENSLAND IN 1860.
+
+ Rush of Population.--High Prices for Stock for occupying New
+ Country.--Sparse Population.--Rockhampton most Northerly Port
+ of Entry.--Navigation inside Barrier Reef unknown.--Tropical
+ Queensland Unexplored.--Ignorance of Climate, Resources, and
+ Conditions.--Primary Industries in 1860.--Primitive Means
+ of Communication.--Public Revenue, Bank Deposits, and
+ Institutions.
+
+
+Thus was Queensland fairly launched on her career as a self-governing
+state of the Empire. The very announcement of impending separation had
+caused a rush of population from the southern colonies; while even the
+Crown tenants, who had for years regarded the movement with aversion,
+found much compensation in their escape from the operation of the
+imminent Robertson land law which threatened free selection before
+survey throughout the entire area of New South Wales. The rush for new
+pastoral country not only attracted the most adventurous bushmen in
+Australia to the new colony, but also sent up the prices of sheep and
+cattle to fabulous rates, as country tendered for could not be held
+unless stocked to the prescribed minimum number. At the time a large
+area of coast country was occupied by sheep, and symptoms of disease
+were so menacing that the sales for stocking up new country proved the
+salvation of some of the "inside" squatters; although looked at in the
+light of experience it may be doubted whether the too rapid occupation
+of the wilderness country, then inhabited solely by the aborigines,
+was not partly accountable for disastrous results when the demand for
+stocking up ceased, and the natural water on most runs proved wholly
+insufficient to carry stock through the mildest drought. Still, at the
+time Queensland attracted a population of seasoned Australians whose
+colonising value was inestimable; and these in addition to many
+immigrants from the mother country. Consequently the colony made
+phenomenal progress.
+
+A glance at the official statistics for the year 1860--the earliest
+available--will illustrate the insignificance, compared with the
+vast area of the territory held, of the population, trade, and liquid
+capital of the community. The total population on 31st December,
+1860, was estimated at 28,056, most of these people being more or less
+concentrated in the towns. The rest were scattered sparsely over the
+country between the southern boundary and the tropic of Capricorn for
+a distance of about 250 miles back from the coast-line. Rockhampton
+was then the most northerly port of entry; the site of the present
+town of Bundaberg was virgin forest, the entrance to the Burnett
+River from Hervey Bay being as yet unknown; Mackay, Bowen, Townsville,
+Ingham, Geraldton, Cairns, Port Douglas, Cooktown, and the Thursday
+Island settlement were non-existent; and of the coast waters beyond
+Keppel Bay little more was known than the narratives of Captain
+Cook and Lieutenant Flinders at the close of the eighteenth century
+disclosed.
+
+The existence of the magnificent natural harbour of 1,000 miles in
+length formed by the Great Barrier Reef was undreamt of; the passage
+was regarded rather as one of Nature's traps for the unwary navigator
+than the future safe and easily traversed route of great steamship
+lines along a coast dotted with prosperous ports kept busy as the
+outlets of a richly productive hinterland.
+
+The tropical climate of the northern coast lands was then supposed to
+be deadly to members of the white races; the interior was declared to
+be almost entirely devoid of surface water--for the greater part of
+the year a fiery furnace, and at intervals of capricious periodicity
+ravaged by destructive floods. It was assumed to be a country where
+the white man would wither and the coloured man thrive--a land wholly
+unfit for the home of civilised peoples, and only adapted to the wants
+of the degraded aboriginal native. It was ignorantly affirmed that the
+sheep stations intended to be formed in the far western country must
+be failures, and English experts held that under the tropical sun the
+sheep, if it could live in Queensland at all, would soon carry
+hair instead of wool. Even in Southern Queensland the agricultural
+possibilities of the land were sadly unappreciated. True, in the
+population centres there were loud preachers of the gospel of
+reclamation of the wilderness so that it might bud and blossom as the
+rose; but their homilies for the most part fell upon deaf ears--the
+seasoned bushman, like the great squatter, tenaciously held that even
+the Darling Downs would not grow a cabbage.
+
+So backward was the farming industry that in 1860 the total area under
+cultivation was 3,353 acres in a country of greater extent than France
+and Germany combined. Of this trifling cultivated area only 196 acres
+were under wheat, and not an acre under sugar-cane. True, there were
+nearly three and a-half million sheep, half-a-million cattle, and
+24,000 horses finding subsistence on the limitless but ill-watered
+natural pastures. But at that time the annual clip from the sheep,
+though wool was the chief export of the colony, totalled only
+5,000,000 lb., or equal to about 1½ lb. to each fleece. Mining,
+except for coal, of which 12,327 tons was raised in 1860, was almost
+non-existent, although 2,738 fine ounces of gold are shown by the
+statistics to have been won during the year.
+
+[Illustration: TREASURY BUILDINGS, BRISBANE]
+
+In 1860 there was not a mile of railway either open for traffic or
+under construction; not a mile of electric telegraph wire; nor, save
+between Brisbane and Ipswich, was there a formed or metalled road, the
+only avenues of transport being along the bridle path or the
+teamsters' track. The country was destitute of culverts and bridges
+over watercourses, and the so-called roads were impassable for days,
+weeks, or even months in succession after the seasonal rains. The
+northern shipping trade was limited to a small steamer running once a
+fortnight between Brisbane, Maryborough, and Rockhampton, but even
+that had been arranged after the proclamation of the colony, partly to
+meet administration exigencies, with the assistance of the new
+Government. A fortnightly steamer from Sydney ran direct to
+Maryborough, and another to Rockhampton, with the apparent object of
+discouraging mutual intercourse among the ports. A weekly steamer ran
+between Brisbane and Sydney, in addition to a few small sailing craft
+for cargo purposes.
+
+Although Sir George Bowen declared that on arrival he found nothing in
+the Treasury save a few coppers, the revenue for the first year
+reached £178,589. The expenditure for the year 1860 was £17,086 less
+than the revenue, yet, through the Government having to lean upon the
+banks in December, 1859, there was an overdraft of over £19,000 at the
+end of the first year. But the banks themselves had little money among
+them, the net assets slightly exceeding half a million sterling, and
+the aggregate deposits totalling less than a quarter of a million. At
+the end of 1860, out of the 28,000 people in the colony 163 were
+"small capitalists" with an aggregate of £7,545, or about £46 per
+depositor, in the Savings Bank. Yet there were six charitable
+institutions in which 397 persons found relief. Of subscribers to
+"public libraries" there were 538, and they had at their disposal
+5,000 volumes from which to select reading for the leisure hour. There
+were 41 schools, with a total of 1,890 pupils. The number of letters
+posted showed a low degree of cultivation, for the average number
+posted as well as received by each person was just seven a year, or
+slightly more than one every two months. Of newspapers a rather fewer
+number passed through the post office. Surely all these things were on
+a microscopic scale, recollecting that the people of Queensland had
+been endowed with autonomous government, and had unfettered control of
+more than one-fifth of the total area of Australia.
+
+Old Queenslanders who still survive, and can meditate retrospectively
+upon the past, will be impressed with the marvellous optimism of all
+classes of the population 50 years ago. The townspeople, enfranchised
+with most political power by reason of their numbers, knew little of
+the dormant resources of the inland country or its climatic vagaries.
+They could not realise the privations, the hard labour, and the deadly
+monotony of early settlement upon the land. The farmer had usually no
+market, and in raising his produce he had to contend against droughts,
+floods, pests, and isolation, and he was fortunate if his produce
+brought from the store-keeper the cost of rations on which his family
+could frugally subsist. The squatter, too, incurred enormous risks,
+though he had a market for his wool at all times; and, if there was no
+domestic consumption of sheep and cattle upon which he could rely, his
+surplus stock brought a fair return from the boiling-down pots. But he
+had to get his produce to port before a money return could be secured;
+and as pastoral settlement pushed further out transport obstacles were
+often crushing. It was no unusual occurrence for one wool clip to
+be detained on a remote station until the next year's shearing had
+commenced. A lien had therefore usually to be given on the clip, and
+the rate of interest, including agent's commission, was commonly
+12 per cent. per annum, while the high carriage rate made rations
+extremely costly; so that even with good seasons the margin of profit
+was small. In bad years ruin became well-nigh inevitable. The pioneer
+squatter spent most of his strenuous life in the saddle, alternately
+worried by bad seasons, low prices, and his bank overdraft. It is
+easy, therefore, to understand the temptation which assailed him to
+regard as his own the country which he had reclaimed at the expense of
+his vitality as well as his capital. When he visited town after a
+term of voluntary exile human nature often asserted itself, and
+the holiday-making squatter disbursed his hard-earned money with a
+prodigal hand, a fact not forgotten by his political opponents. The
+shepherd, too, yielded to temptation, and at the end of a year's
+solitary life in his bush hut longed for nothing so much as an
+alcoholic stimulant or a bottle of pickles and gay human society. Thus
+he prodigally knocked down his cheque in town, and in a week or two
+again abandoned civilisation at the call of the bush. Fifty years
+ago the urban people perhaps lived almost as comfortably as they
+do to-day, but the bushman, whether farmer, squatter, shepherd, or
+stockman, had usually a life of exhausting labour, bad food, dull
+surroundings, and often in consequence indifferent health. Still the
+landless colonist of 1860 had unbounded faith in his country; and if
+he fought earnestly, sometimes passionately, against what he termed
+squatting encroachment, it is now apparent that had not the pastoral
+tenure been jealously limited by Parliament insurmountable obstacles
+would have been placed in the path of progress. In future pages of
+this work it will be seen that the often too sanguine anticipations of
+individual colonists of Queensland's natal year were rudely shattered
+by stern experience; while, on the other hand, the opening up of
+unsuspected resources as often enriched the general community.
+
+
+
+
+PART II.--FROM NATAL YEAR TO JUBILEE.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I.
+
+THE LEGISLATURE.
+
+ The Governor.--His Functions: Political and Social.--His
+ Emoluments.--Administrations that have held Office.--Number
+ of Members of Council and Assembly.--Emoluments of Assembly
+ Members.--Good Results of Responsible Government in
+ Queensland.
+
+
+In a self-governing dependency of the Empire the King's
+representative, while competent to take official action only on
+constitutional advice, is not a mere figurehead in the Government.
+He is, so to speak, one of the three branches of the Legislature.
+No expenditure can be voted by Parliament except after receipt of a
+message of appropriation from the Governor; and no bill can become law
+without the Royal assent, which he, subject to certain reservations,
+is empowered to give. As President of the Executive Council, too,
+the Governor has a voice in administration, although the actual
+power vests in the Ministry so long as it commands the confidence of
+Parliament. But the Governor is in constant touch with his Premier,
+and therefore, apart from the official intercourse at meetings of the
+Executive Council, His Excellency exchanges ideas informally with the
+executive head of the Government. The Governor has social duties, too,
+and these are not unimportant as bringing the King's representative
+into personal contact with his Majesty's colonial subjects of both
+sexes and various classes. The Governor's attendance at public and
+social functions also furnishes a touch of sprightly colour to the
+drab shade which would otherwise often characterise public
+gatherings. He carries with him a distinctive atmosphere of Imperial
+comprehensiveness which usefully neutralises a narrow parochialism
+that might tend to induce men and women to forget that they, while a
+politically independent community, yet form an integral part of the
+great Empire of the Mistress of the Seas. Thus it is that our most
+experienced public men have emphasised the importance of maintaining
+direct communication with the Imperial authority through a Governor
+appointed by and responsible to the King.
+
+Pending the decision of Parliament, the Imperial Government
+provisionally fixed the salary of the first Governor at £2,500 a
+year. In the session of 1861, Parliament, representing a population
+of 34,000 persons, not only voted an increase to £4,000, but also by
+statute made the payment retrospective as from 1st January, 1860. At
+this sum the salary remained until 1874, when Mr. Oscar de Satge, a
+member of the Opposition, carried a motion affirming the principle of
+an increase. This motion the Government accepted, and the salary was
+increased to £5,000 a year, at which figure it remained from that
+time until 1904, when it was reduced to £3,000. Three Governors
+successively filled the office for the fifteen years ending with
+November, 1874; and six for the thirty years between 1874 and October,
+1904. In the latter year an amendment of the Constitution Act was made
+by a bill introduced by the Government, reducing the salary of future
+Governors to £3,000, for reasons exhaustively set forth by the Premier
+in moving the second reading. The chief grounds of reduction, it may
+be mentioned, were the altered situation created by the establishment
+of the Commonwealth, and the steps of a similar character already
+taken in the Southern States.
+
+Twenty-five Ministries have held office during the fifty-year period.
+On that led by the late Sir Robert Herbert comment has already been
+made. It ended a useful Queensland career in 1866, after more than
+six years of office. The succeeding Macalister Ministry, with an
+interruption of eighteen days by a second Herbert Ministry of an
+ephemeral nature, and with reconstructions, lasted until August, 1867,
+when it was displaced by the Mackenzie-Palmer Administration. Mr.
+Macalister was a clever politician; a concise and trenchant speaker;
+and a capital parliamentary leader in so far as the House work
+was concerned. But he was lacking in force, and his Ministry was,
+moreover, much in the nature of coalition representing both squatting
+and anti-squatting interests at a time when bitter controversy
+prevailed. Mr. (afterwards Sir) R. R. Mackenzie, who was held in
+general respect for his personal qualities, likewise lacked strength
+as a politician, and the real force behind him was Mr. (afterwards
+Sir) Arthur Hunter Palmer. His Ministry was at the time termed "pure
+merino," every member of it, save Mr. Pring, the Attorney-General,
+being identified with the pastoral industry.
+
+In November, 1868, the Lilley Ministry was formed. It lasted only till
+April, 1870, and was more than once reconstructed during its tenure of
+office. It included Mr. Macalister, between whom and the Premier
+there was inconvenient rivalry, but its members were all Liberals by
+reputation. The Premier, however, was Radical rather than Liberal
+in his opinions, and his abolition of primary school fees without
+parliamentary authority, and the ordering of the steamer "Governor
+Blackall" in Sydney, with the object of fighting the A.S.N. Company,
+without the consent even of his colleagues, brought about the downfall
+of the Ministry as soon as Parliament met in 1870, only one supporter,
+the late Mr. Henry Jordan, voting with them in a division on a want of
+confidence motion. Mr. (afterwards Sir) Charles Lilley was perhaps
+the most accomplished debater that ever spoke in the Queensland
+Parliament, and throughout most of his public career, as the member
+for Fortitude Valley, he was a popular hero. As an educationist he was
+undoubtedly both sincere and enthusiastic, but his colleagues found
+his imperious moods difficult to contend against.
+
+[Illustration: COAL WHARVES, SOUTH BRISBANE]
+
+The Palmer Ministry met Parliament in May, 1870, and held office for
+more than three and a-half years, although for a great part of the
+time the Government had no working majority. Indeed, for months it
+fought, with a majority of one in a full House of 32, a determined
+Opposition in the Assembly ably led by Mr. Lilley. All business was
+blocked for many weeks, and eventually 13 members of the Opposition,
+headed by Mr. Lilley, waited as a deputation upon the Governor
+(Colonel Blackall) requesting his intervention on the ground that
+Ministers did not possess their confidence or the confidence of the
+House. The Governor declined to interpose, and subtly remarked that he
+had known many Oppositions in Parliament, but never yet knew one that
+had confidence in the Government of the day. The interview did not
+assist the Opposition cause. A second session opened on 5th July,
+1870, and, being defeated two days later by 17 to 11, Mr. Palmer
+was granted a dissolution.[a] The Premier had proved himself an
+indomitable fighter, and his appeal to the constituencies was not
+wholly unsuccessful. Obstruction continuing in the new Parliament, Mr.
+Palmer was granted another dissolution in June, 1871, and from that
+time had a fairly effective majority at his back for two years, when
+being defeated he was granted another dissolution, from which his
+party came back unsuccessful. If the Opposition of those days did not
+obstruct by means of the "stonewall" to the same extent that has been
+the case of recent years, they attained their end in another way. In
+the session of 1871-2 for a period of five weeks the Government failed
+to obtain a quorum except on two occasions, on both of which there was
+a "count out." The Opposition were desirous of forcing the Government
+to pass a Redistribution of Seats Bill before Supply was granted, and
+by persisting in these tactics they compelled the Government to agree
+to a compromise.
+
+The Palmer Ministry on assuming office had found the public finances
+in a bad way, but partly through good management and partly with the
+help of good seasons and improving markets for exports, they retired
+in January, 1874, after a succession of surpluses, and with railway
+construction being vigorously pushed on both in Southern and Central
+districts.
+
+In January, 1874, when the new Parliament met after the general
+election, Mr. Palmer and his colleagues found themselves in so
+hopeless a minority that they resigned without awaiting a debate
+on the Address in Reply. Amidst great hilarity in the Assembly, and
+despite the vehement protests of the candidate, Mr. William Henry
+Walsh was elected Speaker, although a member of the Palmer party; and
+on his refusal to accept the office was humorously threatened with
+the penalty of disobedience to the order of the House. But after
+consideration he assumed the Speakership, and while in the chair
+discharged his duties with credit.
+
+The Macalister-Hemmant Ministry forthwith assumed office, Mr. Lilley,
+who made the announcement in the Assembly on their behalf, declining a
+portfolio. Shortly afterwards he was appointed a Judge of the
+Supreme Court. The Ministry was initiated with Mr. MacDevitt as
+Attorney-General, but in August following he retired, and Mr. S. W.
+Griffith, who had proved an inconvenient supporter of the Government
+as the leader of a subsection, accepted the portfolio. Mr. (afterwards
+Sir) Thomas McIlwraith was Mr. Macalister's Minister for Works, but
+at the close of the first session he differed from the Premier on the
+question of a great private railway scheme, and therefore resigned
+office. On the House reassembling in 1875 Mr. McIlwraith took the
+front cross-bench seat next the gangway on the Opposition side, and,
+while not approving of all the tactics of the party led by Mr. Palmer,
+gave it his general support. The first session of the Parliament had
+been distinguished by the passing of a Customs tariff incidentally
+protective, Mr. Hemmant, the Treasurer, showing uncommon qualities as
+a financial speaker. He closed his first year at the Treasury with
+an apparent deficit of £200,762. His predecessor, when making his
+Financial Statement in 1872, had anticipated a deficit. To prevent
+this he proposed--and Parliament agreed to the proposition--to
+transfer £350,000 from the Loan Fund to the Consolidated Revenue
+Fund to meet the Treasury bills floated or authorised to cover the
+accumulated deficits of earlier years. Mr. Hemmant disapproved of
+this method of financing, and rectified matters as far as possible by
+transferring to a Surplus Revenue Fund £240,000, which left him with a
+deficit of £200,762. This was equivalent to recouping the Loan Fund to
+the extent of £240,000, as the money was to be used for public works
+which would, under ordinary circumstances, have been constructed out
+of loan moneys. In the next year, 1876, soon after the opening of
+Parliament, the appointment of the Premier as Agent-General was
+announced. Ministers consequently resigned, and the Governor (Mr. W.
+W. Cairns) sent for Mr. George Thorn, who to the surprise of political
+circles succeeded in forming a Ministry including Mr. Griffith
+and most of the late Cabinet. Mr. Thorn was personally a general
+favourite, but not conspicuously fit for the position which he had
+fortuitously attained. Mr. Griffith became the actual leader, however,
+and the session was completed without disaster. During the recess Mr.
+Thorn retired, to visit England, and was replaced in the Cabinet
+by Mr. John Douglas, whose scholarly speeches had given him a high
+reputation in the House. As Premier, however, Mr. Douglas was less
+successful than had been anticipated. Conspicuously fair in debate, he
+appeared invariably to feel the force of his opponents' arguments more
+than those on his own side of the House, and therefore his leadership
+wanted decision; but the sessions of 1877 and 1878 were passed through
+without any defeat compelling a premature dissolution.
+
+The Liberal Ministries from 1874 to 1878 had been fertile in
+legislation, but after the retirement of Mr. Macalister they were
+badly led, Mr. Griffith, who attained the Attorney-Generalship at the
+age of twenty-nine, having been unwisely kept in the background on the
+plea of political immaturity. It was evident, however, that chiefly to
+him the passage of all important measures of legislation had been due.
+The colony suffered severely from drought during the years 1876-7-8;
+financial depression was the inevitable result, and, as usual under
+such circumstances, the Government lost popularity.
+
+In November, 1878, the general election resulted in the return of
+a House determined to effect a change of Administration. On the
+new Parliament assembling in January, 1879, Ministers were at once
+defeated, and Mr. McIlwraith was sent for by the Governor. He met
+Parliament a few days afterwards with colleagues representing all
+parts of the colony, and obtained a four months' recess in which to
+mature his policy. On Parliament reassembling in mid-May, however, the
+position of the Government was less strong than had been anticipated.
+During the recess they had been retrenching sharply, and a number
+of dismissals from the Ipswich railway workshops were declared to be
+tainted with partizanship. At no time in the first session, in a test
+division, did the Government sit with a majority of more than six, and
+usually they commanded only two or three. The Opposition, led by
+Mr. Griffith, were always at their posts, and the Government were
+frequently on the verge of defeat. The passing of a Three-million
+Loan Act and of the Divisional Boards Act, however, strengthened the
+Government's position, and in the following session the Torres Strait
+mail contract, making Brisbane the Australian terminus, though opposed
+by stonewalling measures for six consecutive weeks, added to their
+popularity.
+
+In the session of 1880 grave accusations were made against the Premier
+by Mr. Hemmant, who had taken up his residence in England. Mr.
+Hemmant presented a petition to Parliament charging the Premier with
+complicity in certain transactions connected with the purchase of a
+large quantity of steel rails for the Government which had involved
+Queensland in a heavy loss. The matter was referred to a select
+committee, on whose recommendation a Royal Commission was appointed
+to take evidence in England. Mr. Griffith visited London during the
+recess, and acted as honorary counsel for Mr. Hemmant. The Commission
+exonerated the Premier, but a great deal of party animosity was
+engendered, which did not die out for several years.
+
+In 1883 Sir Thomas McIlwraith ordered the British flag to be hoisted
+at Port Moresby, in Eastern New Guinea, annexing to the Empire that
+portion of Papua not already claimed by the Dutch, an act which showed
+true statesmanship and prophetic vision. Unfortunately, the Secretary
+of State for the Colonies, Earl Derby, repudiated the annexation on
+the ground that it was a usurpation of the sovereign rights of the
+Imperial authorities. At the same time he acknowledged the patriotic
+motives which had inspired the Premier of Queensland, and declared
+that the British Government would regard any attempt at annexation by
+a foreign Power as an unfriendly act. Whatever may have been the views
+of political parties at the time, matured judgment formed in the light
+of subsequent events endorses the action of Sir Thomas. The hoisting
+of the German flag on the northern portion of the territory annexed
+by Sir Thomas has brought a foreign Power almost to our doors, and too
+late the home Government endeavoured as far as possible to retrieve
+their blunder by annexing the south-eastern portion of Papua, which
+was handed over to the Commonwealth after federation.
+
+In the same year, the Premier, who had for many years been a strong
+advocate of railway construction by private enterprise on the
+land-grant principle, brought forward a bill authorising the
+construction of what was commonly called the Transcontinental Railway,
+from Charleville to Point Parker, on the Gulf of Carpentaria. Against
+this proposal great popular clamour arose; the majority of the
+squatting members of the Assembly combined with the Opposition, and
+the second reading of the bill was negatived by 27 votes to 16. Sir
+Thomas McIlwraith, rightly regarding the rejection of the measure as
+equivalent to a vote of want of confidence, advised the Administrator
+of the Government, Sir J. P. Bell, to dissolve the Assembly. His
+Excellency accepted the advice, and the Premier asked for five
+months' Supply. Mr. Griffith, the greatest constitutional authority
+in Queensland, approved of the decision of the Administrator of the
+Government, only objecting to Supply being given for such a length of
+time. However, the House, by 24 to 19, agreed to pass the Supply asked
+for, and the dissolution took place in the middle of July.
+
+[Illustration: EXECUTIVE BUILDINGS, BRISBANE]
+
+The Opposition, led by Mr. Griffith, were returned with a large
+majority. Being defeated on the election of a Speaker and in two
+subsequent divisions, the Government resigned. Mr. Griffith was sent
+for, and formed a strong Administration. Parliament adjourned from
+November to January, when some pressing legislation was passed at
+once, including the repeal of the Railway Companies Preliminary Act,
+under which proposals were made by railway syndicates. On 6th March
+Parliament was prorogued until 8th July.
+
+The Premier had chosen as his Lands Minister Mr. Charles Boydell
+Dutton, a Liberal Barcoo squatter, with no previous experience of
+parliamentary life, but a determined land reformer. With the Premier's
+aid Mr. Dutton got the Land Act of 1884 safely through, and the
+Government secured credit for passing a most important measure of
+reform, one important change being the introduction of grazing farm
+leases, and another the resumption of the halves of all runs included
+in a comprehensive schedule of the unsettled districts. But the
+historical measure of the session and the decade was the Ten-million
+Loan Bill, which embodied a grand scheme for providing the entire
+colony with railways. The Opposition protested against the loan as
+unconstitutional on the ground that it covered a programme of railway
+construction which could not be completed for several years, but they
+dared not oppose any specific railway, and the bill passed without
+amendment. Sir Thomas McIlwraith retired from the Assembly in 1886,
+and during the whole life of the Parliament the Opposition found
+themselves helpless to resist the domination of the Ministry. But as
+the Administration aged its political force waned, and in 1887
+the Treasurer, Mr. (afterwards Sir) J. R. Dickson, and Mr.
+Macdonald-Paterson retired from the Ministry because of their
+disagreement with a land tax proposed in Cabinet by the Premier.
+Despite the large loan expenditure, too, there was a portentous
+succession of deficits, due to unfavourable seasons, and Sir Samuel
+Griffith found in 1887 that his Government and party had outlived
+their popularity.
+
+Like his great rival, Sir Samuel gave abundant proof during his
+tenure of office of broad statesmanlike conceptions. No public man in
+Australia has done more to foster the federal spirit and bring about
+the union of the Australian colonies. He played a foremost part in
+creating the Federal Council, and to him is due the credit of drafting
+in 1887 the measure which was passed by all the colonial Parliaments
+granting a subsidy to an auxiliary Australasian naval squadron,
+although parliamentary vicissitudes robbed him of the honour of
+passing the bill in his own State until 1891. He is also entitled to
+the credit of making provision for the administration of British New
+Guinea by Queensland.
+
+In April, 1888, Parliament was dissolved, and when the new Parliament
+met in June the enfeebled Griffith Government were promptly ejected
+from office. Sir Thomas McIlwraith came in with a strong following,
+and he at once formed a Ministry which seemed likely to endure for
+several years. But at the close of the first session Sir Thomas
+retired from the Premiership with a view to visiting England on
+business. Mr. Boyd Dunlop Morehead then succeeded to the leadership.
+In September, 1889, Sir Thomas McIlwraith resigned his seat in the
+Ministry, and the following session he appeared in the Assembly as an
+open opponent of his late colleagues. To make provision for a revenue
+deficit, the Government brought down a proposal for a general property
+tax. This quickly brought Sir Thomas McIlwraith into concerted action
+with Sir Samuel Griffith, then leading the Opposition, and caused the
+resignation of the Ministry in August, 1890. Almost immediately the
+Griffith-McIlwraith Ministry was announced. A year or two earlier such
+a fusion of parties would have been deemed impossible, but the two
+leaders had fought away their mutual differences, and the financial
+outlook was so alarming that the coalition was generally admitted to
+be imperative. The new Government carried many important measures, and
+effected material improvement in the finances.
+
+In March, 1893, just before the banking catastrophe occurred, Sir
+Samuel Griffith accepted the Chief Justiceship, and Sir Thomas
+McIlwraith assumed the Premiership. A dissolution followed, the
+Government securing a commanding majority in the new Assembly. But
+the Premier's health failed, and in October following his Ministry
+was merged into that of Mr. (afterwards Sir) Hugh Nelson. Sir
+Thomas retained office without portfolio until March, 1895, when his
+connection with the Government ceased, though he retained his seat as
+a member of the House until the dissolution in 1896. After resigning
+office he left the colony, and died in England on 17th July, 1900.
+
+The new Premier proved a most capable financier, and although the
+depression in financial, commercial, and industrial affairs continued
+with great intensity he turned successive deficits into annual
+surpluses, and was soon enabled to negotiate loans in the London money
+market on unprecedently favourable terms. In April, 1898, Sir Hugh
+Nelson resigned Ministerial office and accepted the President's chair
+in the Legislative Council, that post having just become vacant by the
+death of Sir Arthur Palmer. Mr. Thomas Joseph Byrnes succeeded to the
+Premiership, and with Mr. Robert Philp as Treasurer it appeared as
+though the reconstructed Government had before it a life of several
+years. Five months afterwards, however, the young, brilliant, and
+much-esteemed Premier was removed by death, and Mr. Dickson was
+called to the Premiership. Fifteen months later the Dickson Government
+suffered defeat, and resigned office.
+
+Mr. Anderson Dawson, the Labour leader in the Assembly, being sent
+for, assumed the Premiership with six other Labour colleagues, but was
+defeated immediately he met Parliament a few days later, and resigned.
+
+He was succeeded by Mr. Philp, who assumed office on 7th December,
+1899. There had been a drought in most parts of the West for a year
+or two previously, but wool prices were high, and better seasons were
+anticipated. The country had almost recovered from the blow sustained
+in 1893. Federation threatened some loss of revenue, but compensation
+was looked for in the enhanced prosperity resulting from interstate
+free trade. But for the two first years of the twentieth century there
+was everywhere in the State a very deficient rainfall, and in most
+inland parts absolute droughts. The double loss to the Treasury
+through Federation and parsimonious Nature was very serious. Mr.
+Philp made reductions in public service expenditure, but kept loan
+expenditure at the normal level, sanguine that when the change
+came there would be a swift recovery, and hesitating to add to the
+depression by suspending the construction of railways and other
+public works. Though by the end of June, 1903, the accumulated deficit
+exceeded a million sterling, and the general election of 1902 had
+given the Government a rather diminished majority, there appeared to
+be no apprehension of a crisis even when Parliament met for its second
+session in July, 1903. But the weight of successive deficits and the
+protracted tenure of the "Continuous Ministry" inspired a general
+desire for change; and, in September, Mr. Philp suddenly found himself
+without adequate support as the result of a number of influential
+Government supporters joining forces with the members of the Labour
+party.
+
+A new Ministry was at once formed, the Speaker, Mr. Arthur Morgan,
+resigning the chair and assuming the Premiership, Mr. William Kidston
+joining him as Treasurer. With a policy of retrenchment and reform
+the new Administration entered upon its career sustained by a strong
+backing of public opinion. Retrenchment had already been initiated
+by the late Government, and it was continued by Mr. Morgan and his
+colleagues. The bottom of the depression having been touched with
+the break-up of the drought, the financial year 1903-4 closed with
+a merely nominal deficit. In the next session, which opened in May,
+1904, the Government encountered so much opposition that a dissolution
+was granted in July. So strongly were the constituencies in favour of
+the retention of office by Ministers that their party numbered 55 in
+a House of 72 when the new Parliament met in September, and the
+Government in that and the three following sessions were accordingly
+able to carry many of their measures of reform.
+
+In January, 1906, the death of Sir Hugh Nelson created a vacancy in
+the Presidency of the Legislative Council. The Premier, who had earned
+a reputation during his four years' occupancy of the Speaker's
+chair for an intimate and comprehensive knowledge of parliamentary
+procedure, was generally designated as peculiarly fitted to succeed to
+the position of President; and, having resigned both the Premiership
+and his seat as a member of the Assembly, he was translated to the
+Legislative Council.
+
+Mr. Kidston then became Premier. On the 11th of April, 1907, the
+Assembly's term having almost expired by effluxion of time, a
+dissolution took place, and a general election followed. The two chief
+objects for which the coalition between Liberals and Labour members
+had been brought about in 1903--sound financial administration and
+electoral reform--having been secured, disintegration had commenced to
+set in in the Government ranks. On the one hand some of the Liberals
+were desirous of reunion with their former associates led by Mr.
+Philp, and on the other the more extreme section of the Labour party
+adopted a socialistic platform, thereby causing their more moderate
+colleagues who followed Mr. Kidston to break with them before the
+election. The respective manifestoes of the Premier and the leader of
+the Opposition, issued some weeks before the dissolution, were found
+to embody practically the same policy in so far as vital measures of
+legislation were concerned. Both emphasised the necessity of having
+in office a Ministry possessing the steadfast support of a united
+following if full effect were to be given to their programme. The
+result was disappointing, for when the new House met in July the Philp
+party numbered 29, the Government party 25, and the Labour party
+18. After a fight over the choice of the Speaker and Chairman
+of Committees, the Labour members gave a general support to the
+Government, but comparatively little progress could be made in
+consequence of the uncertainty of that support. The Legislative
+Council rejected several measures which both the Government and the
+Labour party were very anxious to see placed on the Statute-book. With
+a view to taking concerted action to overcome the veto of the Council
+on democratic legislation, Mr. Kidston made overtures to the Labour
+party for an offensive and defensive alliance in Parliament and at
+the polls. The Labour party replied that they were unable to give any
+assurance on the subject. Mr. Kidston then advised His Excellency,
+Lord Chelmsford, to recognise the principle that there resided in the
+Crown the power to nominate to the Legislative Council such a number
+of new members as might be required to overcome obstruction, and that
+the power should be exercised if, in the opinion of His Excellency's
+responsible advisers, such a course became necessary. The Governor
+declined to accept this advice, and the Premier resigned on 12th
+November.
+
+[Illustration: ROCKHAMPTON 1. Quay Street, from the North Side.
+2. Custom House, Quay Street. 3. East Street.]
+
+Mr. Philp, being sent for by His Excellency, formed a Ministry,
+which was at once met in the Assembly by successive votes of want
+of confidence, the members of the Labour party uniting with the late
+Ministerialists in the divisions. A dissolution was granted, even
+though the House refused to vote Supply to the Government, and early
+in the new year (1908) a general election took place, Mr. Philp losing
+four seats, the Labour party gaining that number, while the Kidston
+party were again returned with the same following. The effect was that
+the Philp and Kidston parties each numbered 25 and the Labour members
+22. As the two latter parties had in most cases assisted one another
+at the elections, the Philp Government resigned, and Mr. Kidston being
+recalled found his position practically unchanged, so far as relative
+numbers were concerned, and yet greatly strengthened as regards the
+constitutional reform he desired to effect. A short session was at
+once held. A reform of the Constitution limiting the vetoing power of
+the Legislative Council by providing for a referendum on any measure
+which the Council rejected twice, and also a number of democratic
+measures rejected by the Council in the two preceding sessions, were
+passed with the aid of the Labour party. When, however, the Government
+turned to legislation affecting the material progress of the State,
+and introduced two bills to authorise the construction of railways to
+mineral fields (to Mount Elliott in the Cloncurry copper area and to
+Lawn Hills in the Gulf district) on agreements made with two private
+companies who undertook to provide in one case one-half and in the
+other case three-fourths of the capital required, despite the fact
+that the railways were to be constructed, worked, and managed by the
+Railway Commissioner, that the companies were to receive no interest
+on the money they advanced until the railways earned it, and that
+when at the end of fifteen years the Government repaid the advance the
+companies were only to receive a sum equal to what their investment
+was then earning capitalised at 3½ per cent., the bills were
+obstructed by the Labour party, and were only passed with the
+assistance of the Philp party, under the closure, the Estimates being
+forced through by the same means at the close of the session. Before
+leaving on a mission to England, Mr. Kidston publicly intimated that
+he could no longer work with the Labour party. He returned in
+October, and the Philp party, recognising the mischievous futility of
+three-party government, agreed to accept the programme enunciated
+by Mr. Kidston at the election in 1907, and to join the Ministerial
+party, the Premier being granted a free hand, both by his colleagues
+and followers, in reconstructing the Government.
+
+The fusion of the two parties led to the immediate resignation of
+two Ministers and the formation of an Independent Opposition by
+these gentlemen and four more seceders from the Kidston party. A
+reconstruction of the Cabinet followed, three members of the Philp
+party taking office under Mr. Kidston. Mr. Philp declined to accept
+a portfolio, but undertook to give the new Government support as
+an unofficial member of the Assembly, an undertaking most loyally
+observed. Dissatisfaction was naturally felt by several members at the
+composition of the Cabinet, and when Parliament met on 17th November
+it was evident that the fusion had not had the desired effect of
+reducing the number of parties to two. On the Opposition side of the
+Chamber were the Labour party in direct opposition and the Independent
+Opposition of six sitting on the cross-benches, while on the
+Government back cross-benches were three or four members who joined
+forces with the Opposition in every division. The cohesive majority
+was still large enough to enable the Government to pass several
+railways, two or three bills, and the Estimates; but, unfortunately,
+it was found necessary to have recourse again to the closure to get
+the Estimates through the House before Christmas.
+
+Further defections took place during the recess. The sudden death of
+the Speaker, Mr. John Leahy, and the election for Bulloo of a Labour
+member in his stead, reduced the Government majority to two. Such a
+condition of affairs rendered it impossible for any party in the House
+to carry on public business. A trial of strength took place over the
+election of a Speaker when the House met on 29th June, the Government
+having a majority of two. Two days later Mr. Bowman, the leader of the
+Labour party, moved a want of confidence amendment on the Address in
+Reply. A very protracted and acrimonious debate took place, and
+the motion was only defeated by a majority of one in a full House.
+Arrangements had been made earlier in the year for the holding of a
+conference of Commonwealth and State Premiers and Treasurers with
+a view to making a final effort to arrive at a mutual understanding
+regarding the financial relations of the Commonwealth and the States
+after the expiry of the ten-year period provided for by section 87 of
+the Commonwealth Constitution. As it was considered highly important
+that Queensland should be represented at this Conference, which was
+to be held in mid-August, the Government secured an adjournment for a
+fortnight, but only by applying the closure.
+
+The Conference came to a unanimous agreement with regard to the future
+division of the surplus Customs and Excise revenue, justifying the
+determination of the Government of this State to be represented. But
+the efforts of the Opposition to defeat the proposal of the Government
+to adjourn furnished additional evidence, if any were needed, that no
+business could be done in a House so evenly divided. When the Premier
+returned from the Conference, which had been held in Melbourne, after
+consultation with his party, he advised the Lieutenant-Governor to
+dissolve the Assembly, provided it agreed to grant temporary Supply.
+His Excellency accepted Mr. Kidston's advice, but stipulated that the
+Supply must be for the shortest time in which it was possible to hold
+an election and summon the new Parliament. After another fight, the
+Government closured through an Appropriation Bill covering Supply for
+ten weeks, and the House was dissolved on 31st August, the election
+being fixed for 2nd October.
+
+The result of the appeal to the country has been to bring about a
+practical restoration of two-party government, an ideal for which the
+Ministerialists have been striving ever since the session of 1906.
+The Government have won 41 seats and the Labour party 27, while the
+Independent Opposition, which went out 12 strong, have been reduced
+to 4. The Government have thus a majority of ten over the combined
+Opposition parties, and should be able to carry to a successful
+issue their policy of railway construction, immigration, and land
+settlement, and to steer the State through the temporary difficulties
+arising from the pending rearrangement of the financial relations
+between the Commonwealth and the component States.
+
+It may be of interest to add that the last was the seventeenth
+Parliament of Queensland, which gives to each an average of about
+three years, the present maximum statutory term of the Legislative
+Assembly. The explanation is, of course, that in the earlier years
+of the colony the limit of the Assembly life-term was five years.
+As already stated, the Legislative Council when first constituted
+comprised 15 members. Since then the number has been periodically
+increased to correspond with the enlargement of the other Chamber. The
+present number of members of the Council is 44. Until 1865 the number
+of members of the Assembly was 26; thence till 1873 it was 32;
+thence till 1875 it was 42, increased in 1875 by the creation of the
+electorate of Cook to 43, at which number it remained until 1879, when
+there were 55 members. In 1886 the number was increased to 59, and
+in 1887 to 72, at which it still remains. Payment of members of the
+Assembly was first sanctioned in 1886 by an allowance of two guineas
+a day for attendance, and 1s. 6d. a mile for travelling expenses, the
+total in any one year for attendance not to exceed £200. In 1889 the
+payment was fixed at £300 a year, with a mileage allowance for one
+journey to and fro each session, unless where an adjournment exceeded
+thirty days, when mileage was again payable. In 1892 the salary was
+reduced to £150 a year. In 1896 it was again raised to £300, at
+which amount it still remains. The members of the Legislative Council
+receive no payment.
+
+In the foregoing sketch of the Legislature of Queensland many
+omissions will probably be detected by the careful reader. But as
+a rule mention of the names of public men has had to be confined to
+Premiers and such other Ministers or members to whom for some
+usually apparent reason it is necessary to give prominence. Had space
+permitted, many interesting character sketches of prominent men of the
+past, as well as of the present, might have been written; and it must
+not be forgotten that some of the services most worth recording have
+been rendered by men whose names have not become household words, and
+whose reward has been found in the lifelong consciousness that they
+have unobtrusively done their duty to the State. Enough has probably
+been said to prove that responsible government in Queensland,
+initiated among a mere handful of people fifty years ago, and carried
+on amidst discouraging difficulties until to-day, has been attended by
+results of which no patriotic subject of the King need feel ashamed.
+
+ [Footnote a: An interesting incident occurred at the opening
+ of the second session. The Speaker announced the receipt of a
+ writ of election endorsing the return of the Right Honourable
+ John Bright as member for Kennedy. As Mr. Bright had not been
+ present during the preceding session--which had only lasted
+ from 26th April till 4th May--the seat was declared vacant.
+ This was not the first instance of an Australian constituency
+ voluntarily disfranchising itself by electing a prominent
+ British statesman by way of protest against some real or
+ fancied injustice.]
+
+[Illustration: TOWNSVILLE: FLINDERS STREET, LOOKING WEST]
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II.
+
+PUBLIC FINANCE (1859-1884).
+
+ Importance of Sound Finance.--A Great Colony Starts upon
+ a Bank Overdraft.--First Year's Revenue.--Land Sales as
+ Revenue.--Deficits in First Decade.--Transfer of Loan
+ Moneys to Revenue to Balance Accounts.--Heavy Public Works
+ Expenditure.--Crisis of 1866.--Inconvertible Paper Currency
+ Proposals.--Flotation of Treasury Bills.--Higher Customs
+ Duties.--Wiping Out a Deficit by Issue of Debentures.
+ --Transfer of Surplus to Surplus Revenue Account to Recoup
+ Loan Fund.--Incidental Protection.--Railway Land Reserves.
+ --Proceeds Used as Ordinary Revenue.--Three-million Loan.
+ --Condition of Affairs at Close of First Quarter-Century.
+ --Phenomenal Progress; Prospects Bright.
+
+
+Sound finance is the sheet anchor of any Government, whether despotic
+or democratic. Without a prudent guiding hand at the Treasury the ship
+of State might as well be rudderless. In the fifty years of Queensland
+history financial mistakes have been made, from which much public loss
+as well as individual suffering has resulted. If those mistakes, or
+some of them, are laid bare in this book, the object is not to reflect
+upon Governments or individual Ministers, but to treasure the lessons
+thus taught for future use.
+
+Queensland began its career with a bank overdraft, for with "7½d.
+in the Treasury" on the date of the Queen's proclamation of the
+colony it was necessary to provide funds in anticipation of revenue
+collections. But at the outset borrowing was indulged in on a modest
+scale. For 1860 the revenue was £178,589, and the deficit only £1,514.
+For the second year there was a revenue surplus of £2,442 over the
+expenditure of £235,796. But there had been during the period an
+outlay of £63,210 on loan account. Besides this, of the total revenue
+for the two-year period--including the twenty-one days of 1859--the
+cash receipts from land sales, which strict political economists
+hold to be capital, were £114,803, equal to 27 per cent. of the total
+revenue. It may be assumed that the loan expenditure was entirely for
+permanent or reproductive works; but only 73 per cent. of the money
+spent for the service of the year was strictly revenue, the remainder
+arising from land sales. Yet as New South Wales practice had lent
+sanction to the use of land sales receipts as revenue, the Treasurer
+(Mr. R. R. Mackenzie) may be admitted to have managed well, since at
+the outset the estimates of revenue and expenditure were both wholly
+conjectural. Mr. Mackenzie's successors were less fortunate; for
+during the first decade, although the annual revenue had quadrupled,
+there were only two years with surpluses.
+
+There was another scarcely defensible transaction during the first ten
+years' term. In 1864 the Treasurer, finding he would otherwise have
+a relatively heavy deficit, balanced his budget by transferring from
+Loan Fund to Revenue the total expenditure incurred upon immigration
+since the foundation of the colony. In that year the loan outlay was
+£401,421, including the transfer to revenue, an increase of £337,950
+in a single year. Thus the loan expenditure was at the rate of about
+£5 10s. per head of the population as ascertained by the census of the
+year. The deficit of 1864 seems less excusable because the revenue had
+increased by over 25 per cent. for the year. The incident illustrates
+the danger of suddenly increasing loan expenditure, which produces
+industrial and commercial activity, but at once adds to the cost of
+public administration in various ways. Loan money spent on the same
+scale per capita in Queensland to-day as in 1864 would mean a total
+sum of about £3,000,000 a year, whereas, even with the numerous
+railways lately started, the loan disbursements for 1908-9 did not
+quite reach 1¼ millions. Another consideration is that up to 1865 none
+of the loan works had become reproductive, and the 21¼ miles of
+railway then open for traffic did not earn working expenses. Further,
+the Government had been borrowing at 6 per cent. interest, which meant
+that the 1¼ millions of loan indebtedness at the end of 1865 imposed a
+burden upon the taxpayers of about £75,000 a year, or not far from £1
+per head of the population.
+
+In 1866, the time of the great crisis, the revenue expenditure
+increased by £241,690, creating a deficit of £200,653 for the year.
+The loan expenditure for the year was £965,346, bringing the total
+debt up to £2,214,123, equal to over £23 per head of the population.
+The total expenditure for the year, including loan, reached nearly £17
+per head. It is not surprising that a mere handful of people,
+plunging into debt at that reckless speed, found their credit suddenly
+shattered. In 1869, the last year of the decade, though the revenue
+had advanced to nearly three-quarters of a million, there was a
+deficit for the year of £37,217. For the ten years the net accumulated
+revenue deficit was £386,527, and the aggregate indebtedness nearly
+3¼ millions. The interest charge was then about £225,000 per annum,
+and the entire weight of it fell upon consolidated revenue. The
+population being 109,897, the interest burden was at the rate of over
+£2 per head. It may here be remarked that in 1907-8 it was only
+£2 16s. 9d. per head, less railway net earnings of about £1 12s.,
+reducing the net burden to about £1 5s. per head. Recurring to the
+debacle of 1866, it should be mentioned that the catastrophe was
+largely due to the failure of the Agra Bank, when all railway works
+were suddenly suspended, and the colony was plunged into the depths
+of extreme depression. During the two preceding years the loan
+expenditure had been largely in excess of revenue disbursements, no
+less than £685,246 of borrowed money having been spent in 1865. This
+was at the rate of nearly £8 per head of the total population, and its
+sudden cessation threatened thousands of the people of the colony with
+ruin. For not only had their sources of income been suddenly cut off,
+and landed property become almost valueless, but increased taxation
+had to be imposed.
+
+Yet the catastrophe was not wholly the fault of the Government. It was
+the consequence of the monetary and commercial crisis in the mother
+country in 1866. The Sydney branch of the Agra and Masterman's Bank
+had engaged to furnish £50,000 monthly to the Queensland Government
+for the prosecution of railways and other reproductive works pending
+the negotiation of the loan authorised by Parliament. The bank was of
+good standing, and under ordinary conditions its contract would have
+amply secured the position of the Treasury. Its failure could not have
+been foreseen; but the incident proves the unwisdom of a Government
+leaning upon any banking institution for heavy advances which can
+only be made on the assumption that normal deposits are maintained.
+In Queensland the position was intensified by the proposal of the
+Macalister Government to issue inconvertible legal tender notes,
+because it gave countenance to the economic fallacy that any
+Government can make money to an indefinable amount with the aid of the
+printing press. The resignation of Ministers because their advice had
+been refused by the Governor shook for the moment the very foundations
+of authority; and had not Mr. Herbert's services been available on
+the eve of his departure for England the consequences might have been
+grave indeed. But he consented to take office without portfolio for
+a few days with several other members, and, by getting authority
+from Parliament to issue Treasury bills, he saved the country from
+financial chaos. As it was, the ordeal proved a severe test of the
+loyalty of the people of the colony.
+
+On the establishment of Queensland a Customs tariff imposing light
+revenue duties was inherited from New South Wales. Under it spirits
+bore a duty of only 7s. per gallon. In 1865 the Treasurer, Mr.
+(afterwards Sir) Joshua Peter Bell, introduced a bill to raise the
+spirit duties by 3s. per gallon, and the duty on other intoxicants in
+proportion. The bill passed the second reading without debate, for it
+must have been felt that with the rapidly increasing interest charge
+further taxation ought years before to have been imposed. After the
+crisis of 1866 had subsided, further increased duties for temporary
+purposes were passed, as were also stamp duties, so that the revenue
+for the following year, despite the depression, showed the important
+increment of about £120,000. Happily the Crocodile goldfield, near
+Rockhampton, was discovered towards the close of 1866, and the Gympie
+goldfield during the next succeeding year. Hence for the remainder
+of the decade revenue, despite prolonged stagnation in business,
+steadily, if not rapidly, increased.
+
+In 1869 authority had been obtained from Parliament to liquidate the
+accumulated deficits by the issue of Treasury bills for the sum
+of £350,000, the increased duties of Customs imposed for temporary
+purposes in 1866 being at the same time continued for twelve months.
+In January, 1872, the Treasurer (Mr. Bell) referred in committee of
+the Assembly to the accumulated deficit, stating that the Treasury
+bills which had temporarily provided for it were falling due, and that
+there was no hope of paying the amount out of revenue. He therefore
+announced the intention of the Government to retire the bills and fund
+the debt by issuing long-dated debentures. That having been done, the
+effect was to produce a surplus for the year 1872 of £487,333. This
+indicated that had the Government exhibited a little more confidence
+the whole amount of the deficit might have been paid off out of
+revenue; for in the next year, shortly before the Palmer Government
+went out of office, a further surplus of £158,874 was realised. This
+sum, with the excess surplus of £137,333 for the preceding year,
+totalled £296,207, leaving only £53,793 short of the entire amount of
+the Treasury bills. In the next year there would have been a surplus,
+but the Macalister Ministry, which assumed office early in January,
+1874--Mr. William Hemmant being Treasurer--carried £240,000 to a
+surplus revenue account, and ended the year with a revenue deficit of
+£200,762. While the revenue of that year only increased by £40,913,
+the expenditure, in addition to the surplus revenue item, increased by
+£160,550. The Macalister Ministry could not keep down expenditure,
+and in 1875-6--the end of the financial year having been changed from
+December to June--with a revenue slightly exceeding 1¼ millions, they
+had a further deficit of £51,663. The same party continued in power
+for a further two years under the leadership successively of Mr.
+George Thorn and Mr. John Douglas. Revenue continued fairly elastic,
+and the deficit period was followed by two years showing small
+surpluses.
+
+[Illustration: HINCHINBROOK CHANNEL, NORTH QUEENSLAND]
+
+[Illustration: THE NARROWS AND MOUNT LARCOMBE, NEAR GLADSTONE]
+
+Early in 1879 the McIlwraith Ministry assumed office, at a time when,
+as the Premier himself admitted in his Budget speech of 1880, the
+colony was "emerging from a state of depression induced by three bad
+seasons of an extraordinary character," so that the year 1878-9
+closed with the considerable deficit of £216,808. This was partly due,
+however, to the operation of the Western Railway Act and the Railway
+Reserves Act, by which the most saleable land in the colony had been
+included in railway reserves, and the proceeds of sales, instead of as
+previously going into consolidated revenue, were placed to the credit
+of a special fund. Mr. (afterwards Sir Thomas) McIlwraith while in
+opposition had predicted that this course would produce a revenue
+deficit; consequently on attaining office he induced Parliament
+to sanction the transfer of all these sums, totalling £382,346,
+to consolidated revenue. Mr. McIlwraith argued that it would be
+impossible to construct a tithe of the railways needed in different
+parts of the colony out of the proceeds of land sales, and that it
+would be sufficient if the interest on railways, until they became
+fully reproductive, were defrayed from that source. Parliament
+accepted that view, and forthwith authorised a loan of 3 millions for
+a comprehensive schedule of railways proposed by the Government in
+1879-80. Between August, 1879, and May, 1883, loans amounting
+to £5,553,000 were floated and a further sum of £1,233,000 was
+authorised, but not placed on the market. During the McIlwraith
+Administration of 1879-83 the revenue increased from rather less than
+1½ millions to 2½ millions. The period was characterised by
+two deficits and three surpluses, showing accumulated surpluses of
+£272,412, without taking into account the sum of £382,346 transferred
+to revenue. During these years the colony was prosperous, the
+fair seasons, large loan expenditure, the establishment of the
+British-India service _via_ Torres Strait, and the free introduction
+of immigrants, all combining to push the country along the path
+of progress; but prosperity had compelled a _pro rata_ increase of
+expenditure.
+
+At the end of the quarter-century in 1884 the public debt was
+£16,570,850, on which the interest charge was £701,565. Of this amount
+£9,417,318 expended on railways was earning £2 18s. per cent. The
+length of lines open for traffic totalled 1,207 miles. The population
+was 309,913. About £2,350,000 had been spent on immigration, of which
+nearly a third of a million had come from revenue, £1,778,000 from
+loan, and the rest from "special receipts"--partly contributions
+from immigrants. The year's imports were of the declared value of
+£6,381,976, and the exports £4,673,864. Joint stock bank assets
+exceeded 11 millions, liabilities were nearly 7¾ millions, deposits
+exceeded 6 millions, and savings bank deposits were over 1 million. Of
+cattle there were 4¼ millions, of sheep less than 9½ millions, while
+horses numbered 253,116. There were 6,979 miles of telegraph line
+constructed. There were over 7 million acres of land alienated, which
+had produced over 4¾ millions sterling of revenue. The value of
+minerals won for the year was £1,325,624. There were 528 schools with
+60,701 scholars, 5,185 subscribers to public libraries, and 60,257
+volumes. Comparing these figures with those of 1860 it will be seen
+that, despite droughts, floods, and financial crises, the progress
+attained had been phenomenal.
+
+Thus in a financial aspect the first quarter-century closed glowingly,
+despite a severe Western drought in 1883. There had been rapid and
+apparently solid progression, and the disasters of 1866, which seemed
+at the time to threaten the solvency of Government and people alike,
+had become an unpleasant memory--a catastrophe very unlikely to recur
+for various reasons, among them being that the railways were beginning
+greatly to facilitate transport, as well as to show considerable net
+earnings; while instead of the Government borrowing at 6 per cent., as
+formerly, money in abundance could be got at 3½ per cent. Moreover,
+mortgage loans and bank overdrafts bore a greatly reduced rate of
+interest.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III.
+
+PUBLIC FINANCE (1884-1893).
+
+ The Ten-million Loan.--Ministers Practically Granted Control
+ of Five Years' Loan Money.--Vigorous Railway Policy.--Effect
+ of Over-spending.--Inflation of Values.--Increased Taxation.
+ --Succession of Deficits.--Second McIlwraith Ministry.
+ --A Protectionist Tariff.--Temporary Increase of Revenue.
+ --Heavy Contraction in 1890.--Another Big Loan; Failure of
+ Flotation.--The First Underwritten Australian Loan.
+ --Amended Audit Act Limiting Spending Power of Government.
+
+
+At the end of 1883 the Griffith Ministry succeeded to office with a
+strong following. It was early in March, 1884, that the Appropriation
+and Loan Acts for 1883-4 became law, but the regular session of the
+year did not begin until 7th July. It was in this session that the
+Government introduced their colossal railway extension scheme, and
+their famous "Ten-million Loan Act"--actually, however, the amount was
+£9,980,000. This sum was to be spent during the following five years,
+which meant that the members of the Assembly voted in a lump sum, and
+on an unprecedented scale, the loan expenditure for the maximum term
+of the Parliament. The effect was also to ensure the life of the
+Ministry for the same term, as it was intended to expend about 2
+millions sterling a year, or about £6 10s. per annum per head of
+the population. This was equal to about three-fourths of the total
+consolidated revenue for 1884.
+
+The Ministry no doubt meant well, and their preparation of a schedule
+of works to extend over five years was in the abstract commendable.
+But the expenditure of so much loan money provoked inflation in
+values, and led to unhealthy speculation in land. Although Ministers
+did not in any one year quite reach their 2-million conventional
+limit of loan outlay, the 10 millions were exhausted soon after their
+retirement from office, and a further loan had to be authorised to
+finish their uncompleted works. While such railways as the "Via Recta"
+(Ipswich to Warwick) and the Cloncurry to the Gulf lines were both
+on the 1884 loan schedule--the amount set down for each being
+£500,000--they have never been even commenced to this day, a quarter
+of a century since they were passed by the Assembly. Other lines then
+authorised absorbed more than the amount voted, and necessarily had
+afterwards to be completed to make them reproductive.
+
+The revenue not proving as expansive as the necessities of the
+Treasury required, an Act passed in 1885 imposed 5 per cent. ad
+valorem duties upon most kinds of industrial machinery, increased the
+spirit duties to 12s. per gallon, and levied upon log and undressed
+timber a duty of 1s. per 100 feet superficial and upon dressed timber
+of 1s. 6d. per 100 feet. In the following year the ad valorem duties
+were increased to 7½ per cent., except as to machinery, which
+remained at 5 per cent.; but small levies like these were as drops in
+the bucket by comparison with the constantly expanding needs of the
+Treasurer.
+
+The 10-million loan schedule did not exhaust the list of what were
+deemed necessary works. In 1886 a special Act was passed appropriating
+£123,000, to be raised by Treasury bills having a term of five
+years, for the duplication of the Brisbane-Ipswich railway, and the
+completion of the lines from Mackay to Eton and Hamilton, and from
+Ravenswood Junction to Ravenswood, respectively. In the year following
+an Act was passed authorising the issue of further Treasury bills
+amounting to £349,834 for the construction of eight small lines, and
+the extension of the Brisbane and Southport line, with a branch to
+Beaudesert, thus bringing the railways and works loan schedule of the
+Griffith Ministry up to £10,452,834.
+
+By the advent of the financial year 1888-9, most intelligent public
+men felt gravely disturbed. The bank deposits, which had been trebled
+in a decade, had to earn interest on the additional 7 millions of
+money held and advanced. When the Griffith Ministry retired from
+office in June, 1888, they had recorded four successive annual
+deficits aggregating £968,313, although between 1884-5 and 1887-8 the
+revenue had increased by £456,861, and there had been spent over 1¾
+millions of loan money per annum in addition. During the year 1888-9,
+after Sir Thomas McIlwraith assumed office, the expenditure increased
+by £128,922, but he obtained a revenue increase of about £437,000.
+This increase chiefly arose from the heavier duties levied under the
+protectionist Customs tariff of 1888; but in 1889-90 there was an
+almost equivalent shrinkage in both Customs and total revenue. Bad
+times partly accounted for the subsequent inelasticity of Customs
+receipts, for not until 1895-6 were the total revenue figures of
+1888-9 again touched.
+
+The year 1889-90 was characterised by a deficit of £483,979, for the
+drop of £402,857 in revenue and the increase of £197,969 in
+expenditure dislocated the finances, and caused the retirement of the
+Morehead Government after an ineffectual attempt to impose a general
+tax of 5 per cent. on all property, both real and personal. The
+coalition Griffith-McIlwraith Administration followed, but could not
+in such a time of value shrinkages materially increase revenue, while
+expenditure was thought to be irreducible. Despite a Loan Act for 1½
+millions passed in 1888-9, to provide for works temporarily met by
+floating Treasury bills during the two preceding years, another large
+loan was authorised in 1890, its total being nearly 3¾ millions
+sterling. This money was needed to retire debentures maturing on 1st
+July, 1891, amounting to £1,170,950, and no less than £422,850
+deficiency loss on the loans of 1882, 1884, and 1889, thus leaving
+little more than 2 millions for railway and harbour works. This 3¾
+million Loan Act did not receive the Royal assent until December,
+1890, and the stock was issued a few months later at a most
+unfortunate time. The monetary tension which culminated in 1893 was
+already felt in the London market, and the credit of Queensland had
+become much impaired by the fact that during the preceding decade
+(1880-81 to 1889-90) the colony's obligations had increased by
+£16,706,834, bringing the funded public debt up to £28,105,684--nearly
+£70 per head of the population--while railway net earnings were
+steadily dwindling.
+
+[Illustration: BARRON GORGE, BELOW THE FALLS, CAIRNS RAILWAY]
+
+The cable soon flashed the unwelcome news that only £1,554,834 was
+subscribed. After some difficulty a Stock Exchange syndicate was
+formed to underwrite £1,182,400 of the balance, the price realised for
+the whole amount taken up averaging £87 6s. 1d. per £100 of 3½ per
+cent. stock. Thus the net proceeds of the loan of £3,704,800 were only
+£3,234,376, a depreciation loss of £470,424. The interest charge on
+this new loan was £129,668; so that the interest, while nominally
+3½ per cent., was really just 4 per cent. on the money received,
+and, in addition, at due date (1930), £470,424 depreciation will have
+to be made good. But the tragedy did not end there, for the money
+borrowed, or the greater part of it, had not reached the Treasury
+in 1893, but ranked among the "suspended bank deposits" which then
+paralysed both Government and private depositors.
+
+That the time chosen for going on the money market was not opportune
+may be gathered from the fact that in 1889 Queensland 3½ per cent.
+stock had brought £96 0s. 11d. per £100, and in 1894--three years
+after the forced sale at £87 6s. 1d. in 1891--an issue of our stock
+of the same denomination brought £98 14s. 0¼d. per £100. It may be
+noted that the Queensland loan of 1890-91 was the first underwritten
+Government loan issued by an Australian colony, though since that time
+all Government loans have been underwritten. Heavy as our sacrifice
+in 1891 may have been, it was infinitely less disastrous than making
+default must have proved; and perhaps after all the experience gained
+was worth its cost, for, although the colony staggered under the blow,
+its progress was checked only for the time.
+
+In 1890 an amending Audit Act was passed--Sir Thomas McIlwraith being
+then Treasurer--section 4 of which made the important provision that
+it should not be lawful for the Colonial Treasurer to expend any
+moneys standing to the credit of the Loan Fund Account except under
+the authority of an annual or special Appropriation Act, in like
+manner as moneys were expended out of the Consolidated Revenue Fund
+for the current expenses of government. By section 6 it was provided
+that, when it was necessary to expend for any work money in excess
+of the appropriation, then, if such sum were included in any
+Appropriation Act, the Governor in Council might authorise the
+additional expenditure from the Loan Fund. By section 8, annual Loan
+Estimates, specifying the nature of the work proposed, were to be
+submitted, as in the case of the Estimates of ordinary expenditure.
+This Act was passed to avoid the evil of placing large amounts of
+borrowed money at the uncontrolled disposal of the Ministry of the
+day.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV.
+
+PUBLIC FINANCE (1893-1898).
+
+ Sir Hugh Nelson at the Treasury.--Credit of Colony Restored.
+ --Assistance to Financial Institutions and Primary Industries.
+ --Savings Bank Stock Act.--Public Debt Reduction Fund.
+ --Treasurer's Cautious and Prudent Administration.--Money
+ Obtained in London at a Record Price.
+
+
+When the banking crisis occurred in 1893, Mr. (afterwards Sir) Hugh
+Nelson, who had previously held office with distinction as Railway
+Minister for about two years, reluctantly took charge of the
+embarrassed Treasury. Entering Parliament after the general election
+in 1883, he had from the first given evidence of more than common
+knowledge of public finance. Mr. Nelson was an exceedingly modest man,
+and an indifferent public speaker at best; but he possessed courage,
+thoroughness, and scholarly knowledge. In public matters he always
+aimed at taking the line of least resistance; but knowing what he knew
+in March, 1893, his assumption of office as Treasurer must be regarded
+as an act of heroism dictated by regard for the public welfare.
+Quietly and unobtrusively he worked, refusing all invitations
+to appear on public platforms, and while affecting contempt for
+politicians who constantly apostrophised "the people," he determined
+to set the affairs of the colony straight. Revenue at that time had
+almost touched bottom, and was very inelastic; and Mr. Nelson followed
+the example of his immediate predecessor in keeping a tight hand upon
+expenditure. For 1892-3 there had been a reduction of outlay of about
+£70,000 only, as compared with the preceding year, the June deficit
+having been reduced to £111,676; but in the next year he realised
+rather less revenue, yet reduced expenditure by £206,000, closing the
+year with a small deficit of £8,467. As this was the time in which
+most commercial and financial disaster was suffered from the crisis,
+this economy was a feat worth accomplishing, although the drastic
+reduction of expenditure tended to aggravate the crisis by delaying
+the restoration of confidence. After 1893-4 followed six surpluses.
+
+In the midst of the bank reconstructions of 1893 there had been a
+general election, and Parliament met on 25th May. Between then
+and 18th October, 1893, Mr. Nelson, as Treasurer in the McIlwraith
+Ministry, passed those financial measures which were the greatest
+achievements of his career. An unpopular measure was his Civil Service
+Special Retrenchment Act, but it was imperative, and civil servants
+were indeed fortunate, when so large a number of their friends
+in private life were left destitute, in being able to draw their
+diminished salaries month by month. The Queensland National Bank
+Limited Agreement Act enabled that institution to resume business,
+though the public sacrifice was great. Acts were also passed for
+encouraging meat and dairy works; for advancing guaranteed loans by
+the Treasury to sugar works companies; for Treasury advances upon the
+notes of suspended joint stock banks; for the issue of Treasury notes,
+made legal tender throughout the colony save by the Treasury; and
+for the imposition of a yearly tax of 10 per cent. on notes issued
+by banks. In the same session was passed an Act for giving relief to
+public depositors, such as treasurers of hospitals and other public
+institutions, by making Treasury advances upon the amount of their
+locked-up deposits.
+
+Another important measure of this period was the Government Savings
+Bank Stock Act of 1894, under which any savings bank depositor may
+exchange his deposit for £10, or any multiple thereof, of Government
+stock redeemable in 1945, and bearing not more than 3½ per cent.
+interest. In 1897 the amount of such stock issuable was increased
+from £1,000,000 to £2,000,000. The object of this measure was to give
+depositors the opportunity of making investments in small amounts of
+Government stock, for which there would always be a buoyant market in
+the event of cash being required; and also to safeguard the Treasury
+by reducing the amount of money held on account of savings bank
+deposits repayable at call. In 1897 the total deposits did not exceed
+2½ millions; to-day they total over 5 millions. It is therefore
+satisfactory to note that the Treasurer (Mr. Hawthorn) early in the
+current year made arrangements for enlarging the sale of savings bank
+stock in the manner intended by the author of the Act.
+
+In 1895 Mr. Nelson passed the amended Audit Act under which, if it
+appears by the Treasurer's annual statement that there is a surplus of
+receipts for any financial year, the money shall, before the 31st
+day of December following, be paid to the trustees of the Public Debt
+Reduction Fund created by the Act, and by them applied, first to the
+purchase of Treasury bills, and then to the purchase of inscribed
+stock at the current market price, stock so purchased to be cancelled.
+As a Treasurer with a deficit is bound to make provision for its
+liquidation at the end of a financial year, the effect of the Act
+has been to start every year with a clean sheet. By this practice an
+ingenious Treasurer is deprived of the opportunity of juggling with
+accumulated surpluses.
+
+[Illustration: ON THE ROAD TO MARKET, CENTRAL QUEENSLAND]
+
+[Illustration: FAT CATTLE, CENTRAL QUEENSLAND]
+
+In April, 1898, when Sir Hugh Nelson retired from active politics, he
+had just completed five years' service as Treasurer. During that time
+he had gone to the London money market only twice, and had issued
+stock to the amount of only 3¾ millions. Of that sum, moreover, the
+2 millions asked for in 1894 was for retiring Treasury bills, and for
+the liquidation of the deficit on account of previously issued loans.
+In 1896 the Loan Act totalled £2,324,480, though it was not all placed
+by Sir Hugh Nelson. It provided for further railway extensions, and
+included half a million sterling for loans in terms of the Local Works
+Loans Act under the Sugar Works Guarantee Act; £600,000 was applied to
+the purchase at par of savings bank stock for cancellation, only 1½
+millions being placed on the London market. Of these two loans issued
+subsequent to the 1893 crisis, the first, bearing 3½ per cent.
+interest, realised £98 14s. 0¼d. net per £100 of stock, and the other,
+floated in 1897, bearing 3 per cent., brought £95 15s. 10¾d., the
+record price for money obtained by the issue of Queensland Government
+stock in London.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V.
+
+PUBLIC FINANCE (1898-1903).
+
+ The Philp Ministry.--Large Surplus.--Loan Acts for Seven and
+ a-half Millions Sterling.--Drought Disasters and Sacrifices
+ for Federation.--Accumulated Revenue Deficits of over
+ £1,000,000.--Rebuff on London Stock Exchange.--Resignation of
+ Philp Ministry.
+
+
+When Mr. Philp took charge of the Treasury in March, 1898, the credit
+of the colony appeared to have been fully restored. True, the funded
+public debt had grown to 33½ millions, but the population had also
+increased to 484,700, so that the public debt proper was slightly more
+than £69 per head. The year 1897-8 closed with the small surplus of
+£20,724 at the Treasury, and revenue was steadily improving. In June,
+1899, Mr. Philp had the largest surplus realised for seventeen years,
+nearly £150,000, but then an era of drought began. Still revenue
+continued to advance until the establishment of federation in 1901,
+when financial trouble was accentuated. The year 1899-1900 had shown a
+small surplus of £47,789, to be followed by three successive deficits
+aggregating £1,151,469. Mr. Philp, an old colonist, an experienced
+business man, and with a full knowledge of its varied resources, had
+unbounded confidence in the future of the State. Soon after he became
+Premier at the close of 1899, he essayed a bold public works policy,
+and during his first three years of office he induced Parliament to
+sanction the borrowing of nearly 7½ millions sterling. But he did not
+issue the whole of the last 2¼ millions. Owing principally to the
+South African war, colonial stocks were not high in favour in 1900,
+and the Queensland Government, acting on the best advice, decided to
+call for tenders for the £1,400,000 of 3 per cent. stock placed on
+the English money market in July of that year. The loan only realised
+£91 5s. 1½d. per cent., about the same price that was obtained by New
+South Wales and West Australia in the same year. Of the balance of
+the loan, £900,000 was taken up in Queensland by the trustees of the
+Government Savings Bank at £97 per cent., and £46,600, sold locally
+and bearing 3½ per cent. interest, realised £99 10s. 8¼d. net, the
+local market not being affected by the adverse influences and the
+choice of investments which operated in London. In October, 1901,
+for £1,374,213 offered in London at 3 per cent., the extremely low
+price of £88 12s. 4d. was obtained; and in 1903, when the then
+Treasurer (Mr. T. B. Cribb) again sought to enter the London market
+with 3½ per cent. stock, he could only place £750,000 worth at the
+low rate of £92 19s. 11¾d. Times had indeed changed, and for the
+moment the State was practically excluded from the London money
+market. The balance of the loan has been, and is being, issued in
+Queensland, about £456,000 being still unsold.
+
+The year 1899-1900, from the revenue standpoint, was the record year
+of the century. Wool brought extremely high prices in London, and loan
+expenditure had been maintained during the previous two years at an
+average of a little over £1,000,000 per annum. For the next year,
+one-half of which was subsequent to the proclamation of the
+Commonwealth, revenue showed a decline of nearly half a million
+sterling, although loan outlay had been increased rather than
+lessened. Two reasons could be assigned for this shrinkage--a bad
+season in the West, and the dislocation of accounts resulting from
+federation. Still, in 1899-1900, the expenditure from revenue was
+fully maintained, with the result that on 30th June, 1901, the deficit
+exceeded half a million.
+
+In the next year, 1901-2, there was a further decline of about half a
+million in revenue, arising (1) from one-fourth of the State's Customs
+revenue and the whole of its postal revenue being retained by the
+Commonwealth, and (2) from the sparse rainfall and the heavy drop in
+London wool prices. Thus, although the apparent expenditure showed a
+decline of about £650,000 due to the cost of the transferred
+departments being defrayed by the Commonwealth, the financial year
+ended with a deficit of £431,940. The year 1902 was the most
+disastrous with respect to rainfall that Australia ever experienced,
+and the drought struck Queensland with cruel intensity. The revenue of
+1902-3 was maintained at nearly the level of the previous year, good
+rains having fallen early in 1903, while the expenditure was cut down
+by about a quarter of a million; yet there was a further deficit of
+£191,341, despite the fact that an income tax had been imposed and a
+Public Service Special Retrenchment Act passed which resulted in a
+saving of £87,000.
+
+The Philp regime practically ended with an accumulated deficit, as
+above mentioned, of £1,151,469; for, about two months after the close
+of the financial year 1902-3, the Ministry were compelled by a schism
+in their party to resign office. They had been long popularly
+stigmatised as the "Continuous Government." The work of the coalition
+of 1890 having been accomplished, Ministers had exhausted their
+popularity; yet the probability is that but for the financial debacle
+the end would not have come quite so soon. The drought having by this
+time broken, a return of prosperity was naturally expected; but on the
+one hand Ministers had made enemies by severe retrenchment, and on the
+other hand they were blamed for having failed to balance their budget.
+
+When Parliament met on 21st July, 1903, Mr. Philp appeared still to
+command a working majority--though somewhat diminished by the general
+election of 1902-3 compared with that which had followed him for three
+years previously. But on the 8th of September the Treasurer, Mr. T.
+B. Cribb, carried his taxation resolutions in Committee of Ways and
+Means, after an acrimonious debate, by a majority of only two votes in
+a House of sixty-five, several prominent Government supporters voting
+with the Noes. Mr. Philp then moved the adjournment of the House, and
+next day announced the resignation of his Ministry.
+
+[Illustration: MAROOCHY RIVER AND NINDERRY MOUNTAIN, NORTH COAST
+RAILWAY]
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI.
+
+PUBLIC FINANCE (1903-1909).
+
+ The Morgan-Kidston Ministry.--Economy in Revenue
+ Expenditure.--Great Reduction in Loan Outlay.--Equilibrium
+ Established at the Treasury.--Retrenchment and Taxation.
+ --Improvement of Finances.--A Record Surplus for Queensland.
+ --Land Sales Proceeds Act.--Abstention from Borrowing.
+ --First Loan Floated since 1903.--Sound Position of
+ Queensland.--Value of State Securities.--Reproductiveness of
+ Railways Built out of Loan Money.--Public Estate Improvement
+ Fund.--How Recourse to Money Market has been Avoided.
+
+
+On the 15th September, 1903, the Speaker's resignation was announced,
+and on the 17th Mr. (now Sir) Arthur Morgan announced the formation of
+a new Ministry with himself as Premier, his colleagues including the
+leader, (the late Mr. W. H. Browne) and another prominent member of
+the Labour party (Mr. W. Kidston). The new Ministry came in expressly
+to restore the financial equilibrium, the Treasurer being Mr. Kidston.
+Retrenchment became the order of the day, although the Estimates of
+the late Government were adopted, having regard to the fact that
+the first quarter of the financial year had practically expired. The
+pruning-knife was applied with vigour, and loan expenditure rapidly
+lessened, although existing railway contracts had of course to be
+completed.
+
+On 30th June following, revenue showed an increase of £69,000, while
+expenditure had been reduced by £110,000, the financial year ending
+with a deficit of only £12,424. Loan expenditure had been brought down
+to £603,805, a reduction of no less than £418,600 compared with
+the previous year. In the middle of the session of 1904 the Premier
+advised a dissolution, which was granted; and after the general
+election the Ministry returned in such strength as to warrant
+Parliament in treating their policy, especially the financial part of
+it, as practically a mandate from the constituencies.
+
+In 1904-5 the revenue being within £41 of the amount of the preceding
+year, while the expenditure was about £26,000 less, a surplus, the
+first for five years, was recorded for the nominal sum of £13,995.
+Seeing that loan expenditure had been reduced to less than a quarter
+of a million, that general retrenchment had been carried out, and that
+a recovery of trade and industry was not yet clearly apparent,
+the result must be deemed highly satisfactory; also, the Treasurer
+refused, after his first year of office, to continue the practice of
+charging to loan fund the amount spent by the Commonwealth Government
+on new works and buildings. The amount was not large, but even the
+£20,000 to £30,000 per annum so expended would, if transferred to
+loan, have improved the appearance of the State revenue account.
+
+In 1904 the obnoxious but necessary Special Retrenchment Act was
+re-enacted for the nine months of the financial year still remaining,
+the rate of deduction being diminished by one-half, while provision
+was made that any surplus revenue for the financial year should
+be paid to the public servants. The year closed with a surplus of
+£13,995, which was at once distributed _pro rata_ among the retrenched
+officers. The continuation of the Act was not popular among public
+servants, but it was deemed necessary in the interests of the wider
+community; and, as the net result was that a public officer only lost
+7s. 6d. for every £1 deducted from his salary during the two previous
+years, it can hardly be considered unfair, having regard to the
+losses sustained by the general public during the same period. Another
+unpopular measure was the Income Tax Amending Act, which exempted
+from taxation incomes of £100 and under, but in regard to the larger
+incomes somewhat increased the taxation then levied. In 1906 a further
+Income Tax Amending Act was passed, adding to the taxation in some
+cases, but raising the exemption to £160 and granting an exemption of
+£120 on incomes between £160 and £200. In 1907 another amendment of
+the Act increased the exemption to £200 on all incomes, and reduced
+certain imposts, which had the effect of relinquishing revenue to
+the extent of £40,000 to £50,000 for the year. But times had then
+improved, and the Treasurer could afford this grateful relief to the
+poorer classes of the community.
+
+Early in 1906, owing to the death of Sir Hugh Nelson, Mr. Morgan
+retired from the Ministry, Mr. Kidston becoming Chief Secretary in
+his stead, while still retaining the Treasurership. Mr. Morgan then
+accepted the Presidency of the Legislative Council. In the year
+1905-6 the revenue had become buoyant, the increase for the year being
+£258,124. The expenditure had also increased by over one-half that
+amount, the year closing with the surplus of £127,811. Loan outlay
+also showed an increase, totalling nearly £300,000. In 1906-7 there
+was a revenue jump of £454,389, with an increase in expenditure
+of £186,085, the record Queensland surplus of £396,115 being
+realised.[a] For 1907-8 the revenue increase was £180,486, while the
+expenditure increase was £461,299, and the surplus only £115,302.
+Loan outlay also advanced to £1,033,676. Including the Commonwealth
+collections the total revenue for 1907-8 approached 5½ millions,
+or nearly 1 million in excess of the most fruitful year before
+federation.
+
+In November, 1906, a brief but important Act was passed providing that
+all moneys received in payment for auction sales of town, suburban,
+and country lands, or of such lands if subsequently purchased by
+selection, should hereafter be paid into the Loan Fund Account. But
+proceeds of the land sold under the Special Sales of Land Act of 1901
+were not included, those moneys having been already appropriated to
+the repayment of sums borrowed upon certain Treasury bills issued
+in aid of revenue in former years. It is the policy of the Kidston
+Government, however, not to alienate lands under the Special Sales
+Act; therefore the deficits of former years which had been liquidated
+with the proceeds of Treasury bills, and practically formed a floating
+debt, are being gradually compensated for by the transfer of annual
+surpluses to the Public Debt Reduction Fund, the total amount of stock
+thus cancelled having on 30th June, 1908, reached the respectable
+amount of £942,641 since the inception of the fund.
+
+One of the wise determinations of Mr. Kidston as Treasurer was to
+keep off the London money market for several years at least after the
+rebuff received by his predecessor in 1903. Consequently he abstained
+from making any attempt to float a loan till March, 1909, when
+£2,000,000 worth of 3½ per cent. stock was disposed of. The net
+proceeds were equal to £94 9s. 6½d. per cent., a price about
+equivalent to that obtained by New South Wales a little earlier in
+the year. This, although dearer money than was obtained by issues of
+Queensland stock in the closing decade of the last century, compares
+not unfavourably with the prices obtained earlier in the financial
+year for other gilt-edged securities on the London market.
+
+The net average rate of interest payable on the public debt of
+Queensland on 30th June, 1908, was £3 14s. 1d. per cent., but this
+rather high rate arose from the fact that more than a moiety of the
+total debt was incurred many years ago, when all Australian stocks
+bore 4 per cent. interest. The lowest average rate now paid by any
+Australian State is £3 8s. 9d. by Western Australia, most of whose
+stock was issued during the closing decade of the 19th century, and
+bears from 3¼ to 3½ per cent.
+
+Speaking generally, Queensland stands well on the London money market
+at present, as, according to the "Commonwealth Year Book" quotations
+from the "Economist" newspaper, the "middle price" of her 3½ per
+cents. quoted on 'Change on the 25th September of last year was £100,
+a figure only equalled at the time by Victoria among the Australian
+States; and in December following £99, which was on a par with New
+South Wales stock on the same date, and only 10s. per cent. below the
+quotation for Victorian stock. These prices, however, for comparative
+purposes seem to need slight adjustment on account of the interest
+respectively due at date of quotation.
+
+Having regard to the fact that the public debt of Queensland is higher
+than that of any other Australian State per head of the population,
+the policy of abstention from further borrowing from 1903 until 1909
+has been vindicated in a most gratifying manner. A pregnant fact is
+that more than one-half the entire public debt has been invested in
+railways which in 1908-9 returned £883,610[b] in net earnings, all
+available for the payment of interest on capital, or equal to about £3
+7s. 6d. per cent. per annum, which meant that our railway system was
+almost self-supporting, besides being the source of a large indirect
+gain to the Treasury by providing facilities for transport over 3,498
+miles of line. It is no exaggeration to assert that directly and
+indirectly the railways assist the Treasury to the amount of the
+annual interest charge on the entire public debt of the State. Instead
+of the railways being a burden upon the taxpayer, as in former years,
+they have undoubtedly now become the backbone of the public credit.
+Seven years ago the interest charge on railway capital falling on the
+taxpayer amounted to £513,128. To-day, as shown by official figures,
+there is practically no such burden, and the existing state of the
+investment not only forms a complete justification for the railway
+policy of the past, but also for the vigorous way in which the
+construction of new lines is being pushed forward. With a continuance
+of good management it is apparent that the time is within measurable
+distance when the Railway Commissioner will, unless rates be reduced,
+hand to the State Treasurer a large annual surplus which will be
+available for lightening the public burdens.
+
+Among other minor financial reforms for which the Morgan and Kidston
+Governments have earned credit is the creation of the Public Estate
+Improvement Trust Account, to which is charged the cost of roads,
+water supply, and other improvements made to Crown lands about to be
+thrown open for settlement, such cost being afterwards added to the
+selling price of those lands. Up to 30th June, 1908, 1½ million
+acres of Crown land had thus been made available for selection by
+a total expenditure of £85,784, the value of which has thus been
+enhanced, it is estimated, by more than half a million sterling. This
+amount will ultimately find its way into consolidated revenue. And all
+this with a debtor balance of the account on 30th June, 1908, of
+only £58,287. Allowing that the profit is shown in figures yet to be
+realised, the estimated margin is so large that the result cannot be
+doubtful.
+
+[Illustration: SCENE ON BARCALDINE DOWNS, CENTRAL QUEENSLAND]
+
+[Illustration: BARCALDINE DOWNS HOMESTEAD, CENTRAL QUEENSLAND]
+
+Loan expenditure on public works, though greatly reduced, was never
+entirely stopped by the Morgan and Kidston Governments. In 1903
+they inherited from their predecessors a loan cash balance of
+1¼ millions. By compelling the local bodies to pay up arrears of
+redemption on local loans, by investing about £603,000 of revenue
+surpluses in unissued stock, with the help of interest accruing on
+public loan cash balances, and the annual instalments paid by the
+Queensland National Bank in liquidation of its extended deposit debt,
+nearly 3½ millions sterling was spent on loan account during the
+five years ended 30th June, 1909, without placing on the money market
+any part of the then unissued balance of the 1902 loan.
+
+ [Footnote a: The so-called surplus of £487,333 in 1872
+ was obtained by the transfer of £350,000 from loan fund to
+ revenue.]
+
+ [Footnote b: These net earnings are Treasury cash figures.
+ They differ somewhat from the departmental figures, which do
+ not deal with cash, but with book receipts and expenditure.]
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII.
+
+THE BOOM DECADE (1880-1890).
+
+ A Great Boom Decade.--Causes of Inflation of Values.
+ --Excessive Rating Valuations.--False Basis of Assessing
+ Capital Value.--Prodigality Succeeded by Financial
+ Stringency and Collapse of Boom.--Difficulty in
+ Determining Real Values.--Sir Hugh Nelson's Legislation.
+ --Sound Finance.--Stability of State.--Prospects Good
+ To-day.
+
+
+The prospects of Queensland had seldom been brighter than they were at
+the opening of the 1880-90 decade. The seasons were good, the outlook
+was regarded as brilliant, and a general air of confidence reigned.
+The Government were spending loan money lavishly, and large amounts
+were being spent in introducing a stream of immigrants from Europe.
+These and other causes contributed to the prevailing over-confidence
+and the consequent excessive values put upon fixed property. One
+was the influx of capital for investment on private account, for the
+confidence felt in Queensland mortgage securities not only extended
+to the other colonies of Australia, but also to the mother country.
+Another was the discovery of subterranean water in Western Queensland,
+and the opinion expressed by geologists that more than one-half the
+total area of the colony, and that in the driest parts of the far
+West, was artesian water-bearing country. The discovery, it was
+argued, had added a new province to Queensland, and one whose
+fertility, water once provided, would not be excelled, despite a
+normally light rainfall, by any other part of the continent. One
+consequence was the sale of Western stations at high prices, and
+the investment by their late owners of the proceeds in city and town
+properties. They had experienced the risks of the far inland climate,
+and they wanted to invest in land in the seaport towns, which must
+quickly become centres of extensive trade.
+
+Another cause was the raising of rating values by the local
+authorities, of whom those having jurisdiction in suburban or country
+areas were endowed with £2 from the Treasury for every £1 raised by
+rates. To augment the claims for endowment, although the rate levies
+were in a few cases raised to the maximum legal limit, in most the
+valuations alone were raised, and the rate levy left untouched. It was
+held that it paid the property owner to contribute a high rate when
+with the endowment it meant three times that sum, most of which would
+be spent in improving his land by making roads and carrying on other
+local works calculated to enhance property values. A further cause
+of inflation was the cutting up of suburban land into 16-perch
+allotments, and selling them on long terms to working men and to
+speculators. A still further cause was, as already mentioned, the
+influx of external money at reduced rates of interest through the
+financial institutions. At first rents were so high as apparently to
+justify an advance on true values; but as the expanding process went
+on vendors ridiculed a capital value based on income-earning capacity.
+"What is the use of talking nonsense!" the agent would exclaim; "it is
+not what this property will bring in annually now, but what it will be
+worth in twenty years' time."
+
+Even conservative loan institutions accepted valuations based on
+actual sales. Prices in many cases doubled and quadrupled in a few
+months without much regard to the income-earning power. Then people
+were told that Brisbane would by and by, with an immense railway
+mileage finding its terminus at the wharves, be as big as Sydney or
+Melbourne; that land in George-street and Collins-street was realising
+£2,000 per foot frontage, bare; and that therefore choice sites in
+Queen-street could not be worth less than £1,000 per foot frontage.
+Thus prices advanced until the second half of 1888, when the demand
+for real property almost ceased. From that time until 1893 values were
+as far as possible upheld by the mortgagees, for they believed that
+the stagnation must be but temporary. Then came the crisis in the
+world's money markets, and it smote Queensland with prostrating force.
+The gradual reduction of local authority endowments, followed by their
+abolition in the year 1902-3, and the consequent increase of rate
+burdens, had a depressing effect upon property values, so that even
+to-day, more than sixteen years after the collapse of the boom, city
+lands do not realise more than one-half the prices demanded and often
+obtained in 1888.
+
+It is easy to blame the leading parliamentarians of the time for their
+prodigality in expenditure; but, when the most experienced bankers of
+the time threw prudence to the winds under pressure of a flooded money
+market, we may at this distance of time judge public men less harshly
+than they were judged in 1893. Confidence was universal, and the
+man who raised a warning voice found himself figuratively "sent
+to coventry." An epidemic of swollen values pervaded the entire
+continent. Even so late as 1893, two skilled and disinterested
+Ministers of the Crown, and both possessed of banking experience, who
+were commissioned by the Government to report confidentially on the
+securities of the Queensland National Bank soon after its suspension,
+failed to realise the full extent of the inflation of past years,
+or the depreciation in land values that had taken place despite the
+efforts made to maintain them. For they gave such a report of the
+values of the bank's securities as induced the Legislature to sanction
+an abortive scheme of reconstruction and the retention of Government
+moneys. It is, however, to Sir Hugh Nelson's credit that, three years
+later, he passed through Parliament an amending Act, embodying the
+scheme which has since restored the bank to the status of a "national"
+institution.
+
+Nineteen years have elapsed since the close of this period of
+extravagant borrowing and reckless expenditure, both public and
+private. For some years past Queensland has been enjoying almost
+unexampled prosperity, and the question naturally arises whether
+that prosperity may not be followed by another crisis. On this point
+examination of fixed property values, which are a good index, leads to
+a favourable conclusion. Of city or town lands there has of late years
+certainly been no inflation. Farming and dairying land values have no
+doubt risen rapidly, but not more, perhaps, than in proportion to the
+enhanced stable income-earning value arising from the success of the
+sugar and dairying industries and the enlarged markets available since
+federation to farmers all over Australia. In pastoral country there
+has certainly been no such inflation as occurred in the 1880-90
+decade. Buyers discounted the future when, to justify their
+anticipations, the 372,105 square miles of artesian water-bearing
+country should have been already opened up and the country made
+increasingly productive by the streams from thousands of bores.
+To-day, as shown elsewhere in this book, artesian water is flowing
+to such an extent in Queensland that it would, with complete
+reticulation, supply 12,000,000 people with 40 gallons a day each.
+This in a country, too, which formerly was almost destitute of surface
+water. More bores are every year being put down, while geological
+research has lately added considerably to the area of artesian
+water-bearing country in Queensland. Generally trade is sound to-day,
+while banking deposits have made but gradual progression in volume
+during the last twenty years. Close settlement is rapidly going on,
+and the pastoral industry, which furnishes about 50 per cent. of our
+exports, is in a most prosperous condition after several good seasons
+capped by recently advancing prices. Wool alone, whose producers are
+realising highly satisfactory profits, formed 28·55 per cent. of our
+exports in 1907. Over gold mining there may be a fleeting cloud, but
+every year's laboratory research extends the area of remunerative ore
+deposits by reducing the cost of treatment. The cost of production and
+transport in all the primary industries is being gradually lessened.
+Happily there is no boom, present or prospective, to disturb the
+steady progress of the country; and it is reassuring to learn from
+recent public speeches by eminent Australian bankers that they are
+refusing to make advances for other than legitimate development.
+
+[Illustration: SWAN CREEK VALLEY, NEAR YANGAN, WARWICK DISTRICT]
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII.
+
+CROWN LANDS LEGISLATION.
+
+ The Code of 1860.--Crown Lands Alienation Act of 1868.
+ --Pastoral Leases Act of 1869.--Homestead Areas Act of 1872.
+ --Crown Lands Alienation Act and Settled Districts Pastoral
+ Leases Act of 1876.--The Griffith-Dutton Land Act of 1884.
+ --Co-operative Communities Land Settlement Act.--Land Act
+ of 1897.--Forms of Selection.--Act to Assist Persons to Settle
+ on Land by Advances from the Treasury.--Extension of Pastoral
+ Leases.--Closer Settlement Act.--Land Orders.
+
+
+The land code of the session of 1860, so enthusiastically eulogised
+by Sir George Bowen in his despatch to the Secretary of State,
+unfortunately by no means settled the complex questions involved in
+the management of public lands extending over 15 degrees of longitude
+and 18 degrees of latitude. Indeed, to-day the land laws are probably
+as complicated as ever they were in the history of Queensland,
+notwithstanding the desire of the Legislature to make them as simple
+as possible, and to meet the wants of every description of settler,
+whether he be a homestead selector with his 320 acres, a grazing
+farmer with his 20,000 acres, or a pastoral lessee with his 1,000
+square miles.
+
+During the first decade several Land Acts, amending the Acts of 1860,
+were passed; but by the advent of the year 1867 it was found that
+the facilities offered for settlement were inadequate, and that new
+methods, especially in the direction of mixed farming adapted to the
+country and climate, and demanding holdings of increased area, were
+indispensable if there was to be close settlement on a more extensive
+scale than that contemplated by the pastoralist. Among the members of
+the Assembly in 1867-8 was Mr. Archibald Archer, of Gracemere, then
+member for Rockhampton, who earnestly voiced the popular contention
+that the upset price of £1 per acre was excessive, and that the
+holdings permitted to the settler by law were too restricted in
+area. In October, 1867, the Minister for Lands was Mr. E. W. Lamb, an
+old-time New South Wales land office official, and then a Peak Downs
+squatter. He introduced a Crown Lands Alienation Bill, which,
+after discussions showing its futility, was, on the motion of Mr.
+Macalister, then in opposition, referred to a Select Committee
+comprising the Minister and Messrs. Archer and Fitzgerald, the latter
+member for Kennedy. In the next session a new bill was introduced,
+giving effect to the recommendations of the Select Committee, which
+provided for the resumption of the halves of all runs within the
+Settled Districts, and for making available such resumed areas
+wherever required for settlement. The bill also provided for the
+opening of these areas to free selection before other than a
+feature survey had been made. This land was to be classified as (1)
+agricultural, in areas not exceeding 640 acres and at 15s. per acre;
+(2) first-class pastoral, in areas not exceeding 2,560 acres, at 10s.
+per acre; and (3) second-class pastoral, in areas not exceeding 7,680
+acres, at 5s. per acre. The purchase was to be conditional upon actual
+occupation and improvement, the payment being spread over ten
+annual instalments, called rents, of 1s. 6d., 1s., and 6d. per acre
+respectively. Provision was also made for homestead selections not to
+exceed 80 acres of agricultural land or 160 acres of pastoral land,
+at a yearly rental for five years of 9d. an acre in the case of
+agricultural land and 6d. an acre for pastoral country. This measure,
+having become law, caused a tremendous rush for land, and in some
+cases, no doubt, too large areas were taken up, regarded from the
+standpoint of the public interest, the abuse partly arising from
+faulty classification by the Government Commissioners. By at least one
+of these officers it was held, for example, that land, no matter how
+accessible or good its quality, was only second-class pastoral if
+destitute of surface water. But, whatever abuses crept in, there can
+be no doubt that the Act of 1868 was the first legislation to place
+the people on the land in areas of such extent, of such quality,
+and at such prices as were then deemed requisite for successful
+occupation. Many of the most prosperous farmers of to-day, or their
+parents, settled under the 1868 Act, and now form most valuable
+members of the community.
+
+In 1869 the Pastoral Leases Act was passed by the Lilley Government,
+and gave the lessees in the unsettled districts a better tenure
+than they had before enjoyed--21 years in respect of new country and
+renewed leases, and 14 years in the case of existing leases, with
+septennial automatic reappraisements of rent in all instances. The
+Liberal members of the Assembly assented to a pre-emptive purchase
+clause in this Act by which a lessee was empowered to purchase on his
+run without competition an area of 2,560 acres, containing permanent
+improvements made by him, at the price of 10s. per acre. But it was
+only discovered by many members after the Act had become law that a
+run might mean a block of 25 square miles, and that a lessee with a
+dozen blocks could secure strategic freeholds in as many different
+parts of his holding. However, the provision remained unaltered until
+in 1884 the Minister for Lands in the Griffith Ministry (Mr. Charles
+Boydell Dutton) refused to sanction further purchases of the kind, and
+during the same year endeavoured to sweep away the privilege by new
+legislation. Parliament, however, refused to repeal the provision, and
+would only consent to withhold the privilege of pre-emption in
+respect of leases acquired after the passage of the Land Act of 1884.
+Altogether 363 pre-emptive selections in respect of as many runs were
+made. By the Act of 1868 the pastoral lessees in the settled districts
+had also been granted ten years' leases for the unresumed halves of
+their runs; but in both cases the Minister was empowered to resume
+part of any run on giving six months' notice.
+
+The Homestead Areas Act of 1872 provided for the setting apart of
+special areas as "homestead areas," to be exclusively settled as
+homestead selections, or selections taken up by virtue of land
+orders issued under the Immigration Act of 1869. A departure from the
+generally accepted principle of "homestead" settlement--that the
+land is granted at a nominal price in consideration of the selector
+personally residing on it--was made in providing for increased areas
+up to 320 acres at conditional purchase prices. This anomaly was
+corrected by the Act of 1876, which styled such larger homesteads
+"Conditional purchases in homestead areas."
+
+In 1876 Mr. Douglas, as Mr. Thorn's Minister for Lands, introduced
+an amending and consolidating Land Bill, repealing all existing
+alienation Acts. Extended powers were given to Land Commissioners to
+expedite settlement. Monthly Commissioners' Courts were provided
+for, but no decision of a Commissioner's Court, except in case of
+certificates of performance of conditions, was to be final until
+confirmed by the Minister. The most noteworthy provision reduced the
+maximum area that one person might select. The area conditionally
+selectable by one person was made not less than 40 acres nor more than
+5,120 acres. The Act declared all leased land reverting to the
+Crown on the Darling Downs to be homestead areas, and empowered the
+Government to establish such areas elsewhere. Within these areas
+conditional purchase selections were restricted to 1,280 acres and
+homesteads to 80 acres. Personal and continuous residence by the
+selector was made compulsory, and, before the fee-simple could be
+acquired, permanent improvements to the value of 10s. per acre were
+required to be made. A homestead was protected against claims for
+debt. A Settled Districts Pastoral Leases Bill also became law this
+year, providing that on the expiration of the ten years' leases then
+held runs should be offered at auction on a five years' lease at a
+rental of not less than £2 per square mile, an outgoing lessee being
+allowed six months' grace in which to remove his stock. In 1882 the
+Act of 1876 was amended so as to abolish the sale of runs by auction
+unless when there was no application for re-lease by the existing
+lessee, and lessees under the Act of 1876 were given the right to an
+extension of their leases for a period of ten years instead of five
+years. The rent, however, was to be subject to appraisement.
+
+The next great land measure was the Griffith-Dutton Act of 1884. Its
+main features were the abolition of the pre-emptive rights of pastoral
+lessees; the creation of a Land Board consisting of two members--an
+independent tribunal acting like Judges of the Supreme Court, and,
+like the Judges, holding office during good behaviour; and the
+introduction of the leasehold tenure in connection with grazing and
+agricultural farms. The object of the Government was to bring about
+close settlement. As it was recognised that it was not feasible at
+that time to devote the lands of Western Queensland to agriculture,
+provision was made for the gradual substitution of a smaller class of
+graziers for the pastoral lessees with their many hundreds of square
+miles of territory. Accordingly inducements, by way of fixity of
+tenure and compensation for improvements, were offered to pastoral
+tenants to surrender their existing leases and bring their holdings
+under the Act. The Crown was thereupon entitled to resume one-half,
+one-third, or one-fourth of such holdings, the proportion varying
+inversely with the length of time the leases had to run. These resumed
+areas were then divided into smaller holdings called "grazing farms,"
+the maximum area being 20,000 acres, which were to be opened to
+selection on a thirty years' lease, with periodical reappraisements
+of rent by the Land Board. It was believed that the lessees of these
+smaller holdings would so improve the country that its carrying
+capacity would be greatly increased, and the Crown would derive a
+larger revenue from its pastoral lands, whilst at the expiration of
+the leases agricultural settlement might be possible. The success of
+the grazing farm system has amply justified the expectations of
+the framers of the Act. The leasehold principle was also applied
+to agricultural farms, the maximum area of which was fixed at 1,280
+acres, with a fifty years' tenure, but the selector was given the
+right to acquire a freehold after ten years' (later reduced to five
+years) personal occupation. Although dropping the name of "homestead,"
+the Act maintained the homestead principle by providing for the
+freeholding of agricultural farms not exceeding 160 acres in area at
+2s. 6d. per acre after five years' personal residence by the selector.
+The Act, which practically superseded the Pastoral Leases Act of 1869,
+continued the right of pastoral lessees to depasture their stock on
+the resumed areas until they were required for closer settlement.
+It also repealed existing alienation Acts, and provided for all the
+contingencies which might be expected to arise. Among the repealed
+Acts were two which had given rise to much party contention in
+previous Parliaments--the Western Railway Act and the Railway Reserves
+Act, to which allusion is made in the parts of this work dealing with
+"Public Finance" and "Fifty Years of Legislation."
+
+[Illustration: SURPRISE CREEK FALLS, CAIRNS RAILWAY]
+
+Amending Acts were passed in 1885, 1886, 1889, 1891, 1892, 1894, and
+1895, but these do not call for mention except to say that the Act
+of 1891 introduced a new mode of selection called "unconditional,"
+providing for selections up to 1,280 acres at prices one-third greater
+than those for agricultural farms, and payable in twenty annual
+instalments.
+
+In 1890 an Act was passed providing for a five years' extension of
+leases held under the 1869 Act and not affected by the Act of 1884. In
+1892 an Act (extended in 1894, 1895, 1897, and 1898) was passed giving
+a seven years' extension of term to pastoral lessees, and an extension
+of five years (afterwards increased to seven years) to the lessees
+of grazing farms selected before the introduction of the bill and
+situated in the southern part of the State, who should enclose their
+holdings with rabbit-proof fences.
+
+In 1893 the Co-operative Communities Land Settlement Act was passed
+at a time of stress, with a view to enabling men of good character
+but without capital to settle on the land with the aid of Government
+advances. In all, twelve "self-governing communities" were formed with
+a total adult male membership of 485. In no case did the venture
+prove successful, and by an amending Act passed in 1895 the several
+communities were dissolved, the members thereof were absolved from all
+liability to the Government for advances made, and the land and assets
+were suitably apportioned among the remaining members of the dissolved
+groups, to the number of 88. They were assigned an area aggregating
+13,491 acres to be held on a five years' tenure at a rental of ¾d.
+per acre per annum, subject to a condition of personal residence and
+to the purchase of the land during the fifth year at 2s. 6d. an acre.
+Only three-fourths of these 88 settlers brought their selections to
+freehold, and the last transaction was not closed till ten years
+had elapsed, instead of five, from the dissolution of the groups.
+Consequent on another period of depression, Parliament in 1905
+authorised another experiment by way of Government assistance to
+would-be settlers without means, but the communal element is not so
+prominent in the new measure, and the "self-government" principle is
+excluded. Only one settlement has been formed under the Act of 1905,
+and it is under Government control. While holding out some promises of
+success, these are not so tangible as to lead to further ventures of
+the sort. Indeed, the need for them has disappeared with the return of
+prosperity.
+
+The last comprehensive Act, extending over 101 pages of the
+Statute-book, was passed in 1897, and it still remains the principal
+Land Act, upon which all subsequent amending measures have been
+grafted.
+
+It is fitting to set out briefly what are the modes by which it is
+sought to secure settlement on the public lands of the State after
+half a century of legislation.[a] There is, first, the agricultural
+farm, in areas up to 1,280 acres on a tenure of twenty years and
+paying an annual rental of one-fortieth part of the purchasing price,
+such rentals being actually instalments of the price, and leaving only
+one-half of the price to be paid at the end of the term. The price
+cannot be lower than 10s. per acre, and there are conditions of
+occupation and improvement to be performed. There is the agricultural
+homestead in areas ranging up to 640 acres, the area varying inversely
+with the quality of the land. This form of settlement is subject to
+conditions of personal residence and improvement. The homesteads are
+capable of being converted into freeholds after five years and up to
+ten years for a total price of 2s. 6d. per acre, payable at the rate
+of 3d. per acre per annum. There is the unconditional selection in
+areas up to 1,280 acres, with no conditions to perform but the
+payment of rent during twenty years at the rate of 5 per cent. of
+the purchasing price each year, the purchasing price being one-third
+higher than that at which the land was available for agricultural farm
+selection. There are the grazing selections in the remoter districts
+in areas up to 60,000 acres. These selections are not capable of being
+made freehold, but are held on leasehold tenures of 14, 21, or 28
+years, at rentals ranging from ½d. to 6d. per acre per annum, and
+subject to conditions of occupation and fencing. There are the scrub
+selections not exceeding 10,000 acres each, intended to secure
+the destruction of useless scrub in the remoter districts and the
+conversion of the land into good pasture. The tenure is purely
+leasehold, with a term of thirty years and at a peppercorn rental
+for a period having relation to the extent of scrub to be destroyed.
+Leasehold tenures are preferred for the remoter lands, and they
+have the advantage of leaving the settler's capital free for the
+development of his land. In case any should prefer a leasehold tenure
+in the more closely settled districts, the law now provides for the
+substitution of "perpetual leases" for the agricultural farm tenure.
+
+The rapid spread of the prickly pear in some parts of the State has
+been a peremptory call for the occupation of the threatened country
+on any terms. Provision has accordingly been made for prickly pear
+selections under conditions of eradicating the pest, the value of the
+land being assessed at rates ranging from a sum paid by the Government
+to the settler in addition to a free gift of the land, to a sum
+perhaps as high as £1 per acre to be paid by the settler to the Crown,
+such payments being in annual instalments of one-fifth or one-tenth,
+and commencing ten or five years respectively after the commencement
+of the lease, the period of exemption from payment having to be
+devoted to the task of eradication.
+
+Until 1901 the competitive principle was general in the selection of
+Crown lands, but in that year provision was made by a special Act to
+allot land non-competitively to bodies of settlers coming from abroad,
+who naturally desired to be assured of obtaining land in proximity
+to each other before pulling up their stakes and migrating to a new
+sphere of activity. Successive amendments have been made in this law,
+and, while in its inception it had application only to agricultural
+homestead selection, it has since been extended to all forms of
+selection tenure.
+
+The great drought, which ended in 1902, has stamped its mark indelibly
+upon the land legislation of the State. The earliest cry for relief
+came from the far West, where the remaining tenancies under the
+Pastoral Leases Act of 1869 chiefly lay. Large tracts of country had
+become forfeited, and the Crown tenants, unable to hold on to the
+remnants of their runs at the rents chargeable under their leases,
+applied for relief. To meet their case, the Pastoral Leases Act of
+1900 was passed, which required the reoccupation of the abandoned
+country at nominal rents, and reduced the rents of the retained
+country to an extent that secured the reoccupation of 13,000 square
+miles. In the following year the Pastoral Holdings New Leases Act
+promised the relief of extended leases to the holders of pastoral
+country in the rest of the State, where the Act of 1884 operated; but
+the drought still continuing, a further appeal was made to Parliament,
+and in the Pastoral Leases Act of 1902 opportunity was given to
+lessees to secure extensions of leases up to forty-two years according
+to situation, subject to reappraisement of rent and to certain rights
+of resumption reserved to the Crown. The chief desideratum of the
+lessees was extended tenures to enable them to finance on more
+favourable terms and recover from their immense drought losses. In
+consideration of this concession and the surrender of resumption
+rights which it involved, the State had to look for increased rentals.
+The reassessments of the rentals under the new leases, however,
+have not compensated the State for the large concessions made to its
+tenants.
+
+The Closer Settlement Act of 1906 superseded the Agricultural
+Lands Purchase Acts, 1894 to 1901. These statutes provide for the
+acquisition by the Government of private estates for the purpose of
+subdivision and sale in areas adapted for closer settlement, payments
+being extended over twenty-five years. The principle is not quite
+impervious to criticism, for unless great prudence is exercised the
+acquisition of these large estates has a tendency to raise the value
+of agricultural land; but a few figures showing the settlement which
+has taken place furnish convincing proof that the primary object of
+the Legislature has been achieved, and that rich arable lands, which
+previously produced nothing but natural grasses for the sustenance of
+sheep and cattle, have become the homes of many hundreds of thriving
+yeomen farmers and the support of numerous rising townships. Since the
+passage of the first of these Acts in 1894, a total area of 537,449
+acres has been repurchased at a cost of £1,490,489. Of this area
+456,742 acres had been surrendered by the former owners at the close
+of 1908. By the same date 364,334 acres had been selected at an
+aggregate price of £1,050,864, and 10,677 acres, with the improvements
+thereon, had realised £70,727 at auction, the purchasing price of the
+whole area disposed of amounting to £1,144,081. The area remaining in
+the hands of the Government, after deducting roads and reserves, was
+78,781 acres, valued at £264,200, almost entirely consisting of land
+only recently acquired and not yet offered for settlement. On 31st
+December last, no less than 1,654 agricultural selectors, the majority
+with families, and holding among them 1,909 selections, were settled
+upon what but a few years ago were twenty-six sheep and cattle
+stations, with a mere handful of employees.
+
+It has been mentioned that the Alienation of Crown Lands Act of 1860
+provided for granting to any immigrant who had paid his passage-money,
+or to any other person by whom it had been paid, an £18 land order
+on arrival, and a further land order for £12 after he had resided two
+years in the colony. These land orders were made receivable as cash at
+any Crown land sale, and they led to a large traffic, as the fact that
+land orders could be bought from immigrants at a discount stimulated
+the demand for land, especially for town lots. At first these
+instruments could be bought at very low prices, but after a time the
+£18 land order had become of the recognised market value of £15 to £16
+cash, and could be readily purchased at those prices from agents in
+Queen-street, Brisbane. But the effect upon land sales revenue alarmed
+the Government, and after a time they refused to receive land orders
+as payment in lieu of cash at sales of other than country land. In
+1864 an Immigration Act was passed providing for the appointment of
+an Agent-General for Emigration in London, and for the repeal of the
+land-order sections of the 1860 Land Act. A new provision was made
+by which the Agent-General was empowered to issue to an approved
+passenger in London who had paid his passage-money a land-order
+warrant for £30. On arrival in the colony the passenger was granted in
+exchange for the warrant a non-transferable land order receivable as
+cash at face value at sales of suburban and country lands only. These
+restrictions lowered the market price of the instrument, although by
+means of a power of attorney the non-transferable provision was for a
+time evaded. Eventually, however, the restrictions were made so
+severe that for market purposes the land order was worth little, and
+immigrants who had come out and failed to settle on the land found
+themselves in possession of a document of no practicable value. The
+extent to which the land-order traffic prevailed will be understood
+when it is mentioned that, in 1865, of £218,431, the total revenue
+from land sales, only £59,461 was cash, the remainder being
+represented by land orders. By 1875 the system had become discredited,
+and was abolished by legislation, but outstanding land orders were
+still used. In 1883-4 the amount so received had fallen to £16, while
+the cash receipts for sales were £378,637. The total value of land
+orders received as cash between 1861 and 1883-4 was £853,583. Some
+public men have contended that, if the initial practice of receiving
+the land order at face value in payment for any Crown land sold at
+auction had been continued, the Treasury would have been recouped by
+the larger demand and higher prices realised, but obviously a system
+which stimulated speculation in land was not good for the country,
+besides which it encouraged dummying. In 1886 the Griffith Government
+determined to give the system a further trial, and in the Crown Lands
+Act Amendment Act of that year power was given to the Agent-General
+to issue land-order warrants to persons paying their own passages to
+Queensland. Each member of a family of twelve years of age and upwards
+was entitled to a £20 land order, and each child between the ages of
+one and twelve entitled the parent to a land order for £10. The land
+orders were not transferable, except in case of death, and were
+available for ten years for the payment of rent of Crown lands
+acquired by the immigrant. The Act authorising the issue of these land
+orders was repealed in 1894. The value of land orders issued under the
+Act amounted to £62,140, and of this sum only £8,956 was utilised. The
+great majority of the immigrants who received the orders had no desire
+to go on the land, and as the orders were not transferable they lapsed
+at the expiration of their currency to the extent of 85 per cent. of
+the whole.
+
+ [Footnote a: For fuller details regarding various forms of
+ land selection, see Appendix E, post.]
+
+[Illustration: FOREST SCENE NEAR WOOMBYE, NORTH COAST RAILWAY]
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX.
+
+APPROPRIATION OF LAND REVENUE.
+
+ Land Sales Receipts; not Consolidated Revenue.--Arguments used
+ in favour of Treating Proceeds as Ordinary Revenue.--Auction
+ Sales have now Practically Ceased.--Certain Proceeds Payable
+ into Loan Fund.--Special Sales of Land Act; Appropriation of
+ Receipts.
+
+
+The revenue from sales of land for the first quarter-century was
+£4,672,659, besides £853,583 representing grants made in consideration
+of land orders issued to immigrants but not included in the revenue
+and expenditure returns. Nor does it include the sum of £382,346
+received in cash for land sold within railway reserves and afterwards
+transferred to revenue. The latter amount must, however, be added to
+the cash receipts for land sold, which therefore totalled £5,055,005.
+
+The practice of treating proceeds of land sales as ordinary revenue
+has already been incidentally alluded to, but it may be well to refer
+more fully to the subject. It is held that the taxpayer ought annually
+to provide for current expenditure, and that if land is alienated
+from the Crown at all the net proceeds, after defraying the cost of
+administration, should be applied to the construction of public works
+that would otherwise be of a character to justify charging their cost
+to the Loan Fund.
+
+This principle in the abstract is unexceptionable; but in a new
+country much work is expected to be done by the Government for
+posterity in the nature of "invisible improvements"; in fact, it is
+so done, and cannot well be provided for by loan. Roads have to be
+cleared and formed, and buildings erected for the benefit of posterity
+as well as of those who so invest their money.
+
+Moreover, the advent of population enhances the value of both public
+and private estates, while the maintenance of great public works like
+railways involves in most cases a heavy revenue loss for years after
+the lines are open for traffic. Only in very recent times have our
+railway earnings approximated, after payment of working charges and
+maintenance, to the amount of the interest charge upon the capital
+invested in them; but they have immensely benefited the country by
+providing facilities for internal transport, and by enhancing the
+value of the land, Crown and other, which they intersect and make
+accessible. Years ago, when the railway debt of Queensland stood at
+about 17 millions, an official estimate showed that, in making good
+the annual deficiency of interest and working expenses on the various
+open lines, at least as much had been spent by the Treasury as
+the entire first cost of their construction. So that contemporary
+colonists have still a charge against posterity for public works to
+be handed down, even though the first cost remains a liability in the
+form of interest upon inscribed stock held by the public creditor.
+
+Further, it has to be said that, since the railways have begun nearly
+to defray interest upon capital, the auction sale of Crown land,
+except in small areas, has practically ceased. The receipts from
+auction sales in 1907-8 totalled only £33,391, and much of that
+sum would be absorbed were it charged with its share of the cost of
+administration. By the Land Sales Proceeds Act of 1906, all moneys
+received in payment for land sold under the authority of Part VI. of
+the Land Act of 1897--by auction sales of town, suburban, and country
+lands, or of such lands sold by selection after having been so
+offered--must be paid into the Loan Fund Account, and be applied to
+defraying the cost of such works as Parliament may from time to time
+determine shall be executed out of moneys standing to the credit of
+that fund. True, receipts for lands sold under the Special Sales of
+Land Act of 1901, being applied to the special purpose of retiring
+Treasury bills issued to make good revenue deficits, are excluded from
+the general law in this respect. But it is satisfactory that, even
+though the recognition of the principle that land is capital and not
+revenue has been tardy, it has now in Queensland the full force of
+statute law.
+
+As to the past, it has been argued with much reason that small areas
+alienated were for farming purposes, and soon became far more valuable
+than when held for grazing purposes by tenants of the Crown. As to
+the future, what Parliament seems determined to guard against by every
+possible means is the alienation of large areas of the public domain
+to persons who will use the land for speculative purposes, or who by
+locking it up will seek to check the wave of closer settlement which
+it is obviously in the best interests of the State to foster and
+stimulate.
+
+As the Special Sales of Land Act of 1901 still remains upon the
+Statute-book a few words in explanation of its provisions and objects
+may be useful. The first Act of this kind was passed in 1891--(1) to
+provide for maturing Treasury bills for £500,000 authorised but not
+issued in 1887; (2) to make provision for meeting Treasury bills for
+£500,000 floated to cover a revenue deficit in 1890; (3) to make good
+an anticipated deficit of £300,000 for the financial year 1891-2; and
+(4) to retire £120,945 worth of Brisbane Bridge debentures--a total
+of £1,420,945. Despite any statute to the contrary, country lands, not
+within twenty miles of a railway or the permanent survey of one, or of
+any navigable stream, were authorised to be sold by auction in areas
+of 320 acres to 5,120 acres, at the upset price of 10s. an acre.
+Payments might be extended over three years, but the unpaid
+instalments must bear 5 per cent. interest. Any land so offered and
+unsold would remain open for six months for purchase at the same price
+and on the same terms.
+
+The proceeds of these sales were to be applied (1) to payment of the
+sums appropriated by Parliament for the service of the financial years
+1891-2 and 1892-3 respectively, and (2) to the payment of interest
+upon and retirement of the Treasury bills before mentioned. In 1901
+the Philp Government were in financial trouble through federal charges
+and the unexampled drought, and they passed a Treasury Bills Act and a
+Special Sales of Land Act, the former for the sum of £530,000; and the
+proceeds of the latter to be applied (1) to making good any revenue
+deficiency during the years 1901-2 and 1902-3, and (2) to the payment
+of interest upon and retirement of the bills issued under the Treasury
+Bills Act. In 1902 another Treasury Bills Act covering £600,000 was
+passed by the same Government. The Auditor-General in his report for
+1907-8 showed that there were still outstanding £1,130,000 in Treasury
+bills issued under the 1901 and 1902 Acts, and maturing in 1912 and
+1913 respectively. In the same report the Auditor-General refers to
+the sum of £8,148 received from special sales of land during the year,
+and appropriated to the payment of interest on Treasury bills. For
+some years past these special sales of land have been stopped,
+but instalments of payments were received annually until last year
+(1907-8), when they amounted to £3,279; but none are now outstanding,
+and the Act is practically a dead letter.
+
+[Illustration: HAULING TIMBER, NORTH COAST RAILWAY]
+
+[Illustration: STONY CREEK BRIDGE AND FALLS, CAIRNS RAILWAY]
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X.
+
+LOCAL GOVERNMENT IN QUEENSLAND.
+
+ First Municipality Established.--Brisbane Bridge Lands.--Grant
+ for Town Hall.--Consolidating Municipalities Act.--Provincial
+ Councils Act.--Government Buildings not Rateable.--Brisbane
+ Bridge Debentures and Waterway Acts.--Municipal Endowment.
+ --Local Government Act of 1878.--Divisional Boards Act of
+ 1879; Success of the Act.--Local Works Loans Act.--Two Pounds
+ for One Pound Endowment Repealed.--Rating Powers Extended by
+ Local Authorities Act of 1902.--Cessation of Endowment.
+ --Valuation and Rating Act.--Decline in Land Values.
+ --Unequal Incidence of Rates Levied.--Efficiency of Local
+ Authorities.
+
+
+When Sir George Bowen proclaimed the establishment of Queensland there
+was only one municipality within the boundaries of the new colony.
+Brisbane had been incorporated just three months earlier, probably
+with the view of having the Mayor of a local authority to take his
+part in the inaugural celebrations. At that time the New South Wales
+Municipal Institutions Act of 1858 was in force, but it was quite
+inadequate to the needs of the country. Sir George Bowen, coming from
+residence among the crowded populations of Great Britain and several
+European countries, and recognising what powerful safeguards to
+public liberty municipal corporations had proved, publicly urged the
+establishment of local government in Queensland on every favourable
+opportunity.
+
+In 1861 two Municipalities Acts were passed, one empowering the
+Brisbane City Council to build a bridge across the river, and
+providing for endowment in the form of grants of Crown land not
+exceeding two-thirds of the unsold town and suburban allotments of
+Brisbane; also empowering the council to borrow for the purpose
+of erecting the structure. The other Act gave extended powers to
+municipal councils generally. It defined the rateable value of
+unoccupied lands to be 8 per cent. of their actual capital value, but
+the minimum rate of any allotment was not to be less than 10s. per
+annum. It also provided that unoccupied land might be leased for
+fourteen years by a council when rates had been permitted to fall into
+arrear for a term of four years. It further empowered a council to
+borrow on mortgage a sum not exceeding the estimated revenue for the
+ensuing three years. As additional endowment, it was provided that
+the Governor in Council might pay to a municipal council every year
+one-third of the proceeds of land sold within its jurisdiction; and
+where one-half of the land in a municipality had been sold the council
+were to be entitled to one-half of the proceeds of future sales.
+
+In 1863 an Act was passed giving the Brisbane Council power to erect a
+town hall on allotment 4 and part of allotment 3 of section 12, with a
+frontage to Queen street and Burnett lane respectively of 99 ft., and
+a depth of 138 ft., to be granted by the Government on the passing of
+the Act. The council were empowered to borrow £20,000 for the purposes
+of the hall. The Brisbane Waterworks Act empowered the Government to
+grant a site for the proposed works on the heads of Enoggera Creek,
+but the Government were to borrow the sum necessary for construction,
+and to hand over the money to the council as it might be required.
+
+In 1864 an amending and consolidating Municipal Institutions Act was
+passed giving larger and more specific powers to municipal bodies.
+In the same year a Provincial Councils Act was passed, empowering
+the Government to appoint such councils in the country districts, and
+place at their disposal money from time to time voted by Parliament
+for roads and bridges within their jurisdiction. But the members, not
+being elective, had no power to levy rates, so that the councils would
+at best have been no more than bodies delegated with power by the
+Works Department to carry out works with which the Government could
+not conveniently grapple. The only provincial council established
+under the Act, however, was one for the Peak Downs district, of which
+all the members were Crown lessees. That council had its place of
+meeting at Clermont, and on first assembling it resolved not to admit
+the Press to its meetings. This exclusive policy, combined with the
+class character of its members, made the council at once unpopular,
+and after spending £2,000 which had been placed to its credit by the
+Government it ingloriously collapsed.
+
+In 1865 an Act was passed dividing the Brisbane Municipality into six
+wards, each returning two members. In 1868 an amendment of the 1864
+and 1865 Acts was passed enabling councils to forbid the erection of
+inflammable buildings. In the following year an Act was passed which
+forbade the levy of rates upon Government buildings. An Act of the
+same year enabled the Governor in Council to rescind any proclamation
+of town or suburban lands.
+
+In 1870 the Brisbane Bridge Debentures Act and the Brisbane Waterway
+Act were passed. By the former the council were empowered to issue
+debentures, bearing 5 per cent. interest and covering £121,250, for
+the payment of its bridge liabilities. The preamble recited that
+a contract had been entered into with Mr. John Bourne for the
+construction of the bridge; that owing to alterations in the plan
+assented to by the Government the cost had been largely increased, and
+the work had in fact been suspended; that the bank overdraft, secured
+upon all the bridge lands and the rates, exceeded £100,000; and
+that Thomas Brassey, having supplied the ironwork of the bridge, had
+undertaken to complete the structure on certain conditions involved
+in the issue of the debenture loan above mentioned. The Waterway
+Act provided for the repayment to the council of the cost of certain
+waterways by the sale of lands specified in the schedule.
+
+In 1875 another Act was passed providing for the payment to the
+Brisbane Council of the cost of certain drainage works by the sale of
+city lands specified in its schedule. In the same year the Rockhampton
+Waterworks Act, being the first for a provincial body, was passed. In
+1876 an Act was passed for endowing municipalities to the extent of
+£2 for £1 on the rates collected for the first five years after
+incorporation and £1 for £1 in subsequent years.
+
+In 1878 was passed the ponderous Local Government Act, adapted from
+the recent Victorian legislation, but denounced by the Opposition
+in the Assembly at the time as far too cumbrous save for town
+municipalities. It formed, however, one of the bases of the Local
+Authorities Act of 1902. In 1879 a new departure was made by the first
+McIlwraith Government by passing a rudimentary measure--the Divisional
+Boards Act--in which the Government took power to apply the Act
+simultaneously to all parts of the colony. It gave power to levy
+rates, and therefore excited popular anti-tax demonstrations. But
+much that was said against the bill proved on investigation to be
+inaccurate, and the endowment it provided of £2 for £1 collected in
+rates for the term of five years ultimately went far to neutralise the
+hostility expressed towards the measure. Also the bill provided that
+to give the boards a start an additional £100,000 should be divisible
+among them as soon as their respective valuations had been made and
+a certified copy of each had been forwarded to the Treasury. After a
+stern and protracted struggle in the Assembly the bill was passed, and
+immediately the Colonial Secretary of the time (Mr. A. H. Palmer) cut
+into "divisions" the entire area of the colony outside the boundaries
+of existing municipalities, and proclaimed seventy-four local
+governing areas under that name, each in three subdivisions with nine
+members for each body. Then every division was invited to elect its
+first members, and rather more than one-half of them did so.
+Within four months from the passing of the Act--on 13th February,
+1880[a]--the whole of the members were gazetted, the Government having
+taken advantage of the power given to the Governor in Council to
+appoint the first members where no action had been initiated to elect
+them within ninety days after the passing of the Act. Thus the names
+of between 600 and 700 members were proclaimed on one day, and the
+new boards forthwith proceeded to put the Act into execution. In a
+comparatively short time valuations were made, and on receipt of a
+copy the Treasurer placed to the credit of the board, in the branch of
+the Queensland National Bank nearest to the division, an amount equal
+to 1s. in the pound of the valuation. This done, works were forthwith
+commenced in all parts of the country, and a few years later visitors
+from the South were wont to compliment the people of Queensland on the
+vast improvement made in their bush roads.
+
+In the following year (1880) the Local Works Loans Act was passed,
+and attracted attention in different parts of the Empire as the first
+measure that provided for advancing local loans by a Government on the
+scientific basis of a term measured by the life of each work, and in
+accordance with an actuarial scale set out in a table in the schedule.
+The longest term was forty years, that being given for the most
+durable works, the rate charged being 5 per cent. interest, with
+16s. 8d. per annum redemption money. Thus a council could borrow for
+waterworks on a forty years' loan, and redeem the principal as well
+as defray the interest charge, by payment of regular half-yearly
+instalments of £2 18s. 4d. per cent. during the term. This Act
+soon became very popular, and with slight amendments--one being the
+reduction of the interest charge to 4 per cent., and the half-yearly
+instalment in the case of a forty years' loan to £2 10s. 0½d.
+per cent.--it still remains on the Statute-book as part of the Local
+Authorities Act of 1902. Several millions sterling have since been
+lent by the Government under this Act, and scarcely a local authority
+has defaulted except for a short period. The principle has also been
+extended to sugar works and other loans not contemplated originally;
+yet with firm administration, such as the Government for several years
+past have insisted upon, the future losses, if any, will be slight,
+and the benefit of the Act continue to be great.
+
+[Illustration: TIMBER GETTING, NORTH COAST DISTRICT]
+
+In 1887 Sir S. W. Griffith passed an amending and consolidating
+Divisional Boards Act in which many defects of the original measure
+were corrected. About the same time he passed an Act to relieve the
+Treasury from the excessive burden of the £2 for £1 endowment, which
+had been extended in 1884 for a second five-year period. Under the
+amended law only such sum as Parliament might vote in each year was to
+be rateably divided among all local authorities. After that time
+the endowment diminished until in 1893 it reached a very small sum.
+Afterwards the amount remained at about 6s. in the pound until 1902,
+when, in passing the new amending and consolidating Local Authorities
+Act of that year, the Philp Government made no provision for
+continuance of the endowment. In 1903, therefore, owing to the
+embarrassment of the Treasury in consequence of heavy deficits for
+several years in succession, the endowment altogether ceased, and
+since that time the Government have steadfastly refused to listen to
+proposals for renewing the payment, on the ground that each governing
+authority should raise its own revenue by taxation or otherwise, and
+not depend upon endowments collected by any other governing authority.
+The stoppage of the endowment was in some degree compensated for by
+the extension of the rating powers of the local authorities, but the
+exercise of these has no doubt accentuated the drop which occurred
+in assessment values after the crisis of 1893. Some councils,
+through failure to make use of their powers of rating, have had an
+insufficient income, so that in parts of the country the roads are now
+in a less traffickable condition than they were a quarter of a century
+ago. In other cases, however, the local bodies have so used the
+powers conferred upon them that they make no complaint of insufficient
+income.
+
+From the day of the presentation to Parliament of the Divisional
+Boards Bill there had always been an outcry, among the farming
+ratepayers chiefly, against the taxation of improvements. In 1890,
+therefore, after ten years' experience, the Government of the
+coalition, whose leaders had long been severed by difference of
+opinion on the subject of land taxation, perceived in a universal levy
+on the unimproved value, so called, a method of mutual reconciliation
+which would meet the demands of many true exponents of local
+government principles, and they agreed to introduce the new system.
+The "unimproved value" is by no means an accurate definition of what
+either the taxpayers or the Legislature at the time desired. But no
+one has yet discovered a more satisfactory definition, and therefore
+it stands.
+
+Up to 1890 the assessment had been on the net rent a property might
+be reasonably expected to yield after deducting the cost of rates
+and insurance and the amount necessary to maintain the property in a
+condition to command such rent. This was, in short, the old basis of
+assessment in the mother country; but to meet the objection to the
+assessment of improvements the Government, in introducing the first
+Divisional Boards Bill, had modified the valuation clause by the
+proviso that the improvements on land should be assessed at one-half
+their value. This was a modification of the New Zealand assessment
+method, and it gave fair satisfaction for a time.
+
+Country ratepayers for the most part approved the change to the
+unimproved value assessment; but speculators in unoccupied city,
+town, and suburban lands regarded it as a gross injustice. They not
+unnaturally complained that an allotment bare, or with a mere hut upon
+it, would pay as much in rates under the new system as the adjoining
+allotment which might be the site of spacious business premises or
+of a palatial dwelling. To this the reply was that the speculative
+holding of city and suburban lands inflicted gross injustice upon the
+man who wanted at existing value an allotment for his own use.
+
+The Valuation and Rating Act of 1890 passed, however; and the law as
+it stands has the undoubted merit of simplicity in valuations. On the
+other hand, the rate levied under the unimproved value assessment upon
+vacant lands is sometimes oppressive, and appreciably reduces their
+capital value. Another unforeseen effect has also been realised. The
+value of a highly improved allotment tends to become depressed to
+the value of the unproductive and unoccupied allotment contiguous or
+adjacent to it. Hence an intending buyer is apt to ascertain the local
+authority valuation of any land he needs, and to regulate his price
+accordingly. In a buoyant land market this might not much affect the
+selling value, but for twenty years past the land market for city or
+suburban properties has been the reverse of buoyant. So the unimproved
+value mode of assessment has apparently assisted to make a substantial
+reduction in the market value of city and suburban properties. But
+that is perhaps a less evil than may at first sight appear. The
+speculative inflation of land values is simply a tax upon the user
+for all time; and the moment the income-earning value is exceeded the
+excess must be regarded as an unjust charge upon posterity.
+
+Of course land values will eventually find their true level, whatever
+law of rating may be in force. It may be conceded that the unimproved
+assessment has caused distress among landowners who had no means of
+improving their properties, and could only find a market for them at
+a heavy sacrifice. Still there is no disposition on the part of the
+majority of ratepayers to revert to the old annual value system, and
+there is not likely to be any alteration in the law in this respect
+unless for the removal of some obvious administrative anomaly. For,
+as the coalition leaders agreed nineteen years ago, the local rate has
+become a land tax pure and simple, and if it be held that more money
+is wanted for development the simpler course is to allow the local
+authorities to give another twist to the rating screw. This, as a
+matter of fact, most of them have of late years done, and in many
+local jurisdictions the rate is now 3d. in the pound, when twenty
+years ago only 1d. or 1½d. was levied. In 1884 the total local
+rates levied were £120,479; in 1908 the total was £452,052 for, it
+must be remembered, an identical aggregate area. A local authorities'
+rate has the distinct advantage in a young State like Queensland that,
+whereas a Treasury land tax would reach only the freeholders of
+less than 20,000,000 acres, the local government rate is levied upon
+460,000 square miles.
+
+The subjoined table is compiled from Statistics of Queensland for 1884
+and 1908 respectively:--
+
+
+AMOUNT LEVIED BY LOCAL AUTHORITIES.
+
+ ------------------------+-------------------------+------------------------
+ Year 1884. | Year 1908. | Increases, 1908.
+ ------------------------+-------------------------+------------------------
+ CITIES AND TOWNS-- £ | CITIES AND TOWNS-- £ | CITIES AND TOWNS-- £
+ General Rates 46,208 | General Rates 150,744 | General Rates 104,536
+ | |
+ Separate 4,845 | Separate} | Separate or
+ | } 87,155 |
+ Special 7,583 | Special } | Special 74,727
+ ------- | -------- | --------
+ Total £58,636 | Total £237,899 | Total £179,263
+ | |
+ DIVISIONS-- | SHIRES-- | SHIRES--
+ Total £61,843 | Total £214,153 | Total £152,310
+ ------- | -------- | --------
+ Grand Total £120,479 | Grand Total £452,052 | Grand Total £331,573
+ ------------------------+-------------------------+------------------------
+
+Thus, since the unimproved value system came into force, the levies
+of the local authority rates have multiplied about three and a-half
+times. In 1884, when the first quarter-century closed, the divisional
+boards drew £2 for £1 as Treasury endowment, which, assuming the
+rates were all collected, made their incomes from the combined sources
+£185,529 for the year. In 1908, without a penny of endowment, their
+successors'--the shire councils--rate levy totalled £214,153, or
+£28,624 in excess of both rates and endowment in 1884. In 1884 the
+city and town councils levied rates amounting to £58,636, which with
+endowment added should have given them £117,272. In 1908 the cities
+and towns levied an aggregate of £237,899, an increase upon 1884 of
+£120,627, despite the loss of the £1 for £1 endowment.
+
+These figures are interesting in view of the agitation for a Treasury
+land tax. They show that in 1908, with a total of 53,948 city and town
+ratepayers, their rate contribution was on the average £4 8s. 2d. per
+ratepayer. At the same time 97,553 shire ratepayers contributed the
+average of only £2 3s. 11d. each. The wide discrepancy between the
+payments of town and country ratepayers seems anomalous, but when
+it is recollected that the urban councils, of which there are only
+thirty-five, undertake many public services, and that the entire area
+of incorporated cities and towns is only about 354 square miles, it
+will be realised that the circumstances widely differ from those of
+the shires, whose various jurisdictions embrace almost the entire area
+of the State, the official estimate being 669,901 square miles. This
+area includes 210,359 square miles of unoccupied country, much of
+which is traversed by roads, but which presumably yields no rate
+revenue. Hence no useful comparison can be made between the rate
+levies of town and country local authorities respectively. At the same
+time a local "land" tax--which ranges from the general-rate of ½d.
+in the pound in the case of shires, to 3d. in the pound, besides
+special and separate rates, in cities and towns, and which makes the
+average total contribution of town ratepayers more than twice the
+amount levied upon country ratepayers--may at no distant time call
+for rectification, especially if a so-called bursting-up tax should be
+deemed necessary to meet the wants of close settlement.
+
+Meanwhile there is room for congratulation in the fact that every
+square mile of the vast area of the State--coastal islands alone
+excepted--is incorporated, and that 160 local authorities with 1,310
+members carry on the entire local government work of the country.
+These men, unlike members of Parliament, are unremunerated by the
+State, even free railway passes not being conceded to enable them to
+attend the periodical meetings. The alderman or shire councillor gives
+purely honorary service, and relieves the State Government of a vast
+amount of worry and expense.
+
+[Illustration: CAIRNS RANGE AND ROBB'S MONUMENT, NORTH QUEENSLAND]
+
+One good effect of local self-government is the exclusion from
+Parliament of the pestilent road-and-bridge member who in former
+years made himself so troublesome to Ministers and so often twisted
+the decision of the Assembly on important questions.
+
+It would be a bad thing indeed for Queensland if the local
+authorities, or any substantial percentage of them, became
+inefficient. There may be room for anxiety at evidences of decadence
+which at times come to the surface; but that local government in
+Queensland is a vigorous and living entity is fairly evident from
+the fact that with very few exceptions the 160 city, town, and shire
+councils are members of the Local Authorities' Association which
+annually makes itself heard in conference in Brisbane. Manifestly the
+spirit of decentralisation is not dead in Queensland. The manner in
+which the various bodies have survived the stoppage of the Treasury
+endowment, simultaneously with the thrusting upon them of many new
+responsibilities by the Act of 1902, must be regarded as a clear
+indication that local government in Queensland retains undiminished
+vitality.
+
+ [Footnote a: See "Queensland Government Gazette" of date
+ mentioned.]
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XI.
+
+PUBLIC INSTRUCTION.
+
+ Primary Education: Board of National Education; Education Act
+ of 1860; Board of General Education; Education Act of 1875;
+ Department of Public Instruction; Higher Education in Primary
+ Schools; Itinerant Teachers; Status of Teachers; Statistics.
+ --Private Schools.--Secondary Education: Grammar Schools Act;
+ Endowments, Scholarships, and Bursaries; Success of Grammar
+ Schools; Exhibitions to Universities; Expenditure.--Technical
+ Education: Beginning of System; Board of Technical Instruction;
+ Transfer of Control to Department of Public Instruction;
+ Statistics; Technical Instruction Act; Continuation Classes;
+ Schools of Arts and Reading Rooms.--University: Royal
+ Commissions; University Bill; Standardised System of Education.
+
+
+From 10th December, 1859, the date of the founding of Queensland, to
+30th September, 1860, primary education was under the control of a
+Board of National Education appointed by the Governor in Council. That
+board consisted of Sir Charles Nicholson (chairman), Messrs. R. R.
+Mackenzie, William Thornton, George Raff, and D. R. Somerset; the
+secretary was William Henry Day. There were then only two national
+schools in the whole of Queensland--namely, one in Drayton and one in
+Warwick. The system of primary education obtaining in New South Wales
+was continued, but the subject of education was one of the earliest
+matters which received the consideration of the first Parliament of
+Queensland, and in 1860 an Act to provide for primary education was
+passed. The Bill was initiated in the Legislative Council by Captain
+O'Connell, and Mr. R. G. W. Herbert had charge of the measure in the
+Legislative Assembly. The object of the Bill was to provide primary
+education under one general and comprehensive system, and to afford
+facilities to persons of all denominations for the education of their
+children in the same school without prejudice to their religious
+beliefs.
+
+
+PRIMARY EDUCATION.
+
+The Act provided for the appointment of a Board of General Education
+to consist of five members, together with a Minister of the Crown who
+would, _ex officio_, act as chairman. The members of the first Board
+were:--Mr. R. R. Mackenzie (chairman), Dr. W. Hobbs (vice-chairman),
+and Messrs. W. H. Day, J. F. McDougall, W. J. Munce, and George Raff.
+
+The scheme of primary education which the board framed was based
+generally upon the national system in operation in Ireland. Schools
+were divided into two classes--vested and non-vested. The vested
+schools were unsectarian in character. The aid granted by the board
+towards the establishment, equipment, and up-keep of schools varied
+from time to time, and ranged from one-half to two-thirds. The board
+appointed the teachers. The salaries of teachers were supplemented
+by school fees, ranging from 3d. to 1s. 6d. per week for each scholar
+according to his standard in the school work. When the board took
+office there were 10 teachers, 493 pupils, and 4 schools--Drayton,
+Warwick, Brisbane (boys), and Brisbane (girls). The total expenditure
+in 1860 was £1,615 2s. 3d. School fees were abolished by the Premier,
+Mr. Lilley, from the 1st of January, 1870, and since that date primary
+State education has been free, Queensland being the first of the
+Australian colonies to adopt the principle of free public education.
+
+The Education Act of 1860 was superseded by the State Education Act of
+1875, which came into operation on 1st January, 1876, and is still
+in force. When passed it was regarded as the most progressive Act
+in Australia. Its author was Mr. S. W. Griffith, the present Chief
+Justice of the Commonwealth, and he was the first Minister for Public
+Instruction. The first Under Secretary was Mr. C. J. Graham. On 31st
+December, 1875, there were 230 schools in operation, the aggregate
+enrolment for the year being 33,643, and the average attendance
+16,887. The number of teachers employed was 595, and the total
+expenditure for the year was £83,219 14s. 9d.
+
+The new Act provided that the whole system of public instruction in
+Queensland, formerly administered by the Board of General Education,
+should be transferred to a department of the public service, to be
+called the Department of Public Instruction.
+
+The Act provided that one-fifth of the cost must be contributed
+locally in the first instance towards the purchase of a school
+site, the erection of the necessary buildings, and the providing of
+furniture; thereafter the State bore the whole expenditure. Thus the
+State defrayed the total cost of repairs and maintenance, renewals,
+additions, and the like. State aid to non-vested schools was withdrawn
+as from 31st December, 1880.
+
+In 1895 a resolution was agreed to by the Legislative Assembly in
+favour of the establishment of superior State schools with a view to
+providing higher education for children in towns and populous centres
+where grammar schools did not exist. The ultimate result of this
+action was the passing of the State Education Act Amendment Act of
+1897, which gave the Governor in Council power to prescribe that any
+subjects of secular instruction might be subjects of instruction in
+primary schools. The department immediately took advantage of this
+amending Act, and provided for the teaching of mathematics, higher
+English, and science in the fifth and sixth classes.
+
+So far as the resources at its disposal have permitted, the Department
+of Public Instruction has done what it could to bring primary
+education within the reach of all the children of the State, and it
+may be safely claimed that wherever twelve children can be gathered
+together there exists a school. But where the children cannot be
+gathered into groups the department goes to the homes of the pupils.
+Itinerant teachers, fully equipped with buggies, camping outfits,
+school requisites, and other necessaries, traverse the sparsely
+settled districts in the far West and North where the establishment of
+schools is not possible. The travelling teachers look for the homes
+of the pupils, be those homes rude wayside inns, log cabins, or even
+tents, and an effort is made to visit each home not less than four
+times a year. Under this system the little ones are at least taught
+to read, to write, and to count. The itinerant teacher system was
+initiated in 1901, when one teacher was appointed. There are now
+twelve of these teachers, and the expenditure in this direction has
+risen from £411 per annum to £5,129 per annum.
+
+In 1906 the department began to appoint trained teachers to the charge
+of all schools where the attendance exceeded twelve. By this process
+properly qualified teachers will soon be in charge of 90 per cent. of
+the schools of the State. One of the most difficult problems which
+has to be faced in England, Scotland, America, and also in some of our
+sister States, is the adequate staffing of small country schools by
+efficient teachers. Queensland has solved that problem, and it is
+doubtful if any country has done better in that respect.
+
+Primary school teachers are officers of the State, and are not
+subject to the caprices of boards or local committees; they enjoy the
+protection and privileges of the Public Service Act, and the interests
+of no branch of the public service are more zealously protected by
+Parliament. They stand high in public estimation in Queensland,
+and that estimation is steadily rising. The pay on the whole is
+good--particularly that of head teachers, and the conditions of
+service are by no means unattractive.
+
+In 1908 the total expenditure on education (including school
+buildings) was £393,378 1s. 8d.; the total number of departmental
+schools open during that year was 1,141, the net enrolment of pupils
+being 94,193, and the average daily attendance 67,309.
+
+[Illustration: VIEW OF GYMPIE FROM NASHVILLE RAILWAY STATION]
+
+[Illustration: COKE OVENS, IPSWICH DISTRICT]
+
+
+PRIVATE SCHOOLS.
+
+The number of private schools in operation in Queensland during 1908
+was 157, namely:--Church of England, 8; Roman Catholic, 61; Lutheran,
+2; undenominational, 86. These schools are not subsidised by the
+State. The number of teachers employed in them during the year
+totalled 665. The total enrolment of scholars was 14,098--males,
+5,934; females, 8,164. The total average number of scholars attending
+the schools was 11,928--males, 5,114; females, 6,814.
+
+
+SECONDARY EDUCATION.
+
+In 1860, that is within one year of the founding of Queensland as a
+separate State, an Act was passed to provide for the establishment
+of grammar schools, in which was to be given an education higher than
+that which could be given in the elementary schools. The following
+remarks made by Mr. R. G. W. Herbert, who introduced the bill in the
+Legislative Assembly, are very interesting. He said: "The question of
+education might be considered under three heads as primary, grammar
+school, and collegiate. The bill introduced into the other branch
+of the Legislature was intended to provide for primary education,
+principally under the national system, and would make adequate
+provision for imparting fundamental instruction at a cheap rate to all
+classes of youth without distinction of creed or religious profession.
+The bill he now introduced was intended to provide for a higher order
+of instruction of a useful and thoroughly practical character by
+establishing grammar schools easily accessible to the colonial youth
+of all denominations throughout the colony.... It was desirable
+that the instruction to be afforded in the grammar schools should
+be afforded at a cheap rate, so that as many as possible might avail
+themselves of it, and that it should be such as would best qualify the
+youth of the colony for discharging the duties that would devolve upon
+them in after life."
+
+Captain O'Connell, who had charge of the measure in the Legislative
+Council, said: "It was merely a sequel to the Primary Education Bill,
+and was designed to give those who might desire it a higher education
+than could be afforded by the primary schools. It was a matter of the
+greatest importance that a system of this kind should be established
+on a broad and permanent foundation, and therefore it was not
+difficult to perceive that the creation of primary schools such as
+were contemplated under the other bill would be found extremely useful
+in carrying out the great objects now proposed to be accomplished."
+
+Under the provisions of the Grammar Schools Act a school may be
+established in any locality where a sum of not less than £1,000 has
+been raised locally, and the Governor in Council may grant towards
+the erection of school buildings and a residence for the principal a
+subsidy equal to twice the amount raised locally. An amending Act
+was passed in 1864 providing that when certain conditions had been
+complied with an annual endowment of £1,000 might be granted to each
+grammar school. Each school is governed by a board of seven trustees;
+of these, four are appointed by the Government, and three are
+nominated by the subscribers to the building fund; they hold office
+for three years.
+
+There are ten grammar schools in the State--seven in Southern, two
+in Central, and one in Northern Queensland. The Ipswich Boys' Grammar
+School was the first to be established; it was erected in 1863. The
+last established was the school for girls in Rockhampton, which was
+founded in 1892.
+
+Each of the schools has qualified for the annual endowment of £1,000;
+of this amount the State pays £750 a year unconditionally, and £250
+on the understanding that the school will receive a certain number of
+State scholars per annum, the scholarships held by these pupils being
+known as district scholarships. Queensland has always been liberal
+in the granting of scholarships, and at the present time no less than
+102, including the district scholarships, are granted every year; of
+these, 70 are available for boys, and 32 for girls. Each scholarship
+has a currency of three years. The State also grants seven bursaries
+to boys and three to girls. A bursary entitles the holder to free
+education at an approved secondary school for three years, together
+with a cash allowance of £30 per annum. The trustees of the various
+grammar schools also grant scholarships in addition to those provided
+by the State. In 1908 the aggregate enrolment of pupils in attendance
+at the grammar schools was 1,101, with an average daily attendance
+of 970; and of these pupils fully one-third were the holders of
+scholarships. Free railway passes to the nearest grammar school are
+granted to the holders of scholarships.
+
+To assist the children of poor parents to avail themselves of the
+scholarships which they may win, the Government grant a living
+allowance of £12 per annum to the winners of scholarships, provided
+that the income of the parents does not exceed £3 per week, or £30
+per annum for each bona fide member of the family. This rule came into
+operation on the 1st of January, 1909.
+
+It is generally recognised that the Queensland grammar schools do
+good work; the success of their students in the junior and senior
+examinations of the Sydney University abundantly justifies this
+conclusion. Each school constructs its own programme, but, broadly
+speaking, the curriculum of the several schools is designed to lead
+up to the Sydney University. As each school practically shapes its own
+course, the success of the institution depends very largely upon the
+personality, efficiency, and vigour of the principal. In addition to
+the State-endowed grammar schools there are several other secondary
+schools. Some of these are denominational, and others are conducted by
+private persons. Schools of this class are not endowed by the State,
+but the winners of State scholarships or bursaries may attend these
+institutions if the Governor in Council is satisfied that they are of
+a sufficiently high standard.
+
+Queensland has not so far placed the coping-stone on her educational
+system by establishing a University, but each year she grants three
+exhibitions to Universities outside the State. The exhibitions
+are open to competition, and the test examination is the senior
+examination of the Sydney University. Each exhibition has a currency
+of three years, and is worth £100 a year. The winners may attend any
+University approved by the Governor in Council.
+
+It will thus be seen that Queensland has been fairly liberal in
+providing the means of higher education for her children. A comparison
+with her sister States of New South Wales and Victoria emphasises this
+fact. During the year 1906-7 New South Wales, with a population of
+1,528,697, and a revenue of £13,392,435, granted £12,945 towards
+secondary education; Victoria, with a population of 1,231,940, and a
+revenue of £8,345,534, granted £5,874; Queensland, with a population
+of 535,113, and a revenue of £4,307,912, granted £12,909, this
+amount being exclusive of the £900 per annum granted on account of
+exhibitions to Universities. In 1908 the amount granted by the State
+towards secondary education in Queensland was £14,272 11s. 11d.
+
+
+TECHNICAL EDUCATION.
+
+The system of technical education in Queensland is in its infancy, but
+no branch is likely to make more rapid and lusty growth or to have a
+more important bearing upon the industrial and commercial development
+of the State.
+
+The Brisbane Technical College has been in existence as a distinct
+institution since 1882. It is only since July, 1905, that the
+Education Department has been closely associated with the
+administration of technical education. Previous to 1902 technical
+colleges, with the exception of the Brisbane College, were carried on
+in connection with schools of arts under the control of local
+committees, the State subsidising the colleges to the extent of £1 for
+each £1 paid in fees or subscribed for technical college purposes.
+
+In 1902 a Board of Technical Education was created; the board held
+office until 1905, when this branch of education was placed under
+the control of the department, and a special officer was appointed to
+supervise the work. Endowment is now paid upon a differential scale,
+the distribution being based on the general and practical utility of
+the subjects taught, the subsidy ranging from 10s. to £3 for every £1
+collected in fees. There were seventeen colleges in operation during
+1908. The progress which has been made during the past five years is
+shown in the following table:--
+
+ ---------------------+---------------------+----------------
+ Year. | Number of | Endowment.
+ |Individual Students. |
+ ---------------------+---------------------+----------------
+ 1904 | 3,600 | £4,732 4 6
+ 1905 | 3,892 | 5,460 4 11
+ 1906 | 4,321 | 7,930 13 5
+ 1907 | 4,702 | 9,610 4 2
+ 1908 | 5,187 | 10,719 12 7
+ ---------------------+---------------------+----------------
+
+The importance of a highly developed system of technical education has
+been fully realised in this State, and in 1908 a Technical Instruction
+Act was passed. It provides for the establishment of a central
+technical college in Brisbane which shall be maintained by, and be
+under the direct control of, the State. It is intended that this
+college shall be the recognised technical institute of Queensland,
+and it is hoped that it may ultimately be one of the most important
+institutions of the kind in Australia. The colleges outside the
+metropolis will be affiliated with the central college, but will
+remain under local control.
+
+In addition to liberal assistance to technical education, provision
+has been made for evening continuation classes. These classes are to
+enable pupils who have left school before completing their primary
+education to continue their education; to assist persons to obtain
+instruction in special subjects relating to their employment; and to
+prepare students for the technical colleges. The classes are liberally
+endowed by the State, and very comprehensive regulations have been
+framed for their administration, the system being probably the best of
+its kind in the Commonwealth.
+
+[Illustration: GULF CATTLE READY FOR MARKET]
+
+[Illustration: BRIGALOW COUNTRY, WARRA, DARLING DOWNS]
+
+[Illustration: HEREFORD COWS, DARLING DOWNS]
+
+Schools of arts and reading rooms are also fostered by the State. A
+grant of 10s. is made for each £1 of subscriptions or donations, but
+the grant to any one institution cannot exceed £150 per annum.
+
+The State subsidises reading rooms at shearing sheds, sugar mills,
+and meat works to the extent of £1 for £1, with a view to assisting
+to provide reading matter, and such suitable recreation games as
+draughts, chess, &c., for the workers in those industries.
+
+The amount contributed by the State towards schools of arts and
+reading rooms is £5,000 per annum, and in 1908 there were 181 of these
+institutions.
+
+
+UNIVERSITY.
+
+The question of establishing a University has been under consideration
+from time to time for the past thirty-five years, and more than one
+Royal Commission has been appointed to inquire into and report upon
+the subject. In 1874 a commission recommended the immediate foundation
+of a University. In 1891 another commission was appointed, and made a
+similar recommendation. For various reasons, however, but principally
+financial stringency, no action was taken until September, 1899,
+when the Government introduced a bill for the establishment of a
+University. Unfortunately the bill did not become law, and Queensland
+remained without a University for another decade.
+
+The Government programme for the first session of 1909 included a
+University Bill, but owing to the untimely dissolution of the Assembly
+nothing was done in the matter. When Parliament met again on 2nd
+November, the bill was the first measure proceeded with. Both Houses
+being unanimously in favour of establishing a University on modern,
+democratic lines, it was speedily passed, and on 10th December,
+the jubilee of the foundation of Queensland, Government House was
+dedicated to the purposes of the University by His Excellency the
+Governor, Sir William MacGregor, in the presence of a large and
+representative gathering of citizens. With the State system of primary
+education established on a sound basis; technical education placed on
+a firm foundation and progressing steadily; secondary education
+linked to the other branches, and all leading towards the University,
+Queensland will have a system of education which will place her on a
+level with the most progressive of the nations.
+
+
+
+
+PART III.--OUR JUBILEE YEAR.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I.
+
+GENERAL REVIEW.
+
+ Good Seasons and General Prosperity.--Land Settlement
+ and Immigration.--The Sugar Crop.--Gold and Other
+ Minerals.--Reduction in Cost of Mining and Treatment
+ of Ores.--Vigorous Railway Extension.--Mileage Open for
+ Traffic.--Efficiency of 3 ft. 6 in. Gauge.--Our Railway
+ Investment.--The National Association Jubilee Show.
+ --The General Election.--The Mandate of the Constituencies.
+ --Government Majority.--Practical Extinction of Third
+ Party.--Labour a Constitutional Opposition.--Federal
+ Agreement with States.--Federal Union Vindicated.
+
+
+During the half-century of Queensland's existence she has never
+experienced a more prosperous year than that of her Jubilee. Not only
+have the seasons been good, the rains well distributed though in
+some parts light, but prices of staple products have been high in the
+world's markets. The increase of sheep, cattle, and horses has
+been unusually large this year; the clip of wool has been highly
+satisfactory both in respect of quality and market value; the yield of
+butter and cheese has been above the average; and crops generally
+have been remunerative to the farmer. The wheat crop at the time
+this chapter is being written promises well, the area showing a
+considerable increase upon last year, while prices are certainly
+above the average. Trade and commerce have consequently been brisk and
+sound, and nearly all classes of the community have participated
+in the prosperity that has prevailed. Settlement upon the land has
+progressed by leaps and bounds; immigrants have begun to flow into
+the country in encouraging numbers, and, with few exceptions, the new
+arrivals have found a market for their labour at wages contrasting
+favourably with their earnings in the mother land.
+
+Of all staple products sugar alone shows declension in yield this
+year, but that arises, not from the season of 1909, but from the
+unprecedentedly severe frosts of the previous year. Yet, despite
+the lessened yield of cane, the sugar-growers do not complain of bad
+times, nor is their outlook discouraging.
+
+The gold yield has continued to fall off, but that is partly due to
+the prosperity of the pastoral and agricultural industries, which have
+attracted both capital and labour that under other circumstances would
+have been employed in prospecting for the precious metal. Silver and
+the baser metals have also exhibited a shrinkage in output, but that
+is explained by the low prices which have ruled since the American
+crisis of two years ago. Two of the great mining companies in Central
+Queensland--the Mount Morgan Gold Mining Company and the Great Fitzroy
+Copper Mining Company--have both had a prosperous year, having
+found in simultaneous mining for gold and copper abundant scope for
+enterprise and energy; and improved methods of raising ore, as well as
+constantly lessened expense of treatment, have made the prospect for
+the future reassuring. Large profits are being made to-day in the
+treatment of the less rich but more abundant ores, which could not
+have been utilised even ten years ago except at ruinous loss. It is
+now recognised that a well-organised laboratory is as essential in the
+equipment of a great mine as a corps of skilled miners or a range of
+smelting furnaces. Hence it is that the mining outlook is encouraging,
+and that in the opinion of scientific experts the industry in
+Queensland has scarcely yet passed the infantile stage.
+
+It is natural that in accordance with the progressive spirit of the
+times the Government should have induced Parliament to authorise the
+expenditure of much more than the recent average amount of loan money
+in the construction of railways and other public works. No less than
+eleven railways, as stated in the Commissioner's report recently
+published, have been under construction this year. These lines are
+expected to be completed within a few months, so that nearly 4,000
+miles will be open for traffic before the close of the financial year.
+Besides this large mileage for a population of 568,000 persons, 446
+miles of other railways and tramways, more or less under the control
+of the State, are available for public traffic. Being of the same
+gauge as the State railways, they have been the means of developing
+large areas and materially improving the position of the Government
+lines. Thus the length of railway which will be open for traffic
+before 30th June, 1910, will amount to 4,320 miles of the standard 3
+ft. 6 in. gauge, which will be equal to the traffic of a comparatively
+dense population. The increased breadth of rolling-stock has been
+found to conduce to comfort without imperilling the safety of
+passengers, and by the use of heavier rails and more powerful engines
+the carrying capacity of the narrow-gauge lines has of late years been
+greatly increased.[a]
+
+The Commissioner puts the total cost of our railway system on 30th
+June last, including £1,139,405 spent on lines not yet open, at
+£24,534,727. The total authorised outlay is, however, given as
+£27,221,805, so that at the rate of expenditure of last year the
+balance unexpended will enable construction to be continued for over
+two years. The net revenue available for the defraying of interest
+accruing on capital for the financial year 1908-9 was £883,610,[b]
+equal to £3 7s. 6d. per cent. The mean rate of interest payable on
+the total public debt of Queensland, which includes much stock bearing
+more than 3½ per cent., is £3 14s. 1d. per cent., so that our
+railways may be deemed almost directly reproductive; and, what is
+still more satisfactory, they are rapidly improving in net earning
+capacity. As every extension adds to the volume of traffic, apart
+altogether from the added value given to Crown lands by providing them
+with railway communication, every inducement is held out to maintain a
+vigorous policy of construction. There is every reason to believe that
+in a few years our railway system will be the greatest and most
+stable of all contributors to the Consolidated Revenue; and when it is
+recollected that forty-five years ago there was not a mile of railway
+or tramway open for traffic in Queensland, the progress made in
+providing transport facilities is brought out in bold relief.
+
+One of the most noteworthy events of the Jubilee Year was the
+thirty-fourth exhibition of the National Agricultural and Industrial
+Association. This exhibition is the occasion of the most generally
+observed holiday of the year in the metropolis, and attracts thousands
+of visitors from all parts of Queensland, and many from the Southern
+States. It has come to be regarded as the annual meeting-ground of
+friends from widely separated localities. Year by year the attendance
+of visitors has grown, and the interest taken in the display has
+increased. This year special efforts were put forth by the council
+of the Association; and, fearing that their own resources would prove
+unequal to the strain, they applied to the Government for a jubilee
+grant. But the Government refused to do more than provide jubilee
+medals for certain classes of successful exhibitors, and enter some
+splendid exhibits from the State farms and others illustrative of the
+mineral wealth of Queensland. They held that to accede to the request
+would be to supply a precedent for similar applications from kindred
+associations in provincial towns, and that one of the glories of the
+metropolitan exhibition is that it is a self-supporting, self-reliant
+institution. The sequel proved the correctness of this view, for the
+exhibition far exceeded all predecessors in magnitude, and gave a
+handsome profit to the National Association, which richly deserved
+such a reward for months of self-sacrificing work.
+
+[Illustration: ABOVE STONY CREEK FALLS, CAIRNS RAILWAY]
+
+The official opening was attended by unusual pomp and ceremony, the
+Governor-General of the Commonwealth, the Earl of Dudley, performing
+the task of declaring the exhibition open. His Excellency took
+advantage of the opportunity to impress upon the people of Queensland
+the urgent need for a vigorous immigration policy if the country is to
+be successfully developed and its well-being maintained.
+
+To attempt a detailed description of what was not inappropriately
+termed "Our Jubilee Carnival" would be beyond the province and the
+scope of this volume. When it is mentioned that the exhibits numbered
+over 8,000, the magnitude of the undertaking will be realised. It will
+be sufficient to mention a few salient points. For example, there
+were no less than 1,580 exhibits of live stock; and as, in the case of
+sheep and cattle, an entry often included pens and not single animals,
+the provision made for this attractive and paramount feature of
+the show was taxed to its utmost capacity. These pastoral exhibits
+represented stock yielding more than a moiety of the £14,000,000 worth
+of annual exports; and the industry connected with grazing stock on
+the natural pastures of the country not only employs much labour and
+contributes largely to the revenue of the State directly in the shape
+of Crown rents and railway freights, but it assists the Treasury
+indirectly in many other ways. The magnificent display of stud and
+pedigree stock and their products spoke volumes for the value of
+the indigenous grass crop which costs nothing to raise and only wire
+fencing to protect.
+
+Among the exhibits was a trophy of that world-commanding product,
+wool, of which the value exported from Australia in 1908 is given
+in the Federal Treasurer's Budget delivered in August last as
+£22,914,236. The Commonwealth returns do not differentiate between the
+various States, but, assuming the average value of the fleece to be
+the same throughout Australia, the value of Queensland's share of the
+clip was about £5,000,000. Another product which has the world for
+its market is cotton. Of this article there were three splendid
+exhibits--one from West Moreton, in Southern Queensland; another from
+Rockhampton, in Central Queensland; and the third from Cairns, in
+Northern Queensland. Nothing save the cost of labour in picking
+prevents cotton being classed among the staple products of our State,
+and it is hoped by experts that as families upon the farms increase
+this difficulty will be removed. The Cairns exhibit was of Caravonica
+cotton, a variety of the valuable Sea Island species, concerning the
+extensive cultivation of which the most sanguine anticipations are
+expressed. In agricultural products emulation was greatly stimulated
+by the district exhibits, of which there were five, and on the
+whole they were superior to any that had ever before been shown in
+Queensland. Almost every product of the temperate and torrid zones
+appeared among the exhibits, though, of course, many of them are not
+yet being cultivated on a commercial scale. Among the most prominent
+of those of commercial value may be mentioned sugar, butter, cheese,
+hams, bacon, wheat, maize, fodder crops, potatoes, pineapples, and
+citrus and deciduous fruits, in all of which the displays were a
+revelation, not only to visitors from other parts of the continent and
+oversea, but also to many of our own people. The same may be remarked
+of the magnificent exhibits of gold, copper, tin, coal, and other
+minerals, which form so large a proportion of our wealth-producing
+exports. Statistics relating to the production and export of these
+commodities will be found in the appendices to this volume, and need
+not be further referred to here. Another attraction meriting special
+notice was the collection of gems and precious stones, the industry
+represented by which is at present struggling against the want of
+access to profitable markets; but the great interest aroused at the
+Franco-British Exhibition of last year by the magnificent display of
+Queensland gems is calculated to remove this disability, and to place
+the industry on a prosperous and permanent footing. The great variety
+of foods manufactured in Australia was another feature of the display,
+while in the machinery section the entries surpassed any previous
+exhibition in Queensland. Consequent upon the removal of border duties
+and the adoption of a uniform tariff, Queensland has suffered keenly
+from the competition of the Southern States. Statistics abundantly
+prove that some of our nascent manufactures have been checked
+seriously by such competition, although these losses are being
+gradually compensated for by gains in the form of enlarged free
+markets for products in which Queensland is safeguarded by natural
+conditions; but even freetraders must admit that our protective
+Customs duties are stimulating what are called native manufactures
+in a surprising degree, and that year by year Queensland and the
+Commonwealth at large are becoming less dependent upon the outside
+world for the products and manufactures which are essential to the
+existence of a civilised nation.
+
+Politically, 1909 has been rather a trying year, but the result of the
+general election on 2nd October seems to give promise of better things
+in Parliament. Both the Premier and the Leader of the Opposition agree
+that the practical extinction of the third party by the appeal to
+the electorate will be beneficial to the country. The election also
+ratifies the fusion of parties carried out towards the end of last
+year, with the consequential placing of the Labour party in the
+position of a constitutional Opposition. These salutary changes are
+held to be equivalent to a restoration of responsible government,
+which had been practically suspended by the impossibility of any party
+carrying on the work of legislation without making humiliating terms
+with an irresponsible section. It was contended that there were three
+parties in the country, and that the existence of the same phenomenon
+in the Assembly proved it to be a true reflex of the electorate at
+large; but the late general election has dispelled that illusion, for
+on no occasion since the splitting up of parties had the issue been
+put in so clear-cut a form to the country. Another result of the
+election has been to add somewhat to the strength of the Labour
+members, who are now sufficiently numerous in the Assembly to give
+them a reasonable expectation of being called upon in due time to
+assume the responsibilities of government. The State must gain from
+the resolution of the House into two parties, for the purity and
+effectiveness of party government demand that His Majesty's Ministers
+shall always be faced by an Opposition fitted and prepared to become
+the advisers of the King's representative whenever the existing
+Administration loses the confidence of the Parliament and the country.
+
+As mentioned elsewhere, a most satisfactory event of the year is
+the prospect of a settlement of the financial relations between
+Commonwealth and States on a durable and mutually acceptable basis.
+Public opinion throughout the continent is so clearly in favour of
+the agreement that its ratification seems certain during the present
+financial year, and it seems also certain that it will come into force
+on 1st July next. From that date there is reason to hope that the
+benefits of federal union will become so conspicuous as to silence
+cavilling opponents and justify the aspirations of its advocates. The
+general opinion throughout the Commonwealth with respect to the vital
+question of national defence has undergone a marvellous change for
+the better during the past twelve months, the unanimity displayed
+justifying the most sanguine anticipations of future unbroken concert
+between Great Britain and her self-governing dominions, and the
+supremacy of the British Empire on the ocean, a supremacy which means
+the protection of the world's trade routes and unimpeded maritime
+commerce.
+
+ [Footnote a: As indicative of the progress made in the local
+ manufacture of railway stock, it may be mentioned, on the
+ authority of the Commissioner, that one Brisbane engineering firm
+ has this year completed its 100th locomotive for the Department.]
+
+ [Footnote b: Treasury figures. The Commissioner's figures differ
+ somewhat from those of the Treasury. In estimating the percentage
+ return the Railway Department takes into account only the
+ expenditure on open lines, whilst the Treasury bases its
+ calculations upon the expenditure on all lines, and charges the
+ Railway Department with its proportion of loan deficiencies and
+ flotation charges.]
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II.
+
+THE FEDERAL OUTLOOK.
+
+ Proclamation of the Commonwealth.--The Referendum
+ Vote.--Queensland's Small Majority in the Affirmative.
+ --Representation in Federal Parliament.--The White
+ Australia Policy.--Temporary Effect on Queensland.
+ --An Embarrassed State Treasury.--Assistance to Sugar
+ Industry.--Continued Protection Necessary.--Unequal
+ Distribution of Federal Surplus Revenue.--The Transferred
+ Properties.--Effect of Uniform Tariff.--Good Times Lessen
+ Federal Burden on State.--The Agreement between Prime
+ Minister and Premiers.--Better Feeling Towards Federation.
+ --National Measures of Deakin Government.
+
+
+After several vain attempts on the part of Australian statesmen to
+bring about federation, the Commonwealth Constitution Act was adopted
+by the several States in 1899 and ratified by the Imperial Parliament
+in 1900; and Her Majesty Queen Victoria issued a proclamation,
+declaring that on and after 1st January, 1901, the colonies of New
+South Wales, Victoria, South Australia, Queensland, Tasmania,
+and Western Australia should be federated under the name of the
+Commonwealth of Australia, the several colonies being thereafter known
+as "States." The union took place by the freewill of all the colonies,
+a popular vote being taken in each. The poll was small, only 583,865
+electors recording their votes, of which number 422,788 voted for
+federation and 161,077 against, the majority in favour being 261,711.
+In Queensland 38,488 voted in the affirmative and 30,996 in the
+negative, giving the narrow majority of 7,492, equal to only 10·78
+per cent. of the total votes polled. That majority was obtained by an
+almost block pro-federation vote throughout the Centre and North of
+the colony, the majority in the Southern district, which contained
+about two-thirds of the population, being adverse to union. There was
+no objection to the abstract principle or to the wisdom of a federal
+union--rather the reverse; but Queensland had not been represented at
+any of the Conventions at which the Constitution was drafted, and no
+provision was made, such as was made in the case of West Australia,
+to meet the peculiar geographical, industrial, and financial
+circumstances of this State. In the absence of legislative safeguards
+and guarantees, the unsatisfactory experience of New South Wales
+administration in pre-separation days led the people of Southern
+Queensland to doubt whether the vaunted fraternal spirit would
+withstand the actual attrition of business competition. They feared
+that the great urban populations of Sydney and Melbourne would,
+under the proposed democratic Constitution, secure for themselves
+industrial, commercial, and administrative advantages at the expense
+of their brethren, but none the less rivals, in the more remote
+parts of the continent. Believing that, though their occupations
+and products were the same as those of the Southern States, their
+interests were conflicting, the majority in Southern Queensland cast
+their votes against the union. Finding themselves in a minority, many
+of the opponents of federation deliberately refused to exercise the
+franchise in the first election, held in 1901. Instead of taking steps
+to secure the return to the Commonwealth Parliament of men who would
+try to avert any evil consequences arising from non-representation at
+the Conventions and who would oppose any unfair discrimination, the
+short-sighted abstention of these people from voting enabled the
+Labour party, who certainly did not comprise a majority of the
+electors, to return nine out of our fifteen representatives in the two
+Houses.
+
+[Illustration: MOUNT MORGAN: OPEN CUT AND DUMPS]
+
+[Illustration: MOUNT MORGAN: MUNDIC AND COPPER WORKS.]
+
+One of the first results of this predominance of Labour representation
+was the early passage of legislation abolishing Pacific Island
+labour in the sugar industry--which is almost exclusively confined
+to Queensland--and requiring all the islanders to leave Australia for
+their native homes not later than 31st December, 1906. With a view
+to compensating the cane-growers for the added cost of labour, and to
+induce them to abandon all forms of coloured labour, a bounty, ranging
+at the present time from 7s. 6d. per ton of cane in the extreme North
+to 6s. per ton in Southern Queensland and on the Northern Rivers of
+New South Wales, was offered upon all cane grown exclusively with
+white labour; while to provide funds for payment of the bounty an
+excise duty, first of £3 and then £4 per ton, was imposed. These
+radical changes occurred at a time, unfortunately, when the State
+was suffering from severe depression resulting from an unprecedented
+succession of adverse seasons and the substitution of a uniform
+protective Customs tariff for the State tariff, which had for years
+previously yielded a large revenue per head while affording protection
+to many native industries. The abolition of interstate Customs
+duties caused a further loss to the Queensland Treasury; so that the
+Government felt compelled to ask Parliament to impose new taxation as
+well as sanction severe retrenchment in order to check the alarming
+series of revenue deficits which, despite large loan expenditure,
+marked the stressful period. All this tended to make federation
+unpopular, and obscure the benefits the union under the Commonwealth
+Constitution was calculated to confer eventually.
+
+The popular sentiment was, however, overwhelmingly in favour of the
+White Australia policy; and even most of its opponents took exception
+to the hasty methods of enforcement rather than to the principle
+itself. Much difficulty was at first experienced in securing reliable
+white workers, but the remuneration year by year attracted, in
+increasing numbers, men accustomed to farm work, until, in 1908-9, the
+owners of about 90 per cent. of the cane grown found themselves in a
+position to claim the bounty. Pacific Island labour is now almost a
+thing of the past, though a few islanders who were not repatriated
+still engage in field work. In the more severely tropical of the sugar
+districts some Asiatic labour is also employed, the planters alleging
+that white men will not, unless at prohibitory wages, face the muggy
+heat of the cane-brake. The bounty, together with the £6 import duty,
+appears at length to have re-established the industry on a durable
+basis; but many growers look forward with some apprehension to the
+gradual extinction of the bounty and the possibility of a reduction
+in the import duty, holding that without the protection at present
+afforded Australian cane sugar cannot compete against the product of
+the cheap coloured labour of Java, Fiji, and Mauritius, or the beet
+sugar of Europe.
+
+A further objection to federation was found in the mode adopted of
+distributing the Federal surplus revenue among the States. The 87th
+section of the Constitution required that for ten years the Federal
+Government should not expend on its own purposes more than one-fourth
+of the net Customs and Excise revenue of the Commonwealth, and that
+the balance of such revenue should be returned to the States. Prior
+to federation this had been interpreted to mean that each State would
+receive back not less than three-fourths of the net Customs and Excise
+revenue collected within its jurisdiction. But the Commonwealth Crown
+law officers placed a different construction on the section, and held
+that, so long as at least three-fourths of the net Customs revenue was
+distributed collectively, the Commonwealth had no obligation to
+return that proportion to any individual State. This has caused great
+uncertainty and embarrassment to the Queensland Treasurer, and has
+impelled many public men to stigmatise the union as a curse instead of
+a blessing.
+
+In illustration of the unequal division of the surplus Federal revenue
+among the States, it may be mentioned that, according to a table
+published by the Commonwealth Auditor-General, while the aggregate sum
+beyond the three-fourths of Customs and Excise revenue returned to the
+States amounted to £6,059,087, Queensland actually received £44,951
+less than her three-fourths during the eight and a-half years ended
+30th June, 1909; and her Treasurer was much embarrassed by the
+uncertainty of the return owing to tariff alterations and the
+determination of the Federal Government to defray from revenue
+otherwise accruing to the State under the Constitution Act the cost of
+permanent buildings, which the State had formerly provided for out of
+loan moneys.
+
+Another grievance of the States--especially of Queensland, which
+borrowed largely to construct its 10,253 miles of telegraph lines,
+and incurred a heavy annual charge upon revenue in providing postal
+communication throughout its vast and scantily populated territory--is
+that the Commonwealth Government treat section 85 of the Constitution
+as a dead letter. This provision expressly enacts that "the
+Commonwealth shall compensate the State for the value of any property
+passing to the Commonwealth under this section"; but not a penny of
+compensation has ever been paid, although there is a considerable
+interest charge to be met annually by the State Treasuries on account
+of money borrowed for the purposes of these transferred properties.
+
+The chief revenue loss suffered by the Queensland Treasury under
+federation arose from the passing of the uniform tariff, which drew
+considerably less than the former State tariff from the pockets of the
+taxpayers. Of course the remedy had to be sought in other taxation,
+and it could only be found in direct levies much more objectionable
+than the indirect charge imposed by Customs duties. However, the feat
+was ultimately accomplished, despite the depressed condition of the
+State through years of scanty rainfall and the enormous losses of live
+stock consequent thereon; but successive State Governments have had to
+bear much unmerited odium and have suffered in popularity on account
+of their efforts to restore financial equilibrium when the principal
+disturbing element was the advent of federation and not State
+mismanagement.
+
+Since times began to improve throughout Australia, the Federal burden
+has been less in evidence; and at the late Melbourne Conference, held
+to confer with the Commonwealth Government with the view to adjust
+mutual relations, no State Premier recognised more frankly than did
+Mr. Kidston the claims of the Federal Government to increased revenue
+to defray the cost of old-age pensions, naval and military defence,
+and other great national objects. The provisional agreement entered
+into by the Conference was recognised by all the Premiers as less
+advantageous than they had desired, but they were unanimous in
+admitting that under the altered conditions it was the best they could
+now hope for. On the Commonwealth side it was recognised that the
+States had made a large voluntary surrender, and that the position of
+the Federal Treasury would be greatly strengthened under the operation
+of the agreement. The apparent dread of diminishing Customs revenue
+in after years was clearly not well founded, because the Commonwealth
+Parliament can easily, by readjustment of duties, make up any
+deficiency. On the other hand, an immense advantage will be gained by
+both parties to the agreement from the separation of Federal and State
+finances except in respect of the liability of the Commonwealth to
+hand over, and the right of the States to receive, a fixed annual
+contribution of 25s. per head of the population. The representatives
+of the States granted a further concession to the Commonwealth by
+permitting the retention of an additional £600,000 of the Customs
+revenue for the current year to reimburse the cost of old-age pensions
+not already provided for by the Commonwealth Trust Fund created by the
+Surplus Revenue Act of 1908. The bill embodying the agreement received
+the approval of the statutory majority in both Houses of Parliament.
+It now rests with the electors of the Commonwealth to accept or reject
+the necessary amendment of the Constitution; and there is every reason
+to hope that the compact will be made as permanent as any other part
+of the Constitution. In that event, the relations between Commonwealth
+and States will undoubtedly improve, and harmonious co-operation for
+the public welfare may be safely anticipated from the Parliaments.
+The Federal session of 1909 has been distinguished by the passage
+of epoch-making bills for the appointment of a High Commissioner
+in London and for naval and military defence, measures which are
+calculated to raise the Commonwealth to an exalted position in the
+scale of young nations.
+
+[Illustration: QUEENSLAND 1859]
+
+[Illustration: QUEENSLAND 1909]
+
+[Illustration: AUSTRALIA 1859 SHOWING SELF-GOVERNING COLONIES]
+
+[Illustration: THE WORLD Showing relative position of AUSTRALIA.]
+
+
+
+
+PART IV.--THE PRIMARY INDUSTRIES.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I.
+
+THE PASTORAL INDUSTRY.
+
+ Importance of Industry.--Small Beginnings in New South
+ Wales.--Extension of Industry.--Stocking of Darling Downs and
+ Western Queensland.--Rush for Pastoral Lands.--Difficulties
+ of Early Squatters.--Influx of Victorian Capital.--Changes
+ in Method of Working Stations.--Boom in Pastoral Properties.
+ --Checks from Drought.--Discovery of Artesian Water.
+ --Conservation of Surface Water.--Introduction of Grazing
+ Farm System.--Closer Settlement of Darling Downs.
+ --Cattle-Rearing.--Meat-Freezing Works.--Overstocking.
+ --Dairying.--Station Routine.--Charm of Pastoral Life.
+ --Shearing.--Hospitality of Squatters.--Attraction of
+ Industry as Investment and Occupation.
+
+
+The pastoral industry in Queensland is, in point of duration, well
+within the compass of a single life. In about seventy years it has
+attained its present dimensions, and, as progress in the early years
+was very slow, its magnitude to-day supplies striking testimony to
+the energy and enterprise of two generations. The description
+of Queensland as a huge sheep and cattle farm with contributive
+industries, which without very great extravagance might have been
+offered forty years ago, has long ceased to be applicable. But
+though other industries have grown into importance, reducing its
+pre-eminence, the pastoral still retains its unquestioned lead and is
+deservedly regarded as the main source of the State's wealth. Bearing
+in mind that the total exports from Queensland for 1907 were rather
+over fourteen and a-half millions sterling, of which pastoral produce
+claimed more than half, it will be seen that this title to
+precedence cannot be challenged. With an abatement of £529,000 for
+butter--dairying being associated with agriculture--this imposing
+sum is the direct product of the natural grasses. It can hardly
+be surprising then, after realising the potential wealth of
+these pastures, that visitors should be struck with the fact that
+rainfall--past, present, and prospective--is a constant and very
+prominent topic in all grades of social intercourse.
+
+That a continent so suited to the abundant propagation of animal life
+should have been so poorly equipped by Nature with an indigenous fauna
+can only be accounted for by Australia's primeval isolation. Similar
+vast prairie lands, which in America sustained countless herds of
+bison and in Africa literally swarmed with antelope and many species
+of game, were in Australia almost uninhabited. The absence of large
+rivers and a general scarcity of water had doubtless much to do with
+this destitute condition of the great pasture lands of the interior,
+but still the wonder remains that a continent which now carries more
+sheep than any other country in the world should have been in its
+original state, except along its coastal belt, almost tenantless. The
+fierce carnivora of the older world were entirely unrepresented, the
+principal denizen of the lonely land being the timid kangaroo; but the
+curious problems presented by the Australian fauna have compensated
+the naturalist for its modest numbers.
+
+In Queensland what is recognised as the Western Interior occupies
+about half the area of the State and is distinct in its geological
+formation from the coastal belt, the waters of which run into the
+ocean to the east and north. The region of these watersheds, with the
+exception of some comparatively limited areas of downs country on the
+heads of the rivers, is regarded as unsuitable for sheep, the rainfall
+being more abundant than on the Western waters and the grass coarser,
+so that cattle are almost exclusively run there. In the Western
+Interior are the true sheep pastures. The farther one goes west the
+more treeless the country becomes. Here undulating downs for the most
+part stretch to the horizon, intersected by watercourses fringed with
+timber, and although in summer many of these creeks shrink to a chain
+of disconnected waterholes, few of which are permanent, they offer
+abundant opportunities for water conservation. In the last few years
+many for several miles of their course have been converted into
+running streams by artesian bores.
+
+Before, however, dwelling on the present position, we must briefly
+glance at the origin of pastoral enterprise in Australia and its tardy
+extension to Queensland.
+
+As soon as settlement was established, the new land had to be stocked
+with the domesticated animals of the old. Captain Phillip, the first
+Governor, in 1788 made a very modest start. He brought with him from
+England 7 horses, 7 cattle, and 29 sheep, besides pigs, rabbits, and
+poultry. Remembering that in those days England was from six to nine
+months distant from the new settlement, it is not perhaps surprising
+that pastoral progress was slow. In 1800 there were only 6,124 sheep
+and 1,044 cattle in Australia. But five years prior to this the seed
+destined to produce a giant growth was already germinating. A shrewd
+young soldier had detected the germ of Australia's future wealth.
+With a strange prescience, unaided by experience, Captain Macarthur
+recognised that the dry climate of Australia was peculiarly adapted to
+the growth of a fine type of wool. Starting from most unpromising ewes
+from India, he gradually improved the strain by the introduction of
+Spanish blood. He was fortunate at the start in getting three rams
+from the Cape, part of a gift from the King of Spain to the Dutch
+Government, and by sedulous culling with a bold disregard for
+carcass, although fat wethers at the time sold for £5, he succeeded
+in establishing a good merino flock the wool from which created
+an excellent impression in England. English manufacturers, who had
+hitherto drawn their limited stocks of clothing wool from Spain,
+welcomed the promise of a new source of supply.
+
+Macarthur had taken some wool with him to England, when deported in
+consequence of a fatal duel in 1803, and its fine quality was at once
+recognised and appreciated. He was fortunate in being still there in
+the following year, when George the Third, in the hope of encouraging
+the production of fine wool, sold a portion of his Kew stud flock, the
+progeny of Negretti sheep, another gift of the Spanish King, so that
+they might be distributed amongst his subjects. Macarthur was the
+principal buyer, securing seven rams and a ewe at very moderate
+prices, the highest being under £30. He was an enthusiast, and could
+see the enormous possibilities of the virgin continent he had left,
+with its mild dry climate and almost limitless pasture lands, for the
+maintenance of great flocks, the wool of which could be improved to
+the finest type. He asked the British Government for a grant of land
+to feed his flocks, assuring them that he was "so convinced of the
+practicability of supplying this country with any quantity of fine
+wool that it may require that I am earnestly solicitous to prosecute
+this important object, and on my return to New South Wales will devote
+my whole attention to accelerating its complete attainment." This
+request--in spite of the adverse opinion of Sir Joseph Banks as to the
+suitability of the new land for wool-growing--was granted, Lord Camden
+instructing the Governor of New South Wales to grant Macarthur such
+lands "as would enable him to extend his flocks in such a degree as
+may promise to supply a sufficiency of animal food for the colony
+as well as a lucrative article of export for the support of our
+manufactures at home." Macarthur selected near Mount Taurus, and the
+Camden estate, long famous as the source from which many studs were
+either formed or replenished, was established. How limited at this
+time was the world's production of this superfine wool--suited to the
+manufacture of the finest fabrics--may be gathered from the fact of
+one bale of Macarthur's being sold at Garraway's Coffee House in 1807
+at 10s. 6d. per lb., the cloth from which provided England's Farmer
+King with a coat.
+
+But not till the merino had passed beyond coastal influences was
+the improvement of growth due to an eminently suitable habitat fully
+realised. Wentworth and others had in 1813 pushed across the Blue
+Mountains, and the occupation of the interior began. In the Mudgee
+district, which was stocked with sheep about 1824, the clip improved
+so distinctly on the original Spanish stock as to form almost a new
+type. Increasing in length and gaining in softness and elasticity, it
+has commanded ever-increasing attention from manufacturers, and has
+long been recognised as the premier fine wool of the world.
+
+Tasmania, starting with Macarthur's stock, and following on his
+breeding lines, had proved peculiarly adapted for the growth of a
+dense fleece of fine wool. As numbers rapidly increased in this small
+island, flockmasters had to look about for an outlet. This was easily
+found on the mainland, and sheep were soon pouring across the narrow
+strait into the district of Port Phillip, which in 1851 was proclaimed
+the colony of Victoria.
+
+After Macarthur's death in 1834, his system of breeding was carefully
+followed by his widow, and when in 1858 the flock was dispersed the
+stud ewes numbered about 1,000. These, passing into the hands of
+flockmasters of New South Wales and Victoria, were the foundation of
+many of the noted studs of to-day. The Victorian flocks, starting
+from the Tasmanian, early competed with the island of their origin in
+excellence, and, though Tasmania still maintains its reputation as
+the home from which the studs of the other States are constantly
+replenished, it has of late years gone largely into crossbreds. The
+most noted studs, however, are still maintained undefiled, except that
+the introduction of the American Vermont blood has been in some cases
+cautiously tried, with results that have provoked much controversy.
+
+Other pioneers of the industry, the Rev. Samuel Marsden for one,
+started with the same Spanish blood, crossed with the hardy and
+prolific Indian ewe, but unlike Macarthur they found the temptations
+of the fat stock market irresistible. Remembering the great price fat
+wethers commanded in those early days, it must be admitted that the
+temptation was considerable. Macarthur, however, by steadily rejecting
+all mutton breeds and making a fine description of fleece his one
+object, deserves grateful recognition as the founder of the Australian
+merino.
+
+[Illustration: FAT CATTLE, CENTRAL QUEENSLAND]
+
+[Illustration: CATTLE COUNTRY, WEST MORETON]
+
+Although the settlement of Moreton Bay was started in 1824, it was
+long before the pastoral industry made any progress in the territory
+which is now Queensland. In that year Governor Brisbane sent Oxley
+to explore Moreton Bay and report on its suitability for a convict
+out-station. From information given by two white castaways living with
+the blacks, he found the river which Cook in 1770 and Flinders ten
+years later had failed to discover--though both, confident of its
+existence, had spent days in the Bay searching for its embouchure.
+Sheep and cattle were sent as supplies. But in a few years the
+settlement was abandoned, the officials and prisoners returning to
+New South Wales; and in 1842, when Moreton Bay was proclaimed a free
+settlement, the Government live stock were dispersed by sale amongst
+the settlers. Blacks were numerous and very hostile, and, though
+cattle throve well, the country was found unsuitable for sheep, so
+that expansion from the Moreton district was very slow.
+
+But already in 1827 one man had been favoured with a glimpse of what
+is still regarded as the garden of Queensland. Allan Cunningham,
+starting from the Hunter, had pushed steadily North for 500 miles till
+he emerged from the broken highlands of New England on to the famous
+Downs which he named after Sir Charles Darling. He was enraptured with
+the country, which he described as clothed "with grasses and herbage
+exhibiting an extraordinary luxuriance of growth." Yet it was thirteen
+years before anyone took advantage of his discovery. To a later
+generation acquainted with the great value of the lands, which as a
+distinguished botanist Cunningham could not have failed to recognise,
+this appears one of the most astounding facts in the history of
+exploration. Many a time he must have discoursed to his friend Patrick
+Leslie on the rich vision he had been privileged to look on, yet it
+was not till 1840 that the latter with a small flock followed in his
+footsteps. What increases the surprise at this apparently strange lack
+of enterprise is that the year after Cunningham had found the Darling
+Downs he visited Moreton Bay, and succeeded in crossing the range from
+the coast by a gap since known by his name and reached the vicinity
+of his old camp, thus demonstrating that the natural port of this rich
+region was little over a hundred miles distant. Leslie, who settled in
+the neighbourhood of where the flourishing town of Warwick now stands,
+was rapidly followed by others who established the fine squattages
+that have since become famous. Although a few sheep had previously
+been introduced in the Moreton district, Leslie and his confreres must
+be regarded as the fathers of sheep-farming in Queensland.
+
+Difficulties of carriage long retarded any attempt to occupy the
+splendid territory farther West which Sir James Mitchell had explored
+in 1846 and Kennedy had farther penetrated a year later, crossing
+the Barcoo and discovering the Thomson River. Though the existence of
+these vast rolling plains was known, the presumption that no industry
+requiring a fair amount of labour could pay, handicapped with five
+to six hundred miles of land carriage, checked any attempt to occupy
+them. Nor was this unreasonable. The difficulties and uncertainties of
+such an undertaking might well prompt hesitation. Yet, in view of
+the rich returns from flocks elsewhere, it was impossible that
+these solitudes should for very long await easier conditions. A few
+adventurous spirits pushed out to these great undulating plains. Their
+example was quickly followed. In the early sixties a general migration
+westward began, and wherever water was met with the country was taken
+up. In 1869 an Act was passed granting 21-year leases to applicants
+who had taken up areas and stocked them to the extent of twenty-five
+sheep or five cattle to the square mile. It was found that on these
+Western pastures, rich with succulent grasses and saline shrubs
+all the year round, and in winter abounding in herbage of many
+descriptions, all stock grew and fattened amazingly. The climate, too,
+falsified all predictions, and instead of converting the wool to hair,
+which experts had prognosticated as the inevitable result of an ardent
+summer, grew an excellent fleece of fine lustrous combing wool. A
+frantic rush for country set in. Flocks and herds were hurried out by
+jealous owners anxious to forestall one another in the scramble for
+leases. In a few years the whole territory, except where absence of
+water forbade settlement, was parcelled out in sheep and cattle runs.
+It had not yet been recognised how country destitute of surface water
+could be utilised. On these neglected areas are now many prosperous
+sheep-runs, the pioneers little suspecting the inexhaustible supplies
+awaiting the magic touch of the boring-rod to provide the abundant
+streams they longed for.
+
+With such easy conditions of tenure and lands of unsurpassable quality
+for grazing, it might naturally be expected that these pioneers
+amassed easy fortunes. The falsification of such expectation is a
+melancholy story. Though the cattle-men in many cases managed
+to struggle on, the majority of the sheep-owners went under. The
+difficulties were enormous. Railways had not yet penetrated the
+country, though a small start had been made. Wool took from six to
+nine months reaching the coast by bullock dray, and the carriage
+of supplies to the station cost more than the goods themselves.
+Frequently the next clip was awaiting carriage ere the previous one
+had left the station. Wages were high, and all forms of labour scarce.
+The quality of sheep, too, was poor, many of them being the culls from
+Southern flocks, bought at high prices. The depression in the wool
+market, with high rates of interest on borrowed money, strained the
+pioneer's resources to breaking point, and in too many cases years of
+strenuous endeavour and hardship ended in ruin.
+
+But brighter days were in store. As railways pushed out, the attention
+of Victorian capitalists was attracted by the potentialities of
+Western Queensland. The phenomenal gold production of Victoria had
+produced a plethora of money seeking investment, which constituted
+Melbourne the financial capital of Australia. This accumulated wealth,
+after fructifying New South Wales, flowed into Queensland. A Victorian
+invasion began. The knell of the shepherd had sounded, wire fences
+taking his place. Sheep that had hitherto been run in flocks of 1,500
+to 2,000, tended during the day by a man and a dog and yarded at
+night, were now turned into large paddocks by tens of thousands with
+only a boundary rider to look to the fences. It was found by this
+method that the carrying capacity of country was enormously increased.
+Yarded sheep, driven to and fro twice daily, destroy more grass than
+they can eat, whereas when left to themselves it is all utilised. The
+smaller the paddocks, the less the sheep wander and the larger the
+number that can be carried on a given area. It was found, too, that
+stocking greatly improved the water. On the spongy surface of virgin
+country, untrodden by any hoof, there was little "run" off the
+surface after rain, but when hardened by the tread of stock the creeks
+received a fairer share of the downpour. The best rams procurable
+from the Darling Downs and noted Southern studs rapidly improved the
+flocks. In 1873 wool rose to a price not touched for many years; a
+boom in Queensland stations set in, and the remnant of the pioneers
+who elected to do so sold out at prices that gave a rich though tardy
+reward for long and toilsome enterprise.
+
+Although the general course of the industry has been one of great
+prosperity, it has not been without its serious checks. A severe
+drought throughout nearly the whole of Australia, culminating in
+1902, inflicted terrible losses of both sheep and cattle. Waterholes
+supposed to be permanent dried up; and pastures within reach of those
+which proved permanent were trodden into a desert condition till the
+stock were too weak to travel back to the surviving pasturage. The
+outlook was so gloomy that almost universal ruin seemed impending.
+It is sad to think that whilst stock were perishing in multitudes
+abundant subterranean streams, flowing southward to discharge
+uselessly in the Great Australian Bight, might have been available to
+avert this national calamity. The uses of adversity have never been
+more strikingly exemplified than by the number of artesian bores
+put down since that hard experience. These, as the cost of sinking
+decreases, are multiplying yearly. The artesian basin exists
+throughout nearly three-fifths of Queensland, and whilst the origin
+of these subterranean stores is still somewhat of a mystery they are
+apparently inexhaustible. The supply and the depth at which water
+is obtained vary considerably; the former runs as high as 3,000,000
+gallons per diem, and the latter averages about 1,600 feet.
+
+Whilst artesian boring has been prosecuted with commendable
+enterprise, the storage of surface water on an extensive scale has not
+yet received the attention it deserves. Many schemes have been mooted
+for conserving a portion of the huge volume of water that in the rainy
+season flows through regions which would gladly retain a share, to
+waste itself in the Southern Ocean. Doubtless in the future a problem
+of such fascination will attract the best engineering skill, and a
+number of inland lakes will result. But that day may yet be distant.
+One such scheme only need be noticed. The Diamantina River, which
+in time of flood stretches out to many miles in breadth, flows
+south-westward through several degrees of Western Queensland. At a
+point known as Diamantina Gates it finds an exit through a narrow
+gorge in a low range. Although never yet tested by accurate survey,
+competent judges have surmised that a substantial dam at this spot
+would throw back an amount of water which would constitute a veritable
+inland sea. Other large rivers--the Thomson, Barcoo, Hamilton,
+Georgina--also offer to the hydraulic engineer splendid opportunities
+of winning distinction.
+
+In 1884 a notable change of land policy was adopted. The 1869 leases
+were expiring, and it was recognised that the big squattages could
+not longer be allowed to monopolise the country. Room was required for
+smaller holdings. All available country was already occupied under
+the 1869 leases, and, although under another Act 5,120 acres could be
+acquired with conditions of improvement and residence, there was no
+way of getting an area capable of carrying 10,000 sheep. There did
+not exist a small squatting class. The Minister for Lands, Mr. C.
+B. Dutton--himself a large squatter--recognised the desirability of
+creating such a class, which would stand in the same relation to the
+"squattocracy" that the yeomen of Britain do to the large landowners.
+In granting a new lease to the original lessee, Dutton's Act required
+him to surrender a portion of his run, from a half to a quarter
+according to the length of time his lease had been running. A Land
+Board independent of Ministerial control was appointed to arrange an
+equitable division of the runs and to fix the rent of the new lease,
+which was for fifteen years. Two years later this was increased to
+twenty-one years, on condition of the lessee surrendering another
+quarter of his area at the end of the fifteenth year. The portions
+resumed from the old squattages were surveyed into areas up to 20,000
+acres and thrown open to selection. The old lessee--who regarded any
+area under 400 square miles as a paltry holding and counted his crop
+of calves by thousands and his yearly lambing increase by tens of
+thousands--ridiculed the new departure, maintaining that any man must
+starve on such an absurdly inadequate area as 20,000 acres. But
+these sinister predictions did not deter selectors from testing the
+question. At first grazing farms were only very gradually applied for,
+but a few years' experience justified Mr. Dutton's expectations, and
+a great demand set in, till now, as soon as opened to selection, there
+is a keen competition for them. The difficulty is to survey them fast
+enough to provide for requirements. The maximum area has since been
+increased so that now as much as 60,000 acres can be held by an
+individual, provided the total rent does not exceed £200. It is not
+unusual for three or four grazing farmers to combine and manage the
+combined leasehold as a co-partnership, which, although not provided
+for in the Act, is sanctioned by the Land Court.
+
+[Illustration: HORSES AT GOWRIE, DARLING DOWNS]
+
+[Illustration: SHEEP AT GOWRIE, DARLING DOWNS]
+
+[Illustration: HORSES, WESTERN QUEENSLAND]
+
+[Illustration: FAT CATTLE, BURRANDILLA, CHARLEVILLE]
+
+A new Act in 1902 offered those who elected to take advantage of it
+a fresh lease, at the expiration of the current one, of from ten to
+forty-two years, according to classification; and farther resumptions
+were made for closer settlement. The classification, which was decided
+by the Land Court, was governed by the degree of remoteness from
+railway and the demand for land in the neighbourhood.
+
+The low range of hills surrounding the Darling Downs encloses over
+2,000,000 acres of land of a quality that invites the plough to
+convert it into the granary of the State. As the railway to the New
+South Wales border takes its rather serpentine course southwards,
+coasting round many of the undulations to avoid cutting through them,
+the traveller looks upon a land which he must recognise as capable
+of maintaining a large farming population. What he actually saw till
+quite recently was paddock after paddock of sheep on each side, then
+a paddock of cattle and horses, and again more sheep. It was palpable
+that this could not continue indefinitely. The railway built at the
+cost of the general taxpayers had greatly increased the value of these
+estates and rendered their working more profitable. The owners
+of these flocks and herds had done good service to the State, and
+deserved the most generous treatment. Successors of the original
+pioneers, they had bred the stock that helped to occupy the West, and
+had founded studs that enabled others to replenish their flocks and
+herds from the purest sources. It was important above all things that
+no legislative interference should harass men who deserved so well of
+Queensland, and that no step should be taken to dispossess them which
+could be suspected of any taint of harshness. In time, doubtless, they
+would themselves have parcelled out their estates for tillage, but the
+process would have been slow, the easy terms of payment possible to
+a Government borrowing money at a low rate of interest not being
+generally convenient to an individual, and time in the development of
+a young country is important. Parliament therefore took the matter
+in hand and decided that where possible these landholders should be
+bought out on a valuation made by an independent tribunal. A number
+of properties have been bought by the Government, cut up into farms of
+from 80 acres upwards, and sold to farmers on liberal terms, payment
+extending over twenty-five years. Mixed farming and dairying are the
+chief purposes to which the land has been put, and busy townships
+have sprung up at the railway stations where a few years ago the
+stationmaster, his family, and an assistant porter formed the bulk of
+the resident population. Breeding lambs for export is found to be
+a profitable branch of the pastoral business on the Downs, and the
+breeding of crossbreds is consequently increasing, the Lincoln or
+Leicester being mated with the merino. Southdown and Romney rams have
+also been tried, but the Lincoln cross has been generally preferred.
+Crossbred lambs three to four months old bring 10s. in Brisbane, the
+railage costing from 1s. to 1s. 3d.
+
+So far little mention has been made of cattle. It may be generally
+stated that where country is suitable for sheep, or, more accurately
+speaking, where they can be profitably run, cattle are only depastured
+in very small herds. The coastal belt and the Northern Gulf region are
+exclusively cattle country, and in the extreme West, although sheep
+thrive excellently, the long carriage causes cattle to be preferred,
+the expense of cattle management being much below that of sheep. The
+product of these distant pastures travels on the hoof to market, the
+Western cattle being noted for their great weight of flesh and the
+distance they carry it without great waste. Most of the herds have
+been improved to a high degree of excellence by importation of some
+of the best blood in England, and high-class stud herds have been long
+established in the different States from which drafts of herd bulls
+are drawn as required at from about 10 to 15 guineas per head.
+
+With a population of little over half a million occupying a territory
+of 670,500 square miles, it will be realised that the yearly cast of
+"fats" greatly exceeds local requirements. The Southern States take a
+large number. New South Wales and Victoria are the best customers, as,
+with a combined population of roughly five times that of Queensland,
+the total of their cattle is only slightly in excess of the Queensland
+herd. South Australia is also a regular buyer of "fats." The "stores"
+that go South to be fattened beyond the State are almost exclusively
+bullocks of three to four years. Amongst the "fats" of ripe ages is
+a proportion of dry cows, and a limited number of breeders and mixed
+cattle also find sale with Southern buyers. But these outlets would
+have been quite inadequate for the absorption of the Queensland annual
+surplus had not meat-preserving come to the rescue of the stock-owner.
+Before freezing works were established, boiling down was the one
+resource, the tallow, hides, and sheepskins giving a meagre return,
+whilst the valuable carcass went to the pigs. The late Sir Arthur
+Hodgson, a leading pastoralist, used to relate with humorous comments
+his experiences with a first draft of sheep from his Darling Downs
+station (Eton Vale), brought to Brisbane to be boiled down at the
+Kangaroo Point works. During the process the owner--educated at Eton,
+and subsequently a Minister of the Crown in Queensland--went round
+daily with a handcart selling the legs of mutton at sixpence apiece.
+Such commercial enterprise has long fallen into desuetude.
+
+To bring the surplus meat of Australia within reach of the eager
+millions of Europe has not been an easy problem, but it has at length
+been fairly solved by freezing the carcass, though much has yet to be
+done in discovering the best method of distribution of so perishable
+an article and its proper treatment from the freezing chamber to the
+spit. The various works buy cattle at about 18s. to 20s. per 100 lb.,
+the weight of bullocks averaging about 750 lb., though many mobs,
+notably the huge beasts from the West, go as much as 200 lb. beyond
+this. The works are also buyers of fat sheep, a 50-lb. wether two or
+three months after shearing bringing from 9s. to 10s. In the six years
+1901-6 the exports of frozen meat from Australia totalled 353,514,135
+lb. of beef and 371,692,090 lb. of mutton.
+
+An occupation the profits of which are capable of such large additions
+by increasing numbers is apt to foster a spirit of gambling. In a
+season of bountiful rainfall it is almost impossible to over-stock
+country, and owners too often take the risk of availing themselves
+to the full of Nature's prodigality. Such a policy is most dangerous.
+When the time of more limited rainfall comes the owner of over-stocked
+pastures pays a heavy toll for his improvidence, whereas he who has
+regulated his numbers on the assumption of fair average seasons comes
+scathless through the time of trial.
+
+Dairying comes more within the department of agriculture, as crops
+must be grown for feed, the dairy-farmer being necessarily the
+occupant of a very limited area. The benefit dairying has been to the
+small stock-owner can hardly be exaggerated. In old days the owner of
+a herd of 50 to 100 head could look only for a poor living, working
+for wages for part of the year whilst his family looked after the
+herd. Now he is a rich man. The monthly cheque from the creamery for
+a man milking 25 cows easily reaches an average of £20. Except in
+the few cases where the business has been conducted in a large way
+by capitalists, it is mostly an enterprise for small men. The work is
+unremitting, the herd having to be milked twice a day, but the rewards
+are sure and ample. Butter and cheese factories have sprung up like
+mushrooms in the last few years, there being now 79 in the State. The
+yield of butter for 1907 totalled 22,789,158 lb. As returns depend on
+the amount of butter-fat produced, owners have converted the ordinary
+breeds of cattle to good dairy herds by plentiful introductions of
+the true milking strains--Jersey, Alderney, Ayrshire, Holstein, and
+milking Shorthorn.
+
+Many will probably wonder how cattle grazed over an area of many
+hundred square miles of country, which in the outside districts is
+probably unfenced, can be mustered or even kept on the run. Cattle
+are docilely subservient to custom, and once broken into "camps" will
+voluntarily seek repose in these shelters. On a well-managed station
+the crack of a whip will start any mob within hearing trotting for
+their camp, formed in a clump of shade on the creek, or, if shade is
+available, on some better galloping ground. Others, seeing them on the
+move, head towards the same well-known resort, there to pass the day
+till the shadows lengthen, only moving off in the cool of the evening
+to feed. If they are being mustered for branding, the cows with calves
+are "cut out" and brought to the stockyard to be dealt with; if for a
+butcher to select a draft of fats, these only are taken and delivered
+either on the spot or where arranged. At the general muster, which is
+only made every few years, as the cattle are brought in they are put
+through a lane in the yard, the long lock at the tip of the tail being
+cut short; they are thus easily distinguished on the run, so that
+only long-tails are brought in subsequently. A "bang-tail" muster is
+recorded in the station books, and, as all sales and other disposals
+are carefully noted and an allowance made of from 3 to 5 per cent. for
+deaths, it is not necessary to repeat an operation taxing horseflesh
+so severely at nearer intervals than three to five years. Stock-horses
+become very clever, and will turn and twist with a beast through the
+mob, the rider's whip playing on either side till the animal is run
+out. Large tailing yards are maintained in different parts of the run
+to avoid much driving, and at weaning time the weaners are herded for
+a month or six weeks and yarded at night, which has a quieting
+effect they never forget. A well-managed herd is noted for absence of
+rowdyism amongst its members. On a well-improved station the bullocks,
+heifers, and weaners will be in separate paddocks, and at a certain
+season the bulls are taken out of the herd and put in a paddock by
+themselves.
+
+[Illustration: WOOL TEAMS, WYANDRA, WARREGO DISTRICT]
+
+[Illustration: HAULING CEDAR, ATHERTON, NORTH QUEENSLAND]
+
+Much has been written of the Australian squatter's life, both in fact
+and in fiction; yet the charm it exercises remains unexplained. The
+invigorating influence of perfect health doubtless has something to
+do with it, as well as the utter freedom and escape from all
+conventionality. Much of the bushman's time is passed in the saddle,
+and his dress consists of moleskin trousers, the sleeves of his shirt
+rolled up to the elbow, and a soft shady hat. He rises at daybreak and
+after an early breakfast starts his day's work. As frequently he
+will not return to the homestead till nightfall, his lunch is in his
+saddle-pouch, to be enjoyed in the shade by some waterhole, where he
+boils the quart "billy" that dangles all day from a dee on his saddle,
+and makes the inevitable brew of tea. Probably he has companions and
+is mustering a paddock half the size of an English county; bringing
+the sheep to the drafting yards, it may be to draft out the fats from
+a mob of several thousand wethers, or perhaps to take lambs from
+their mothers for weaning, or to separate the sexes in a mob of mixed
+weaners, or to bring sheep to the shed for shearing.
+
+Shearing is of all times the busiest. At this season men, each usually
+riding one horse and leading another packed with his swag, roam the
+country in gangs and undertake the work at contract rates, which of
+late have been raised from 20s. per 100 to 24s. There will be from
+ten to forty men on the shearing board, according to the size of the
+flock; and in most of the large sheds men write beforehand to bespeak
+a stand. Shearers earn great wages; a good man will do from 100 to
+200 per day, though the latter number is of course exceptional. The
+introduction of shearing machines has helped to increase the shearer's
+daily tally. A host of other men are employed in the shed. Boys gather
+the fleeces which they throw on a table where they are skirted, the
+trimmings being divided into "locks and pieces" and "bellies," and
+the rolled fleece is thrown on another long table at which the
+wool-classer presides. He is an expert, and orders each to its
+respective bin, according to quality--judged by condition, length of
+staple, and brightness. From the various bins so graded men feed the
+wool-press worked by two wool-pressers, who turn out, sew, and brand
+the bales, of an average weight of from 3 to 4 cwt. Wagons are waiting
+to convey these to the railway, horse and bullock teams being almost
+equally used. A whip cracks like a pistol shot, and with lowered
+heads, the bullocks straining at the yoke, the first team draws slowly
+off to the incomprehensible objurgations of the driver, an incredible
+number of bales in three tiers piled on the wagon and securely roped.
+
+But this bustling activity is not confined to the shed. Shorn sheep
+have to be returned to their paddocks, fresh mobs brought in, and the
+morrow's shearing housed in the shed to escape the night's dew or a
+chance shower. From daylight to dark during this harvest time everyone
+is at full stretch. The shearers have their own cook and "find"
+themselves, sharing together in a general mess; and as they earn good
+money they "do themselves" really well, denying themselves no delicacy
+obtainable at the station store. The whistle sounds at 6 p.m.; the
+last fleece has been gathered, and the men stroll to their camp to
+discard sodden shirts and moleskins and clean up generally before
+supper. The twilight is short, night chasing it swiftly from the
+world. The weird charm of a Queensland night in the bush penetrates
+with a calm satisfaction difficult to analyse. It is, let us suppose,
+spring or summer, and the stars appear to hang low from the deep clear
+indigo vault. The silence is unbroken, appealing to some indefinable
+emotion. No cry of beast or bird ruffles the stillness, save perhaps
+the faint tinkle of the bell-bird or the solemn plaint of the mopoke
+from some distant scrub. The men are sitting outside their hut
+smoking, or with tired limbs stretched on the short dry grass lying
+full length drawing the quiet night into their blood, its cool
+soft breath soothing the fatigue of the arduous day's toil. Very
+entertaining to a listener would be the symposium of experiences
+and amazing political theories of these rough good-humoured toilers,
+whilst in the pauses one might perhaps enjoy the fantasia executed by
+the musician of the party on his concertina.
+
+Life at the homestead of many of the old-established stations differs
+little from that of a wealthy country home in other parts of the
+world. Froude in his "Oceana" draws a diverting picture of his
+anticipations of a bush home and its reality. He had pictured a
+log-hut in the wilderness, and was taken to Ercildoune, where he was
+amazed to find a mansion amidst splendid gardens, with conservatories,
+elaborate drawing-rooms, well-dressed ladies, and all the
+appurtenances and customs of refined life. Expecting chops, damper,
+and tea, the culinary triumphs of a skilful _chef_ would strike an
+author in quest of the barbaric life with a keen reproach. Had Mr.
+Froude visited Queensland, he might have found something more suitable
+for literary treatment. Although in the older settled districts,
+especially on the Darling Downs, the lessees live in comfortable,
+well-furnished homes, many bush homesteads are still very primitive.
+The farther a station is from the railway the more the owner is
+inclined to dispense with the superfluous, till in many cases he
+restricts himself to the absolutely necessary. But every year sees
+an improvement in this respect. Hospitality is unlimited, any visitor
+being sure of a welcome and a night's lodging; he turns his horses
+into his host's paddock, and, if there are ladies of the household,
+his evening is enlivened with music and cultured talk.
+
+Some of the more gigantic enterprises are conducted by squatting
+companies, the sheep numbering several hundred thousand and the cattle
+up to thirty or forty thousand. But these stupendous figures need not
+deter small investors. In the purchase of a station the goodwill is
+an asset to be paid for, and in many cases this is valued at a high
+figure. The selector who takes up a grazing farm pays nothing for
+goodwill, and gets into what is possibly a going concern from the
+outset with no other payment than the year's rent and the value of the
+existing improvements erected by the former lessee before the area was
+resumed from his holding. It may happen that the country is bare of
+all improvements, in which case he has to fence it before he gets a
+lease, his neighbours being liable for half the cost of this work,
+which forms their common boundary. He pays a higher rent than the
+representative of the pioneer who created the goodwill which has
+descended by purchase. What more desirable opening can be found for a
+young man of limited capital than a farm that will carry 10,000 sheep
+or 1,500 cattle? He leads the healthiest life in the world, and,
+although it is full of hard work and includes what would be thought
+hardships in the home he comes from, a manly youth takes the latter
+with a frolic welcome, and if he works hard he also plays hard when
+the occasional races, cricket carnival, and festivities in the nearest
+township or perhaps at some neighbouring station give the occasion.
+But above all things it is important that he should not invest till
+he has gained experience. There is no difficulty in acquiring this, as
+stockowners are without exception glad of the assistance of a willing
+young fellow who accepts the knowledge acquired and perhaps a trifling
+salary as an equivalent for his time and work. After a couple of years
+of this novitiate as a "Jackeroo," he will be equipped for facing the
+future on his own account, which with ordinary steadfastness, energy,
+and forethought he may regard with confidence.
+
+[Illustration: DAIRY CATTLE ON DARLING DOWNS]
+
+[Illustration: SHEEP, JIMBOUR, DARLING DOWNS]
+
+[Illustration: HORSES, IVANHOE STATION, WARREGO]
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II.
+
+AGRICULTURE IN QUEENSLAND.
+
+ Tripartite Division of Queensland.--Climate.--Development of
+ Agriculture in Queensland.--Wide Range of Products.--Early
+ History.--Exclusion of Farmers from Richest Lands.--Origin of
+ Mixed Farming.--Extension of Industry Westward.--Inexperience
+ of Early Settlers.--Cotton-growing.--Chief Crops.--Dairying.
+ --Cereal-growing.--Farming in the Tropics.--Farming on the
+ Downs.--Farming in the West.--Irrigation.--Conservation of
+ Water.--Timber Industry.--Land Selection.--Assistance Given by
+ the Government.--Immigration.--Attractions of Queensland.
+ --Defenders of Hearth and Home.
+
+
+Situated between 10½ degrees and 29 degrees South latitude and 138
+degrees and 153½ degrees East longitude, Queensland covers 670,500
+square miles, or 429,120,000 acres--greater than the combined areas
+of France, Germany, and Austro-Hungary. Of this immense territory 53·5
+per cent. lies within the Tropics, and 46·5 per cent. within the South
+Temperate Zone.
+
+The State may be divided into three belts--the tropical, stretching
+from Cape York to the 21st parallel in the neighbourhood of Mackay;
+the sub-tropical, between Mackay and Gladstone, about 24 degrees
+South; and the temperate, from Gladstone to the 29th parallel on the
+border of New South Wales.
+
+These three zones lend themselves, in turn, to a tripartite
+subdivision of littoral, tableland, and Western plain. Running
+generally in a North and South direction, and distant from the Eastern
+coast 30 to 100 miles, the Great Dividing Range separates the littoral
+from a series of tablelands having an altitude of 3,000 ft. at the two
+extremes, with a lesser elevation between Herberton in the North and
+the Darling Downs in the South. Almost imperceptibly the intermediate
+plateau sinks into a vast plain, which extends westward for hundreds
+of miles and into South Australia.
+
+The mountain barrier between coast and tableland, though rarely
+exceeding 4,000 ft. in height, is still sufficiently lofty to cause
+the clouds of the Pacific to deposit most of their moisture on the
+Eastern slopes. The precipitation in this coastal belt ranges from
+a yearly average of 135 in. at Geraldton (at the foot of the
+Bellenden-Ker Mountains, in the North) to 40 in. between the Tropic of
+Capricorn and Brisbane, with a heavier fall wherever the mountains
+are in close proximity to the ocean. On the Western side of the Great
+Divide the rainfall decreases from 40 in. to about 30 in. at the
+Western limit of the tableland, and, gradually diminishing with
+increasing distance from the seaboard, averages only about 10 in. in
+the extreme South-west.
+
+Temperature, rainfall, and soil necessary for the successful
+cultivation of almost every known crop are to be found in Queensland.
+Pastoral pursuits and mining have been the principal wealth-producers
+in the past; but steadily agriculture is coming to the front, and,
+long before the present generation has passed away, will occupy first
+place among the primary industries. That it has not done so already
+is due partly to the comparative youth of the country and its small
+population, and partly to its rich natural pastures and vast mineral
+resources. For many years the fascination of a pastoral life and
+the search for gold, with the hope of winning fortunes in those
+avocations, proved more attractive than the regular, uneventful life
+of the farmer, with its prospect of a competence; but the old-time
+glamour of grazing and mining is passing away, and the independence
+of the farmer is now preferred to the lot of station hand or working
+miner.
+
+On the inestimable value of a rural population to the permanent
+well-being of a nation Mr. Roosevelt, the late President of the United
+States, lays stress in these pregnant words:--
+
+ "I warn my countrymen that the great recent progress made in
+ city life is not a full measure of our civilisation; for
+ our civilisation rests at bottom on the wholesomeness,
+ the attractiveness, and the completeness, as well as the
+ prosperity, of life in the country. The men and women on the
+ farms stand for what is fundamentally best and most needed in
+ our national life. Upon the development of country life rests
+ ultimately our ability, by methods of farming requiring the
+ highest intelligence, to continue to feed and clothe the
+ hungry nations; to supply the city with fresh blood, clean
+ bodies, and clear brains that can endure the terrific strain
+ of modern life; we need the development of men in the open
+ country, who will be in the future, as in the past, the stay
+ and strength of the nation in time of war, and its guiding and
+ controlling spirit in time of peace."
+
+Too large a proportion of the people of Australia is already
+congregated in the capital cities on the seaboard, and this
+centripetal tendency constitutes one of the problems most difficult
+of solution in our young communities, as it is proving in the older
+countries of the world. Here, however, we are not confronted with the
+obstacle of high-priced land, and no effort is being spared to turn
+the tide of settlement to the true source of national virility and
+prosperity--the land.
+
+The suitability of the State for agriculture is amply demonstrated
+by the condition of those engaged in that industry, for there is no
+considerable class in the community so prosperous. Comfortable homes,
+well-stocked farms, overflowing barns, and other evidence of labour
+richly rewarded, bear witness to this fact. The abundance of a series
+of fat years more than compensates for the loss of crops and stock
+in occasional years of drought, and these losses it is possible to
+minimise by devoting attention to afforestation, the conservation of
+water, irrigation, and the storage of fodder.
+
+Diversity of products is to be expected in a country stretching
+through 18½ degrees of latitude, possessing an infinite variety
+of soils, and divided into a hot and humid coastal belt, an elevated
+tableland with cool climate and moderate rainfall, and a huge plain
+with light rainfall and dry, invigorating atmosphere. There is
+probably no country in the world with so wide an agricultural range.
+To mention crops which can be, and are being, grown with gratifying
+results would be to set forth in detail nearly every crop of economic
+value found in the torrid or the temperate zone. Wherever Nature is
+so generous with her gifts there must be accompanying drawbacks in
+the shape of vegetable and insect pests, but, by the application
+of intelligence and industry, the farmers of Queensland are able to
+combat these petty foes.
+
+Some of the principal objects of culture have a remarkably extensive
+distribution. Citrus fruits, fodder crops and artificial grasses,
+pumpkins and melons, flourish in every part of the State. Maize is
+very prolific throughout the littoral and on the tableland. Sugar-cane
+and tropical fruits grow luxuriantly on all the coastal lands. Most
+of the fruits of the British Isles and Continental Europe are at home
+everywhere except on the coast north of the Tropic of Capricorn, and
+reach perfection on the elevated lands of the Darling Downs. Cereals
+and root crops are produced in the Southern and Central West districts
+equal in quality and yield to the crops in the Southern States and
+oversea countries.
+
+"Agriculture," says Professor Robert Wallace, of Edinburgh University,
+"is one of the oldest of human arts, dating from long before the dawn
+of history. The savage who lives on the roots and fruits he finds
+ready to his hand stands lower in the scale than the huntsman living
+by the chase. The herdsman leading a nomadic life belongs to a higher
+stage of human culture; but civilisation in any full sense only begins
+amongst men with settled habitations, who till the soil for their
+sustenance." Judged by this standard, Queensland has passed through
+the evolutionary stages. Eighty-five years ago, when the first British
+settlers landed on the shores of Moreton Bay, the country was sparsely
+inhabited by savages of the lowest type, dependent upon native
+roots and fruits and the chase for a subsistence. For a quarter of a
+century, settlement on the coast was confined to a few convicts and
+military guards stationed at Brisbane and Ipswich, and a handful of
+free settlers. In the year 1840 some adventurous spirits, searching
+for sheep country west of the Main Range, found themselves on the
+magnificent tableland which Allan Cunningham had discovered in 1827,
+and which, during the intervening years, had remained untrodden by the
+foot of a white man. Soon the whole of the Darling Downs was parcelled
+out into large sheep stations. Agriculture, until the advent of small
+selectors many years later, was only represented by garden patches
+of cereals, vegetables, and fruit trees, grown for the use of the
+station-owners and their employees.
+
+On the Eastern side of the Range the industry was in almost as
+backward a state before the arrival of the first shipment of
+agriculturists in the ship "Fortitude" in January, 1849. Gangs of
+convicts felled the scrub on the banks of the Brisbane River adjacent
+to the barracks; with the hoe they planted maize among the stumps and
+tree-trunks under the constant surveillance of armed guards, and,
+when the corn was ripe, dragged it in carts to the windmill on
+Wickham terrace, still a conspicuous landmark, though now used as an
+observatory. There the maize was ground into "hominy," an important
+item in the menu of those days.
+
+A band of Moravian missionaries settled at what is now known as
+Nundah, and they and the majority of the "Fortitude" immigrants were
+the real pioneers of agriculture in the infant settlement.
+
+Land orders, free immigration, and the discovery of gold were all
+factors in the development of the country, and the demand for farm
+lands led to the unlocking of areas previously given over to grazing.
+The pastoralists regarded agriculturists with disfavour, and in some
+cases with open antagonism. By the exercise of "pre-emptive rights,"
+which their influence in the Legislature secured for them, they
+converted into freehold large blocks of the best land, as well as
+strategic areas by the possession of which they were able to close
+against settlement immense tracts preeminently suitable for farming.
+This was particularly the case in the settled districts of Moreton,
+Darling Downs, Wide Bay, and Burnett, and to a lesser degree in
+Maranoa. To such an extent was the right of preemption used that many
+squatters seriously crippled themselves, the price paid being too high
+for grazing to be remunerative on their freehold lands.
+
+[Illustration: HARVESTING WHEAT, EMU VALE, NEAR WARWICK]
+
+When, in after years, it would have been to their advantage to
+subdivide and sell to farmers, it was not in their power to give
+titles. In the course of time railways were built through some of
+these large estates, but their earning power was seriously hampered
+by country capable of supporting a very large agricultural population
+being devoted to pasturing sheep and cattle. As the most satisfactory
+solution of the difficulty, successive Governments have repurchased
+a number of properties at a cost exceeding a million sterling, and
+resold them in small areas to farmers, with highly gratifying results
+both to the settlers and to the State.
+
+The immediate effect of the exclusive policy adopted by the
+pastoralists, however, was to force many selectors to take up land in
+dense scrubs on steep mountain slopes and in river pockets which were
+useless to stockowners. They had literally to hew their homes out
+of the jungle. Having no roads, they were thrown upon their own
+resources, and were obliged to live very largely upon the produce of
+their farms. Erecting a rude makeshift fence around a clearing of a
+few acres, the "cocky" or "cockatoo farmer," as he was contemptuously
+styled by those who regarded him as an interloper, planted maize and
+pumpkins among the remains of the scrub. Despite the ravages of bird
+and beast, he persevered, until at last success began to crown his
+efforts. A cow or two provided him with milk and butter, any surplus
+butter being sold to the storekeepers in the towns which quickly
+followed in the wake of settlement. Lucerne, sorghum, and other fodder
+crops formed part of his husbandry, live stock multiplied, and thus
+commenced that system of mixed farming to which thousands of the
+farmers of Queensland owe their prosperity. The coming of neighbours
+and the making of roads rendered life less lonely. With increasing
+prosperity, improved implements and methods were adopted. The plough
+succeeded the hoe; the harvester or the reaper and binder took the
+place of sickle and scythe; and the slab humpy or bark hut gave way to
+the comfortable farmhouse.
+
+Though these early selectors were driven into almost inaccessible
+scrub, they were at least within the region of heavy rainfall, and,
+even where some distance from permanent streams, suffered little from
+drought. Settlers who went over the Range, profiting by the experience
+of the pastoral pioneers regarding the vicissitudes of climate,
+avoided the mistake of relying upon a single crop, or, to use a
+homely phrase, of putting all their eggs in one basket--an error which
+brought ruin to thousands upon thousands of the people who, between
+thirty and forty years ago, flocked from the Atlantic seaboard to the
+arid regions of America, west of the Mississippi. Mixed farming became
+the general rule on the further side of the Main Range, so that, if
+wheat and maize failed, the farmers had their flocks and herds
+and their shearing cheques as a standby until the next harvest was
+garnered.
+
+It is sometimes said with scorn that there is comparatively little
+real farming in Queensland; but the conditions peculiar to
+settlement in the State are responsible for the trend of agricultural
+development. In the United States and Canada, the flood of immigration
+and the part played by the great railway companies as land-owners and
+promoters of settlement to provide traffic for their railways led
+to the creation of small holdings, which, in turn, led to intense
+cultivation of field and orchard crops. In Queensland, immigration has
+never been conducted on an extensive scale, and, indeed, for over a
+decade almost ceased. There was no great demand for land, and, as the
+mistaken belief long prevailed that the quantity of arable land was
+small, the area of so-called agricultural farms was made sufficiently
+large to enable a man to make a living from stock-raising, dairying,
+and pig-breeding. Field labourers being scarce and stock cheap, the
+farmer's aim has rather been to grow feed for his stock than crops for
+human consumption. He has followed the line of least resistance, so
+using his land as to carry on his operations with family labour and a
+little casual assistance during the busy seasons.
+
+Events have justified this mixed farming from the point of view of
+the farmer, and doubtless the monthly returns from dairying will cause
+most of the farmers of Southern and Central Queensland to rely chiefly
+upon that industry so long as high prices continue, and to look to
+pig-breeding and lamb-fattening as subsidiary branches. But for the
+swelling tide of newcomers the supplies of rich scrub, alluvial flat,
+and volcanic downs country must sooner or later prove inadequate.
+Indeed, within the last few years settlers have been turning their
+attention to land which was once regarded as inferior. From the
+lighter soils of plain and upland larger and more certain crops of
+grain are being won, and on these lands dairying will take second
+place to cereal production.
+
+Since an enlightened Legislature has resumed many millions of acres
+previously held under pastoral lease, and repurchased large estates in
+districts enjoying the advantages of railway communication, there
+has been no need to go far afield, and settlement has been chiefly
+confined to the lands adjacent to the rivers and railways in the
+coastal belt, on the Darling Downs, and, of recent years, in the
+Burnett district.
+
+Still, within the last thirty years, from one cause or another, groups
+of settlers have made their homes far beyond those limits. Thus the
+wheat lands of Maranoa were settled when there was no farming more
+than a few miles to the west of Toowoomba. Over eighteen hundred years
+ago Tacitus wrote of our Saxon forefathers: "They live apart, each by
+himself, as woodside, plain, or fresh spring attracts him." And
+this racial characteristic is strong in many of their descendants in
+Queensland. Better results and greater profits might have accrued from
+concentration, but the wonderful development of the British
+Empire owes much to this centrifugal impulse and to the spirit of
+independence and self-reliance which it has fostered; and as the flag
+has followed the adventurer in so many parts of the globe, so are the
+scattered pioneers of our Western lands nuclei around whom settlement
+is gradually gathering.
+
+To people coming for the most part from the mother country, experience
+constituted no safe guide to the agricultural possibilities of their
+new home in the South. Naturally, mistakes were made and time
+and money lost before they discovered which crops were the most
+profitable, and on what kind of land those crops could be grown with
+greatest certainty of success.
+
+When Dr. Lang induced the "Fortitude" immigrants to cast in their lot
+with the Moreton Bay settlement, in whose welfare he took so deep an
+interest, his desire was to establish the cultivation of cotton, to
+which he believed the climate and soil were specially adapted. But,
+despite the heavy crops produced on the river flats, cotton did not
+prove remunerative until, after the outbreak of the American Civil
+War in 1861, the Lancashire spinners were reduced to such straits
+that they gladly paid high prices for all that could be obtained from
+Queensland. The product was of excellent quality, but the cost of
+picking precluded competition with countries where cheap labour was
+plentiful, and, with the return to normal conditions in the United
+States after the termination of the war, cotton passed almost out
+of cultivation, and has never since become a crop of commercial
+importance. An effort was made some years back to resuscitate the
+industry by the offer of a Government bonus upon manufactured piece
+goods. The bounty was earned by a mill at Ipswich, but the industry
+did not long survive the stoppage of the bonus. Since the drought
+of 1902 cotton has again been grown, principally in West Moreton
+and North Queensland, as a subsidiary crop, and farmers have been
+encouraged to extend their operations by the recent offer of a
+bounty by the Commonwealth; but, until machinery takes the place of
+hand-picking, farmers are likely to prefer crops which are not subject
+to competition with the cheap labour of other lands.
+
+The first European colonists in America found there two valuable
+native products--maize and tobacco. Australia, on the other hand,
+presented a virgin field to the agriculturist. Like the rest of the
+Commonwealth, Queensland, blessed with the richest natural pastures,
+possesses no indigenous food plants of proved economic value. The
+early settlers naturally availed themselves of the wealth of native
+grasses and edible shrubs, and became graziers. When a commencement
+was made with agriculture, farmers sowed the crops to which they had
+been accustomed in Great Britain. Though these grew well, it was soon
+found that they were, on the whole, better adapted to the elevated
+downs than to the forcing climate on the coast. Maize, sugar-cane, and
+the fruits of the tropics, on the other hand, revelled in the sunshine
+and moist atmosphere of the seaboard.
+
+The farmer's first consideration is how he may utilise his land to the
+best advantage. The most profitable crops are those for which there
+is a world-wide demand but only a limited area of production, and
+therefore little competition for the grower; or, alternatively, crops
+which, by reason of natural advantages, he can produce more abundantly
+and at less cost than his competitors. Next in value are crops for
+which he has a monopoly in a limited but protected market, or enjoys
+natural advantages which give him a partial monopoly in such a market.
+Of less value, but still profitable, are crops which he can place on
+the market as cheaply as his rivals.
+
+In the first-mentioned category the Queensland farmer has butter,
+cheese, hams, and bacon. With good stock, cheap land, unrivalled
+pastures, and a climate which permits production to go on
+uninterruptedly from January to December, Queensland is most
+favourably situated, and farmers have not been slow to profit by their
+natural advantages.
+
+Large as are the present dimensions of the dairying industry, they are
+small compared with the possibilities of expansion. Already the value
+of butter, cheese, and milk is well over £1,000,000 per annum, the
+butter export alone being worth considerably more than half that
+sum. The export has multiplied tenfold in the last six years; and, as
+Queensland is the leading cattle State, there is every justification
+for believing that in dairy produce she will soon become one of the
+principal exporting States of the Commonwealth.
+
+[Illustration: SURPRISE CREEK CASCADE, CAIRNS RAILWAY]
+
+So late as twenty years ago, much of the butter consumed in Queensland
+came from the Southern States. The local product was inferior in
+quality, although an agreeable change from the imported salted butter.
+The passage of the protective tariff of 1888 gave a great impetus
+to the production of butter and cheese. A heavy impost was placed on
+dairy produce, and the Government lent further aid to the industry by
+sending experts through the farming districts in charge of travelling
+dairies. Valuable instruction was given; the cream separator came
+into general use, and there was soon a noticeable improvement in
+both butter and cheese. Factories sprang into existence in every
+agricultural centre, and by degrees the farmers became suppliers of
+cream instead of manufacturers of butter. Speedily production overtook
+the local consumption, importations ceased, and manufacturers began
+to look oversea for a market for their surplus stocks. Difficulties
+at once arose in connection with refrigerated space and freight rates.
+Regular shipments and rapid transport involved transhipment at
+Sydney from the coastal steamers, increased expense, and risk of
+deterioration. A State subsidy induced first one and then another
+shipping company to make Brisbane its terminal port in Australia, and
+to provide refrigerated chambers for butter at reduced freights; and
+now Queensland, in respect of these matters, is on precisely the same
+footing as the other States.
+
+On the first appearance of Queensland butter in London, lower prices
+were obtainable than were paid for other brands with an established
+reputation, and some dissatisfaction was expressed by buyers on
+account of variations in quality. To remedy this, legislation was
+passed providing for Government inspection and grading of all butter
+intended for export. Whether grading and price do or do not stand in
+the relations of cause and effect, it is beyond dispute that it is
+only since the initiation of the system that Queensland butter has
+been on a parity with the butter of the Southern States and New
+Zealand, and the general standard is undoubtedly higher than in
+pre-grading days.
+
+Coincident with the improvement in the quality of the butter, a great
+change for the better has taken place in the dairy herds. Good milking
+strains have been introduced, and more attention is paid to the
+feeding of the cows, with the result that it is by no means uncommon
+for the milk from one cow to bring as much as £8 or £9 a year.
+
+The tariff of 1888 and the educative policy of successive Governments
+have also been largely responsible for the establishment of the allied
+industry of bacon and ham curing on a firm basis, and local brands are
+favourably known in many parts of the world.
+
+Under the heading of crops for which our farmers enjoy a monopoly in
+a limited but protected market--or natural advantages which are
+equivalent to a partial monopoly--are sugar, maize, tomatoes, tropical
+and citrus fruits, and cigar tobacco. The Commonwealth tariff gives
+Queensland a practical monopoly in Australia for sugar. She has a
+virtual monopoly for tropical fruits, being the only State in which
+these are produced in excess of local requirements. The warmer climate
+and earlier crop give her temporary command of the Southern markets
+for citrus fruits, tomatoes, maize, and a number of minor products,
+before they mature in the cooler South, an advantage that will extend
+in time to many other crops, with the increasing interchange arising
+from interstate free trade.
+
+Chief among products which can be placed as cheaply on the market as
+in other countries are the cereals. Queensland has all the essentials
+of a great grain-producing country. Her name does not yet figure
+among the list of exporters of foodstuffs, but the reasons for her
+backwardness are not far to seek.
+
+At the close of 1908 the number of people in the State, scattered over
+its 670,500 square miles of territory, was only 558,000--little more
+than the population of Sydney or Melbourne, and less than that of
+several second-class cities in the mother country. Probably not more
+than ten per cent. of the people are engaged in farming, but, acre for
+acre and man for man, Queensland compares favourably with countries
+that are regarded as primarily agricultural. The lands most sought
+after have been scrub, deep alluvial flats, and black and chocolate
+loams; and, until recently, it was on land of this kind that most of
+the wheat and barley was grown. Heavy crops were harvested, as a
+rule, but the results were not uniformly satisfactory, and it is now
+recognised that these highly fertile lands are better suited for other
+forms of cultivation than the growth of cereals. For several years,
+incoming selectors--many Southern wheat farmers from preference--have
+been settling to the west of the heavy Downs country on the lighter
+soils of ridge and plain. From these lands, of which Queensland has a
+practically unlimited supply, but which the settlers of twenty or even
+ten years ago regarded as poor, more and more of the wheat crop is now
+coming. With less labour and at less expense than on the heavy soils,
+the farmer has greater certainty of a payable yield.
+
+Sugar has first place among agricultural products from Port Douglas
+to the Mary River, followed by maize and the luscious fruits of the
+tropics. From Maryborough to the Tweed, maize takes precedence of
+sugar. Crops of less importance are potatoes, pumpkins, citrus fruits,
+pineapples, and bananas. In the Central and Southern divisions of the
+coastal belt, where dairying is the chief industry, large areas are
+under fodder crops and permanent grasses. From the Northern section
+of the littoral, thousands of bunches of bananas are shipped weekly
+to the South. Mangoes and pineapples are also sent South in very
+considerable quantities. Citrus fruits and tomatoes ripen at least
+two months earlier in North Queensland than in New South Wales and
+Victoria, and this fact has led to an important and profitable trade
+in these commodities being opened up with Sydney and Melbourne. The
+spices and food and other economic plants of the tropics grow to
+perfection north of Mackay. Cigar tobacco of good quality is being
+grown in small quantities in several parts of the North, and the
+Commonwealth bounty and the willingness of manufacturers to take
+the leaf should lead in time to the bulk of the cigars consumed
+in Australia being made from Queensland leaf. Despite the heat and
+humidity of the climate, dairying is being carried on with success as
+far north as Cairns, and at Atherton on the hinterland it promises to
+become an important industry.
+
+Except on the Darling Downs, progress on the tableland has been
+retarded until a comparatively recent date through the land being
+locked up in pastoral leaseholds. At Atherton in the North and on
+the Burnett lands in the South, however, agricultural settlement is
+proceeding by leaps and bounds. Following the usual practice on scrub
+land, maize and grasses are the principal objects of culture, as they
+can be planted among the fallen timber and converted into milk long
+before the land can be put under the plough.
+
+The Darling Downs, famous for their beauty and fertility, well deserve
+their title of "Garden of Queensland." Other districts, notably
+Atherton and the Burnett, have as good land, and the latter may
+have an equal area; but nowhere can there be seen 4,000,000 acres of
+splendid agricultural country requiring so little labour to bring it
+under cultivation. Far beyond the horizon stretch these fine lands,
+formerly clothed with nutritious natural grasses, but now passing into
+cultivation and dotted over with prosperous homesteads. More than 70
+per cent. of the wheat, oats, and barley of Queensland comes from the
+Downs, which are capable of supporting a population far larger than
+the whole State now contains. Shipments of malting barley grown on
+the Downs attracted such favourable notice in England a few years
+back that offers were made to buy large quantities, and modern and
+well-equipped malting houses have since been built at Toowoomba and
+Warwick by a leading firm of English maltsters. Oats are grown for
+hay, no grain being ground into meal. There is an increasing tendency,
+founded on experience, to look to the lighter soils for cereal
+production, and to put the heavier volcanic soils of the Eastern Downs
+to uses for which they are better adapted. To dairying much of the
+prosperity of the Downs farmers is due. Butter and cheese factories
+have been erected every few miles along the railway line, and the
+number of cream-cans awaiting transport on every platform bear
+striking testimony to the importance of the industry. Most of the
+fruits of Northern and Southern Europe flourish, and the many fine
+orchards between Stanthorpe and the New South Wales border are giving
+handsome returns to their fortunate owners. In the neighbourhood of
+Texas, to the west of Warwick, pipe tobacco of fine flavour is being
+cultivated. The extension of the railway from Warwick to Goondiwindi
+has rendered available additional areas suitable for this crop, and
+circumstances favour the creation of a great industry.
+
+The boundless plains of the West, where the annual rainfall varies
+from 30 inches to 10 inches, are the seat of the pastoral industry,
+and agriculture is still in its infancy. In the vicinity of Roma, on
+the Southern and Western Railway, wheat is the staple crop. Further
+West, on river banks and adjacent to artesian bores, vegetables,
+grapes, and oranges are grown. The oranges at Barcaldine, in the
+Central West, have been pronounced by the Government Fruit Expert
+to be the finest he has seen. In the same locality areas of grain,
+lucerne, and other hay crops show the capabilities of the plain lands
+when irrigated; but these small patches do not constitute an
+industry. The soil has in it all the elements of fertility, and is
+of inexhaustible depth; but, unhappily, the rainy season does not
+coincide with the period of growth of the cereals for which these
+lands seem otherwise intended by Nature; and until science becomes
+the handmaid of husbandry, and irrigation is demonstrated to be both
+practicable and remunerative, agriculture is likely to make little
+headway in the West.
+
+[Illustration: PINEAPPLE FARM, WOOMBYE, NORTH COAST RAILWAY]
+
+[Illustration: SUGAR-MILL, HUXLEY, ISIS RAILWAY]
+
+[Illustration: A FIELD OF MAIZE, EEL CREEK, GYMPIE]
+
+The farmers of Queensland may well lay to heart the experience
+of America. Forty years ago disaster overtook every attempt at
+cultivation west of the Mississippi basin until the aid of irrigation
+was invoked. The response to the application of water was immediate,
+and millions of acres are now under intense cultivation in the dry
+belt, and supporting a population far outnumbering that of Australia.
+
+These are the words in which an American writer graphically describes
+the wonderful work that has been done on lands that bear a striking
+resemblance to those of Western Queensland both in regard to climate
+and soil:--
+
+ The actual amount of land that may be reclaimed and cultivated
+ in the semi-arid region furnishes no measure of the value of
+ irrigation in this vast district. By enabling thousands to
+ engage in farming, irrigation has made it possible to use the
+ surrounding plains as the pasture for great numbers of beef
+ cattle. In many instances small herds are owned by the farmers
+ themselves, but to a large extent their crops are bought by
+ those whose sole business is cattle-raising. Thus all the
+ resources of the region are brought into use, and a wonderful
+ prosperity has followed as the logical result.
+
+ From Canada to Mexico the revolution of the Great Plain is now
+ in full tide. It is the most democratic page in the history
+ of American irrigation. It has saved an enormous district from
+ lapsing into a condition of semi-barbarism. It has not only
+ made human life secure, but revolutionised the industrial and
+ social economy of the locality.
+
+ To a considerable extent it has replaced the quarter-lot
+ with the small farm, and the single crop with diversified
+ cultivation. It has transformed the speculative instincts of
+ the people into a spirit of sober industrialism. It has raised
+ the standard of living and improved the character of the
+ homes. It has planted the rose bush and the pansy where only
+ the sunflower cast its shadow, and it has twined the ivy and
+ the honeysuckle over doors which formerly knew not the touch
+ of beauty. It has made neighbours and society where once there
+ were loneliness and heart-hunger. It has broken the chains of
+ hopeless mortgages and crowned industry with independence.
+
+The history of irrigation in the United States reads like a romance.
+Competent authorities have expressed the opinion that truly scientific
+farming is only possible where irrigation takes the place of rain,
+and where the elements of fertility are retained in the soil. American
+experience supports this view. Farms of from ten to forty acres
+support whole families in comfort, if not in affluence, and one acre
+yields as much as five of the best land in the rainfall belt. Whether
+land is used for mixed farming or crop cultivation, the best results
+are achieved when moisture can be applied or withheld according to the
+needs of the crop. Without irrigation, crops may be more certain
+in the coastal belt and on the intermediate tableland, but with
+irrigation the advantage will undoubtedly lie with our Western lands.
+A downpour may do irremediable harm to a ripening crop or at harvest
+time, and to that danger the plain lands of the interior are less
+liable than those in the region of heavier rainfall.
+
+In some parts of Queensland, principally near the coast, irrigation
+has already attained some prominence. In 1907 water was applied
+artificially to 9,612 acres. Of this area, 4,492 acres were in the
+Burdekin Delta, the water being drawn from the Burdekin, from lagoons,
+and from wells. The rainfall is comparatively light, and the marked
+increase in the cane crop on the irrigated lands is apparent to the
+most casual observer. In the Bundaberg district 2,350 acres were
+irrigated from the Burnett River and from wells; the vegetable and
+fruit growers of Bowen irrigated 356 acres; and water was applied
+to 482 acres in the neighbourhood of Rockhampton. Artesian water was
+supplied to 100 acres at Barcaldine and 240 acres at Hungerford far
+out on the New South Wales border.
+
+In the Western States of America, where water is measured out
+with mathematical accuracy and applied with clockwork regularity,
+agriculture has been raised almost to the rank of an exact science.
+The soil of Western Queensland is quite equal to that of the States
+in fertility, and similar methods should here produce similar results.
+When even the sterile Sahara is gradually disappearing before the
+irrigation works of French engineers, there is no need to despond
+regarding the future of the very driest parts of Queensland.
+
+In Egypt and Spain and in several of the American States, the water
+for irrigation is obtained from perennial streams drawing their
+supplies from distant snow-clad mountains. Kansas differs in this
+respect from other States. The description of the rivers of Western
+Kansas by an American humorist might have been penned with equal
+appositeness of the rivers of Western Queensland: "They are a mile
+wide, and an inch thick; they have a large circulation, but very
+little influence." Fortunately for Kansas, water is everywhere
+procurable by sinking shallow wells. In Dakota and Texas, thousands of
+millions of gallons are poured on to the land daily from thousands of
+artesian wells. Though lofty mountain chains are lacking, with summits
+high above the line of perpetual snow and giving birth to rivers
+rivalling Nile and Mississippi in volume, both of these latter sources
+of supply are available in Queensland. East and west of the Great
+Divide, abundance of water has been obtained from wells. Our western
+rivers may flow intermittently on the surface, but sub-artesian water
+is plentiful in many localities, and the great artesian basin, with
+its area of no less than 372,000 square miles, coincides generally
+with that part of the State which has a rainfall of 20 inches or less,
+a wise Providence having apparently created this huge subterranean
+reservoir to guard against excessive evaporation and to compensate for
+the light rains.
+
+There is still another supply open. Allowing for a very large
+percentage of the water that finds its way into the watercourses of
+the West sinking into the earth or being lost through evaporation, a
+tremendous quantity that now runs to waste could be conserved by works
+such as the Government of New South Wales are constructing in the
+Murrumbidgee basin. Irrigation on a large scale is beyond the means of
+individuals--it must be undertaken either by private co-operation
+or by State enterprise; and preferably the latter. Irrigation and
+afforestation are both necessary for the successful development of
+the West. If water can be supplied to settlers at a cost which is
+not prohibitive, whether it be drawn from storage reservoirs or from
+subterranean sources, the face of the country will quickly be changed.
+Instead of a handful of pastoral lessees controlling in some instances
+areas of hundreds of thousands of acres, a much larger population of
+grazier farmers will be settled on much smaller holdings, enjoying
+all the benefits--educational, social, and civic--which result from
+concentrated settlement.
+
+A product of the land which is intimately connected with settlement,
+if somewhat outside the scope of this chapter, is timber. The forests
+of Queensland are very extensive, and contain numerous timbers of
+great value for building and cabinet-making. Chief among the former
+are several species of pine, hardwood, beech, and ash. The most
+beautiful and valuable of the ornamental woods are red cedar, silky
+oak, bean-tree, and maple. In the earliest settled districts in
+the South most of these have become comparatively scarce. The
+timber-getter has been through the scrubs and forests, and much that
+could not be converted into lumber has been destroyed by fire, to make
+the ground ready for the plough. In North Queensland there are immense
+quantities available, especially of the ornamental varieties, and
+a profitable trade has been opened up with the southern part of the
+State and with Sydney and Melbourne. Formerly the timber became the
+property of the selector, but now a royalty is charged, which yields
+the Crown a considerable revenue, and selection is deferred until the
+marketable trees have been removed. To prevent the exhaustion of the
+supplies, and as a preliminary to reafforestation, reserves have been
+proclaimed in several parts of the State to act as nurseries.
+
+Of the 429,120,000 acres contained in Queensland, at the close of 1908
+some 21,500,000 acres--or just one-twentieth of the total area--had
+been selected as agricultural farms and homesteads; 31,000,000 acres
+were held as grazing and scrub selections, 56,000,000 acres were under
+occupation license or depasturing right, and 186,000,000 acres under
+pastoral lease, the remainder consisting either of reserves, mineral
+lands, or unoccupied land in remote localities.
+
+From every district where land is open to agricultural selection,
+however, comes the report that the demand is keen. No sooner is an
+area thrown open to selection than it is eagerly applied for, and the
+number of those who signify their desire to become personal residents
+in order to obtain priority is fast increasing. The Australian States,
+New Zealand, the British Isles, and Germany are all furnishing their
+quota of seekers after the cheap and excellent lands Queensland has to
+offer.
+
+Provision has been made by the Legislature for all kinds of
+settlement--purely agricultural, mixed farming, and grazing. The
+areas vary, being governed by the quality of the land, rainfall, the
+presence or absence of permanent water, and proximity to a market or a
+railway--in other words, by the amount required to provide the settler
+with a comfortable income. The State is a generous landlord, and every
+allowance is made for the difficulties of selectors in the earlier
+stages of their occupancy. The man who wishes to acquire a freehold
+has the opportunity of gratifying his desire. The man who objects to
+that tenure has it in his power to obtain a lease in perpetuity. The
+best settler being generally the man who intends to earn his living
+entirely from the soil, and is prepared to reside continuously upon
+the land, men of that class are very properly accorded priority over
+those who do not intend to reside in person. Particulars regarding the
+different tenures and the conditions upon which land may be obtained
+from the Crown will be found in Appendix E.
+
+The State assists the agriculturist in many ways. The Agricultural
+College at Gatton is doing valuable service in training young men and
+in carrying on experimental work. Six State farms, at two of which
+apprentices are taken, have been established in as many widely
+separated districts to ascertain by experiment the crops and methods
+of cultivation most suited to local conditions, and impart the results
+of their labours to the neighbouring farmers. Some of these farms have
+valuable stud flocks and dairy herds, from which settlers can obtain
+high-class stock. At Cairns tropical products are being tested and
+propagated at a State nursery. Useful educational work is also being
+done at the Sugar Experiment Station at Mackay. These institutions are
+under the direct supervision of the Department of Agriculture, which
+also employs experts in dairying, fruit culture, and tobacco growing
+and curing. A botanist, an entomologist, and an agricultural chemist
+are highly necessary and valuable members of the departmental staff,
+and much useful information is disseminated through the medium of the
+"Agricultural Journal," published by the Department.
+
+[Illustration: THRESHING WHEAT, EMU VALE, KILLARNEY RAILWAY]
+
+[Illustration: COFFEE PLANTATION, KURANDA, CAIRNS RAILWAY]
+
+In addition to giving instruction, the Government have built sheds in
+the principal farming centres on the Darling Downs for the storage of
+wheat and other grain until the farmers can dispose of their crops
+to advantage. Cheap money is supplied through the medium of the
+Agricultural Bank. There are trust funds from which advances are made
+to those who desire to build co-operative flour or sugar mills, butter
+and cheese factories, or meat-preserving works. Railways have been
+constructed in the older farming districts, produce is carried at
+moderate rates, and subsidies are given to steamship companies for the
+carriage of produce to oversea markets.
+
+All this has been done for the man already on the land. Much is
+likewise being done to help the man who wishes to become a settler.
+Railways are being built into districts in which the Crown owns large
+areas fit for close settlement. In other localities roads are made,
+land is cleared, and wells and bores are sunk. Money is advanced on
+liberal terms and at a low rate of interest by the Agricultural Bank
+for the making of improvements and the purchase of stock, implements,
+and machinery. Land is cheap, and special concessions are given by
+the Railway Department to new settlers when taking up their land. The
+annual rent forms an instalment of the purchase money, and payments
+may be deferred during the initial years of occupancy, when the
+selector is under heavy expense and is getting little or no return
+from his land.
+
+North and south along the coast, and west to the setting sun, long
+stretches of thick wood or grassy plain present themselves to the eye,
+solitary as in the dawn of creation, only awaiting the advent of the
+settler to be transformed into a scene of bustling activity.
+
+Endowed with a sunny and salubrious climate, a fruitful soil, an
+immense territory, Queensland has room for many millions of people;
+but those people must be of European birth or descent. For many
+years the settled policy of the country in regard to immigration was
+conservative. Now, however, all political parties are agreed upon the
+need for a larger population--but primarily an agrarian population.
+The great obstacles to immigration from Europe on any considerable
+scale are distance and expense. America is distant but a few days'
+sail, and the cost of a passage is correspondingly low. To place
+Queensland on an equally favourable footing, the Government have
+arranged with the British-India Steam Navigation Company to bring
+adult males from the United Kingdom to the State upon payment by the
+immigrants of £4 each. The rate for adult females is £2 per head,
+and £8 for males and females over 40 and under 55 years of age. Free
+passages may be granted to agricultural labourers introduced under
+contract if the employer pays a fee of £5 and guarantees a year's
+employment at approved wages. The balance of the passage-money in
+every case is paid by the State. Female domestic servants, and the
+wives and children of contract or part-paying immigrants, are carried
+free. Immigrants may select land before leaving the old country, with
+the option of getting a refund if not satisfied with their choice
+after their arrival in Queensland. Full particulars of the various
+forms of immigration will be found in Appendix F.
+
+In 1908 the number of those who came from the British Isles was only
+2,584, but the numbers are increasing since the inauguration of the
+B.I.S.N. service _via_ Torres Strait, 2,737 immigrants having arrived
+during the first nine months of this year. Hundreds of desirable
+settlers and their families are coming every year from the Southern
+States and New Zealand, attracted by the cheaper land and brighter
+prospects. The stream of newcomers is now but a tiny rivulet; but,
+when each proclaims to his friends his success in the land of his
+adoption, that rivulet will swell to a mighty river.
+
+Cheap passages and the cheap land across the Atlantic have till now
+turned westward the eyes of the millions of Europe anxious to become
+their own masters and to live a wider, freer life than is possible
+in their native lands. Queensland is taking steps to bring her
+attractions more prominently under the notice of the British and
+European public in order to secure a share of the rural populations
+of the Old World for herself. She has advantages--natural, material,
+social, and political--in no way inferior to those presented by other
+countries. Life and liberty are nowhere more secure. A wide expanse of
+sea divides us from the nearest foreign Power. Living is cheaper and
+existence easier than in those lands to which the people of Europe are
+flocking. The sun is always shining, and winter, instead of being a
+period of enforced idleness, is a season when labour is greatly in
+demand. Crop succeeds crop without pause, and seed-time and harvest
+follow each other in quick procession. Stock feed in the open
+throughout the year, and winter brings little diminution in the yield
+of dairy produce.
+
+With free institutions, individual liberty, and great natural
+resources, Queensland is destined to become the home of a numerous and
+prosperous people. It is our manifest duty to see that it forms part
+of a strong, self-reliant, British nation beneath the Southern Cross,
+linked in the bonds of affection with the Motherland and our brethren
+across the seas, with arms open in welcome to our kin and colour, but
+ready to defend ourselves against aggression. In the great work, the
+men who are subduing the wilderness and converting it into a smiling
+garden can be relied upon to play their part. Nature is a tender
+foster-mother; freedom is in the air. Stalwart in frame, courageous
+in heart, true scions of the race from which they spring, rejoicing in
+their manhood, grateful for their heritage, the yeomen of Queensland
+are the pride of their country.
+
+ "Not without envy Wealth at times must look
+ On their brown strength who wield the reaping-hook
+ And scythe, or at the forge-fire shape the plough
+ Or the steel harness of the steeds of steam;
+ All who, by skill and patience, anyhow
+ Make service noble, and the earth redeem
+ From savageness. By kingly accolade
+ Than theirs was never worthier knighthood made."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III.
+
+THE SUGAR INDUSTRY.
+
+ Sugar-cane in the Northern Hemisphere.--The Rise of the
+ Beet Industry.--Abolition of Slave Labour in West Indies.
+ --Reorganisation of Industry on Scientific Basis.
+ --Establishment of Industry in Queensland.--Difficulties
+ of Early Planters.--Stoppage of Pacific Island Labour.
+ --Evolution of Small Holdings and Erection of Central
+ Mills.--Reintroduction of Pacific Islanders.--Stoppage of
+ Pacific Island Labour by Commonwealth Legislation.--Bonus
+ on White-grown Sugar.--Benefits Arising from Separating
+ Cultivation and Manufacture.--Contrast between Past and
+ Present Methods.--Scientific Cultivation.--Recent Statistics.
+ --The Future of the Industry.--Queensland Leading the Van in
+ Establishing White Agriculturists in Tropics.
+
+
+Long before the Christian era classical and sacred writers made
+mention of that "sweet cane" whose product plays so important a part
+in the everyday requirements of modern life.
+
+Sugar-cane was introduced into Spain by the Moors early in the eighth
+century. The Moorish empire sank before the combined might of Spain
+in 1492, and in that year Columbus added a new world to the realm of
+Castile. Within a few years the sugar industry had taken firm root
+in the West Indies, and on every isle dotting the Spanish Main waved
+countless fields of cane, yielding crops beside which the production
+of Andalusia, already waning under the dead hand of Spain, paled into
+insignificance.
+
+To the first Spanish planters is due the system upon which the sugar
+industry was conducted in the tropics for more than three hundred
+years. The haughty hidalgo, scorning to labour with his own hands,
+forced into his service the unresisting natives of the West. Unused
+to strenuous toil, they sank beneath the burden. Touched with pity for
+their sad lot, and anxious to save them from extirpation, Las Casas,
+"the Apostle of the Indians," urged the substitution of the children
+of Ham, whom he and all good Christians believed to have been doomed
+to perpetual bondage; and African slavery thus became an established
+institution in the West.
+
+Whether under Spanish or British rule, the sugar industry of the West
+Indies, and of all other tropical countries to which it was extended,
+was carried on under a system of large plantations, owned as a rule
+by men of good family, who, deeming personal control beneath their
+dignity, deputed to overseers of meaner rank the supervision of their
+servile labourers. The profusion of Nature, coupled with vicarious
+management and the absence of competition, engendered extravagance,
+improvident husbandry, and wasteful and unscientific manufacture, the
+while there rose to Heaven--
+
+ "Steaming up, a lamentation and an ancient tale of wrong,
+ Like a tale of little-meaning, tho' the words are strong;
+ Chanted from an ill-used race of men that cleave the soil,
+ Sow the seed, and reap the harvest with enduring toil."
+
+[Illustration: SUGAR-MILL, CHILDERS, NORTH COAST RAILWAY]
+
+Until well on in the nineteenth century little progress was made
+either in cultivation or manufacture. For more than three hundred
+years the history of the industry was one of slave labour, crude
+methods, and planters to whom life in the tropics meant exile from
+Europe, and whose sole object was to amass wealth to be spent in the
+pleasures of the courts of St. James, Versailles, or Madrid.
+
+The first blow struck at the old-time theory that the tropics were
+created solely to supply the needs of dwellers in temperate climes
+was dealt by Napoleon when he took steps to establish the beet-sugar
+industry in France. His object was twofold--to render Continental
+Europe, which was then lying at his mercy, independent of Britain and
+the British colonies; and to cripple the trade of the only Power which
+had never stooped to his sway. Unconsciously, at the same time he laid
+the foundation of a tropical Britain peopled by the British race.
+
+The successful establishment of the beet-sugar industry called for the
+application of industrial, scientific, and organising capacity of
+the highest order, and the Governments of France and other European
+countries fostered its development by heavy bounties.
+
+The abolition of slavery in the British West Indies in 1834 and the
+later emancipation of the negroes in the United States so disorganised
+the sugar industry of the West that those engaged in it were too
+engrossed with their own affairs to heed the progress of the beet
+industry of Europe. The output of beet sugar steadily forged ahead
+until, in the early eighties, it was almost equal to the output of
+cane sugar. Tropical planters and manufacturers then found themselves
+engaged in a life-and-death struggle for which they were ill-equipped.
+Forced by inexorable necessity to face the situation, they realised
+that only by following the example of their rivals--by calling in the
+aid of science both in cultivation and in manufacture, and by
+paying the strictest attention to the financial side of their
+enterprise--could they hope to hold their own.
+
+Just at the time that the Southern States of America were fighting
+desperately in defence of the slave system, the foundations of the
+Queensland sugar industry were being laid. Despite the high prices
+then ruling for sugar, the profits were not large, owing to the
+primitive methods of cultivation and manufacture adopted on the
+plantations. In time, even in this remote quarter of the globe the
+growth of the beet industry compelled the planters to make radical
+changes. Antiquated husbandry, crude processes, and wasteful
+management were superseded by modern scientific methods. The
+subdivision of large estates, the substitution of small white growers
+for gangs of unskilled coloured labourers, and the establishment of
+co-operative central factories were Queensland's contribution to the
+solution of the problem of Beet _versus_ Cane.
+
+As Napoleon in his wildest dreams had no conception that his
+anti-British policy would ultimately lead to the expansion and
+evolution of the sugar industry of the tropics, so the Queenslander
+who first planted a few sticks of sugar-cane on the shores of Moreton
+Bay half a century ago little foresaw that from that humble beginning
+would develop the greatest agricultural industry of this State--an
+industry which, if treated with continued consideration and sympathy
+by the Commonwealth, bids fair to revolutionise the hitherto accepted
+view of the relations of the white races to the tropics. Yet, if we
+read aright the brief history of the Queensland sugar industry, and
+appreciate its present position, that first planter commenced a work
+which is likely to lead to permanent settlement in the tropics by men
+of European descent.
+
+There was little to distinguish the establishment of our sugar
+industry from similar ventures in other parts of the tropics where
+the supply of cheap coloured native labour was insufficient for
+the requirements of the planters. The men who opened up the first
+plantations in Queensland were not Australians, except by adoption.
+Their experience had been gained in Java, Mauritius, the West Indies,
+and elsewhere. They came to this country imbued with the old notion
+that the best and most economical means of carrying on tropical
+agriculture was to cultivate large estates by the aid of gangs of
+coloured labourers; and it is a moot point whether, fifty years ago,
+any other method of establishing tropical industries in Queensland
+was possible. Certain land concessions were given to encourage the
+newcomers, and they were permitted to import Pacific Islanders, under
+Government supervision, as contract labourers for work in the fields.
+
+Not all the early planters had been sugar-growers previously. In the
+Mackay district, which has always been one of the chief sugar centres,
+the first settlers grew cotton, tobacco, and arrowroot. But early in
+the sixties it was recognised that the production of sugar offered
+the most satisfactory and profitable field for their enterprise.
+Generally, they were representatives of that class of whom Benjamin
+Kidd, in his "Control of the Tropics," says: "The more advanced
+peoples, driven to seek new outlooks for their activities, will be
+subject to a gradually increasing pressure to turn their attention
+to the great natural field of enterprise which still remains in the
+development of the tropics."
+
+It was not sufficient for these early planters to take up land and
+plant their crops; they had to erect mills, where the cane could be
+converted into sugar, and this required capital. The cost of labour,
+provisions, and supplies was enormous. Communication along the coast
+was such that goods were taken North in small sailing vessels, and the
+pioneers were quite accustomed to travelling in a small steamer which
+anchored under the lee of a convenient island during the darkness
+of the night. Those who see the condition of the industry which has
+evolved from these first efforts must, in justice to the pioneers,
+recall the difficulties and risks which were faced by them.
+
+Forty years ago the industry was an infant struggling with its
+teething troubles, still liable to premature death. In 1871 there were
+only 9,581 acres under sugar-cane in the whole of Queensland, and the
+production of sugar was only 3,762 tons, not equal to half the output
+of one of our large modern factories. The industry was then chiefly
+confined to the South, but it soon made its way northwards, and
+expanded so rapidly that, in 1881, the area under cane had increased
+to 28,026 acres, and there were no less than 103 mills in operation.
+
+The industry then entered upon the first of its great reverses. Owing
+to the enormous increase in the output of beet sugar in Europe, prices
+fell rapidly. The first of the larger class of factories, conducted on
+modern lines, with improved appliances, came into existence, and small
+mills, unable to compete successfully, began to close. Labour supplies
+from the South Sea Islands became more expensive, and a class of white
+men, originally labourers who had saved money, took up selections
+as sugar farms, and sought to dispose of their crops of cane to the
+planter-proprietors of existing mills. The latter, alarmed by the
+passage of legislation decreeing an end to the employment of coloured
+labour, planted larger areas with the object of taking off as much
+cane as possible before they were deprived of the services of the
+Polynesian labourers then under contract. The immediate result was
+that the small farmers were unable to sell their crops at reasonable
+rates; and to help them the Government of the day, whose avowed policy
+it was to have the industry carried on by white labour, decided to
+advance money to groups of these farmers to enable them to erect
+co-operative factories for the treatment of their cane. As an
+experiment, two such factories were built in the Mackay district,
+where the need was most clamant; and thus was laid the foundation of
+the central mill system, which has given such an impetus to the growth
+of the industry, conducted on the basis of white labour. Tentative
+though the experiment was, and though for many years not a complete
+financial success from the point of view of the mills, the erection of
+these mills at least showed that the interests of the farmer and the
+factory were mutually interdependent.
+
+It was seen almost at once by the large planter that the farmer,
+working in the field beside his employees, was more eager for success
+than when he worked as labourer or overseer for another. The control
+of the factories, under directorates of farmers, was found to be more
+satisfactory and more economical than when in the hands of planters
+or managers with old-fashioned ideas of organisation--with managers,
+sub-managers, and large administrative staffs. Five years after the
+first loan was granted by the Government, and barely three after the
+rollers were started in the first of the two pioneer mills, these
+facts had become manifest. It says much for the sense and courage
+of the planters that this revolution in established methods did
+not dismay them, and their wisdom was shown in setting to work
+energetically to put the new methods into practice in the conduct of
+their own business.
+
+In 1891 the Colonial Sugar Refining Company set the example by cutting
+up one of its large estates into farms of moderate size. Ten years
+earlier that estate was a cattle station, employing a couple of white
+men and a few aboriginals. Before the first six months of 1891 had
+passed, it was the home of fifty or sixty settlers, a number trebled
+within the next few years.
+
+The new departure largely overcame the labour difficulty; in addition
+to that, it went far to meet the low prices for sugar. Many of the
+factories still continued to make sugar for sale in the open market,
+and a considerable quantity found its way, profitably, to London.
+
+In 1892 a special Commissioner of the London "Times" (Miss Flora Shaw,
+now Lady Lugard) travelled through the sugar districts, and noted the
+evolution which was taking place. She seemed to foresee the future
+more clearly than many of those actually engaged in the industry.
+"Even the sugar industry," she wrote, "appears as a whole to be
+half-unconscious of the results of the reorganisation through which it
+has passed, and lies, as it were, still asleep in the dawn of its own
+prosperity."
+
+[Illustration: SISAL HEMP AND CANEFIELDS, SOUTH ISIS]
+
+[Illustration: CANEFIELDS, ISIS RAILWAY]
+
+[Illustration: SUGAR CANE AND MILL, HUXLEY, ISIS RAILWAY]
+
+The middle nineties saw the fuller development of the central mill
+system. More groups of farmers were formed, loans were obtained
+from the Government, and further factories, mostly large and all
+well-equipped with the most modern machinery, were erected. A sudden
+demand arose in all parts of the coastal belt for sugar lands. The
+wiser of the planters subdivided their estates; owners of lands
+hitherto unutilised cut them up, and sold them to the inrush of
+farmers. The financial crisis of the early nineties and the action
+of Parliament in removing the embargo on the introduction of Pacific
+Islanders were no doubt contributing factors to the rapid increase in
+the number of would-be sugar-growers; but, whatever the cause, certain
+it is that at this time the spurt in cane cultivation and white
+settlement was greater than at any other period in the history of the
+industry in Queensland.
+
+The year 1898 saw no less than 111,012 acres under cane, with a sugar
+production of 163,734 tons. The factories employed 3,709 men, nearly
+all Europeans, and the declared value of the sugar sent away
+from Queensland exceeded £1,300,000. The actual number of farmers
+cultivating cane in that year is not ascertainable, but it
+approximated 2,500.
+
+It may fairly be claimed that Queensland has conquered her tropical
+littoral. Between Nerang in the South and Port Douglas in the North
+stretches a coastline of nearly 1,000 miles. At intervals along this
+great distance are large areas under cane and a number of considerable
+towns almost entirely dependent upon the sugar industry--including
+important centres like Bundaberg, with over 10,000 inhabitants, and
+Mackay and Cairns, each containing over 5,000 souls. Uninhabited
+swamps and forests and mountain lands--covered with rank tropical
+grasses or dense growths of trees and creepers--have given place
+to cultivated fields, in which stand thousands of comfortable homes
+rendered accessible by well-made roads, while many districts are
+provided with most of the adjuncts to modern civilisation. In fact,
+the white settler and worker live under conditions in no way inferior
+to those prevailing in agricultural centres in other parts of the
+world. European brains and European labour have brought into being
+a flourishing industry, and converted into one of the healthiest
+portions of Australia, fitted to become the permanent home of millions
+of our own race, a malarial belt where it had for long been thought
+none but coloured people would ever be able to labour and live.
+
+The latter end of the nineties and the opening years of the present
+decade saw a further development of the principle of white settlement
+in our tropics. The federation of the Australian States offered the
+sugar-producer some escape from the keen competition of the world's
+markets through its fiscal policy of unhampered interstate freetrade,
+with protection against the world.
+
+The Commonwealth Parliament, in its first session (1901), decided that
+the eight or nine thousand Pacific Islanders employed in cultivation
+should be returned to their islands, granting, by way of compensation
+for the increased cost of production, a bounty upon all white-grown
+sugar. As was the case under somewhat similar circumstances nearly
+twenty years before, this withdrawal of coloured labour gave a great
+impetus to planting. There was naturally some anxiety as to whether
+the supply of white labour in the future would be sufficient; but the
+profits made in the industry enabled the farmers to pay high wages at
+harvest time, and men flocked to the sugar districts from all parts of
+Australia.
+
+One result of the labour legislation has been that many of the growers
+on large areas have considered it to their interest still further
+to subdivide their holdings, and their action has had the effect of
+increasing largely the number of farmers. It was estimated that last
+year the registered white growers of sugar-cane in Queensland numbered
+no less than 4,425. In addition to these, there is still a small
+number employing casual coloured labour. Of the whole output of
+151,000 tons of sugar, fully 93 per cent. was produced without the aid
+of any coloured labour. In other words, white men almost exclusively,
+whether as employers or as workers, are now engaged in developing
+our tropical resources, and peopling with our own race solitudes
+previously untrodden save by a few aboriginal natives.
+
+Less than thirty years ago it was the belief of most of those engaged
+in sugar production that the work of the mills was one of extreme
+complexity, and that success depended upon the possession of some
+special secret in the working. At that time the planter was also the
+miller. Now the work of cultivation is generally dissociated from the
+manufacture of sugar. Principally owing to the proprietary interest of
+the farmers in the various central mills, every stage of the work
+is openly and intelligently discussed, results are compared, and an
+efficiency attained which in many respects is equal to any in the
+sugar world. The factories no longer make sugar for the open market,
+but sell to the refiners. Analytical chemists check the work at every
+stage in the factory, and labour-saving appliances are the rule and
+not the exception. A modern factory is a wonderful illustration of
+the application of science, mechanical invention, and organisation to
+human industry.
+
+Nothing can better indicate the evolution of the Queensland sugar
+industry during the past forty years than a comparison between one of
+the first mills established in the State and one of the most modern.
+
+Forty years ago the sugar-cane was drawn in a cart close to the single
+set of crushing rollers, flung on the ground, and then fed, stick by
+stick, through the rollers, emerging with less than half the juice
+extracted. The crushed sticks were taken out and spread on the ground
+in the open, until dry enough to be collected and brought to the
+furnaces for use as fuel. In the modern factory the cane arrives by
+tram or train, is mechanically placed on a long endless carrier, and
+passes, at the rate of twenty tons or more per hour, through several
+sets of rollers, the refuse, caught by strainers, returning to the
+rollers, while the megass, or exhausted fibre, goes direct to the
+furnaces.
+
+The old mill crushed enough cane during six months to make two or
+three hundred tons of sugar. The modern factory deals with sufficient
+to produce anything from six to ten thousand tons, and in some cases
+more.
+
+Steam has taken the place of fires at the boiling stations, and
+boiling _in vacuo_ has been as fully adopted in Queensland as in other
+parts of the sugar-producing world. In the old mill the _masse cuite_,
+the last stage of the product before the sugar is dried off, had to
+be dug out from tanks, men standing up to their knees in the sticky
+substance, and handling it in buckets. Now, the _masse cuite_ goes
+direct from the vacuum pans to the receivers, and thence into the
+centrifugals. There the molasses is separated, and the sugar is
+carried automatically to the bags standing on weighing machines only a
+few feet from the railway trucks which are waiting to take the product
+to the ship's hold.
+
+The old-style factory carried on its operations solely by day. The
+present-day factory is lit throughout with electric light, and works
+day and night (Sunday excepted) for five or six months, employing,
+according to its capacity, from 100 to 150 men. Around each factory
+has sprung up a small settlement of artisans, storekeepers, and
+others, while, under a statute passed by the Queensland Parliament,
+the employees are decently housed, fed, and assured of good
+sanitation, their mental, moral, and financial welfare being provided
+for by the institution of reading and recreation rooms, and the
+establishment of branches of the Government Savings Bank.
+
+Turning to the agricultural operations, similar evidence of the
+evolution of the industry is to be found. Time was when a visitor
+could stand on some slight eminence and look over vast areas of cane,
+the vista unbroken save for a few trees, or the plantation roads
+running like ribbons through a sea of waving green. Now the prospect
+discloses the homes of farmers standing out amongst the cane, with all
+the evidences of a closely settled and thriving population. The large
+gangs of labourers tending the cultivation have for the most part
+disappeared. Instead, the farmer and his sons, with possibly one or
+two labourers, work side by side in the fields.
+
+At harvest time long lines of carts drawing cane to the mills no
+longer make a picturesque feature in the landscape; locomotives now
+haul cane-trains over the hundreds of miles of narrow-gauge tramline
+which radiate from the factories to all points from which supplies of
+cane are drawn. Where but a few years back was naught but the lonely
+bush, its silence broken only by the lowing of a few cattle, the
+occasional passing of an aboriginal stockman or a party of drovers,
+carriers, or a chance swagman--birds of passage between the inland
+stations and the ports on the coast--townships have sprung into being,
+and every half-mile reveals the home of the farmer nestling among his
+fields of emerald green.
+
+During the past few years, mainly owing to the satisfactory prices
+received for their cane, the farmers have been profitably employed.
+They have learned in the school of experience that cane cultivation
+requires practical knowledge, and that in many cases their land needs
+special treatment, which they must study for themselves. Nothing has
+brought this fact home to the farmers more thoroughly than the work
+of the Sugar Experiment Station at Mackay, and the valuable reports
+published by the late Director, Dr. W. Maxwell.
+
+In the early seventies the sugar-planters of Mackay awoke one morning
+to discover the whole of their crops destroyed, as if a fire had
+passed over them. They then grew only one variety of cane, which had
+become diseased. Fresh varieties had to be introduced from abroad,
+with all the risk of introducing canes that were worthless, or,
+worse still, of bringing in pests or diseases. So far, sugar-cane
+in Queensland has been singularly and fortunately free from
+natural enemies. Thanks to the work of Mr. H. Tryon, the Government
+Entomologist, the grower readily recognises the presence of insect
+pests, and knows how to deal promptly with them on their first
+appearance.
+
+The farmer is learning to know his cane; he studies its habits, and
+is quick to appreciate the good and bad effects of his operations. The
+analyses at the mills have directed his attention to the importance
+of cane being a good sugar-producer, and, as he is in many cases a
+shareholder in a factory, he is alive to the fact that weight of cane
+is not the only essential to success. For many years the need for
+securing canes richer in sugar was largely neglected all over the
+world, but recently efforts have been made to repeat in the case of
+cane the splendid results won by such men as the late Sir J. B.
+Lawes and the French chemist, Vilmorin, in connection with the
+sugar-producing qualities of the beet. The officials at the Queensland
+Sugar Experiment Stations have tested fully sixty varieties of cane,
+including some from Papua, to discover the agricultural and milling
+value of each.
+
+[Illustration: CAMBANORA GAP, HEAD OF CONDAMINE, KILLARNEY]
+
+[Illustration: MINTO CRAG, DUGANDAN, FASSIFERN DISTRICT]
+
+It is only natural that in an industry whose operations extend over so
+many degrees of latitude conditions must greatly vary. Irrigation is
+necessary in some districts, notably in the Burdekin Delta, which
+lies in a dry belt. Drainage is the prime requisite in other places.
+Fertilisation varies with the soils, and information as to the latter
+has been compiled in a series of exhaustive analyses made by Dr. W.
+Maxwell at the laboratory in Bundaberg. In South Queensland the cane
+frequently takes two years to mature, while in the extreme North
+fifteen months after planting it is fit for the rollers.
+
+According to the official estimate of the Commonwealth Treasurer for
+1908, 4,825 farmers were then engaged in the industry in Queensland,
+91·7 per cent. of whom employed white labour only, the number of
+employees being in round figures 30,000. In 1902 the number of farmers
+was only 2,496, showing the rapidity with which closer settlement is
+taking place. It is true that of late there has been a reduction in
+the area under cultivation, but this is probably attributable to the
+tendency to make "intense cultivation" a feature of the industry in
+order to solve the labour problem. Some of the larger areas under crop
+have been curtailed, and the reduction has not been made good by the
+increased settlement; but, as in the eighties those engaged in the
+industry found, possibly unconsciously, a remedy for the dearth of
+labour, so we may reasonably expect that the present difficulty in
+obtaining men for the ordinary work of cultivation will be met by new
+developments.
+
+What does the future hold for us? Can we continue the work of building
+up a white nation beneath a tropical sun--a task which in many parts
+of the world is considered quixotic? The areas available for cane
+cultivation are still enormous, and, though hesitancy and doubt may
+for a time join hands in checking expansion, the main facts remain
+that there is room for the people and that there is a demand for the
+product. Australia, in her fiscal policy, has recognised that the
+sugar industry is a national industry, and our statesmen realise that
+it is doing for the Australian tropics what no other industry on the
+coastal lands has yet seriously attempted--what, indeed, no other
+country in the world is as yet prepared to try.
+
+Assuming, as we have a right to assume, a sympathetic Australian
+Government, we can turn to the future with eyes full of hope. There
+are many directions in which we may look for the expansion of the
+industry. The increasing population of the Commonwealth involves
+an added capacity to consume the product. The field of invention
+in regard to the harvesting of the cane has yet to be explored and
+exploited. At present the cost of cutting and loading a field of cane
+is from eight to ten times that of harvesting an equal amount of
+sugar beets. Experiments are constantly being made with mechanical
+appliances for cutting and loading and unloading cane, and this is
+one direction in which Queenslanders may look forward hopefully to the
+time when they will not only lessen the volume of labour required, but
+when they will reduce the burdensome nature of the work, and place
+the cane-sugar industry in a position to compete successfully with the
+great beet-sugar industry of Europe.
+
+Some 250,000 gallons of rum are distilled annually at Bundaberg, but
+we are told officially that 4,000,000 gallons of molasses go to waste
+every year. The conversion of this product into foodstuffs for live
+stock as an adjunct to the main industry would add materially to the
+profits.
+
+In some sugar districts, dairying is finding a footing, and possibly
+the time is not far distant when a form of mixed farming will enable
+the cane-grower to utilise more of the by-products of his industry,
+at the same time rendering him more independent of unfavourable
+meteorological conditions. Generally speaking, improvement in
+the quality and quantity of the cane, intense culture, mechanical
+inventions, and the use of by-products are all within the bounds of
+possibility, and will make for further progress.
+
+But all these things are of secondary importance compared with the
+need of a settled working population. Back from the coast lies a range
+of mountains, rising often 3,000 feet above the level of the sea.
+Along and behind these mountains are excellent lands, well suited for
+close settlement and for the production of cereals, and the fruits and
+vegetables so greatly needed in the more humid areas of the littoral
+belt. The climate of this elevated hinterland is excellent, and the
+close settlement of these lands will furnish one of the safeguards
+of the sugar industry, seeing that a permanent population within easy
+reach will always be available for employment in the canefields and
+sugar-mills. To a large extent, the populations of the lowlands and
+the highlands will be mutually dependent upon each other.
+
+In the early days of settlement in East and West Moreton and on the
+Darling Downs, the small selector, with no capital in many cases save
+a pair of strong hands, a courageous heart, and a tireless energy,
+made his way every year to the squatter's shearing shed. No thought
+had he of "knocking down" his hard-earned cheque. Labour disputes
+never entered his mind. With his earnings he paid his rent and
+improved his land. It was men of this stamp who built up the great
+agricultural industry of Southern Queensland, and they and their
+descendants of the second and third generations are the very cream
+of the farmers of to-day. It is to a similar class of settlers in
+the sugar districts and their hinterland that we look for the
+proper settlement and development of our tropical lands. And in our
+aspirations for a great white agricultural population we are entitled
+to expect the sympathetic assistance of our kinsmen in the South and
+of the Empire at large. For not only are we doing what we can to make
+a prosperous and contented people, but we are doing a great work for
+the whole of the white races. We are proving that the tropics can
+be conquered and permanently settled by people of our own race and
+colour; we are holding one of the gateways of the East; and we are
+garrisoning an important outpost of the Empire. Kipling's stirring
+words, written of Queensland, find an echo in the hearts of
+Queenslanders--
+
+ The northern stirp beneath the southern skies--
+ I build a Nation for an Empire's need,
+ Suffer a little, and my land shall rise,
+ Queen over lands indeed!
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV.
+
+A HALF-CENTURY OF MINING.
+
+ The Quest for Gold a Colonising Agency.--Earliest
+ Discoveries of the Precious Metal in Queensland.
+ --Port Curtis.--Rockhampton District.--Peak Downs.
+ --Gympie.--Ravenswood.--Charters Towers.--Palmer.--Mount
+ Morgan.--Croydon.--Later Discoveries.--Yield at Charters
+ Towers and Mount Morgan.--Copper Mining.--Tin.--Silver.
+ --Queensland the Home of All Kinds of Minerals and Precious
+ Stones.--Mineral Wealth in Cairns Hinterland.--Copper
+ Deposits in Cloncurry District.--The Etheridge.--Anakie Gem
+ Field.--Opal Fields.--Extensive Coal Measures.--Railway
+ Communication with Mining Fields.--Value of Queensland
+ Mineral Output.--Prospects of Industry.
+
+
+The quest for gold, to say nothing of other minerals, has had much to
+do with the settlement and development of Queensland, apart from the
+direct advantages conferred on the State by her mining industry.
+It has brought to our shores many thousands of people who would not
+otherwise have come here; it has helped to open up for occupations
+other than mining previously unknown and unexplored regions that, but
+for the prospector, might have lain dormant for many more years;
+while the successful development of the territory's rich and almost
+unlimited mineral wealth has aided in making our State known in other
+parts of the world, and thus assisted in attracting hither the people
+and capital that have been the chief contributing factors to our
+wonderful progress.
+
+Fifty years ago, when what is now Queensland, casting itself free
+from the parental skirts of New South Wales, began to walk alone, its
+mining industry did not exist. It would not be correct to say that
+gold--here, as elsewhere in Australia, the first to be sought and
+found of the numerous minerals that have since proved a source of
+so much wealth to the State--had not been then discovered upon
+our shores. Fifteen years before, men attached to an official
+establishment at Gladstone, Port Curtis, found "colours" of the yellow
+metal; and in 1858, the year preceding "Separation," occurred the
+Canoona "rush," which proved so disastrous to the 15,000 or 20,000
+adventurers who then swarmed to the Rockhampton district in search
+of the "saint-seducing gold." But the so-called "colours" detected at
+picturesque Gladstone were nothing more than can to this day be traced
+in scores of places in Queensland; while the find at Canoona proved a
+fiasco so great as to spread abroad the impression that this part
+of Australia, as a prospective field for mining enterprise, was a
+delusion. But was it? Within a dozen miles or so of the scene of the
+Canoona disappointment was situated the "mountain of gold" that has
+since earned world-wide fame under the name of Mount Morgan; and
+by the end of Queensland's first half-century the Rockhampton (or
+Central) district has turned out gold to the sum of nearly 3,500,000
+fine ounces, representing a money value of over £14,500,000--the bulk
+of it won within the last moiety of the half-century.
+
+[Illustration: MOUNT MORGAN: COPPER WORKS, LOOKING NORTH]
+
+[Illustration: MOUNT MORGAN: GENERAL VIEW OF WORKS]
+
+Three years after the foundation of the colony of Queensland gold
+in payable quantities was discovered on the Peak Downs, inland from
+Rockhampton; but it was not till the finding of the Gympie field
+late in 1867--eight years after severance from New South Wales--that
+Queensland first definitely took rank as a gold producer. Within six
+months from the time when the wandering digger Nash, fossicking in
+the gullies running into the upper Mary River, found the promising
+specimens in his dish which made him hasten to Maryborough to report
+his discovery, 15,000 men had flocked to the spot from all parts of
+Australia. The place had hardly been heard of before. Pressmen in
+Brisbane did not even know how to spell the name "Gympie" when first
+the news arrived; but within a very few weeks its fame spread far
+and wide. The gullies in the vicinity of Nash's claim were rich
+and numerous. One nugget brought to light weighed nearly a thousand
+ounces, and was worth £3,675. Soon alluvial gave place to quartz
+mining, and within five years gold to the value of more than
+£1,500,000 had been won. Up to the end of 1908--that is, in forty-one
+years--the field had produced gold worth £10,350,000, and is still
+"going strong." Like all other fields, it has of course had its
+ups and downs, and just now is recovering its feet after one of
+its "downs." Last year Gympie produced gold to the value of nearly
+£270,000; the grade of its ore is improving, and its monthly yields
+are now showing comparative increases.
+
+Since the discovery of the Gympie goldfield there has been no
+cessation in the progress of mining in Queensland. From one end of the
+territory to another the existence of gold and other minerals has from
+time to time been disclosed. For many years--
+
+ "Gold! Gold! Gold! Gold!
+ Bright and yellow, hard and cold--"
+
+but still much to be desired--was the magnet which attracted the
+peripatetic prospector away from the comforts of civilisation into
+the rugged wilds of the coastal ranges and the gullies and stony
+stream-beds of the eastern watershed; and for a long while it was only
+the gold discoveries that attracted much attention. A year or so after
+the Gympie find, the Ravenswood goldfield, south-west from Townsville,
+"broke out," to use the phrase of the old-time digger. In 1869 the
+precious metal was found on the Gilbert River, and the Gilbert,
+Etheridge, and Woolgar fields were proclaimed. Then came Charters
+Towers, our premier goldfield, in 1872; the Palmer, inland from
+Cooktown (then the very far North), in 1873; the Hodgkinson, a little
+more to the south, in 1875; the great Mount Morgan in 1882; Croydon in
+1886; and other discoveries, until Dickie, a veteran prospector, found
+the Hamilton and Alice River fields in the Peninsula--the former in
+1899 and the latter as late as 1904.
+
+In its thirty-six years of existence Charters Towers has turned out
+over 5,800,000 ounces--more than £24,600,000 worth of gold; last
+year's output was of the value of £700,000; and to-day the indications
+in the deeper ground of the field are such that there is reason to
+expect that both the term of its existence and the volume of its
+output will be greatly extended. At Mount Morgan--the show mine of
+Queensland, and one of the greatest in the world--there has been
+quarried out of the hill and dug from the depths beneath stone that,
+under treatment by works in every way worthy of such a mine, has, in
+a little over twenty-two years, yielded gold to the value of over
+£13,760,000; has paid in wages and other expenditure about £7,000,000;
+and has given to the fortunate holders of its 1,000,000 shares some
+£7,230,000 in dividends. That is what the big mine has done. What is
+it doing now? True, the phenomenal yields of gold and the high grade
+of its auriferous ores that characterised the earlier years of its
+history showed signs of diminishing as time went on; but diminishing
+yields were counterbalanced by improved methods of mining and
+treatment, with consequent reduction of costs; and a few years since
+copper as well as gold was found in the lower levels, with the result
+that the mine has become at once the most productive copper and the
+most productive gold mine of the State. It has already turned out
+copper to the value of about £1,500,000, which has to be added to the
+gold yield, given above, to arrive at its total product; while the
+value of the mine's aggregate output for 1908 (over £1,017,000) was
+greater, with perhaps one exception, than that of any previous year in
+its history.
+
+Though for some years gold was the only string to the bow of
+Queensland's mining industry, that state of things has long since
+changed. In the early sixties copper was mined in the State, but then
+and for many years afterwards only to a limited extent. Tin came
+on the scene in 1872. During the first forty years of Queensland's
+existence the gold won within her borders was four times the worth
+of all other minerals and coal produced; but so rapid has been the
+increase during the past ten years in the production of the industrial
+metals--or "other minerals," as they are officially termed, to
+distinguish them from gold--that in 1907 their value exceeded that of
+the gold yield by over £170,000. Indeed, during the five years ending
+with that year there was an almost phenomenal expansion. The output
+of 1902 was of the value of only £589,960. In the following year it
+increased to £846,280, and then for four years jumped up by leaps and
+bounds, until in 1907 the yield was worth no less than £2,153,226.
+
+The known mineral-producing country of Queensland extends over an
+immense area. It begins on the southern border, where the Silver Spur
+mine maintains a constant output of silver and other mineral products,
+and where the Stanthorpe district, our first stanniferous field, still
+materially assists, with the aid of dredges, in the tin production of
+the State; and extends northerly a hundred miles beyond the goldfield
+of Coen, in the Cape York Peninsula. Over this immense distance of
+some 1,300 miles from south to north, and extending inland from 50
+to 200 miles from the eastern coast, are located at varying intervals
+fields producing gold, silver, copper, tin, coal, lead, sapphires,
+manganese, wolfram, molybdenite, bismuth, and graphite; while further
+to the west are the opal fields of Jundah, Opalton, and Kynuna, the
+copper deposits of the vast Cloncurry district, the silver-lead mines
+of Lawn Hills in the Burketown district, and the Croydon goldfield,
+also on the Gulf waters. Queensland, with a huge area of 670,500
+square miles and a scant population of little more than half a million
+of people, has a hundred proclaimed gold, mineral, and coal fields,
+having a combined area of about 50,000,000 acres.
+
+Apart from goldfields, by far the most important and productive of
+these areas is the tract of country which forms the hinterland of
+the port of Cairns--a tract which includes the tin-mining centres of
+Herberton, Stannary Hills, Irvinebank, Nymbool, and Reid's Creek;
+the copper and silver-lead mines of Chillagoe and Mungana; the copper
+mines of Mount Molloy and O.K.; the wolfram, molybdenite, and bismuth
+mines of Wolfram Camp, Bamford, and Mount Carbine; and the antimony
+deposits of the Mitchell River. The two large mineral fields into
+which this portion of the State is now officially divided--Chillagoe
+and Herberton--have together an area of over 8,500,000 acres. The port
+of Cairns was not established till 1876--seventeen years after the
+foundation of the State. Now there yearly pass through it from the
+area mentioned minerals worth from £600,000 to £800,000, exclusive of
+the mineral product from the Etheridge and Croydon fields, which also,
+for the most part, finds an outlet through the same channel. Copper
+and tin are responsible for more than half the amount named, but the
+potentialities of the district as far as other minerals are concerned
+are almost unlimited. Of wolfram--taking only one example--this part
+of the State alone can supply the world's demand, and have a good deal
+to spare afterwards. The Queensland Government Geologist has estimated
+that the wolfram-bearing country in this portion of Queensland extends
+over an area of 3,500 square miles. Given anything like a permanent
+demand and a fair and steady market, wolfram production would soon
+take a prominent position in our mining industry. The historical tin
+mine of the district is the Vulcan, at Irvinebank, which has attained
+the greatest depth (1,450 feet) reached by any tin mine in Queensland,
+and where the appliances for recovering the metal are more up-to-date
+than at Dolcoath, the most famous tin mine of Cornwall. During the
+twenty-five years of its existence, the Vulcan Mine has from 106,000
+tons of tin ore produced over 9,790 tons of concentrates, worth
+something approaching £500,000, and has paid its lucky shareholders
+dividends to the extent of £160,000. The opening up of this large and
+prolific district is largely due to the enterprise of the Chillagoe
+Company, which not only has developed extensively its several mines
+and erected large ore-treatment works, but has built the railway--in
+length 93 miles--which connects those mines and numerous others with
+the Government railway at the top of the Coastal Range at Mareeba,
+and is building a further extension to the Etheridge field, nearly 150
+miles further inland.
+
+Queensland is known as a country of magnificent distances, and one
+example of its vast expanse is the extent of the copper area of the
+Cloncurry district, which is tapped by the Great Northern Railway 480
+miles westward from the port of Townsville. This district is by far
+the largest tract of copper-bearing country in Australia, and one
+of the largest in the world. As the crow flies, it extends north and
+south for more than 150 miles, and east and west some 80 or 100 miles.
+Over this large area, covering at least 15,000 square miles, copper
+has been proved to exist. At the close of 1907 there were on the
+Warden's books over 800 mineral leases, besides some hundreds of
+claims and several freeholds. The outcrops throughout the district
+have been described by one of the Government Geologists as innumerable
+and phenomenally rich. But the district is still in the prospecting
+stage, and it is yet too soon to pronounce an opinion as to whether
+the deposits generally will live at depth, or of what value they will
+be if they do, although it may safely be said that the developments
+in the more important mines during the past twelve months have been
+distinctly encouraging. Smelting operations are already in progress
+at two, if not three, of the principal mining centres of the district,
+and a railway extension from Cloncurry 74 miles southward is now
+in course of construction. Another Queensland mineral field of
+vast extent is the Etheridge. It has an area equal to half that
+of Scotland, and the Warden for the field, when he undertakes his
+periodical patrol, has an itinerary of about 400 miles.
+
+[Illustration: CHARTERS TOWERS: PLANT'S DAY DAWN]
+
+Passing reference has been made to the sapphire field of Anakie, in
+Central Queensland, and to the opal to be found in her trackless West.
+As a matter of fact, isolated finds of many kinds of gems besides
+these two have been made in widely separated parts of the State, but
+as a recognised branch of the mining industry opal and sapphire mining
+has for years occupied an important place. In the Anakie field, 190
+miles from Rockhampton, on the Central Railway, the existence of
+gem-stones was officially reported as early as 1892. Ten years later
+the Government Geologist, reporting on these sapphire fields, stated
+that "the total distance along which deposits are found ... is
+altogether about fifteen miles. Of an area of 400 square miles
+examined, fifty square miles contain deposits carrying sapphires of
+more or less value." In 1905, another member of the Geological staff
+reported that the most important recent development had been the
+opening up of a second bed of the sapphire wash at a depth of 25 feet,
+and that excellent stones, freer from flaws than those nearer the
+surface, were being obtained from the lower deposit. Mining for these
+precious stones, many of which are of the most beautiful description,
+has been to a considerable extent detrimentally affected by the
+difficulty experienced in getting a regular market and what is
+considered a fair price for the gems; but, notwithstanding this
+drawback, there was a large expansion in the industry during the four
+years preceding 1907--the annual production having increased in that
+period from £7,000 to £35,000 in value. In 1908, however, there was
+a considerable falling off, mainly because miners were not satisfied
+with the prices obtainable; but, with an improvement in this respect,
+renewed activity on the field, which even now supports a population of
+over 1,000 persons, may be looked for.
+
+The opal-bearing country extends over a much wider area than
+sapphires. The width of this country is, roughly, about 250 miles,
+while in length it extends right from the New South Wales border
+half-way up the State in a curve bending towards the South Australian
+border. The chief centres of production have been Kynuna (near
+Winton), Opalton and Fermoy (in the Longreach district), Eromanga, and
+Yowah (near Thargomindah). The Queensland opal is recognised as being
+unsurpassed for its brilliance and iridescence, and there is reason to
+believe that much more will be found than has yet been unearthed; but
+the quest for it is difficult owing to the arid nature and vast extent
+of the western plains where it occurs. In good seasons men in those
+regions find ready employment on the pastoral stations; in very dry
+ones, they cannot prospect for the precious stone, and the result has
+been that the industry has fluctuated even more than that of sapphire
+mining. The highest point was attained in 1895, when the value of the
+opal product reached nearly £33,000. Of late years Queensland has been
+blessed with good seasons, and the uncertain occupation of opal
+mining has, with many men, given place to the more regular and more
+comfortable station life. While the opal, the sapphire, and other
+precious stones have been dug from Queensland's earth, her Northern
+waters have for years yielded the lustrous pearl, and in 1908
+pearl-shell to the value of £71,000 was exported.
+
+Sir William Ramsay, speaking as a scientific authority, lately stated
+that the day will come when Great Britain, if she continue to be
+dependent on her own coal supplies, will find it difficult not only to
+carry on her manufactures but to provide fuel for household purposes.
+Well, when that day does come, she can send to Queensland for what
+coal she wants. Here there are coal measures in abundance--in the
+South, Central, and Northern divisions of the State, and on the
+Darling Downs. True, we have not yet done much in the way of
+production, but all that is wanted is a market, and coal, both
+bituminous and anthracitic, can be dug out of the earth and sent away
+in practically unlimited quantities. Of ironstone, also, there is an
+abundance, and that, too, in such close proximity to the coal supplies
+that when the time arrives for Australia to enter earnestly into the
+enterprise of iron and steel manufacture Queensland should play an
+important part both in producing the raw material and in preparing the
+product for the market.
+
+With only one or two exceptions, all the important mining centres of
+Queensland are now connected with the eastern coast by rail, and
+those that are not are being rapidly linked up. During the year 1908
+thirteen new railways were authorised by Parliament, five of them
+to serve mineral districts. Four of these lines are now under
+construction; and in addition the railway to the Etheridge field is
+completed for two-thirds of its length.
+
+To sum up: Queensland during the half-century of her existence has
+produced gold to the value, in round numbers, of over £69,000,000,
+and other minerals, coal, and precious stones worth more than
+£21,000,000--or an aggregate of £90,000,000. Last year's mineral
+production was worth £3,844,000, so that, even at the same rate
+of output, in less than three years we shall have topped the
+£100,000,000. The number of men obtaining employment in connection
+with the industry during 1908 was just upon 21,000--only 4,000 less
+than Queensland's total population in 1859. The value of machinery and
+plant used for mining and ore reduction purposes throughout the State
+is over £2,000,000. The worth of the coal output of the West Moreton
+district alone last year (£193,000) was more than the total revenue of
+Queensland during the first year of her existence; while the mineral
+product of the Herberton district during the same period was nearly
+four times as great.
+
+In the space available for this article it has been possible to take
+but a cursory view of the mineral progress which has characterised the
+first half-century of Queensland's life, but enough has been written
+to show that that progress has been remarkable, if not phenomenal. And
+who shall say what strides will be made during the next fifty years,
+or venture to predict what will be the value of our mineral wealth in
+the year 1959? It is a safe rule "not to prophesy till you know," but
+even the most timid prophet could hardly hesitate to predict expansion
+for Queensland's mining industry. Where there has been so much growth
+in the past, and where there is such an unlimited field for greater
+growth in the years to come, it would be absurd to suppose that there
+will be no further advance. As a matter of fact, many well qualified
+to judge do not hesitate to say that the industry is as yet in its
+infancy. It has been truly said of gold that "what it is, there
+it is"; and what you have to do is to find where it is. When it is
+remembered, however, that the prominent hill known as Mount Morgan,
+with its millions' worth of golden ore, was within a day's journey
+of the populous town of Rockhampton, and remained undiscovered until
+1882, although alluvial gold had been found at its base for years
+previously and the disappointed miners from Canoona had twenty-three
+years before swarmed in its vicinity; when we recollect that only
+quite recently nuggets have been found in the streets of some of the
+oldest of Victorian mining townships, who shall say what has yet to be
+unearthed in the wide expanses of Queensland's bush, a great deal of
+which is already known to be "rich with the spoils of Nature"?
+
+ "Full many a gem of purest ray serene,
+ The dark unfathom'd caves of ocean bear;"
+
+and the experience of the last half-century amply justifies the belief
+that untold millions lie hidden in the earthen depths of Queensland.
+
+[Illustration: GYMPIE: SCOTTISH GYMPIE GOLD MINE]
+
+[Illustration: GYMPIE: No. 1 NORTH ORIENTAL AND GLANMIRE]
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V.
+
+OUR ASSET IN ARTESIAN WATER.
+
+ Erroneous Judgment of Western Queensland.--Scarcity of Surface
+ Water.--Water Supply Department.--Discovery of Artesian Water
+ in New South Wales.--Prospecting in Queensland.--Difficulties
+ Experienced by Early Borers.--First Artesian Flowing Bore.
+ --Dr. Jack's First Estimate of Artesian Area.--Revised Figures.
+ --Number of Bores and Estimated Flow.--Area Capable of being
+ Irrigated with Artesian Water.--Cost of Boring.--Value of
+ Artesian Water.--Extent of Intake Beds.--Waste of Water.
+ --Necessity for Government Control of Wells.--Value of Water
+ for Irrigation, Consumption, and Motive Power.--Artesian Water
+ a Great National Asset.
+
+
+Fifty years ago the white population of Australia, including Tasmania,
+scarcely exceeded a million persons. At that time the theory was
+generally accepted that only a fringe of the coast south of the
+tropic of Capricorn would be found habitable by a British or European
+population. The reports of explorers led to the conclusion that the
+vast inland area of our continent was an irreclaimable arid desert,
+save when, at long and uncertain intervals, it was ravaged by
+destructive floods, the water from which, licked up by a fiery sun
+or absorbed by a porous subsoil, disappeared from the surface with
+marvellous rapidity. A little more than forty years ago squatting
+occupation had been pushed towards the interior of the continent
+with not only rapid strides, but it was held by many explorers with
+a presumptuous boldness that could only be followed by disaster. So
+deeply had this conviction been driven into the minds of experienced
+men that a distinguished Australian explorer, the late Sir A. C.
+Gregory, declared in his late maturity, little more than ten years
+ago, that on what is now some of the richest and most productive
+country in Western Queensland a bandicoot could not live; and on the
+statement being challenged he said he spoke from personal experience
+as an explorer after two visits separated by an interval of nine
+years. The country more particularly so condemned was the well-known
+pastoral run, Wellshot, a little to the south of Longreach, and one of
+the largest and finest wool-growing properties in Australia.
+
+It must be frankly conceded that the occupation by flocks and herds
+nearly forty years ago of what was then known as the Barcoo and
+Thomson country was venturesome to the point of recklessness. Except
+in the sandy beds of these rivers there was practically no surface
+water of a permanent nature; and the average rainfall was so
+inadequate, not to mention its capriciousness, and the ground in many
+places so porous, that any attempt to provide artificial water by the
+construction of dams or tanks seemed almost tempting Providence. Yet
+there arose a persistent belief, afterwards more than justified, that
+underneath the arid surface was flowing water in great abundance. The
+rainfall, however copious in exceptional seasons, certainly did not
+reach the sea, and the hypothesis that great subterranean rivers would
+disclose themselves to a systematic search attracted much notice. In
+the dry year of 1883 the necessity of an improved water supply if
+the country was not to be denuded of stock forced itself upon the
+attention of our leading public men. The Premier, the late Sir Thomas
+McIlwraith, decided to constitute a Government Hydraulic Department
+with a competent engineer at its head. There had previously been
+so-called hydraulic engineers, but their work was chiefly confined to
+the water supply of a few towns and of the more settled districts on
+the coast. But Sir Thomas McIlwraith, as a runholder in the Far West,
+realised that nothing but heroic efforts, assisted by the Government,
+would save the country from desertion, with appalling loss to its
+adventurous occupiers and their flocks and herds. Mr. J. Baillie
+Henderson was at the time in the Queensland public service, and the
+Premier knew that he had served with distinction as an engineer in
+the Water Supply Department of Victoria. That gentleman was therefore
+selected to organise a Water Supply Department in Queensland, and on
+1st February, 1883, he was gazetted Hydraulic Engineer, an appointment
+which he has ever since held with credit to himself and advantage to
+the country.[a]
+
+At that time the existence of artesian water in Queensland was no more
+than suspected. It had been tapped four years previously in New South
+Wales, but the boring appliances were so inadequate as to make the
+process tedious and of questionable practicability on an extensive
+scale. In Queensland some prospecting work had been done, and in some
+places fair supplies of water obtained by sinking ordinary wells.
+But in the Far West there was little scope for enterprise in
+that direction. Hence some extensive dams were constructed across
+watercourses ordinarily dry, but without conspicuous success. For
+often the rush of flood waters either carried away the embankments,
+or the reservoirs they created quickly silted up, or the porousness of
+the subsoil could not be entirely combated by "puddling." Then streams
+at times complaisantly abandoned their old channels and formed new
+ones, leaving the intended reservoirs high and dry after the most
+deluging rains. After a time it was found that better sites than
+the beds of main watercourses could be found for dams, and that
+the construction of tanks would suffice in many places to provide
+sufficient water for a scattered population and the increasing numbers
+of live stock, although the expense of this mode of conservation was
+great for the limited supply obtained. Evidently, if the Far West
+was ever to be completely utilised, its almost illimitable areas of
+splendid pastures must be watered by some more effective means.
+
+Attention was at this time attracted to the success of the few
+artesian bores in New South Wales, and to the vast scale on which
+water had been tapped by that means in the United States of America.
+The chief obstacles, however, were the great depth at which artesian
+water might be expected to be found, and the utter inadequacy of the
+boring machinery then in use in Australia; moreover, the search was
+most needed in the areas practically inaccessible by reason of the
+absence of surface water. For a considerable time, as is disclosed in
+the digest of the Hydraulic Engineer's annual reports reproduced in
+Appendix H, little progress could be made.
+
+It was not until October, 1884, in fact--just twenty-five years
+ago--that information was obtained of the striking of sub-artesian[b]
+water by the Messrs. Bignell at Widgeegoara Station, close to the New
+South Wales border. The place was visited by Mr. Henderson, and by him
+reported upon encouragingly. In the same month the Treasurer received
+a letter from the late Hon. George King, of Gowrie Station, Darling
+Downs, directing attention to the "Walking Beam Rig" machine, an
+American well-boring apparatus, by the use of which it had been
+ascertained that his firm might have saved £4,500 out of the £6,000
+spent by it in well-sinking in the Warrego district. The letter being
+referred to the Hydraulic Engineer, that officer recommended the
+introduction of American bore-sinking machinery, and the engagement of
+American skilled drillers who would undertake to give instruction in
+the use of the machinery as well as engage in drilling work for the
+Government of Queensland. Delays occurred, however, apparently through
+the unwillingness of the Government to adopt the advice tendered. It
+was not until December, 1885, that Mr. Arnold, an American well-borer,
+was despatched to Blackall to sink a bore there. The first attempt
+failed, but afterwards water was struck in abundance, though not by
+him, or until after the first Queensland flowing well had been sunk by
+the Government at Barcaldine in December, 1887.
+
+In April, 1887, the Hydraulic Engineer had visited Thurulgoona
+Station, and there found that Mr. Loughead, with the "Canadian Pole
+Tool" boring apparatus, had obtained a supply of excellent fresh
+artesian water from a depth of 1,009 feet, the flow rising 20 inches
+above ground. From that date boring went on apace, and the exploratory
+success of the Government encouraged private persons to follow their
+lead. There were failures to strike artesian water, of course, both on
+the part of the Government and private persons, but on the whole the
+results have been such as to add to Queensland occupiable country
+equivalent to a great new province in the Far West.
+
+[Illustration]
+
+The map presented herewith shows the area of artesian water-bearing
+country in Australia as estimated by Dr. R. L. Jack, formerly
+Government Geologist. Since 1893 Queensland has been credited with the
+area of 376,832 square miles, this being equal to 56 per cent. of
+the estimated total. But that total has since been reduced to 569,000
+square miles, and late information shows that the approximate area of
+the Queensland artesian basin, as ascertained by scaling off the
+most recent map issued by the Hydraulic Engineer, is 372,105 square
+miles--4,727 square miles less than the area given in his report for
+1893. Yet the revised figures bring the Queensland artesian area up to
+65 per cent. of the Australian total. The difference is accounted
+for by later information acquired in the field. Of the 372,105 square
+miles mentioned the area of 146,430 square miles has been tested and
+found to be less or more artesian or sub-artesian. Mr. Henderson
+says: "The flows from many of the artesian bores which at one time
+or another yielded artesian water have failed, but owing to the
+suspension of the hydraulic survey the available data are quite
+insufficient to admit of a trustworthy estimate being made of the area
+so affected."
+
+[Illustration: FLOWING ARTESIAN WELLS, WESTERN QUEENSLAND]
+
+The total supply of bore water has not been ascertained by actual
+measurement except from Government bores. But all possible reports of
+reputed flows have been obtained from the owners of private bores, and
+the figures cut down to 47 per cent. of the furnished estimates. This
+reduction is not an arbitrary one, however, but is the equivalent of
+the difference found to exist between the average estimate and the
+measured flow of such bores as the Hydraulic Department has been
+enabled to test.
+
+Information from the Hydraulic Engineer's office shows that up to the
+end of May last there were 716 flowing bores in Queensland, pouring
+forth an enormous supply of sparkling water estimated at slightly over
+479¼ million gallons a day, equal to a discharge of 175,000 million
+gallons per annum.[c] This flow, if conserved in tanks and pipes,
+would furnish a population of nearly 12 millions with 40 gallons of
+water per capita a day. It would irrigate 644,366 acres of cultivated
+land with 12 inches of water per annum.[d] An area so irrigated,
+utilised solely for wheat-growing, would produce, at 20 bushels per
+acre, nearly 13 million bushels of grain, which is equal to 28·87 per
+cent. of the entire Commonwealth wheat crop for the year 1907-8.
+The average Commonwealth yield for the last five years, however, was
+61½ million bushels. The average area under wheat for the same
+period was 5,864,114 acres, the average yield for the Commonwealth
+therefore being slightly over 10½ bushels to the acre. As much
+wheat is cut for fodder, and as irrigated land should produce a
+largely increased crop, 20 bushels per acre for such land seems a
+moderate estimate. Moreover, in 1902-3, the Commonwealth crop was
+under 12½ million bushels, or less than one-fifth of the mean
+average for the succeeding five years. At the same time the area
+of land under crop was in 1902-3 but little below the succeeding
+five-year average on an acre of land.[e]
+
+The presumably perpetual daily flow of 479¼ million gallons of
+artesian water--the quantity named being equal to only 47 per cent. of
+the reputed flow in the case of unmeasured wells--has cost, so far as
+an estimate can be made, £1,873,515. This works out at the average of
+£2,616 per flowing bore, supplying 669,369 gallons a day. Calculating
+on the basis of 5 per cent., including interest and redemption
+payments, the annual charge for this money is equal to £131 per
+well, spread over a forty-one years' term, the average cost to each
+well-owner being thus £1 for 1,865,000 gallons of water a year. Thus,
+although much money has been lost in sinking unsuccessful bores, the
+investment has on the whole been amazingly profitable, even allowing
+that a further annual charge for maintenance must be added.
+
+It need hardly be said, however, that in practice this enormous
+flow of artesian water could not be utilised solely either for human
+consumption or for irrigation. Under existing conditions the first
+claim upon it may be said to be for the sustenance of live stock, as
+the domestic consumption in the region of the flow is comparatively
+trifling. And here arises a problem of vast importance. Will this flow
+be perpetual, or will it gradually decline until exhaustion of the
+sources of supply ultimately takes place? The latter contingency there
+seems to be little reason to fear, for the area of the intake beds,
+estimated by Dr. R. L. Jack at 5,000 square miles, affords the
+assurance that our artesian springs will be constantly replenished by
+the rainfall over that large extent of country. Yet, when the existing
+number of artesian wells has been doubled or trebled, it seems not
+improbable that many of them will become sub-artesian, and only
+yield their fertilising streams in response to pumping-power. On this
+question, however, expert opinions widely differ. But, taking the
+experience of America and other countries in which artesian springs
+have been tapped, it may be said that the flow steadily decreases as
+the number of bores multiplies.
+
+The Hydraulic Engineer estimates that about two-thirds of the artesian
+water at present tapped flows to waste. As to the definition of
+"waste," however, there is sharp conflict of opinion. A pastoralist
+who distributes a supply of a million gallons of bore water a day
+by replenishing dry creeks or constructing artificial channels may
+contend that in his case the loss by evaporation or soakage is not
+waste, but an expenditure of water necessary to make his artesian
+well serve its desired purposes. To control and distribute by means of
+reticulating pipes the product of all Queensland's flowing bores would
+involve a heavy investment of capital, and one not warranted by
+the existing population in the artesian area--a population mainly
+dependent upon sheep-raising and wool-growing for subsistence. But the
+time may come when it will be deemed indispensable that flowing
+wells should be brought under Government control, or their product
+be subject, as in the case of surface water, to riparian rights.
+The pastoralist who has spent several thousand pounds in sinking a
+successful bore not unnaturally claims the water issuing from it as
+his own property; but public policy may require that after diverting
+so much as may be requisite for his reasonable individual uses the
+remainder shall be made available for the occupiers of neighbouring
+lands.
+
+The information that little more than one-half the area of the
+artesian basin in Queensland has yet been explored is in some respects
+disappointing, but it is reassuring in others. For if the unexplored
+country yields as much water per square mile of surface as is now
+pouring forth from the wells on the tested area--which is not yet
+fully developed--the total daily yield will ultimately approach 1,000
+millions of gallons. Never, according to official information, was
+bore-sinking more active than it is during the current year, and
+the thoughtful reader will sympathise with Mr. Henderson's repeated
+expression of regret that want of money some years ago compelled the
+department to discontinue both exploration on scientific lines and the
+periodical measurement of all artesian flows. For with careful surveys
+of the entire water-bearing area much capital might be saved by
+teaching where copious springs might or might not be expected to be
+met with; while with measurement and registration of all flows the
+question as to the perpetuity or the contrary of the supply would be
+placed beyond controversy. In that case legislation could be initiated
+with confidence, and the public interest safeguarded with the least
+possible disturbance of private interests.
+
+An important consideration in connection with the artesian area
+is that the land watered by bores is as a rule more than commonly
+fertile. Its pastures produce some of the most nutritious natural
+grasses and herbage found on the face of the earth; and, what is of
+immense significance, they are grasses and herbage that either would
+not live or would deteriorate under a tropical sun, with a rainfall
+equal to the coastal average. Thus it may be argued that artesian bore
+water--at any rate, when so free from mineral impregnation as to be
+unquestionably potable--is more valuable, gallon for gallon, than the
+supply direct from the clouds.
+
+In several of his numerous reports the Hydraulic Engineer makes
+reference to the subject of irrigation by means of artesian water.
+It is certain that the water from some bores, while useful for live
+stock, is not fit for either domestic use or for irrigation. The
+Hydraulic Department many years ago began what was intended to be
+a systematic analysis of bore water with the view to providing an
+official record that would be highly useful for public purposes. But
+in one case at least water pronounced by the Government Analyst as
+useless even for stock was highly esteemed on the run whence it was
+obtained; and evidently much has yet to be learned as to the value of
+subterranean waters not regarded as potable by scientific standards.
+
+Some of the most copiously flowing bores, however, discharge water
+of unexceptional quality, whether for domestic use, manufacturing
+purposes, or irrigation. The Hydraulic Engineer doubts, having regard
+to the immense quantity of water required for irrigation, whether it
+will ever be found useful for that purpose in so far as the greater
+agricultural industries are concerned; but for intense cultivation
+around the homestead he thinks bore water might well be utilised. In
+some cases it would be in sufficiently large supply for the raising of
+green fodder for stud stock--perhaps even for protection against minor
+local droughts. An irrigated crop needs three or four waterings of
+3 inches each, and as each inch means 22,614 gallons, the quantity
+required for a crop, with four waterings, would be 271,368 gallons per
+acre; so that a cultivation plot of 20 or 30 acres would absorb from
+5 to 8 million gallons a year, according to the seasons, the nature of
+the soil, or the soakage.
+
+While doubtful as to the suitability of bore water for irrigation on
+a large scale, Mr. Henderson strongly advocates its being applied to
+machinery of small power. Many years ago he directed attention in
+one of his annual reports to the extensive use of water power
+in competition with steam in certain parts of America; and it is
+satisfactory to note that in some inland towns of Queensland the
+American example has been followed. In quite a number of towns the
+public water service is artesian, and in a few it is the motive power
+of electric lighting systems. The information that the flowing wells
+of Queensland are discharging daily 320 million gallons of water "to
+waste" indicates that when population in the artesian area becomes
+more dense bore power will become an invaluable aid in economic
+manufacture. The water so harnessed would not be wasted, as every
+gallon would still be available for human or animal consumption.
+
+[Illustration: ABERDARE COLLIERY, IPSWICH DISTRICT]
+
+The money value of the water annually discharged from the flowing
+bores of Queensland runs into stupendous figures, even at the rate
+of 6d. per 1,000 gallons. At that rate its annual value would exceed
+4¼ millions sterling. Capitalise this sum at 4 per cent., and the
+artesian water flow of Queensland becomes worth upwards of 109¼
+millions sterling, less, of course, the cost of maintenance and
+supervision similarly capitalised. And this colossal endowment is the
+result during the last quarter of a century of a total expenditure of
+less than 2 millions sterling. Granting that to utilise all this water
+already under pressure would mean a very large additional expenditure
+in tanks, aqueducts, and pipes, that expenditure may be calculated in
+advance to a minute fraction in every case, and it would of course
+be disbursed gradually as the demand for the delivery of water
+under pressure developed with the increase of population and the
+multiplication of industries. It must be apparent, therefore, that any
+needful public expenditure to ascertain whether the flow diminishes or
+increases as the years go on, and to prevent waste if waste there
+be, is more than justified. Indeed, should any great public loss be
+suffered for want of State control of this life-giving national asset,
+it might be difficult for Parliament entirely to clear itself from
+blame if charged with neglecting the reiterated advice of its own
+responsible officer in this respect.
+
+ [Footnote a: For digest of Hydraulic Engineer's reports, 1883 to
+ 1908 inclusive, see Appendix H, post.]
+
+ [Footnote b: "Sub-artesian" is a term applied when the water in
+ a bore rises to or near the surface, but does not automatically
+ flow along it.]
+
+ [Footnote c: It will be seen on reference to Appendix H that
+ since the Hydraulic Engineer supplied his figures a number of
+ additional flowing bores have been sunk, and have substantially
+ increased the aggregate flow, although, the figures not having
+ been officially verified, the aggregate flow remains in the
+ text as from the 716 bores recognised by the Hydraulic Engineer.]
+
+ [Footnote d: The quantity of water deposited on an acre of land
+ by an inch of rain is 22,614 gallons.]
+
+ [Footnote e: See "Commonwealth Year Book," 1909, page 382.]
+
+
+
+
+APPENDICES.
+
+
+
+
+APPENDIX A.
+
+READJUSTMENT OF WESTERN BOUNDARY.
+
+
+The following summary of correspondence between Governor Bowen and the
+Secretary of State for the Colonies gives information in addition to
+that furnished in "The Subdivision of Australia," page xiv., relating
+to the readjustment of the Queensland western boundary:--
+
+On 30th September, 1860, Sir George Bowen--in transmitting an Address
+passed by the Queensland Legislature asking that "the western boundary
+of Queensland should be declared to extend at least so far as to
+include the Gulf of Carpentaria, without which declaration the
+Legislature would not feel authorised in taking steps towards the
+development of the colony in that direction"--referred to the opinion
+of Mr. A. C. Gregory, then Surveyor-General, that "a boundary at the
+141st meridian would just cut off from Queensland the greater portion
+of the only territory available for settlement, _i.e._, the Plains of
+Promise, and the only safe harbour, _i.e._, Investigator Road, in the
+Gulf of Carpentaria." The Governor added that until receipt of the
+Duke of Newcastle's despatch of 21st October, 1859, enclosing the
+opinion of the Law Officers of the Crown, the general belief here was
+that the western boundary of Queensland was identical with the eastern
+boundary of Western Australia, that is, with the 129th degree of east
+longitude. But now the Law Officers had declared expressly that the
+141st meridian was the western boundary, he urged that the prayer
+of the local Legislature should be complied with by extending the
+boundary to the 138th meridian of east longitude.
+
+On 8th December, 1860, Governor Bowen again wrote to the Colonial
+Office urging that the boundary should be extended, and contending
+that the question was of Imperial as well as colonial importance.
+Replying on 26th February, 1861, the Duke of Newcastle said that South
+Australia had asked for the territory desired by Queensland, and that
+certain gentlemen in Victoria were desirous of forming a settlement
+on the northern coast of Australia. His Grace added that there were
+doubts whether the Government had the power to annex the territory as
+desired, and if these doubts had any foundation he would submit a Bill
+to the Imperial Parliament to remove them. In September, 1861, Sir
+George Bowen again urged the annexation of the territory, remarking
+that "Queensland can gain little but trouble and expense from
+undertaking the management and protection of any future settlement on
+the Gulf of Carpentaria; for it is certain that so soon as it becomes
+self-supporting it will demand to be erected into a separate colony."
+On 14th December following the Duke of Newcastle wrote to the Governor
+stating that he had "no objection to the proposal that this territory
+should be temporarily annexed to the colony of Queensland, and
+accordingly that Letters Patent would be issued for giving effect to
+this arrangement under 24 and 25 Vict., cap. 44." But his Grace warned
+the Governor that the annexation would probably be revoked when
+the growth of population or other circumstances rendered separation
+desirable in the interests of the new territory. He closed with these
+words--"I am not prepared to abandon definitely, on the part of
+Her Majesty's Government, the power to deal with districts not yet
+settled, as the wishes or convenience of the future settlers may
+hereafter require."
+
+
+
+
+APPENDIX B.
+
+THE FIRST PARLIAMENT.
+
+(First Session, 1860.)
+
+
+THE GOVERNOR:
+
+ His Excellency Sir George Ferguson Bowen, K.C.M.G.
+
+
+THE MINISTRY:
+
+_With Seats in the Legislative Assembly._
+
+ Colonial Secretary--The Honourable Robert George Wyndham Herbert.
+ Attorney-General--The Honourable Ratcliffe Pring.
+ Colonial Treasurer--The Honourable Robert Ramsay Mackenzie.
+
+_With Seats in the Legislative Council._
+
+ Minister without Portfolio--The Honourable Maurice Charles O'Connell.[a]
+ Minister without Portfolio--The Honourable John James Galloway.[b]
+
+
+MEMBERS OF THE LEGISLATIVE COUNCIL (15).
+
+ President--The Honourable Sir Charles Nicholson.[c]
+ Chairman of Committees--The Honourable Daniel Foley Roberts.[d]
+
+ [c] Balfour, Hon. John.
+ [c] Bigge, Hon. Francis Edward.
+ [c] Compigne, Hon. Alfred William.
+ [d] Fitz, Hon. Henry Bates.
+ [c] Fullarton, Hon. George.
+ [c] Galloway, Hon. John James.
+ [d] Harris, Hon. George.
+ [c] Laidley, Hon. James.
+ [c] Massie, Hon. Robert George.
+ [c] McDougall, Hon. John Frederick.
+ [c] O'Connell, Hon. Maurice Charles.
+ [d] Simpson, Hon. Stephen.
+ [c] Yaldwyn, Hon. William Henry.
+
+
+MEMBERS OF THE LEGISLATIVE ASSEMBLY (26).
+
+ Speaker--The Honourable Gilbert Eliott (_Wide Bay_).
+ Chairman of Committees--Arthur Macalister (_Ipswich_).
+
+ Blakeney, Charles William (_Brisbane_).
+ Broughton, Alfred Delves (_West Moreton_).
+ Buckley, Henry (_East Moreton_).
+ Coxen, Charles (_Northern Downs_).
+ Edmondstone, George (_East Moreton_).
+ Ferrett, John (_Maranoa_).
+ Fitzsimmons, Charles (_Port Curtis_).
+ Forbes, Frederick Augustus (_Ipswich_).
+ Gore, St. George Richard (_Warwick_).
+ Haly, Charles Robert (_Burnett_).
+ Herbert, Robert George Wyndham (_Leichhardt_).
+ Jordan, Henry (_Brisbane_).
+ Lilley, Charles (_Fortitude Valley_).
+ Mackenzie, Robert Ramsay (_Burnett_).
+ Moffatt, Thomas de Lacy (_Western Downs_).
+ [e] Nelson, William Lambie (_West Moreton_).
+ O'Sullivan, Patrick (_Ipswich_).
+ Pring, Ratcliffe (_Eastern Downs_).
+ Raff, George (_Brisbane_).
+ Richards, Henry (_Brisbane South_).
+ Royds, Charles James (_Leichhardt_).
+ Taylor, James (_Western Downs_).
+ Thorn, George, sen. (_West Moreton_).
+ Watts, John (_Drayton and Toowoomba_).
+
+ [Footnote a: Captain O'Connell resigned on 28th August, and
+ became President of Legislative Council.]
+
+ [Footnote b: Appointed 28th August, 1860; resigned 10th
+ November, 1860.]
+
+ [Footnote c: Appointed for five years by Sir William Denison.]
+
+ [Footnote d: Appointed for life by Sir G. F. Bowen.]
+
+ [Footnote e: Unseated on petition in June, 1860--disqualified,
+ being a minister of religion; succeeded by Joseph Fleming.]
+
+[Illustration: COCOA-NUT PALMS, JOHNSTONE RIVER, NORTH QUEENSLAND]
+
+[Illustration: CUSTOM HOUSE AND PETRIE BIGHT, BRISBANE]
+
+
+
+
+APPENDIX C.
+
+
+THE EIGHTEENTH PARLIAMENT.
+
+(1909.--Second Session.)
+
+
+THE GOVERNOR:
+
+ His Excellency Sir William MacGregor, G.C.M.G., C.B.
+
+
+THE LIEUTENANT-GOVERNOR:
+
+ The Honourable Sir Arthur Morgan.
+
+
+THE MINISTRY:
+
+_With Seats in the Legislative Assembly._
+
+ Vice-President of Executive Council and Chief Secretary
+ --The Honourable William Kidston.
+ Secretary for Public Lands
+ --The Honourable Digby Frank Denham.
+ Treasurer
+ --The Honourable Arthur George Clarence Hawthorn.
+ Secretary for Public Instruction and Secretary for Public Works
+ --The Honourable Walter Henry Barnes.
+ Home Secretary and Secretary for Mines
+ --The Honourable John George Appel.
+ Secretary for Railways and Secretary for Agriculture
+ --The Honourable Walter Trueman Paget.
+
+_With Seats in the Legislative Council._
+
+ Minister without Portfolio--The Honourable Andrew Henry Barlow.
+
+ Attorney-General--The Honourable Thomas O'Sullivan.
+
+
+MEMBERS OF THE LEGISLATIVE COUNCIL (44).
+
+ President--The Honourable Sir Arthur Morgan.
+ Chairman of Committees--The Honourable Peter MacPherson.
+
+ Annear, Hon. John Thomas.[a]
+ Barlow, Hon. Andrew Henry.
+ Beirne, Hon. Thomas Charles.
+ Brentnall, Hon. Frederick Thomas.
+ Brown, Hon. William Villiers.
+ Callan, Hon. Albert James.
+ Campbell, Hon. William Henry.
+ Carter, Hon. Arthur John.
+ Clewett, Hon. Felix.
+ Cowlishaw, Hon. James.
+ Davey, Hon. Alfred Allen.
+ Deane, Hon. John.
+ Fahey, Hon. Bartley.
+ Gibson, Hon. Angus.
+ Gray, Hon. George Wilkie.
+ Groom, Hon. Henry Littleton.
+ Hall, Hon. Thomas Murray.
+ Hart, Hon. Frederick Hamilton.
+ Hinchcliffe, Hon. Albert.
+ Jensen, Hon. Magnus.
+ Johnson, Hon. Thomas Alexander.
+ Lalor, Hon. James.
+ Marks, Hon. Charles Ferdinand, M.D.
+ McDonnell, Hon. Frank.
+ McGhie, Hon. Charles Stewart.
+ Miles, Hon. Edward David.
+ Moreton, Hon. Berkeley Basil.
+ Murphy, Hon. Peter.
+ Nielson, Hon. Charles Frederick.
+ Norton, Hon. Albert.
+ O'Sullivan, Hon. Thomas.
+ Parnell, Hon. Arthur Horatio.
+ Plant, Hon. Edmund Harris Thornburgh.
+ Power, Hon. Francis Isidore.
+ Raff, Hon. Alexander.
+ Smith, Hon. Robert Harrison.
+ Smyth, Hon. Joseph Capel.
+ Stevens, Hon. Ernest James.
+ Taylor, Hon. William Frederick, M.D.
+ Thomas, Hon. Lewis.
+ Thynne, Hon. Andrew Joseph.
+ Turner, Hon. Henry.
+
+
+MEMBERS OF THE LEGISLATIVE ASSEMBLY (72).
+
+ Speaker--The Honourable Joshua Thomas Bell (_Dalby_).
+ Chairman of Committees--William Drayton Armstrong (_Lockyer_).
+
+ Allan, James (_Brisbane South_).
+ Allen, Barnett Francis Samuel (_Bulloo_).
+ Appel, Hon. John George (_Albert_).
+ Barber, George Phillips (_Bundaberg_).
+ Barnes, George Powell (_Warwick_).
+ Barnes, Hon. Walter Henry (_Bulimba_).
+ Blair, James William (_Ipswich_).
+ Booker, Charles Joseph (_Maryborough_).
+ Bouchard, Thomas William (_Brisbane South_).
+ Bowman, David (_Fortitude Valley_).
+ Brennan, James (_Rockhampton North_).
+ Breslin, Edward Denis Joseph (_Port Curtis_).
+ Bridges, Thomas (_Nundah_).
+ Collins, Charles (_Burke_).
+ Corser, Edward Bernard Cresset (_Maryborough_).
+ Cottell, Richard John (_Toowong_).
+ Coyne, John Harry (_Warrego_).
+ Crawford, James (_Fitzroy_).
+ Cribb, James Clarke (_Bundanba_).
+ Denham, Hon. Digby Frank (_Oxley_).
+ Douglas, Henry Alexander Cecil (_Cook_).
+ Ferricks, Miles Aloysius (_Bowen_).
+ Foley, Thomas (_Townsville_).
+ Forrest, Hon. Edward Barrow (_Brisbane North_).
+ Forsyth, James (_Moreton_).
+ Fox, George (_Normanby_).
+ Grant, Kenneth McDonald (_Rockhampton_).
+ Grayson, Francis (_Cunningham_).
+ Gunn, Donald (_Carnarvon_).
+ Hamilton, William (_Gregory_).
+ Hardacre, Herbert Freemont (_Leichhardt_).
+ Hawthorn, Hon. Arthur George Clarence (_Enoggera_).
+ Hodge, Robert Samuel (_Burnett_).
+ Hunter, David (_Woolloongabba_).
+ Hunter, John McEwan (_Maranoa_).
+ Keogh, Denis Thomas (_Rosewood_).
+ Kidston, Hon. William (_Rockhampton_).
+ Land, Edward Martin (_Balonne_).
+ Lennon, William (_Herbert_).
+ Lesina, Vincent Bernard Joseph (_Clermont_).
+ Macartney, Edward Henry (_Brisbane North_).
+ Mackintosh, Donald (_Cambooya_).
+ McLachlan, Peter Alfred (_Fortitude Valley_).
+ Mann, John (_Cairns_).
+ Maughan, William John Ryott (_Ipswich_).
+ May, John (_Flinders_).
+ Morgan, Godfrey (_Murilla_).
+ Mulcahy, Daniel (_Gympie_).
+ Mullan, John (_Charters Towers_).
+ Murphy, William Sidney (_Croydon_).
+ Nevitt, Thomas (_Carpentaria_).
+ O'Sullivan, James (_Kennedy_).
+ Paget, Hon. Walter Trueman (_Mackay_).
+ Payne, John (_Mitchell_).
+ Petrie, Andrew Lang (_Toombul_).
+ Philp, Hon. Robert (_Townsville_).
+ Rankin, Colin Dunlop Wilson (_Burrum_).
+ Roberts, Thomas Robert (_Drayton and Toowoomba_).
+ Ryan, Thomas Joseph (_Barcoo_).
+ Ryland, George (_Gympie_).
+ Somerset, Henry Plantagenet (_Stanley_).
+ Stodart, James (_Logan_).
+ Swayne, Edward Bowdick (_Mackay_).
+ Theodore, Edward (_Woothakata_).
+ Thorn, William (_Aubigny_).
+ Tolmie, James (_Drayton and Toowoomba_).
+ Walker, Harry Frederick (_Wide Bay_).
+ White, John (_Musgrave_).
+ Wienholt, Arnold (_Fassifern_).
+ Winstanley, Vernon (_Charters Towers_).
+
+ [Footnote a: Acting Chairman of Committees.]
+
+
+
+
+APPENDIX D.
+
+FIFTY YEARS OF LEGISLATION.
+
+
+In the following epitome of Queensland legislation during the last
+half-century no mention is made of Land Acts, Local Government Acts,
+Revenue or Loan Acts, or Education Acts, those subjects being dealt
+with in the text of the book. The rule has been to notice in this
+appendix the first legislation of the Parliament on each subject
+exclusive of those above mentioned, and only to refer to amending Acts
+of a consolidating and extending character. Nor is any attempt made to
+furnish a digest of the Acts mentioned, but only to direct attention
+to what are deemed the salient points of each.
+
+The first session of the first Parliament has been specially dealt
+with in "Our Natal Year."
+
+
+THE FIRST PARLIAMENT: 29th May, 1860-22nd May, 1863.
+
+It may not be generally known that in 1861, before Government railways
+were authorised in Queensland, an Act was passed incorporating the
+Moreton Bay Tramway Company, formed to construct a railway "from
+Ipswich to the interior of the colony." The company failed to raise
+the capital required, however, and the project fell through. In the
+same year a Loan Act was passed, but it made no provision for railway
+construction. In 1861 an Act was passed giving facilities for the
+naturalisation of aliens. A Fencing Act, a Carriers Act, and a Masters
+and Servants Act also found a place on the Statute-book. There were
+also passed a Savings Bank Act, a Supreme Court Act, and, among
+several others, twenty-two in all, the Real Property Act of 1861,
+which adopted the Torrens system of registration of titles, and may be
+regarded as one of the most useful reforms of the fifty-year period.
+An Act to facilitate the incorporation of religious and charitable
+institutions also became law. In 1862 an Act to provide for the
+appointment of a second Supreme Court Judge, at a salary of £1,500 a
+year, was passed, the result being the introduction of the late Chief
+Justice Cockle, much to the dissatisfaction of the late Mr. Justice
+Lutwyche, who, having been sole Judge before separation, preferred a
+prior claim to the appointment. Interference with political and party
+affairs was the alleged cause of this non-recognition of seniority;
+and the charge had some justification, as his Honour once issued an
+address to the electors through the Press urging them to vote for a
+Liberal candidate. Another noticeable measure was an Act to provide
+for the introduction of labourers from British India. In all
+thirteen measures were passed in this session, the last of the first
+Parliament.
+
+
+THE SECOND PARLIAMENT: 22nd July, 1863-29th May, 1867.
+
+In 1863 the second Parliament passed twenty-seven Acts, among them
+one empowering the Government to construct a railway from Ipswich to
+Toowoomba, "and such other lines as may hereafter be specified," and
+providing generally for the management of railways. The Inquests on
+Fires Act, the Liens on Crops Act, the Trading Companies Act,
+the Queensland Bank Act, the Civil Service Act--providing liberal
+allowances for retiring public officers--Police, Publicans, and
+Quarantine Acts, and other measures, made this a very fertile session.
+In 1864 no less than thirty Acts became law, including the Gold Export
+Duty Act, imposing a duty of 1s. 6d. per ounce on the precious metal.
+The Immigration Act of 1864, providing for the issue of land-order
+warrants by the Agent-General, instead of land orders, and generally
+restricting the traffic in these instruments, was passed. The Marriage
+Laws Act, the Military Contribution Act, appropriating £3,640 towards
+the cost of Her Majesty's troops in the colony, the Volunteer Corps
+Act, the Small Debts Act, the Roads Closing Act, the Bank of New South
+Wales Act, and the Brisbane Gas Company Act, with several others,
+became law. The publication of "Hansard" was begun in this year.
+
+Twenty-two Acts were passed in 1865, among them one for the Prevention
+of the Careless Use of Fire, a Selectors Relief Act, the Industrial
+and Reformatory Schools Act, and eight measures amending the Criminal
+law. In 1866 twenty-six measures were passed, including the Friendly
+Societies Enabling Act, the Inquests of Deaths Act, abolishing
+coroners' juries and providing for magisterial inquiries at a cost
+of two guineas each as a fee to the presiding justice. The Standard
+Weight for Agricultural Produce Act and an Act declaring Port Albany,
+Cape York, a free port also became law, as well as a number of legal
+statutes.
+
+
+THE THIRD PARLIAMENT: 6th August, 1867-27th August, 1868.
+
+The third Parliament commenced its career in 1867 with a list of
+forty-eight Acts. The Constitution Act of 1867 and the Legislative
+Assembly Act of the same year laid the foundation of the Queensland
+Legislature, while the basis of our judiciary is the Supreme Court
+Act, the District Court Act, the Small Debts Act, and the Jury Act,
+all passed in the same session. Other important measures which
+were passed were Probate Act, Succession Act, Statute of Frauds and
+Limitations, Equity Act, Trustees and Incapacitated Persons Act, and
+the Polynesian Labourers Act, the latter the first of a long series
+of statutes legalising and regulating Polynesian labour. Most of the
+others were amendments of Acts passed in previous sessions. In August,
+1868, the Parliament was prematurely dissolved.
+
+
+THE FOURTH PARLIAMENT: 18th November, 1868-13th July, 1870.
+
+The fourth Parliament opened in November, 1868, and the first session
+lasted till April, 1869. Only nineteen Acts were passed in the two
+sessions of 1868 and 1869. In the latter year two measures were passed
+to encourage the establishment of industries, one by means of grants
+of land, while the other authorised bonuses for the manufacture of
+woollen and cotton goods--the growth of cotton having attained some
+prominence during the American Civil War in the early sixties.
+The principal work of the session, however, was the passage of the
+Pastoral Leases Act, and an Act to repeal the Civil Service Act of
+1863, on the ground that it was imposing undue liabilities on
+the Treasury. The session of 1870 only lasted for a week, and was
+consequently barren.
+
+[Illustration: IN THE SCRUB COUNTRY, KIN KIN, NORTH COAST RAILWAY]
+
+[Illustration: ON THE BLACKALL RANGE, NORTH COAST RAILWAY]
+
+
+THE FIFTH PARLIAMENT: 16th November, 1870-21st June, 1871.
+
+The fifth Parliament lived only seven months. It met in November,
+1870, and passed twenty-two Acts, among them being the University
+Act of 1870, giving the Governor in Council power to establish local
+examinations for degrees in connection with universities in Great
+Britain and Ireland. In this year an Act legalising the collection
+of border duties was passed. An Act providing for a pension of £400
+a year to the Assembly's first Speaker also became law, but has not
+since been used as a precedent. By the Country Publicans Act a license
+for a house not within five miles of any town in which the Towns
+Police Act was in force was reduced to £15. The Gold Fields Homestead
+Act authorised the granting of agricultural leaseholds not exceeding
+forty acres on any proclaimed goldfield. A Wages Act enabled an
+employee to claim six months' pay from a mortgagee on taking over
+a property. In the session of 1871 only six Acts were passed, one
+repealing the proviso to section 10 of the Constitution Act of 1867
+which required a two-thirds majority of both Houses to a bill altering
+the number or apportionment of members of the Assembly. The other
+measures of this session demand no notice here.
+
+
+THE SIXTH PARLIAMENT: 8th November, 1871-1st September, 1873.
+
+The sixth Parliament met in November, 1871, and passed six measures in
+its first session, none of them of more than temporary importance save
+the comprehensive Brands Act, which received the Governor's assent in
+the following year. The main session of 1872 was fertile in practical
+legislation, the Health Act and a Railway Act--providing for the
+fixing of compensation for land resumptions by a railway arbitrator,
+and empowering the Governor in Council to accept proposals for railway
+construction from private individuals or corporations--becoming law
+with twenty-four other measures. An Act of this year provided for the
+gradual abolition of the export duty on gold; another provided for
+homestead areas on liberal terms; and another for the sale of mineral
+lands. A number of legal measures, all of an amending character, also
+became law. And finally, a Loan Act, authorising the Government
+to raise £1,466,499 for railways from Ipswich to Brisbane and from
+Westwood to Comet River on the Central Railway, and other public
+works, gave a new impetus to development. In 1873 the Parliament met
+at the end of May, and after the session had lasted two months the
+Houses were prorogued for the purpose of a dissolution. Only six Acts
+were passed during the session, and those of no permanent significance
+except, perhaps, an equally elaborate and Algerine Customs Act.
+
+
+THE SEVENTH PARLIAMENT: 7th January, 1874-2nd October, 1878.
+
+The seventh Parliament opened on 7th January, 1874, and the Palmer
+Government, being defeated on the election for the Speakership, at
+once retired. After nearly three months' adjournment to enable the new
+Ministry to formulate its policy, the session was resumed at the end
+of March, and eighteen public and six private Acts were passed. Among
+the most important was the Audit Act, which, among other provisions,
+altered the opening date of the financial year to 1st July, instead of
+1st January, with the object of getting the work done during the cool
+weather. But the Act failed in this respect, for Governments seldom
+care to call Parliament together much before mid-July, in time to
+provide for the first Treasury payments of the new financial year.
+On the other hand, the Assembly members usually protract the sittings
+until close to Christmas week, at whatever date the session opens.
+Among the other measures passed in 1874 were the Insolvency Act,
+of which Mr. S. W. Griffith was the author; the Crown Remedies Act,
+providing for the conduct of suits on behalf of the Crown; a Supreme
+Court Act, making provision for the appointment of a third Judge to be
+stationed at Bowen, and fixing the salaries and pensions of the Judges
+at the amounts still payable; a comprehensive Goldfields Act; an
+Act for the protection of oysters and the establishment of oyster
+fisheries; and an Act to encourage the manufacture of sugar. In 1875
+sixteen Acts were passed, one of the two most important being the
+Western Railway Act, providing for the reservation of the land for
+fifty miles on either side of a straight line drawn from Dalby to
+Roma, and the sale of such lands to pay for the construction of a
+railway to connect the two towns. The other and great measure of the
+session, however, was the State Education Act, the scope of which is
+elsewhere explained.
+
+In 1876 twenty-three Acts were passed, two of them being temporary
+Supply Acts, measures which first became necessary with the alteration
+of the date of the financial year. A Crown Lands Alienation Act,
+passed this year, is noticed elsewhere, as is also the Customs
+Duties Act, introducing a tariff incidentally protective. Mr.
+Groom's Friendly Societies Act became law, as also did Mr. Griffith's
+Judicature Act, and the Fire Brigades Act. A Municipality Endowments
+Act provided a £2 for £1 endowment for municipalities during the
+first five years after their establishment, and then £1 for £1. The
+Department of Justice was provided for, enabling a layman to hold
+the portfolio of Minister for Justice in a Ministry, and, so far as
+official practice was concerned, to qualify such Minister to discharge
+the duties of the Attorney-General.
+
+In 1877, twenty-eight measures were placed on the Statute-book,
+including the Navigation Act, Bank Holidays Act, Chinese Immigration
+Regulation Act, an Act to punish disorderly conduct in places of
+religious worship, the Victoria Bridge Act, and the first of a series
+of enactments for the destruction of marsupials and the protection
+of native birds. But the most important piece of legislation was the
+Railway Reserves Act, which, before it was finally repealed, caused
+considerable trouble in regard to the disposal of the moneys received
+from the sale of land within the reserves which were set apart in the
+various districts to provide funds for the construction of railways in
+the several reserves.
+
+In 1878, the last session of the seventh Parliament, only a few
+measures were passed, among them, however, being the Deceased
+Wife's Sister Marriage Act, the Intestacy Act, a comprehensive Local
+Government Act, and a Volunteer Act. An Electoral Districts Act
+redistributed the electorates of the colony, and increased the number
+of members of the Assembly from 43 to 55.
+
+
+THE EIGHTH PARLIAMENT: 15th January, 1879-26th July, 1883.
+
+In January, 1879, a new Parliament opened, and the ensuing five years
+contributed but a moderate number of Acts to the Statute-book. First
+in political importance was the Divisional Boards Act of 1879; then
+the Licensing Boards Act; the Orphanages Act; the Bills of Exchange
+Act; and the Life Insurance Act, providing among other things
+that after an insured person had held a policy for life assurance,
+endowment, or annuity for three years his age, unless in the case of
+fraud, should be deemed to have been admitted by the company, and also
+protecting the interest of the assured in the event of his insolvency.
+A short Act was passed requiring all moneys received under the
+Western Railway Act and the Railway Reserves Act to be paid into the
+consolidated revenue fund; and a Loan Act for £3,053,000 was also
+placed on the Statute-book. The Local Works Loans Act, referred to
+elsewhere, was also passed. The Rabbit Act, passed on the initiative
+of a private member, Mr. E. J. Stevens, was the forerunner of several
+measures having for their object the extermination of this national
+pest. In 1880, out of the twenty-four Acts passed, four were for
+appropriations, and four for private purposes. A new Pacific Island
+Labourers Act became law, providing for the engagement of all
+islanders under the inspection of a Government agent travelling in
+the recruiting vessel, restricting the employment of the islanders to
+tropical and semi-tropical agriculture, and making provision for their
+payment and treatment. The Post Card and Postal Notes Act provided for
+the issue of those instruments. The greatest political measure was the
+Railway Companies Preliminary Act, passed with the view of inducing
+capitalists to undertake railway construction in consideration of land
+grants.
+
+In 1881 fifteen Acts, exclusive of appropriations, were passed, among
+which were the Macalister Pension Act, authorising the payment to
+the ex-Agent-General of a pension of £500 a year; the Pearl-shell
+and Beche-de-mer Fishery Act; the Sale of Food and Drugs Act, and the
+United Municipalities Act. In 1882, with the exception of the Tramways
+Act, nearly all the measures passed were amending Acts.
+
+In 1883 only two measures were passed--the Queensland Stock
+Inscription Act and an Appropriation Act--dissolution following
+upon the defeat of the Government on the second reading of the
+Transcontinental Railway Bill, which was introduced to ratify an
+agreement made with a company, represented by General Feilding, under
+the provisions of the Railway Companies Preliminary Act of 1880, for
+the construction of a railway from Charleville to Point Parker on the
+Gulf of Carpentaria.
+
+
+THE NINTH PARLIAMENT: 7th November, 1883-4th April, 1888.
+
+The ninth Parliament opened on 7th November, 1883, and the Government
+resigned after being thrice defeated. Mr. Griffith became Premier, and
+he at once set to work to reverse the policy of his rival in several
+respects. The Assembly passed a bill to repeal the Labourers from
+British India Acts of 1862 and 1882, but the Council rejected it. The
+passage of the Chinese Immigrants Regulation Act (introduced by Mr.
+Macrossan as a private Opposition member), which restricted the number
+of Chinese passengers arriving by any vessel to one to every fifty
+tons register, and imposed a landing fee of £30 per head on such
+passengers, had a salutary effect in limiting this form of Asiatic
+immigration. The Pacific Island Labourers Act Amendment Act further
+safeguarded the interests of white workers in Queensland. The Railway
+Companies Preliminary Act was repealed, and its repeal put a stop
+to the negotiations which had been going on in connection with the
+Transcontinental Railway under the previous Government.
+
+The chief measure passed in the regular session of 1884 was the
+Crown Lands Act, which has been dealt with elsewhere. A comprehensive
+Defence Act established the principle of compulsory service in time
+of war. Among other measures passed were a comprehensive Health Act,
+a Bills of Exchange Act, a Wages Act, a Pharmacy Act, and the Native
+Birds Protection Act; also the Patents, Designs, and Trade Marks Act.
+Many of the other Acts were legal measures, but one may be mentioned
+as of interest--the New Guinea and Pacific Jurisdiction Contribution
+Act, which provided for the amount of annual contribution by
+Queensland in the event of a British Protectorate being established
+over Eastern New Guinea and other islands in the Western Pacific. An
+Act of interest to civil servants was that which required all fees
+thereafter received by them to be paid into the Treasury. The Acts of
+this single session--the first of Mr. Griffith's Premiership--extended
+over 405 pages of the then quarto Statute-book.
+
+The Officials in Parliament Act--passed to create an additional
+Minister, to readjust the division of portfolios between the two
+Houses, and to render officers in the Imperial and Queensland military
+and naval forces eligible to sit in the Legislative Assembly--had the
+effect of bringing about an innovation not intended at the time the
+Act was passed, and which had no parallel in parliamentary government
+in the Empire. The passage of section 3 involved the repeal of
+sections 5 and 6 of the Legislative Assembly Act of 1867, the latter
+of which made it obligatory for members of the Assembly to submit
+themselves for re-election upon taking office as Ministers. Curiously
+enough, the effect of this repeal was not discovered until certain
+Ministerial changes were made in 1893. The members of the McIlwraith
+Government in 1888 and the members of the Griffith-McIlwraith
+Coalition in 1890 went before their constituents for re-election; but
+since the latter year the practice has ceased, and the electors have
+now no opportunity of showing by their votes whether they approve or
+disapprove of Cabinet changes.
+
+The session of 1885 was also productive of much legislation. There
+were a new Licensing Act containing local option provisions, a Federal
+Council (Adopting) Act, and an Undue Subdivision of Land Prevention
+Act, making the minimum width of new streets 66 feet, and of lanes
+22 feet, and buildings were not to be erected within 33 feet of the
+middle line of a lane; while suburban or country lands could not be
+sold in areas of less than 16 perches. This measure put a stop to
+subdivisions which could only be regarded as a grave abuse. The law
+relating to parliamentary elections was consolidated and amended.
+Another Act prohibited the introduction of Pacific Islanders after
+31st December, 1890. Altogether eighteen measures, irrespective of
+appropriations, were passed. During this and the following session a
+series of conflicts arose over the power of the Legislative Council
+to amend bills dealing with appropriation and taxation. In 1884 a bill
+was introduced which made provision for granting to members of the
+Assembly payment of expenses at the rate of £2 2s. per sitting day,
+with a maximum amount of £200 per annum, and in addition payment of
+travelling expenses to and from electorates once a year at the rate
+of 1s. 6d. per mile. The bill was laid aside by the Council. It
+was reintroduced in 1885, and again laid aside by the Council.
+The Government thereupon included a sum of £7,000 in the annual
+Appropriation Bill for the payment of members' expenses, and the
+Council took the extreme step of amending the Appropriation Bill by
+omitting this vote. After communications had passed between the two
+Chambers, it was agreed to submit to the Imperial Crown Law Officers
+two questions to settle whether the Council possessed co-ordinate
+powers with the Assembly in the amendment of all bills, including
+money bills, and the Judicial Committee of the Privy Council decided
+against the Council. The following year, the Members' Expenses Bill
+was passed by the Council without any attempt at amendment. The
+Council having also amended the rating clauses of a Local Government
+Bill in 1885, the bill was laid aside by the Assembly. It was
+reintroduced next year, and again amended by the Council. Warned by
+the fact that a Divisional Boards Bill had been laid aside by the
+Council because the Assembly claimed that the Upper House had no
+power to amend rating clauses, the Assembly accepted the Council's
+amendments, but at the same time asserted their sole power of altering
+taxation provisions.
+
+In the year 1886 no less than thirty-two Acts, exclusive of
+appropriations and private measures, were passed. Among them was the
+Elections Tribunal Act, which gave to a Supreme Court Judge, assisted
+by a panel of members of the Assembly acting as assessors, the
+decision of election petitions, as the trying of such petitions before
+an Elections and Qualifications Committee consisting of members of
+the Assembly had proved unsatisfactory. The Members' Expenses Bill was
+also passed. The important Justices Act was a measure of this session.
+The Labourers from British India Acts were repealed, the repealing
+measure having been rejected by the Council in the 1883-4 session,
+thus closing the door to the long-desired importation of coolie labour
+for pastoral holdings. Two measures of great importance to workers
+which were placed on the Statute-book in this session were the
+Employers Liability Act and the Trade Unions Act. The Offenders
+Probation Act embodied a new departure in the treatment of first
+offenders, which has since been copied by many other countries.
+Another Act which proved of material assistance to the working
+classes was the Building Societies Act. Several of the measures were
+amendments of the work of former Parliaments.
+
+The session of 1887, though less fruitful than the three preceding
+sessions, was by no means barren. Twenty-one bills were passed, one
+of which made provision for a contribution to the British New Guinea
+civil list. The Divisional Boards Bill, which had been laid aside by
+the Council in 1886, was reintroduced. The taxation clauses were
+this year embodied in a separate bill--the Valuation Bill--and both
+measures became law. An Electoral Districts Bill was also passed,
+increasing the number of members of the Assembly to 72. No change has
+since been made in the representation of the State. The passage of
+this bill was urged as a reason for not passing the Australasian Naval
+Force Bill, the Opposition contending that no important legislation
+should be attempted after Parliament had agreed to a redistribution
+of seats, and Sir S. W. Griffith was in this way prevented from giving
+legislative force to the agreement which he had drafted, and which was
+passed into law in all the other colonies before its author finally
+succeeded in securing its passage in Queensland in the year 1891. The
+session closed in December, 1887, but the Assembly was not dissolved
+until four months later.
+
+
+THE TENTH PARLIAMENT: 12th June, 1888-5th April, 1893.
+
+The tenth Parliament opened on 12th June, 1888, and the Griffith
+Ministry gave place to that of Sir Thomas McIlwraith. Only ten public
+measures were passed, however, exclusive of appropriations.
+The struggle of the session arose on the Customs Bill, imposing
+protectionist duties, and increasing the complexity of the tariff. On
+entering Parliament in 1874, Mr. Macrossan had earnestly demanded, on
+behalf of the Northern miners, effectual anti-Chinese legislation,
+but the attitude of the Imperial Government compelled the Queensland
+Parliament to proceed warily. In 1877 an Act was passed requiring the
+master of any ship to pay £10 for each Chinese passenger landed, and
+forbidding more than one to every 10 tons burthen, a penalty of
+£10 being imposed in each case of breach. In 1884 the number to be
+introduced was further restricted to one Chinese for each 50 tons,
+with a landing payment of £30, and £30 penalty for each landed in
+excess of the prescribed number. In 1888 the representatives of the
+various Australasian Governments met at Sydney, as, owing to the
+unwillingness of the Imperial Government to give the Royal assent
+to the legislation desired, there was doubt as to whether a measure
+passed by an individual colony would be assented to. The conference
+agreed to a bill, and the Queensland Parliament passed it in 1888, but
+it did not become law until February, 1890. It placed the limitation
+at one Chinese passenger to every 500 tons registered, made the
+penalty on the master £500 for every Chinese landed in excess of the
+number, and, in default of payment, twelve months' imprisonment, and
+£100 for a master failing to report at the Customs. For failure
+to supply a correct list of Chinese passengers the master rendered
+himself liable to a penalty of £200 for each act of default, and £30
+for permitting Chinese to land without payment of the landing tax. A
+Chinaman landing illegally, either overland or by ship, was himself
+liable to a penalty of £50, and, in default of payment, to six months'
+imprisonment. A comprehensive Railways Act was passed, its main object
+being to entrust the control of the railways to three Commissioners.
+The other measures were not of permanent interest.
+
+The session of 1889, under the Morehead Administration, was more
+productive. The Totalisator Restriction Act was among the measures
+passed, as was also the Trustees Act. The Civil Service Act, which
+embodied superannuation provisions on the basis of a 4 per cent.
+contribution from salary, was passed, but the superannuation sections
+were repealed in 1894 chiefly because of the representations of
+junior officers who alleged that the system was unjust. The Payment of
+Members Act repealed the Members' Expenses Act of 1886, and under
+it members were paid an annual salary of £300. The session was also
+notable by reason of the passage of the Defamation Act, introduced
+by Sir S. W. Griffith as a private member, by which journalists
+were relieved of the Algerine law under which their profession had
+previously been carried on.
+
+The session of 1890 was marked by the formation of the
+Griffith-McIlwraith Ministry, and the passing of twenty-seven Acts,
+many of importance, one of them being the Married Women's Property
+Act. The dividend duty was first imposed in this session, and
+sketching fortifications was made a penal offence; but the more
+important measures of this year are elsewhere noticed.
+
+In the session of 1891 a comprehensive Water Authorities Act, which
+is still in force, became law. An Act permitting solicitors to do work
+for their clients by agreement was passed, as was also an Act for the
+better protection of women and girls. In all thirty-eight measures,
+many of them of a legal character, became law in this session. The one
+of greatest importance was the Australasian Naval Force Act, to which
+allusion has already been made.
+
+In 1892 thirty-nine Acts were passed, among which was one for the
+treatment and isolation of lepers; others provided for strengthening
+the law penalising bakers for selling bread under weight; for
+subsidising railway construction by grants of land; for the
+establishment of harbour boards, and the levy of harbour dues; for
+penalising the publication of indecent advertisements; for making a
+person accused of an indictable offence and the wife or husband of
+such accused person a competent but not a compellable witness for the
+defence; for raising the Chief Justice's salary to £3,500 with a
+view to securing the services of Sir S. W. Griffith; for reducing the
+payment of members of the Assembly to £150 per annum; and for taxing
+the receipts of totalisators on racecourses, a duty being imposed of
+sixpence in the pound of money passed through the totalisators. A new
+principle in rabbit legislation was introduced by an Act encouraging
+pastoral lessees to destroy the pest by granting them an extension
+of their leases as compensation for their outlay. The Pacific Island
+Labourers (Extension) Act reversed the decision of Parliament in 1885,
+and permitted the reintroduction of islanders for work in the sugar
+industry. The recruiting continued from this date until terminated by
+the Commonwealth legislation of 1901. This session proved a very long
+one, the Houses sitting from March till November.
+
+
+THE ELEVENTH PARLIAMENT: 26th May, 1893-22nd February, 1896.
+
+The eleventh Parliament was opened on 26th May, 1893, Sir Thomas
+McIlwraith being then Premier. A Ministerial crisis was produced on
+the Railway Border Tax Bill, which imposed a duty of £2 10s. per ton
+on every bale of Queensland wool taken across the border. Ministers
+tendered their resignations, but the Governor, Sir Henry Norman,
+declined to accept them. In a minute read in the Assembly, His
+Excellency expressed the opinion that the vote in question did not
+constitute a vote of want of confidence in Ministers, and he gave it
+as his belief that on most questions of importance likely to arise
+they would have the support of a substantial majority of members of
+the Assembly. Consequently Sir Thomas McIlwraith continued in office,
+and both Houses passed the bill. It was a retaliatory measure against
+the New South Wales Railway Commissioners because of the preferential
+rates conceded by them to draw traffic to Sydney that legitimately
+belonged to Brisbane. The Meat and Dairy Produce Act became law in
+this year; also the Sugar Works Guarantee Act, and the Co-operative
+Communities Land Settlement Act, which proved an utter failure in
+spite of the passing of amending Acts in the two succeeding years.
+Various financial measures noticed elsewhere were also passed, these
+last being rendered imperative by the banking crisis which then
+paralysed industry and commerce. At the end of the session, Sir Thomas
+McIlwraith's health failing him, he retired from the Premiership,
+which was taken by Sir Hugh Muir Nelson.
+
+In 1894 the session opened on 17th July, and one of the most hotly
+contested measures was the Peace Preservation Bill, introduced in
+consequence of the disturbances connected with the shearers' strike
+in the West in 1891, and the apprehension that they would be repeated
+unless drastic legislation was enacted. Its passage was strenuously
+opposed by the Labour Opposition, and it was only forced through the
+Assembly by the application of the closure. Violent scenes culminated
+in the suspension of eight Labour members, the suspension being
+followed by an appeal by the ejected members to the Supreme Court,
+when that court decided that Parliament was the only tribunal for
+determining matters affecting its own jurisdiction. In all thirty-six
+measures were passed, but the majority were either financial
+or designed to amend existing statutes which caused friction in
+operation. The effort at this time seemed to be rather to pass
+practicable laws than enact measures embodying so-called advanced
+principles. The most noteworthy of these laws was the Agricultural
+Lands Purchase Act, which authorised the purchase by the Government
+of large estates at a cost not exceeding £100,000 in any one year, and
+the subdivision of the land into farms.
+
+In 1895 thirty-five Acts were the product of the session, and they
+were generally characterised by the same adaptation of means to ends
+that was noticeable in the preceding year. In fact, during these two
+years the colonies were all suffering a recovery which did not incite
+to heroic legislation for securing the rights of man, including woman.
+Deserving of special mention are the Suppression of Gambling Act, and
+the Railways Guarantee Act which made provision for local authorities
+guaranteeing the State against loss in connection with the
+construction and working of railways built under the Act. In
+consequence of friction between the three Railway Commissioners, an
+Act was passed in this year reducing the number of Commissioners to
+one, Mr. Mathieson, the Chief Commissioner, being retained. A short
+measure of considerable value was the Standard Time Act, the object
+of which was to place Queensland in line with New South Wales and
+Victoria by adopting the time of the 150th meridian of east longitude
+as the standard time for the three colonies.
+
+[Illustration: BARRON GORGE, CAIRNS RAILWAY, NORTH QUEENSLAND]
+
+
+THE TWELFTH PARLIAMENT: 17th June, 1896-15th February, 1899.
+
+In 1896 there was a general election, and the new Parliament opened
+on 17th June. Public confidence had been fairly restored after the
+financial crisis of 1893, and thirty-five Acts were passed, not one of
+which was of a highly contentious political nature. Even the Factories
+and Shops Act, introduced by the Government, was supported by the
+Labour party; indeed, no party or section opposed it, although the
+compulsory closing of shops at 1 p.m. on Saturdays throughout an area
+within the radius of ten miles of the General Post Office excited much
+individual opposition. Mr. Mathieson having accepted the position of
+Chief Commissioner of the Victorian railways, an amending Railways
+Act was passed empowering the Governor in Council to appoint a
+Commissioner for three years, reducing the salary from £3,000 to
+£1,500, and providing for the appointment of a Deputy Commissioner.
+Mr. R. J. Gray, one of the three original Commissioners, was appointed
+Commissioner, and Mr. Thallon, the present Commissioner, became his
+deputy. A measure of some importance repealed the existing Payment
+of Members Act, and made the new Act an integral part of the
+Constitution, the salary being fixed at £300 a year. The object, as
+stated by the Government, was to stop the incessant agitation that was
+carried on in political circles on the one hand for an increase, and
+on the other for a reduction of the salary.
+
+In the session of 1897, Sir Hugh Nelson being still Premier, thirty
+Acts were passed. There was again a remarkable absence of measures of
+a party character, most of them being useful amendments of existing
+laws. Of these the Elections Consolidating Act was important. The Home
+Secretary, Mr. J. F. G. Foxton, deserves credit for introducing this
+session the Aboriginals Protection and Restriction of the Sale of
+Opium Act, the first measure for the preservation and care of our
+fast-disappearing aboriginal blacks. It must be recorded with shame
+that the Government of Queensland should have allowed so many years to
+pass before taking steps to protect the race who had been dispossessed
+of their heritage from some of the curses attendant on our
+civilisation. Since 1897 the stigma no longer rests on our fair
+fame, everything possible being done now to save the natives from
+extinction. In this year, too, the Mareeba to Chillagoe Railway Act,
+which has proved very beneficial to the Cairns hinterland, became law.
+A comprehensive Land Act, occupying 110 pages of the Statute-book, was
+passed, and also an amending and consolidating Trustees and Executors
+Act.
+
+The session of 1898--the last of the Parliament--opened on 26th July,
+and closed on 30th December. The principal work of this session was
+the passage of an amending Mining Act which greatly improved the
+condition of the working miners. Other measures were an Act to
+incorporate the Brisbane Technical College, and the Game and Fishes
+Acclimatisation Act, providing for the proclamation of districts, for
+an open season, for the issue of game licenses, and the appointment of
+guardians. Sir Hugh Nelson, in consequence of the death of Sir A.
+H. Palmer, had been translated to the Presidency of the Legislative
+Council, and the Premiership was assumed by Mr. T. J. Byrnes on 13th
+April. Mr. Byrnes died in the following September, and was succeeded
+by Mr. (afterwards Sir) J. R. Dickson.
+
+On 1st December, 1899, Mr. Dickson and his colleagues resigned in
+consequence of a vote of the Assembly, and for seven days the Dawson
+Labour Ministry held office, but they were defeated immediately on the
+reassembling of the House. In the meantime Mr. Philp had been chosen
+leader of the Opposition, and on 7th December he returned to power as
+Premier with most of his old colleagues.
+
+
+THE THIRTEENTH PARLIAMENT: 16th May, 1899-4th February, 1902.
+
+The year 1899 was remarkable for the passage of two great
+measures--the Australasian Federation Enabling Act, passed in a
+session specially summoned for the purpose, which authorised a
+referendum to be taken on the new Constitution; and the invaluable and
+monumental Criminal Code Act, extending with its four schedules over
+270 pages of the Statute-book. The Code was compiled by Sir S. W.
+Griffith, and was afterwards submitted to the whole of the Judges of
+the Supreme and District Courts before being presented to Parliament.
+A bill was also passed legitimising children born before marriage on
+the subsequent marriage of their parents. The other public measures of
+the session were for amending purposes.
+
+The session of 1900 was a fairly active one, thirty-four measures
+being passed. A short Act of far-reaching importance empowered the
+Government to enter into arrangements with the Governments of the
+United Kingdom, Canada, Victoria, New South Wales, and New Zealand,
+for laying a Pacific cable. By a short measure the Government were
+empowered to prohibit the exportation of arms or naval stores. A great
+consolidating and amending Health Act was passed; also a measure, in
+connection with the appointment of Dr. Maxwell, of Honolulu, for the
+establishment of sugar experiment stations. In this year the Railway
+Commissioner was reappointed for three years at a salary of £2,000 per
+annum, being an increase of £500. The Factories and Shops Act of 1896
+was repealed, and a more comprehensive measure passed. An amending
+Defence Act was passed providing, among other things, for the military
+training of boys between twelve and eighteen years. An Act also became
+law providing for the inspection of grammar schools by a graduate of
+a British or Australian University. Another measure provided for the
+holding of the first Commonwealth elections, and for the temporary
+division of the State into nine electorates for the House of
+Representatives election. Several bills authorising the construction
+of railways to mineral fields by private companies evoked the bitter
+opposition of the Labour party. To force them through the popular
+House the Government were obliged to introduce an amendment of the
+Standing Orders, colloquially known as the "guillotine," and to
+closure the bills through the House.
+
+In the session of 1901 twenty-seven Acts were passed. The Chief
+Justice's salary, on the retirement of Sir S. W. Griffith to accept
+the Federal Chief Justiceship, was reduced to its former amount of
+£2,500 a year. The first legislation to eradicate the prickly pear
+took place in this year. The bill was introduced by a private member,
+Mr. Bell, who has always taken a keen interest in the destruction of
+this pest. It was based on the principle that close settlement is the
+only effective remedy, and offered inducements to settlers to select
+infested lands. The Public Service Act was so amended as to constitute
+the members of the Ministry for the time being the members of the
+board. A measure was passed requiring every life assurance company
+carrying on business in Queensland to hold £10,000 in Queensland
+securities, and otherwise protecting policy-holders. An Agricultural
+Bank Act was passed authorising the Government to advance to settlers
+on the land loans for carrying out improvements. An Animals Protection
+Act was also passed for the more effectual prevention of cruelty to
+animals.
+
+
+THE FOURTEENTH PARLIAMENT: 8th July, 1902-21st July, 1904.
+
+The fourteenth Parliament opened on 8th July, 1902, twenty-seven
+public measures becoming law in the first session. An amending
+Aboriginals Protection Act, chiefly dealing with the sale of opium,
+was passed. The sum to be paid as duty on totalisator stakes or bets
+was increased to one shilling in the pound from the sixpence provided
+by the Act of 1892. A Railway Act amending measure was passed
+authorising the appointment of a Commissioner for a term of seven
+years, and making other changes to facilitate the working of the
+department. In consequence of the drought and Federal embarrassments,
+the Public Service Special Retrenchment Act was passed, reducing the
+salaries of public servants on a sliding scale; and an Income Tax
+Bill became law, imposing a tax of sixpence in the pound upon incomes
+derived from personal exertion, and one shilling in the pound when
+derived from property, incomes under £100 being mulcted in 10s.,
+and when not exceeding £150 £1 a year. Provision was made for the
+appointment of a Government department for collecting the tax, and the
+last section enacted that the tax should cease on 1st January, 1905.
+The monumental Local Government Act of 1902 also became law in this
+year.
+
+The next session opened in July, and closed in December, 1903, but
+in mid-September progress was suspended by a change of Ministry, the
+Morgan-Kidston Government assuming office. Among the measures passed
+after the change of Ministry was an Act providing that the senior
+puisne Judge resident in Brisbane should be the senior puisne Judge of
+the Supreme Court, and discretionary power was given to the Governor
+in Council with regard to filling the vacancy created on the Supreme
+Court bench through the acceptance by Sir S. W. Griffith of the
+more dignified position of Chief Justice of the High Court of the
+Commonwealth. The Government were subjected to severe criticism for
+making no appointment, but the number of Judges was allowed to remain
+at four until the appointment of Mr. Justice Shand in November, 1908.
+
+Parliament reassembled in May following, and sat two months, when a
+dissolution was granted on 21st July, in consequence of the Government
+being left without a working majority.
+
+
+THE FIFTEENTH PARLIAMENT: 20th September, 1904-11th April, 1907.
+
+The fifteenth Parliament opened on 20th September following, and sat
+until Christmas. Among the measures passed was a comprehensive
+Dairy Produce Act providing for the appointment of inspectors; the
+registration of premises, a fee being charged proportioned to the
+number of cows kept; for compulsory grading of butter for export; and
+for the general regulation of dairies. The Income Tax was continued,
+but gave relief to persons with small incomes, though on the whole
+it yielded more revenue. Owing to the exigencies of the Treasury, the
+Public Service Special Retrenchment Act was continued for a further
+period of nine months, but the rate of retrenchment was reduced by
+one-half, and provision was made for devoting any surplus revenue
+at the close of the year to the repayment to public servants of the
+amounts so deducted from their salaries, and in this way they received
+a return equal to 8s. in the pound.[a] A Registration of Clubs Act and
+fourteen other measures were also passed.
+
+An extraordinary session of twenty days was held in January, 1905, to
+reconsider the Elections Bill, rejected by the Legislative Council
+in December previously. This having been done, and the Council having
+agreed to the bill, Parliament was prorogued, and met for the regular
+session of the year in July following, the sittings being continued
+till the Christmas holidays.
+
+The ordinary session of 1905 was a busy one, though the measures
+generally were short and of a practical nature. A distinguishing
+feature of the work of this Parliament was the humanitarian and social
+legislation which was placed on the Statute-book. The interests of
+workers generally were conserved by the Workers' Compensation Act,
+which made injuries or fatal accidents met with by employees a charge
+upon the industry in which they were engaged. The comfort of a very
+large number of workers in the pastoral and sugar industries was
+provided for by the Shearers and Sugar Workers Accommodation Act. A
+most valuable piece of legislation was the Infant Life Protection Act,
+the object of which was to prevent the alarming sacrifice of infant
+life in nursing homes from neglect, all such homes having to be
+registered and made subject to Government inspection. An Act imposing
+a penalty of £10 upon any person selling or giving tobacco or cigars
+to a young person under the age of sixteen years was passed, as was
+also an Act forbidding the sale or supply of firearms to a young
+person under fourteen years, and also forbidding such young person to
+use or carry firearms, the penalty for a breach of the Act being
+£20. Another measure of interest, which was passed in response to the
+request of a large number of workers, was an Act providing for railway
+employees a Board of Appeal against disciplinary decisions of
+superior officers. A short Act became law giving the right to women
+to admission and practice as barristers, solicitors, or conveyancers.
+Quite a number of other small Acts was passed, among them being a
+Fertilisers Act, the object of which was to prevent loss to farmers by
+the sale of fraudulent fertilisers.
+
+The most contentious measure of the session of 1906, which opened, as
+usual, in July, was the Railways Act, its principal object being to
+hold the ratepayers of a benefited area responsible for all losses in
+working a newly-constructed railway. It empowers the local authority
+to levy a railway rate to make good the deficiency, if any, after
+providing for working expenses and interest at the rate of three per
+cent. on capital expended on the line. If the local authority fails to
+levy and collect the railway rate, the Commissioner is empowered to
+do so. An important principle of the Act requires, when lands in
+a benefited area are being valued for rating purposes, that to the
+capital value shall be added the enhancement through the railway
+facilities provided. The object of the Act is undoubtedly good, in so
+far as it discourages landowners from agitating and bringing political
+pressure upon the Government in favour of railway undertakings not
+justified by the prospective traffic. It was supposed that persons
+desiring a new railway would hesitate to guarantee the Government
+against loss through its construction, but the applications for new
+lines have not been less numerous since the passing of the Act than
+when the burden fell entirely upon the general taxpayer. Yet there can
+be no doubt that many unwarranted undertakings have been quashed by
+the liability imposed upon local landowners.
+
+During the session there were thirty-four Acts passed, among them one
+for the protection of opossums, native bears, and other wild animals
+specified in the schedule, by the proclamation of a close season, and
+the prohibition of the use of cyanide as poison by collectors of skins
+for export. The Mining Machinery Advances Act empowered the Minister
+to advance loans from moneys appropriated by Parliament to persons
+or companies erecting machinery for carrying on mining operations or
+treating metalliferous ores, such loans to be made on the basis of £1
+for £1 of money expended by the applicant. A comprehensive Weights and
+Measures Act also became law. Another useful measure was the amending
+Public Works Land Resumption Act, the compensation provisions being
+greatly improved. The Etheridge Railway Act also passed in this
+session despite the objection of several members of the Labour party
+to "syndicate" lines. The opposition of these members, however, was
+not characterised by the obstructive tactics adopted in regard to
+similar measures in 1908.
+
+ [Footnote a: See page 50, ante.]
+
+
+THE SIXTEENTH PARLIAMENT: 23rd July to 31st December, 1907.
+
+The sixteenth Parliament was elected in May, 1907, but none of the
+three parties, into which the Assembly was divided by the cleavage
+between the moderate and the extreme sections of the Labour party
+consequent upon the adoption by the latter of the socialistic
+objective at the Convention held earlier in the year at Rockhampton,
+came back with a majority, and little legislation was found possible,
+the only public Acts passed relating to Appropriations, Children's
+Courts, Poor Prisoners' Defence, and an amending Income Tax measure
+raising the exemption to £200, and giving other relief to taxpayers.
+Towards the end of November the Government, failing to pass several
+democratic measures through the Council and to obtain adequate support
+from the Labour party, resigned, and Parliament was dissolved on 31st
+December on the advice of Mr. Philp, who had been called on to form a
+new Government from the Opposition party, and had failed to secure a
+parliamentary majority.
+
+
+THE SEVENTEENTH PARLIAMENT: 3rd March, 1908-31st August, 1909.
+
+The result of the appeal to the constituencies was to leave parties
+much as before, the Kidston and Labour parties being slightly
+strengthened numerically, and the Philp party--the Government at the
+moment--weakened correspondingly, they and the Kidston party numbering
+25 each, while the Labour party were 22 strong. Mr. Philp's appeal
+having thus failed, he retired, and Mr. Kidston, being recalled,
+sought to secure for his Government more than casual support from the
+Labour party. The House met on 3rd March, 1908. The session lasted
+barely seven weeks, and among the fifteen measures which became law
+were the following:--An amending Constitution Bill repealing the
+provisoes to section 9 of the principal Act, the first of which
+required a two-thirds vote of both Houses to any amendment for varying
+the mode of appointment or number of members of the Legislative
+Council; and the second, that any such amending bill should not
+receive the Royal assent until it had lain thirty days on the table
+of both Houses of the Imperial Parliament. Another Constitution Bill
+provided for a referendum to the electors when a bill passed by the
+Assembly had been twice rejected by the Council. The first of the
+above-mentioned bills received the Governor's assent forthwith, but
+as to the second such assent was reserved, and the bill transmitted
+to England. On 19th August, however, the King's assent was
+proclaimed, and the incompatibilities between the two Houses were thus
+satisfactorily adjusted by a comparatively simple process. A measure
+which aroused strong party feeling was a bill to amend the Elections
+Act by repealing the postal voting sections, substituting provisions
+to enable absent voters to vote at any polling place in the State, and
+also ensuring greater secrecy by having the ballot papers from places
+where a small number of votes are recorded counted in some larger
+centre. A useful Land Surveyors Act was passed, requiring registration
+after approval of candidates by a board to be constituted under the
+Act, and prescribing a variety of other regulations for the purposes
+of securing the competence and protecting the interests of surveyors
+generally. Other measures placed on the Statute-book included an Old
+Age Pensions Act, which has now lapsed in consequence of the passing
+of a Commonwealth pensions law; an Act for the Inspection of Machinery
+and Scaffolding; an amending Factories and Shops Act containing many
+democratic provisions; a Wages Boards Act, which has been kindly taken
+to by both employers and employed, and promises to adjust most of the
+differences between masters and men; a Religious Instruction in State
+Schools Referendum Act, the poll to be taken on the same day as the
+polling for the first Federal election after the passing of the Act;
+and an amending Technical College Act dissolving the councils of both
+metropolitan technical colleges, and vesting the property and future
+management in the Government. Two bills were also passed authorising
+the construction of railways to the Mount Elliott and Lawn Hills
+mineral fields. These bills directly led to the Labour party assuming
+an attitude of open hostility to the Government, and brought the
+latter and the Opposition, led by Mr. Philp, together, as the policy
+put before the electors by these two parties was identical in almost
+every respect.
+
+Before the opening of the second session on 17th November, 1908, the
+Kidston and Philp parties were fused into one on the common basis
+of the policy enunciated by Mr. Kidston in 1907 at Rockhampton. A
+reconstruction of the Cabinet preceded the meeting of Parliament. When
+the session closed on 22nd December very little legislative work
+had been done, most of the Government time being occupied with
+consideration of the Estimates, the Labour party, which had then
+become the Opposition proper, again offering obstruction to Government
+measures, and again compelling resort to the closure. An important
+measure of a non-party character was passed, however, for a revision
+of the statute law in many important details. The most significant
+measure of the session was the Loan Act of 1908, authorising the
+borrowing of £3,208,000, the vote affording proof of the determination
+of the Government and Parliament to enter upon a vigorous policy of
+railway and public works extension.
+
+The third session of the seventeenth Parliament opened on 29th June,
+1909. The two sides of the House were so evenly balanced, owing to
+several supporters of the Government having crossed to the Opposition
+benches, that the majority of the Government was reduced to one.
+Finding themselves impotent to transact public business, the
+Government advised the Lieutenant-Governor to grant a dissolution,
+provided the House would grant Supply. This was done, and His
+Excellency accordingly dissolved the Assembly on 31st August.
+
+
+THE EIGHTEENTH PARLIAMENT: 2nd November, 1909.
+
+The eighteenth Parliament met on 2nd November. The Address in Reply
+was adopted without division on the 5th, and Parliament at once
+proceeded to the business outlined in the Opening Speech of His
+Excellency the Lieutenant-Governor, a laudable desire to transact
+business without unnecessary discussion being evinced. The most
+important measure was the University of Queensland Act, which was
+passed in time to enable the dedication ceremony to take place on 10th
+December, Queensland's jubilee day. Of vital importance to Brisbane
+and its suburbs was the Metropolitan Water and Sewerage Act. An
+amendment of the Workers' Compensation Act and a Workers' Dwellings
+Act also became law. Resolutions were also passed approving of the
+construction of railways in various parts of the State.
+
+
+
+
+APPENDIX E.
+
+LAND SELECTION IN QUEENSLAND.
+
+[OFFICIAL COMPILATION.]
+
+
+The State is divided into Land Agents' Districts, in the principal
+town of each of which there is a Government Land Office and Land
+Agent. Plans and information respecting the quality, rents, and
+prices of lands available for selection may be obtained on personal
+or written application to the Land Agent of the District in which
+the land is situated, or to the Officer in Charge, Inquiry Office,
+Department of Public Lands, Brisbane.
+
+Land is opened or made available for Selection by proclamation in the
+_Government Gazette_. The proclamation, which is made not less than
+four weeks before the time appointed for the opening, specifies the
+modes in which the land may be selected, the area, rent, price, &c.
+
+The several modes of Selection for which the law provides are--(1)
+Agricultural Selections, _i.e._, Agricultural Farms, Perpetual Leases,
+Agricultural Homesteads, and Free Homesteads; (2) Grazing Selections,
+_i.e._, Grazing Farms and Grazing Homesteads; (3) Scrub Selections;
+(4) Unconditional Selections; and (5) Prickly Pear Selections. The
+more accessible lands are usually set apart for agricultural selection
+in areas up to 1,280 acres, or, if pear infested, as Prickly Pear
+Selections in areas up to 5,000 acres; while opportunities of
+acquiring Grazing Selections in areas up to 60,000 acres are given
+over a great extent of Queensland territory.
+
+Except in the case of Scrub Selections, Unconditional Selections, and
+Prickly Pear Selections, no person who is under the age of sixteen
+years, or who seeks to acquire the land as the agent or servant or
+trustee of another, will be allowed to select. A single girl under
+the age of twenty-one years is debarred from selecting an Agricultural
+Homestead, Free Homestead, or Grazing Homestead. A married woman is
+not competent to select a Homestead unless she has obtained an order
+for judicial separation or an order protecting her separate property,
+or is living apart from her husband and has been specially empowered
+by the Land Court to select a Homestead. A married woman may, however,
+acquire a Grazing Homestead by transfer after the expiry of five years
+of the term of lease. An alien may, under certain conditions, acquire
+a selection, but, unless he becomes a naturalised British subject
+within three years thereafter, all his right, title, and interest in
+the land will become forfeited.
+
+Applications for selections must be made in the prescribed form, in
+triplicate, and be lodged with the Land Agent for the District in
+which the land is situated.
+
+[Illustration: FARM SCENE, BLACKALL RANGE]
+
+[Illustration: SISAL HEMP, CHILDERS, NORTH COAST RAILWAY]
+
+[Illustration: WOOL TEAMS, LONGREACH, CENTRAL QUEENSLAND]
+
+They must be signed by the applicant, but may be lodged in the Land
+Office by his duly constituted attorney, and must be accompanied by
+the prescribed deposit. In the case of a Prickly Pear Selection the
+deposit must be the full amount of the prescribed survey fee, and in
+other cases, except Free Homesteads, a year's rent and one-fifth of
+the survey fee. In the case of a Free Homestead application the
+deposit consists of an application fee of £1 and one-fifth of the
+survey fee. Ordinarily, applications take priority in the order of
+their being lodged with the Land Agent, but applications lodged
+_prior_ to the time proclaimed as that at which land is to be open
+for selection are regarded as simultaneous with those lodged at that
+time.
+
+If land is open for Selection in two or more modes alternatively,
+and there are simultaneous applications to select it under different
+modes, priority among such applications is given to an application for
+the land as an Agricultural Homestead as against an application for it
+as an Agricultural Farm; to an application for it as an Agricultural
+Farm as against an application for it as an Unconditional Selection;
+and, if the land is open for Grazing Selection, to an application
+for it as a Grazing Homestead as against an application for it as a
+Grazing Farm.
+
+In the case of simultaneous applications for the same land, as an
+Agricultural Farm, priority is secured by an applicant, other than
+a married woman or a single girl under twenty-one years of age, who,
+when making application, undertakes to personally reside on the
+land during the first five years of the term. In other cases of
+simultaneous applications for the same land by the same mode of
+selection, priority is determined by lot, unless in the case of
+simultaneous applications for the same land as a Grazing Selection,
+Unconditional Selection, or Prickly Pear Selection, a higher rental
+is tendered than that proclaimed. In that event the tender most
+favourable to the Crown secures priority.
+
+Under the Special Selections Act land may be set apart for any body of
+settlers who, having some measure of common interest or capacity for
+mutual help, are desirous of acquiring land in the same locality. The
+procedure to be followed is for a request to be made to the Minister
+by the members of the body, explaining the grounds on which they are
+co-operating and setting out the land they desire to acquire. Should
+the request be acceded to, the land will be opened for selection in
+the usual way, but for a period to be set out in the proclamation it
+will only be available for the members of the body of settlers for
+whom it has been set apart.
+
+When an application has been accepted by the Land Commissioner
+and approved by the Land Court, and the applicant has paid for any
+improvements there may be on the land, he becomes entitled to receive
+a license to occupy the land in the case of an Agricultural Selection
+or a Grazing Selection, or a lease in the case of a Scrub Selection,
+Unconditional Selection, or Prickly Pear Selection. Within six months
+after the issue of a license, the selector must commence to occupy
+the land, and must thereafter continue to occupy it in the manner
+prescribed.
+
+
+AGRICULTURAL SELECTIONS.
+
+AGRICULTURAL FARMS.
+
+The largest area that may be acquired by any one person as an
+Agricultural Farm is 1,280 acres. If the same person is the selector
+of both an Agricultural Farm and an Agricultural Homestead, the joint
+areas must not exceed 1,280 acres. The purchasing price may range from
+10s. an acre upwards, as may be declared by proclamation. The term is
+twenty years. The annual rent is one-fortieth of the purchasing price,
+and the payments are credited as part of the price.
+
+The land must be continuously occupied by the selector residing
+personally on it or by his manager or agent doing so. Within five
+years from the issue of the license to occupy, or such extended time
+as the Court may allow, the selector must enclose the land with a good
+and substantial fence, or make substantial and permanent improvements
+on it equal in value to such a fence. On the completion of the
+improvements the selector becomes entitled to a lease of the farm, and
+may thereafter mortgage it; or, with the permission of the Minister,
+may subdivide or transfer it; or, with the approval of the Court, may
+underlet it.
+
+The selector of an Agricultural Farm, who has obtained priority by
+undertaking to reside personally thereon during the first five years
+of the lease, must comply strictly with that undertaking, and is
+not allowed during such period to mortgage, transfer, or assign the
+holding.
+
+After five years of the term have elapsed, the prescribed conditions
+of occupation and improvement having been duly performed, a deed of
+grant may be obtained on payment of the balance of the purchasing
+price and deed fees.
+
+
+PERPETUAL LEASE SELECTIONS.
+
+Land proclaimed to be open for Agricultural Farm Selection may also
+be opened for Perpetual Lease Selection, and the latter mode may be
+conceded priority of application over the former. The rent for the
+first period of ten years of the lease is 1½ per cent. on the
+proclaimed purchasing price of the land for Agricultural Farm
+Selection. The rent for each succeeding period of ten years shall be
+determined by the Land Court. The same conditions of occupation and
+improvement as are prescribed for Agricultural Farms are attached to
+Perpetual Lease Selections, and, except as specially prescribed, the
+provisions relating to Agricultural Farms apply to them also. As the
+name implies, the selections are leases in perpetuity, and are not
+capable of being converted to freeholds.
+
+
+AGRICULTURAL HOMESTEADS.
+
+Land open for selection as Agricultural Farms is not available for
+Agricultural Homesteads unless so proclaimed. The area allowed to be
+selected as an Agricultural Homestead varies with the value of the
+land, and is fixed by proclamation within the following limits,
+viz.:--160 acres in the case of land valued for Agricultural Farm
+Selection at not less than £1 an acre; 320 acres in the case of land
+valued at less than £1 but not less than 15s. an acre; and 640 acres
+in the case of land valued at less than 15s. an acre. The price for
+an Agricultural Homestead is 2s. 6d. an acre, the annual rent 3d. an
+acre, and the term ten years.
+
+The land must be continuously occupied by the selector residing
+personally thereon.
+
+Within five years from the issue of the license to occupy, or such
+extended time as the Land Court may allow, the selector must enclose
+the land with a good and substantial fence, or make substantial and
+permanent improvements on it equal in value to such fence. On the
+completion of the improvements the selector becomes entitled to a
+lease, which, however, is not negotiable in any way.
+
+At any time after five years from the commencement of the term, on the
+selector proving that the conditions have been duly performed and that
+the sum expended in improvements on the land has been at the rate of
+10s., 5s., or 2s. 6d. an acre respectively according to the value of
+the land, he may pay up the remaining rents so as to make his total
+payments equal to 2s. 6d. an acre, and obtain a deed of grant of the
+land in fee-simple. A deed fee must be paid.
+
+
+FREE HOMESTEADS.
+
+Land is not available for Free Homestead Selection unless specially
+so proclaimed, and the area of no selection must exceed 160 acres. The
+term is five years, and during that period the selector must occupy
+the land by personally residing on it, and must effect improvements to
+the total value of 10s. per acre. A Free Homestead cannot be sold or
+mortgaged until a deed of grant is obtained.
+
+
+GRAZING SELECTIONS.
+
+GRAZING FARMS.
+
+The greatest area which may be applied for as a Grazing Farm under any
+circumstances is 60,000 acres, but, as in the case of other modes
+of selection, each proclamation opening land for grazing selection
+declares the maximum area which may be selected in the area to which
+it applies. In the event of lands open under different proclamations
+and of a total area exceeding 20,000 acres being applied for by the
+same person, a rental limitation of £200 per annum must be observed as
+well as the maximum areas declared by the several proclamations. Thus,
+of lands open at 2d. an acre, the greatest area obtainable would be
+24,000 acres; at 1½d. an acre, 32,000 acres, and so on. The term
+may be fourteen, twenty-one, or twenty-eight years, as the opening
+proclamation may declare. The annual rent for the first period of
+seven years may range from ½d. an acre upwards, as may be proclaimed
+or tendered. The rent for each subsequent period of seven years will
+be determined by the Land Court.
+
+A Grazing Farm must be continuously occupied by the selector residing
+personally on it, or by his manager or agent doing so.
+
+Within three years from the issue of the license to occupy, or such
+extended time as the Land Court may allow, the selector must enclose
+the land with a good and substantial fence, and must keep it so fenced
+during the whole of the term. In the case of two or more contiguous
+farms, not exceeding in the aggregate 20,000 acres, the Court may
+by Special License permit the selectors to fence only the outside
+boundaries of the whole area. If the proclamation declaring the land
+open for selection so prescribed, the enclosing fence must be of such
+character as to prevent the passage of rabbits. In the case of a group
+of contiguous Grazing Farms not exceeding eight in number, or 200
+square miles in total area, and which are situated within a District
+constituted under "_The Rabbit Boards Act, 1896_," the Court may by
+Special License permit the enclosure of the whole area with a fence
+of such character as to prevent the passage of rabbits, instead of
+requiring each farm to be separately enclosed.
+
+The selectors of a group of two or more Grazing Farms, the area of
+none of which exceeds 4,000 acres, may associate together for mutual
+assistance, and on making proof of _bona fides_ to the Commissioner
+may receive from him a Special License enabling not less than one-half
+of the whole number by their personal residence on some one or more of
+the farms to perform the condition of occupation in respect of all the
+farms.
+
+When a Grazing Farm is enclosed in the manner required, the selector
+becomes entitled to a lease of it, and may thereafter mortgage it; or,
+with the permission of the Minister, may subdivide or transfer it; or,
+with the approval of the Court, may underlet it.
+
+
+GRAZING HOMESTEADS.
+
+Land open for selection as Grazing Farms must also be open for
+selection as Grazing Homesteads, and at the same rental and for the
+same term of lease. As already stated, an application to select as a
+Grazing Homestead takes precedence of a simultaneous application to
+select the same land as a Grazing Farm. The requirements of the law
+as regards Grazing Homesteads are the same as in the case of Grazing
+Farms, except in the following respects:--
+
+ (1.) During the first five years of the term of a Grazing
+ Homestead the condition of occupation must be performed by the
+ continuous personal residence of the selector on the land.
+
+ (2.) Before the expiration of five years from the commencement
+ of the term, or the death of the original lessee, whichever
+ first happens, a Grazing Homestead is not capable of being
+ assigned or transferred. Unless with the special permission of
+ the Minister, a Grazing Homestead may not be mortgaged.
+
+
+SCRUB SELECTIONS.
+
+Lands entirely or extensively overgrown by scrub may be opened for
+selection as Scrub Selections up to 10,000 acres in area and with a
+term of thirty years. These are classed according to the proportion
+covered by scrub, and for periods varying from five to twenty years,
+according to the classification, no rent is chargeable. During the
+first period the selector must clear the whole of the scrub in equal
+proportions each year, and must keep it cleared, and must enclose the
+selection with a good and substantial fence. The annual rent payable
+for the subsequent periods ranges from ½d. to 1d. an acre. A
+negotiable lease is issued to the selector when his application has
+been approved by the Court.
+
+
+UNCONDITIONAL SELECTIONS.
+
+The greatest area allowed to be acquired by any one person as an
+Unconditional Selection in one district is 1,280 acres; the price per
+acre ranges from 13s. 4d. upwards, and is payable in twenty annual
+instalments. As the term implies, no other condition than the payment
+of the purchase money is attached to this mode of selection. A
+negotiable lease for the term of twenty years is issued to the
+selector when his application to select has been approved by the
+Court. A deed of grant may be obtained at any time on payment of the
+balance of the purchasing price and the deed fee.
+
+
+PRICKLY PEAR SELECTIONS.
+
+PRICKLY PEAR INFESTED SELECTIONS.
+
+Prickly Pear Infested Selections comprise lands heavily infested with
+prickly pear. The area must not exceed 5,000 acres.
+
+The term is fifteen years, with a peppercorn rental for the first ten
+years and an annual rent of one-fifth of the purchasing price for the
+remaining five years. During the first ten years of the term the land
+must be absolutely cleared of prickly pear--one-tenth of the pear
+being eradicated during each year--and must be kept clear for the
+remainder of the term. The freehold may be obtained prior to the
+expiry of the term on proof being made that the land has been
+maintained free from prickly pear for three years consequent on the
+eradication having been completed in advance of the prescribed period.
+
+
+PRICKLY PEAR FRONTAGE SELECTIONS.
+
+Prickly Pear Frontage Selections are confined to proclaimed prickly
+pear frontage areas, comprising lands free from or only lightly
+infested with prickly pear, but which adjoin and do not extend for
+more than seven miles from lands heavily infested. The greatest area
+allowed is 5,000 acres.
+
+The term is fifteen years, with a peppercorn rental for the first five
+years and an annual rent of one-tenth of the purchasing price during
+the remaining ten years. During the first five years of the term the
+land must be absolutely cleared of prickly pear, one-fifth of the pear
+being eradicated during each year, and must be kept clear during the
+balance of the term. The freehold may be obtained prior to the expiry
+of the term on proof being made that the land has been maintained free
+from prickly pear for three years consequent on the eradication having
+been completed in advance of the prescribed period.
+
+PRICKLY PEAR (BONUS) SELECTIONS.
+
+In the case of Prickly Pear (Bonus) Selections, the freehold of the
+land, and a bonus in addition, are granted in return for the complete
+eradication of the pear. The maximum amount per acre payable as bonus
+is stated in the opening proclamation, but each applicant must lodge a
+tender specifying a bonus per acre not in excess of that mentioned
+in the proclamation. In the case of simultaneous applications for the
+same land, priority attaches to the lowest tender. The size of the
+portions opened must not exceed 2,560 acres. The term of lease is ten
+years, at a peppercorn rental throughout. The land must be absolutely
+cleared of prickly pear during the first seven years--one-seventh
+each year--and the clearing must be maintained until the expiry of the
+lease. One-seventh of the bonus payable may be claimed at the end
+of each of the first seven years of the term, on proof to the
+satisfaction of the Commissioner that the condition of eradication has
+been complied with. If the eradication is completed at an earlier date
+than is required by the conditions of the lease, the balance of the
+bonus will then become payable. The freehold may be obtained prior
+to the expiry of the term on proof being made that the land has been
+maintained free from prickly pear for three years consequent on the
+eradication having been completed in advance of the prescribed period.
+
+
+OTHER MODES OF ACQUISITION.
+
+Crown lands may be acquired in fee-simple by auction purchase in areas
+up to 5,120 acres. There is no limitation to the area of freehold land
+which may be held by any one person. The minimum purchasing price for
+agricultural land bought at auction is £1 an acre, and for other land
+10s. an acre. Terms up to ten years may be allowed, with interest at 5
+per cent. per annum on instalments paid after six months from the time
+of sale, or the purchaser may elect to hold the land as a lease in
+perpetuity at a rental, for the first ten years, equal to 3 per cent.
+of the purchasing price, and for such rent for each succeeding period
+of ten years as the Land Court may determine.
+
+Opportunity is also afforded for the occupation of Crown lands for
+pastoral purposes from year to year under an occupation license, or
+for a fixed term not exceeding forty-two years under pastoral lease.
+There is no limitation to the area which may be held by one person
+under either of these tenures.
+
+
+TERMS AND CONDITIONS OF SELECTION ON REPURCHASED ESTATES.
+
+"THE CLOSER SETTLEMENT ACT OF 1906."
+
+AGRICULTURAL FARMS.
+
+1. An application to select must be made in the prescribed form, in
+triplicate, and be lodged with the Land Agent for the district in
+which the land is situated. It must be signed by the applicant, but
+may be lodged in the District Land Office by his duly constituted
+attorney, and must be accompanied by a deposit of one-tenth of the
+purchasing price of the land and one-fifth of the prescribed survey
+fee.
+
+2. In the case of simultaneous applications for the same land,
+priority is secured by an applicant, other than a married woman or
+a single girl under twenty-one years of age, who, when making
+application, undertakes to reside personally on the land during the
+first five years of the term of lease. In other cases of simultaneous
+applications for the same land priority is determined by lot.
+
+3. Land cannot be acquired in the interest of another person, and an
+applicant is required to declare that he requires the land for his own
+exclusive benefit, and not as the agent, servant, or trustee of any
+other person. An alien may, on passing a reading and writing test,
+acquire a selection; but unless he becomes a naturalised subject of
+the King within three years thereafter, all his right, title, and
+interest in the land will become forfeited.
+
+4. The term of the lease of a selection is twenty-five years,
+dating from the 1st January or 1st July nearest to the date of the
+Commissioner's license to occupy the land.
+
+5. No rent will be payable during the second, third, or fourth years
+of the term. The rent payable during the remainder of the term will
+be at the rate of £8 2s. 7d. for every £100 of the purchasing price of
+the land, and will be allocated to principal and interest according to
+the table appended hereto.
+
+6. Within two years of the issue of a license to occupy, the selector
+must enclose the land with a good and substantial fence, or make
+substantial and permanent improvements on it of a value equal to the
+cost of such a fence, and must within such period make application
+to the Commissioner for a certificate that he has performed this
+condition.
+
+7. When the prescribed improvements are made, a lease will be issued
+to the selector, and the selection may then be mortgaged, or, with the
+permission of the Minister, may be subdivided or transferred, or, with
+the approval of the Land Court, may be sublet, except in the case of
+a selection on which the selector has undertaken to reside personally
+during the first five years of the term, in which case neither the
+lease nor the selector's right, title, or interest thereunder can be
+mortgaged, except to the trustees of the Agricultural Bank, assigned,
+or transferred during such period.
+
+8. A selection must be occupied by the residence thereon of the
+selector in person, or by his duly appointed agent, as the case may
+require or permit, during the whole term or until the leasehold tenure
+is determined by freehold.
+
+9. At any time after five years' occupation the leasehold tenure may
+be converted into freehold by payment of the unpaid balance of the
+purchasing price. The amount payable in any year, after payment of the
+rent for that year, shall be at the rate specified in the last column
+of the appended table for every £100 of the purchasing price.
+
+TABLE OF THE ANNUAL PAYMENTS TO BE MADE AS INSTALMENTS OF PURCHASE
+MONEY (SHOWING PRINCIPAL AND INTEREST SEPARATELY), AND THE PAYMENT,
+EXCLUSIVE OF RENT, TO BE MADE IN ANY YEAR AFTER THE FIFTH TO ACQUIRE
+THE FREEHOLD OF ANY SELECTION UNDER "THE CLOSER SETTLEMENT ACT OF
+1906."
+
+ ----------+-----------------+----------------+-----------------+---------------
+ | ANNUAL PAYMENT. | Payment to be
+ | | made in any
+ +-----------------+----------------+-----------------+ Year after the
+ | | | | Fifth to
+ | Principle. | Interest. | Total. | acquire
+ | | | | Freehold.
+ ----------+-----------------+----------------+-----------------+--------------
+ | £ _s._ _d._ | £ _s._ _d._ | £ _s._ _d._ | £ _s._ _d._
+ | | | |
+ 1st year | 10 0 0 | ... | 10 0 0 | ...
+ 2nd " | ... | ... | ... | ...
+ 3rd " | ... | ... | ... | ...
+ 4th " | ... | ... | ... | ...
+ 5th " | ... | 8 2 7 | 8 2 7 | ...
+ 6th " | ... | 8 2 7 | 8 2 7 | 98 4 2
+ 7th " | ... | 8 2 7 | 8 2 7 | 94 19 10
+ 8th " | ... | 8 2 7 | 8 2 7 | 91 12 3
+ 9th " | 1 18 7 | 6 4 0 | 8 2 7 | 88 1 6
+ 10th " | 3 14 6 | 4 8 2 | 8 2 7 | 84 7 0
+ 11th " | 3 18 2 | 4 4 5 | 8 2 7 | 80 8 10
+ 12th " | 4 2 1 | 4 0 6 | 8 2 7 | 76 6 9
+ 13th " | 4 6 3 | 3 16 4 | 8 2 7 | 72 0 6
+ 14th " | 4 10 6 | 3 12 1 | 8 2 7 | 67 10 0
+ 15th " | 4 15 1 | 3 7 6 | 8 2 7 | 62 14 11
+ 16th " | 4 19 10 | 3 2 9 | 8 2 7 | 57 15 1
+ 17th " | 5 4 10 | 2 17 9 | 8 2 7 | 52 10 3
+ 18th " | 5 10 0 | 2 12 7 | 8 2 7 | 47 0 3
+ 19th " | 5 15 6 | 2 7 1 | 8 2 7 | 41 4 9
+ 20th " | 6 1 4 | 2 1 3 | 8 2 7 | 35 3 5
+ 21st " | 6 7 4 | 1 15 3 | 8 2 7 | 28 16 1
+ 22nd " | 6 13 7 | 1 9 0 | 8 2 7 | 22 2 6
+ 23rd " | 7 0 4 | 1 2 3 | 8 2 7 | 15 2 2
+ 24th " | 7 7 4 | 0 15 3 | 8 2 7 | 7 14 10
+ 25th " | 7 14 10 | 0 7 9 | 8 2 7 |
+ +-----------------+----------------+-----------------+-------------
+ | £100 0 0 | £80 14 3 | £180 14 3 |
+ ----------+-----------------+----------------+-----------------+-------------
+
+
+[Illustration: VIEW ON BARRON RIVER, CAIRNS RAILWAY]
+
+
+AN ACT TO FACILITATE THE ACQUIREMENT OF SELECTIONS BY CERTAIN BODIES
+OF SETTLERS.
+
+"THE SPECIAL SELECTIONS ACT OF 1901."
+
+PREAMBLE.
+
+Whereas it is desirable to promote closer settlement upon the
+agricultural lands of Queensland by affording to bodies of settlers
+special facilities for the acquirement of Agricultural Selections
+to be held in conjunction with portions in adjacent Agricultural
+Townships: Be it therefore enacted by the King's Most Excellent
+Majesty, by and with the advice and consent of the Legislative Council
+and Legislative Assembly of Queensland in Parliament assembled, and by
+the authority of the same, as follows:--
+
+SHORT TITLE AND CONSTRUCTION OF ACT.
+
+1. This Act may be cited as "_The Special Selections Act of 1901_,"
+and shall be read and construed with and as an amendment of "_The Land
+Act, 1897_," hereinafter called the Principal Act.
+
+
+PROCLAMATION OF LANDS TO WHICH THIS ACT APPLIES.
+
+2. (1.) The Governor in Council may from time to time, by
+proclamation, declare any unoccupied country lands to be open for
+selection as Agricultural Homesteads, or as Agricultural Farms, or
+as Prickly Pear Selections, or as Perpetual Lease Selections, or as
+Grazing Selections, or as Agricultural Farms to be held in conjunction
+with Grazing Farms under the provisions of this Act by members of the
+body of settlers in the proclamation specified.
+
+Notwithstanding the provisions of section eighty-three of the
+Principal Act, such proclamation declaring the lands mentioned therein
+open for selection as Agricultural Homesteads need not also declare
+such lands to be also open for selection as Agricultural Farms.
+
+No Agricultural Homestead to be selected under the provisions of this
+Act shall exceed three hundred and twenty acres.
+
+No Prickly Pear Selection to be selected under the provisions of this
+Act shall exceed two thousand five hundred and sixty acres.
+
+No Grazing Farm to be held in conjunction with an Agricultural Farm
+selected under the provisions of this Act shall exceed two thousand
+acres, and the total aggregate area of the Agricultural Farm and the
+Grazing Farm held in conjunction therewith shall not exceed three
+thousand two hundred and eighty acres.
+
+No other Grazing Selection to be selected under the provisions of this
+Act shall exceed three thousand acres.
+
+Such lands shall remain open for selection under the provisions of
+this Act for such time as may be declared by Proclamation.
+
+During such time such lands shall be open to be selected only by
+persons who shall, at the time and in the manner prescribed, furnish
+to the Commissioner for the District in which the lands are situated
+proof that they are members of the body of settlers for whom such
+lands have been set apart.
+
+
+MAXIMUM AREA.
+
+(2.) No person shall at the same time apply for or hold two or more
+Homesteads under the provisions of this Act the aggregate area of
+which is greater than three hundred and twenty acres, or two or more
+Prickly Pear Selections under the provisions of this Act the aggregate
+area of which is greater than two thousand five hundred acres, or
+two or more Grazing Selections under the provisions of this Act the
+aggregate area of which is greater than three thousand acres.
+
+
+AGRICULTURAL TOWNSHIPS.
+
+(3.) The Governor in Council may by proclamation set apart any Crown
+lands in the said District as Agricultural Townships, and may cause
+the whole or any part of such lands to be subdivided into portions
+for purposes of residence. Such lands shall be in the vicinity of the
+lands open for selection under the foregoing provisions.
+
+The area of any portion shall not exceed ten acres.
+
+Any selector of a selection under the provisions of this Act shall
+also be entitled to one of the portions in an Agricultural Township,
+which portion shall, for the purposes of this Act, be deemed to be
+a part of the Selection, so that the condition of occupation may be
+performed by the residence of the selector either upon the Selection
+or upon the portion in the Township.
+
+The area of the portion in the Township shall not, however, be taken
+into consideration in estimating the maximum area which a selector may
+apply for or hold.
+
+
+IMPROVEMENTS.
+
+(4.) In order that the selector may become the purchaser of an
+Agricultural Selection under this Act, the certificate of the
+Commissioner given under section one hundred and thirty-four or one
+hundred and thirty-eight, as the case may be, of the Principal Act
+must show that a sum at the rate of ten shillings per acre has been
+expended in substantial and permanent improvements on the land.
+
+The value of any improvements made upon the portion in the Township
+shall be reckoned as part of the improvements required to be made upon
+the Selection.
+
+The provisions of this subsection do not apply to Prickly Pear
+Selections or to Perpetual Lease Selections or Grazing Selections.
+
+
+CONDITION OF OCCUPATION.
+
+(5.) During the first five years of the term of the lease of an
+Agricultural Farm (including an Agricultural Farm held in conjunction
+with a Grazing Farm) selected under this Act, the condition of
+occupation shall be performed by the continuous and _bona fide_
+personal residence of the lessee on the Selection; and subsection
+5A of section one hundred and thirty-two of the Principal Act shall
+accordingly be applicable.[a]
+
+(6.) During the first five years of the term of the lease of a Prickly
+Pear Selection selected under this Act, the lessee shall occupy
+the land; such condition of occupation shall be performed by the
+continuous and _bona fide_ personal residence of the lessee on the
+Selection; and during such period subsection 5A of section one
+hundred and thirty-two of the Principal Act, except the last paragraph
+thereof, shall be applicable to every such Prickly Pear Selection.
+
+(7.) Notwithstanding anything in the Principal Act, or any Act
+amending the same, when the proclamation opening the land for
+selection so declares, lots which are not contiguous may be applied
+for and held as one selection under this Act.
+
+
+REGULATIONS.
+
+3. The Governor in Council may make Regulations prescribing the manner
+in which applicants for selections under the provisions of this Act
+shall give proof of their qualification to become selectors, and
+prescribing such other matters and things as may be necessary to give
+effect to the provisions of this Act.
+
+ [Footnote a: Inter alia the subsection referred to provides
+ that the lessee shall not, during the first five years of the
+ term of the lease, mortgage, assign, or transfer the lease.]
+
+
+
+
+APPENDIX F.
+
+IMMIGRATION TO QUEENSLAND.
+
+[OFFICIAL COMPILATION.]
+
+ASSISTED IMMIGRANTS.
+
+1. Immigrants approved by the Agent-General, who deposit with him
+the sum of £50, shall be provided with passages by a steamer from the
+United Kingdom to any port in Queensland for £5, the £50 deposit to be
+returned to them on their arrival in Queensland.
+
+
+NOMINATED IMMIGRANTS.
+
+2. Persons resident in Queensland wishing to obtain passages for their
+friends or relatives in the United Kingdom, or on the Continent of
+Europe, may do so under the provisions of the 9th section of "_The
+Immigration Act of 1882_," at the following rates:--
+
+ £ _s._ _d._
+ Males between 18 and 40 years 4 0 0
+ Females between 18 and 40 years 2 0 0
+ Males and Females over 40 and under 55 years 8 0 0
+
+A full description of the nominee must appear on the application form
+supplied by the Immigration Department of Queensland. The application
+must be signed by the nominor, who must be of full age.
+
+The Immigration Agent or Clerk of Petty Sessions must satisfy himself
+by personal inquiry that the person for whose passage application is
+made is a relative or personal friend of the applicant.
+
+Passage warrants shall be made out in duplicate. One copy, to be
+marked "provisional," will be issued to the applicant and the other
+copy, to be marked "final," will be sent to the Agent-General,
+who will cause inquiries to be made through his agents as to the
+eligibility of the persons named therein to be nominated under the
+provisions of this Order.
+
+If the Agent-General is satisfied that all the conditions of
+this Order have been complied with he will, upon surrender of the
+provisional warrant, issue the final warrant to the person nominated,
+which will entitle him to a passage contract ticket.
+
+A memorandum shall be printed on the provisional warrant stating that
+it must be surrendered and exchanged for a final warrant at the office
+of the Agent-General before a passage can be obtained.
+
+The Agent-General will refuse to issue a final warrant to any person
+named in a provisional warrant if he finds that such person is not
+eligible to be nominated under the provisions of this Order, or
+that the description in the application is incorrect in any material
+particular, or that the nominee is otherwise undesirable.
+
+
+CONTRACT IMMIGRANTS.
+
+3. Free passages may be granted from the United Kingdom to any part of
+Queensland to agricultural labourers introduced under contract if the
+employer pays a fee of £5 for each labourer introduced, provides him
+with suitable accommodation, and guarantees him a year's employment at
+wages approved by the Chief Secretary. The choosing of such labourers
+to be left to the Agent-General, unless they are known to the
+applicant, in which case the Agent-General's duty is restricted to
+passing or rejecting them.
+
+
+FREE IMMIGRANTS.
+
+4. The Agent-General may grant free passages to the wives and children
+(under the age of 18 years) of assisted, nominated, and contract
+immigrants and to female domestic servants who are desirous of
+emigrating to Queensland.
+
+5. The Chief Secretary may direct that a passage warrant be not issued
+in respect of any person nominated or proposed to be indented.
+
+6. The Order in Council of the fourth day of June, 1891, published in
+the _Government Gazette_ of the 5th June, 1891, shall be and is hereby
+rescinded.
+
+And the Honourable the Chief Secretary is to give the necessary
+directions herein accordingly.
+
+
+
+
+APPENDIX G.
+
+SOME STATISTICS AND THEIR STORY.
+
+
+The figures contained in this Appendix, save those for 1908, and in
+relation to certain financial matters for 1908-9, are drawn from the
+Statistics for 1908 laid before Parliament this year, but all are
+official.
+
+GROWTH OF POPULATION.
+
+The population of Queensland, estimated at 28,056 on 31st December,
+1860, a little more than a year after separation from New South Wales,
+more than doubled during the succeeding three years. Thence it again
+more than doubled in the next eight years, the census of April, 1871,
+providing a basis for the estimate of 125,146 at the end of that year.
+Thence to 1882, two years before the close of the quarter-century,
+the figures had again nearly doubled, the population on 31st December,
+1884, reaching 309,913.
+
+Of the number of arrivals in excess of departures there is no record
+for 1860 or 1861, but of the total increase, 51,509, for the four
+years ended 1865 the recorded arrivals in excess of departures
+aggregated 46,422, leaving only 5,087 for excess of births over deaths
+for the period. In 1866, in spite of the crisis resulting from the
+Agra and Masterman's Bank failure, there was still an excess of 6,632;
+but by the next following year the number of such excess had fallen to
+917, while the net increase of population in that year was only 3,648.
+
+The census of 1886, the second year of the new quarter-century, showed
+a total population of 342,614, and the next census five years later
+410,330. This marked the end of the "boom" period, and the amount
+spent on immigration, as compared with 1883 and 1884, was cut down in
+the next year by nearly three-fourths, or from the maximum of £361,632
+in 1883-4 to £91,143 in 1889-90. In 1891 there was severe commercial
+depression, and by that time arrivals had annually decreased, and
+departures came very near in numbers to the arrivals. During the next
+ten years the increase in population, as shown by the census, was
+95,614, bringing the total up to 505,944.
+
+Here it may be explained that the intercensus estimates between 1891
+and 1901 proved fallacious, for the total number in the latter year
+was 6,660 less than the estimate had been for two years previously,
+although the arrivals for the intervening period recorded an excess
+over departures of 6,389. So that adding to that number the 17,350
+increase by excess of births over deaths the population in 1901 would
+have been shown as 536,343 had the estimates between the censuses been
+continued on similar lines. The error would therefore have been 30,399
+had not the census figures in 1901 enabled an adjustment to be made.
+Similar over-estimating had occurred previously, it is understood,
+through many oversea departures not being recorded by those who
+supplied information to the department. Of late years allowances have
+been made for unrecorded arrivals and departures in preparing
+the intercensus returns, and it may be hoped that in future the
+discrepancies will be less disconcerting than in the past.
+
+The population at the end of the first quarter-century having been
+309,913, and on 31st December last year (1908) 558,237, the increase
+for the period was 248,324. But the second quarter-century does not
+actually close until 31st December next, when the total population
+should be approximately 570,000 souls. During the half-century,
+therefore, the number of people in Queensland as compared with the
+population in 1859 may be taken to have multiplied by twenty-two.
+In other words, at the time of separation, a year earlier than the
+official record begins, the total population was scarcely greater than
+it now is in several of our provincial cities.
+
+
+PUBLIC FINANCE.
+
+Public revenue, which began in 1860 with a total of £178,589, reached
+£2,720,656 in 1884-5, the figures of the natal year being multiplied
+nearly fifteen times at the close of the quarter-century. The second
+quarter-century showed continued increase until 1888-9, but the
+figures of that year were not again reached until 1895-6. They
+progressed until in 1899-1900, the last year before federation, they
+reached over 4½ millions sterling, an amount not again realised till
+1908-9. In 1901 the State figures were considerably disturbed by the
+proclamation of the Commonwealth on 1st January. In 1901-2 there was
+a large apparent decline of £1,053,145, the Commonwealth having
+taken over the whole of the postal and telegraph revenue and about
+one-fourth of the Customs. There was also a considerable loss by the
+discontinuance of State border duties, as well as by the Commonwealth
+tariff, which took effect in the second quarter of 1901-2, many
+revenue duties being either sacrificed or lowered in favour of
+protectionist imposts which only yielded revenue until they excluded
+imports. By 1908-9, despite the loss of post-telegraph and Customs
+revenue, the total receipts at the State Treasury formed the
+half-century record of £4,766,244.
+
+The expenditure on loan account began with the foundation of the
+colony. At the end of the first quarter-century the public debt
+amounted to £16,570,850, exclusive of Government Savings Bank and
+Treasury bills obligations. In the first decade of the second quarter
+it had almost doubled, standing at the end of 1894 at £30,639,534.
+By the end of 1900 there had been a further increase of nearly 5
+millions, and on 30th June, 1909, it stood at £41,568,827, or at the
+rate of £74 per head of the estimated population. But the railway net
+earnings alone of the last two financial years (1907-8 and 1908-9)
+have provided a mean sum of £884,616 per annum towards the interest
+charge.
+
+
+LAND STATISTICS.
+
+In 1860 there were 108,870 acres of land alienated in Queensland.
+In 1872 the area exceeded 1 million acres, the first quarter-century
+closing in 1884 with over 7 million acres. The 10-million-acre limit
+was passed in 1890, and the 15-million-acre limit in 1908, when the
+total area alienated was 15,108,439 acres.
+
+The cash received at the Treasury from land sales up to the close
+of 1884 was over 4¾ millions, and at the close of 1908 exceeded 8½
+millions sterling. In process of alienation there were then over
+6 million acres. For the last ten years the total area leased or
+otherwise in occupation has been recorded. In 1899 the area thus
+occupied was 296½ million acres, and in 1906 only 247 million
+acres. Since then there has been some recovery in this respect, the
+total occupied area of Crown lands being now 273,180,864 acres. The
+unoccupied area in 1899 was over 131¼ million acres, and in 1902
+only 121½ million acres. Since then there has been both an increase
+and a decrease, the area unoccupied in 1908 being almost 135 million
+acres, equal to nearly one-third of the total area of the State. This
+unoccupied land consists largely of rangy and waterless country, but
+a not inconsiderable area would be occupiable were water and transport
+facilities provided, and much of it is in what the geologists have
+delimited as the artesian area.
+
+
+LIVE STOCK.
+
+In 1860 the number of live stock in Queensland totalled--Horses,
+23,504; cattle, 432,890; sheep, 3,449,350; pigs, 7,147. There was an
+almost continual yearly increase in horses until 1902, when drought
+reduced the number by 62,997, or at the rate of about 14 per cent. Not
+until 1907 was this loss recovered, when the total number of horses
+stood at 488,486, the number being still further increased in 1908 to
+519,969. There was an almost uninterrupted increase of cattle until
+1882, when the total exceeded 4¼ millions. At the close of the
+quarter-century the number was 4,266,172. In 1885 and 1886, owing to
+a drought, there was again a small decline in cattle numbers, but from
+that time there was a continued increase until 1894, when the total of
+7 millions was recorded. But droughts and the tick pest had cut them
+down to less than 2½ millions in 1903. In 1908 the number had
+recovered to 4,321,600. The enlarged Australian consumption has been
+a factor in the shrinkage of numbers, but the large increase in prices
+fully compensated the owners for the diminished numbers of their
+herds. The increased price of wool during recent years renders the
+same remark applicable to the sheep-owners of the State; and it may
+be said generally that the pastoral industry was never in a more
+flourishing condition.
+
+Sheep, which totalled fewer than 3½ millions in 1860, reached 7¼
+millions in 1866, and 9 millions two years later. Thence till 1878
+there was a series of fluctuations which brought the total in that
+year below 6 millions. But in 1882 the number had vaulted to over 12
+millions, after which there was a descent to a little more than 9¼
+millions at the close of the quarter-century. The year 1885 closed
+with a further decrease, but by 1887 the number had increased to
+nearly 13 millions. Three years later it reached 18 millions, and in
+1892 it touched the record of nearly 21¾ millions. By 1900, which
+had been preceded by bad seasons, the number of sheep had dropped to
+10-1/3 millions, and in the second year of the twentieth century the
+low-water mark of less than 7¼ millions was touched. Since then
+there has been a rapid increase, and the numbers in 1908 had recovered
+to 18,348,851, or within 3,359,459 of the record number of seventeen
+years ago. It must be mentioned that, while scanty rainfall on the
+Western pastures was accountable for much of the depletion in stock
+numbers, overstocking and absence of possible provision for bad
+seasons had much to do with the losses incurred. However, the second
+quarter-century will close with flocks in number almost equal to those
+of 1892, and with fleeces immensely more valuable than the pastures
+then carried, and the stock-carrying capacity of the country has
+also been much increased by fencing, water conservation, and artesian
+wells.
+
+Pigs are also becoming a valuable asset of the Queensland
+dairy farmer. In 1860 they numbered 7,147; at the close of the
+quarter-century, 51,796; and in December, 1908, 124,749.
+
+[Illustration: HAULING TIMBER, BARRON RIVER, NORTH QUEENSLAND]
+
+
+DAIRYING.
+
+The phenomenal growth of the dairying industry is shown by the table
+headed "Dairying." It shows that, whereas in 1860 10,400 lb. butter
+were imported and 450 lb. exported, in 1908 there were 23,838,357 lb.
+made, 13,752,118 lb. exported, and only 201,924 lb. imported. Even in
+1896 Queensland could hardly be accounted a butter-exporting country,
+when the shipments were only 13,942 lb., the imports 1,003,680 lb.,
+and the quantity made 6,164,240 lb., for in that year the excess
+of imports was 989,738 lb.; while in 1908 the excess of exports was
+13,550,194 lb., or more than a moiety of the amount manufactured. Of
+cheese, in 1896 the quantity made was 1,921,404 lb., whereas in 1908
+it had increased to 3,199,510 lb., and the amount exported was 732,090
+lb., the excess of exports over imports being 685,629 lb. Twenty-five
+years ago the excess of imports over exports was 1,068,033 lb., which
+meant that there were practically no exports. Even in 1896 the cheese
+exported totalled only 8,505 lb. It is evident that the dairying
+industry in Queensland is yet only in its youth, and that in another
+quarter of a century the exports of both cheese and butter will have
+increased enormously.
+
+
+SUGAR PRODUCTION.
+
+Sugar first appears as a Queensland export in 1870, the quantity
+being, however, only 26 cwt. By 1879 the quantity had reached 206,269
+cwt., the quarter-century closing in 1884 with 368,626 cwt., valued
+at £454,759. But these figures do not represent the quantity of sugar
+manufactured, the total in 1884 being given at 33,361 tons, the export
+being 18,431 tons. In 1885 the export, as compared with the previous
+year, increased by 58½ per cent. in value. In 1888 the value
+declined to £384,375, or by more than one-half as compared with
+1886. Thence for many years there was a fluctuating export, a drop to
+£681,038 in 1897 being followed by a jump to £1,329,876 in 1898. Two
+years later there was a heavy fall to £669,389 worth; then two years'
+progression followed by a fall to £646,875 in 1903. In 1904, owing
+to the Commonwealth bounty and good seasons, there was a recovery to
+£1,257,815, followed by substantial progression each following year,
+till 1907, when the record export of £1,779,624 was made. In 1908,
+owing to abnormal frosts, there was a decline to £1,482,320.
+
+The quantity of sugar made of course showed corresponding
+fluctuations. In 1896 the 100,000-ton limit of manufacture was for the
+first time passed. It was followed by a slight drop in the following
+year, but in 1898 the record to that date in manufacture, as well as
+in export, was made, the product of the mills reaching the high figure
+of 163,734 tons. After that year there was a fluctuating decline in
+manufacture to the minimum of 76,626 tons in 1902, the great drought
+year; but there was an improvement in 1903, and in 1905 152,722 tons
+were manufactured, the two following years being very close together
+with a mean production of 186,342 tons. In 1908 the sugar manufactured
+was 151,098 tons, a decrease, through frost, of 37,209 tons for the
+year. In glancing through the figures not only will the effects of
+good and bad seasons be recognised, but also of the suspension of
+kanaka labour importation in 1888, its revival in 1890, and the
+payment of the Commonwealth bounty during the last five years.
+
+
+MINERAL PRODUCTION.
+
+When in 1866 railway construction suddenly ceased, both on the
+Southern and Central (then called the Northern) lines, there was
+general distress, mitigated shortly afterwards by the discovery of
+gold at the Crocodile Field, near Rockhampton; and in 1867 by the
+opening up of the Gympie Goldfield. The first important discovery of
+gold, however, had been on the Peak Downs in 1862, after which the
+production of that metal advanced from 2,783 oz. in 1863 to 15,660 oz.
+in 1864, slightly in excess of which level it remained for the next
+two years. The gold raised then jumped to 35,581 oz. in 1867, and to
+111,589 oz. in 1868. During the next two years the production dropped
+by about 19,000 oz., but it recovered to 115,986 oz. in 1871. In 1874
+it made another big jump to 254,959 oz., owing to the discoveries at
+the Palmer, Charters Towers, and elsewhere in the North. This volume
+of production was rather more than maintained during the next two
+years, after which there was a fluctuating annual diminution until
+1887, when there was a recovery to 348,890 oz. For seven years of
+the first quarter-century the value of gold won exceeded a million
+sterling per annum, high-water mark being touched in 1875--a year of
+heavy rainfall and abundant water--with a gold yield of £1,196,583.
+
+In gold production the second quarter-century opened well with a total
+of 250,137 oz., and this yield for 1885 was followed by continuous
+progression until 1889, when the total of 634,605 oz., valued
+at £2,695,629, was reached. Thence for seven years there was a
+fluctuating decline, the minimum of 477,976 oz. being touched in 1891.
+From that year there was a gradual recovery until in 1898 647,487 oz.
+was reached, the record being made with 676,027 oz. in the last year
+of the century. Since then there has been a continuous annual decline
+until the total gold raised in 1908 had fallen to 465,085 oz., which
+is rather less than half the quantity declared to be exported in 1898
+and 1903. But the export and production figures of course differ, the
+former being the actual weight exported in the year, which may be
+less or more than the production. Moreover, the production figures
+are stated in fine ounces, so that the difference between gold won and
+exported is considerably less than the figures would at first sight
+indicate.
+
+Of copper the recorded quantity produced in 1860 was only one ton,
+valued at £50; but two years later the value reached £10,332 through
+the discovery of the Peak Downs mines. The two following years showed
+an almost entire cessation of export, although some £90,000 worth had
+been won. In 1865 the value of copper produced was £58,440. Thence
+there was fluctuating progression until 1871, when the value rose to
+£174,300, with a further rise to £196,000 in 1872. Declension
+followed until in 1882 the production had dropped to £14,982, the
+quarter-century closing in 1884 with a total of £30,872 worth. The
+explanation is that during the period there was practically only one
+copper mine at work in Queensland, and that in 1871 the policy was
+commenced of smelting all the richer ores and paying the highest
+possible dividends. In one year an amount of about £300,000, equal
+to the total capital of the company, was distributed, and shortly
+afterwards the mine was closed for want of remunerative ore. Had money
+been freely spent in exploration, as at the Mount Morgan Gold Mine,
+and only moderate dividends paid to the shareholders, it is
+believed that the life of the Peak Downs Copper Mine would have been
+indefinitely prolonged.
+
+During sixteen years of the second quarter-century copper mining
+languished, the highest production in any one year being valued at
+£20,340, while in 1891 the lowest descended to £865. In 1901, however,
+through the opening of the Chillagoe mine, the production rose to
+£194,227 worth; by 1906 it had continuously ascended to £916,546,
+and in 1907 to £1,028,179. In 1908 there was a phenomenal decline in
+production value, owing to the low price obtainable for copper, the
+total being stated at £882,901.
+
+The first production of tin is recorded in 1872, when the yield was
+valued at £109,816, through the discovery of stream tin in the Severn
+River district of Queensland. The record year for tin production of
+the half-century was in 1873, when the value raised was £606,184.
+Thence there was a fluctuating decline in output till 1884, which
+closed with £130,460 worth for the year.
+
+In the second quarter-century there was a fluctuating diminution of
+production, till in 1898 it was only worth £36,502. After that date
+there was a continuous improvement, the figures reached in 1907 being
+£496,766. The tin won in 1908 was declared to be of the value of only
+£342,191, the reduction arising chiefly from lowered market prices.
+
+The coal raised in Queensland in 1860 was only 12,327 tons; in 1884
+120,727 tons were raised; and in 1908 the production was 696,332 tons,
+valued at £244,922.
+
+
+IMPORTS AND EXPORTS.
+
+The imports into Queensland in 1860 were of the declared value of
+£742,023; at the close of the first quarter-century they exceeded
+6¼ millions a year; in 1900 they exceeded 7 millions; in 1908 they
+totalled nearly 9½ millions.
+
+The declared value of exports totalled a little more than half a
+million in 1860; the first quarter-century closed in 1884 with a total
+of under 4¾ millions. In 1889 the value was slightly under 7¾
+millions, and in 1908 it reached over 14 millions. During the last
+quarter-century the exports have trebled in value, while the imports
+have increased by only about 48·4 per cent. These figures indicate
+that the State is rapidly liquidating its external indebtedness
+on private account, whatever may be the increase in public loan
+obligations.
+
+
+RAILWAYS.
+
+Railways form a very gratifying asset. In 1865 there were only
+twenty-one miles open for traffic, and they yielded no net revenue.
+In 1884 there were 1,207 miles open, of which the net earnings were
+£273,096. In 1898 2,742 miles open had £534,992 of net earnings. In
+1901 there were 2,801 miles open, with net earnings of £223,853 only,
+the cause being the historic drought of the period. Since then there
+has been a rapid increase in both traffic and profit, the net earnings
+of 3,498 miles in 1908-9 having been £885,622. These figures afford
+complete justification for a policy of vigorous construction, for they
+show that the capital invested in our railways, £25,183,529, earned
+£3 10s. 4d. per cent. in 1907-8. In 1908-9 the net earnings were
+£883,610, the return on capital invested being £3 7s. 6d. per cent.
+
+With the object of supplying the latest official data, the Government
+Statistician, Mr. Thornhill Weedon, has compiled the following tables,
+which practically divide the half-century into four equal periods. It
+must be borne in mind that, except under the heading "Finance," the
+statistics are for the calendar year and not for the financial year,
+which closes on 30th June:--
+
+COMPARATIVE STATISTICS.
+
+VITAL STATISTICS.
+
+ -----------------------+-------------------------------------------------
+ | CALENDAR YEAR.
+ +---------+---------+---------+---------+---------
+ | 1860. | 1872. | 1884. | 1896. | 1908.
+ -----------------------+---------+---------+---------+---------+---------
+ Births No. | 1,236 | 5,265 | 10,679 | 14,017 | 14,828
+ | | | | |
+ Marriages No. | 278 | 1,125 | 2,661 | 2,823 | 4,009
+ | | | | |
+ Deaths No. | 478 | 1,936 | 6,861 | 5,645 | 5,680
+ | | | | |
+ Population, State No. | 28,056 | 133,553 | 309,913 | 472,179 | 558,237
+ | | | | |
+ " Brisbane [a] No. | 6,051 | 15,002 | 23,001 | 110,554 | 137,670
+ -----------------------+---------+---------+---------+---------+---------
+
+ [Footnote a: The area in 1860, 1872, and 1884 is not quite the
+ same as that in 1896 and 1908, but the population quoted is
+ fairly representative.]
+
+
+FINANCE.
+
+ ----------------------+----------------------------------------------------
+ | FINANCIAL YEAR.
+ +---------+---------+----------+----------+----------
+ | 1860. | 1872. | 1883-4. | 1895-6. | 1907-8.[b]
+ ----------------------+---------+---------+----------+----------+----------
+ REVENUE-- | | | | |
+ | | | | |
+ From Customs and | | | | |
+ Excise £| 59,210 | 419,853 | 900,916 | 1,361,212| 1,498,131
+ | | | | |
+ From other sources £| 119,379 | 576,471 | 1,665,442| 2,280,371| 3,953,501
+ | | | | |
+ Total Revenue £| 178,589 | 996,324 | 2,566,358| 3,641,583| 5,451,632
+ | | | | |
+ EXPENDITURE-- | | | | |
+ | | | | |
+ From Revenue £| 161,503 | 865,743 | 2,532,045| 3,567,947| 5,336,330
+ | | | | |
+ From Loan ... ... £| 19,384 | 156,424 | 1,665,823| 592,158| 1,033,676
+ | | | | |
+ ----------------------+---------+---------+----------+----------+----------
+
+ [Footnote b: The figures for 1907-8 include both Federal and
+ State collections and disbursements on Queensland account.]
+
+
+BANKING.
+
+ ----------------+-----------------------------------------------------------
+ | CALENDAR YEAR.
+ +---------+-----------+------------+------------+-----------
+ | 1860. | 1872. | 1884. | 1896. | 1908.
+ ----------------+---------+-----------+------------+------------+-----------
+ BANKING | | | | |
+ COMPANIES-- | | | | |
+ | | | | |
+ Assets £| 574,661 | 2,200,346 | 11,155,423 | 18,850,945 | 19,122,646
+ | | | | |
+ Advances £| 490,861 | 1,489,515 | 9,338,716 | 15,481,960 | 14,698,195
+ | | | | |
+ Liabilities £| 332,173 | 1,842,848 | 7,662,543 | 11,346,303 | 16,072,757
+ | | | | |
+ Deposits £| 286,917 | 1,590,283 | 6,322,025 | 10,879,640 | 15,440,427
+ | | | | |
+ SAVINGS BANK-- | | | | |
+ | | | | |
+ Depositors No.| 163 | 8,121 | 33,067 | 58,226 | 100,324
+ | | | | |
+ Amount to credit| | | | |
+ at end of year £| 7,545 | 466,754 | 1,220,614 | 2,329,381 | 4,921,881
+ ----------------+---------+-----------+------------+------------+-----------
+
+
+CROWN LANDS.
+
+ -----------+---------------------------------------------------------------
+ | CALENDAR YEAR.
+ +-----------+------------+------------+------------+------------
+ | 1860. | 1872. | 1884. | 1896. | 1908.
+ -----------+-----------+------------+------------+------------+------------
+ Area | | | | |
+ Alienated | | | | |
+ Acres | 108,870| 1,069,208| 7,099,275| 12,850,843| 15,108,439
+ | | | | |
+ In Process | | | | |
+ of | | | | |
+ Alienation | | | | |
+ Acres | ... | ... | ... | 1,776,034| 6,200,930
+ | | | | |
+ Leased or | | | | |
+ otherwise | | | | |
+ occupied | | | | |
+ Acres | 41,027,200| 123,737,093| 316,113,760| 254,787,200| 273,180,864
+ | | | | |
+ Not | | | | |
+ occupied | | | | |
+ Acres |387,983,930| 304,313,699| 105,906,965| 159,705,923| 134,629,767
+ -----------+-----------+------------+------------+------------+------------
+
+
+LIVE STOCK.
+
+ -------------+------------------------------------------------------------
+ | CALENDAR YEAR.
+ +-----------+-----------+-----------+------------+-----------
+ | 1860. | 1872. | 1884. | 1896. | 1908.
+ -------------+-----------+-----------+-----------+------------+-----------
+ Horses | 23,504 | 92,798 | 253,116 | 452,207 | 519,969
+ | | | | |
+ Cattle | 432,890 | 1,200,992 | 4,266,172 | 6,507,377 | 4,321,600
+ | | | | |
+ Sheep | 3,449,350 | 6,687,907 | 9,308,911 | 19,593,696 | 18,348,851
+ | | | | |
+ Pigs | 7,147 | 35,732 | 51,796 | 97,434 | 124,749
+ -------------+-----------+-----------+-----------+------------+-----------
+
+
+DAIRYING.
+
+ ------------------+------------------------------------------------------------
+ | CALENDAR YEAR.
+ +-----------+------------+-----------+-----------+-----------
+ | 1860. | 1872. | 1884. | 1896. | 1908.
+ ------------------+-----------+------------+-----------+-----------+-----------
+ | | | | |
+ BUTTER-- | | | | |
+ Made Lb.| ... | ... | ... | 6,164,240 | 23,838,357
+ | | | | |
+ Imported Lb.| 10,400 | 454,698 | 1,271,964 | 1,003,680 | 201,924
+ | | | | |
+ Exported Lb.| 450 | 1,310 | 12,724 | 13,942 | 13,752,118
+ | | | | |
+ Excess of | | | | |
+ Imports Lb.| 9,950 | 453,388 | 1,259,240 | 989,738 | ...
+ | | | | |
+ Excess of | | | | |
+ Exports Lb.| ... | ... | ... | ... | 13,550,194
+ | | | | |
+ Estimated | | | | |
+ Wholesale | | | | |
+ Price of | | | | |
+ Butter Per Lb.| 1s. 11¼d. | 9½d. | 11d. | 10d. | 10¾d.
+ | | | | |
+ | | | | |
+ CHEESE-- | | | | |
+ Made Lb.| ... | ... | ... | 1,921,404 | 3,199,510
+ | | | | |
+ Imported £| 1,559 |lb. 186,916 | 1,069,620 | 77,275 | 46,464
+ | | | | |
+ Exported £| 247 |lb. 20 | 1,587 | 8,505 | 732,093
+ | | | | |
+ Excess of | | | | |
+ Imports £| 1,312 |lb. 186,896 | 1,068,033 | 68,770 | ...
+ | | | | |
+ Excess of | | | | |
+ Exports £| ... | ... | ... | ... | 685,629
+ ------------------+-----------+------------+-----------+-----------+-----------
+
+
+AGRICULTURE.
+
+ -----------------------+----------------------------------------------------
+ | CALENDAR YEAR.
+ +-------+--------+------------+-----------+----------
+ | 1860. | 1872. | 1884. | 1896. | 1908.
+ -----------------------+-------+--------+------------+-----------+----------
+ | | | | |
+ Total Area Cropped | | | | |
+ Acres| 3,838 | 62,491 | 187,381 | 322,678 | 535,900
+ | | | | |
+ Wheat, Area for Grain | | | | |
+ Acres| 196 | 3,661 | 11,389 | 34,670 | 80,898
+ | | | | |
+ " Result of Crop | | | | |
+ Bushels| ... | 78,734 | 195,727 | 601,254 | 1,202,799
+ | | | | |
+ Maize, Area for Grain | | | | |
+ Acres| 1,526 | 21,143 | 61,064 | 115,715 | 127,655
+ | | | | |
+ " Result of Crop | | | | |
+ Bushels| ... | ... | 1,312,939 | 3,065,333 | 2,767,600
+ | | | | |
+ English Potatoes, area | | | | |
+ Acres| 333 | 2,837 | 3,775 | 7,672 | 6,227
+ | | | | |
+ " Result of Crop | | | | |
+ Tons| ... | ... | 6,834 | 18,451 | 11,550
+ | | | | |
+ Sugar-cane, Area Cut | | | | |
+ Acres| ... | 5,018 | 29,930 | 66,640 | 92,219
+ | | | | |
+ " Result of Crop, | | | | |
+ Cane Tons| ... | ... | ... | ... | 1,433,315
+ | | | | |
+ " Result of Crop, | | | | |
+ Sugar Made Tons| ... | 6,266 | 33,361 | 100,774 | 151,098
+ -----------------------+-------+--------+------------+-----------+----------
+
+
+MINING.
+
+ -------------------+-----------------------------------------------------
+ | CALENDAR YEAR.
+ +--------+---------+-----------+-----------+----------
+ | 1860. | 1872. | 1884. | 1896. | 1908.
+ -------------------+--------+---------+-----------+-----------+----------
+ Gold raised in | | | | |
+ Queensland Oz.| 2,738 | 124,163 | 250,127 | 502,146| 465,085
+ £| 11,631 | 537,365 | 1,062,471 | 2,132,979| 1,975,554
+ | | | | |
+ Silver raised in | | | | |
+ Queensland £| | | 35,327 | 32,162 | 117,889
+ | | | | |
+ Copper raised in | | | | |
+ Queensland Tons| 1 | 2,448 | 1,653 | 580 | 14,698
+ £| 50 | 196,000 | 30,872 | 21,042 | 882,901
+ | | | | |
+ Tin raised in | | | | |
+ Queensland Tons| | 1,407 | 3,383 | 1,554 | 4,826
+ £| | 109,816 | 130,460 | 49,018 | 342,191
+ | | | | |
+ Coal raised in | | | | |
+ Queensland Tons| 12,327 | 27,727 | 120,727 | 371,390 | 696,332
+ £| 9,244 | 16,120 | 60,025 | 154,987 | 244,922
+ | | | | |
+ All other in | | | | |
+ Queensland £| | | 6,469 | 30,440 | 281,030
+ | | | | |
+ Total £| 20,925 | 849,301 | 1,325,624 | 2,420,628 | 3,844,487
+ -------------------+--------+---------+-----------+-----------+----------
+
+
+SECONDARY PRODUCTION.
+
+ -------------------------------------------------------------------------
+ CALENDAR YEAR.
+ -----------------+-------+---------+-----------+------------+------------
+ | 1860. | 1872. | 1884. | 1906. | 1908.
+ -----------------+-------+---------+-----------+------------+------------
+ FACTORIES No.| 13 | 593 | 955 | 1,332 | 1,481
+ Hands | | | | |
+ Employed No.| | | | 19,733 | 29,510
+ Plant and | | | | |
+ Machinery £| | | | 6,145,548 | 4,484,340
+ Output £| | | | 6,482,824 | 11,242,437
+ Leather Lb.| | 427,168 | 2,221,856 | 3,324,832 | (c)152,611
+ Butter Lb.| | | | 6,164,240 | 23,838,357
+ Cheese Lb.| | | | 1,921,404 | 3,199,510
+ Bacon and | | | | |
+ Hams Lb.| | | | 5,108,726 | 11,324,323
+ Meat, | | | | |
+ Cured Lb.| | | 4,283,024 | 69,442,447 | 50,418,522
+ Timber, Sawn | | | | |
+ Super. Ft.| | | | 22,309,900 | 100,759,016
+ -----------------+-------+---------+-----------+------------+------------
+ [Footnote c: Now collected on sides.]
+
+
+IMPORTS.
+
+ ---------------------+-----------------------------------------------------
+ | CALENDAR YEAR.
+ +---------+----------+----------+-----------+---------
+ | 1860. | 1872. | 1884. | 1896. | 1908.
+ ---------------------+---------+----------+----------+-----------+---------
+ Apparel, including | | | | |
+ Boots and Shoes £| 32,701 | 113,371 | 318,910 | 232,077 | 552,071
+ Linen, Drapery, and | | | | |
+ Haberdashery £| 154,454 | 293,155 | 742,357 | 806,638 |1,233,776
+ Wine, Beer, and | | | | |
+ Spirits £| 66,909 | 177,601 | 394,764 | 247,259 | 325,484
+ Tobacco, Cigar, &c. £| 17,727 | 30,659 | 78,093 | 74,501 | 204,131
+ Wheat, Flour, | | | | |
+ Biscuits, &c. £| 95,318 | 208,447 | 383,504 | 555,460 | 483,794
+ Other Grain and | | | | |
+ Products thereof £| 4,867 | 42,991 | 197,929 | 118,968 | 202,549
+ Potatoes and Onions £| 3,410 | 15,789 | 77,897 | 104,233 | 147,584
+ Green Fruit, Jams, | | | | |
+ and Jellies £| 3,487 | 27,755 | 118,309 | 73,184 | 175,967
+ Hardware, Machinery, | | | | |
+ Metals, and Metal | | | | |
+ Goods £| 63,622 | 217,659 |1,019,374 | 766,217 |1,661,999
+ Stationery, Books, | | | | |
+ Paper, &c. £| 16,482 | 26,528 | 148,682 | 135,127 | 220,746
+ Kerosene and other | | | | |
+ Oils £| 3,916 | 32,580 | 69,202 | 94,048 | 156,460
+ | | | | |
+ Total all imports £| 742,023 |2,218,717 |6,381,976 |5,433,271 |9,471,166
+ ---------------------+---------+----------+----------+-----------+---------
+
+
+EXPORTS--HOME PRODUCTION.
+
+ ----------------------+-------------------------------------------------------
+ | CALENDAR YEAR.
+ +-----------+----------+----------+----------+----------
+ | 1860. | 1872. | 1884. | 1896. | 1908.
+ ----------------------+-----------+----------+----------+----------+----------
+ Wool--Clean Lb.|}5,007,167{|12,622,067| 9,030,701|24,479,769|23,459,014
+ Greasy Lb.|} {| 5,171,245|26,495,276|64,012,465|66,802,873
+ | | | | |
+ Clean £|} 444,188{| 952,450| 682,774| 1,130,170| 1,670,664
+ Greasy £|} {| 217,362| 1,206,730| 1,846,814| 2,459,190
+ Total Value £| 444,188 | 1,169,812| 1,889,504| 2,976,984| 4,129,854
+ Tallow--Quantity Tons| 640 | 2,890| 2,623| 18,554| 7,292
+ Value £| 25,628 | 100,201| 76,019| 337,967| 197,229
+ Gold--Value £| 14,565 | 660,396| 923,010| 2,089,166| 1,941,229
+ Copper--Value £| 50 | 257,723| 3,014| 32,401| 831,699
+ Tin--Value £| ... | 108,310| 228,457| 46,779| 290,389
+ Live Stock (Horses, | | | | |
+ Cattle, Sheep) £| 510 | 366,003| 572,010| 859,367| 1,699,381
+ Meat (all kinds, | | | | |
+ including extract) £| 5,356 | 67,579| 70,833| 898,545| 850,772
+ Sugar--Quantity Cwt.| ... | 23,959| 368,626| 1,507,503| 2,645,333
+ Value £| ... | 36,833| 454,759| 863,080| 1,482,320
+ Hides and Skins £| 14,030 | 93,218| 109,291| 449,265| 421,987
+ Pearlshell £| ... | ... | 94,021| 94,865| 49,898
+ +-----------+----------+----------+----------+----------
+ Total all Exports £| 523,477 | 2,998,934| 4,673,864| 9,163,726|14,194,977
+ ----------------------+-----------+----------+----------+----------+----------
+
+[Illustration: FALLS NEAR KILLARNEY]
+
+[Illustration: ABORIGINAL TREE CLIMBERS]
+
+
+INTERCOMMUNICATION.
+
+ -----------------+---------------------------------------------------------
+ | CALENDAR YEAR.
+ +--------+-----------+-----------+------------+-----------
+ | 1860. | 1872. | 1884. | 1896. | 1908.
+ -----------------+--------+-----------+-----------+------------+-----------
+ RAILWAYS-- | | | | |
+ | | | | |
+ Miles Open | ... | 218 | 1,207 | 2,430 | 3,498
+ Passengers No.| ... | 40,539 | 1,025,552 | 2,462,020 | 6,538,411
+ Cost of | | | | |
+ Construction £| ... | 2,345,385 | 8,631,835 | 17,248,678 | 23,102,158
+ Net Revenue £| ... | 18,213 | 273,096 | 424,862 | 806,797
+ | | | | |
+ SHIPPING-- | | | | |
+ | | | | |
+ Inward Vessels | | | | |
+ No.| 210 | 522 | 1,042 | 649 | 881
+ Tonnage| 45,736 | 148,630 | 572,124 | 562,759 | 1,601,107
+ | | | | |
+ Outward Vessels| | | | |
+ No.| 183 | 507 | 1,061 | 645 | 847
+ Tonnage | 39,503 | 143,380 | 579,988 | 531,289 | 1,563,911
+ -----------------+--------+-----------+-----------+------------+-----------
+
+
+CHARITABLE INSTITUTIONS, EDUCATION, AND PUBLIC LIBRARIES.
+
+ --------------------------+---------------------------------------------
+ | CALENDAR YEAR.
+ +-------+--------+--------+---------+---------
+ | 1860. | 1872. | 1884. | 1896. | 1908.
+ --------------------------+-------+--------+--------+---------+---------
+ | | | | |
+ CHARITABLE INSTITUTIONS-- | | | | |
+ | | | | |
+ Number | 6 | 21 | 46 | 77 | 107
+ Persons Relieved | 397 | 2,796 | 11,614 | 19,917 | 28,310
+ | | | | |
+ EDUCATION-- | | | | |
+ | | | | |
+ Number of Schools | 41 | 210 | 528 | 957 | 1,104
+ Scholars on Rolls | 1,890 | 23,728 | 60,701 | 103,733 | 105,436
+ Average Attendance | ... | ... | ... | ... | 67,309
+ | | | | |
+ PUBLIC LIBRARIES-- | | | | |
+ | | | | |
+ Number of Subscribers | 538 | 1,711 | 5,185 | 6,904 | 12,770
+ Volumes in Libraries | 4,945 | 20,890 | 60,257 | 129,883 | 249,257
+ --------------------------+-------+--------+--------+---------+---------
+
+
+
+
+APPENDIX H.
+
+DIGEST OF HYDRAULIC ENGINEER'S REPORTS.
+
+OUR ARTESIAN WATER SYSTEM.
+
+
+The water supply problem is of importance so momentous, and the
+official information collected by the Hydraulic Engineer being
+scattered through reports covering about twenty-five years--from 1883
+until 1908--it is thought desirable to present the main official facts
+in a convenient digest for the general reader.
+
+
+SUB-ARTESIAN WATER IN 1884.
+
+Up to 1883, when the McIlwraith Government created the Hydraulic
+Engineer's Department by appointing Mr. J. B. Henderson to organise
+it, little had been done by the State for the improvement of the water
+supply of the country except in cities and towns. At that time no
+artesian water was known to exist in Queensland, but there was a
+popular belief that there were great underground supplies, especially
+in Western Queensland. Many station-owners had been active, and the
+diamond drill had been brought into use, but deep drilling had
+not then been undertaken. In October, 1884, the Hydraulic Engineer
+reported that he had just visited Widgeegoara Station, where the
+owners, Messrs. E. and J. Bignell, partly by sinking shafts and partly
+by boring, had obtained an underground pumped supply aggregating
+94,000 gallons every twenty-four hours. This resulted from sinking
+four 5 ft. × 2½ ft. shafts an average depth of 102 ft. each, and
+thence boring and tubing below the bottom of each shaft to the average
+depth of 161 ft. Of the total quantity 20,000 gallons a day was
+obtained from the Four-mile well, a shaft sunk to a depth of 150 ft.
+below the natural surface. Besides this there was a homestead well
+33 ft. deep. Analyses of the water showed that, in the opinion of the
+Government Analyst, only in one bore was it useful for watering sheep,
+it being brackish; but according to the station reports the supply
+from the Four-mile well and Nos. 1 and 2 shaft-bores was good
+stock water. Mr. Henderson warmly commended the Messrs. Bignell's
+enterprise.
+
+
+IMPROVED BORING MACHINERY.
+
+During the same month the late Hon. George King, of Gowrie, brought
+under the notice of the department a report by Mr. Darley, C.E.,
+to the Government of New South Wales respecting certain American
+well-boring machinery by the use of which in Mr. King's opinion
+three-fourths of the cost of £6,000 incurred by his firm in sinking
+shafts in the Warrego district might have been saved. Besides which
+much greater depths could be reached, a machine costing £600 in
+America being capable of boring 2,000 ft. The matter being referred to
+the Hydraulic Engineer, that officer made inquiries which induced him
+heartily to endorse Mr. King's suggestion that the Government should
+secure from America a machine with two men experienced in working it
+and capable of themselves making any ordinary repairs. Mr. Henderson
+also recommended that a staff should be trained by the Americans after
+arrival, and expressed the opinion that this course would save both
+money and time, and prove a large gain to the colony. But he reminded
+the Minister that until there had been an abundant rainfall extensive
+operations in bore-sinking in the West could not be carried on, though
+he advised the introduction of a sufficient number of machines and
+enough tubing in order that during the next season, if rain fell, work
+should be vigorously commenced.
+
+On 4th September, 1885, the Hydraulic Engineer replied in unequivocal
+terms to a minute of his Minister requesting him to comply with the
+wish expressed that he should purchase a Victorian diamond drill, then
+under offer, for coal-prospecting purposes. Mr. Henderson strongly
+recommended that no drill be purchased unless capable of boring holes
+at least from 5 in. to 2 in. in diameter. He also pointed out that
+where drifts and loose gravels were met with, and tubed, a deep bore
+must be commenced of large diameter to ensure success. Although the
+proposed drills were not ostensibly to be used for water-finding, it
+is evident that the Hydraulic Engineer, in reporting upon them, had
+that kind of work in view.
+
+
+GOVERNMENT URGED TO IMPORT PLANT AND MEN.
+
+On 2nd December following the Hydraulic Engineer addressed the
+Minister touching water-boring operations, and pointed out that, while
+there would be no difficulty in importing the machinery and appliances
+requisite for deep bores, he was convinced that men must be introduced
+from America to start and teach others here to work them. He
+recommended that an efficient plant should be ordered capable of
+boring up to 12 in. in diameter to a depth of 2,500 ft., for (say)
+£1,000, delivery at the works, and four good drillers under a two
+years' engagement brought out to work them at 21s. to 23s. per day,
+apparently of twelve hours; board, lodging, and travelling expenses to
+be defrayed by the Government.
+
+
+OBSTACLES FROM DROUGHT.
+
+On 20th February, 1886, the Hydraulic Engineer wrote that,
+understanding from conversations with the Minister that "the policy of
+the Government is to carry on water conservation works and boring for
+underground water with increased energy, he recommends the purchase of
+three Wright and Edwards' boring machines, capable of reaching a depth
+of 1,000 ft., for delivery within four months from the date of order."
+Three days later Mr. Henderson wrote:--"Unfortunately it can be said
+with much truth that, ever since the department's existence, the
+seasons have been unfavourable in the extreme for carrying out its
+plans." After mentioning the specific difficulties encountered, he
+added:--"I do not share in the idea that the late rains broke up the
+drought, as I cannot disguise from myself the fact that they have not
+been general, or even yet of sufficient quantity."
+
+
+FIRST BORING STARTED AT BLACKALL.
+
+Although the Hydraulic Engineer, so long before as December, 1884, had
+recommended the Minister to import American boring machinery with men
+trained to work it, it was not until 19th October, 1886, nearly two
+years later, that he was able to announce that his advice had been
+so far followed that Mr. Arnold, an American borer from Honolulu,
+had gone to Blackall with a Pennsylvania Walking Beam Oil Rig boring
+machine which had been constructed in Brisbane. It seems that so long
+previously as July, 1885, two tenders for boring by Americans--one
+being from Mr. Arnold--were submitted by the Hydraulic Engineer to
+the Minister, with the intimation that they were both too vague for
+acceptance, and expressing the hope that Mr. Arnold, "who seemed a man
+of considerable experience, would submit a more liberal and definite
+offer." The same report mentions that on the 30th June previously the
+Blackall bore had been carried to a depth of 775 ft., and that at 127
+ft. good water had been struck that rose to a height of 60 ft. below
+the surface, but was deemed insufficient for the requirements of the
+town. Up to that time nine bores had been completed, chiefly by the
+ineffective Tiffin auger, but not one had reached artesian water, the
+deepest being that at Blackall, and the average depth 371 ft.
+
+
+ARTESIAN WATER STRUCK AT THURULGOONA.
+
+In his report of 12th November, 1887, the Hydraulic Engineer states
+that it is essential that only the best quality of tubing, or
+"casing," should be used in bores. In April he had visited, by
+direction of the Treasurer, Thurulgoona Station, on the New South
+Wales border, and there carefully inspected boring operations. He
+found that one bore had, by means of the Canadian Pole Tool boring
+machine, been sunk to 1,079 ft., a supply of excellent water having
+been struck at a depth of 1,009 ft., "the water overflowing in my
+presence to a height of about 20 in. above the surface of the ground."
+This was apparently the first artesian water Mr. Henderson had seen in
+Queensland, though he had years previously seen the artesian well at
+Sale, in Victoria; and he naturally pronounced the opinion that the
+result at Thurulgoona was "very satisfactory." During this year
+boring had been carried on in Queensland without success so far as the
+formation of flowing wells was concerned. Mr. Arnold, having sunk
+to 1,039 ft. at Blackall, resigned, but it was decided to continue
+sinking, all the tubing being recovered with the exception of a few
+feet, and being capable of use several times over if need be. During
+this year also tenders had been received from Mr. Loughead, of
+Thurulgoona, to put down three bores of 2,500 ft. in Queensland, and
+Mr. Henderson reported that there was every prospect of a tender being
+received from a company recently formed in Brisbane at a slightly
+lower price than Mr. Loughead had named.
+
+
+GOVERNMENT'S FIRST FLOWING WELL.
+
+It was at this time, after three years' fighting with difficulties
+arising from drought, the want of knowledge of deep-boring machinery,
+and the indisposition of the Government to spend much money in so
+speculative an undertaking, that the first gleam of daylight appeared.
+On 6th October, 1888, the Hydraulic Engineer reported that four
+contracts had been entered into for deep boring, with as many
+different persons or companies, in the aggregate over 20,000 ft.
+Included among these was the contract with the Canadian Pole Tool
+Company (of which the late Mr. Percy Ricardo was then the financial
+head, and Mr. William Woodley, who had been induced to come over from
+Canada, was the head driller) for completing the Blackall bore to a
+depth of 2,000 ft. if necessary. In this bore, on 26th April, 1888,
+after many vexatious stoppages, "an abundant supply of overflowing,
+sparkling, fresh artesian water, excellently adapted for domestic
+purposes, was tapped at a depth of 1,645 ft." The rate of flow, as
+measured from 3 in. piping attached to a screw plug and valve to
+control the flow, was found to be 210,000 gallons per diem, with a
+temperature of 119 degrees. This had been an expensive bore, for it
+cost £5,748. It was not the first artesian water officially utilised
+in Queensland, for four months earlier than water rose to the surface
+in the Blackall bore the Barcaldine bore was yielding 175,416 gallons
+of water a day, at a temperature of 101 degrees, obtained from a depth
+of 691 ft., and at a cost of only £1,220.
+
+
+THIRTEEN ADDITIONAL BORES.
+
+These results were so encouraging that the Hydraulic Engineer
+recommended the sinking of thirteen additional bores, and the
+recommendation was approved. As early as possible tenders were
+advertised, and there then seemed some difficulty in getting eligible
+applications, partly, it may be assumed, because of the activity
+of private enterprise in bore-sinking. To those engaged in this
+undertaking Mr. Henderson in his 1889 report pays a graceful tribute,
+congratulating them on their successes, and expressing regret at their
+failures, in which they only met the same luck as the Government had
+encountered. It was in this report also that the Hydraulic Engineer
+suggested that a map be prepared showing the position, altitude, and
+other useful particulars of all Government and private bores and wells
+in Queensland, and he invited information from all persons capable
+of giving it. Mr. Henderson mentioned the successful sinking of
+the Cunnamulla bore, having a flow of 22,500 gallons per hour of
+"excellent fresh water," with a pressure of 186 lb. to the square
+inch, a temperature of 106 degrees, and a depth of 1,402 ft. The total
+cost of this bore was £1,928. The success of the Tambo bore was also
+reported at the same time, 8,333 gallons per hour having been obtained
+at a depth of 1,002 ft., with a temperature of 98 degrees, and for a
+cost of £1,515.
+
+
+THE CHARLEVILLE BORE.
+
+The Hydraulic Engineer's report dated 11th September, 1890, supplies
+evidence of the importance of the discoveries made up to that date of
+artesian water in Queensland. The striking of a supply of 3,000,000
+gallons a day of "water clear, colourless, soft, and potable" in the
+Charleville bore is noted with satisfaction. In the text of the report
+this was said to be, so far as the writer knew, the "best well in
+Australia," but a footnote added that soon afterwards a bore in the
+Cunnamulla district was reported to have been tapped with a daily
+supply of 3½ million gallons. The depth of the Charleville bore
+was only 1,370 ft., and its cost £2,389. The striking of a supply of
+1,095,000,000 gallons per annum at so small a cost was naturally a
+subject for both official and general congratulation.
+
+
+INFORMATION SOUGHT AS TO PRIVATE BORES.
+
+In the same year is reported the striking of water in the Muckadilla
+bore, which yielded about 10,000 gallons a day from a depth of over
+3,000 ft., and was then believed to be the deepest bore in Australia.
+The cost was £2,673. A somewhat better supply was afterwards struck at
+3,262 ft. In this report the Hydraulic Engineer expresses regret that
+through the absence of barometrical measurements, owing to scarcity of
+money, the height above sea level of proposed sites for bores was
+not known, but sites were selected from surface indications and the
+results achieved by sinking in the neighbourhood. The wells sunk by
+the Government had been of much use in assisting private enterprise
+to select likely sites, but it would have been more satisfactory
+had better information been obtained by the use of the spirit level.
+Acknowledgments were made to those who had responded to the circular
+invitation sent out for information, and regret was expressed that in
+some cases there had been no response. The effort made, however, had
+enabled several new features to be embodied in the report, among which
+was a table containing a list of both public and private bores, and a
+large map locating, so far as possible, the position of each. Another
+map showed the rainfall in different parts of the colony, while a
+handsome diagram of the Brisbane rainfall was furnished for the first
+time. Both of these remained features of the Hydraulic Engineer's
+annual reports until 1901, when revenue considerations compelled their
+suspension.
+
+
+HINDRANCES FROM FLOODS.
+
+During 1890 excessive rains and bad roads hindered work in
+bore-sinking, instead of the dry periods which had been the cause of
+embarrassment for the preceding seven years. The only newly completed
+bore during this year was that at McKinlay, which at 1,002 ft. gave a
+supply of 224,000 gallons a day. Water was struck in two other bores,
+but of insufficient quantity, and work was still proceeding. The
+obstacles encountered in boring, often from the breaking of machinery,
+but more frequently from the want of thoroughly skilled drillers, must
+have been disheartening, especially in cases where the sinking was
+done without useful scientific information, and bores had to be
+abandoned after months--even years in cases--of labour and worry.
+
+In his report of 20th January, 1893, the Hydraulic Engineer discusses
+at length the question of artesian water supply. The country is, he
+holds, now in a much improved position to encounter long droughts.
+Valuable information has been and is still being obtained by
+exploration as to the prospects of artesian water being found, and
+also as to the conservation of surface water by artificial means. He
+says that fifteen bores, averaging 1,571 ft. each, have been sunk by
+the department, and that although the work has been of a pioneering
+character only one sunk to the contract depth has proved a failure. He
+estimates that about 88,000 square miles in the western country have
+been proved to be water-bearing, and he urges that as large areas
+still remain to be explored the present is a favourable time for
+inviting tenders for the work.
+
+
+STREAM-GAUGING RECOMMENDED.
+
+In this report the Hydraulic Engineer directs attention to
+the necessity of acquiring information as to the extent of our
+surface-water resources. In three of the southern colonies, he
+mentions, a systematic practice of gauging streams has for some time
+been in force. The work will be useless unless it is carried on for
+a number of years. The essential thing to be ascertained is not the
+maximum flow of a stream, but the minimum; or rather, perhaps, the
+maximum that can be expected from a stream in a season of maximum
+aridity. "Without such data," he continues, "no fair distribution of
+water, no scheme of water supply, or irrigation, or drainage can be
+well considered; nor can storage and distribution or drainage works be
+economically designed, or their permanency and efficiency ensured."
+He therefore urges the matter of stream-gauging upon the favourable
+consideration of the Government, adding that the paramount necessity
+of active administration in respect of water conservation generally
+has been recognised by Parliament by legislation already placed upon
+the Statute-book.
+
+
+WASTE OF ARTESIAN WATER.
+
+Two official pages of the 1893 report are devoted to the "misuse
+of water," a member of Parliament having already objected to the
+application of the word "waste" to water allowed to flow unchecked
+from bores. The aggregate capacity of the ten Government bores then
+flowing was 5,000,000 gallons daily, all measured; while of the 137
+private wells the flow was estimated at 100,000,000 gallons daily.
+This total of 105,000,000 gallons would be equivalent to a rainfall
+of 29 in. on 91 square miles of country. This was the rate of average
+rainfall on the assumed outcrop of water-bearing country that supplied
+the artesian area. And it had to be remembered that a part of this
+rainfall of 29 in. had to be carried off by streams as well as by
+evaporation, and therefore did not sink into the water-bearing strata
+of the arid west. As to the extent of the outcrop, it was estimated
+not to exceed one-eighth of a mile, with a total length of 1,600
+miles, which meant a total supply of 200 square miles of water-bearing
+outcrop area.[a] Arguing on these and other grounds, the report
+contends that the falling off of the yield of many bores affords proof
+that, wherever the supply comes from, the outflow already exceeds the
+inflow. The Engineer can only regard as wasted two-thirds of the water
+that now flows from the artesian bores in Queensland; indeed, adopting
+the language of an American, "the waste is a crime against the
+well-owner and against the State."
+
+ [Footnote a: For fuller particulars see Hydraulic Engineer's
+ Report for 1893, pages 5 and 6.]
+
+
+CONTROL OF FLOW NECESSARY.
+
+The Hydraulic Engineer adds that while he cannot assert that the
+artesian flow is being exhausted, he yet holds that the flow ought to
+be controlled by legislative action.[b]
+
+ [Footnote b: On this passage the Hydraulic Engineer notes
+ that, in 1891, a bill was introduced into Parliament by Sir
+ Thomas McIlwraith for controlling the artesian water supply,
+ and passed through the Assembly, but was rejected by the
+ Council. Since then no action in that direction has been
+ taken.]
+
+
+IRRIGATION BY BORES.
+
+The same report contains an interesting article on irrigation.
+It points out that at the beginning of 1892 there were only 200
+irrigators among the land cultivators of the colony, and that the area
+irrigated was only 5,000 acres. It was believed that in the last year
+the amount of land so fertilised had largely increased. Many of the
+plants and distributing apparatus were of a most primitive kind.
+"Some are expensive, others badly erected, and not a few are of a type
+ill-adapted to the object in view."
+
+The report goes on to discuss the probability or otherwise of water in
+sufficient quantities for irrigation being obtainable by conservation.
+In summarising his argument the Hydraulic Engineer says, "Looking at
+the question broadly, I am much disposed to regard the possibilities
+of a sufficiently abundant supply of water being obtained for
+irrigation, especially for land in small areas devoted to intense
+culture, as of considerable promise." He then urges the inadequacy of
+artesian wells for the irrigation of large areas, pointing out, among
+other things, that the entire discharge of the wells then flowing in
+Queensland would suffice to irrigate only 219 square miles to a depth
+of 1 ft. He thinks that in Queensland we shall have to depend upon
+"natural" water for irrigation purposes.
+
+
+A VALUABLE MAP--376,832 SQUARE MILES IN ARTESIA.
+
+A new feature in the 1893 report was the map giving information as to
+(1) artesian bores applied for, (2) under contract, (3) in progress,
+and (4) completed. It showed that out of a total of 668,497 square
+miles of the "Rolling Downs Formation" (Lower Cretaceous) no less
+than 376,832 square miles, chiefly in the arid west, was likely to be
+water-bearing. This estimate, it may be noted, has been very slightly
+reduced of late, but the scope for exploration in water-finding seems
+still great in Western Queensland. The report alludes to the success
+attained in the Queensland manufacture of well-boring machinery. All
+the plant used, the wire rope alone excepted, was manufactured in the
+colony, where improvements had been made in the originally imported
+article. Yet it is admitted that the apparatus used was "not a
+perfectly scientific one, because it does not produce a core by means
+of which the nature of the strata and the angle and direction of the
+dip can be fully ascertained." Queensland yellow-wood (_Flindersia
+Oxleyana_) had quite replaced American timber in the manufacture of
+drilling poles.
+
+[Illustration: SCENE ON LOGAN RIVER, SOUTH QUEENSLAND]
+
+
+EFFECT OF GOOD SEASONS.
+
+In closing, the Hydraulic Engineer reports that the succession of good
+seasons experienced (years 1890-93), and the abundance of water
+and grass resulting, has occasioned much inattention to water
+conservation, and he also expresses regret that financial exigencies
+have compelled the dispensing with some valued members of his staff.
+The article is illustrated by diagrams, and the studious reader will
+peruse it with profit.
+
+
+THE SOURCE OF ARTESIAN WATER.
+
+In his report for 1st November, 1894, the Hydraulic Engineer recurs to
+the source of artesian water. He regrets that very little can be added
+to the previous assumption that it lies in the outcrops of the porous
+beds of the Lower Cretaceous formation on the western slope of the
+coast range; and he urges the necessity of accumulating facts relating
+to the bores already sunk, and complains that some owners neglect to
+give the department the information sought. He urges that legislation
+should make the furnishing of statistical matter of this kind
+compulsory. He doubts whether, in the absence of information as to the
+precise geological conditions subsisting beneath the surface, a map of
+Queensland can ever be prepared showing with certainty where artesian
+water can be found; but much may be done by accumulating accurate
+information with respect to the sinking of bores, nature of strata
+passed through, amount and pressure of flow, temperature of water, and
+depth beneath the surface whence obtained in each case. The map issued
+by the Geological Department would show the water-bearing areas, which
+means the formation in which water may be expected to be found; but
+bores can only be put down with reasonable certainty when the entire
+western country has been prospected.
+
+
+THE LIFE OF ARTESIAN WELLS.
+
+The life of an artesian well with a permanent spring, says the report,
+is limited by the durability of the casing. The corrosive action
+of some water is much greater than others; but there should be no
+difficulty in renewing the casing when necessary. It has often
+been discovered that an interruption of the flow, or its serious
+diminution, is the result of worn-out casing. So much is this the case
+that there is still controversy as to whether there is any general
+diminution in the supply consequent upon continuous waste.
+
+
+ARTESIAN WATER POWER.
+
+The report then discusses the question of using artesian water for
+power in the industries. The Hydraulic Engineer points out that of the
+total horse-power used in the United States at that time about 39·5
+per cent. was hydrodynamic. Artesian water, he says, can be applied
+to driving all kinds of machinery, "from a sewing machine or a cream
+separator to a saw or flour mill; and for fire-extinguishing it is
+most excellent." He therefore recommends the employment in Western
+Queensland of turbines and Pelton wheel motors for sheep-shearing,
+electric lighting, and other kinds of machinery used there, pointing
+out that the horse-power available was--At Blackall, 8·04; at
+Cunnamulla, 41·53; at Charleville, 123·41; and at Thargomindah,
+63·51.[c] He further recommends the utilisation of the artesian supply
+for street mains, a suggestion since carried out with great public
+advantage in several western towns. While Mr. Henderson doubts the
+utility of artesian water for irrigation, he says that, generally
+speaking, it is quite as valuable as that from town mains, rivers,
+and falls for developing power. The aggregate area to date in which
+precious artesian water has been found in Queensland is 117,000
+square miles, and he feels that this area would be rapidly enlarged
+by exploration by both Government and private borings. The shallowest
+completed flowing well in Queensland at that date was 60 ft., and the
+deepest 3,630 ft.; the average depth so far as known to the department
+was 1,289 ft.
+
+ [Footnote c: Mr. Henderson notes that these horse-powers have
+ since been very much reduced.]
+
+
+STATIC PRESSURE AND HYDRAULIC PRESSURE.
+
+Explaining why the volume flowing from a well does not depend upon
+the diameter of the "static" pressure of the water, Mr. Henderson says
+that the flow depends principally upon the relative altitudes of the
+outcrops of the water-bearing beds, and of the mouth of the bore or
+well, and upon the character and texture of the porous beds from which
+the well derives its supply. The static pressure is ascertained by
+stopping the flow by artificial means, when the pressure generally
+rises, sometimes quickly, at other times slowly, until it reaches a
+maximum. But when the well is again opened it will be found that
+the static pressure has been more or less reduced by friction. This
+reduced pressure is called the "hydraulic." The hydraulic pressure can
+never exceed the static pressure; nor can the volume of water flowing
+from an artesian well be ascertained by its pressure, or the height to
+which the water may rise over the top of the casing, any more than the
+pressure can be ascertained by knowing its volume.[d]
+
+In the same report is announced the striking at Winton, at a depth
+of 3,235 ft. of a supply amounting to 100,000 gallons a day, at a
+temperature of 140 degrees. It was determined to continue sinking
+under a new contract.
+
+ [Footnote d: See Votes and Proceedings, 1894-5, for Hydraulic
+ Engineer's Report, 1st November, 1894, page 5.]
+
+
+SUBTERRANEAN WATER BELONGS TO THE STATE.
+
+Mr. Henderson again returns to the misuse of water, suggesting that
+the utility of the artesian supply can easily be tested by intense
+cultivation of a small area at each bore. He complains that one of
+Queensland's most valuable assets is not as carefully guarded as it
+should be. He estimates that the quantity allowed to run uncontrolled
+and generally misused amounts to 66,000,000 gallons per diem, or
+66 per cent. of the estimated total flow in Queensland. He invites
+attention to a recommendation in a previous report that all
+underground or artesian water should be declared State property.
+This would not prevent owners of artesian water taking and using a
+reasonable supply of water, but all consumption beyond what might be
+called a "liberal" amount should be paid for, the State receiving the
+water rate. The experience of America in this matter proved that in
+some States control by the Government was enforced, while in others
+the greatest care was exercised to prevent any further granting of
+subterranean water franchises unless the absolute right of the State
+was reserved to regulate the consumption. Appended to the report is a
+copy of a recommendation by a Commission in the State of Colorado for
+regulating, distributing, and using water. Mr. Henderson thinks the
+recommendation too severe, but insists that some State control should
+be exercised.
+
+The same report contains an interesting review of the condition of
+irrigation enterprise in Queensland, and again insists that scientific
+stream-gauging is indispensable if surface water is to be made
+generally available for irrigation purposes.
+
+
+EXTENT OF ARTESIAN SUPPLY.
+
+The report dated 5th October, 1895, recurs to the Hydraulic Engineer's
+previous estimate that the outcrops of the water-bearing beds of the
+country covered an area of about 200 square miles. He is glad to learn
+that Mr. R. L. Jack, Government Geologist, had since worked the matter
+out, and, while approving of Mr. Henderson's suggestion as to the
+source of artesian supplies in Queensland, estimated the area as
+5,000 square miles, or twenty-five times the Engineer's estimate.
+This information seems to have allayed Mr. Henderson's dread of the
+exhaustion of the supply, for he says that the Geologist's figures
+indicate that "the gathering-ground is larger than can possibly be
+required for years to come if there is no extensive leakage, of
+which as yet there is no evidence that I am aware of." He next writes
+strongly in favour of a comprehensive search for artesian water by
+the Government, and of Government aid being offered by loan to persons
+willing to sink bores on Crown lands or even on private property.
+Such assistance would encourage settlement by leaving the settler in
+possession for other purposes of money which would otherwise be spent
+on water provision on his holding, and prove an incalculable benefit
+to the State by mitigating periodical droughts.
+
+
+PROGRESS TO 1895.
+
+The report then gives statistics relative to artesian bores as
+follows:--Number of bores, 397; average depth, 1,195 ft. Of these
+286 overflow with a total output of 213½ million gallons per diem.
+Total cost of boring and casing, £860,321, as nearly as could be
+estimated, "remarkable results for eight years' work, as in 1887
+boring in Queensland was in its infancy." With a view to greater
+accuracy provision for the salaries of two inspectors had been made
+on the Estimates for the year, in order that uniform records might
+be secured as to the strata pierced, the flow, the pressure and
+temperature of the water, amount of rainfall at the outcrop of
+water-bearing beds, and the alleged diminution of artesian streams.
+The suggestion is then made that land, the leases carrying water
+rights, might be made available for settlement in small areas around
+tanks and bores.
+
+
+THE WINTON BORE.
+
+In this report the Hydraulic Engineer is able to announce the success
+of the Winton bore. At about 3,555 ft. a daily supply of 720,000
+gallons of excellent artesian water was struck, and boring being
+continued to 4,010 ft. without increasing the supply work ceased,
+the total cost of the bore having been about £7,000. An article on
+irrigation shows a total irrigated area of 7,641 acres, an increase
+for the year of 2,240 acres. Included in the area are 2,000 acres of
+natural grass land and 2,000 acres sown with artificial grasses; also
+11½ acres irrigated from artesian wells in the Warrego district.
+Flood mitigation is also dealt with at length, and a system of flood
+warnings on the various streams recommended.
+
+
+DR. R. L. JACK'S OPINION.
+
+The report for 2nd October, 1896, brings records up to date. By map it
+is shown that not only does the water-bearing country extend over 56
+per cent. of the area of Queensland, but also continues into New South
+Wales and South Australia, and enters Western Australia. It "marks
+the position of the ancient Cretaceous sea which connected the Gulf
+of Carpentaria with the Great Australian Bight," and "divided the
+continent into two islands." "They were," wrote Dr. R. L. Jack, "laid
+down by this sea; their present position is due to subsequent general
+upheaval, and they lie directly and unconformably on schists and
+slates of undetermined age, or on granite or gneiss. Except in
+Queensland, where they are overlaid here and there by the remains of
+the Upper Cretaceous or Desert Sandstone formations which have not
+been removed by denudation, they seem to be covered to a considerable
+extent by Tertiary rocks. The Desert Sandstone beds lie horizontally
+but unconformably on those of the Rolling Downs, which dip to the
+south." [e]
+
+ [Footnote e: See "Geology and Palaeontology of Queensland and
+ New Guinea," by R. L. Jack, F.G.S., Government Geologist,
+ and R. Etheridge, jun,. Government Palaeontologist, New South
+ Wales, page 390.]
+
+
+IMPROVED DRILLING MACHINERY.
+
+In the same report the improvement in drilling machinery is discussed,
+and Queensland manufacturers are congratulated on making American
+and Canadian machines with improvements which greatly add to their
+efficiency. Bores in Queensland are generally begun with 10-in.
+casing, and carried to not lower than 500 ft. Then 8-in., 6-in.,
+and 5-in. casings are used. The necessity of these casings being as
+perfect as possible is emphasised by the Engineer. The cost of sinking
+bores by contract, which is almost the universal method, depends
+upon the facilities offered by the site for the transport of wood and
+water, but the range then was from 17s. to 24s. per foot for the first
+500 ft., and increased with depth until, at 4,000 ft. odd, sinking
+had cost 55s. per foot. The inspectors appointed the previous year had
+done good work, though the wet season delayed travelling. Sectional
+diagrams compiled from the inspectors' reports appear among the
+appendices.
+
+Then follows an interesting description of surface artesian water
+known as Elizabeth Springs, in latitude half a degree south of the
+tropic, and in 140¾ degrees west longitude. The account of these
+remarkable springs is well worth reading.[f]
+
+ [Footnote f: See Votes and Proceedings for 1897 for Hydraulic
+ Engineer's Report, 2nd October, 1896, page 5.]
+
+
+PROGRESS TO 1896.
+
+Number of bores in Western Queensland to October, 1896, 454; average
+depth, 1,168 ft.; feet bored, 530,332 (nearly 100 miles); overflow,
+193,000,000 gallons per diem. There were also nineteen deep bores on
+the coast. The total cost had been £928,081.
+
+
+BORES IN THE GULF TOWNS.
+
+Reporting on 2nd August, 1897, the Hydraulic Engineer mentions that
+the Burketown bore has been carried to a depth of 2,304 ft., with a
+supply of 155,560 gallons of good water at a pressure of 60 lb. per
+square inch, and a temperature of 155 degrees, the cost being £4,155.
+A few months earlier the Normanton bore had struck water at 2,330 ft.,
+for 293,000 gallons a day, with a temperature of 151 degrees, at a
+total cost of £3,803.
+
+
+PROGRESS COMPARED WITH SOUTHERN COLONIES.
+
+The same report glances at the progress made in artesian water
+discovery in the southern colonies. Queensland aggregate flows on
+30th June, 1897, were estimated at 140,000,000 gallons daily, or
+51,135,000,000 gallons annually. This would suffice to cover 294
+square miles with water 1 ft. deep, or 100 square miles 35-1/3 in.
+deep. In New South Wales, in 1897, there were thirty-four flowing and
+twelve pumping bores, yielding 22½ million gallons of water per diem.
+In Victoria only one or two flowing bores had been put down, the
+country being generally unfavourable for artesian water. In South
+Australia there were in all sixty-two bores, seven being still in
+progress, but of the total only nineteen wells gave good fresh
+water, and twenty-two wells salt water. Seeing that artesian water
+exploration began in the three colonies named before any steps were
+taken in Queensland, the success here may be regarded as phenomenal,
+although of course a very considerable amount of capital was lost in
+sinking abortive bores.
+
+
+GRAZING FARM SELECTORS' BORE.
+
+The report dated 15th September, 1898, mentions that the Bando bore
+sunk for the Lands Department for the accommodation of grazing farm
+selectors was completed during the year at a depth of 2,081 ft.,
+giving a supply of 2,000,000 gallons daily, and at a cost of £3,289.
+It was estimated to water 146,000 acres. The Roma bore for the town
+supply had also been completed at a depth of 1,678 ft., and yielded
+a controlled supply of 111,000 gallons daily, which sufficed for the
+wants of the town.
+
+
+STATISTICS TO DATE.--THARGOMINDAH ILLUMINATED.
+
+Particulars of thirty-seven bores sunk in the colony to a depth of
+3,000 ft. and over are given. Of these eleven had reported flows,
+either large or small, during the year, three had been abandoned, and
+nine were still in progress. The yield of 376 bores in the colony was
+estimated at 214,000,000 gallons a day, the average per bore being
+over half a million gallons. Besides these, fifty-five sub-artesian
+wells--those whose water did not rise above the surface--yielded
+2½ million gallons a day; and perennial springs gave an ascertained
+continuous flow of nearly 4,000,000 gallons a day. The report calls
+attention to a serious diminution in the yield of certain wells, and
+says that it has been ascertained in some cases that the loss was due
+to loss of head, and not to any leakage or obstruction in the casing.
+The Hydraulic Engineer therefore again urges legislation to give the
+Government control of bore water. As to power, it is mentioned that a
+small electrical installation had been set up at Thargomindah by
+the Bulloo Divisional Board, and that the number of lamps of sixteen
+candle-power that would exhaust the bore power was 150 to 200.
+
+
+THE DROUGHT OF 1899.
+
+When the report dated 30th August, 1899, was prepared the country was
+held in the throes of a protracted drought, and the Hydraulic Engineer
+speaks of compression in his report on the ground of economy.
+For years past the reports had been becoming increasingly bulky,
+appendices and maps being supplied on a generous scale. Government
+expenditure in bore-sinking had now nearly ceased, presumably because
+private enterprise had already benefited greatly by Government
+prospecting for water, and the same necessity did not exist for State
+action as in previous years. The new feature of the departmental
+year's work is stated to have been the comparative analysis of the
+height of bore sites and the water potentials thereat, upon which the
+iso-potential map, with the full description given in page 56 of the
+report, is based. By this time the number of bores sunk to a depth of
+3,000 ft. and over was fifty, an increase for the year of thirteen,
+which shows that private enterprise was still active in the search for
+artesian water. The total number of flowing bores in the colony was
+given as 440, with a yield of water of nearly 266½ million gallons
+a day.
+
+The report dated 25th August, 1900, mentions that during the year in
+the Adavale bore 9,000 gallons of water a day had been struck at 1,494
+ft., and although further sinking had been carried to 2,930 ft. there
+was no increase in the supply. By this time the number of bores sunk
+to 3,000 ft. and over had increased by nine, or to fifty-nine, while
+the aggregate flow of artesian water was put at over 321½ million
+gallons per day.
+
+
+REGRETTABLE ECONOMIES.
+
+The report dated 31st August, 1901, was the last to supply the very
+full information customarily given annually by the department. There
+was almost universal drought and difficulty. In some parts of the
+State, however, the drought had broken, so that needful works could be
+again pushed on. But this was by no means the end of the great drought
+of 1898-1903, and the appendices and valuable maps which added so
+greatly to the permanent value of the reports of the department were
+discontinued, and only a brief report was presented. This is much to
+be regretted, but retrenchment was enforced by revenue shrinkages and
+the dislocation temporarily caused by federal union. Happily, however,
+the information has since been carefully collected, and is now
+available to complete this sketch of the work done and results
+achieved since the year 1883, when the department was created under
+Mr. Henderson's direction. In the 1901 report the success of the
+Adavale bore is recorded, the depth being 3,398 ft., with a flow of
+990,890 gallons per day, and at a total cost of £5,369. The striking
+of a supply of water in the Dalby bore to the amount of 46,470 gallons
+an hour at a depth of 1,841 ft. is also mentioned in this report.
+This success is interesting on account of the site being the furthest
+easterly where artesian water has been found.
+
+The report for 1902 was cut down to the minimum limit. It was prepared
+while the country was in the grip of the worst drought ever known,
+and yet private enterprise was active as ever in bore-sinking, no less
+than thirty-six flowing wells having been completed during the year.
+The total number in the State was thus brought up to 563, yielding
+375,000,000 gallons a day, the average flow per bore being 666,231
+gallons.
+
+
+ADDITIONAL FLOWING BORES IN 1903.
+
+The report for 1903 was brief. During the year the number of flowing
+bores had increased by thirteen, and the aggregate flow by 10,000,000
+gallons. The average flow was 669,279 gallons, or 3,048 gallons
+increase upon the flow for the preceding year. This in the face of
+the diminution of the flow in many bores cannot be considered
+unsatisfactory. The entire cost of well-boring in the State to 1903 is
+set down at £1,463,326, including abortive bores, and heavy sums for
+carriage of boring plant in the earlier days. It is mentioned in this
+report that the Whitewood bore, Bimerah, yielding only 70,000
+gallons a day, at 5,045 ft., is still the deepest in Queensland. The
+shallowest is given as at Manfred Downs, at 10 ft., yielding 2,000
+gallons a day; and the hottest water at Elderslie No. 2, where from a
+depth of 4,523 ft. emerge more than 1½ million gallons per diem at
+a temperature only 10 degrees below boiling point. The greatest static
+pressure is at the Thargomindah bore, where it is nearly 240 lb. to
+the square inch.
+
+
+LATER INFORMATION.
+
+Since 1902 until this year annual reports at length have not been
+furnished by the Hydraulic Engineer; but this year the work has been
+resumed, and advance information supplied in a condensed form.
+
+In the foregoing epitome of the Hydraulic Engineer's reports extending
+over twenty-five years, no particular mention has been made of the
+failures inevitable when either the Government or private persons
+were engaged in deep boring for water exploration. The following
+particulars show some of the obstacles encountered in tapping the
+subterranean springs of our arid western country:--
+
+In his report for 1902 the Hydraulic Engineer mentioned that a
+contract had been entered into with Mr. W. Woodley for the sinking of
+a bore at Eromanga to a depth of 2,000 ft. for the sum of £1,438, but
+that work could not be prosecuted in consequence of the prevailing
+drought in the West. The contract depth was reached on 29th August,
+1903, without finding water. A further contract to carry the bore to
+3,000 ft. was subsequently entered into, and on 30th June, 1904, at
+a depth of 2,612 ft., the work was suspended until the arrival of
+casing, which was delayed by rain. It was not until November, 1904,
+that the casings reached the bore site, and that work could be
+resumed. A suspension of work occurred on 4th March following for want
+of a competent driller. Boring was resumed in August and continued
+till March, 1906, without success. The only water tapped up to that
+time was a supply of 10,000 gallons per diem at a depth of 1,640 ft.
+The casings were allowed to remain in the bore, the gross cost of
+which had been £4,480. In May, 1906, a new contract with Mr. Woodley,
+for sinking another bore to a depth of 3,000 ft., was entered into. At
+1,660 ft. a supply of 12,000 gallons a day was tapped; but, this being
+considered insufficient, another contract for deepening the bore to
+3,500 ft. was entered into with Mr. Woodley, the additional cost being
+£1,000. On 9th March, 1908, the depth of 3,500 ft. was reached without
+any additional supply. Then a contract for sinking a further 500 ft.
+was entered into. At 3,980 ft. a small flow was tapped which dribbled
+over the surface, and the 4,000 ft. depth being reached arrangements
+were made for sinking another 100 ft. At 4,050 ft. a small flow of 110
+gallons per hour was struck. At 4,135 ft. the flow increased to 250
+gallons per hour. Delays occurred after this, until January, 1909,
+when boring was resumed, and at 4,270 ft. a flow of 306,234 gallons
+per diem was struck. The water was then brought under control,
+and found to have a pressure of 219 lb. per square inch, with a
+temperature of 198 degrees F. The water was fresh and drinkable,
+though having a slightly gaseous taste; but this was not noticeable
+after it had stood exposed to the air for a little time. On completion
+of the surface fittings the discharge was measured, and the flow
+ascertained to be 256,825 gallons per diem. The cost had not been
+adjusted at the date of our information, but it will be understood
+that a work extending over five years, and then yielding a
+comparatively small supply, makes bore-sinking a highly speculative
+industry, even in what the geologists declare to be artesian
+water-bearing country.
+
+[Illustration: COOKTOWN AND ENDEAVOUR RIVER, NORTH QUEENSLAND]
+
+[Illustration: PEARLING FLEETS OFF BADU ISLAND, TORRES STRAIT]
+
+At the Kynuna bore, work had been suspended at the time of the last
+annual report at a depth of 2,221 ft., the flow being 807,608 gallons
+a day. When cased to the bottom the flow was 880,154 gallons per day.
+It was handed over to the Winton Shire Council, the total cost having
+been £2,610, half of which was granted as a loan to the council by the
+Government, and the other half as a free gift.
+
+Another unsuccessful bore was at Windorah, where, under contract, a
+depth of 4,000 ft. was reached, with no water save an insignificant
+spring touched at 103 ft. below the surface. The total cost, including
+casing and supervision, was £7,508.
+
+A bore at the joint expense of the Booringa Shire Council and the
+Government was started at Mitchell in January, 1908, and on 18th May,
+at a depth of 1,405 ft., the work was stopped, the supply, equal to
+205,000 gallons a day, being considered sufficient. The cost of the
+bore was £1,935.
+
+
+SUMMARY BY THE HYDRAULIC ENGINEER.
+
+Summarising the information supplied in the accompanying tables, Mr.
+Henderson writes:--"The total continuous yield from 716 bores--the
+flows from which have been estimated by various persons, not connected
+with the department, and communicated to me either directly or through
+the public prints, for the accuracy of which I cannot vouch, and
+measured under the hydraulic survey which was suspended in 1899 and
+not yet resumed--is now estimated at 479,268,000 gallons per diem;
+hence the average flow per bore is 669,369 gallons in the same time.
+
+"These figures do not include the flows from nine sub-artesian wells
+the flow from which is artificially produced by cutting down the
+outlet, but which it is understood have since ceased to flow, nor do
+they include the yield from 215 sub-artesian wells which are pumped
+more or less regularly during periods of drought, and which are
+estimated to yield 8,600,000 gallons per day, or an average of 40,000
+gallons per well if pumped continuously night and day; but as it is
+impossible to form a trustworthy estimate of the daily volume raised
+I have put it down at what I think is approximately true--namely,
+1,720,000 gallons.
+
+"I may also mention that owing to the suspension of the departmental
+hydraulic survey previously mentioned, I have obtained no official
+data relating to perennial springs. The last data to hand are given in
+my summarised report for the year 1902."
+
+
+WELLS SUCCESSFUL AND ABANDONED.
+
+The following table shows the progress of boring and artesian supplies
+to end of 1908 [but it must be stated that only part of the data for
+the years 1907 and 1908 is to hand]:--
+
+ ----------------------------+----------+-----------+--------------+--------
+ | Artesian | Pumped | Progress |
+ Sunk by | Flows. | Supplies. | Abandoned or | Total.
+ | | | Uncertain. |
+ ----------------------------+----------+-----------+--------------+--------
+ [g] Government | 32 | 10 | 76 | 118
+ Local Governing Authorities | 16 | 0 | 24 | 40
+ Private Owners | 668 | 205 | 315 | 1,188
+ +----------+-----------+--------------+--------
+ Total to end of 1908 | 716 | 215 | 415 | 1,346
+ ----------------------------+----------+-----------+--------------+--------
+
+ [Footnote g: Pioneering bores sunk to explore and ascertain
+ the artesian possibilities of new country.]
+
+
+AGGREGATE MILEAGE BORED, AND AVERAGE FOR EACH WELL.
+
+For comparison with former years I may mention (writes Mr. Henderson)
+that the total aggregate number of feet bored in search of artesian
+water in Queensland up to end of 1908 is estimated, from the best
+information at hand, at 1,498,700 ft., equal to 283·84 miles. The
+average depth per bore is 1,113 ft. The total aggregate depth bored is
+as follows:--
+
+ -------------------------------+-----------+--------------------------------
+ Date | Miles. | Increase in Each Year.
+ -------------------------------+-----------+--------------------------------
+ Up to the end of October, 1894 | 82·75 |
+ " " " 1895 | 92·21 | 9·46 miles in twelve months
+ " " September, 1896 | 102·43 | 10·22 miles in eleven months
+ " " June, 1897 | 111·02 | 8·59 miles in nine months
+ " " " 1898 | [h]135·85 | [h]24·83 miles in twelve months
+ " " " 1899 | 159·61 | 23·76 miles in twelve months
+ " " " 1900 | [i]184·98 | [i]25·37 miles in twelve months
+ " " " 1901 | 202·01 | 17·03 miles in twelve months
+ " " " 1902 | 215·04 | 13·03 miles in twelve months
+ " " " 1903 | 221·87 | 6·83 miles in twelve months
+ " " " 1904 | 225·04 | 3·17 miles in twelve months
+ " " " 1905 | 229·53 | 4·49 miles in twelve months
+ " " " 1906 | 236·41 | 6·88 miles in twelve months
+ " " " 1907 | [j]273·66 | [j]37·25 miles in twelve months
+ " " December, 1907 | [k]276·50 | [k] 2·84 miles in six months
+ " " " 1908 | [k]283·84 | [k] 7·34 miles in twelve months
+ -------------------------------+-----------+--------------------------------
+
+ [Footnote h: This includes a considerable number of old bores
+ discovered and added to the 1898 year's list.]
+
+ [Footnote i: This includes thirty-four sub-artesian wells
+ and bores in the Dalby district, representing an aggregate of
+ 3,500 ft.]
+
+ [Footnote j: Data collected by Police Department at the
+ beginning of 1907, which include a number of old bores not
+ previously heard of.]
+
+ [Footnote k: Only a small part of data to hand, which was
+ chiefly compiled from newspaper reports. It is a fact well
+ known to this Department that never before was there in any
+ year so much boring done as during the years 1907 and 1908.]
+
+
+FLOWING ARTESIAN BORES--1908.
+
+ Number of artesian flows of various magnitudes to end of 1908:--
+
+ Under 10,000 gallons per day 49
+ From 10,001 to 150,000 gallons per day 151
+ " 150,001 to 750,000 " " " 296
+ " 750,001 to 1,500,000 " " " 129
+ " 1,500,001 to 2,500,000 " " " 57
+ Exceptional flows of over 2,500,000 gallons per day 34
+ ----
+ Total flowing bores 716
+
+The continuous yield of water is estimated at 479,268,000 gallons per
+diem, equal to 1,763·22 acre feet, or 2·755 square miles of water 1
+ft. deep, in the same time.
+
+The average flow of the 716 bores is thus 669,369 gallons per day, and
+their average depth is 1,575 ft.
+
+The estimated value of 1,346 borings is £1,873,375.
+
+
+ARTESIAN WELLS OVER 3,000 FEET DEEP.
+
+The following is a list, compiled from the latest available
+information, of the Artesian Wells of the State over 3,000 ft. deep,
+in order of their depth:--
+
+ ---------------------------+------------------+-------+---------------
+ Name of Bore. | Date of | Depth.| Date of
+ | | | Completion or
+ | Commencement. | | Suspension.
+ ---------------------------+------------------+-------+---------------
+ | | Feet. |
+ 1. Bimerah Run, No. 3, | 11 Aug, 1898 | 5,045 | June, 1900
+ Whitewood | | |
+ 2. Bimerah Run, No. 1, | May, 1895 | 4,860 | July, 1897
+ Bothwell | | |
+ 3. Elderslie Run, No. 2, | April, 1900 | 4,523 | Sept., 1902
+ Cathedral | | |
+ 4. Ruthven Run, No. 1 | 1 Aug., 1905 | 4,515 | April, 1908
+ 5. Ayrshire Downs Run, | Jan., 1895 | 4,438 | Sept., 1897
+ No. 1 | | |
+ 6. Warbreccan Run | Jan., 1894 | 4,333 | 22 April, 1898
+ 7. Manuka Run, No. 1 | Aug., 1896 | 4,310 | April, 1898
+ 8. Bimerah Run, No. 2, | Oct., 1897 | 4,310 | Jan., 1900
+ Munjerie | | |
+ 9. Eromanga (Government) | 16 July, 1906 | 4,270 | Jan., 1909
+ 10. Rockwood Run, No. 1, | 15 Dec., 1891 | 4,220 | 15 July, 1897
+ Glenariffe | | |
+ 11. Albilbah Run, No. 1, | 1 July, 1889 | 4,205 | Sept., 1902
+ Cable End | | |
+ 12. Ruthven Run, No. 1 | 1 Aug., 1903 | 4,105 | 22 June, 1905
+ 13. Lorne, No. 1 | ... | 4,057 | In Progress
+ 14. Minnie Downs Run | 11 May, 1899 | 4,040 | 30 April, 1902
+ 15. Malboona, Manuka | 18 Feb., 1899 | 4,032 | 7 June, 1900
+ Resumption | | |
+ 16. Winton (Government) | 16 July, 1889 | 4,010 | 25 June, 1895
+ 17. Darr River Downs Run, | | |
+ No. 4, Overnewton | Feb., 1892 | 4,006 | 28 Mar., 1894
+ 18. Thornleigh (Kargoolnah | May, 1901 | 4,003 | 15 Sept., 1902
+ Shire) | | |
+ 19. Windorah (Government) | 1 July, 1902[l]| 4,001 | 24 May, 1905
+ 20. Vindex Run, No. 2 | Oct., 1898 | 4,000 | June, 1900
+ 21. Ayrshire Downs Run, | Sept., 1899 | 3,983 | Sept., 1902
+ No. 3 | | |
+ 22. Katandra and | | |
+ Stamfordham Runs, No. 1 | 8 Oct., 1892 | 3,980 | -- 1896
+ 23. Evesham, No. 1 | ... | 3,970 | In Progress
+ 24. Malvern Hills Run, | 1 July, 1890[m]| 3,942 | 10 May, 1894
+ Gowan | | |
+ 25. Darr River Downs Run, | | |
+ No. 2, Fairlie | 1 Nov., 1899 | 3,890 | May, 1891
+ 26. Talleyrand, Camoola | ... | 3,870 | -- 1898
+ District | | |
+ 27. Burenda Run, No. 3, | | |
+ Gidyea Creek | 16 Oct., 1895 | 3,840 | Sept., 1898
+ 28. Oondooroo Run | Jan., 1900 | 3,800 | 1 April, 1901
+ 29. Mount Abundance, No. 2 | -- 1907 | ... | -- 1908
+ 30. Albilbah Run, No. 2, | 21 Dec., 1889 | 3,800 | -- 1893
+ Jackson's | | |
+ 31. Greendale, No. 1 | ... [n] | 3,799 | In Progress
+ 32. Vindex Run, No. 3 | 24 July, 1901 | 3,795 | 6 Sept., 1902
+ 33. Muckadilla (Government)| 21 Oct., 1889 | 3,762 | 24 Dec., 1898
+ 34. Redcliffe Run, | Jan., 1893 | 3,750 | 20 Mar., 1895
+ Redcliffe | | |
+ 35. Clio G. F., Ayrshire | | |
+ Downs Resumption | -- 1901 | 3,745 | April, 1902
+ 36. Katandra and | | |
+ Stamfordham Runs, No. 2 | ... | 3,723 | -- 1896
+ 37. Ayrshire Downs Run, | 11 April, 1898 | 3,721 | Sept., 1899
+ No. 2 | | |
+ 38. Roma Town, No. 2 | 28 June, 1899 | 3,710 | 17 Oct., 1900
+ 39. Nive Downs Run, No. 2, | | |
+ The Ironbarks | 1 Jan., 1893 | 3,710 | 5 Sept., 1894
+ 40. Roma Mineral Oil | -- 1907[o]| 3,702 | Dec., 1908
+ Company | | |
+ 41. Wellshot Run, No. 4 | Sept., 1901 | 3,698 | -- 1902
+ 42. Elderslie Run, No. 3 | Mar., 1900 | 3,680 | 18 May, 1901
+ 43. Kensington Downs Run | -- 1897 | 3,650 | June, 1898
+ 44. Wyora, Winton District | 23 May, 1899 | 3,650 | 12 Mar., 1900
+ 45. Darr River Downs Run, | Jan., 1890 | 3,650 | Aug., 1891
+ No. 3 | | |
+ 46. Darr River Downs Run, | | |
+ No. 1, Nine-mile | 23 Dec., 1888 | 3,600 | Mar., 1899
+ 47. Longreach Town, Aramac | April, 1897 | 3,590 | 10 Dec., 1897
+ Shire | | |
+ 48. Noondoo Run, No. 2, | Nov., 1897 | 3,586 | July, 1899
+ Dareel | | |
+ 49. Manuka Run, No. 2 | Feb., 1899 | 3,581 | June, 1901
+ 50. Fairbairn, Dagworth | -- 1900 | 3,579 | Sept., 1900
+ Resumption | | |
+ 51. Wellshot Run, No. 3, | 27 Oct., 1894 | 3,561 | 17 June, 1895
+ Totness | | |
+ 52. Barcaldine Downs Run, | | |
+ No. 1, Twenty-mil e| -- 1889 | 3,533 | 21 Jan., 1896
+ 53. Lansdowne Run, No. 3, | Oct., 1894 | 3,529 | Jan., 1896
+ Downfall | | |
+ 54. Jericho (Government) | Mar., 1902 | 3,518 | 15 June, 1903
+ 55. Lerida Run, No. 1 | Sept., 1897 |?3,511 | 16 July, 1898
+ 56. Katandra and | | |
+ Stamfordham Runs, No. 4 | ... [p]| 3,510 | -- 1907
+ 57. Wellshot Run, No. 1, | 16 Nov., 1892 | 3,504 | 2 Nov., 1893
+ Bradnich | | |
+ 58. Elderslie Run, No. 1, | Oct., 1896 | 3,500 | July, 1898
+ Farewell | | |
+ 59. Lerida Run, No. 2, | 12 July, 1898 | 3,500 | 3 Mar., 1900
+ Glenullen | | |
+ 60. Westlands Run, No. 2, | 18 April, 1893 | 3,480 | 13 May, 1896
+ Buffalo | | |
+ 61. Acacia Downs G. F., | Feb., 1897 | 3,480 | 20 July, 1897
+ Bowen Downs | | |
+ 62. Hamilton Downs Run, | | |
+ No. 2, Campsie | July, 1898 | 3,457 | Jan., 1900
+ 63. Tintinchilla Run, Milo | Before 1895 | 3,411 | Mar., 1895
+ 64. Dagworth Run, No. 2, | April, 1898 | 3,400 | Dec., 1898
+ Pinnacle | | |
+ 65. Adavale Town | 27 Dec., 1899 | 3,398 | 8 Nov., 1900
+ (Government) | | |
+ 66. Westbury, Camoola | ... | 3,340 | -- 1900
+ District | | |
+ 67. Dagworth Run, No. 1, | | |
+ Crescent Creek | April, 1892 | 3,335 | July, 1893
+ 68. Arabella Run | 13 April, 1896 | 3,335 | 16 May, 1897
+ 69. Jacondol G. F., , | | |
+ Campbell's Barcaldine | Mar., 1895 | 3,333 | -- 1905
+ 70. Thomson Watershed | Aug., 1891 | 3,319 | July, 1893
+ (Government) | | |
+ 71. Burenda Run, No. 2, | Nov., 1894 | 3,315 | 14 Sept., 1895
+ Burenda | | |
+ 72. Bowen Downs Run, | | |
+ No. 4, Muttaburra road | Aug., 1891 | 3,308 | Oct., 1894
+ 73. Hamilton Downs Run, | ... | 3,301 | April, 1895
+ No. 1, Clio | | |
+ 74. Noorindoo Run, No. 1 | Mar., 1901 | 3,300 | -- 1904
+ 75. Cooinda, Winton North | 7 June, 1898 | 3,298 | 20 Jan., 1899
+ District | | |
+ 76. Portland Downs Run | 14 Aug., 1897 | 3,280 | 14 June, 1899
+ 77. Chatsworth Run, No. 1 | ? 1894 | 3,266 | 5 Feb., 1895
+ 78. Sesbania Run, No. 2 | May, 1898 | 3,252 | 19 Sept., 1898
+ 79. Alice Downs Run, |11 April, 1898 | 3,248 | Dec., 1898
+ No. 2, Norwood | | |
+ 80. Mount Cornish Run, | ... | 3,219 | 4 June, 1907
+ No. 2 | | |
+ 81. Sesbania Run, No. 5 | 5 June, 1901 | 3,186 | Mar., 1902
+ 82. Sesbania Run, No. 6 | ... | 3,179 | -- Aug., 1909
+ 83. Terrick Terrick Run, | -- 1907[q]| 3,140 | -- 1908
+ Lorne | | |
+ 84. Sesbania Run, No. 4 | Feb., 1899 | 3,103 | Jan., 1900
+ 85. Noorindoo Run, No. 2 | Feb., 1903 | 3,103 | 2 April, 1904
+ 86. Noondoo Run, Narine | -- 1896 | 3,098 | Nov., 1897
+ 87. Birkhead Run, No. 1, | 29 June, 1898 | 3,095 | -- 1906
+ Macfarlane | | |
+ 88. Authoringa and | 1 Jan., 1896 | 3,086 | June, 1898
+ Riversleigh Runs, | | |
+ No. 2, Rocky | | |
+ 89. Llanrheidol Run, No. 2,| June, 1896 | 3,085 | 3 April, 1897
+ Acacia | | |
+ 90. Hughenden M. C. | 3 Jan., 1894 | 3,069 | July, 1898
+ Town Bore | | |
+ 91. Muttaburra District, | ? 1895 | 3,065 | April, 1895
+ Brookwood | | |
+ 92. Authoringa, No. 3, | Aug., 1898 | 3,060 | -- 1899
+ Spinifex | | |
+ 93. Muttaburra District, | | |
+ Weewondilla | ... | 3,060 | Dec., 1903
+ 94. Albion Downs Run | Oct., 1897 | 3,033 | Sept., 1899
+ 95. Muttaburra District, | -- 1906 | 3,030 | 27 July, 1908
+ Crossmoor | | |
+ 96. Barcaldine North | | |
+ District, Fairview | ... | 3,028 | 20 July, 1907
+ 97. Myall Plains, Boombah | Feb., 1907 | 3,024 | Dec., 1908
+ 98. Lansdowne, No. 2, | Nov., 1889 | 3,005 | Feb., 1892
+ Narambla | | |
+ 99. Yarrawonga Run, Ada | ... | 3,000 | June, 1898
+ 100. Tarra Grazing Farm, | ... | 3,000 | -- 1906
+ No. 4 | | |
+ ---------------------------+------------------+-------+---------------
+
+ [Footnote l: Abandoned or suspended at 4,001 feet.]
+
+ [Footnote m: Abandoned at 3,942 feet.]
+
+ [Footnote n: In progress at 3,799 feet.]
+
+ [Footnote o: In progress at 3,702 feet.]
+
+ [Footnote p: Abandoned or suspended at 3,510 feet.]
+
+ [Footnote q: In progress at 3,140 feet.]
+
+The hydraulic survey, suspended some years ago, has not yet been
+resumed; therefore the foregoing return, furnished by the Hydraulic
+Engineer in advance of his report, has been compiled from unofficial
+documents which have not yet been verified, and is given for what it
+is worth.
+
+
+STATISTICS SUPPLIED BY WELL-BORING COMPANIES.
+
+In order to make the record of artesian boring in Queensland as
+complete as possible, the following information has been obtained from
+the two principal drilling firms at present engaged in the State.
+It will be noticed that the list of the Intercolonial Boring Company
+includes three bores in South Australia:--
+
+LIST OF BORES OVER 3,000 FEET IN DEPTH PUT DOWN BY INTERCOLONIAL
+BORING COMPANY, LIMITED.
+
+ Depth.
+ Name of Bore. Feet. Date Completed.
+
+ Ayrshire Downs, No. 3 3,983 September, 1902
+ Brookwood, No. 1 3,065 May, 1895
+ Boombah, No. 1 3,024 December, 1908
+ Chatsworth, No. 1 3,266 February, 1895
+ Cooindah, No. 1 3,289 January, 1899
+ Dagworth, No. 1 3,335 July, 1893
+ Dagworth, No. 2 3,400 December, 1898
+ Dareel, No. 1 3,586 July, 1899
+ Elderslie, No. 3 3,626 May, 1901
+ Evesham, No. 1 3,970 In progress
+ Fairview, No. 2 3,028 July, 1907
+ Greendale, No. 1 3,799 In progress
+ Goyder's Lagoon, S.A. 4,850 March, 1905
+ Hamilton Downs, No. 1 3,301 April, 1895
+ Hamilton Downs, No. 2 3,457 January, 1900
+ Kynuna, No. 7 3,226 December, 1908
+ Lerida, No. 1 3,511 July, 1898
+ Lerida, No. 2 3,500 March, 1900
+ Llanrheidol, No. 2 3,085 April, 1897
+ Lorne, No. 1 4,057 In progress
+ Manuka, No. 2 3,581 June, 1901
+ Mungeranie, S.A. 3,360 February, 1900
+ Mulka, S.A. 3,445 December, 1906
+ Mount Cornish, Tablederry 3,219 June, 1907
+ Mount Cornish, No. 3 3,015 June, 1909
+ Narine, No. 1 3,098 November, 1897
+ Ruthven, No. 1 4,105 June, 1905
+ Ruthven, No. 2 4,515 April, 1908
+ Roma Mineral Oil 3,715 In progress
+ Sesbania, No. 2 3,252 September, 1898
+ Sesbania, No. 4 3,103 January, 1900
+ Sesbania, No. 5 3,186 March, 1902
+ Sesbania, No. 6 3,179 August, 1909
+ Vindex, No. 2 4,000 June, 1900
+ Vindex, No. 3 3,795 September, 1902
+ Warbreccan, No. 1 4,333 June, 1898
+ Winton (deepened) 4,010 June, 1895
+ Wyora, No. 1 3,600 March, 1900
+
+Note.--Bores marked S.A. are in South Australia.
+
+Brisbane, 1st October, 1909.
+
+
+BORES COMPLETED AND IN PROGRESS BY WOODLEY LIMITED, BRISBANE, SINCE
+31ST MARCH, 1909.
+
+ 1. Bore at Millie Station, near Charleville, D. McNeill owner.
+ Depth, 1,732 ft.; water 8 in. over casing; flow ¾-million
+ gallons per diem.
+
+ 2. At Claverton Downs, near Wyandra, Mrs. Whitney owner.
+ Depth, 1,955 ft.; water 22 in. over casing; flow about 1½
+ million gallons.
+
+ 3. At Bendena Station, Burgess and Co. owners. Depth, 2,232
+ ft.; water 4 ft. 6 in. over casing; flow about 3½ million
+ gallons.
+
+ 4. At Bonus Downs Station, Mitchell, Sir S. McCaughey owner.
+ Depth, 3,424 ft. 6 in.; water rising to 60 ft. below surface;
+ boring ceased in slate formation.
+
+ 5. At Eurella Station, Donald Fletcher owner. Depth at end
+ of September, 2,124 ft., still in progress; water rising to
+ within 150 ft. of the surface.
+
+ 6. At Clifton Station, C. H. T. Schmidt owner. Depth, 26th
+ June, 225 ft.; in progress.
+
+ 7. At Koreelah Station, Charleville. Depth at end of June, 400
+ ft.; in progress.
+
+ 8. At Comongin Station, Bulloo, McLean, Barker, and Co.
+ owners. Depth on 30th June, 600 ft.; in progress.
+
+ 9. At Aberglassie Station, J. R. and H. C. Loughran owners.
+ Starting.
+
+ 10. At Cytherea Station, R. T. Winter owner. Starting.
+
+ 11. At Airlie Downs, A. Leeds owner. Starting.
+
+
+
+
+APPENDIX J.
+
+CLIMATIC CONTRASTS.
+
+COMPARATIVE VITAL STATISTICS.
+
+
+Vital statistics are set forth by the various Government Statists
+of Australia with extreme particularity. But it is not easy to make
+comparative analyses for the purpose of ascertaining the birth rates,
+marriage rates, or death rates in the different States of Australia.
+The birth rates per 1,000 of the population give no accurate bases for
+comparison. They supply only what the statists call the crude birth
+rate. The information necessary to ascertain true comparative birth
+rates involves knowledge of the number of women of the different
+child-bearing ages in the several States; the proportion of marriages
+at different ages in each; the number of married women, their ages,
+and also the number of spinsters. Married women in their teens are
+more fertile than in their twenties, in their twenties than in
+their thirties, in their thirties than in their forties. So that to
+ascertain the true birth rate the comparative number of married or
+marriageable women in the contrasted countries must be ascertained.
+For example, if there were 20,000 married women in Queensland between
+twenty and thirty; and 60,000 married women of the same age in New
+South Wales; and if the number of births among those 20,000 and 60,000
+respectively were ascertained, the true birth rate among women of that
+age would be obtained. Similar remarks apply to the death rate. The
+comparison must be made between a given number of men or women of the
+same ages, and then the true comparative death rate per 1,000 of such
+persons will be ascertainable, but not otherwise.
+
+It is supposed in many parts of Australia that North Queensland is
+less salubrious than South Queensland, and that the Southern States
+are healthier than Queensland as a whole. The crude death rate does
+not give a basis for this assumption, because there are fewer old
+people and fewer young children per 1,000 of the population in
+sparsely peopled areas than in settled districts. The lightest average
+mortality is among persons between the ages of two and eighteen years;
+the greatest mortality among children under two years. Information
+is not procurable showing the number of persons in Queensland in age
+groups, this information being only obtainable in census years.
+
+The Queensland Government Statistician has furnished the accompanying
+table, based on the results of the censuses of 1891 and 1901, showing
+the relative salubrity of different parts of the Commonwealth in those
+two years for all the States save Western Australia; and it will be
+noticed that it differentiates also between children north and south
+of the Tropic of Capricorn in Queensland. These figures are valuable
+for comparative purposes.
+
+It will be noticed that among children under two years the rate of
+mortality north of the Tropic of Capricorn in 1891 was 74.85
+per 1,000, and in 1901 73.42 per 1,000. South of the tropic the
+corresponding figures were 70.33 and 64.97 per 1,000 respectively, the
+difference in favour of the south being 4.52 and 8.45 per 1,000. Of
+children under five years in the north the mortality was 39.44 and
+32.80 respectively; while south of the tropic it was 33.54 and 29.72
+respectively. Thus the difference in favour of the south was 5.90 and
+3.08 respectively. Above the age of five years the difference between
+north and south is rather more marked, but the comparison of
+these, for reasons analogous to those stated above with respect to
+comparative birth or death rates, is valueless.
+
+If we take the New South Wales figures, we find that as to children
+under two years the mortality in 1891 was 85.12, and in 1901 72.42 per
+1,000. Thus North Queensland compares very favourably with the parent
+State by 10.27 in 1891, and unfavourably in 1901 by only 1 per 1,000.
+With South Queensland the comparison shows a difference against New
+South Wales in 1891 of 14.79 per 1,000, and of 7.45 per 1,000 in 1901.
+As to children under five years the difference in favour of New South
+Wales in 1891, as against North Queensland, was only 0.16 per cent.,
+and in 1901 0.43 per 1,000; and as against South Queensland it was
+5.74 on the wrong side in 1891, and 2.65 in 1901. It is needless
+further to analyse the figures, but evidently the only States
+whose mortality among young children is more favourable than South
+Queensland are South Australia and Tasmania.
+
+Although these figures are official it may be wise to use them with
+reservation. The comparatively high mortality north of the Tropic of
+Capricorn is fully accounted for by the absence of the comforts of
+life in that newly settled area. In 1901 the mortality beyond the
+tropic was, for children under five years, almost the same as in
+New South Wales and Victoria. So that, so far as young children are
+concerned, we need not fear that the climate of Tropical Queensland
+will be found unfavourable to the British race.
+
+The death ratio of the population is somewhat higher in the tropics
+than in the South for each age group mentioned, and consequently of
+course for persons of all ages; this applies to both the years cited,
+1891 and 1901. These years have been selected as, being "Census"
+years, the numbers at each age can then be definitely determined. The
+mortality rate for 1901 showed a distinct improvement on that for 1891
+in all instances except with persons over five years of age in the
+South; as regards these the experience for 1901 was fractionally less
+satisfactory than in 1891.
+
+[Illustration: "QUEENSLAND and Territory of PAPUA 1909"]
+
+
+RETURN SHOWING THE POPULATION, NUMBER OF DEATHS, AND THE RATE OF
+MORTALITY AT CERTAIN AGES FOR THE YEARS 1891 AND 1901.
+
+ ----------------------------+----------------------------------------++
+ | 1891. ||
+ +--------------+-----------+-------------++
+ | Census | Number of | Ratio ||
+ ------ | Population. | Deaths. | per 1,000 ||
+ | | | of the ||
+ | | | Population. ||
+ ----------------------------+--------------+-----------+-------------++
+ QUEENSLAND-- | | | ||
+ | | | ||
+ NORTH OF THE TROPIC OF | | | ||
+ CAPRICORN-- | | | ||
+ | | | ||
+ Under 2 years | 6,426 | 481 | 74·85 ||
+ +--------------+-----------+-------------++
+ Under 5 years | 15,061 | 594 | 39·44 ||
+ Over 5 years | 93,925 | 1,088 | 11·58 ||
+ +--------------+-----------+-------------++
+ All ages | 108,986 | 1,682 | 15·43 ||
+ |==============|===========|=============||
+ | | | ||
+ SOUTH OF THE TROPIC OF | | | ||
+ CAPRICORN-- | | | ||
+ | | | ||
+ Under 2 years | 18,598 | 1,308 | 70·33 ||
+ +--------------+-----------+-------------++
+ Under 5 years | 45,264 | 1,518 | 33·54 ||
+ Over 5 years | 239,468 | 1,970 | 8·23 ||
+ +--------------+-----------+-------------++
+ All Ages | 284,732 | 3,488 | 12·25 ||
+ |==============|===========|=============||
+ | | | ||
+ WHOLE STATE-- | | | ||
+ | | | ||
+ Under 2 years | 25,024 | 1,789 | 71·49 ||
+ +--------------+-----------+-------------++
+ Under 5 years | 60,325 | 2,112 | 35·01 ||
+ Over 5 years | 333,393 | 3,058 | 9·17 ||
+ +--------------+-----------+-------------++
+ All Ages | 393,718 | 5,170 | 13·13 ||
+ ----------------------------+--------------+-----------+-------------++
+
+[cont.]
+ ----------------------------++----------------------------------------
+ || 1901.
+ ++--------------+-----------+-------------
+ || Census | Number of | Ratio
+ ------ || Population. | Deaths. | per 1,000
+ || | | of the
+ || | | Population.
+ ----------------------------++--------------+-----------+-------------
+ QUEENSLAND-- || | |
+ || | |
+ NORTH OF THE TROPIC OF || | |
+ CAPRICORN-- || | |
+ || | |
+ Under 2 years || 6,933 | 509 | 73·42
+ ++--------------+-----------+-------------
+ Under 5 years || 17,166 | 563 | 32·80
+ Over 5 years || 132,466 | 1,448 | 10·93
+ ++--------------+-----------+-------------
+ All ages || 149,632 | 2,011 | 13·44
+ ||==============|===========|=============
+ || | |
+ SOUTH OF THE TROPIC OF || | |
+ CAPRICORN-- || | |
+ || | |
+ Under 2 years || 18,454 | 1,199 | 64·97
+ ++--------------+-----------+-------------
+ Under 5 years || 45,460 | 1,351 | 29·72
+ Over 5 years || 308,174 | 2,645 | 8·58
+ ++--------------+-----------+-------------
+ All Ages || 353,634 | 3,996 | 11·30
+ ||==============|===========|=============
+ || | |
+ WHOLE STATE-- || | |
+ || | |
+ Under 2 years || 25,387 | 1,708 | 67·28
+ ++--------------+-----------+-------------
+ Under 5 years || 62,626 | 1,914 | 30·56
+ Over 5 years || 440,640 | 4,093 | 9·29
+ ++--------------+-----------+-------------
+ All Ages || 503,266 | 6,007 | 11·94
+ ----------------------------++--------------+-----------+-------------
+
+
+NOTE.--Death rates calculated on the estimated mean population of
+the two years mentioned above and published in the Reports on Vital
+Statistics were--
+
+ 1891 12·77
+ 1901 11·88
+
+The utilisation of Census figures in order to quote the age condition
+at the time is accountable for the slight difference in the total
+ratio.
+
+RETURN SHOWING THE POPULATION, NUMBER OF DEATHS, AND THE RATE OF
+MORTALITY AT CERTAIN AGES FOR THE YEARS 1891 AND 1901.--_continued:_
+
+ ----------------------------+----------------------------------------++
+ | 1891. ||
+ +--------------+-----------+-------------++
+ | Census | Number of | Ratio ||
+ ------ | Population. | Deaths. | per 1,000 ||
+ | | | of the ||
+ | | | Population. ||
+ ----------------------------+--------------+-----------+-------------++
+ NEW SOUTH WALES-- | | | ||
+ | | | ||
+ Under 2 years | 66,719 | 5,679 | 85·12 ||
+ +--------------+-----------+-------------++
+ Under 5 years | 165,750 | 6,510 | 39·28 ||
+ Over 5 years | 966,484 | 9,776 | 10·12 ||
+ +--------------+-----------+-------------++
+ All ages | 1,132,234 | 16,286 | 14·38 ||
+ |==============|===========|=============||
+ | | | ||
+ VICTORIA-- | | | ||
+ | | | ||
+ Under 2 years | 62,102 | 5,822 | 93·75 ||
+ +--------------+-----------+-------------++
+ Under 5 years | 148,359 | 6,518 | 43·93 ||
+ Over 5 years | 982,104 | 12,113 | 12·33 ||
+ +--------------+-----------+-------------++
+ All ages | 1,130,463 | 18,631 | 16·48 ||
+ |==============|===========|=============||
+ | | | ||
+ SOUTH AUSTRALIA-- | | | ||
+ | | | ||
+ Under 2 years | 17,875 | 1,180 | 66·01 ||
+ +--------------+-----------+-------------++
+ Under 5 years | 45,166 | 1,407 | 31·15 ||
+ Over 5 years | 270,367 | 2,804 | 10·37 ||
+ +--------------+-----------+-------------++
+ All ages | 315,533 | 4,211 | 13·35 ||
+ |==============|===========|=============||
+ | | | ||
+ TASMANIA-- | | | ||
+ | | | ||
+ Under 2 years | 8,414 | 524 | 62·28 ||
+ +--------------+-----------+-------------++
+ Under 5 years | 21,466 | 599 | 27·90 ||
+ Over 5 years | 125,201 | 1,635 | 13·06 ||
+ +--------------+-----------+-------------++
+ All ages | 146,667 | 2,234 | 15·23 ||
+ |==============|===========|=============||
+ | | | ||
+ WESTERN AUSTRALIA-- | | | ||
+ | | | ||
+ Under 2 years | ... | ... | ... ||
+ +--------------+-----------+-------------++
+ Under 5 years | 6,835 | 293 | 42·87 ||
+ Over 5 years | 42,947 | 576 | 13·41 ||
+ +--------------+-----------+-------------++
+ All ages | 49,782 | 869 | 17·46 ||
+ ----------------------------+--------------+-----------+-------------++
+
+ [cont.]
+ ----------------------------++---------------------------------------
+ || 1901.
+ ++--------------+-----------+------------
+ || Census | Number of | Ratio
+ ------ || Population. | Deaths. | per 1,000
+ || | | of the
+ || | | Population.
+ ----------------------------++--------------+-----------+------------
+ NEW SOUTH WALES-- || | |
+ || | |
+ Under 2 years || 64,376 | 4,662 | 72·42
+ ++--------------+-----------+------------
+ Under 5 years || 159,146 | 5,151 | 32·37
+ Over 5 years || 1,199,987 | 10,870 | 9·06
+ ++--------------+-----------+------------
+ All ages || 1,359,133 | 16,021 | 11·79
+ ||==============|===========|============
+ || | |
+ VICTORIA-- || | |
+ || | |
+ Under 2 years || 54,669 | 3,817 | 69·82
+ ++--------------+-----------+------------
+ Under 5 years || 131,986 | 4,251 | 32·21
+ Over 5 years || 1,069,355 | 11,653 | 10·90
+ ++--------------+-----------+------------
+ All ages || 1,201,341 | 15,904 | 13·24
+ ||==============|===========|============
+ || | |
+ SOUTH AUSTRALIA-- || | |
+ || | |
+ Under 2 years || 15,988 | 1,059 | 66·24
+ ++--------------+-----------+------------
+ Under 5 years || 39,940 | 1,166 | 29·19
+ Over 5 years || 318,568 | 2,808 | 8·81
+ ++--------------+-----------+------------
+ All ages || 358,508 | 3,974 | 11·08
+ ||==============|===========|============
+ || | |
+ TASMANIA-- || | |
+ || | |
+ Under 2 years || 8,484 | 492 | 57·99
+ ++--------------+-----------+------------
+ Under 5 years || 20,865 | 531 | 25·45
+ Over 5 years || 151,610 | 1,283 | 8·46
+ ++--------------+-----------+------------
+ All ages || 172,475 | 1,814 | 10·52
+ ||==============|===========|============
+ || | |
+ WESTERN AUSTRALIA-- || | |
+ || | |
+ Under 2 years || 9,303 | 882 | 94·81
+ ++--------------+-----------+------------
+ Under 5 years || 20,675 | 957 | 46·29
+ Over 5 years || 163,449 | 1,562 | 9·56
+ ++--------------+-----------+------------
+ All ages || 184,124 | 2,519 | 13·68
+ ----------------------------++--------------+-----------+------------
+
+
+RAINFALL AND TEMPERATURE.
+
+The subjoined map shows the curves of equal mean annual rainfall
+for every 10·0 inches for Australia, compiled from the most recent
+information:--
+
+[Illustration: DISTRIBUTION OF THE RAINFALL OF THE COMMONWEALTH OF
+AUSTRALIA]
+
+The following table shows the relative rainfalls at the six Australian
+capital cities for the periods set severally against them; also for
+the ten-year period subsequent to 1896, during which the average
+precipitation was much below that of the total number of years over
+which the records extend:--
+
+ -----------------------------------------------------------------------
+ Ten Years'
+ Total Average Ten Years' Difference Difference Percentage
+ Place. Number Rainfall Average between for per Annum
+ of for all Rainfall. the Two. Ten Years. above or
+ Years. Years. below
+ True Mean.
+ -----------------------------------------------------------------------
+ Inches. Inches. Inches. Inches.
+
+ Brisbane 57 47·47 39·16 -8·31 83·10 -18
+ Sydney 67 48·80 44·28 -4·52 45·20 -9
+ Melbourne 63 26·35 25·50 -0·85 8·50 -3
+ Perth 31 33·03 32·54 -0·49 4·90 -1
+ Hobart 66 23·38 22·98 -0·40 4·00 -2
+ Adelaide 67 20·89 20·53 -0·36 3·60 -2
+ -----------------------------------------------------------------------
+
+The following table supplies similar information with respect to
+seventeen representative Queensland stations, from which it will be
+seen that the mean annual rainfall at Geraldton for twenty-one years
+was 145·27 inches, and for the ten years subsequent to 1896 135·81
+inches. Thus Geraldton is by far the wettest place in the State.
+The lightest mean rainfall for the same period was at Boulia, which
+recorded 11·45 inches; and for the ten years, 8·72 inches. The last
+column of the table shows that the fall for the ten years was under
+the average at every station mentioned, the shortage at Cooktown
+having been 28 per cent. each year of the ten. The number of wet days
+is not supplied, except for the capital cities. The driest part
+of Australia--that which receives a rainfall of 10·0 inches
+and under--comprises an area equalling nearly one-third of the
+Commonwealth, and includes the central Territory of South Australia,
+the extreme western parts of New South Wales, the south-western
+parts of Queensland, and the south-eastern, central, and part of the
+north-western portions of Western Australia. The limits of this dry
+area are shown by the 10·0-inch isohyetal line:--
+
+ ------------+------+----------+----------+----------+----------+----------
+ | | | | | |Ten Years'
+ |Total | Average |Ten Years'|Difference|Difference|Percentage
+ |Number| Rainfall | Average | between | for |per Annum
+ Place. |of | for | Rainfall.| the Two. |Ten Years.|above or
+ |Years.|all Years.| | | | below
+ | | | | | |True Mean.
+ ------------+------+----------+----------+----------+----------+----------
+ | | Inches. | Inches. | Inches. | Inches. |
+ | | | | | |
+ Cooktown | 29 | 68·96 | 49·91 | -19·05 | 190·50 | -28
+ | | | | | |
+ Geraldton | 21 | 145·27 | 135·81 | -9·46 | 94·60 | -7
+ | | | | | |
+ Brisbane | 57 | 47·47 | 39·16 | -8·31 | 83·10 | -18
+ | | | | | |
+ Mackay | 36 | 69·42 | 61·73 | -7·69 | 76·90 | -11
+ | | | | | |
+ Maryborough | 36 | 46·58 | 39·49 | -7·09 | 70·90 | -15
+ | | | | | |
+ Goondiwindi | 28 | 29·27 | 22·99 | -6·28 | 62·80 | -21
+ | | | | | |
+ Tambo | 21 | 22·87 | 18·08 | -4·79 | 47·90 | -21
+ | | | | | |
+ Bowen | 36 | 40·40 | 35·62 | -4·78 | 47·80 | -12
+ | | | | | |
+ Blackall | 27 | 22·59 | 17·92 | -4·67 | 46·70 | -21
+ | | | | | |
+ Charleville | 34 | 19·71 | 15·30 | -4·41 | 44·10 | -22
+ | | | | | |
+ Hughenden | 22 | 19·12 | 14·92 | -4·20 | 42·00 | -22
+ | | | | | |
+ Thursday | | | | | |
+ Island | 16 | 68·11 | 63·99 | -4·12 | 41·20 | -6
+ | | | | | |
+ Springsure | 30 | 26·25 | 22·54 | -3·71 | 37·10 | -14
+ | | | | | |
+ Boulia | 21 | 11·45 | 8·72 | -2·73 | 27·30 | -24
+ | | | | | |
+ Thargomindah| 25 | 12·53 | 10·03 | -2·50 | 25·00 | -20
+ | | | | | |
+ Cloncurry | 23 | 19·35 | 17·02 | -2·33 | 23·30 | -12
+ | | | | | |
+ Normanton | 35 | 37·11 | 35·26 | -1·85 | 18·50 | -5
+ ------------+------+----------+----------+----------+----------+----------
+
+The following table shows the distribution of the average rainfall
+from 10·0 inches and under to over 40·0 inches:--
+
+ -----------------+-----------+-----------+-----------+-----------+
+ Average Annual | | | | |
+ Rainfall. | N.S.W. | Victoria. |Queensland.| South |
+ | | | | Australia.|
+ -----------------+-----------+-----------+-----------+-----------+
+ | sqr. mls. | sqr. mls. | sqr. mls. | sqr. mls. |
+ | | | | |
+ Under 10 inches | 81,144 | nil | 135,600 | 306,663 |
+ 10-20 " | 116,363 | 36,300 | 255,300 | 57,935 |
+ 20-30 " | 77,910 | 27,900 | 173,400 | 13,908 |
+ 30-40 " | 20,414 | 18,770 | 58,700 | 1,198 |
+ Over 40 " | 14,541 | 4,914 | 47,500 | 366 |
+ +-----------+-----------+-----------+-----------+
+ Total Area | 310,372 | 87,884 | 670,500 | 380,070 |
+ -----------------+-----------+-----------+-----------+-----------+
+
+ [cont.]
+ -----------------+-----------+-----------+-----------+--------------
+ Average Annual | | | |
+ Rainfall. | Northern | Western | Tasmania.| Commonwealth.
+ | Territory.| Australia.| |
+ -----------------+-----------+-----------+-----------+--------------
+ | sqr. mls. | sqr. mls. | sqr. mls. | sqr. mls.
+ | | | |
+ Under 10 inches | 6,300 | 408,300 | nil | 938,007
+ 10-20 " | 213,430 | 400,720 | nil | 1,080,048
+ 20-30 " | 96,790 | 113,700 | 11,395 | 515,003
+ 30-40 " | 120,600 | 39,100 | 5,396 | 264,178
+ Over 40 " | 86,500 | 14,100 | 9,424 | 177,345
+ +-----------+-----------+-----------+--------------
+ Total Area | 523,620 | 975,920 | 26,215 | 2,974,581
+ -----------------+-----------+-----------+-----------+--------------
+
+
+The comparative rainfalls and temperatures at the respective State
+capitals, and at Canberra, the embryo Federal capital, are shown in
+the following table:--
+
+ ------------+-------+--------------------------------+
+ | | ANNUAL RAINFALL. |
+ Place. | Height+----------+----------+----------+
+ | above | | | |
+ | M.S.L.| | | |
+ | | Average. | Highest. | Lowest. |
+ ------------+-------+----------+----------+----------+
+ | Ft. | Ins. | Ins. | Ins. |
+ | | | | |
+ Perth | 197 | 33·05 | 46·73 | 20·48 |
+ Adelaide | 141 | 20·38 | 30·87 | 13·43 |
+ Brisbane | 137 | 50·00 | 88·23 | 24·11 |
+ Sydney | 144 | 49·35 | 82·81 | 23·01 |
+ Melbourne | 91 | 25·62 | 44·25 | 15·61 |
+ Hobart | 160 | 23·40 | 40·67 | 13·43 |
+ Canberra {| 2,000 |} | | |
+ (District) {| to |} 23·00 | 50·69 | 16·56 |
+ {| 2,900 |} | | |
+ ------------+-------+----------+----------+----------+
+
+ [cont.]
+ ------------+-------+-----------------------------------------------------
+ | | TEMPERATURE.
+ Place. | Height+--------+--------+--------+--------+--------+--------
+ | above | Mean | Mean |Highest | Lowest | Average| Average
+ | M.S.L.| Summer.| Winter.| on | on | Hottest| Coldest
+ | | | | Record.| Record.| Month. | Month.
+ ------------+-------+--------+--------+--------+--------+--------+--------
+ | Ft. | Fahr. | Fahr. | Fahr. | Fahr. | Fahr. | Fahr.
+ | | | | | | |
+ Perth | 197 | 73·9 | 55·6 | 112·0 | 33·6 | 75·1 | 54·6
+ Adelaide | 141 | 72·3 | 52·0 | 116·3 | 32·2 | 73·3 | 52·5
+ Brisbane | 137 | 76·0 | 60·0 | 108·9 | 36·1 | 77·3 | 58·0
+ Sydney | 144 | 70·8 | 53·9 | 108·5 | 35·9 | 71·5 | 52·3
+ Melbourne | 91 | 64·9 | 49·2 | 111·2 | 27·0 | 66·3 | 47·7
+ Hobart | 160 | 61·4 | 47·0 | 105·0 | 27·7 | 62·1 | 45·7
+ Canberra {| 2,000 |} | | | | |
+ (District) {| to |} 69·7 | 45·0 | 109·0 | 16·0 | 72·0 | 42·0
+ {| 2,900 |} | | | | |
+ ------------+-------+--------+--------+--------+--------+--------+--------
+
+The mean humidity at the several capitals is as follows:--Brisbane
+mean averages, 68·1; highest, 85; lowest, 47. Sydney mean averages,
+73, 90, 55. Melbourne mean averages, 72, 76, 67. Adelaide mean
+averages, 56, 84, 33. Perth mean averages, 63, 83, 45. Hobart mean
+averages, 72, 76, 67.
+
+
+
+
+APPENDIX K.--EDUCATION STATISTICS.
+
+
+I.--STATE PRIMARY EDUCATION (1907).
+
+ ----------------------------+------------+-----------------+-----------+
+ | Queensland.| New South Wales.| Victoria. |
+ ----------------------------+------------+-----------------+-----------+
+ | £ s. d. | £ s. d. | £ s. d.|
+ Amount per head of estimated| | | |
+ population | 0 10 11 | 0 10 6 | 0 9 6 |
+ Amount per district scholar | 3 3 2 | 3 9 2 | 2 18 7 |
+ ----------------------------+------------+-----------------+-----------+
+
+
+II.--PRIVATE SCHOOLS (1908).
+
+ ------------------------+---------+---------+---------+---------+-------+
+ |Undenomi-|Church of| Roman |Lutheran.| Total.|
+ |national.| England.|Catholic.| | |
+ ------------------------+---------+---------+---------+---------+-------+
+ Number of schools | 86 | 8 | 61 | 2 | 157 |
+ Teachers--Male | 26 | 6 | 57 | 2 | 91 |
+ Female | 170 | 32 | 372 | | 574 |
+ Gross enrolment--Male | 786 | 236 | 4,883 | 29 | 5,934 |
+ Female | 1,386 | 344 | 6,400 | 34 | 8,164 |
+ Average daily attendance| | | | | |
+ --Male | 654 | 216 | 4,220 | 24 | 5,114 |
+ Female| 1,289 | 297 | 5,200 | 28 | 6,814 |
+ ------------------------+---------+---------+---------+---------+-------+
+
+CHURCH OF ENGLAND SCHOOLS (1909).[a]
+
+ -------------------------+------------+--------------+----------------+
+ Schools. | On Roll. | Average | Teachers. |
+ | | Attendance. | |
+ -------------------------+------------+--------------+----------------+
+ St. John's Day School, | 44 boys, | 33 boys, | 6, and 1 music |
+ Brisbane | 134 girls | 107 girls | and 1 drawing |
+ | | | |
+ Holy Trinity Day School, | 33 boys, | 30 boys, | 3 |
+ Woolloongabba | 42 girls | 37·6 girls | |
+ | | | |
+ St. Paul's Day School, | 35 | 29 | 2 |
+ Maryborough | | | |
+ | | | |
+ High School for Boys, | 112 | 112 | 9 |
+ Southport | | | |
+ | | | |
+ Glennie Memorial School | 50 | Very good | 6 |
+ for Girls, Toowoomba | | | |
+ | | | |
+ Eton High School for | 50 | 97 per cent. | 9 |
+ Girls, Toorak, Hamilton | | | |
+ | | | |
+ St. Paul's Day School, | 35 boys, | 25·3 boys, | 4 |
+ Ipswich | 62 girls | 47 girls | |
+ | | | |
+ Theological College, | 14 students| ... | 3 |
+ Nundah | | | |
+ | | | |
+ Tufnell Orphanage, | 70 children| ... | 5 workers |
+ Nundah | | | |
+ | | | |
+ Industrial Home, | 21 inmates | ... | 2 instructors |
+ Clayfield | | | |
+ | | | |
+ High School for Girls, | ... | ... | ... |
+ Stanthorpe | | | |
+ -------------------------+------------+--------------+----------------+
+
+[Footnote a: Furnished by Mr. A. A. Orme, Diocesan Registry, Brisbane.]
+
+
+ROMAN CATHOLIC SCHOOLS (1909).[b]
+
+ -------------------------------------------------------+---------+
+ SCHOOLS TAUGHT BY SISTERS-- | On Roll.|
+ | |
+ _Archdiocese of Brisbane_-- | |
+ | |
+ Brisbane (High School), All Hallows; (Primary) | |
+ --Elizabeth street, Ivory street, South | |
+ Brisbane, Kangaroo Point, Red Hill, Wooloowin, | |
+ Toowong, Rosalie; Sandgate; Ipswich; | |
+ Helidon; Toowoomba (2); Dalby; Roma; Warwick; | |
+ Stanthorpe; Gympie (2); Maryborough; | |
+ Bundaberg; Beaudesert; Southport; | |
+ (Orphanage), Nudgee | 6,226 |
+ | |
+ _Diocese of Rockhampton_-- | |
+ | |
+ (High School), Rockhampton; Townsville; | |
+ Charters Towers; (Primary), Rockhampton; | |
+ Townsville; Charters Towers; Mount Morgan; | |
+ Hughenden; Gladstone; Longreach; | |
+ Winton; Mackay; Ravenswood; Clermont; | |
+ Emerald; (Orphanage), Neerkol | 4,228 |
+ | |
+ _Diocese of Cooktown_-- | |
+ | |
+ (High School), Cooktown; (Primary), | |
+ Cooktown; Cairns; Geraldton; Mareeba | 572 |
+ | |
+ SCHOOLS TAUGHT BY CHRISTIAN BROTHERS-- | |
+ | |
+ _Archdiocese of Brisbane_-- | |
+ | |
+ (College), Nudgee; (High School and Primary), | |
+ Brisbane; Ipswich; Toowoomba; Gympie; | |
+ Maryborough | 1,880 |
+ | |
+ _Diocese of Rockhampton_-- | |
+ (High School and Primary), Rockhampton; | |
+ Charters Towers | 740 |
+ |-------- |
+ Total | 13,646 |
+ -------------------------------------------------------+---------+
+
+[Footnote b: Supplied by the Church authorities.]
+
+[Illustration: GOVERNMENT HOUSE, NOW DEDICATED TO UNIVERSITY PURPOSES]
+
+
+
+
+APPENDIX L.
+
+INAUGURATION OF THE UNIVERSITY OF QUEENSLAND.
+
+
+In older lands Time seems to move with so deliberate a step that his
+march is scarcely noticed, and the passing of fifty years is but a
+small matter, though within the past half-century discovery after
+discovery, advance after advance, has been made. Still these things
+have come gradually, and, like all the great triumphs of peace, have
+been achieved calmly, orderly, and almost imperceptibly. It has been
+different in these new countries, whose practical history comprehends
+scarcely more than the span of one man's life. Queensland has grown
+out of nothing (from the point of view of civilisation) to a fair
+stature of importance. Fifty years is the sum of its existence as a
+self-governing State, but within that brief period the country has
+been reclaimed from the wilderness, and made the home of a happy,
+progressive, and enlightened people. Bearing in mind what Queensland
+was fifty years ago, and what it is to-day, it will be admitted that
+its jubilee was eminently worth celebrating, not in a mere spirit of
+festivity, but in the spirit of a people conscious of what has been
+done, and full of enthusiasm for continued development. No better
+evidence of that could have been afforded than by the particular
+method of celebration decided upon--the dedication of the most
+historic building in Queensland to the purposes of a University.
+It would have been easy to have devised a more showy plan, to have
+arranged for festivities that would have given greater immediate
+pleasure, but it would not have been possible to have marked the
+jubilee day with anything so admirably calculated to promote the best
+interests of the people, or so likely to abide in the public memory.
+That was the view of Mr. Kidston and his Government, to whom belong
+the honour of having given effect to the long-cherished aspirations of
+that numerous body who desire to see Queenslanders an educated as well
+as a prosperous people. For many years there had been a movement afoot
+for the establishment of a University. As far back as 1891, a Royal
+Commission, under the presidency of the late Sir Charles Lilley,
+had inquired into the matter and reported strongly in favour of the
+project. Premiers who were themselves graduates of universities and
+cultured, far-seeing men had recognised the need for a University, but
+the matter obstinately remained in the air. For some sixteen years,
+largely supported by the Sydney University, a Council had carried on
+University Extension Lectures, educating not only the students, but
+the public. Finally, the present Premier, realising that the time was
+ripe for a definite forward move, placed educational reform in the
+forefront of his policy, and succeeded in getting legislation passed
+for the establishment of the institution and in securing a liberal
+provision for maintaining it. This much achieved, everything was
+sufficiently far advanced for an impressive dedicatory ceremony on
+the day chosen for celebrating the jubilee of Queensland--Friday, 10th
+December, 1909. It was not possible, of course, for the University to
+be actually in operation by that date, but it was possible to take
+the first step by solemnly setting apart for its uses the building in
+which it is proposed to conduct it. That was precisely what was done
+on this occasion, and with a simple dignity and an earnestness of
+purpose that could not well have been surpassed. Everything combined
+to make the day and the event memorable, to lift it out of the
+commonplace of public occasions, in a word to make it historic--the
+most historic event since the promulgation of Queensland's free
+Constitution. The building itself had been the honoured home of every
+Governor since 1861. As was happily phrased in one of the speeches,
+it had been the centre of social and political life. What more
+appropriate than that it should be invested with a new function--be
+given, as it were, a new lease of life in the great cause of
+citizen-making? What more interesting than that the chief figure
+in the ceremonial should be Sir William MacGregor, himself a great
+witness to the value of university training, a distinguished servant
+of the Empire, one of the select band of Empire builders who have
+united ripe scholarship with tireless energy and firm grasp of
+national business and the ways of the world? It was a singularly happy
+circumstance that this was his first important public act as Governor
+of Queensland. But a few days before he had taken over the reins
+of government from the hands of the Lieutenant-Governor, Sir Arthur
+Morgan. As befitted the occasion and the interest which they had taken
+in the matter of the University, Sir Arthur and Mr. Kidston also took
+a prominent part in the ceremony. The presence of Professor David, of
+the Sydney University, who was a prominent member of the Shackleton
+Expedition to the Antarctic regions, and of Professor Stirling, of the
+Adelaide University, lent additional distinction to the event, visibly
+representing, as it did, the cordiality with which those important
+institutions regarded the advent of Queensland into the sisterhood of
+Australian University-States.
+
+Never before in its history had Government House been the scene of
+a gathering so unique. The Premier struck the keynote of the whole
+proceedings, when he said that they were met "to erect this white
+stone, as it were, to mark this point in our national progress." He
+was alluding to the marble tablet, which had been affixed to the wall
+near the main entrance, recording the dedication of the building to
+its new purposes. Also, he declared the democratic foundation of the
+institution in the significant sentence: "In very truth it may be said
+that the Queensland University is of the people, and I trust that the
+Senate, when they start to manage this institution, will remember that
+it is also to be for the people."
+
+To the ceremony were bidden all who could lend to it distinction and
+interest. It was no mere official or exclusive gathering, but one
+which represented in full measure the democratic character of the
+Queensland people. Those high in place were there; those who in
+university life had won honour; those who had laboured to lay
+the foundations of the educational system of which this was the
+culmination; the people for whose children this was to be in a real
+and practical sense the great training school and character-building
+institution; the children from whose ranks were to be drawn the
+earliest students. The scene was one which will live in memory long
+after the University has begun its work, and will be recalled when in
+their gladsome, perhaps boisterous, fashion the students hold their
+commemoration days, or when in more thoughtful times the men and women
+who have gone forth from it girded for the battle of life revisit
+its shady walks and studious halls. The building and its charming
+environments lent themselves to an impressive spectacle. In the
+bright summer day, the well-kept grounds and the rich foliage of the
+neighbouring gardens presented a picture of rare colour and beauty.
+Beyond lay the broad river glistening in the sunlight. Above arched
+the ineffable azure scarcely flecked by clouds. In the distance lay
+the far spreading city, with its pulsating life and varied activities.
+Under the shadow of the graceful building and in a sweeping
+semi-circle were massed the spectators, with eyes concentrated on
+the main portico, which had been converted into a stage for the
+interesting drama of the afternoon. A curved structure had been thrown
+out from the masonry, and decorated and canopied with maroon and
+white. Grouped around this were arranged the chairs provided for the
+seven hundred invited guests. Among these were many wearing their
+university costumes, which vied in colour and variety with the dresses
+of the ladies. Beyond this enclosure were drawn up, rank behind rank,
+250 boys and 550 girls chosen from the fifth and sixth classes of the
+metropolitan schools, each wearing Queensland's colours, maroon and
+white, and 200 State school cadets in uniform. All had been assembled
+in Alice street, and marched in procession to the space allotted to
+them. They were there for the double purpose of supplying a choir and
+adding to the representative character of the assembly. Beyond
+their lines were gathered the members of the general public. The
+arrangements entailed a good deal of planning and forethought, but
+every part of the ordered and dignified ceremony was smoothly carried
+out. The military element, drawn from the 9th Australian Infantry
+Regiment, was lined up along the whole front of Government House, the
+scarlet coats and white helmets supplying a fringe of colour to that
+part of the picture.
+
+The time fixed for the ceremony was half-past 3 o'clock. The reserved
+enclosure was then filled, the intermediate space was thronged with
+school children and cadets, and the outer circle was made up of those
+whom interest or curiosity had drawn to the spot. It was no small
+evidence of the genuineness of that interest that, though hundreds
+were too far away to hear the speeches, they remained during the whole
+proceedings. They took their cue from those who were nearer, and
+when they saw or heard them applauding they joined in and swelled the
+volume of enthusiasm. One of the first to take his place on the dais
+was Mr. W. H. Barnes, to whom it had fallen, as Secretary for Public
+Instruction, to pilot the University Bill through the Legislative
+Assembly. Not long afterwards there came Mr. A. H. Barlow, M.L.C., the
+veteran Minister, who had had much to do with the preparation of the
+measure, and who had charge of it during its progress through
+the Upper House. Among early arrivals were Miss MacGregor, His
+Excellency's daughter, and Mrs. Kidston. Punctually at half-past 3 His
+Excellency the Governor, Sir William MacGregor, arrived, dressed in
+his Windsor uniform and wearing the long flowing blue silk cloak
+and decorations of the Grand Cross of St. Michael and St. George,
+accompanied by Lady MacGregor and Mr. Kidston, Premier of Queensland.
+Mrs. Kidston presented Lady MacGregor with a beautiful bouquet, and
+almost at the same time the band of the 9th Regiment struck up "The
+National Anthem," the whole assemblage rising as the patriotic strains
+were heard. The duties usually devolving upon a chairman fell to
+the Premier, who occupied a chair on one side of a small flag-draped
+table, while His Excellency sat on the other side. Near by were the
+Lieutenant-Governor, Sir Arthur Morgan, wearing his robes of office,
+the Chief Justice (Sir Pope A. Cooper) in court dress, the Speaker
+of the Legislative Assembly (Mr. J. T. Bell) in his flowing robes,
+Professor David (representative of the Sydney University) in
+his official robe, Professor Stirling (the representative of the
+University of Adelaide) wearing the scarlet robe of an M.D. of
+Cambridge, and His Grace Archbishop Donaldson in the scarlet and
+ermine of a D.D. Central Queensland had a venerable representative in
+the person of the Right Rev. Dr. Hay, Moderator of the Presbyterian
+General Assembly. The Roman Catholic Archbishop, the Right Rev. Dr.
+Dunne, had as his representative Rev. Father Byrne, the Administrator
+of his diocese. The distinguished company included also Mr. Justice
+Real and Mrs. Real, Mr. Justice Chubb and Mrs. Chubb, Mr. Justice
+Shand, Mr. D. F. Denham (Minister for Lands) and Mrs. Denham, Mr. T.
+O'Sullivan, M.L.C. (Attorney-General) and Mrs. O'Sullivan, Mr. W. T.
+Paget (Minister for Agriculture and Railways) and Miss Paget, Mr. J.
+G. Appel (Home Secretary) and Miss Appel, Mrs. Barnes, Mr. A. G. C.
+Hawthorn (Treasurer) and Mrs. Hawthorn, Mr. W. Lennon, M.L.A. (Acting
+Leader of the Opposition) and Mrs. Lennon, Miss Celia Cooper, Mr.
+C. W. Costin (Clerk of Parliaments), Mr. Anthony Musgrave, (Private
+Secretary to His Excellency), Captain Scarlett, A.D.C., and Captains
+Newton and Claude Foxton, honorary AA.D.C. Members of both Houses
+of Parliament, prominent public servants, the mayors and aldermen of
+Brisbane and South Brisbane, representatives of other metropolitan
+civic bodies, leading citizens, and consular representatives had their
+seats in the enclosure fronting the official dais.
+
+By a happy arrangement the ceremony was inaugurated by the assembled
+children singing "The National Anthem," to which were added three
+of the patriotic verses of "The Australian Anthem" composed by
+Queensland's sweet singer, the late J. Brunton Stephens. The fresh
+musical voices rang out true and clear, carrying far through the
+still, scented air the simple words of devotion and patriotism--
+
+ What can Thy children bring?
+ What save the voice to sing
+ "All things are Thine"?--
+ What to Thy throne convey?
+ What save the voice to pray
+ "God bless our land alway,
+ This land of Thine"?
+
+ Oh, with Thy mighty hand
+ Guard Thou the Motherland;
+ She, too, is Thine.
+ Lead her where honour lies,
+ We beneath other skies
+ Still clinging daughterwise,
+ Hers, yet all Thine.
+
+ Britons of ev'ry creed,
+ Teuton and Celt agreed,
+ Let us be Thine.
+ One in all noble fame,
+ Still be our path the same,
+ Onward in Freedom's name,
+ Upward in Thine!
+
+
+[Illustration: VIEW OF DEDICATION CEREMONY]
+
+The last notes had scarcely died away, when the Premier rose to
+invite His Excellency to assent to the University Bill of 1909, and to
+dedicate the building to the University. He prefaced that proceeding
+by a speech, which summarised the course of progress in Queensland,
+touched upon the difficulties it had been necessary to overcome, and
+the achievements in settlement and development which had made this
+ceremony possible. More than that, it focussed as it were in a few
+sentences the destined scope of the University, and the liberal
+provisions by which it was to be made accessible to "all our young
+people without regard to class, or creed, or sex." Twenty foundation
+scholarships were the generous birthday gift to the University. There
+was a great outburst of enthusiasm at this announcement, and the
+applause rang out again with renewed strength when His Excellency
+stepped forward, and read a congratulatory message from His Majesty
+the King. This was a fitting prelude to the able and statesmanlike
+speech which His Excellency made. This over, Mr. Costin presented the
+University Bill for His Excellency to sign. His Excellency dipped his
+pen in the ink held by a handsome silver inkstand, and affixed his
+signature to the charter of the University. Then, pressing an electric
+button, he revealed to view a marble tablet--the white stone of
+which the Premier spoke--designed "to mark this point in our national
+progress."
+
+The building had now been dedicated, but it yet remained symbolically
+to hand it over to the people. This was done by His Excellency's
+presentation to Mr. J. T. Bell of the University Act, and Mr. Bell's
+acceptance of it on behalf of the people of Queensland. Eloquent
+speeches from Mr. Bell, Professor David, and Professor Stirling
+followed, each in his turn drawing from the assemblage the endorsement
+of enthusiastic applause. Once more the aid of the children was
+invoked, and, under the direction of Mr. George Sampson, F.R.C.O.,
+they sang to the music of "The Old Hundredth" "The Children's Ode,"
+specially written for the occasion by Mr. W. J. Byram--
+
+ Dear land, the queen of all fair climes!
+ To jewels of thy diadem
+ We add to-day its brightest gem,
+ A guiding star for after-times.
+
+ Thy sons shall grow in wisdom's power,
+ Thy daughters win an ampler grace,
+ And both shall mould that higher race
+ Gifted with learning's priceless dower.
+
+ Here as the seasons wax and wane
+ May Science still increase her store,
+ And Truth be reverenced more and more,
+ And Tolerance and Justice reign.
+
+ Father of all, our effort bless!
+ Without thy aid we are as nought,
+ We are but children to be taught
+ Thy way that leads to perfectness.
+
+
+One graceful ceremony remained, and that typical of beauty, life, and
+growth--the planting of a tree to be known as "The University Tree,"
+its destiny to grow with the University, and afford grateful shade
+to those brought within its wholesome influence. The pleasant duty of
+planting devolved upon Lady MacGregor, and it was carried out by means
+of a silver trowel presented to her by the Premier. The business
+of the afternoon had now concluded; the first step toward the
+establishment of the University had been taken: its future home had
+been dedicated.
+
+
+THE DEDICATION SPEECHES.
+
+The PREMIER (Hon. W. Kidston), in rising to ask His Excellency to
+dedicate Government House to the purposes of the University, said:
+Your Excellency and Ladies and Gentlemen,--To-day Queensland completes
+her first half-century as a self-governing community; and we are met
+to honour the occasion--to erect a white stone, as it were, to mark
+this point in our national progress. Fifty years ago a handful of
+settlers, not quite 24,000 in number, claimed and obtained the right
+to manage their own affairs; and the British Government, in granting
+that right, virtually handed over to those few pioneers the ownership
+of this vast territory now called Queensland--a territory exceeding
+in area the combined areas of England, Scotland, Ireland, France,
+Portugal, Spain, and Italy. If we consider how few they were and the
+way in which they undertook the work of opening up and civilising this
+vast territory, we must recognise that our first pioneers were men
+of enterprise, of self-reliance, and of high courage. (Hear, hear.)
+Although our population has increased twenty-four times since then, we
+are still but a handful in this vast land. When we try to compare the
+Queensland of to-day with the Queensland of fifty years ago--the
+cities and towns that have been built where then was the untrodden
+bush; the thousands of miles of railways and the many thousands of
+miles of roads, like a network all over this great area; the rivers
+that have been spanned by bridges; the harbours that have been made;
+the endless miles of telegraph lines that give rapid communication
+between the townships scattered all over the State--all the things
+that go to mark a civilised people--when we consider to what extent
+that work has been carried out by such a mere handful of people, we
+may well commend the men who have preceded us. (Hear, hear.) And it
+was not only in the matter of material development that these men did
+good work. Many years ago they established an educational system which
+still obtains--a system so effective and comprehensive that all over
+this vast territory of Queensland wherever ten or a dozen children can
+be brought together there you will find a State school. (Hear, hear.)
+And even beyond that, by means of the itinerant teachers, the
+scattered children of the bush are sought out and have at least the
+rudiments of education brought to their isolated homes. (Hear, hear.)
+To-day we seek to commemorate our establishment as a self-governing
+community, and at the same time to show our appreciation of the
+excellent work done by our predecessors in opening up this new land
+and in promoting the civilising and humanising agencies that have made
+Queensland what she is; and I hold that we can show our appreciation
+of the good work our predecessors did in no better way than by
+imitating and continuing that good work. We who have eaten of the
+fruit of the trees which our predecessors planted; we, the men of
+to-day, may also seek to plant so that the children of to-morrow may
+gather the fruit. (Hear, hear.)
+
+[Illustration: THE PREMIER (HON. W. KIDSTON) OPENING THE PROCEEDINGS]
+
+Perhaps, Your Excellency, I am not just the person to discuss
+educational methods, or to seek here to give instructions to the
+Senate who will manage this University; but I may express the hope
+that the University of Queensland will provide for the youth of
+Queensland the highest culture and the best university training that
+can be got, at any rate, this side of the line. (Hear, hear.) At the
+same time I would not have it forgotten that Queensland is a hive of
+working bees; and all our educational institutions, from Kindergarten
+to University, should keep that fact in view. There is this difference
+between the youngest University in the Empire and the oldest: Oxford
+was established by a King; the University of Queensland is established
+by the People. (Hear, hear.) Queensland is democratic not only in her
+political institutions: she is democratic in heart and sentiment; and
+the desire of our people for a University is simply the desire that
+Queensland may be an educated democracy--the safest, the strongest,
+and the happiest community in which men can live. (Hear, hear.) I
+would have the Senate always remember that it was the desire of our
+people that inspired the crowning of our educational system by the
+establishment of a University, that in very truth the Queensland
+University is "of the people," and I trust that the Senate will never
+forget that it should be "for the people." (Hear, hear.) It is not all
+of us who can go to a University or directly share in its advantages;
+yet the whole community should, and I hope will, receive a general
+benefit. I hope that its influence will radiate downwards through all
+the ranks of our social organism; that those who have the advantage
+and the privilege of the more liberal education which our University
+will give will be like the leaven which the woman put in three
+measures of meal, and will leaven the whole community. (Hear, hear.)
+
+Parliament has made what I think is fairly adequate financial
+provision for our University. A sum of £50,000 is being set aside from
+this year's revenue for meeting what may be called the initial cost.
+(Hear, hear.) And, besides that, a sum of £10,000 a year is being
+provided for what may be called the annual working charges. (Hear,
+hear.) I may also announce to-day that the Cabinet, subject of course
+to the approval of Parliament, has resolved to institute a certain
+number of foundation scholarships as a step towards equalising
+educational opportunities for our young people and by way of opening
+the door to ability and special merit. (Applause.) It has been decided
+to establish twenty foundation scholarships--(applause)--tenable for
+three years, each of which will carry free entrance to the University
+and £26 per year, or, in cases where students, to attend the
+University, must live away from home, £52 a year. These scholarships
+will be equally open to all our young people without regard to class,
+or creed, or sex. (Applause.) There will also be a foundation gold
+medal, carrying a prize of £100 a year for two years, for the purpose
+of encouraging original chemical research--(applause)--a similar
+medal and prize of a similar amount, tenable for two years, for
+engineering--(applause)--and a foundation travelling scholarship of
+£200 a year, tenable for two years. (Applause.) The scholarships will
+of course be competed for annually, so that in the third and each
+succeeding year there will be sixty of these scholarship students at
+our University. (Applause.)
+
+I now ask Your Excellency, as representing His Majesty, to assent to
+the Bill, which has been approved by both Houses of Parliament, for
+the establishment and endowment of the University of Queensland, and
+on behalf of our people to dedicate this building, now your home, to
+the purposes of the University. (Loud applause.)
+
+
+HIS EXCELLENCY SIR WILLIAM MacGREGOR said: Mr. Kidston, Ladies and
+Gentlemen,--The first duty I have to perform here to-day is to read
+to you a telegram which I received this forenoon from the Right
+Honourable the Secretary of State for the Colonies. This telegram
+is dated London, 9th December, at 1.45 p.m., and is addressed "The
+Governor, Brisbane." The Secretary of State says:--
+
+"I am commanded by His Majesty the King to convey to you the following
+message:--
+
+ "His Majesty the King heartily congratulates the people of
+ Queensland on the completion of fifty years of responsible
+ government. It is the earnest hope of His Majesty the King
+ that the enterprise and loyalty which have marked the first
+ half-century of the State of Queensland may be its abiding
+ heritage and that the prosperity which is evident at the close
+ of this period may be multiplied abundantly in the years to
+ come." "CREWE."
+
+For two reasons I have put in writing what I have to say on the
+important subject that has brought us here to-day. The first is that
+I cannot make myself heard by a large audience. The second is that we
+are assembled here on the occasion of the Jubilee of Queensland, and
+that fifty years hence the Jubilee of the University of this
+State will also be celebrated, and it is desirable that those who
+participate in that ceremony should know in what spirit the
+University is being founded: what are our hopes, our aspirations, what
+appreciation we have of our duty towards our posterity and the future
+of the great country we and they have to develop. I trust that for
+this reason all speeches made here to-day may be carefully recorded,
+as we now enter upon a new phase of the intellectual life of
+Queensland, a matter that cannot but be of far-reaching importance to
+the next and succeeding generations of this State.
+
+I deem it a fortunate circumstance that, a few days after my arrival
+in Brisbane, I should have the privilege of participating in a
+ceremonial for the establishment of "The University of Queensland," of
+taking part in a State function of historical and of great social and
+economic importance.
+
+We live in an age of more rapid progress than any that has ever
+preceded our own day: and for my part I am prepared to believe that
+we owe to education the enormous advances in recent years in health,
+wealth, and in the amenities and comforts of life. It is now well
+known to us all that the nation that is backward in education is, or
+soon will be, behind in all that makes a people great and prosperous.
+
+I am aware that these facts were fully recognised by many men in
+Queensland long years ago, for I well remember the former efforts
+that were made to found a University here--efforts that failed through
+causes that happily no longer exist. One of the most noticeable facts
+in the social and economic life of English-speaking people in recent
+years is the great impulse that has been given to the development and
+extension of university teaching. It may with a good show of reason be
+said that Australasia led up to the great educational revival of
+the last quarter of a century, by the opening of the now famous
+Universities, of Sydney in 1852, of Melbourne in 1855, and of Adelaide
+in 1876. Then followed the University of Tasmania in 1889. The wave of
+university education has left the United States with 40 universities,
+16 of which are very great, and 415 colleges. The movement has been
+as pronounced in Canada, where higher education is receiving great
+attention, due in a large measure to the splendid liberality of
+wealthy and patriotic citizens. The same influence has been profoundly
+felt in the United Kingdom. The Victoria University was founded in
+1880, and the London University was reconstituted in 1900. Birmingham
+University dates from 1900, Liverpool University from 1903, the
+University of Wales from 1903, Leeds University from 1904, Sheffield
+University from 1905, and the two national Universities of Ireland
+from 1908. To come nearer home, New Zealand has her University and
+affiliated colleges; and West Australia is at this moment taking
+active steps for the establishment of her own State University,
+so that it remains at present doubtful whether Queensland or West
+Australia is to play the part of the most retiring of this pleiad of
+Australasian Universities. Hitherto the youth of Queensland has had
+to go elsewhere for residential university education. Fortunately
+for Queensland, she has had an active and influential committee for
+university extension lectures, the members of which have patriotically
+performed good service to the State by arranging for lectures that
+have helped to procure from beyond the State university certificates
+of competence by a considerable number of the youth of this country.
+This committee has fortunately been able to do enough to demonstrate
+how much we need a University of our own. They are entitled to the
+warm thanks of the community for what they have done. I have had an
+opportunity of knowing from the admirable lectures of Professor David,
+on the 4th and 8th of this month, how interesting, instructive, and
+valuable those lectures can be. I have said enough to show you that
+if Queensland did not now, without any further delay, proceed to
+found her University, this, one of the greatest, most promising, and
+wealthiest provinces in the Empire, would, as far as education is
+concerned, occupy a very conspicuous and unenviable position among
+the great countries of the world; especially would this be the case in
+regard to the sister States and Dominions.
+
+What is a University? I have seen a University defined as a place at
+which students from any quarter of the universe could be received
+to study, irrespective of nationality. What we understand here by a
+University, and what we aim at, is an institution where any person
+can find the fullest and best instruction of the day in any branch of
+knowledge. It will be the head corner-stone of the system of
+education that has been legalised in this State, a school that will be
+accessible to all, and will afford equal chances and opportunities
+to rich and poor alike, without reference to sex or religious
+denomination. I know of no institution in modern social life that
+equals the University in giving a fair chance in life to the youth
+that is capable and is able and willing to work; although, for my
+part, I can only regard schools of all grades as only preparatory for
+the studies that have to be incessantly pursued after one ceases to
+attend classes, if one does not resign oneself to falling behind; thus
+the primary school prepares for the secondary school, and that school
+leads to the university, which last furnishes the highest and best
+intellectual equipment for one's life work, an equipment of such
+character that it can be obtained and be certified to by the
+university, and by that alone. It supplies to the bearer the hall-mark
+of the State that the man or woman that bears it has had the best
+instruction that the country can supply.
+
+[Illustration: HIS EXCELLENCY SIR W. MACGREGOR ADDRESSING THE
+AUDIENCE]
+
+What is to be taught in the University? You will find that the
+University Act makes provision for the establishment of certain
+faculties in which instruction shall be given; the preamble shows that
+the University is to provide "a liberal and practical education in the
+several pursuits and professions of life in Queensland." In no other
+country can the pursuits and professions of social and economic life
+be greater than they are, or will be, in Queensland, having regard to
+the extraordinary multiplicity of its resources. Such a broad purpose
+as that set out in the University Act leaves little option to the
+ruling power of the University as to what subjects are to be taught.
+That question is determined in a large measure by the work of other
+universities, for it is a foregone conclusion that the University
+of Queensland is not to occupy a position in the educational world
+inferior to that of any sister university in Australasia. We are well
+aware that their standard is high; and we recognise that we start
+late, and are therefore behind, and that we have a hard task before us
+to overtake the other universities; but this has to be done, and will
+be done. I dwell on this because there should exist no misconception
+as to the scope of the Queensland University, especially in regard to
+what is called the classical side of instruction, in contradistinction
+to the scientific or practical. We recognise that the literary records
+of the world have, in the main, been successively committed to
+the languages of the Chaldeans, the Greeks, the Romans, and the
+Anglo-Saxons. If those languages are dead, their remains are so
+constantly brought before us every hour of our lives that acquaintance
+with those of them that are usually taught in what is called the
+faculty of arts forms a necessary and indispensable part of the
+education of every accomplished or finished scholar, and of most
+professional men or women. At the same time, therefore, that this
+University will provide the best tuition in the classical languages
+of the past, we cannot but see that times have changed; that, for
+example, in no country in Europe or America could the Prime Minister
+now conduct official business in Latin with King or Governor, as was
+the case in England not very long ago. No Prime Minister could now
+electrify a drooping Parliament with a Latin quotation, as Pitt did.
+So far as I know, the last Parliament in Europe to use Latin as its
+language ceased to do so some three-score of years ago. The classics
+have come into disfavour owing in a large measure to the fact
+that they were overdone, that time was wasted on utterly valueless
+subtleties in learning them. They were associated with too much
+book and too little practical work. Here we shall have a course of
+classics, an arts faculty, equal to that of other universities,
+but without unduly encroaching on other faculties of more modern
+development and of more direct utility in the evolution of modern
+economic life. It would, however, be unreasonable to expect that the
+University of Queensland could be brought into the world full-grown at
+its birth. The University of Sydney began with four professors. I am
+informed by the very distinguished gentleman who is Chancellor of
+the University of Adelaide that the now great University of that city
+entered on its career, in rented premises, thirty-four years ago, with
+three chairs--classics, mathematics, and natural science. Now it has
+faculties of arts, science, law, medicine, electrical, mining, civil
+engineering, commerce, and music; and it has ranked, by letters
+patent, for the last twenty-eight years, with the old universities of
+the United Kingdom. The Adelaide University now has eleven professors
+and twenty-six lecturers. It supplies to us a splendid example of
+courage, of energy, and of perseverance, and that example we mean to
+follow. (Applause.) Our late start is not without some compensation,
+for not only are we able to profit from the experience of others, but,
+what is equally important, we can adapt our University courses to
+the needs of the country untrammelled by the vested interests and the
+threadbare traditions that make it so difficult for old universities
+to adapt themselves to the exigencies of modern educational
+requirements. If one thinks of Queensland as she was this day fifty
+years ago, and as she is to-day, it can be seen that he would be
+a bold man that would predict what faculties, what tuition, may
+be required, and may be given, in the Queensland University half a
+century from now. The moral to be drawn from this is, to make a start
+on an elastic plan that may admit of indefinite expansion. We
+require a broad and strong foundation, able to carry a great edifice,
+sufficient to provide the most comprehensive tuition, not only in what
+is known, but also to facilitate and encourage original research and
+invention, as set out in the Act. Even sport will not be forgotten,
+for it is an important consideration, in a non-residential university,
+to foster that feeling and regard for a bountiful mother that
+should animate the students of every great University. One thing is
+abundantly clear: that because we are determined to have a university
+equal to the needs of this great State, a university that shall
+stimulate those of the sister States, and because we start at so
+late a date, we must begin with the very best teachers that can be
+procured, the most learned and enthusiastic men in their several
+departments. On those men will in a large measure depend the future
+character and standing of our University. The best men will be the
+cheapest. Queensland can afford to employ them, and we know they will
+be a profitable investment. (Applause.) A university costs money, much
+money, especially in the technical departments, such as engineering,
+mining, and agriculture. The endowment of universities has been
+recognised in recent years as having such strong claims on public
+funds that they cannot be overlooked. That principle is accepted here.
+Our nearest neighbours have conferred valuable land areas on their
+universities; and they have been very liberal to them in money grants.
+In this respect the oldest of our Universities, that of Sydney, led
+the way with wisdom and a liberal hand, and to-day New South Wales
+reaps her reward. It may safely be assumed that the Parliament and
+Government of Queensland will be equally liberal and far-seeing.
+But the different Universities have in recent years profited in an
+extraordinary manner from the munificence of private citizens. In ten
+years the technical schools, colleges, and universities of the United
+States received in that way £23,000,000. Perhaps the largest amount of
+such gifts in any one year was in 1903, when they received £3,350,000.
+It appears that in 1907 nearly £300,000 was bequeathed to universities
+and colleges in the United Kingdom. It has become a common practice
+for private citizens to found a university chair to bear the name of
+a person whose memory it is desired to preserve and to honour. Others
+that are not in a position to do so much as that have very frequently
+established a bursary or scholarship, sometimes sufficiently large
+to maintain a student at the university, or to partly do so. The
+bursaries that produce the best results are those that are given by
+open competition. But others that are limited to a specified name or
+locality, according to the desire of the donors, are very useful. Some
+men of good will are not permitted by their means to do more than to
+found a prize for proficiency in some branch taught in the university.
+This State possesses an enormous area; the productions are varied in
+a very unusual degree, and they are of enormous value present and
+prospective; and there can be no reason to suppose that Queenslanders
+are to be less generous and patriotic towards their University than
+our neighbours have been towards theirs. I shall be satisfied if we
+have citizens here as generous as Russell in Sydney, as Ormond in
+Melbourne, and Elder and Hughes in Adelaide. I think that no more
+patriotic nor useful disposition of one's money could be made. We
+start under the best auspices, for we have before us now a most
+gracious message of congratulation and good wishes from His Majesty
+the King, whose life is devoted to the welfare of his subjects, and
+there are with us to-day representatives from the great Universities
+of Sydney and Adelaide. Each of these Universities has sent us a man
+of world-wide reputation. I know well what I am saying when I tell you
+that the names of Professors David and Stirling are as well known,
+and are as highly honoured, by the learned men and women of Europe
+and America as by the people of Australia. (Applause.) It is a great
+honour to us to have such representatives here to-day, and for their
+presence we owe hearty thanks to their respective Universities, and
+I bid them a hearty and appreciative welcome to Brisbane, for I feel
+sure that they and the Universities they represent will always extend
+to us sympathy, good advice, and an excellent example; and I am
+certain that they will be delighted to see us here in a position to
+offer them that healthful emulation that cannot but be advantageous to
+all concerned. I now, ladies and gentlemen, take the first practical
+step towards the founding of the University of Queensland by complying
+with the request of the Hon. William Kidston, Premier of the State, to
+assent to the University Bill of 1909; and I shall thereafter, in your
+presence, deliver this copy of the Act to the Hon. Joshua Thomas Bell,
+who will receive it on behalf of the people of Queensland; and, this
+done, I shall, by unveiling a commemorative tablet, dedicate this
+building to the purposes of the University of Queensland. (Loud
+applause.)
+
+[Illustration: HIS EXCELLENCY UNVEILING THE DEDICATION TABLET]
+
+
+HIS EXCELLENCY, having signed the University Bill, and assented to it
+on behalf of His Majesty the King, handed a copy to Mr. Bell, Speaker
+of the Legislative Assembly, saying: It is with profound pleasure and
+great hope that I present this Act to you on behalf of the people of
+Queensland. (Applause.)
+
+
+HIS EXCELLENCY: I now proceed to unveil the commemorative tablet which
+dedicates this house to the University of Queensland.
+
+
+By pressing a button, His Excellency unveiled a tablet bearing the
+following inscription:--
+
+ DEDICATED
+ TO THE UNIVERSITY OF QUEENSLAND
+ BY HIS EXCELLENCY THE GOVERNOR,
+ SIR WILLIAM MACGREGOR, G.C.M.G.,
+ ON BEHALF OF THE PEOPLE OF QUEENSLAND,
+ ON 10TH DECEMBER, 1909,
+ THE FIFTIETH ANNIVERSARY
+ OF THE
+ ESTABLISHMENT OF RESPONSIBLE GOVERNMENT
+ IN QUEENSLAND.
+
+ W. KIDSTON,
+
+ CHIEF SECRETARY.
+
+
+The HON. J. T. BELL (_Speaker of the Legislative Assembly_) said: Your
+Excellency, Mr. Kidston, Your Grace, Ladies and Gentlemen,--If I
+may for a second, before uttering the few sentences I propose to do,
+mention a personal matter in regard to His Excellency, I should like
+to do it, and that is to express the consternation I felt at the
+announcement which His Excellency made that in his opinion all the
+speeches that are delivered upon this occasion should be of such a
+character that they may be perused with pleasure and with instruction
+by those who are celebrating the jubilee of this institution fifty
+years hence. May I say that I find it sufficiently difficult to cope
+with my contemporaries without having to make in addition provision
+for posterity? I listened to His Excellency's address with the
+greatest satisfaction, as everyone did who heard it, because it was
+felt to be a fitting deliverance for such an occasion as this. Whether
+now, or five years hence, or ten years hence, or when the jubilee of
+this institution is celebrated--as it will be celebrated--anyone
+who wants authoritative information concerning the present education
+systems of the world, of the Empire, and particularly of Australia and
+in regard to this University, can turn to His Excellency's deliverance
+with the knowledge that he can get all the information there. (Hear,
+hear.) I at least feel--and so does everyone who has any acquaintance
+with the fact--sympathy with the allusion which His Excellency made
+during his remarks to that body of men who are known as the University
+Extension Council. I do not know how far back their labours began--it
+was certainly more than ten years--but these men, free from any
+instinct of self-advertisement, and prompted only by influences that
+were unselfish, did their very best in our small community years ago,
+and year after year, to lay the foundations of a university. (Hear,
+hear.) I am of opinion, although these things are difficult to trace,
+that it was the labour of these men of the University Extension
+Council, and their influence upon the public and upon the men in
+public life, which really laid the foundations of this gathering, and
+caused the Government of the day to institute the University. I
+say all honour to those men, and I hope that their names will be
+perpetuated somewhere or other. (Hear, hear.) I should like to say
+that in dedicating this building to the purposes of a University,
+those of us who are Queenslanders born and bred, not of the first
+but even of the second generation, must feel some interest in the
+transformation that such an edifice undergoes. I can only hope that
+it will play its part as well as a University edifice as it did as a
+Government House. Ever since, I suppose, 1861 or 1862, it has been the
+home of Her Majesty's or His Majesty's representative in this State.
+It was the headquarters of the social and political life of the State,
+and it has, through its various inhabitants, performed its duties
+well. There is this to be said, that it has housed in the past men
+of the character that it will house in the future--men who possessed
+qualifications that equally adapted them to live in this building in
+the future, and within its new surroundings, as they were qualified to
+inhabit it in the past. Let us think for a moment of some of the men
+who have made this building historical. Let us think of Sir George
+Bowen, our first Governor, a man who, before he became private
+secretary to Mr. Gladstone, was the representative of the Crown in the
+Ionian Isles, was an Oxford don, a fellow of his college, and a man
+with an academic reputation. He came out here and lived with us, and
+in one way at least his classical impulses have left their impression
+on the community in the nomenclature of a number of creeks and hills
+in Southern Queensland. (Hear, hear.) Then we had Lord Lamington,
+a man of some academic pretensions; but, greatest of all from a
+university standpoint, we had Lord Chelmsford, a man who was an honour
+to his college, his university, and to the State which he governed.
+(Hear, hear.) He was one of the very few men in the public service of
+Great Britain who had ever come south of the line who were able to
+say they were fellows of All Souls--(applause)--which represents in
+university distinction what the V.C. means in the military field.
+(Applause.) He was a man of qualifications that we were proud to have
+in our Governor, and I know that when the proposal was made to him
+that this building which he inhabited should be converted into a
+university he was one of the first and most enthusiastic advocates of
+the proposal. (Applause.) Lastly, we come to the last occupant of the
+building, our present Governor, Sir William MacGregor, and no happier
+instance can be found of what a university education can do to produce
+an Empire builder and a stern man of the world than is to be found in
+the person of His Excellency. Whatever may be the class of inhabitants
+who are going to labour within these walls in the future, they have
+had forerunners of whom they have no reason to be ashamed. Just let me
+add a few sentences more. This building has some distinct advantages
+from a university point of view. The sole object of a university is
+not to instruct men to pass examinations; it has a wider sphere than
+that. There was a time--it existed through ages--when the conception
+of a university was an institution that turned out scholars. To-day, I
+venture to say, it has become recognised that the duty and the object
+of a university is the production of citizens. (Applause.) And you
+will not produce citizens merely by making them go to lectures and
+periodically answer questions in an examination. In the university
+life one of the chief and most valuable features is the comradeship,
+the common citizenship with the other members of the university, the
+participation in athletic sports, the _esprit de corps_ that comes
+from belonging to such an institution. And from that aspect I look
+with pleasure upon the Brisbane River, only a few yards away, where we
+shall find in the future, I hope, a university boat club, which club
+has always been a prominent feature of universities in Great Britain,
+as it is now becoming in Germany. And in connection with athletics,
+and especially aquatic athletics, you will find the students of this
+University will uphold the reputation of British students. (Applause.)
+I do not propose to speak at any greater length. I am convinced that
+after the liberal and, as far as we can see at the present time,
+adequate provision that has been made by the Government of the day for
+the management of this University, you will see men attending it who
+will make their mark upon the community. (Hear, hear.) I repeat that
+I hope that the test of the success of this University is not going to
+be purely a literary test, though let it be tested in that way too.
+I am convinced that those who look at the University from the broader
+standpoint feel confident that this University is not going to turn
+out merely scholars--merely men who can pass examinations--but is
+going to turn out men of the world, and is going to have a striking
+effect upon the tone of our citizenship. (Hear, hear.) I hope that
+not merely morals, but, in some degree at all events, manners, will be
+cultivated in this University; and we, a handful of people, who
+spend comparatively enormous sums every year on primary and secondary
+education, shall have additional reason to be proud when we see the
+effects of the University now inaugurating being spread throughout the
+land. (Applause.) I thank Your Excellency for dedicating this building
+to the purposes of a University, and I rejoice that we have a man of
+your character performing such a ceremony. (Applause.)
+
+
+THE HON. W. KIDSTON: I have here apologies from the Chancellors of the
+Universities of Melbourne and Tasmania, regretting their inability
+to be present with us to-day. One of the pleasing features of this
+celebration is the kindly and friendly way in which the Universities
+of sister States have received the advent of their younger sister, the
+University of Queensland. (Hear, hear.) But the Universities of
+Sydney and Adelaide have done more: they have sent Professor David
+and Professor Stirling respectively to say a few words to us on this
+occasion and to wish us Godspeed. I now ask Professor David to speak.
+(Applause.)
+
+
+PROFESSOR DAVID (_Sydney University_) said: Your Excellency, Mr.
+Kidston, Your Grace, and Ladies and Gentlemen,--It is a great honour
+for me, as representing the elder sister amongst the Universities of
+Australia, to bring a message of goodwill to our young University--the
+University of Queensland. (Applause.) It is under happy auspices that
+this young University is having this grand building, with such fine
+memories of the past, dedicated to its uses. We have in our present
+representative of His Majesty a gentleman of ripe scholarship and
+learning, one who has been throughout his whole life, as he is now and
+as he long will be too, a great power for good, a great power for all
+that is uplifting and ennobling to the British Empire--Sir William
+MacGregor. (Applause.) We have, too, this dedication ceremony
+performed in the presence of a representative of the Government who
+has shown that he has the greatest possible grip of all that is
+needed to make a university such as this young University a People's
+University; one, too, who has at heart, I know, the good and
+prosperity of his country--the Honourable the Premier, Mr. Kidston.
+(Applause.) The present Ministry, with great foresight, have resolved
+to make this University not merely a University of Brisbane, but the
+University of Queensland. (Hear, hear.) And it seems to me, as one who
+has studied university matters for some years in the past, that it is
+an act of great wisdom on the part of those who have controlled the
+inception of this movement that they have decided to associate here
+together the Technical College and the University. (Applause.) I
+feel sure that the association will make for the good of both these
+institutions, which never should be divorced from one another, and
+between which there should be nothing more than friendly rivalry, and
+always an interchange of courtesy, of hospitality, and of confidence.
+(Applause.) Another point, and a very important one, which I
+was delighted to hear from the lips of Mr. Kidston, is that this
+University is to be able to appeal to the farthest boundaries of this
+great State, by virtue of these sixty splendid scholarships which the
+Government have decided to endow--(applause)--that will bring in many
+boys and girls who otherwise, through remoteness or want of means,
+would have been unable to avail themselves of this University
+education. Thus I am sure that, although this University will start,
+no doubt, with but a small number of students, even amongst the small
+group of students who may come first to this University the nation
+will reap no less rich reward than did the University of Sydney when
+it started with a mere handful of students. That University celebrated
+its Jubilee only in 1902, and amongst its first handful of students
+was no less a man than he who was the honoured Chancellor of our
+University, Sir William Windeyer; than he who did so much not only
+for New South Wales but Australian science, our late Government
+Astronomer, Mr. H. C. Russell; than he who is now an ornament to the
+Bar, an honour to his University, and a great honour to this State and
+to the whole of this Commonwealth, Sir Samuel Griffith. (Applause.)
+Certainly it will not be for want of plenty of good material that this
+University will not flourish, for we in Sydney know of what splendid
+materials your grammar schools, both for boys and girls, are made, as
+well as many of your other schools. We know it right well in Sydney,
+for there, many a time and oft, your boys and girls take prizes over
+the heads of our own. (Applause.) Then a word in conclusion, and that
+is this, Your Excellency, and ladies and gentlemen: That, just as in
+medieval times when the universities were started, Feudalism, which
+made for isolation and all that was selfish, was broken down chiefly
+by the University influence, which gathered the people and drew them
+together in that great bond of brotherhood and learning, so in these
+troublous times, when class is ranged against class, and when Labour
+is pitted against Capital, surely we need the levelling influence of
+a University--not an influence to level down but an influence to level
+up in a noble, common brotherhood. (Applause.) We need universities as
+well as we need "Dreadnoughts" and Kitcheners--as we do need them to
+keep our country foremost in the arts, not only of war--even in war a
+university may do much; we have a Director of Military Studies at our
+University at Sydney, and I trust you will have one here--but to keep
+us foremost in the arts of peace. In the matter of the foundation
+of the universities of the Old World, you will remember that it was
+through the Crusaders that those universities were founded. It was the
+fiery zeal for Faith that started those universities. The Crusaders
+were brought into contact with the learning of the Eastern World,
+and so Learning and Faith were brought together in the foundations of
+those old Universities of Paris and Oxford. Sometimes Learning only
+flourished: sometimes only Faith: sometimes Reverence only, sometimes
+Faith. May it be our fervent prayer that in this noble hall both
+Reverence and Learning shall for ever dwell together in sweet harmony.
+(Applause.) As representing the older sister University of Sydney,
+from the bottom of my heart I wish to our young sister University on
+this historic occasion all goodwill--a message of goodwill, a message
+of Godspeed. (Applause.)
+
+
+PROFESSOR STIRLING (_Adelaide University_) said: Your Excellency, Mr.
+Premier, and Ladies and Gentlemen,--My first duty is to present to the
+Government of Queensland, on behalf of the University of Adelaide, its
+very cordial thanks for the invitation so courteously extended to it
+that it should be represented on an occasion which will assuredly be
+a memorable episode in the annals of this great and prospering State.
+And in this connection I am desired by our Chancellor, Sir Samuel Way,
+to convey to this gathering his great regret that his judicial duties,
+now of a very exacting kind, have prevented his acceptance of the
+invitation extended to him in the first place as our chief official,
+and of doing honour to the event that is being celebrated. My second
+and principal duty is to offer the cordial congratulations of the
+University I represent to the Government of Queensland, and through it
+to its whole people, that now at last, after many years, the keystone
+is being placed upon the arch of the educational edifice of this
+State. (Hear, hear, and applause.) I have had the honour of being
+connected with the University of Adelaide ever since its foundation,
+now thirty-four years ago. I can well remember its early struggles,
+its efforts to take a fitting place in our national life, and I
+am glad to have lived long enough to see many of its aspirations
+fulfilled--(hear, hear)--aspirations that have been fulfilled in spite
+of what has not always been a very whole-hearted support either on the
+parts of successive Governments or of the people for whose benefit
+it was intended. But I think it is now well recognised that the
+University is playing a useful and essential part in the intellectual
+life of the community, and that any arrest to its progress would be
+nothing short of national disaster. These recollections of our early
+struggles lead me to say that it will now be very interesting to us,
+as onlookers, to see whether this last-born of the great educational
+centres of Australia--founded as it has been by a Government that
+claims to be at least as democratic as the Governments of its sister
+States--will escape the criticisms, sometimes quite undeserved, that
+have at one time or another been directed, certainly against my
+own University, and, as I think I may say also, against its sister
+institutions. Then, too, in the adjustment of the work of the
+University there will no doubt recur the perennial discussion--indeed
+it has already been initiated to-day by His Excellency--as to the
+relative importance in an educational system of culture as opposed to
+material science. I am glad that I am not called upon to enter into
+that question to-day. But, speaking now from a point of view which
+concerns literature no less than science, I may be permitted to say
+that it is gratifying to hear the announcement of the Honourable the
+Premier that the claims of original research will be brought
+within the scope of the institution which takes its origin to-day.
+(Applause.) Surely it is a desirable, even a necessary, function of
+the chief seat of learning of a State that its professors and teachers
+should not only teach that which is known, but that they should
+themselves be contributors to the sum of human knowledge. There can be
+no doubt that the prestige of a university depends far more upon the
+extent to which its teachers are known as originators of knowledge
+than upon their daily routine lectures, however honestly or however
+ably these may be delivered.
+
+[Illustration: LADY MacGREGOR PLANTING THE UNIVERSITY TREE]
+
+Every professor worthy the name will admit that the burden of
+teaching, unrelieved and uninspired by the stimulus of independent
+work and thought, may indeed become destructive of the intellectual
+energies. This infant University, launched as it is upon its career
+with the goodwill of a prudent Government and with, I believe, to an
+unusual degree the good wishes and support of the people, has the
+great advantage that it may profit by the example of the institutions
+that have preceded it; and fortunate will be the University of
+Queensland if, by adopting the good that may be discerned in its
+sister institutions, and by avoiding their mistakes, if such have
+been made, it shall enter upon and pursue a blameless career of which
+all men shall speak well. Even in their relatively short careers, as
+time goes for States and institutions, it can be perceived that the
+Australian Universities have to some extent developed individualities
+of their own, and this is just what is to be desired. A Minister of
+France under the Third Empire once made it his boast that on the same
+day and at the same hour every corresponding class in every Lycee
+throughout the length and breadth of the land was performing the same
+allotted task. That boast bespoke an undesirable uniformity which is
+not likely to find favour in British communities, least of all in
+these States, where we have become accustomed to strike out new lines
+in education for ourselves. Therefore, it is to be desired that the
+University of Queensland will in its turn, evolve an individuality of
+its own, that it will be inspired by the particular requirements of
+the State whose interests it serves; and, further, may I express the
+hope that the fact will become recognised, which has not easily
+gained recognition in the Australian communities--namely, that a
+well-founded and well-equipped university may be one of the best
+assets, material as well as intellectual, that can be possessed by
+any State or Nation. Your Excellency, I have been ordered to be brief
+in my remarks, and, interesting as are many of the thoughts that
+arise on such an exceptional occasion, I must conclude by expressing
+once more, on behalf of the University I have the honour to represent,
+and with all earnestness and sincerity, our fervent hope that this
+University of Queensland, so auspiciously inaugurated, will prosper
+to the uttermost, and that it will grow in usefulness and dignity as
+it grows in years, and that at length it will stand forth as a noble
+monument to the great State whose far-seeing Government and whose
+public-spirited citizens have this day launched it on its career of
+promise. (Applause.)
+
+
+THE HON. W. KIDSTON: I have now to invite Her Excellency, Lady
+MacGregor, to plant a "University tree," which I hope will grow and
+flourish as we expect the University to do, and that in the years to
+come, when many who are here to-day have passed away, the tree will be
+known as "Lady MacGregor's tree."
+
+
+On a spot in front of the dais, Her Excellency planted a tree with
+a silver trowel on which was inscribed: "To Lady MacGregor, from the
+Chief Secretary of Queensland, Hon. W. Kidston, 10th December, 1909."
+Lady MacGregor then declared the tree well and truly planted.
+
+
+
+
+ BRISBANE:
+
+ ANTHONY JAMES CUMMING, GOVERNMENT PRINTER.
+
+ 1909.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+ Transcriber's Note:
+
+
+ Missing or damaged punctuation has been repaired.
+
+ The mid-dot, usual for the period, was used for decimals, and
+ where used, has been retained.
+
+ L.s., _locus sigilli_ ( = the place of the seal).
+
+ Part of the text of Map 8 was on the next page after 2 pages
+ of maps, and has been moved to join the beginning of the map 8
+ text, for better flow.
+
+ The Barwan River, described in the Proclamation in the Government
+ Gazette, and under Queensland (Map 9) is now known as the Barwon
+ River.
+
+ Illustrations (photographs) through the book appear facing
+ every 4th or 8th page. Where a photograph intersects a
+ paragraph of text, it has been moved to the end of the
+ paragraph.
+
+ Page 27: 'freetrade' corrected to 'free trade' "... the
+ enhanced prosperity resulting from interstate free trade."
+
+ Page 69: 'arrear', archaic, but probably correct in 1909.
+ "... unoccupied land might be leased for fourteen years by a
+ council when rates had been permitted to fall into arrear for
+ a term of four years." (Webster's Dictionary, 1913 Edition).
+
+ Page 207: Mining: 1872: Gold raised in Queensland: £537,365.
+ The first '3' could be '2'. The scan is smudged and unclear.
+
+ Page 229: 'Mount Cornish, No. 3'.
+ The '3' may be a '5'. The scan is unclear, even at different
+ magnifications.
+
+ Page 237: Brisbane, mean summer temperature, '76.0' could be
+ '73.0' or '75.0'. This is a 'best guess'; the scan is smudged
+ and unclear, and part of the number is missing. '76.0' has
+ been selected after a careful comparison of the '6' with nearby
+ numbers. 76.0°F is also closest to the current Brisbane mean
+ summer temperature of 24.8°C, or 76.6°F, and in the same chart,
+ the current Brisbane mean winter temperature of 15.6°C, or 60°F
+ is the same as that given in this 1909 book (60°F).
+
+ Page 243: 'acessible' corrected to 'accessible'.
+ "... by which it was to be made accessible to all our young
+ people without regard to...."
+
+
+
+
+
+
+End of Project Gutenberg's Our First Half-Century, by Government of Queensland
+
+*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK OUR FIRST HALF-CENTURY ***
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+
+Project Gutenberg's Our First Half-Century, by Government of Queensland
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Our First Half-Century
+ A Review of Queensland Progress Based Upon Official Information
+
+Author: Government of Queensland
+
+Release Date: April 21, 2012 [EBook #39495]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK OUR FIRST HALF-CENTURY ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by far Nick Wall, Lesley Halamek, and the Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This
+file was produced from images generously made available
+by The Internet Archive/American Libraries.)
+
+
+
+
+
+
+</pre>
+
+
+<a name="frontis" id="frontis"></a>
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 600px;"><a href="images/frontis-1200.jpg"><img src="images/frontis-600.jpg" width="600" height="356" alt="GOVERNMENT HOUSE" /></a>
+<p class="center">GOVERNMENT HOUSE</p></div>
+
+<h2 style="margin-top: 3em;">JUBILEE MEMORIAL VOLUME</h2>
+
+<h1 style="margin-top: 2em; font-weight: normal;"><span class="sc">Our First Half-Century</span></h1>
+
+<h2 style="margin-top: 3em;">A REVIEW OF QUEENSLAND PROGRESS</h2>
+
+<h4 style="margin-top: 2em;">BASED UPON OFFICIAL INFORMATION</h4>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 150px;"><a href="images/seal-500.jpg"><img src="images/seal-150.jpg" width="150" height="152" alt="QUEENSLAND JUBILEE 1859-1909" /></a>
+</div>
+
+<h2>BY AUTHORITY OF THE GOVERNMENT OF QUEENSLAND</h2>
+
+<h4 style="margin-top: 3em;">BRISBANE</h4>
+
+<h4>PRINTED AND PUBLISHED BY ANTHONY J. CUMMING, GOVERNMENT PRINTER</h4>
+
+<h4>1909.</h4>
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="pageiii" id="pageiii"></a>iii</span>
+<h2 style="margin-top: 5em;">PREFACE.</h2>
+
+<p>The object of this work, as the title implies, is to furnish the reader with
+a succinct review of the salient facts of Queensland progress, first as an
+autonomous British colony of the Australian group, and second as a
+State of the Commonwealth of Australia, retaining all constitutional
+rights unimpaired save in so far as they may be qualified by the provisions
+of "The Commonwealth of Australia Constitution Act of 1900." In
+treating of federation as thus accomplished the object has been to set
+forth dispassionately, yet clearly, the general results of the change upon
+the well-being of the State, and the reasonable anticipations of its future
+when the objects of federal union have been more completely attained.</p>
+
+<p>This is not a volume of statistics, yet in a fifty-year review it would
+be impossible entirely to avoid the use of figures. These, however, have
+been availed of sparingly; and, to avoid encumbering the text, tables
+compiled by the Government Statistician contrasting the progress made,
+by presenting the figures for the first, middle, and last (available) years of
+the fifty-year period, have been included as appendices. Every effort has
+been made to ensure accuracy, and to embody in the volume all the information
+possible without overloading it with detail.</p>
+
+<p>For the series of diagrams illustrative of the subdivision of Australia
+into separate colonies between 1787 and 1863 acknowledgment is due to
+the Under Secretary for Lands of New South Wales, under whose
+authority they were compiled from data in the Public Library, Sydney.</p>
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="pagev" id="pagev"></a>v</span>
+<h2 style="margin-top: 3em;">TABLE OF CONTENTS.</h2>
+
+<table summary="contents" align="center" width="90%">
+<tr>
+<td>&nbsp;</td><td class="right" valign="bottom" width="10%">PAGES</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td><span class="sc"><a class="contents" href="#pageiii">Preface</a></span></td>
+ <td class="right"><a href="#pageiii">iii</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td><span class="sc"><a class="contents" href="#pagev">Table of Contents</a></span></td>
+ <td class="right"><a href="#pagev">v-x</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td><span class="sc"><a class="contents" href="#pagexi">List of Illustrations</a></span></td>
+ <td class="right"><a href="#pagexi">xi-xiv</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td><span class="sc"><a class="contents" href="#pagexv">Introduction</a></span> </td>
+ <td class="right"><a href="#pagexv">xv-xx</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td><span class="sc"><a class="contents" href="#pagexxii">The Subdivision of Australia</a></span></td>
+ <td class="right"><a href="#pagexxii">xxii-xxiv</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td><span class="sc"><a class="contents" href="#pagexxv">Jubilee Ode&mdash;"Queen of the North"</a></span></td>
+ <td class="right"><a href="#pagexxv">xxv-xxviii</a></td>
+</tr>
+</table>
+
+<h2 style="margin-top: 2em;"><i>PART I.&mdash;OUR NATAL YEAR.</i></h2>
+
+<h2 class="toc"><a class="contents" href="#page1">CHAPTER I</a></h2>
+<h3 class="toc">THE BIRTH OF QUEENSLAND.</h3>
+
+<table summary="contents" align="center" width="90%" border="0">
+<tr>
+<td><span class="outdent2">Issue of Letters Patent</span> and Order in
+ Council.&mdash;Appointment of Sir George Ferguson Bowen as
+ First Governor.&mdash;Continuity of Colonial Office Policy.
+ &mdash;Instructions to Governor.&mdash;Munificent Gift of all Waste
+ Lands of the Crown.&mdash;Temporary Limitation of Electoral
+ Suffrage.&mdash;Responsible Government Unqualified by
+ Restrictions or Reservations.&mdash;Governor-General of New
+ South Wales Initiates Elections</td>
+<td class="right" valign="bottom" width="10%"><a href="#page1">1-4</a></td>
+</tr>
+</table>
+
+<h2 class="toc"><a class="contents" href="#page5">CHAPTER II.</a></h2>
+<h3 class="toc">INITIATION OF RESPONSIBLE GOVERNMENT.</h3>
+
+<table summary="contents" align="center" width="90%">
+<tr>
+<td><span class="outdent2">Arrival of Sir George Bowen</span> in Brisbane.&mdash;The First
+ Responsible Ministry.&mdash;Injunctions to Governor by
+ Secretary of State in regard to Choice of Ministers.
+ &mdash;Ex-members of New South Wales Legislature take Umbrage.
+ &mdash;The Governor on the Characteristics of Various Classes
+ of Colonists.&mdash;The Governor a Dictator.&mdash;The Microscopic
+ Treasury Balance.&mdash;Gladstone as Site of Capital.
+ &mdash;Mr. Herbert as a Parliamentary Leader </td>
+<td class="right" valign="bottom" width="10%"><a href="#page5">5-7</a></td>
+</tr>
+</table>
+
+<h2 class="toc"><a class="contents" href="#page8">CHAPTER III.</a></h2>
+<h3 class="toc">DIFFICULTIES OF EARLY ADMINISTRATIONS.</h3>
+
+<table summary="contents" align="center" width="90%">
+<tr>
+<td><span class="outdent2">Meeting of First Parliament</span>.&mdash;Amendment on Address in
+ Reply defeated by Speaker's Casting Vote.&mdash;Adoption of
+ Address in Reply.&mdash;Compromise between Parties
+ Indispensable.&mdash;Successful Inauguration of Responsible
+ Government.&mdash;The Governor's Egotism.&mdash;Mr. Herbert's
+ Retirement.&mdash;Mr. Macalister Succeeds.&mdash;Financial and
+ Political Crisis.&mdash;Proposed Inconvertible Paper
+ Money.&mdash;Governor Undeservedly Blamed </td>
+<td class="right" valign="bottom" width="10%"><a href="#page8">8-10</a></td>
+</tr>
+</table>
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="pagevi" id="pagevi"></a>vi</span>
+
+<h2 class="toc"><a class="contents" href="#page11">CHAPTER IV.</a></h2>
+<h3 class="toc">THE FIRST SESSION OF PARLIAMENT.</h3>
+
+<table summary="contents" align="center" width="90%">
+<tr>
+<td><span class="outdent2">Work of the First Session</span>.&mdash;Four Land Acts
+ Passed.&mdash;Summary of Land "Code."&mdash;Pastoral Leases.
+ &mdash;Upset Price of Land £1 per acre.&mdash;Agricultural
+ Reserves.&mdash;Land Orders to Immigrants.&mdash;Cotton Bonus.
+ &mdash;Lands for Mining Purposes.&mdash;Renewal of Existing Leases.
+ &mdash;Governor's Laudation of "Code."&mdash;Praises Parliament.
+ &mdash;Abolition of State Aid to Religion.&mdash;Primary and
+ Secondary Education.&mdash;Wool Liens.&mdash;First Estimates and
+ Appropriation Act </td>
+<td class="right" valign="bottom" width="10%"><a href="#page11">11-14</a></td>
+</tr>
+</table>
+
+<h2 class="toc"><a class="contents" href="#page15">CHAPTER V.</a></h2>
+<h3 class="toc">QUEENSLAND IN 1860.</h3>
+
+<table summary="contents" align="center" width="90%">
+<tr>
+<td><span class="outdent2">Rush of Population</span>.&mdash;High Prices for Stock for occupying
+ New Country.&mdash;Sparse Population.&mdash;Rockhampton most
+ Northerly Port of Entry.&mdash;Navigation inside Barrier Reef
+ Unknown.&mdash;Tropical Queensland Unexplored.&mdash;Ignorance of
+ Climate, Resources, and Conditions.&mdash;Primary Industries
+ in 1860.&mdash;Primitive Means of Communication.&mdash;Public
+ Revenue, Bank Deposits, and Institutions </td>
+<td class="right" valign="bottom" width="10%"><a href="#page15">15-18</a></td>
+</tr>
+</table>
+
+<h2 style="margin-top: 2em;"><i>PART II.&mdash;FROM NATAL YEAR TO JUBILEE.</i></h2>
+
+<h2 class="toc"><a class="contents" href="#page19">CHAPTER I.</a></h2>
+<h3 class="toc">THE LEGISLATURE.</h3>
+
+<table summary="contents" align="center" width="90%">
+<tr>
+<td><span class="outdent2">The Governor</span>.&mdash;His Functions: Political and Social.
+ &mdash;His Emoluments.&mdash;Administrations that have held
+ Office.&mdash;Number of Members of Council and Assembly.
+ &mdash;Emoluments of Assembly Members.&mdash;Good Results of
+ Responsible Government in Queensland </td>
+<td class="right" valign="bottom" width="10%"><a href="#page19">19-32</a></td>
+</tr>
+</table>
+
+<h2 class="toc"><a class="contents" href="#page33">CHAPTER II.</a></h2>
+<h3 class="toc">PUBLIC FINANCE (1859-1884).</h3>
+
+<table summary="contents" align="center" width="90%">
+<tr>
+<td><span class="outdent2">Importance of Sound Finance</span>.&mdash;A Great Colony Starts upon
+ a Bank Overdraft.&mdash;First Year's Revenue.&mdash;Land Sales as
+ Revenue.&mdash;Deficits in First Decade.&mdash;Transfer of Loan
+ Moneys to Revenue to Balance Accounts.&mdash;Heavy Public
+ Works Expenditure.&mdash;Crisis of 1866.&mdash;Inconvertible Paper
+ Currency Proposals.&mdash;Flotation of Treasury Bills.
+ &mdash;Higher Customs Duties.&mdash;Wiping Out a Deficit by Issue
+ of Debentures.&mdash;Transfer of Surplus to Surplus Revenue
+ Account to Recoup Loan Fund.&mdash;Incidental Protection.
+ &mdash;Railway Land Reserves.&mdash;Proceeds Used as Ordinary
+ Revenue.&mdash;Three-million Loan.&mdash;Condition of Affairs at
+ Close of First Quarter-Century.&mdash;Phenomenal Progress;
+ Prospects Bright </td>
+<td class="right" valign="bottom" width="10%"><a href="#page33">33-38</a></td>
+</tr>
+</table>
+
+<h2 class="toc"><a class="contents" href="#page39">CHAPTER III.</a></h2>
+<h3 class="toc">PUBLIC FINANCE (1884-1893).</h3>
+
+<table summary="contents" align="center" width="90%">
+<tr>
+<td><span class="outdent2">The Ten-million Loan</span>.&mdash;Ministers Practically Granted
+ Control of Five Years' Loan Money.&mdash;Vigorous Railway
+ Policy.&mdash;Effect of Over-spending.&mdash;Inflation of
+ Values.&mdash;Increased Taxation.&mdash;Succession of Deficits.
+ &mdash;Second McIlwraith Ministry.&mdash;A Protectionist Tariff.
+ &mdash;Temporary Increase of Revenue.&mdash;Heavy Contraction
+ in 1890.&mdash;Another Big Loan; Failure of Flotation.
+ &mdash;The First Underwritten Australian Loan.&mdash;Amended
+ Audit Act Limiting Spending Power of Government </td>
+<td class="right" valign="bottom" width="10%"><a href="#page39">39-42</a></td>
+</tr>
+</table>
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="pagevii" id="pagevii"></a>vii</span>
+
+<h2 class="toc"><a class="contents" href="#page43">CHAPTER IV.</a></h2>
+<h3 class="toc">PUBLIC FINANCE (1893-1898).</h3>
+
+<table summary="contents" align="center" width="90%">
+<tr>
+<td><span class="outdent2">Sir Hugh Nelson</span> at the Treasury.&mdash;Credit of Colony
+ Restored.&mdash;Assistance to Financial Institutions and
+ Primary Industries.&mdash;Savings Bank Stock Act.&mdash;Public Debt
+ Reduction Fund.&mdash;Treasurer's Cautious and Prudent
+ Administration.&mdash;Money Obtained in London at a Record
+ Price </td>
+<td class="right" valign="bottom" width="10%"><a href="#page43">43-45</a></td>
+</tr>
+</table>
+
+<h2 class="toc"><a class="contents" href="#page46">CHAPTER V.</a></h2>
+<h3 class="toc">PUBLIC FINANCE (1898-1903).</h3>
+
+<table summary="contents" align="center" width="90%">
+<tr>
+<td><span class="outdent2">The Philp Ministry</span>.&mdash;Large Surplus.&mdash;Loan Acts for Seven
+ and a-half Millions Sterling.&mdash;Drought Disasters and
+ Sacrifices for Federation.&mdash;Accumulated Revenue Deficits
+ of over £1,000,000.&mdash;Rebuff on London Stock
+ Exchange.&mdash;Resignation of Philp Ministry </td>
+<td class="right" valign="bottom" width="10%"><a href="#page46">46-48</a></td>
+</tr>
+</table>
+
+<h2 class="toc"><a class="contents" href="#page49">CHAPTER VI.</a></h2>
+<h3 class="toc">PUBLIC FINANCE (1903-1909).</h3>
+
+<table summary="contents" align="center" width="90%">
+<tr>
+<td><span class="outdent2">The Morgan-Kidston Ministry</span>.&mdash;Economy in Revenue
+ Expenditure.&mdash;Great Reduction in Loan
+ Outlay.&mdash;Equilibrium Established at the
+ Treasury.&mdash;Retrenchment and Taxation.&mdash;Improvement of
+ Finances.&mdash;A Record Surplus for Queensland.&mdash;Land Sales
+ Proceeds Act.&mdash;Abstention from Borrowing.&mdash;First Loan
+ Floated since 1903.&mdash;Sound Position of Queensland.
+ &mdash;Value of State Securities.&mdash;Reproductiveness of
+ Railways Built out of Loan Money.&mdash;Public Estate
+ Improvement Fund.&mdash;How Recourse to Money Market has
+ been Avoided </td>
+<td class="right" valign="bottom" width="10%"><a href="#page49">49-53</a></td>
+</tr>
+</table>
+
+<h2 class="toc"><a class="contents" href="#page64">CHAPTER VII.</a></h2>
+<h3 class="toc">THE BOOM DECADE (1880-1890).</h3>
+
+<table summary="contents" align="center" width="90%">
+<tr>
+<td><span class="outdent2">A Great Boom Decade</span>.&mdash;Causes of Inflation of
+ Values.&mdash;Excessive Rating Valuations.&mdash;False Basis of
+ Assessing Capital Value.&mdash;Prodigality Succeeded by
+ Financial Stringency and Collapse of Boom.&mdash;Difficulty in
+ Determining Real Values.&mdash;Sir Hugh Nelson's
+ Legislation.&mdash;Sound Finance.&mdash;Stability of
+ State.&mdash;Prospects Good To-day </td>
+<td class="right" valign="bottom" width="10%"><a href="#page54">54-56</a></td>
+</tr>
+</table>
+
+<h2 class="toc"><a class="contents" href="#page57">CHAPTER VIII.</a></h2>
+<h3 class="toc">CROWN LANDS LEGISLATION.</h3>
+
+<table summary="contents" align="center" width="90%">
+<tr>
+<td><span class="outdent2">The Code of 1860</span>.&mdash;Crown Lands Alienation Act of
+ 1868.&mdash;Pastoral Leases Act of 1869.&mdash;Homestead Areas Act
+ of 1872.&mdash;Crown Lands Alienation Act and Settled
+ Districts Pastoral Leases Act of 1876.&mdash;The
+ Griffith-Dutton Land Act of 1884.&mdash;Co-operative
+ Communities Land Settlement Act.&mdash;Land Act of 1897&mdash;Forms
+ of Selection.&mdash;Act to Assist Persons to Settle on Land by
+ Advances from the Treasury.&mdash;Extension of Pastoral
+ Leases.&mdash;Closer Settlement Act.&mdash;Land Orders </td>
+<td class="right" valign="bottom" width="10%"><a href="#page57">57-65</a></td>
+</tr>
+</table>
+
+<h2 class="toc"><a class="contents" href="#page66">CHAPTER IX.</a></h2>
+<h3 class="toc">APPROPRIATION OF LAND REVENUE.</h3>
+
+<table summary="contents" align="center" width="90%">
+<tr>
+<td><span class="outdent2">Land Sales Receipts</span>; not Consolidated Revenue.
+ &mdash;Arguments used in favour of Treating Proceeds as
+ Ordinary Revenue.&mdash;Auction Sales have now Practically
+ Ceased.&mdash;Certain Proceeds Payable into Loan Fund.
+ &mdash;Special Sales of Land Act; Appropriation of Receipts </td>
+<td class="right" valign="bottom" width="10%"><a href="#page66">66-68</a></td>
+</tr>
+</table>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="pageviii" id="pageviii"></a>viii</span>
+
+<h2 class="toc"><a class="contents" href="#page69">CHAPTER X.</a></h2>
+<h3 class="toc">LOCAL GOVERNMENT IN QUEENSLAND.</h3>
+
+<table summary="contents" align="center" width="90%">
+<tr>
+<td><span class="outdent2">First Municipality Established</span>.&mdash;Brisbane Bridge
+ Lands.&mdash;Grant for Town Hall.&mdash;Consolidating
+ Municipalities Act.&mdash;Provincial Councils Act.&mdash;Government
+ Buildings not Rateable.&mdash;Brisbane Bridge Debentures and
+ Waterway Acts.&mdash;Municipal Endowment.&mdash;Local Government
+ Act of 1878.&mdash;Divisional Boards Act of 1879; Success of
+ the Act.&mdash;Local Works Loans Act.&mdash;Two Pounds for One Pound
+ Endowment Repealed.&mdash;Rating Powers Extended by Local
+ Authorities Act of 1902.&mdash;Cessation of Endowment.
+ &mdash;Valuation and Rating Act.&mdash;Decline in Land Values.
+ &mdash;Unequal Incidence of Rates Levied.&mdash;Efficiency
+ of Local Authorities </td>
+<td class="right" valign="bottom" width="10%"><a href="#page69">69-77</a></td>
+</tr>
+</table>
+
+<h2 class="toc"><a class="contents" href="#page78">CHAPTER XI.</a></h2>
+<h3 class="toc">PUBLIC INSTRUCTION.</h3>
+
+<table summary="contents" align="center" width="90%">
+<tr>
+<td><span class="outdent2">Primary Education</span>: Board of National Education; Education
+ Act of 1860; Board of General Education; Education Act of
+ 1875; Department of Public Instruction; Higher Education
+ in Primary Schools; Itinerant Teachers; Status of
+ Teachers; Statistics.&mdash;Private Schools.&mdash;Secondary
+ Education: Grammar Schools Act; Endowments, Scholarships,
+ and Bursaries; Success of Grammar Schools; Exhibitions to
+ Universities; Expenditure.&mdash;Technical Education:
+ Beginning of System; Board of Technical Instruction;
+ Transfer of Control to Department of Public Instruction;
+ Statistics; Technical Instruction Act; Continuation
+ Classes; Schools of Arts and Reading Rooms.&mdash;University:
+ Royal Commissions; University Bill; Standardised System
+ of Education </td>
+<td class="right" valign="bottom" width="10%"><a href="#page78">78-85</a></td>
+</tr>
+</table>
+
+<h2 style="margin-top: 2em;"><i>PART III.&mdash;OUR JUBILEE YEAR.</i></h2>
+
+<h2 class="toc"><a class="contents" href="#page86">CHAPTER I.</a></h2>
+<h3 class="toc">GENERAL REVIEW.</h3>
+
+<table summary="contents" align="center" width="90%">
+<tr>
+<td><span class="outdent2">Good Seasons and General Prosperity</span>.&mdash;Land Settlement and
+ Immigration.&mdash;The Sugar Crop.&mdash;Gold and Other
+ Minerals.&mdash;Reduction in Cost of Mining and Treatment of
+ Ores.&mdash;Vigorous Railway Extension.&mdash;Mileage Open for
+ Traffic.&mdash;Efficiency of 3 ft. 6 in. Gauge.&mdash;Our Railway
+ Investment.&mdash;The National Association Jubilee Show.&mdash;The
+ General Election.&mdash;The Mandate of the
+ Constituencies.&mdash;Government Majority.&mdash;Practical
+ Extinction of Third Party.&mdash;Labour a Constitutional
+ Opposition.&mdash;Federal Agreement with States.&mdash;Federal
+ Union Vindicated </td>
+<td class="right" valign="bottom" width="10%"><a href="#page86">86-91</a></td>
+</tr>
+</table>
+
+<h2 class="toc"><a class="contents" href="#page92">CHAPTER II.</a></h2>
+<h3 class="toc">THE FEDERAL OUTLOOK.</h3>
+
+<table summary="contents" align="center" width="90%">
+<tr>
+<td><span class="outdent2">Proclamation of the Commonwealth</span>.&mdash;The Referendum
+ Vote.&mdash;Queensland's Small Majority in the
+ Affirmative.&mdash;Representation in Federal Parliament.&mdash;The
+ White Australia Policy.&mdash;Temporary Effect on
+ Queensland.&mdash;An Embarrassed State Treasury.&mdash;Assistance
+ to Sugar Industry.&mdash;Continued Protection
+ Necessary.&mdash;Unequal Distribution of Federal Surplus
+ Revenue.&mdash;The Transferred Properties.&mdash;Effect of Uniform
+ Tariff.&mdash;Good Times Lessen Federal Burden on State.&mdash;The
+ Agreement between Prime Minister and Premiers.&mdash;Better
+ Feeling Towards Federation.&mdash;National Measures of Deakin
+ Government </td>
+<td class="right" valign="bottom" width="10%"><a href="#page92">92-96</a></td>
+</tr>
+</table>
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="pageix" id="pageix"></a>ix</span>
+
+<h2 style="margin-top: 2em;"><i>PART IV.&mdash;THE PRIMARY INDUSTRIES.</i></h2>
+
+<h2 class="toc"><a class="contents" href="#page97">CHAPTER I.</a></h2>
+<h3 class="toc">THE PASTORAL INDUSTRY.</h3>
+
+<table summary="contents" align="center" width="90%">
+<tr>
+<td><span class="outdent2">Importance of Industry</span>.&mdash;Small Beginnings in New South
+ Wales.&mdash;Extension of Industry.&mdash;Stocking of Darling Downs
+ and Western Queensland.&mdash;Rush for Pastoral Lands.
+ &mdash;Difficulties of Early Squatters.&mdash;Influx of Victorian
+ Capital.&mdash;Changes in Method of Working Stations.&mdash;Boom
+ in Pastoral Properties.&mdash;Checks from Drought.&mdash;Discovery
+ of Artesian Water.&mdash;Conservation of Surface Water.
+ &mdash;Introduction of Grazing Farm System.&mdash;Closer Settlement
+ of Darling Downs.&mdash;Cattle-Rearing.&mdash;Meat-Freezing Works.
+ &mdash;Over-stocking.&mdash;Dairying.&mdash;Station Routine.&mdash;Charm of
+ Pastoral Life.&mdash;Shearing.&mdash;Hospitality of Squatters.
+ &mdash;Attraction of Industry as Investment and Occupation </td>
+<td class="right" valign="bottom" width="10%"><a href="#page97">97-112</a></td>
+</tr>
+</table>
+
+<h2 class="toc"><a class="contents" href="#page113">CHAPTER II.</a></h2>
+<h3 class="toc">AGRICULTURE IN QUEENSLAND.</h3>
+
+<table summary="contents" align="center" width="90%">
+<tr>
+<td><span class="outdent2">Tripartite Division of Queensland</span>.&mdash;Climate.&mdash;Development
+ of Agriculture in Queensland.&mdash;Wide Range of
+ Products.&mdash;Early History.&mdash;Exclusion of Farmers from
+ Richest Lands.&mdash;Origin of Mixed Farming.&mdash;Extension of
+ Industry Westward.&mdash;Inexperience of Early Settlers.
+ &mdash;Cotton-growing.&mdash;Chief Crops.&mdash;Dairying.
+ &mdash;Cereal-growing.&mdash;Farming in the Tropics.&mdash;Farming
+ on the Downs.&mdash;Farming in the West.&mdash;Irrigation.
+ &mdash;Conservation of Water.&mdash;Timber Industry.&mdash;Land
+ Selection.&mdash;Assistance Given by the Government.
+ &mdash;Immigration.&mdash;Attractions of Queensland.
+ &mdash;Defenders of Hearth and Home </td>
+<td class="right" valign="bottom" width="10%"><a href="#page113">113-131</a></td>
+</tr>
+</table>
+
+<h2 class="toc"><a class="contents" href="#page132">CHAPTER III.</a></h2>
+<h3 class="toc">THE SUGAR INDUSTRY.</h3>
+
+<table summary="contents" align="center" width="90%">
+<tr>
+<td><span class="outdent2">Sugar-cane in the Northern Hemisphere</span>.&mdash;The Rise of the
+ Beet Industry.&mdash;Abolition of Slave Labour in West
+ Indies.&mdash;Reorganisation of Industry on Scientific
+ Basis.&mdash;Establishment of Industry in Queensland.
+ &mdash;Difficulties of Early Planters.&mdash;Stoppage of Pacific
+ Island Labour.&mdash;Evolution of Small Holdings and Erection
+ of Central Mills.&mdash;Reintroduction of Pacific Islanders.
+ &mdash;Stoppage of Pacific Island Labour by Commonwealth
+ Legislation.&mdash;Bonus on White-grown Sugar.&mdash;Benefits
+ Arising from Separating Cultivation and Manufacture.
+ &mdash;Contrast between Past and Present Methods.&mdash;Scientific
+ Cultivation.&mdash;Recent Statistics.&mdash;The Future of the
+ Industry.&mdash;Queensland Leading the Van in Establishing
+ White Agriculturists in Tropics </td>
+<td class="right" valign="bottom" width="10%"><a href="#page132">132-143</a></td>
+</tr>
+</table>
+
+<h2 class="toc"><a class="contents" href="#page144">CHAPTER IV.</a></h2>
+<h3 class="toc">A HALF-CENTURY OF MINING.</h3>
+
+<table summary="contents" align="center" width="90%">
+<tr>
+<td><span class="outdent2">The Quest for Gold a Colonising Agency</span>.&mdash;Earliest
+ Discoveries of the Precious Metal in Queensland.&mdash;Port
+ Curtis.&mdash;Rockhampton District.&mdash;Peak Downs.&mdash;Gympie.
+ &mdash;Ravenswood.&mdash;Charters Towers.&mdash;Palmer.&mdash;Mount Morgan.
+ &mdash;Croydon.&mdash;Later Discoveries.&mdash;Yield at Charters
+ Towers and Mount Morgan.&mdash;Copper Mining.&mdash;Tin.&mdash;Silver.
+ &mdash;Queensland the Home of All Kinds of Minerals and
+ Precious Stones.&mdash;Mineral Wealth in Cairns Hinterland.
+ &mdash;Copper Deposits in Cloncurry District.&mdash;The Etheridge.
+ &mdash;Anakie Gem Field.&mdash;Opal Fields.&mdash;Extensive Coal
+ Measures.&mdash;Railway Communication with Mining Fields.
+ &mdash;Value of Queensland Mineral Output.&mdash;Prospects of
+ Industry </td>
+<td class="right" valign="bottom" width="10%"><a href="#page144">144-152</a></td>
+</tr>
+</table>
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="pagex" id="pagex"></a>x</span>
+
+<h2 class="toc"><a class="contents" href="#page153">CHAPTER V.</a></h2>
+<h3 class="toc">OUR ASSET IN ARTESIAN WATER.</h3>
+
+<table summary="contents" align="center" width="90%">
+<tr>
+<td><span class="outdent2">Erroneous Judgment of Western Queensland</span>.&mdash;Scarcity of
+ Surface Water.&mdash;Water Supply Department.&mdash;Discovery of
+ Artesian Water in New South Wales.&mdash;Prospecting in
+ Queensland.&mdash;Difficulties Experienced by Early
+ Borers.&mdash;First Artesian Flowing Bore.&mdash;Dr. Jack's First
+ Estimate of Artesian Area.&mdash;Revised Figures.&mdash;Number of
+ Bores and Estimated Flow.&mdash;Area Capable of being
+ Irrigated with Artesian Water.&mdash;Cost of Boring.&mdash;Value of
+ Artesian Water.&mdash;Extent of Intake Beds.&mdash;Waste of Water.
+ &mdash;Necessity for Government Control of Wells.&mdash;Value of
+ Water for Irrigation, Consumption, and Motive Power.
+ &mdash;Artesian Water a Great National Asset </td>
+<td class="right" valign="bottom" width="10%"><a href="#page153">153-161</a></td>
+</tr>
+</table>
+
+<h2 class="app"><i>APPENDICES.</i></h2>
+<table summary="contents" align="center" width="90%">
+<tr>
+ <td><a class="contents" href="#page162"><span class="sc">Appendix A&mdash;Readjustment of Western Boundary</span></a></td>
+ <td class="right"><a href="#page162">162-163</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td><a class="contents" href="#page164"><span class="sc">Appendix B&mdash;The First Parliament</span></a></td>
+ <td class="right"><a href="#page164">164</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td><a class="contents" href="#page165"><span class="sc">Appendix C&mdash;The Eighteenth Parliament</span></a></td>
+ <td class="right"><a href="#page165">165-166</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td><a class="contents" href="#page167"><span class="sc">Appendix D&mdash;Fifty Years of Legislation</span></a></td>
+ <td class="right"><a href="#page167">167-183</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td><a class="contents" href="#page184"><span class="sc">Appendix E&mdash;Land Selection in Queensland</span></a></td>
+ <td class="right"><a href="#page184">184-195</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+ <td><a class="contents" href="#page196"><span class="sc">Appendix F&mdash;Immigration to Queensland</span></a></td>
+ <td class="right"><a href="#page196">196-197</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td><a class="contents" href="#page198"><span class="sc">Appendix G&mdash;Some Statistics and Their Story</span></a></td>
+ <td class="right"><a href="#page198">198-209</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td><a class="contents" href="#page210"><span class="sc">Appendix H&mdash;Digest of Hydraulic Engineer's Reports</span></a></td>
+ <td class="right"><a href="#page210">210-230</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td><a class="contents" href="#page231"><span class="sc">Appendix J&mdash;Climatic Contrasts</span></a></td>
+ <td class="right"><a href="#page231">231-237</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td><a class="contents" href="#page238"><span class="sc">Appendix K&mdash;Education Statistics</span></a></td>
+ <td class="right"><a href="#page238">238</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td><a class="contents" href="#page239"><span class="sc">Appendix L&mdash;Inauguration of the University of Queensland</span></a></td>
+ <td class="right"><a href="#page239">239-257</a></td>
+</tr>
+</table>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="pagexi" id="pagexi"></a>xi</span>
+
+<h2 style="margin-top: 2em;">INDEX TO ILLUSTRATIONS.</h2>
+<table summary="contents" align="center" width="90%" border="0">
+<tr>
+ <td><a class="contents" href="#frontis">Government House</a></td>
+ <td>(<i>C. E. S. Fryer</i>)</td>
+ <td class="right"><a href="#frontis"><i>Frontispiece</i></a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td>&nbsp;</td>
+ <td>&nbsp;</td>
+ <td class="right">Facing Page</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td><a class="contents" href="#pagexiv">First Gazette, 10th December, 1859</a></td>
+ <td>&nbsp;</td>
+ <td class="right"><a href="#pagexiv">xiv</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td><a class="contents" href="#pagexx">Writ of Summons for First Election</a></td>
+ <td>&nbsp;</td>
+ <td class="right"><a href="#pagexx">xx</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td><a class="contents" href="#pagexxiv">Governors of Queensland </a></td>
+ <td>(<i>C. E. S. Fryer</i>)</td>
+ <td class="right"><a href="#pagexxiv">xxiv</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td><a class="contents" href="#pagexxviii">Premiers of Queensland</a></td>
+ <td>(<i>C. E. S. Fryer</i>)</td>
+ <td class="right"><a href="#pagexxviii">xxviii</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td><a class="contents" href="#page4">Houses of Parliament, Brisbane</a></td>
+ <td>(<i>C. E. S. Fryer</i>)</td>
+ <td class="right"><a href="#page4">4</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td><a class="contents" href="#page8">View from River Terrace, Brisbane</a></td>
+ <td>(<i>C. E. S. Fryer</i>)</td>
+ <td class="right"><a href="#page8">8</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td><a class="contents" href="#page12">Barron Falls, Cairns Railway, North Queensland</a></td>
+ <td>(<i>C. E. S. Fryer</i>)</td>
+ <td class="right"><a href="#page12">12</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td><a class="contents" href="#page16">Treasury Buildings, Brisbane</a></td>
+ <td>(<i>C. E. S. Fryer</i>)</td>
+ <td class="right"><a href="#page16">16</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td><a class="contents" href="#page20">Coal Wharves, South Brisbane</a></td>
+ <td>(<i>C. E. S. Fryer</i>)</td>
+ <td class="right"><a href="#page20">20</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td><a class="contents" href="#page24">Executive Buildings, Brisbane</a></td>
+ <td>(<i>C. E. S. Fryer</i>)</td>
+ <td class="right"><a href="#page24">24</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td><a class="contents" href="#page28">Views of Rockhampton, Central Queensland</a></td>
+ <td>(<i>C. E. S. Fryer</i>)</td>
+ <td class="right"><a href="#page28">28</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td><a class="contents" href="#page32">Townsville: Flinders Street, looking West</a></td>
+ <td>(<i>C. E. S. Fryer</i>)</td>
+ <td class="right"><a href="#page32">32</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td><a class="contents" href="#page36">Hinchinbrook Channel, North Queensland</a></td>
+ <td>(<i>C. E. S. Fryer</i>)</td>
+ <td class="right"><a href="#page36">36</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td><a class="contents" href="#page36">The Narrows and Mount Larcombe, near Gladstone</a></td>
+ <td>(<i>C. E. S. Fryer</i>)</td>
+ <td class="right"><a href="#page36">36</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td><a class="contents" href="#page40">Barron Gorge below the Falls, Cairns Railway</a></td>
+ <td>(<i>C. E. S. Fryer</i>)</td>
+ <td class="right"><a href="#page40">40</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td><a class="contents" href="#page44">On the Road to Market, Central Queensland</a></td>
+ <td>(<i>W. E. Perroux</i>)</td>
+ <td class="right"><a href="#page44">44</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td><a class="contents" href="#page44">Fat Cattle, Central Queensland</a></td>
+ <td>(<i>W. E. Perroux</i>)</td>
+ <td class="right"><a href="#page44">44</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td><a class="contents" href="#page48">Maroochy River and Ninderry Mountain, N.C. Railway</a></td>
+ <td>(<i>C. E. S. Fryer</i>)</td>
+ <td class="right"><a href="#page48">48</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td><a class="contents" href="#page52">Scene on Barcaldine Downs, Central Queensland</a></td>
+ <td>(<i>W. E. Perroux</i>)</td>
+ <td class="right"><a href="#page52">52</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td><a class="contents" href="#page52">Barcaldine Downs Homestead, Central Queensland</a></td>
+ <td>(<i>W. E. Perroux</i>)</td>
+ <td class="right"><a href="#page52">52</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td><a class="contents" href="#page56">Swan Creek Valley, near Yangan, Warwick District</a></td>
+ <td>(<i>C. E. S. Fryer</i>)</td>
+ <td class="right"><a href="#page56">56</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td><a class="contents" href="#page60">Surprise Creek Falls, Cairns Railway</a></td>
+ <td>(<i>C. E. S. Fryer</i>)</td>
+ <td class="right"><a href="#page60">60</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td><a class="contents" href="#page64">Forest Scene near Woombye, North Coast Railway</a></td>
+ <td>(<i>C. E. S. Fryer</i>)</td>
+ <td class="right"><a href="#page64">64</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td><a class="contents" href="#page68">Hauling Timber, North Coast Railway</a></td>
+ <td>(<i>C. E. S. Fryer</i>)</td>
+ <td class="right"><a href="#page68">68</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td><a class="contents" href="#page68">Stony Creek Bridge and Falls, Cairns Railway</a><span class="pagenum"><a name="pagexii" id="pagexii"></a>xii</span></td>
+ <td>(<i>C. E. S. Fryer</i>)</td>
+ <td class="right"><a href="#page68">68</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td><a class="contents" href="#page72">Timber Getting, North Coast Railway</a></td>
+ <td>(<i>C. E. S. Fryer</i>)</td>
+ <td class="right"><a href="#page72">72</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td><a class="contents" href="#page76">Cairns Range and Robb's Monument, N. Queensland</a></td>
+ <td>(<i>C. E. S. Fryer</i>)</td>
+ <td class="right"><a href="#page76">76</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td><a class="contents" href="#page80">View of Gympie from Nashville Railway Station</a></td>
+ <td>(<i>C. E. S. Fryer</i>)</td>
+ <td class="right"><a href="#page80">80</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td><a class="contents" href="#page80">Coke Ovens, Ipswich District</a></td>
+ <td>(<i>C. E. S. Fryer</i>)</td>
+ <td class="right"><a href="#page80">80</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td><a class="contents" href="#page84">Gulf Cattle Ready for Market</a></td>
+ <td>(<i>H. J. Walton</i>)</td>
+ <td class="right"><a href="#page84">84</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td><a class="contents" href="#page84">Brigalow Country, Warra, Darling Downs</a></td>
+ <td>&nbsp;</td>
+ <td class="right"><a href="#page84">84</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td><a class="contents" href="#page84">Hereford Cows, Darling Downs</a></td>
+ <td>&nbsp;</td>
+ <td class="right"><a href="#page84">84</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td><a class="contents" href="#page88">Above Stony Creek Falls, Cairns Railway</a></td>
+ <td>(<i>C. E. S. Fryer</i>)</td>
+ <td class="right"><a href="#page88">88</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td><a class="contents" href="#page92">Mount Morgan: Open Cut and Dumps</a></td>
+ <td>(<i>Mount Morgan G.M. Co.</i>)</td>
+ <td class="right"><a href="#page92">92</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td><a class="contents" href="#page92">Mount Morgan: Mundic and Copper Works</a></td>
+ <td>(<i>Mount Morgan G.M. Co.</i>)</td>
+ <td class="right"><a href="#page92">92</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td><a class="contents" href="#page100">Cattle Country, West Moreton</a></td>
+ <td>&nbsp;</td>
+ <td class="right"><a href="#page100">100</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td><a class="contents" href="#page100">Fat Cattle, Central Queensland</a></td>
+ <td>(<i>C. E. S. Fryer</i>)</td>
+ <td class="right"><a href="#page100">100</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td><a class="contents" href="#page104">Horses at Gowrie, Darling Downs</a></td>
+ <td>&nbsp;</td>
+ <td class="right"><a href="#page104">104</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td><a class="contents" href="#page104">Sheep at Gowrie, Darling Downs</a></td>
+ <td>&nbsp;</td>
+ <td class="right"><a href="#page194">104</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td><a class="contents" href="#page104">Horses, Western Queensland</a></td>
+ <td>(<i>H. J. Walton</i>)</td>
+ <td class="right"><a href="#page104">104</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td><a class="contents" href="#page104">Fat Cattle, Burrandilla, Charleville</a></td>
+ <td>(<i>H. J. Walton</i>)</td>
+ <td class="right"><a href="#page104">104</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td><a class="contents" href="#page108">Wool Teams, Wyandra, Warrego District</a></td>
+ <td>(<i>C. E. S. Fryer</i>)</td>
+ <td class="right"><a href="#page108">108</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td><a class="contents" href="#page108">Hauling Cedar, Atherton, North Queensland</a></td>
+ <td>(<i>C. E. S. Fryer</i>)</td>
+ <td class="right"><a href="#page108">108</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td><a class="contents" href="#page112">Dairy Cattle on Darling Downs</a></td>
+ <td>&nbsp;</td>
+ <td class="right"><a href="#page112">112</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td><a class="contents" href="#page112">Sheep, Jimbour, Darling Downs</a></td>
+ <td>&nbsp;</td>
+ <td class="right"><a href="#page112">112</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td><a class="contents" href="#page112">Horses, Ivanhoe Station, Warrego</a></td>
+ <td>&nbsp;</td>
+ <td class="right"><a href="#page112">112</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td><a class="contents" href="#page116">Harvesting Wheat, Emu Vale, near Warwick</a></td>
+ <td>(<i>C. E. S. Fryer</i>)</td>
+ <td class="right"><a href="#page116">116</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td><a class="contents" href="#page120">Surprise Creek Cascade, Cairns Railway</a></td>
+ <td>(<i>C. E. S. Fryer</i>)</td>
+ <td class="right"><a href="#page120">120</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td><a class="contents" href="#page124">Pineapple Farm, Woombye, North Coast Railway</a></td>
+ <td>(<i>C. E. S. Fryer</i>)</td>
+ <td class="right"><a href="#page124">124</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td><a class="contents" href="#page124">Sugar-Mill, Huxley, Isis Railway</a></td>
+ <td>(<i>C. E. S. Fryer</i>)</td>
+ <td class="right"><a href="#page124">124</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td><a class="contents" href="#page124">Field of Maize, Eel Creek, Gympie</a></td>
+ <td>(<i>C. E. S. Fryer</i>)</td>
+ <td class="right"><a href="#page124">124</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td><a class="contents" href="#page128">Threshing Wheat, Emu Vale, Killarney Railway</a></td>
+ <td>(<i>C. E. S. Fryer</i>)</td>
+ <td class="right"><a href="#page128">128</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td><a class="contents" href="#page128">Coffee Plantation, Kuranda, Cairns Railway</a></td>
+ <td>(<i>C. E. S. Fryer</i>)</td>
+ <td class="right"><a href="#page128">128</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td><a class="contents" href="#page132">Sugar-Mill, Childers, North Coast Railway</a></td>
+ <td>(<i>C. E. S. Fryer</i>)</td>
+ <td class="right"><a href="#page132">132</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td><a class="contents" href="#page136">Sisal Hemp and Cane Fields, South Isis</a></td>
+ <td>(<i>C. E. S. Fryer</i>)</td>
+ <td class="right"><a href="#page136">136</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td><a class="contents" href="#page136">Canefields, Isis Railway</a><span class="pagenum"><a name="pagexiii" id="pagexiii"></a>xiii</span></td>
+ <td>(<i>C. E. S. Fryer</i>)</td>
+ <td class="right"><a href="#page136">136</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td><a class="contents" href="#page136">Sugar Cane and Mill, Huxley, Isis Railway</a></td>
+ <td>(<i>C. E. S. Fryer</i>)</td>
+ <td class="right"><a href="#page136">136</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td><a class="contents" href="#page140">Cambanora Gap, Head of Condamine, Killarney</a></td>
+ <td>(<i>C. E. S. Fryer</i>)</td>
+ <td class="right"><a href="#page140">140</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td><a class="contents" href="#page140">Minto Crag, Dugandan, Fassifern District</a></td>
+ <td>(<i>C. E. S. Fryer</i>)</td>
+ <td class="right"><a href="#page140">140</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td><a class="contents" href="#page144">Mount Morgan: Copper Works, looking North</a></td>
+ <td>(<i>Mt. Morgan G.M. Co.</i>)</td>
+ <td class="right"><a href="#page144">144</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td><a class="contents" href="#page144">Mount Morgan: General View of Works</a></td>
+ <td>(<i>Mt. Morgan G.M. Co.</i>)</td>
+ <td class="right"><a href="#page144">144</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td><a class="contents" href="#page148">Charters Towers: Plant's Day Dawn</a></td>
+ <td>(<i>C. E. S. Fryer</i>)</td>
+ <td class="right"><a href="#page148">148</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td><a class="contents" href="#page152">Gympie: Scottish Gympie Gold Mine</a></td>
+ <td>(<i>C. E. S. Fryer</i>)</td>
+ <td class="right"><a href="#page152">152</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td><a class="contents" href="#page152">Gympie: No. 1 North Oriental and Glanmire</a></td>
+ <td>(<i>C. E. S. Fryer</i>)</td>
+ <td class="right"><a href="#page152">152</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td>Flowing Artesian Wells, Western Queensland:</td>
+ <td>&nbsp;</td>
+ <td class="right">&nbsp;</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td style="padding-left: 2em;"><a class="contents" href="#page156">1. Beel's Bore, Cunnamulla</a></td>
+ <td>(<i>Kerry</i>)</td>
+ <td class="right"><a href="#page156">156</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td style="padding-left: 2em;"><a class="contents" href="#page156">2. Bore on Thurulgoona Station</a></td>
+ <td>(<i>Kerry</i>)</td>
+ <td class="right"><a href="#page156">156</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td style="padding-left: 2em;"><a class="contents" href="#page156">3. Charleville Bore</a></td>
+ <td>(<i>C. E. S. Fryer</i>)</td>
+ <td class="right"><a href="#page156">156</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td><a class="contents" href="#page160">Aberdare Colliery, Ipswich District</a></td>
+ <td>(<i>C. E. S. Fryer</i>)</td>
+ <td class="right"><a href="#page160">160</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td><a class="contents" href="#page164">Cocoa-Nut Palms, Johnstone River, North Queensland</a></td>
+ <td>(<i>C. E. S. Fryer</i>)</td>
+ <td class="right"><a href="#page164">164</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td><a class="contents" href="#page164">Custom House and Petrie Bight, Brisbane</a></td>
+ <td>(<i>C. E. S. Fryer</i>)</td>
+ <td class="right"><a href="#page164">164</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td><a class="contents" href="#page168">In the Scrub Country, Kin Kin, North Coast Railway</a></td>
+ <td>(<i>C. E. S. Fryer</i>)</td>
+ <td class="right"><a href="#page168">168</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td><a class="contents" href="#page168">On the Blackall Range, North Coast Railway</a></td>
+ <td>(<i>C. E. S. Fryer</i>)</td>
+ <td class="right"><a href="#page168">168</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td><a class="contents" href="#page176">Barron Gorge, Cairns Railway, North Queensland</a></td>
+ <td>(<i>C. E. S. Fryer</i>)</td>
+ <td class="right"><a href="#page176">176</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td><a class="contents" href="#page184">Farm Scene, Blackall Range</a></td>
+ <td>(<i>C. E. S. Fryer</i>)</td>
+ <td class="right"><a href="#page184">184</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td><a class="contents" href="#page184">Sisal Hemp, Childers, North Coast Railway</a></td>
+ <td>(<i>C. E. S. Fryer</i>)</td>
+ <td class="right"><a href="#page184">184</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td><a class="contents" href="#page184">Wool Teams, Longreach, Central Queensland</a></td>
+ <td>(<i>C. E. S. Fryer</i>)</td>
+ <td class="right"><a href="#page184">184</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td><a class="contents" href="#page192">View on Barron River, Cairns Railway</a></td>
+ <td>(<i>C. E. S. Fryer</i>)</td>
+ <td class="right"><a href="#page192">192</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td><a class="contents" href="#page200">Hauling Timber, Barron River, North Queensland</a></td>
+ <td>(<i>C. E. S. Fryer</i>)</td>
+ <td class="right"><a href="#page200">200</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td><a class="contents" href="#page208">Falls near Killarney</a></td>
+ <td>(<i>C. E. S. Fryer</i>)</td>
+ <td class="right"><a href="#page208">208</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td><a class="contents" href="#page208">Aboriginal Tree Climbers</a></td>
+ <td>(<i>C. E. S. Fryer</i>)</td>
+ <td class="right"><a href="#page208">208</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td><a class="contents" href="#page216">Scene on Logan River, South Queensland</a></td>
+ <td>(<i>C. E. S. Fryer</i>)</td>
+ <td class="right"><a href="#page216">216</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td><a class="contents" href="#page224">Cooktown and Endeavour River, North Queensland</a></td>
+ <td>(<i>C. E. S. Fryer</i>)</td>
+ <td class="right"><a href="#page224">224</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td><a class="contents" href="#page224">Pearling Fleets off Badu Island, Torres Strait</a></td>
+ <td>&nbsp;</td>
+ <td class="right"><a href="#page224">224</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td><a class="contents" href="#page238">Government House, now Dedicated to University purposes</a></td>
+ <td>(<i>C. E. S. Fryer</i>)</td>
+ <td class="right"><a href="#page238">238</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td><a class="contents" href="#page242">View of Dedication Ceremony</a><span class="pagenum"><a name="pagexiv" id="pagexiv"></a>xiv</span></td>
+ <td>(<i>H. W. Mobsby</i>)</td>
+ <td class="right"><a href="#page242">242</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td><a class="contents" href="#page244">The Premier (Hon. W. Kidston) Opening the Proceedings</a></td>
+ <td>(<i>H. W. Mobsby</i>)</td>
+ <td class="right"><a href="#page244">244</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td><a class="contents" href="#page248">His Excellency Sir W. MacGregor Addressing the Audience</a></td>
+ <td>(<i>H. W. Mobsby</i>)</td>
+ <td class="right"><a href="#page248">248</a></td>
+</tr><tr>
+ <td><a class="contents" href="#page250">His Excellency Unveiling the Dedication Tablet</a></td>
+ <td>(<i>H. W. Mobsby</i>)</td>
+ <td class="right"><a href="#page250">250</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td><a class="contents" href="#page256">Lady MacGregor Planting the University Tree</a></td>
+ <td>(<i>H. W. Mobsby</i>)</td>
+ <td class="right"><a href="#page256">256</a></td>
+</tr>
+</table>
+
+<h2 style="margin-top: 2em;">MAPS.</h2>
+
+<p class="center">(<i>Prepared by Survey Office, Department of Public Lands.</i>)</p>
+
+<table summary="contents" align="center" width="90%" border="0" style="margin-bottom: 2em;">
+<tr>
+ <td><span class="sc"><a class="contents" href="#pagexxii">Subdivision of Australia</a></span></td>
+ <td class="right"><a href="#pagexxii">xxii, xxiii</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td><span class="sc"><a class="contents" href="#page96">Australia before Captain Cook</a></span></td>
+ <td class="right"><a href="#page96">96</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td><span class="sc"><a class="contents" href="#page96">Australia, Showing First Settlement</a></span></td>
+ <td class="right"><a href="#page96">96</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td><span class="sc"><a class="contents" href="#page96">Queensland in 1859</a></span></td>
+ <td class="right"><a href="#page96">96</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td><span class="sc"><a class="contents" href="#page96">Queensland in 1909</a></span></td>
+ <td class="right"><a href="#page96">96</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td><span class="sc"><a class="contents" href="#page96">Australia in 1859, Showing Self-Governing Colonies</a></span></td>
+ <td class="right"><a href="#page96">96</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td><span class="sc"><a class="contents" href="#page96">The World, Showing Relative Position of Australia</a></span></td>
+ <td class="right"><a href="#page96">96</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td><span class="sc"><a class="contents" href="#page232">Queensland, with British Islands Superimposed</a></span></td>
+ <td class="right"><a href="#page232">232</a></td>
+</tr>
+</table>
+<hr />
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 600px; margin-top: 5em;"><a href="images/gov-gaz-1200.jpg"><img src="images/gg_arms-600.jpg" width="600" height="273" alt="Royal Coat of Arms" /></a>
+</div>
+
+<p class="center" style="font-size: 3em">QUEENSLAND</p>
+
+<h1><span class="oes">Government Gazette.</span></h1>
+
+<p class="center" style="font-size: 2em; margin-top: 2em; margin-bottom: 1.5em;"><b>PUBLISHED BY AUTHORITY.</b></p>
+
+<table align="center" width="100%" summary="gov. gazette header" cellpadding="4" border="0" style="border-collapse: collapse;">
+<tr>
+ <td class="left1" width="10%">No. 1.<span style="font-size: 1.3em;">]</span></td>
+ <td class="center1" width="80%"><b>SATURDAY, 10 DECEMBER, 1859.</b></td>
+ <td class="right1" width="10%">&nbsp;</td>
+</tr>
+</table>
+
+<h2><b>PROCLAMATION</b></h2>
+
+<blockquote><p class="ind">
+<span class="outdent1">By His Excellency</span> <span class="sc">Sir George Ferguson Bowen</span>, Knight Commander of the Most
+Distinguished Order of St. Michael and St. George, Captain-General and
+Governor-in-Chief of the Colony of Queensland and its Dependencies, and
+Vice-Admiral of the same, &amp;c., &amp;c., &amp;c.
+</p></blockquote>
+<p style="line-height: 1%; margin-top: -1em;">&nbsp;</p>
+<p class="dropcap"><span class="dcap">W</span>
+<b>HEREAS</b> by an Act passed in the Session of Parliament holden in the
+eighteenth and nineteenth years of the Reign of Her Majesty, entitled,
+"<i>An Act to enable Her Majesty to assent to a Bill as amended of the
+Legislature of New South Wales 'to confer a Constitution on New South Wales, and to grant
+'a Civil List to Her Majesty,'</i>" it was amongst other things enacted that it
+should be lawful for Her Majesty, by Letters Patent, to be from time to time issued
+under the Great Seal of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland, to erect into
+a separate Colony or Colonies, any territories which might be separated from New
+South Wales by such alteration as therein was mentioned, of the northern
+boundary thereof; and in and by such Letters Patent, or by Order in Council, to make
+provision for the Government of any such Colony, and for the Establishment of a
+Legislature therein, in manner as nearly resembling the form of Government and
+Legislature which should be at such time established in New South Wales as the
+circumstances of such Colony will allow; and that full power should be given in
+and by such Letters Patent, or Order in Council, to the Legislature of the said
+Colony, to make further provision in that behalf. And whereas Her Majesty, in exercise
+of the powers so vested in Her Majesty, has by Her Commission under the Great
+Seal of the United Kingdom, bearing date the sixth day of June, in the year of
+Our Lord one thousand eight hundred and fifty-nine, appointed that from and
+after the publication of the said Letters Patent in the Colonies of New South
+Wales and Queensland, the Territory described in the said Letters Patent should
+be separated from the said Colony of New South Wales and be erected into the
+separate Colony of Queensland: Now, therefore, I, <span class="sc">Sir George Ferguson
+Bowen</span>,the Governor of Queensland, in pursuance of the authority invested in me by Her
+Majesty, do hereby proclaim and publish the said Letters Patent in the words and
+figures following, respectively.</p>
+
+<h2><b>QUEENSLAND.</b></h2>
+
+<blockquote><p class="ind">
+<span class="outdent2"><i><b>LETTERS PATENT</b></i></span> <i>erecting Moreton
+ Bay into a Colony, under the name of</i>
+ <span class="sc">Queensland</span>,<i> and appointing</i> <span class="sc">Sir
+ George Ferguson Bowen, K.C.M.G.</span>,
+ <i>to be Captain-General and Governor-in-Chief
+ of the same.</i>
+</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote><p class="ind1">
+<span class="outdent2"><span class="sc"><b>Victoria</b></span>, by the Grace</span> of God, of the
+ United Kingdom of Great Britain
+ and Ireland, Queen, Defender of
+ the Faith, to Our trusty and well-beloved
+ <span class="sc">Sir George Ferguson
+ Bowen</span>, Knight Commander of Our
+ most distinguished Order of St.
+ Michael and St. George,&mdash;
+</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote><p class="ind1">
+<span class="sc"><b>Greeting:</b></span></p>
+
+<p><span class="sc"><b>Whereas</b></span> by a reserved Bill of the Legislature
+of New South Wales, passed in the
+seventeenth year of our reign, as amended by
+an Act passed in the Session of Parliament
+holden in the eighteenth and nineteenth years
+of our reign, entitled, "An Act to enable
+Her Majesty to assent to a Bill, as amended,
+of the Legislature of New South Wales, to
+confer a Constitution on New South Wales,
+and to grant a Civil List to Her Majesty,"
+it was enacted that nothing therein contained
+should be deemed to prevent us from
+altering the boundary of the Colony of New
+South Wales on the north, in such a manner as
+to us might seem fit; and it was further enacted
+by the said last recited Act, that if We
+should at any time exercise the power given
+to Us by the said reserved Bill of altering
+the northern boundary of our said colony, it
+should be lawful for Us by any Letters
+Patent, to be from time to time issued under
+the Great Seal of our United Kingdom of
+Great Britain and Ireland, to erect into a
+separate Colony or Colonies any territories
+which might be separated from our said
+colony of New South Wales by such alterations
+as aforesaid of the northern boundary
+thereof, and in and by such Letters Patent,
+or by Order in Council, to make provision
+for the Government of any such separate
+colony, and for the establishment of a Legislature
+therein, in manner as nearly resembling
+the form of Government and Legislature
+which should be at such time established in
+New South Wales as the circumstances of
+such separate Colony would allow, and that
+full power should be given by such Letters
+Patent or Order in Council to the Legislature
+of such separate Colony to make further
+provision in that behalf. Now know you,
+that We have, in pursuance of the powers
+vested in us by the said Bill and Act, and
+of all other powers and authorities in Us in
+that behalf vested separated from our colony
+of New South Wales, and erected into a
+separate Colony, so much of the said colony
+of New South Wales as lies northward of a
+line commencing on the sea coast at Point
+Danger, in latitude about 28 degrees 8 minutes
+south, and following the range thence which
+divides the waters of the Tweed, Richmond,
+and Clarence Rivers from those of the Logan
+and Brisbane Rivers, westerly, to the great
+dividing range between the waters falling to
+the east coast and those of the River Murray;
+following the great dividing range southerly
+to the range dividing the waters of Tenterfield
+Creek from those of the main head of
+the Dumaresq River; following that range
+westerly to the Dumaresq River; and following
+that river (which is locally known as the
+Severn) downward to its confluence with the
+Macintyre River; thence following the Macintyre
+River, which lower down becomes the
+<ins title="Transcriber's Note: The 'Barwan' River is now known as the 'Barwon' River.">Barwan</ins>, downward to the 29th parallel of
+south latitude, and following that parallel
+westerly to the 141st meridian of east longitude,
+which is the eastern boundary of South
+Australia, together with all and every the adjacent
+Islands, their members and appurtenances,
+in the Pacific Ocean: And do by
+these presents separate from our said Colony
+of New South Wales and erect the said territory
+so described into a separate Colony to be
+called the Colony of Queensland.</p>
+
+<p class="ti">And whereas We have by an Order made
+by Us in our Privy Council, bearing even
+date herewith, made provision for the government
+of our said Colony of Queensland,
+and we deem it expedient to make more
+particular provision for the government of
+our said Colony: Now know you, that
+We, reposing especial trust and confidence
+in the prudence, courage, and loyalty of
+you, the said Sir George Ferguson Bowen,
+of our especial grace, certain knowledge, and
+mere motion, have thought fit to constitute
+and appoint, and do by these presents
+constitute and appoint you, the said Sir
+George Ferguson Bowen, to be, during our
+will and pleasure, our Captain-General and
+Governor-in-Chief in and over our said Colony
+of Queensland, and of all forts and garrisons
+erected and established, or which shall be
+erected and established within our said
+Colony, or in its members and appurtenances;
+And we do hereby authorise, empower,
+require, and command you, the said Sir George
+Ferguson Bowen, in due manner, to do and
+execute all things that shall belong to your
+said command and the trust We have reposed
+in you, according to the several powers, provisions,
+and directions granted or appointed
+you by virtue of our present Commission, and
+of the said recited Bill, as amended by the
+said recited Act; and according to our Order
+in our Privy Council, bearing even date herewith,
+and to such instructions as are herewith
+given to you, or which may from time to
+time hereafter be given to you, under our Sign
+Manual and Signet, or by our Order in our
+Privy Council, or by Us, through one of our
+Principal Secretaries of State; and according
+to such laws and ordinances as are now in
+force in our said Colony of New South Wales
+and its dependencies, and as shall hereafter be
+in force in our said Colony of Queensland.</p>
+
+<p class="ti">2. And whereas it is ordered by our said
+Order, made by Us in our Privy Council,
+bearing even date herewith, that there shall
+be within our said Colony of Queensland a
+Legislative Council and a Legislative Assembly,
+to be severally constituted and composed
+in the manner in the said Order prescribed;
+and that We shall have power, by and with
+the advice and consent of the said Council
+and Assembly, to make laws for the peace,
+welfare, and good government of our said
+Colony in all cases whatever: And it is
+provided by the above recited Act, that the
+provisions of the Act of the fourteenth year
+of Her Majesty, chapter fifty-nine, and of the
+Act of the sixth year of Her Majesty, chapter
+seventy-six, intituled, "An Act for the Government
+of New South Wales and Van Diemen's
+Land," which relate to the giving and
+withholding of Her Majesty's assent to bills,
+and the reservation of bills for the signification
+of Her Majesty's pleasure thereon, and
+the instructions to be conveyed to Governors
+for their guidance in relation to the matters
+aforesaid and the disallowance of Bills by
+Her Majesty, shall apply to Bills to be
+passed by the Legislative Council and Assembly
+constituted under the said Reserved Bill
+and Act, and by any other Legislative body or
+bodies which may at any time hereafter be
+substituted for the present Council and Assembly:
+Now We do, by virtue of the
+powers in Us vested, hereby require and
+command, that you do take especial care that
+in making and passing such laws, with the
+advice and consent of the said Legislative
+Council, and Legislative Assembly, the provisions,
+regulations, restrictions, and directions
+contained in the said Acts of Parliament,
+and in Our said Order made in Our
+Privy Council, bearing even date herewith,
+and in Our instructions under Our Sign
+Manual, accompanying this Our Commission,
+or in such future Orders as may be made by
+Us in Our Privy Council, or in such further
+instructions under Our Sign Manual and Signet
+as shall at any time hereafter be issued
+to you in that behalf, be strictly complied
+with.</p>
+
+<p class="ti">3. And whereas it is expedient that an Executive
+Council should be appointed to advise
+and assist you, the said Sir George Ferguson
+Bowen, in the administration of the Government
+of our said Colony: Now We do declare
+Our pleasure to be, that there shall be
+an Executive Council for Our said Colony,
+and that the said Council shall consist of
+such persons as you shall, by instruments to
+be passed under the Great Seal of our said
+Colony in Our name and on our behalf, from
+time to time, nominate and appoint, to be
+members of the said Executive Council, all
+which persons shall hold their places in the
+said Council during Our pleasure: But We
+do expressly enjoin and require that you do
+transmit to Us, through one of Our principal
+Secretaries of State, exemplifications of all such
+instruments as shall be by you so issued for
+appointing the members of the said Council.</p>
+
+<p class="ti">4. And we do hereby authorise and empower
+you, the said Sir George Ferguson
+Bowen, to keep and use the Great Seal of
+our said colony for sealing all things whatsoever
+that shall pass the Great Seal of our
+said colony.</p>
+
+<p class="ti">5. And we do hereby give and grant to you,
+the said Sir George Ferguson Bowen, full
+power and authority, by and with the advice
+of the said Executive Council, to grant in
+Our name and on Our behalf, any waste or
+unsettled lands in Us vested within Our said
+Colony, which said grants are to be passed
+and sealed with the Great Seal of Our said
+colony, and being entered upon record by such
+public officer or officers as shall be appointed
+thereunto, shall be effectual in law against Us,
+Our heirs or successors: provided nevertheless,
+that in granting and disposing of such
+lands you do conform to and observe the
+provisions in that behalf contained in any
+law which is or shall be in force within our
+said colony, or within any part of our said
+colony, for regulating the sale and disposal of
+such lands.</p>
+
+<p class="ti">6. And we do hereby give and grant unto
+you, the said Sir George Ferguson Bowen, full
+power and authority, as you shall see occasion,
+in our name and on our behalf, to grant to any
+offender convicted of any crime in any court,
+or before any judge, justice, or magistrate
+within our said colony, a pardon, either free
+or subject to lawful conditions or any respite
+of the execution of the sentence of any such
+offender, for such period as to you may seem
+fit, and to remit any fines, penalties, or forfeitures
+which may become due and payable
+to us, but subject to the regulations and
+directions contained in the instructions under
+Our Royal Sign Manual and Signet accompanying
+this our Commission, or in any future
+instructions as aforesaid.</p>
+
+<p class="ti">7. And We do hereby give and grant unto
+you, the said Sir George Ferguson Bowen, full
+power and authority, upon sufficient cause to
+you appearing, to suspend from the exercise
+of his office, within our said colony, any
+person exercising any office or place under,
+or by virtue of, any Commission or Warrant
+granted, or which may be granted by Us, or
+in Our name, or under Our authority, which
+suspension shall continue and have effect
+only until Our pleasure therein shall be made
+known and signified to you: And We do
+hereby strictly require and enjoin you in proceeding
+to any such suspension, to observe
+the directions in that behalf given to you by
+Our present or any future Instructions as
+aforesaid.</p>
+
+<p class="ti">8. And in the event of the death or absence
+of you, the said Sir George Ferguson Bowen,
+out of Our said colony of Queensland and its
+dependencies, We do hereby provide and declare
+Our pleasure to be, that all and every
+the powers and authorities herein granted to
+you shall be, and the same are hereby vested
+in such person as may be appointed by Us,
+by Warrant under Our Sign Manuel and
+Signet, to be Our Lieutenant-Governor of our
+said colony, or in such person or persons as
+may be appointed by Us, in like manner, to
+administer the government in such contingency;
+or, in the event of there being no
+person or persons within our said colony so
+commissioned and appointed by Us as aforesaid,
+then Our pleasure is, and We do hereby
+provide and declare, that in any such contingency
+the powers and authorities herein
+granted to you shall be, and the same are
+hereby granted to the Colonial Secretary of
+our said colony for the time being, and such
+Lieutenant-Governor, or such person or persons
+as aforesaid, or such Colonial Secretary,
+as the case may be, shall exercise all and
+every the powers and authorities herein
+granted, until Our further pleasure shall be
+signified therein.</p>
+
+<p class="ti">9. And We do hereby require and command
+all our officers and ministers, civil, and military,
+and all other the inhabitants of our said
+colony of Queensland, to be obedient, aiding
+and assisting unto you, the said Sir George
+Ferguson Bowen, or, in the event of your
+death or absence, to such person or persons,
+as may, under the provisions of this our Commission
+assume and exercise the functions of
+Captain-General and Governor-in-Chief of our
+said colony.</p>
+
+<p class="ti">10. And We do declare that these presents
+shall take effect so soon as the same shall be
+received and published in the said colonies.
+</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote><p class="ind1">
+<span class="outdent2">
+In Witness whereof</span> we have caused these
+ our Letters to be made Patent. Witness
+ Ourself at Westminster, the sixth day of
+ June, in the twenty-second year of Our
+ Reign. By warrant under the Queen's
+ Sign Manual.</p>
+
+<p class="author"><span class="sc">C. Romilly.</span></p>
+
+<p class="ind1">
+<span class="outdent2">
+Given under my hand</span> and Seal at Government
+ House, Brisbane, this tenth day of
+ December, in the year of our Lord one
+ thousand eight hundred and fifty-nine, in
+ the twenty-third year of Her Majesty's
+ Reign.</p>
+
+<p class="ind1"><ins title="Transcriber's Note: 'locus sigilli' = 'the place of the seal'">(L.s.)</ins></p>
+
+<p class="author2">G. F. BOWEN.</p>
+
+<p class="center"><br /><i>By His Excellency's Command</i>,</p>
+
+<p class="author1">R. G. W. HERBERT.</p>
+
+<h3>GOD SAVE THE QUEEN!
+</h3></blockquote>
+
+<h2 style="margin-top: 5em;">PROCLAMATION</h2>
+
+<blockquote><p class="ind">
+<span class="outdent1">
+By His Excellency</span> <span class="sc">Sir George Ferguson
+ Bowen</span>, Knight Commander of the Most
+ Distinguished Order of St. Michael and
+ St. George, Captain-General and Governor-in-Chief
+ of the Colony of Queensland and
+ its Dependencies, and Vice-Admiral of
+ the same, &amp;c., &amp;c., &amp;c.
+</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p style="line-height: 1%; margin-top: -1em;">&nbsp;</p>
+<p class="dropcap"><span class="dcap">W</span>
+<b>HEREAS</b> Her Majesty has been graciously
+pleased, by Letters Patent, under
+the Great Seal of the United Kingdom of
+Great Britain and Ireland, bearing date at
+Westminster, the sixth day of June, in the
+twenty-second year of Her Majesty's Reign,
+to separate from the Colony of New South
+Wales the territory described in the said
+Letters Patent, and to erect the same into a
+separate Colony, to be called the Colony of
+Queensland, and has further been pleased to
+constitute and appoint me,
+</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote><p class="ind">
+<span class="sc">Sir George Ferguson Bowen</span>, <i>Knight Commander
+ of the Most Distinguished Order of
+ St. Michael and St. George</i>,
+</p>
+
+<p>to be Captain-General and Governor-in-Chief,
+in and over the said Colony of Queensland and
+in Dependencies: Now, therefore, I, the
+Captain-General and Governor-in-Chief, aforesaid,
+do hereby proclaim and declare that I
+have this day taken the prescribed oaths before
+His Honor, Alfred James Peter Lutwyche, Esquire,
+Judge of the Supreme Court, and that I
+have accordingly assumed the said office of
+Captain-General and Governor-in-Chief.</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote><p class="ind1"><span class="outdent1">
+Given under my hand</span> and seal at the
+ Government House, Brisbane, this
+ 10th day of December, in the Year
+ of Our Lord one thousand eight hundred
+ and fifty-nine, and in the twenty-third
+ year of Her Majesty's Reign.</p>
+
+<p class="ind1"><ins title="Transcriber's Note: 'locus sigilli' = 'the place of the seal'">(L.s.)</ins></p>
+
+<p class="author2">G. F. BOWEN.</p>
+
+<p class="center"><br /><i>By His Excellency's Command</i>,</p>
+
+<p class="author1">R. G. W. HERBERT.</p>
+
+<h3>GOD SAVE THE QUEEN!
+</h3></blockquote>
+
+<div class="ind3">
+<p class="author1" style="margin-top: 5em;"><i>Government House,</i></p>
+<p class="author"><i>Brisbane, 10th December, 1859.</i></p>
+
+<p style="line-height: 1%; margin-top: -1em;">&nbsp;</p>
+<p class="dropcap"><span class="dcap">H</span><b>IS</b> <span class="sc">Excellency the Governor</span> will hold
+a Levee at Government House, on
+WEDNESDAY, December 14th, at 11 o'clock,
+a.m.</p>
+
+<p class="center"><i>By Command</i>,</p>
+ <p class="center">C. E. HARCOURT VERNON,</p>
+ <p class="center">Commander, R.N., A.D.C.,</p>
+
+<p class="center">REGULATIONS FOR THE LEVEE.</p>
+
+<p>All gentlemen attending the Levee, to be
+dressed in uniform or evening costume.</p>
+
+<p>Each gentleman to be provided with two
+cards with his name legibly written thereon;
+one card to be left in the Entrance Hall, and
+the other to be given to the Aide-de-Camp.</p>
+
+<hr />
+
+<p class="center"><i>Colonial Secretary's Office,</i></p>
+ <p class="author"><i>Brisbane, 10th December, 1859.</i></p>
+
+<p style="line-height: 1%; margin-top: -1em;">&nbsp;</p>
+<p class="dropcap"><span class="dcap">H</span><b>IS</b> <span class="sc">Excellency the Governor</span> has been
+pleased to appoint</p>
+
+<p class="center"><span class="sc">Robert George Wyndham Herbert, Esq.</span>,</p>
+
+<p>to be Colonial Secretary of Queensland.</p>
+
+<p class="center"><i>By His Excellency's Command</i>,</p>
+ <p class="author1">R. G. W. HERBERT.</p>
+
+ <hr />
+
+<p class="center"><i>Colonial Secretary's Office,</i></p>
+ <p class="author"><i>Brisbane, 10th December, 1859.</i></p>
+
+<p style="line-height: 1%; margin-top: -1em;">&nbsp;</p>
+<p class="dropcap"><span class="dcap">H</span><b>IS</b> <span class="sc">Excellency the Governor</span> has been
+pleased to appoint</p>
+
+<p class="center"><span class="sc">Abram Orpen Moriarty, Esquire,</span></p>
+
+<p>to be His Excellency's Acting Private Secretary.</p>
+
+<p class="center"><i>By His Excellency's Command</i>,</p>
+ <p class="author1">R. G. W. HERBERT.</p>
+
+ <hr />
+
+<p class="center"><i>Colonial Secretary's Office,</i></p>
+ <p class="author"><i>Brisbane, 10th December, 1859.</i></p>
+
+<p style="line-height: 1%; margin-top: -1em;">&nbsp;</p>
+<p class="dropcap"><span class="dcap">H</span><b>IS</b> <span class="sc">Excellency the Governor</span> has been
+pleased to appoint</p>
+
+<p class="center"><span class="sc">Commander Charles Egerton Harcourt
+ Vernon, R. N.</span>,</p>
+
+<p>to be His Excellency's Acting Aide-de-Camp.</p>
+
+<p class="center"><i>By His Excellency's Command</i>,</p>
+ <p class="author1">ROBERT G. W. HERBERT.</p>
+
+ <hr />
+
+<p class="center"><i>Colonial Secretary's Office,</i></p>
+ <p class="author"><i>Brisbane, December 10, 1859.</i></p>
+
+<p style="line-height: 1%; margin-top: -1em;">&nbsp;</p>
+<p class="dropcap"><span class="dcap">H</span><b>IS</b> <span class="sc">Excellency the Governor</span> has been
+pleased to appoint</p>
+
+<p class="center"><span class="sc">Ratcliffe Pring, Esquire</span>,</p>
+
+<p>of the Inner Temple, Barrister-at-Law, to be
+Attorney-General of Queensland.</p>
+
+<p class="center"><i>By His Excellency's Command</i>,</p>
+ <p class="author1">ROBERT G. W. HERBERT.</p>
+
+ <hr />
+
+<p class="center"><span class="sc">Brisbane</span>&nbsp;: &nbsp;By Command&nbsp;: &nbsp;<span class="sc">T. P. Pugh</span>, Printer,<br />
+George Street.</p>
+
+<hr />
+</div>
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="pagexv" id="pagexv"></a>xv</span>
+
+<h2 style="margin-top: 2em;">INTRODUCTION.</h2>
+
+<blockquote><p class="ind">
+<span class="outdent1">
+Terra Australis: The Fifth Continent</span>.&mdash;Dampier lands on North-west Coast.&mdash;Cook lands at
+Botany Bay.&mdash;Annexes entire Eastern Coast North of 38 deg. S.&mdash;Phillip annexes whole of
+Eastern Coast and part of Southern Coast, including Tasmania.&mdash;Fremantle annexes all the
+rest of the Continent.&mdash;Erroneous Impressions of Early Explorers regarding Australia.&mdash;Discovery
+of Bass Strait.&mdash;Completion of Coast Map of Australia.&mdash;Six Colonies constituted.&mdash;Queensland's
+Natal Day.&mdash;Proclamation of Commonwealth.&mdash;Inland Exploration.
+</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>Without disparagement to the adventurous foreign navigators who for
+centuries earlier than the British occupation had suspected the existence
+of "Terra Australis," the "fifth continent" of the globe, and had done
+their best to discover it, it may be safely contended that the honour of the
+delineation of the coast-line belongs to Englishmen, the chief of whom
+were William Dampier and James Cook. In 1688 Dampier, as super-cargo
+of the "Cygnet," a trading vessel whose crew had turned buccaneers,
+landed on the north-west coast of Australia in lat. 16 deg. 50 min. S. In
+the year 1699 he again visited the coast in charge of H.M.S. "Roebuck,"
+landing at Shark Bay, and sailing thence northward to Roebuck
+Bay.<a id="footnotetagint1" name="footnotetagint1"></a><a href="#footnoteint1"><sup>a</sup></a> Afterwards Captain James Cook, in voyages which extended
+until 1777, delineated the eastern coast-line, and opened up the continent
+to European enterprise and settlement. On 29th April, 1770, Cook, in the
+little barque "Endeavour," 370 tons burthen, entered Sting-ray Harbour
+(Botany Bay), remaining there until 6th May, when he sailed northwards,
+and, not entering Port Jackson, named Port Stephens, "Morton Bay,"
+Bustard Bay, and Keppel Islands, landing at several places for the purpose
+of obtaining fresh water and making observations. Thus, coasting along
+for nearly 1,300 miles, on 11th June he narrowly escaped the total loss of
+his vessel when north of Trinity Bay by striking a coral reef. After
+enduring great hardships, and jettisoning all surplus gear, the vessel was
+sailed into the mouth of the Endeavour River, and there careened.
+During the succeeding two months she was thoroughly repaired. In
+August the captain set his course again for the north; and on the
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="pagexvi" id="pagexvi"></a>xvi</span>
+23rd of that month, after navigating among the dangerous rocks of
+the Barrier Reef Passage, he safely reached open water and landed on
+Possession Island, near Cape York. There he took formal possession,
+"in right of His Majesty King George III.," of the land he had discovered
+from lat. 38 deg. S. to lat. 10 deg. 30 min. S. Sailing through Torres Strait,
+Cook reached the English Channel in the "Endeavour" on 18th June,
+1771<a id="footnotetagint2" name="footnotetagint2"></a><a href="#footnoteint2"><sup>b</sup></a>. It was not until 7th February, 1788, however, that Captain
+Phillip, as Governor-General of the vast territory then called New
+South Wales, read to the people whom he had brought to Port Jackson
+in the first fleet his commission proclaiming British sovereignty over the
+whole of the eastern coast of Australia and Tasmania, and also over the
+then unknown southern coast as far west as the 135th degree of E.
+longitude.<a id="footnotetagint3" name="footnotetagint3"></a><a href="#footnoteint3"><sup>c</sup></a> On 2nd May, 1829, Captain Fremantle, hoisting the British
+flag on the south head of the Swan River, took possession of all those
+parts of Australia not included in the territory of New South Wales.</p>
+
+<p>Thus a new continent was added to the British Empire. It was
+occupied by only a few score thousand native blacks, and was believed
+to be uninhabitable by civilised people unless possibly along a strip of land
+south of the Tropic of Capricorn on the eastern, western, and southern
+shores of the continent. Of the north-west Dampier had written: "The
+land is of a dry, sandy soil, destitute of water, unless you make wells, yet
+producing divers sorts of trees." Cook occasionally found difficulty in
+getting water unless by sinking in the shore sand; he made no attempt to
+penetrate the fringe of coast or even to explore its inlets. It was not until
+1798 that Flinders and Bass discovered the channel through Bass Strait,
+and the former's discoveries may be said to have completed the coast map
+of Australia.</p>
+
+<p>By successive proclamations six colonies were subsequently constituted,
+the last being that of Queensland on 10th December, 1859. On 1st
+January, 1901, Queen Victoria's proclamation of the Commonwealth of
+Australia was formally made at Melbourne, the prescribed place for the
+sitting of the Parliament until the federal seat of government had been
+determined. This important step was taken 131 years after Captain Cook
+had annexed the eastern coast at Possession Island, and 72 years after
+Captain Fremantle made the possession of the continent as British territory
+complete by hoisting the flag at Swan River.</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="pagexvii" id="pagexvii"></a>xvii</span>
+
+<p>The story of Australian land exploration is a long one, and it would,
+if complete, reveal many a startling tale of privation and death. The
+earliest exploring expeditions were those of Governor Phillip, in 1789,
+when he set out from Sydney to discover Broken Bay first, and then
+explore the Hawkesbury River.<a id="footnotetagint4" name="footnotetagint4"></a><a href="#footnoteint4"><sup>d</sup></a> At that time the undertaking no doubt
+seemed great, but to-day Broken Bay may almost be regarded as a suburb
+of Sydney. In the same year Captain Tench discovered the Nepean River.
+By the end of the eighteenth century, despite many expeditions, the total
+of the discoveries were the rivers Hawkesbury, Nepean, Grose, and
+Hunter, and the fertile Illawarra district to the south of Sydney. In 1813
+Blaxland, Lawson, and Wentworth discovered a pass over the Blue
+Mountains, and opened the way to the interior. Later in the same year,
+following in their footsteps, George William Evans discovered a river
+flowing inland, which he named the Macquarie, and that led to the discovery
+of the Bathurst Plains, and other country beyond the Blue Mountains. John
+Oxley, who in 1817 penetrated the country until he struck rivers flowing
+to the south-west, found himself in shallow stagnant swamps, with no
+indication that the rivers reached the sea. Oxley and Evans made
+further discoveries to the north-west of Sydney during the next seven
+years, the principal result being the finding of Liverpool Plains. Cunningham,
+the botanist, also was in the field of exploration in 1823. In the year
+1824 Hume, accompanied by W. H. Hovell, crossed the Murrumbidgee
+River, and some time afterwards saw the snow-capped mountains of the
+Australian Alps. In their progress to Port Phillip they discovered the
+Murray River, and ultimately reached their destination, which proved to
+be the seashore near the site of Geelong.</p>
+
+<p>In 1828 Captain Charles Sturt discovered the Darling River. In the
+next year he reached the Murray near its confluence with the Darling; in
+1830 he went down the stream by boat, and finally reached the sea at
+Encounter Bay, east of St. Vincent Gulf. In 1826 Major Lockyer founded
+King George Sound Settlement; in 1828 Captain Stirling examined the
+mouth of the Swan River, and was afterwards, in 1831, appointed
+Lieutenant-Governor at Perth, the settlement established in 1829 by Captain
+Fremantle. Other explorers traced the country for some distance to the
+northward, and a settlement, called Port Essington, which had an
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="pagexviii" id="pagexviii"></a>xviii</span>
+ephemeral existence, was formed on the northern coast. In 1831 Major
+Mitchell explored the country north-west from Sydney, and in 1845-6 he
+traversed the Darling Downs, afterwards penetrating as far north as the
+Drummond Range. Allan Cunningham had previously, in 1827, discovered
+the Darling Downs, and in the next year, by locating Cunningham's Gap, he
+connected the Downs with the Moreton Bay Settlement. A year later he
+explored the source of the Brisbane River, that being his last expedition.</p>
+
+<p>In 1831 Major Bannister crossed from Perth to King George Sound.
+In 1836 John Batman landed at Port Phillip, and permanently settled
+there. The same year Adelaide was founded by Captain Sir John
+Hindmarsh, the first Governor of South Australia. In 1838 E. J. Eyre
+discovered Lake Hindmarsh on his journey from Port Phillip to Adelaide.
+Next year George Hamilton travelled overland from Sydney to Melbourne,
+and Eyre penetrated from the head of Spencer's Gulf to Lake Torrens.</p>
+
+<p>In 1840 Patrick Leslie settled on the Condamine; in the year following
+Stuart and Sydenham Russell formed Cecil Plains station. In 1842
+Stuart Russell discovered the Boyne River, travelling from Moreton Bay
+to Wide Bay in a boat. In 1844-5 Captain Sturt conducted his Great
+Central Desert expedition. In the same year Dr. Ludwig Leichhardt
+started on his first expedition from Jimbour station to Port Essington;
+and in the next year Sir Thomas Mitchell went on his Barcoo expedition.
+In 1846 A. C. Gregory entered upon his first expedition in Western
+Australia. In 1848 Leichhardt set out upon his last journey, from
+which he never returned. In the same year Kennedy made his fatal
+venture up the Cape York Peninsula, and A. C. Gregory explored the
+Gascoigne. Next year J. S. Roe, Surveyor-General of Western Australia,
+travelled from York to Esperance Bay. In 1852 Hovenden Hely, in charge
+of a Leichhardt search party, started from Darling Downs. In 1855
+Gregory and Baron von Mueller started on an expedition to North
+Australia in the same search, and discovered Sturt's Creek and the Elsey
+River.</p>
+
+<p>In 1858 Frank Gregory reached the Gascoigne River, Western
+Australia, and discovered Mount Augustus and Mount Gould. A. C.
+Gregory in the same year, when searching for Leichhardt, confirmed the
+identity of the Barcoo River with Cooper's Creek. In 1858 also McDouall
+Stuart started on his first expedition across the continent; in the following
+year he started again, and one of his party, Hergott, discovered and named
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="pagexix" id="pagexix"></a>xix</span>
+Hergott Springs. In 1859 G. E. Dalrymple discovered the main tributaries
+of the Lower Burdekin, also the Bowen and the Bogie Rivers, and in the
+year following Edward Cunningham and party explored the Upper
+Burdekin.</p>
+
+<p>In 1860 the ill-fated Burke and Wills expedition left Melbourne, and
+reached the Gulf of Carpentaria, but their return journey resulted in the
+death of Burke, Wills, and Gray.</p>
+
+<p>In 1861 McDouall Stuart crossed the continent; Frank Gregory
+discovered the Hammersley Range, and the Fortescue, Ashburton, de
+Grey, and Oakover Rivers in Western Australia. In the same year
+William Landsborough left the Gulf of Carpentaria in search of Burke and
+Wills; and Alfred Howitt started from Victoria on the same errand.
+Edwin J. Welch, Howitt's second in command, found King, the only
+survivor of the expedition; and McKinlay, with W. O. Hodgkinson as
+lieutenant, started from Adelaide in the search, and crossed the continent,
+reaching the coast at Townsville. In 1863 John Jardine formed a settlement
+at Somerset, Cape York; and in the next year his adventurous
+brothers, Alexander and Frank, travelled overland to Somerset along the
+Peninsula, which Kennedy had failed to do.</p>
+
+<p>In 1864 Duncan McIntyre travelled from the Paroo to the Gulf of
+Carpentaria, and died there. Next year J. G. Macdonald visited the Plains
+of Promise, and Frederick Walker marked the telegraph line from
+Rockingham Bay to the Norman River. In 1869 Mr. (now Sir John)
+Forrest made his first expedition to Lake Barlee; in 1870 he travelled the
+Great Bight from Perth to Adelaide, and in 1871 took charge of a private
+expedition in search of pastoral country. In 1872 William Hann, a
+Northern squatter, led an expedition equipped by the Queensland Government,
+and discovered the Walsh, Palmer, and Upper Mitchell Rivers, and
+found prospects of gold which led to great mineral discoveries in North
+Queensland. Hann reached the coast at Princess Charlotte Bay. In the
+same year J. W. Lewis travelled round Lake Eyre to the Queensland
+border. Ernest Giles also made his first expedition in 1872, discovering
+Lake Amadeus, and on a second trip in 1873 discovered and named
+Gibson's Desert, after one of his party who died there. In 1873 Major
+Warburton crossed from Alice Springs, on the overland telegraph line, to
+the Oakover River, Western Australia. In 1875-6 Ernest Giles made a
+third and successful attempt from Adelaide to reach Western Australia.
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="pagexx" id="pagexx"></a>xx</span>
+In the same year W. O. Hodgkinson started on a north-west expedition to
+the Diamantina and Mulligan Rivers, on which he officially reported.</p>
+
+<p>In 1878 Prout brothers, looking for country across the Queensland
+border, never returned. In 1878 N. Buchanan, on an excursion to the
+overland telegraph line from the Queensland border, discovered
+Buchanan's Creek. In 1878-9 Ernest Favenc, starting from Blackall in
+charge of the "Queenslander" transcontinental expedition, reached
+Powell's Creek station, on the overland telegraph line; four years
+later he explored the rivers flowing into the Gulf, particularly the
+Macarthur, and then crossed to the overland telegraph line. In 1878
+Winnecke and Barclay, surveyors, started to determine the border lines of
+Queensland and South Australia, returning in 1880 with their work done.
+In 1879 Alexander Forrest led an expedition from the de Grey River,
+Western Australia, to the overland telegraph line, discovering the Ord and
+Margaret Rivers.</p>
+
+<p>By this time there was little left of the continent, save Western
+Australia, to explore, though men in search of pastoral country still found
+occupation in expeditions to discover the unknown in Queensland and the
+Northern Territory. In 1896 Frank Hann, younger brother of the explorer,
+who had left Queensland, traversed the country to the north of King
+Leopold Range, discovering a river which he named the Phillips, but which
+was afterwards renamed the Hann by the Surveyor-General of Western
+Australia. Afterwards Hann travelled from Laverton, Western Australia,
+to Oodnadatta, in South Australia. F. S. Brockman is another explorer
+who was leader of a Kimberley expedition a few years ago, and discovered
+in North-west Australia 6 million acres of basaltic country clad with blue
+grass, Mitchell and kangaroo grasses, and other fodder vegetation. The
+Elder expedition, projected on an ambitious scale in 1891 to complete the
+exploration of the continent, started under David Lindsay, but the results
+were less valuable than its generous and enterprising originator anticipated.
+From a second Elder expedition under L. A. Wells no great results
+were recorded. The same may be said of the Carnegie expedition in
+Western Australia. Yet the sum total of the information obtained was
+valuable. Australia owes much to her adventurous explorers, as well as to
+the men who, following up their tracks, placed stock on much of the
+country that produced great wealth to the people, though as a rule neither
+explorers nor pastoral pioneers personally benefited much by their labours
+and privations.</p>
+
+<p class="footnote"><a id="footnoteint1" name="footnoteint1"></a><a class="footnote" href="#footnotetagint1">Footnote a:</a> See Dampier's "Collection of Voyages, 1729."</p>
+
+<p class="footnote"><a id="footnoteint2" name="footnoteint2"></a><a class="footnote" href="#footnotetagint2">Footnote b:</a> See Cook's "Journal during his First Voyage Round the World, 1768-71." W. J. L.
+Wharton, 1893.</p>
+
+<p class="footnote"><a id="footnoteint3" name="footnoteint3"></a><a class="footnote" href="#footnotetagint3">Footnote c:</a> Historical Records of New South Wales, vol. i.</p>
+
+<p class="footnote"><a id="footnoteint4" name="footnoteint4"></a><a class="footnote" href="#footnotetagint4">Footnote d:</a> See "History of Australian Exploration," 1888; and "Explorers of Australia," 1908, both
+by Ernest Favenc.</p>
+
+<hr />
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="pagexxi" id="pagexxi"></a>xxi</span>
+
+<table summary="proclamation" align="center" width="auto" border="0">
+<tr>
+<td>
+<div class="figleft" style="width: 440px;"><a href="images/xxi-proclamation-1100.jpg"><img src="images/xxi-proclamation-440.jpg" width="440" height="602" alt="Proclamation Letter" /></a></div>
+</td><td class="sp">
+<p class="author"><br /><span class="double-underline" style="font-size: 1.2em;">Victoria</span> by the Grace of God<br />
+of the United Kingdom<br />
+of Great Britain and Ireland,<br />
+Queen, Defender of the Faith, &amp;c.<br />
+&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&ndash;</p>
+
+<p style="margin-top: -1em;"><span class="double-underline">In</span> pursuance of Our Order made by and with the advice of
+our Privy Council on the 6th day of June in the year of Our
+Lord 1859, We do by these presents summon and call
+together a Legislative Assembly in and for Our Colony
+of Queensland to advise and give consent to the making of Laws
+for the peace, welfare and good Government of our said Colony.&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>And we do enjoin and require Our subjects, inhabitants
+of Our said Colony, and being duly qualified in that behalf, to
+proceed to the Election of Members to serve in the said
+Legislative Assembly in pursuance of Our Writs to be issued
+in Our name, in the first instance by Our Governor of Our
+Colony of New South Wales, and thereafter by Our Governor of
+Our said Colony of Queensland.&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;And We do further enjoin and require the Members
+who shall be so elected, to assemble and meet together
+and to be and appear before Us for the purposes aforesaid at the Court
+House Buildings Brisbane on the 22nd day of May in the present year.</p>
+
+<p>&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;In testimony whereof we have caused the Great Seal
+of Our Colony of Queensland to be affixed to this Our Writ.&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;Witness our trusty and well-beloved Sir William
+Thomas Denison, Knight Commander of the Most Honorable Order of the
+Bath, Governor General in and over all Her Majesty's Colonies of New
+South Wales, Tasmania, Victoria, South Australia, Western Australia
+and Queensland, and Captain General and Governor-in-chief of the
+Territory of New South Wales and Vice Admiral of the same &amp;c. &amp;c. &amp;c.
+at Government House Sydney, in New South Wales aforesaid this
+twentieth day of March in the Twenty third year of Our
+reign, and the year of our Lord one thousand eight hundred and sixty&mdash;</p>
+
+<p class="author1b">W. Denison</p>
+
+<p class="author1a">By His Excellency's Command</p>
+
+<p class="author1c">Robert G. W. Herbert</p>
+
+<p class="author1a">God save the Queen!</p>
+
+</td>
+</tr>
+</table>
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="pagexxii" id="pagexxii"></a></span>
+
+<h2 style="margin-top: 5em;">THE SUBDIVISION OF AUSTRALIA.</h2>
+
+<h3>(MAPS 1 AND 2.)</h3>
+
+<p>Since the issue of Captain Arthur Phillip's Commission as Governor in 1786
+there have been no less than ten successive modifications in Australian
+boundaries, all internal save the first, which severed Van Diemen's Land from New South
+Wales. Map 1 represents Australia as depicted before the time of Captain Cook.
+Map 2 shows the territory as divided into two parts by Governor Phillip's
+Commission. The continent was severed by a north-and-south line along the 135th
+meridian of east longitude, and all the eastern part declared to be the
+territory of New South Wales.</p>
+
+<table summary="maps" align="center" width="auto" border="0" style="border-collapse: collapse">
+<tr>
+ <td class="inset"><div class="figcenter"><a href="images/map1-800.jpg"><img src="images/map1-296.jpg" width="296" height="270" alt="Map 1 (1770)." /></a>
+<p class="center">Map 1 (1770).</p></div></td>
+ <td class="inset"><div class="figcenter"><a href="images/map2-800.jpg"><img src="images/map2-297.jpg" width="297" height="270" alt="Map 2 (1786)." /></a>
+<p class="center">Map 2 (1786).</p></div></td>
+</tr> </table>
+
+<h3>VAN DIEMEN'S LAND (MAP 3).</h3>
+
+<p>Under an Imperial Act of 1823 a Royal Commission was issued to Governor
+Arthur on 14th June, 1825, erecting Van Diemen's Land into a separate colony, as
+shown in Map 3.</p>
+
+<h3>NEW SOUTH WALES&mdash;ALTERED BOUNDARY (MAP 4).</h3>
+
+<p>On 6th July, 1825, a Commission appointing Sir Ralph Darling Governor of New
+South Wales, after describing the boundary of the colony as then existing,
+declared that the western boundary should be extended 6 degrees further west to the 129th
+meridian of east longitude, including all the adjacent islands in the Pacific
+Ocean.</p>
+
+<table summary="maps" align="center" width="auto" border="0" style="border-collapse: collapse">
+<tr>
+ <td class="inset"><div class="figcenter"><a href="images/map3-800.jpg"><img src="images/map3-296.jpg" width="296" height="270" alt="Map 3 (1825)." /></a>
+<p class="center">Map 3 (1825).</p></div></td>
+ <td class="inset"><div class="figcenter"><a href="images/map4-800.jpg"><img src="images/map4-302.jpg" width="302" height="270" alt="Map 4 (1825)." /></a>
+<p class="center">Map 4 (1825).</p></div></td>
+</tr>
+</table>
+
+<h3>WESTERN AUSTRALIA (MAP 5).</h3>
+
+<p>Although Western Australia had been occupied in 1826 by Major Lockyer, and
+a settlement had been established at Swan River in 1829, the boundaries of the
+colony were not definitely described until 1831, when Sir James Stirling's Commission
+of appointment as Governor gave him authority over all that part of the continent
+to the west of 129 degrees east longitude. A supplementary Commission issued in
+1873 included all the adjacent islands in the Indian Ocean.</p>
+
+<h3>SOUTH AUSTRALIA (MAP 6).</h3>
+
+<p>South Australia was proclaimed a British Province by Letters Patent on the 28th
+December, 1836; bounded on the north by the 26th parallel of south latitude; on
+the south by the Southern Ocean; on the west by the 132nd meridian of east
+longitude; on the east by the 141st meridian.</p>
+
+<table summary="maps" align="center" width="auto" border="0" style="border-collapse: collapse">
+<tr>
+ <td class="inset"><div class="figcenter"><a href="images/map5-800.jpg"><img src="images/map5-297.jpg" width="297" height="270" alt="Map 5 (1831)." /></a>
+<p class="center">Map 5 (1831).</p></div></td>
+ <td class="inset"><div class="figcenter"><a href="images/map6-800.jpg"><img src="images/map6-298.jpg" width="298" height="270" alt="Map 6 (1836)." /></a>
+<p class="center">Map 6 (1836).</p></div></td>
+</tr>
+</table>
+
+<h3>VICTORIA (MAP 7).</h3>
+
+<p>In 1851 the territory previously known as Port Phillip was separated from
+New South Wales. In July, 1851, the legal symbol of the fact was found in the
+issue of writs of election for members of the Legislative Council. This was done
+under an Act of the New South Wales Legislature, passed to give effect to the
+Act passed in 1850 "for the Better Government of Her Majesty's Australian Colonies."
+Boundaries: On the north and north-east by a straight line from Cape Howe to the
+nearest source of the River Murray; thence by the course of that river to the
+eastern boundary of South Australia; and on the south by the sea: the River Murray to
+remain within New South Wales.</p>
+
+<h3>NEW SOUTH WALES&mdash;ALTERED BOUNDARY (MAP 8).</h3>
+
+<p>By a later statute passed in 1855, the boundaries of New South Wales were
+defined as follows:&mdash;"All the territory lying between the 129th and 154th
+meridians of east longitude, and north of the 40th parallel of south latitude, including
+all islands and Lord Howe Island, except the territories comprised within the boundaries of
+the province of South Australia and the colony of Victoria as at present
+established."</p>
+
+<table summary="maps" align="center" width="auto" border="0" style="border-collapse: collapse">
+<tr>
+ <td class="inset"><div class="figcenter"><a href="images/map7-800.jpg"><img src="images/map7-304.jpg" width="304" height="270" alt="Map 7 (1851)." /></a>
+ <p class="center">Map 7 (1851).</p></div></td>
+ <td class="inset"><div class="figcenter"><a href="images/map8-800.jpg"><img src="images/map8-297.jpg" width="297" height="270" alt="Map 8 (1855)." /></a>
+ <p class="center">Map 8 (1855).</p></div></td>
+</tr>
+</table>
+
+<h3>QUEENSLAND (MAP 9).</h3>
+
+<p>In 1859 Queensland was severed from New South Wales by Letters Patent
+issued to Sir George Bowen, the boundaries being given as follows:&mdash;"So much of
+the said colony of New South Wales as lies northward of a line commencing on the
+sea coast at Point Danger, in latitude about 28 degrees 8 minutes south, and
+following the range thence which divides the waters of the Tweed, Richmond, and
+Clarence Rivers from those of the Logan and Brisbane Rivers, westerly, to the
+Great Dividing Range between the waters falling to the east coast and those of the
+River Murray; following the Great Dividing Range southerly to the range dividing the
+waters of Tenterfield Creek from those of the main head of the Dumaresq River;
+following that range westerly to the Dumaresq River; and following that river
+(which is locally known as the Severn) downward to its confluence with the
+Macintyre River; thence following the Macintyre River (which lower down becomes
+the <ins title="Transcriber's Note: The 'Barwan' River is now known as the 'Barwon' River.">Barwan</ins>) downward to the 29th parallel of south latitude; and following that
+parallel westerly to the 141st meridian of east longitude, which is the eastern
+boundary of South Australia; together with all and every the adjacent islands,
+their members and appurtenances, in the Pacific Ocean; and do by these presents
+separate from our said colony of New South Wales and erect the said territory so
+described into a separate colony to be called the 'Colony of Queensland.'"</p>
+
+<h3>ANNEXATION TO QUEENSLAND, 1862 (MAP 10).</h3>
+
+<p>On 12th April, 1862, the Duke of Newcastle advised Governor Bowen that
+Letters Patent, of which a copy was enclosed, had been issued annexing to
+Queensland the following territory&mdash;namely, "so much of our colony of New South Wales as
+lies to the northward of the 21st parallel of south latitude, and between the
+141st and 138th meridians of east longitude, together with all and every the adjacent
+islands, their members and appurtenances in the Gulf of Carpentaria." The area thus
+annexed added to Queensland about 120,000 square miles of territory, which now
+comprises such centres as Birdsville, Boulia, Cloncurry, Camooweal, and
+Burketown.</p>
+
+<table summary="maps" align="center" width="auto" border="0" style="border-collapse: collapse">
+<tr>
+ <td class="inset"><div class="figcenter"><a href="images/map9-800.jpg"><img src="images/map9-302.jpg" width="302" height="270" alt="Map 9 (1859)." /></a>
+<p class="center">Map 9 (1859).</p></div></td>
+ <td class="inset"><div class="figcenter"><a href="images/map10-800.jpg"><img src="images/map10-303.jpg" width="303" height="270" alt="Map 10 (1862)." /></a>
+<p class="center">Map 10 (1862).</p></div></td>
+</tr> </table>
+
+<h3>ANNEXATION TO SOUTH AUSTRALIA (MAP 11).</h3>
+
+<p>An Imperial Act of 1861 enacted that "so much of the colony of New South
+Wales, being to the south of the 26th degree of south latitude, as lies between
+the western boundary of South Australia and 129 degrees east longitude, shall be and
+the same is hereby detached from the colony of New South Wales and annexed to
+the colony of South Australia, and shall for all purposes whatever be deemed to
+be part of the last-mentioned colony from the day in which the Act of Parliament is
+proclaimed."</p>
+
+<h3>THE NORTHERN TERRITORY ANNEXED TO SOUTH AUSTRALIA (MAP 12).</h3>
+
+<p>There still remained, nominally belonging to New South Wales though detached
+from that colony, the country now known as the Northern Territory and forming
+part of South Australia, lying northward of the 26th parallel of south latitude,
+and between 129 degrees and 138 degrees east longitude. That area was by Letters
+Patent, dated 6th July, 1863, issued under the Imperial Act of 1861, annexed to South
+Australia until it was "the Royal pleasure to make other disposition thereof."</p>
+
+<table summary="maps" align="center" width="auto" border="0" style="border-collapse: collapse">
+<tr>
+ <td class="inset"><div class="figcenter"><a href="images/map11-800.jpg"><img src="images/map11-302.jpg" width="302" height="270" alt="Map 11 (1861-3)." /></a>
+<p class="center">Map 11 (1861-3).</p></div></td>
+ <td class="inset"><div class="figcenter"><a href="images/map12-800.jpg"><img src="images/map12-303.jpg" width="303" height="270" alt="Map 12 (1863)." /></a>
+<p class="center">Map 12 (1863).</p></div></td>
+</tr>
+</table>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="pagexxiv" id="pagexxiv"></a></span>
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 400px; margin-top: 5em;"><a href="images/governors-1000.jpg"><img src="images/governors-400.jpg" width="400" height="664" alt="Governors of Queensland" /></a></div>
+
+<h2 style="margin-top: 2em;">GOVERNORS OF QUEENSLAND.</h2>
+
+<div class="poemc"> <div class="stanza">
+<p>(1) <span class="sc">Sir George Ferguson Bowen, G.C.M.G.</span>: Dec. 1859&mdash;Jan. 1868.</p>
+ </div><div class="stanza">
+<p>(2) <span class="sc">Colonel Samuel Wensley Blackall</span>: Aug. 1868&mdash;Jan. 1871.</p>
+ </div><div class="stanza">
+<p>(3) <span class="sc">Marquis of Normanby</span>: Aug. 1871&mdash;Nov. 1874.</p>
+ </div><div class="stanza">
+<p>(4) <span class="sc">William Wellington Cairns, C.M.G.</span>: Jan. 1875&mdash;Mar. 1877.</p>
+ </div><div class="stanza">
+<p>(5) <span class="sc">Sir Arthur Edward Kennedy, G.C.M.G., C.B.</span>: April 1877&mdash;May 1883.</p>
+ </div><div class="stanza">
+<p>(6) <span class="sc">Sir Anthony Musgrave, G.C.M.G.</span>: Nov. 1883&mdash;Oct. 1888.</p>
+ </div><div class="stanza">
+<p>(7) <span class="sc">Sir Henry Wylie Norman, G.C.B., G.C.M.G., C.I.E.</span>: May 1889&mdash;Dec. 1895.</p>
+ </div><div class="stanza">
+<p>(8) <span class="sc">Lord Lamington, G.C.M.G.</span>: April 1896&mdash;Dec. 1901.</p>
+ </div><div class="stanza">
+<p>(9) <span class="sc">Sir Herbert Charles Chermside, G.C.M.G., C.B.</span>: Mar. 1902&mdash;Oct. 1904.</p>
+ </div><div class="stanza">
+<p>(10) <span class="sc">Lord Chelmsford, K.C.M.G.</span>: Nov. 1905&mdash;May 1909.</p>
+ </div><div class="stanza">
+<p>(11) <span class="sc">Sir William MacGregor, G.C.M.G., C.B.</span>: Dec. 1909&mdash;</p>
+ </div> </div>
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="pagexxv" id="pagexxv"></a>xxv</span>
+<h2 style="margin-top: 5em;">QUEEN OF THE NORTH.</h2>
+
+<h3>ESSEX EVANS.</h3>
+
+<div class="poem"> <div class="stanza">
+<p>Stand forth, O Daughter of the Sun,</p>
+<p class="i2">Of all thy kin the fairest one,</p>
+<p>It is thine hour of Jubilee.</p>
+<p class="i2">Behold, the work our hands have done</p>
+<p>Our hearts now offer unto thee.</p>
+<p class="i2">Thy children call thee; O come forth,</p>
+<p class="i8">Queen of the North!</p>
+ </div><div class="stanza">
+<p>Brow-bound with pearls and burnished gold</p>
+<p class="i2">The East hath Queens of royal mould,</p>
+<p>Sultanas, peerless in their pride,</p>
+<p class="i2">Who rule wide realms of wealth untold,</p>
+<p>But they wax wan and weary-eyed:</p>
+<p class="i2">Thine eyes, O Northern Queen, are bright</p>
+<p class="i8">With morning light.</p>
+ </div><div class="stanza">
+<p>Fear not thy Youth: It is thy crown&mdash;</p>
+<p class="i2">The careless years before Renown</p>
+<p>Shall load its tines with jewelled deeds</p>
+<p class="i2">And press thy golden circlet down</p>
+<p>With vaster toils and greater needs.</p>
+<p class="i2">Fear not thy Youth: its splendid power</p>
+<p class="i8">Awaits the hour.</p>
+ </div><div class="stanza">
+<p>Stand forth, O Daughter of the Sun,</p>
+<p class="i2">Whose fires through all thine arteries run,</p>
+<p>Whose kiss hath touched thy gleaming hair&mdash;</p>
+<p class="i2">Come like a goddess, Radiant One,</p>
+<p>Reign in our hearts who crown thee there,</p>
+<p class="i2">With laughter like thy seas, and eyes</p>
+<p class="i8">Blue as thy skies.</p>
+ </div><div class="stanza">
+<p>Ah, not in vain, O Pioneers,</p>
+<p class="i2">The toil that breaks, the grief that sears,</p>
+<p>The hands that forced back Nature's bars</p>
+<p class="i2">To prove the blood of ancient years</p>
+<p>And make a home 'neath alien stars!</p>
+<p class="i2">O Victors over stress and pain</p>
+<p class="i8">'Twas not in vain!</p>
+ </div><div class="stanza">
+<p>Jungle and plain and pathless wood&mdash;</p>
+<p class="i2">Depths of primeval solitude&mdash;</p>
+<p>Gaunt wilderness and mountain stern&mdash;</p>
+<p class="i2">Their secrets lay all unsubdued.</p>
+<p>Life was the price: who dared might learn.</p>
+<p class="i2">Ye read them all, Bold Pioneers,</p>
+<p class="i8">In fifty years.</p>
+ </div><div class="stanza">
+<p>O True Romance, whose splendour gleams</p>
+<p class="i2">Across the shadowy realm of dreams,</p>
+<p>Whose starry wings can touch with light</p>
+<p class="i2">The dull grey paths, the common themes:</p>
+<p>Hast thou not thrilled with sovereign might</p>
+<p class="i2">Our story, until Duty's name</p>
+<p class="i8">Is one with Fame!</p>
+ </div><div class="stanza">
+<p>Queen of the North, thy heroes sleep</p>
+<p class="i2">On sun-burnt plain and rocky steep.</p>
+<p>Their work is done: their high emprise</p>
+<p class="i2">Hath crowned thee, and the great stars keep</p>
+<p>The secrets of their histories.</p>
+<p class="i2">We reap the harvest they have sown</p>
+<p class="i8">Who died unknown.</p>
+ </div><div class="stanza">
+<p>The seed they sowed with weary hands</p>
+<p class="i2">Now bursts in bloom through all thy lands;</p>
+<p>Dark hills their glittering secrets yield;</p>
+<p class="i2">And for the camps of wand'ring bands&mdash;</p>
+<p>The snowy flock, the fertile field.</p>
+<p class="i2">Back, ever back new conquests press</p>
+<p class="i8">The wilderness.</p>
+ </div><div class="stanza">
+<p>Below thy coast line's rugged height</p>
+<p class="i2">Wide canefields glisten in the light,</p>
+<p>And towns arise on hill and lea,</p>
+<p class="i2">And one fair city where the bright</p>
+<p>Broad winding river sweeps to sea.</p>
+<p class="i2">Ah! could the hearts that cleared the way</p>
+<p class="i8">Be here to-day!</p>
+ </div><div class="stanza">
+<p>A handful: yet they took their stand</p>
+<p class="i2">Lost in the silence of the land.</p>
+<p>They went their lonely ways unknown</p>
+<p class="i2">And left their bones upon the sand.</p>
+<p>E'en though we call this land our own</p>
+<p class="i2"> 'Tis but a handful holds it still</p>
+<p class="i8">For good or ill.</p>
+ </div><div class="stanza">
+<p>What though thy sons be strong and tall,</p>
+<p class="i2">Fearless of mood at danger's call;</p>
+<p>And these, thy daughters, fair of face,</p>
+<p class="i2">With hearts to dare whate'er befall&mdash;</p>
+<p>Tall goddesses and queens of grace&mdash;</p>
+<p class="i2">Fill up thy frontiers: man the gate</p>
+<p class="i8">Before too late.</p>
+ </div><div class="stanza">
+<p>Sit thou no more inert of fame,</p>
+<p class="i2">But let the wide world hear thy name.</p>
+<p>See where thy realms spread line on line&mdash;</p>
+<p class="i2">Thy empty realms that cry in shame</p>
+<p>For hands to make them doubly thine!</p>
+<p class="i2">Fill up thy frontiers: man the gate</p>
+<p class="i8">Before too late!</p>
+ </div><div class="stanza">
+<p>Prepare, ere falls the hour of Fate</p>
+<p class="i2">When death-shells rain their iron hate,</p>
+<p>And all in vain thy blood is poured&mdash;</p>
+<p class="i2">For dark aslant the Northern Gate</p>
+<p>I see the Shadow of the Sword:</p>
+<p class="i2">I hear the storm-clouds break in wrath&mdash;</p>
+<p class="i8">Queen of the North!</p>
+ </div> </div>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="pagexxviii" id="pagexxviii"></a></span>
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 400px; margin-top: 5em;"><a href="images/premiers1-1200.jpg"><img src="images/premiers1-400.jpg" width="400" height="577" alt="Premiers1" /></a></div>
+
+<h3>PREMIERS OF QUEENSLAND.</h3>
+
+<div class="poemc"> <div class="stanza">
+<p> (1) <span class="sc">Sir R. G. W. Herbert</span>: Dec. 1859&mdash;Feb. 1866; July 1866&mdash;Aug. 1866.</p>
+ </div><div class="stanza">
+<p> (2) <span class="sc">Hon. Arthur Macalister</span>: Feb. 1866&mdash;July 1866; Aug. 1866&mdash;Aug. 1867;</p>
+<p class="i6">Jan. 1874&mdash;June 1876.</p>
+ </div><div class="stanza">
+<p> (3) <span class="sc">Sir R. R. Mackenzie</span>: Aug. 1867&mdash;Nov. 1868.</p>
+ </div><div class="stanza">
+<p> (4) <span class="sc">Sir Charles Lilley</span>: Nov. 1868&mdash;May 1870.</p>
+ </div><div class="stanza">
+<p> (5) <span class="sc">Sir A. H. Palmer</span>: May 1870&mdash;Jan. 1874.</p>
+ </div><div class="stanza">
+<p> (6) <span class="sc">Hon. George Thorn</span>: June 1876&mdash;Mar. 1877.</p>
+ </div><div class="stanza">
+<p> (7) <span class="sc">Hon. John Douglas</span>: Mar. 1877&mdash;Jan. 1879.</p>
+ </div><div class="stanza">
+<p> (8) <span class="sc">Sir Thomas McIlwraith</span>: Jan. 1879&mdash;Nov. 1883; June 1888&mdash;Nov. 1888;</p>
+<p class="i6"> Mar. 1893&mdash;Oct. 1893.</p>
+ </div><div class="stanza">
+<p> (9) <span class="sc">Sir S. W. Griffith</span>: Nov. 1883&mdash;June 1888; Aug. 1890&mdash;Mar. 1893.</p>
+ </div><div class="stanza">
+<p>(10) <span class="sc">Hon. D. B. Morehead</span>: Nov. 1888&mdash;Aug. 1890.</p>
+ </div><div class="stanza">
+<p>(11) <span class="sc">Sir H. M. Nelson</span>: Oct. 1893&mdash;April 1898.</p>
+ </div><div class="stanza">
+<p>(12) <span class="sc">Hon. T. J. Byrnes</span>: April 1898&mdash;Sept. 1898.</p>
+ </div><div class="stanza">
+<p>(13) <span class="sc">Sir J. R. Dickson</span>: Oct. 1898&mdash;Dec. 1899.</p>
+ </div><div class="stanza">
+<p>(14) <span class="sc">Hon. A. Dawson</span>: 1st Dec. 1899&mdash;7th Dec. 1899.</p>
+ </div><div class="stanza">
+<p>(15) <span class="sc">Hon. R. Philp</span>: Dec. 1899&mdash;Sept. 1903: Nov. 1907&mdash;Feb. 1908.</p>
+ </div><div class="stanza">
+<p>(16) <span class="sc">Sir A. Morgan</span>: Sept. 1903&mdash;Jan. 1906.</p>
+ </div><div class="stanza">
+<p>(17) <span class="sc">Hon. W. Kidston</span>: Jan. 1906&mdash;Nov. 1907: Feb. 1908 (still in office).</p>
+ </div> </div>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 400px;"><a href="images/premiers2-1200.jpg"><img src="images/premiers2-400.jpg" width="400" height="572" alt="Premiers2" /></a></div>
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page1" id="page1"></a>1</span>
+
+<h2 style="margin-top: 5em;">PART I.&mdash;OUR NATAL YEAR.</h2>
+
+<h2 style="margin-top: 2em;">CHAPTER I.</h2>
+
+<h3>THE BIRTH OF QUEENSLAND.</h3>
+
+<blockquote><p class="ind">
+<span class="outdent1">
+Issue of Letters Patent and Order in Council</span>.&mdash;Appointment of Sir George Ferguson Bowen as
+First Governor.&mdash;Continuity of Colonial Office Policy.&mdash;Instructions to Governor.&mdash;Munificent
+Gift of all Waste Lands of the Crown.&mdash;Temporary Limitation of Electoral
+Suffrage.&mdash;Responsible Government Unqualified by Restrictions or Reservations.&mdash;Governor
+General of New South Wales Initiates Elections.
+</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>Fifty years ago an emphatic expression of confidence in the self-governing
+competence of the people of North-eastern Australia was given by
+the British Government of Lord Derby. On 6th June, 1859, Queen
+Victoria in Council adopted Letters Patent&mdash;which had been already
+approved in draft on 13th May&mdash;"erecting Moreton Bay into a colony
+under the name of Queensland," and appointing Sir George Ferguson
+Bowen to be "Captain-General and Governor-in-Chief of the same." On
+the same day an Order in Council was made "empowering the Governor
+of Queensland to make laws and provide for the administration of
+justice in the said colony"; also to constitute therein a Government and
+Legislature as nearly resembling the form of Government and
+Legislature established in New South Wales as the circumstances of the
+colony would allow. This meant that representative and responsible
+government had been granted to the people of the new colony to the full
+extent that it was enjoyed by the people of New South Wales under the
+epoch-making Constitution Act of 1855. It meant also that the whole
+of the unalienated Crown Lands of the colony were vested in the
+Legislature.</p>
+
+<p>Next day, the 7th June, the annual session of the Imperial
+Parliament was opened, and four days later an amendment upon the
+Address in Reply was carried in the House of Commons, whereupon Lord
+Derby and his Conservative colleagues forthwith resigned, and were
+succeeded by a Liberal (or Whig) Ministry under Lord Palmerston.
+The new Government included men of such distinction as Mr. W. E.
+Gladstone, Lord John Russell, and the Duke of Newcastle, the last-mentioned
+assuming the office of Colonial Secretary. The change of
+Ministry, however, caused no interruption in the continuity of Colonial
+Office policy; and no time was lost in despatching Sir George Bowen to
+discharge the highly responsible duties imposed upon him by the Queen's
+Commission.</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2" id="page2"></a>2</span>
+
+<p>In notifying Sir George Bowen of his appointment, Sir Edward
+Bulwer Lytton tendered him some friendly advice. He said that Sir
+George would experience the greatest amount of difficulty in connection
+with the squatters, and he went on in these words:&mdash;"But in this, which is
+an irritating contest between rival interests, you will wisely abstain as
+much as possible from interference. Avoid taking part with one or the
+other.... The first care of a Governor in a free colony," he
+continued, "is to shun the reproach of being a party man. Give all
+parties and all Ministries formed the fairest play." In public addresses
+Sir George was advised to "appeal to the noblest idiosyncracies of the
+community&mdash;the noblest are generally the most universal and the most
+durable. They are peculiar to no party. Let your thoughts never be
+distracted from the paramount object of finance. All states thrive
+in proportion to the administration of revenue." A number of
+excellent maxims followed, among them&mdash;"The more you treat people
+as gentlemen the more 'they will behave as such.'" Again, "courtesy
+is a duty which public servants owe to the humblest member of the
+community." And, in a postscript, "Get all the details of the land
+question from the Colonial Office, and master them thoroughly. Convert
+the jealousies now existing between Moreton Bay and Sydney into
+emulation." All these generous didactics from the great novelist and Tory
+statesman, followed by congratulations and good wishes, must have been
+stimulative to the aspirations of the embryo Governor charged with the
+foundation of a new colony at the Antipodes.</p>
+
+<p>The value of autonomous government is generally appreciated; but
+the free gift of land made by the Imperial authority to the various
+self-governing
+colonies has no parallel in human history. In the case of
+Queensland the recipients were a mere handful of people, mostly settled
+at one end of a vast territory, at least half of which was unexplored.
+Plenary authority was in fact given to manage and control the waste
+lands belonging to the Crown, as well as to appropriate the gross
+proceeds of the sales of any such lands, and all other proceeds and
+revenues of the same from whatever source arising, including all royalties,
+mines, and minerals, all of which by the Letters Patent and the Order
+in Council were vested in the Legislature. This vesting, however, was
+subject to a proviso validating all contracts, promises, and engagements
+lawfully made on behalf of Her Majesty before the proclamation took
+effect. The proviso also stipulated that there should be no disturbance
+of any vested or other rights which had accrued or belonged to the
+licensed occupants or lessees of Crown Lands under any repealed Act,
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page3" id="page3"></a>3</span>
+or under any Order in Council issued in pursuance thereof.<a id="footnotetagi1a" name="footnotetagi1a"></a><a href="#footnotei1a"><sup>a</sup></a> This
+reservation was really for the protection of a number of people in the
+colony, and not for the benefit of the Imperial Government. The licensed
+occupants would be subject to the mandates of the Legislature; while
+the reservation in favour of the owners of freehold lands was of a
+comparatively trivial nature, the total area alienated from the Crown a
+year after the establishment of the new colony amounting to only 108,870
+acres, which had yielded £305,250 as purchase-money chiefly to the New
+South Wales Treasury. Taking the 670,500 square miles within the
+colony thus handed over to be worth five shillings per acre, or £160 the
+square mile, the total value of the Imperial gift to Queensland would be
+£107,280,000. Of course that price was not immediately realisable, and
+before much of the vast area could be utilised millions of capital must be
+expended in reclamation and development; but as some indication of
+ultimate value it may be pointed out that the land sold up to 31st
+December, 1860, realised at the rate of nearly £3 per acre. That the
+"waste" land was not a dead asset was shown by the fact that the public
+revenue of the colony for the first year of its existence was £178,589, to
+which rents and sales of land contributed a substantial proportion. It
+was not surprising, therefore, that Sir George Bowen's early despatches
+to the Secretary of State testified to the grateful and enthusiastic loyalty
+of the people of the colony to the Queen and the mother country.</p>
+
+<p>When the previously established Australian colonies were severally
+constituted the people were kept for years in a state of tutelage, so to
+speak, power being exercised in each case by a Governor advised by
+Ministers appointed by and responsible only to the Crown. The single
+Chamber of the Legislature, if not wholly nominated, included a
+prescribed number of members appointed by the Governor, and was
+practically under his control. It had therefore been supposed by many
+colonists that separation having been hotly opposed by some influential
+residents of the territory concerned&mdash;and having been emphatically
+condemned by an official despatch received in England from Sir William
+Denison, then Governor-General of New South Wales, almost at the last
+moment&mdash;conditions in restraint of popular government would have been
+imposed on the establishment of Queensland. For the separation struggle
+had been long continued, and marked by much personal and party
+bitterness. The agitation had been originated and chiefly maintained by
+people on the seaboard led by ardent patriots introduced a few years
+previously under the auspices of Dr. John Dunmore Lang, who while
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page4" id="page4"></a>4</span>
+undoubtedly a great Australian patriot was unhappily not a <i>persona
+grata</i> with the controlling authority at the Colonial Office. The
+movement was from its initiation protested against by the enterprising
+Crown tenants who had driven their flocks and herds overland from New
+South Wales, and had, taking their lives in their hands, adventurously
+formed stations in the remote wilderness. They not unnaturally dreaded
+the effect of popular sovereignty upon what they deemed their vested
+interests. But British statesmen, whether Conservative or Liberal,
+appear to have felt that, responsible government having been granted to
+and enjoyed by the people of New South Wales&mdash;and consequently to
+the people of that part of its territory about to be separated&mdash;any
+Imperial limitation of popular rights already conferred would be regarded
+as an unjustifiable encroachment upon public liberty achieved after many
+years of ardent struggle in the parent colony. True, the language of the
+Letters Patent and Order in Council was afterwards construed to involve
+some temporary limitation of the manhood suffrage which had been
+affirmed by the Parliament of New South Wales; but whether this
+limitation was actual or inadvertent does not clearly appear. It was not
+of much practical consequence, perhaps, in a new country that was
+rapidly multiplying its scant population, whether or not the electors for
+the first Legislative Assembly were required to have some other qualification
+than adult age and six months' residence; but the incident operated
+prejudicially against the Government, and gave a rallying cry to
+Opposition politicians.</p>
+
+<p>A somewhat singular course adopted by the Home Government was the
+authorisation of the Governor-General of New South Wales to appoint the
+first members of the Queensland Legislative Council, with a term of five
+years, although subsequent appointments were to be made by the Governor
+of Queensland for the term of the members' natural lives. Sir William
+Denison was also empowered to summon and call together the first
+Legislative Assembly of Queensland; to fix by proclamation the number
+of members; to divide the colony into convenient electoral districts; to
+prepare the electoral rolls; to issue the writs of election; and to make all
+necessary provision for the conduct of the first elections. It was required,
+moreover, that the Parliament should be called together for a date not
+more than six months after the proclamation of the colony, and should
+remain in existence, unless previously dissolved by the Governor, for a
+period of five years. Yet there was practically no limitation of popular
+authority except in respect of the preliminary arrangements, for the
+Queensland consolidating and amending Constitution Act of 1867 reaffirmed
+all rights and privileges conferred by the New South Wales
+Constitution Act.</p>
+
+<p class="footnote"><a id="footnotei1a" name="footnotei1a"></a><a class="footnote" href="#footnotetagi1a">Footnote a:</a>
+These powers were given in the New South Wales Constitution Act, 1855, Sect. 2.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 600px; margin-top: 2em;"><a href="images/page004-1200.jpg"><img src="images/page004-600.jpg" width="600" height="360" alt="HOUSES OF PARLIAMENT, BRISBANE" /></a>
+<p class="center">HOUSES OF PARLIAMENT, BRISBANE</p></div>
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page5" id="page5"></a>5</span>
+
+<h2 style="margin-top: 2em;">CHAPTER II.</h2>
+
+<h3>INITIATION OF RESPONSIBLE GOVERNMENT.</h3>
+
+<blockquote><p class="ind">
+<span class="outdent1">
+Arrival of Sir George Bowen in Brisbane</span>.&mdash;The First Responsible Ministry.&mdash;Injunctions to
+Governor by Secretary of State in regard to choice of Ministers.&mdash;Ex-members of New
+South Wales Legislature take Umbrage.&mdash;The Governor on the Characteristics of Various
+Classes of Colonists.&mdash;The Governor a Dictator.&mdash;The Microscopic Treasury Balance.&mdash;Gladstone
+as Site of Capital.&mdash;Mr. Herbert as a Parliamentary Leader.
+</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>When on 10th December, 1859, Governor Bowen, accompanied by Mr.
+Robert George Wyndham Herbert, his private secretary, had landed
+amidst great popular rejoicings at Brisbane, read the Queen's proclamation
+of the new colony, and been sworn in as Governor by Mr. Justice
+Lutwyche (the Resident Supreme Court Judge for Moreton Bay), he
+was compelled to choose Ministers and then govern the colony for nearly
+six months before they could be constitutionally approved by the
+representatives of the people in Parliament assembled. Sir George Bowen
+was faced by the dearth of seasoned public men, and by the dread of
+enlisting the services of strong partizans whose opinions and personal
+qualities were alike unknown to him. But as a constitutional Governor
+he could do no executive act until he had secured responsible advisers, and
+therefore the immediate appointment of Ministers was imperative. Hence
+on the day of the official landing a "Gazette" notice contained the
+proclamation of the Queen's Letters Patent, and notification of the
+appointment of Mr. Herbert as Colonial Secretary with Mr. Ratcliffe
+Pring as Attorney-General. Thus with the Governor and his two
+Ministers an Executive Council was at once formed; and five days later
+Mr. (afterwards Sir) Robert Ramsay Mackenzie was gazetted Colonial
+Treasurer.<a id="footnotetagi2a" name="footnotetagi2a"></a><a href="#footnotei2a"><sup>a</sup></a></p>
+
+<p>These appointments gave umbrage to certain colonists, particularly to
+those who, having represented Moreton Bay constituencies in the New
+South Wales Assembly, were deemed in many respects most eligible as
+advisers of the Queen's representative. Mr. Herbert had come out from
+England with Sir George Bowen as private secretary at the moderate
+salary of £250 a year. He was a scholarly young man of 28 years, and
+among other advantages had enjoyed the privilege of holding for a time
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page6" id="page6"></a>6</span>
+the post of private secretary to Mr. Gladstone. Indeed, both the Governor
+and his secretary, although the former had been selected by Sir E. B.
+Lytton, Colonial Secretary in the superseded Derby Administration, may
+be classed among the Gladstone school of politicians. Sir George Bowen
+probably recollected the injunction of Sir E. B. Lytton against partizanship,
+and the danger of identifying himself with the "squatters." For not
+only were they, speaking generally, partizans of a pronounced type, but
+the reservation of tenant rights made by the Order in Council of 6th June
+was calculated to taint them with a strong personal, or at least class, bias
+in land legislation and administration.</p>
+
+<p>In his official despatches to the Colonial Secretary Sir George Bowen
+did not mention at length these initial difficulties; but to Sir E. B. Lytton
+he wrote more fully. "I have often thought," he said, under date 6th
+March, 1860, "that the Queensland gentlemen-squatters bear a similar
+relation to the other Australians that the Virginian planters of 100 years
+back bore to the other Americans. But there is a perfectly different class
+of people in the towns. Brisbane, my present capital, must resemble what
+Boston and the other Puritan towns of New England were at the close of
+the last century. In a population of 7,000<a id="footnotetagi2b" name="footnotetagi2b"></a><a href="#footnotei2b"><sup>b</sup></a> we have 14 churches, 13
+public-houses, 12 policemen. The leading inhabitants of Brisbane are a
+hard-headed set of English and Scotch merchants and mechanics; very
+orderly, industrious, and prosperous; proud of the mother country; loyal
+to the person of the Queen; and convinced that the true federation for
+these colonies is the maintenance of the integrity of the Empire, and that
+the true rallying-point for Australians is the Throne."</p>
+
+<p>To the Under Secretary for the Colonies (Mr. Chichester Fortescue)
+Sir George Bowen wrote on 6th June, 1860:&mdash;"At the first start of all
+other colonies the Governor has been assisted by a nominated Council
+of experienced officials; he has been supported by an armed force; and he
+has been authorised to draw, at least at the beginning, on the Imperial
+Treasury for the expenses of the public service. But I was an autocrat;
+the sole source of authority here, without a single soldier, and without a
+single shilling. There was no organised force of any kind on my arrival,
+though I have now, by dint of exertion and influence, got up a respectable
+police on the Irish model, and a very creditable corps of volunteers. And
+as to money wherewith to carry on the Government, I started with just
+7&frac12;d. in the Treasury. A thief&mdash;supposing, I fancy, that I should have
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page7" id="page7"></a>7</span>
+been furnished with some funds for the outfit, so to speak, of the new
+State&mdash;broke into the Treasury a few nights after my arrival, and carried
+off the 7&frac12;d. mentioned. However, I borrowed money from the banks
+until our revenue came in, and our estimates already show (after paying
+back the sums borrowed) a considerable balance in excess of the proposed
+expenditure for the year."</p>
+
+<p>Sir George Bowen's initial difficulties were not chiefly financial,
+however; neither was the lack of material force to give effect to the law
+a serious embarrassment. He was empowered practically to select the
+seat of government by determining where the Parliament should first
+assemble. Among the opponents of separation had been certain squatters
+who sought to place the capital of the new colony in some more geographically
+central place than Brisbane. Of these Mr. William Henry Walsh,
+of Degilbo, Wide Bay, one of the most able and virile of the Moreton Bay
+ex-members of the New South Wales Parliament, was very prominent.
+Offended by the Governor's selection of Mr. Herbert for the
+Premiership, Mr. Walsh refused a seat in either House of the new
+Parliament, and sought to create an agitation in the more northerly ports
+of Maryborough and Rockhampton, each containing about 500 inhabitants,
+in favour of Gladstone as the capital&mdash;a place which Sydney political
+influence had always indicated as the future seat of government when a
+new northern colony came to be established. But each of the towns
+mentioned had ambitions of its own, and regarded Gladstone as a rival.
+The movement therefore failed; but the colony for years lost the benefit
+of Mr. Walsh's services at a time when every capable man was needed
+to assist in organising the government and directing the Parliament of
+political novices who took their seats a few months later. Mr. Arthur
+Macalister, solicitor, another ex-member of the New South Wales Parliament
+and an excellent debater, was perhaps equally disappointed, but he
+was at least more diplomatic. As member for Ipswich he took his seat
+on the Opposition benches, and after two years' service in the Assembly
+was invited by Mr. Herbert to join the Government. This invitation
+he accepted, and four years later he became the party leader. The sequel
+proved that the Governor had made no mistake in selecting Mr. Herbert for
+his Premier. He proved a first-rate parliamentary leader, and succeeded
+in giving the new colony the inestimable advantage of over six years of
+stable government at the outset of its career, in marked contrast to the
+kaleidoscopic Administrations which so greatly hindered political progress
+in more than one of the southern colonies.</p>
+
+<p class="footnote"><a id="footnotei2a" name="footnotei2a"></a><a class="footnote" href="#footnotetagi2a">Footnote a:</a>
+For personnel of first Ministry and Parliament, see Appendix B, post.</p>
+
+<p class="footnote"><a id="footnotei2b" name="footnotei2b"></a><a class="footnote" href="#footnotetagi2b">Footnote b:</a>
+The census of 1861 showed that then the population was only a little over 6,000.</p>
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page8" id="page8"></a>8</span>
+
+<h2 style="margin-top: 2em;">CHAPTER III.</h2>
+
+<h3>DIFFICULTIES OF EARLY ADMINISTRATIONS.</h3>
+
+<blockquote><p class="ind">
+<span class="outdent1">
+Meeting of First Parliament</span>.&mdash;Amendment on Address in Reply defeated by Speaker's Casting
+Vote.&mdash;Adoption of Address in Reply.&mdash;Compromise between Parties Indispensable.&mdash;Successful
+Inauguration of Responsible Government.&mdash;The Governor's Egotism.&mdash;Mr.
+Herbert's Retirement.&mdash;Mr. Macalister Succeeds.&mdash;Financial and Political Crisis.&mdash;Proposed
+Inconvertible Paper Money.&mdash;Governor Undeservedly Blamed.
+</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>On the 7th of May, 1860, the 26 members of the first Legislative
+Assembly&mdash;among them the three Ministers of the Crown&mdash;having been
+returned, Parliament was summoned to meet at Brisbane on the 22nd of
+that month, just a few days before the maximum limit of delay specified
+by the Queen's Order in Council. On 1st May Sir William Denison had
+appointed 11 members for a five years' term to the Legislative Council, and
+three weeks later Sir George Bowen, conceiving the number insufficient,
+appointed four members additional for a life term, raising the total number
+to 15. Thus the first Parliament of Queensland was at length fully constituted,
+and all preliminaries had been completed for entering upon the
+work of the first session.<a id="footnotetagi3a" name="footnotetagi3a"></a><a href="#footnotei3a"><sup>a</sup></a></p>
+
+<p>On the 22nd of May the session opened, and after members had been
+sworn in Sir Charles Nicholson, for some years Speaker in the Sydney
+Parliament, was elected President of the Council, and Mr. Gilbert
+Eliott&mdash;formerly
+an officer of the Royal Artillery&mdash;the member for Wide Bay,
+Speaker of the Assembly. Both Houses then adjourned for a week.</p>
+
+<p>The Governor's Speech, which was of great length, having been
+delivered, the Address in Reply was moved in both Houses. In the Council
+the leadership had been entrusted to Captain Maurice Charles O'Connell,
+Minister without portfolio, who had long been in the Port Curtis
+district as a trusted official of the New South Wales Government, and in
+early life had served with great distinction as a British soldier in Spain.
+In the Council no difficulty arose in adopting the Address. But in
+the Assembly an amendment moved for the adjournment of the debate
+at an early stage was only defeated by the Speaker's casting-vote, one
+member being absent. It thus appeared that the Assembly was almost
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page9" id="page9"></a>9</span>
+equally divided. This was a dangerous position to be faced by a new
+Premier without a day's previous experience in Parliament, and with the
+two most formidable debaters in the House, Mr. Macalister and Mr.
+(afterwards Sir) Charles Lilley, in active opposition. Mr. Herbert made
+a diplomatic speech, however, and the Address passed without much
+further contention. The division list showed that, despite the efforts of
+the Governor and his Premier to avoid identification with the squatters,
+the votes of the latter were essential to the existence of the Ministry, since
+the members of the Opposition consisted almost exclusively of town
+representatives. The following day (30th May) the Government nominee
+for the Chairmanship of Committees, Mr. C. W. Blakeney, was defeated
+by 15 votes to 7, and Mr. Macalister, who was nominated by the Opposition,
+was thereupon elected on the voices. The division of parties evidently
+made compromise indispensable to the passing of much-needed legislation.
+But much had been gained by the Government. All its members had been
+elected by the constituencies, and the Assembly had practically acknowledged
+that it was entitled to a fair trial. Seeing that for nearly six
+months Ministers had held their portfolios without parliamentary
+sanction, and had naturally made many executive mistakes during that
+time, it may be held that the first session of the first Parliament had been
+inaugurated successfully from the Ministerial standpoint. In his official
+despatches, as well as in private letters to friends in England, Sir George
+Bowen revealed himself as a genial though apparently unconscious egotist.
+His assumption of what must strike the discriminating reader as a
+dominating influence in the political and executive affairs of the colony
+was scarcely consistent with his position as a ruler representing the Queen,
+and competent to act only on constitutional advice. An impartial survey
+of Mr. Herbert's six years of office as Premier leads to the conclusion
+that chiefly to his judicious counsel and incomparable tact in the management
+of men the Governor owed the exemplary success attained in the
+organisation and government of the colony.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 600px; margin-top: 2em;"><a href="images/page008-1200.jpg"><img src="images/page008-600.jpg" width="600" height="363" alt="VIEW FROM RIVER TERRACE, BRISBANE" /></a>
+<p class="center">VIEW FROM RIVER TERRACE, BRISBANE</p></div>
+
+<p>The Governor's complete if rather florid reports to the Colonial Office,
+however, justly evoked cordial responses from the Secretary of State.
+Sir George Bowen was a most capable man, but sometimes betrayed want
+of both reticence and dignity. He was enthusiastic as well as optimistic,
+and his retention in Queensland for the unusually long period of eight years
+is an unanswerable certificate of his official merit. Yet it is undoubted that
+when bad times overtook the colony in 1866 both the Governor and his
+Premier appeared to have outlived their popularity, though their combined
+action at that time for restoring the public credit was perhaps the most
+eminent service that either of them had ever rendered. Mr. Herbert
+had formed no ties in Australia; he had exercised supreme influence
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page10" id="page10"></a>10</span>
+in the local Legislature; but now that there were several members with both
+natural capacity and parliamentary experience aspiring to the Premiership,
+believing that he had better prospects of preferment in the Imperial
+service, he determined to return to England. His subsequent long career
+at the Colonial Office justified his anticipations, and it may be safely
+said of his departure from Queensland that the colony's loss was the
+Empire's gain.</p>
+
+<p>The ex-Premier did not leave the colony abruptly, however, on
+handing over, on the 1st of February, 1866, all ministerial responsibilities
+to Mr. Arthur Macalister, his senior colleague in the Cabinet. He
+occupied his seat for nearly six months, in fact, and conducted himself
+with native dignity and becoming self-effacement as an unofficial member
+of the Assembly. Unhappily he was not to leave Australia without
+having a wholly unexpected shadow suddenly cast over his long administration
+of affairs. In mid-July the news reached the colony of the catastrophic
+failure of the Agra and Masterman's Bank, which had undertaken
+to finance the Queensland railway loan then being rapidly spent. The
+financial crisis of 1866 played havoc in London; it was of crushing effect
+in Queensland, for the Treasurer could not meet his obligations, and the
+railway workmen threatened a riot in consequence of non-payment of their
+hard-earned wages. In this emergency, Parliament being in session, the
+Treasurer, Mr. (afterwards Sir) Joshua Peter Bell desired to adopt the
+recent American expedient of issuing an inconvertible paper currency.
+The Cabinet approved, but on the Governor being consulted before the
+introduction of the bill he emphatically declined to promise the Royal
+assent to the measure, if passed. This he did for the all-sufficient reason
+that his Imperial instructions compelled him to reserve the assent to all
+measures affecting the currency. Ministers immediately resigned, and the
+Governor became the victim of irrational public obloquy for a time.<a id="footnotetagi3b" name="footnotetagi3b"></a><a href="#footnotei3b"><sup>b</sup></a> Mr.
+Herbert consented to lead a stop-gap Administration, and under his
+guidance a bill was at once passed empowering the Government to raise
+£300,000 by the issue of Treasury bills bearing not more than 10 per cent.
+interest per annum. They were forthwith disposed of at a premium, and
+the credit of the Government was restored. The temporary Government
+then resigned, and Mr. Macalister resumed office. Thus Queensland was
+saved from the double peril of paralysed credit and a debased paper
+currency.</p>
+
+<p class="footnote"><a id="footnotei3a" name="footnotei3a"></a><a class="footnote" href="#footnotetagi3a">Footnote a:</a>
+The names of the first Ministers, and of members of both Houses of the first Parliament,
+will be found in Appendix B. It may be of interest to mention that of all these representative
+men one, Mr. A. W. Compigne, who resigned his seat in the Council in 1864, alone survived till
+the Jubilee Year; and that he died at his residence, Brisbane, on Sunday, 4th July, 1909, in the
+92nd year of his age.</p>
+
+<p class="footnote"><a id="footnotei3b" name="footnotei3b"></a><a class="footnote" href="#footnotetagi3b">Footnote b:</a>
+Sir George Bowen, writing to the Right Honourable Robert Lowe, afterwards Lord
+Sherbrooke, said:&mdash;"Several leading members of Parliament were ill-treated in the streets; and
+threats were even uttered of burning down Government House, and of treating me 'as Lord Elgin
+was treated at Montreal in 1849.'"</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page11" id="page11"></a>11</span>
+
+<h2 style="margin-top: 2em;">CHAPTER IV.</h2>
+
+<h3>THE FIRST SESSION OF PARLIAMENT.</h3>
+
+<blockquote><p class="ind">
+<span class="outdent1">
+Work of the First Session</span>.&mdash;Four Land Acts Passed.&mdash;Summary of Land "Code."&mdash;Pastoral
+Leases.&mdash;Upset Price of Land £1 per acre.&mdash;Agricultural Reserves.&mdash;Land Orders to
+Immigrants.&mdash;Cotton Bonus.&mdash;Lands for Mining Purposes.&mdash;Renewal of Existing Leases.&mdash;Governor's
+Laudation of "Code."&mdash;Praises Parliament.&mdash;Abolition of State Aid to
+Religion.&mdash;Primary and Secondary Education.&mdash;Wool Liens.&mdash;First Estimates and Appropriation
+Act.
+</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>The first session closed on the 18th of September, having extended
+over nearly four months. On the 28th of August, Sir Charles Nicholson
+having determined to retire and go to England, Captain O'Connell was
+appointed President of the Legislative Council by the Governor's Commission.
+Mr. John James Galloway at the same time accepted the appointment
+of Minister without portfolio, and held the leadership of the Council
+for the remainder of the session. Without other change in the personnel
+of the Cabinet the session was brought to a close with the position of the
+Government considerably improved. They had not carried all the
+measures promised in the Opening Speech, but the new Acts passed
+numbered sixteen, some of them important, and all necessary. Seeing
+that both Houses were new to their work, the result went to prove that
+the confidence of the Imperial Government in the self-governing competence
+of the colonists had not been misplaced. Even the "Moreton Bay
+Courier," then hostile to the Government, admitted that much good work
+had been done, the chief exception taken being to the Act authorising the
+granting of a five years' additional term for existing pastoral leases. The
+Act reserved power of resumption during the currency of the lease, but the
+Opposition contended that the power would never be exercised.</p>
+
+<p>No less than four Land Bills were passed during the session, and the
+Governor, writing to the Secretary of State, said, referring to them, that
+these Acts might be called "The Land Code of Queensland." The first of
+the "Code," which was entitled the Unoccupied Crown Lands Occupation
+Act, repealed the New South Wales pastoral leasing law of 1858,
+and the Orders in Council then in force in Queensland in so far as they
+were repugnant to the new Act. Any person was to be permitted to apply
+for an occupation license for one year for a run of 100 square miles, and
+if there were more than one applicant for the same run preference was to
+be given to any person who had occupied it for two months previously.
+Within nine months after the granting of the license application might be
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page12" id="page12"></a>12</span>
+made by the occupier for a 14 years' lease conditionally on the run having
+been stocked to one-fourth its assumed carrying capacity of 100 sheep or
+20 head of cattle per square mile. An absolute power of resumption
+at any time during the lease on 12 months' notice was given. The second
+was the Tenders for Crown Lands Act, authorising the issue of 14 years'
+leases to lessees of runs already liable for rent; also authorising the
+acceptance of tenders (which had been held over awaiting legislation) for
+runs occupied since 1st January, 1860, and the granting to the tenderers
+of 14 years' leases.</p>
+
+<p>The third measure of the "Code" was the Alienation of Crown Lands
+Act, which fixed the minimum upset price at auction or otherwise at £1 per
+acre; and which provided for the setting apart, within six months from the
+bill becoming law, of not less than 100,000 acres on the shores or navigable
+waters of Moreton Bay, Wide Bay, Port Curtis, and Keppel Bay, and also
+within five miles of all towns with upwards of 500 inhabitants, as
+agricultural reserves of not less than 10,000 acres each, which should not
+be for sale by auction, but surveyed and opened to selection as farms
+of not less than 40 nor more than 320 acres at the fixed price of £1 per
+acre; the purchase money to be paid in advance, and the Crown grant
+issued at the end of six months if the selector had occupied the land
+and commenced to improve it during that term. If a selector failed
+so to occupy and improve, the purchase-money was to be returned
+to him, less 10 per cent., and the land again opened for selection. A
+selector was also entitled to lease three times the area of his farm&mdash;but
+so that the whole should not exceed 320 acres&mdash;in one lot or
+conterminous lots within the same reserve, for a term of five years, at
+sixpence per acre rent, with right of purchase, if fenced in, at £1 per
+acre at any time during the currency of the lease. A further provision of
+importance in the same Act was the granting of a land order for £18 on
+arrival to each immigrant from Europe who paid his own passage, and a
+further land order for £12 at the end of two years' residence in the colony.
+It was also provided that two children between the ages of four and
+fourteen should be reckoned as one statute adult. Further provision was
+made by which a bonus in land was to be paid during the next three years
+of £10 per bale of good cleaned Sea Island cotton, and for the two years
+next following £5 per bale. And finally any person or company was
+empowered to purchase land not exceeding 640 acres in one block for
+mining purposes, other than for coal or gold, at the upset price of 20s. per
+acre.</p>
+
+<p>The fourth measure of the "Code" was the Occupied Crown Lands
+Leasing Act, which enabled the lessee of any Crown land held under
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page13" id="page13"></a>13</span>
+previously existing regulations, or under the Tenders for Crown Lands
+Act of the current session, to get a five years' renewal at the end of his
+term. The principle of compensation was recognised in these leasing
+Acts, but no provision was made for the continuance of the pre-emptive
+right of purchase, conferred by the old Orders in Council.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 350px;"><a href="images/page012-800.jpg"><img src="images/page012-350.jpg" width="350" height="581" alt="BARRON FALLS, CAIRNS RAILWAY, NORTH QUEENSLAND" /></a>
+<p class="center">BARRON FALLS, CAIRNS RAILWAY, NORTH QUEENSLAND</p></div>
+
+<p>Sir George Bowen wrote to the Secretary of State in terms of exalted
+laudation of these four Acts. "I regard them," he said, "as a practical
+and satisfactory settlement of this much-vexed question, which is still
+embittering the social life and retarding the material advance of the
+neighbouring and elder colonies." To a friend in England he wrote,&mdash;"The
+legislation of our first Parliament has settled the long quarrel
+between the pastoral and agricultural interests which has raged in all new
+countries ever since the days of Abel, the 'keeper of sheep,' and Cain, the
+'tiller of the ground!'" To the Secretary of State he added,&mdash;"This
+Parliament may fairly boast of having passed, with due caution and
+foresight, a greater number of really useful measures, and of having
+achieved a greater amount of really practical legislation, than any other
+Parliament in any of the Australian colonies since the introduction of
+parliamentary government." Sir George quotes a Sydney journal,<a id="footnotetagi4a" name="footnotetagi4a"></a><a href="#footnotei4a"><sup>a</sup></a> which
+before separation was antagonistic to that movement, as saying,&mdash;"The
+Government of Queensland has been either very fortunate or very
+judicious. The last to enter the race, Queensland has shot ahead, and
+taken the first place. While in Melbourne the popular rage has been
+worked up by its guardians into riot, and while in Sydney the tactics of
+the popular party have succeeded in placing the land question in a position
+of chronic blockade, in Queensland it has been settled on a moderate and
+reasonable basis, and without so much as a single ministerial crisis."</p>
+
+<p>In the prorogation speech Sir George Bowen reviewed at length the
+work of the session. From that and other sources it may be stated that
+the limitation of the number of salaried officials capable of being elected
+to the Legislative Assembly had been fixed so as not to exceed five; the
+collection of parliamentary electors' names had been discontinued, and
+facilities provided for self-registration; State aid to religion had been
+abolished, the rights of existing incumbents being preserved; the existing
+system of primary education had been abolished, and provision made for
+the appointment by the Governor in Council of a "Board of General
+Education," a body corporate authorised to expend such sums as Parliament
+might vote for primary education. The Board was empowered to
+assist any primary school that submitted to its supervision and inspection,
+and conformed to its rules and by-laws; but it was forbidden to
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page14" id="page14"></a>14</span>
+contribute to the repair or building of any school unless the fee-simple
+thereof had been previously vested in the Board. And nothing in the Act
+could be held to authorise any inspection of or interference with the
+special religious instruction which might be given in such school during
+the hours set apart for such instruction. Not more than 5 per cent. of the
+Board's funds might be applied to granting exhibitions at any grammar
+school to primary scholars who had passed the competitive examination
+prescribed by the Board.</p>
+
+<p>The Board was also authorised to devote a portion of its funds
+to assist in the establishment of normal or training schools, or to
+industrial schools. The Grammar Schools Act of 1860, which with a
+few amendments is still in force, was passed. An Act for taking the
+census of the colony on 1st April, 1861, became law. An Act for the
+appointment of Commissioners to adjust accounts with New South
+Wales was another measure of the session. It may be remarked, however,
+that an adjustment was never reached, but the amount in dispute
+became so comparatively small when mutual credits had been allowed
+that the question was permitted to lapse. Another measure of some
+practical importance was the Liens on Wool Act, which extended also to
+mortgages on sheep, cattle, and horses; and the Scab in Sheep Act, the
+main provisions of which are still in force. The gold export duty was
+abolished by an Act which merely validated the then official practice of
+omitting to collect the duty imposed by a New South Wales Act passed
+seven years previously.</p>
+
+<p>It must be admitted that this record of work done by a new Parliament,
+in a colony that had no existence as a self-governing entity twelve
+months before, deserved much of the approbation expressed of its
+proceedings by the Governor. Indeed, the "Courier" of the day, in
+commenting upon the work of the session, gave honourable members of
+both Houses hearty credit for the assiduity with which they had attended
+to public duty, even to the neglect in many cases of their own personal
+and business affairs. There was then no payment of members in any
+form. And there were other matters than legislation which deserve
+notice. The Estimates had been passed, totalling £220,808 for the service
+of the year; and the Governor had congratulated the Assembly upon
+having appropriated one-fourth of the total estimated revenue to roads,
+bridges, and other public works, besides ample sums to hospitals,
+libraries, botanic gardens, and schools of arts. No less than £31,261
+was voted for police, of which £13,516 was absorbed for the native
+troopers then necessary for the protection of the adventurous pioneers
+who were conducting what may be termed exploratory settlement in the
+remote interior.</p>
+
+<p class="footnote"><a id="footnotei4a" name="footnotei4a"></a><a class="footnote" href="#footnotetagi4a">Footnote a:</a> "Sydney Morning Herald," September, 1860.</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page15" id="page15"></a>15</span>
+
+<h2 style="margin-top: 2em;">CHAPTER V.</h2>
+
+<h3>QUEENSLAND IN 1860.</h3>
+
+<blockquote><p class="ind">
+<span class="outdent1">
+Rush of Population</span>.&mdash;High Prices for Stock for occupying New Country.&mdash;Sparse Population.&mdash;Rockhampton
+ most Northerly Port of Entry.&mdash;Navigation inside Barrier Reef unknown.&mdash;Tropical
+ Queensland Unexplored.&mdash;Ignorance of Climate, Resources, and Conditions.&mdash;Primary
+ Industries in 1860.&mdash;Primitive Means of Communication.&mdash;Public Revenue, Bank
+ Deposits, and Institutions.
+</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>Thus was Queensland fairly launched on her career as a self-governing
+state of the Empire. The very announcement of impending separation
+had caused a rush of population from the southern colonies; while even
+the Crown tenants, who had for years regarded the movement with
+aversion, found much compensation in their escape from the operation
+of the imminent Robertson land law which threatened free selection before
+survey throughout the entire area of New South Wales. The rush for
+new pastoral country not only attracted the most adventurous bushmen
+in Australia to the new colony, but also sent up the prices of sheep and
+cattle to fabulous rates, as country tendered for could not be held unless
+stocked to the prescribed minimum number. At the time a large area of
+coast country was occupied by sheep, and symptoms of disease were so
+menacing that the sales for stocking up new country proved the salvation
+of some of the "inside" squatters; although looked at in the light of
+experience it may be doubted whether the too rapid occupation of the
+wilderness country, then inhabited solely by the aborigines, was not
+partly accountable for disastrous results when the demand for stocking
+up ceased, and the natural water on most runs proved wholly insufficient
+to carry stock through the mildest drought. Still, at the time Queensland
+attracted a population of seasoned Australians whose colonising value
+was inestimable; and these in addition to many immigrants from the
+mother country. Consequently the colony made phenomenal progress.</p>
+
+<p>A glance at the official statistics for the year 1860&mdash;the earliest
+available&mdash;will illustrate the insignificance, compared with the vast area
+of the territory held, of the population, trade, and liquid capital of the
+community. The total population on 31st December, 1860, was estimated
+at 28,056, most of these people being more or less concentrated in the
+towns. The rest were scattered sparsely over the country between the
+southern boundary and the tropic of Capricorn for a distance of about 250
+miles back from the coast-line. Rockhampton was then the most northerly
+port of entry; the site of the present town of Bundaberg was virgin
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page16" id="page16"></a>16</span>
+forest, the entrance to the Burnett River from Hervey Bay being as yet
+unknown; Mackay, Bowen, Townsville, Ingham, Geraldton, Cairns, Port
+Douglas, Cooktown, and the Thursday Island settlement were non-existent;
+and of the coast waters beyond Keppel Bay little more was
+known than the narratives of Captain Cook and Lieutenant Flinders at
+the close of the eighteenth century disclosed.</p>
+
+<p>The existence of the magnificent natural harbour of 1,000 miles in
+length formed by the Great Barrier Reef was undreamt of; the passage
+was regarded rather as one of Nature's traps for the unwary navigator
+than the future safe and easily traversed route of great steamship lines
+along a coast dotted with prosperous ports kept busy as the outlets of a
+richly productive hinterland.</p>
+
+<p>The tropical climate of the northern coast lands was then
+supposed to be deadly to members of the white races; the interior was
+declared to be almost entirely devoid of surface water&mdash;for the greater
+part of the year a fiery furnace, and at intervals of capricious periodicity
+ravaged by destructive floods. It was assumed to be a country where the
+white man would wither and the coloured man thrive&mdash;a land wholly
+unfit for the home of civilised peoples, and only adapted to the wants of
+the degraded aboriginal native. It was ignorantly affirmed that the sheep
+stations intended to be formed in the far western country must be
+failures, and English experts held that under the tropical sun the
+sheep, if it could live in Queensland at all, would soon carry hair
+instead of wool. Even in Southern Queensland the agricultural possibilities
+of the land were sadly unappreciated. True, in the population
+centres there were loud preachers of the gospel of reclamation of the
+wilderness so that it might bud and blossom as the rose; but their homilies
+for the most part fell upon deaf ears&mdash;the seasoned bushman, like the great
+squatter, tenaciously held that even the Darling Downs would not grow a
+cabbage.</p>
+
+<p>So backward was the farming industry that in 1860 the total area
+under cultivation was 3,353 acres in a country of greater extent than
+France and Germany combined. Of this trifling cultivated area only 196
+acres were under wheat, and not an acre under sugar-cane. True, there
+were nearly three and a-half million sheep, half-a-million cattle, and
+24,000 horses finding subsistence on the limitless but ill-watered natural
+pastures. But at that time the annual clip from the sheep, though wool
+was the chief export of the colony, totalled only 5,000,000 lb., or equal to
+about 1½ lb. to each fleece. Mining, except for coal, of which 12,327
+tons was raised in 1860, was almost non-existent, although 2,738 fine
+ounces of gold are shown by the statistics to have been won during the
+year.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 600px;"><a href="images/page016-1200.jpg"><img src="images/page016-600.jpg" width="600" height="361" alt="TREASURY BUILDINGS, BRISBANE" /></a>
+<p class="center">TREASURY BUILDINGS, BRISBANE</p></div>
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page17" id="page17"></a>17</span>
+
+<p>In 1860 there was not a mile of railway either open for traffic or
+under construction; not a mile of electric telegraph wire; nor, save between
+Brisbane and Ipswich, was there a formed or metalled road, the only
+avenues of transport being along the bridle path or the teamsters' track.
+The country was destitute of culverts and bridges over watercourses, and
+the so-called roads were impassable for days, weeks, or even months in
+succession after the seasonal rains. The northern shipping trade was
+limited to a small steamer running once a fortnight between Brisbane,
+Maryborough, and Rockhampton, but even that had been arranged after
+the proclamation of the colony, partly to meet administration exigencies,
+with the assistance of the new Government. A fortnightly steamer from
+Sydney ran direct to Maryborough, and another to Rockhampton, with
+the apparent object of discouraging mutual intercourse among the ports.
+A weekly steamer ran between Brisbane and Sydney, in addition to a
+few small sailing craft for cargo purposes.</p>
+
+<p>Although Sir George Bowen declared that on arrival he found nothing
+in the Treasury save a few coppers, the revenue for the first year
+reached £178,589. The expenditure for the year 1860 was £17,086 less
+than the revenue, yet, through the Government having to lean upon the
+banks in December, 1859, there was an overdraft of over £19,000 at the
+end of the first year. But the banks themselves had little money among
+them, the net assets slightly exceeding half a million sterling, and the
+aggregate deposits totalling less than a quarter of a million. At the end of
+1860, out of the 28,000 people in the colony 163 were "small capitalists"
+with an aggregate of £7,545, or about £46 per depositor, in the Savings
+Bank. Yet there were six charitable institutions in which 397 persons
+found relief. Of subscribers to "public libraries" there were 538, and
+they had at their disposal 5,000 volumes from which to select reading for
+the leisure hour. There were 41 schools, with a total of 1,890 pupils.
+The number of letters posted showed a low degree of cultivation, for the
+average number posted as well as received by each person was just seven
+a year, or slightly more than one every two months. Of newspapers a
+rather fewer number passed through the post office. Surely all these things
+were on a microscopic scale, recollecting that the people of Queensland had
+been endowed with autonomous government, and had unfettered control of
+more than one-fifth of the total area of Australia.</p>
+
+<p>Old Queenslanders who still survive, and can meditate retrospectively
+upon the past, will be impressed with the marvellous optimism of all
+classes of the population 50 years ago. The townspeople, enfranchised
+with most political power by reason of their numbers, knew little of the
+dormant resources of the inland country or its climatic vagaries. They
+could not realise the privations, the hard labour, and the deadly monotony
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page18" id="page18"></a>18</span>
+of early settlement upon the land. The farmer had usually no market, and
+in raising his produce he had to contend against droughts, floods, pests, and
+isolation, and he was fortunate if his produce brought from the store-keeper
+the cost of rations on which his family could frugally subsist. The
+squatter, too, incurred enormous risks, though he had a market for his
+wool at all times; and, if there was no domestic consumption of sheep and
+cattle upon which he could rely, his surplus stock brought a fair return
+from the boiling-down pots. But he had to get his produce to port before
+a money return could be secured; and as pastoral settlement pushed
+further out transport obstacles were often crushing. It was no unusual
+occurrence for one wool clip to be detained on a remote station until the
+next year's shearing had commenced. A lien had therefore usually to be
+given on the clip, and the rate of interest, including agent's commission,
+was commonly 12 per cent. per annum, while the high carriage rate made
+rations extremely costly; so that even with good seasons the margin of
+profit was small. In bad years ruin became well-nigh inevitable. The
+pioneer squatter spent most of his strenuous life in the saddle, alternately
+worried by bad seasons, low prices, and his bank overdraft. It is easy,
+therefore, to understand the temptation which assailed him to regard as
+his own the country which he had reclaimed at the expense of his vitality
+as well as his capital. When he visited town after a term of voluntary
+exile human nature often asserted itself, and the holiday-making squatter
+disbursed his hard-earned money with a prodigal hand, a fact not forgotten
+by his political opponents. The shepherd, too, yielded to temptation,
+and at the end of a year's solitary life in his bush hut longed for
+nothing so much as an alcoholic stimulant or a bottle of pickles and gay
+human society. Thus he prodigally knocked down his cheque in town,
+and in a week or two again abandoned civilisation at the call of the bush.
+Fifty years ago the urban people perhaps lived almost as comfortably as
+they do to-day, but the bushman, whether farmer, squatter, shepherd, or
+stockman, had usually a life of exhausting labour, bad food, dull surroundings,
+and often in consequence indifferent health. Still the landless
+colonist of 1860 had unbounded faith in his country; and if he fought
+earnestly, sometimes passionately, against what he termed squatting
+encroachment, it is now apparent that had not the pastoral tenure been
+jealously limited by Parliament insurmountable obstacles would have been
+placed in the path of progress. In future pages of this work it will be
+seen that the often too sanguine anticipations of individual colonists of
+Queensland's natal year were rudely shattered by stern experience; while,
+on the other hand, the opening up of unsuspected resources as often
+enriched the general community.</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page19" id="page19"></a>19</span>
+
+<h2 style="margin-top: 5em;">PART II.&mdash;FROM NATAL YEAR TO JUBILEE.</h2>
+
+<h2 style="margin-top: 2em;">CHAPTER I.</h2>
+
+<h3>THE LEGISLATURE.</h3>
+
+<blockquote><p class="ind">
+<span class="outdent1">
+The Governor.&mdash;His Functions</span>: Political and Social.&mdash;His Emoluments.&mdash;Administrations that
+ have held Office.&mdash;Number of Members of Council and Assembly.&mdash;Emoluments of
+ Assembly Members.&mdash;Good Results of Responsible Government in Queensland.
+</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>In a self-governing dependency of the Empire the King's representative,
+while competent to take official action only on constitutional advice, is not
+a mere figurehead in the Government. He is, so to speak, one of the three
+branches of the Legislature. No expenditure can be voted by Parliament
+except after receipt of a message of appropriation from the Governor; and
+no bill can become law without the Royal assent, which he, subject to
+certain reservations, is empowered to give. As President of the Executive
+Council, too, the Governor has a voice in administration, although the
+actual power vests in the Ministry so long as it commands the confidence
+of Parliament. But the Governor is in constant touch with his Premier,
+and therefore, apart from the official intercourse at meetings of the
+Executive Council, His Excellency exchanges ideas informally with the
+executive head of the Government. The Governor has social duties, too,
+and these are not unimportant as bringing the King's representative into
+personal contact with his Majesty's colonial subjects of both sexes and
+various classes. The Governor's attendance at public and social functions
+also furnishes a touch of sprightly colour to the drab shade which would
+otherwise often characterise public gatherings. He carries with him a
+distinctive atmosphere of Imperial comprehensiveness which usefully
+neutralises a narrow parochialism that might tend to induce men and
+women to forget that they, while a politically independent community, yet
+form an integral part of the great Empire of the Mistress of the Seas.
+Thus it is that our most experienced public men have emphasised the
+importance of maintaining direct communication with the Imperial
+authority through a Governor appointed by and responsible to the King.</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page20" id="page20"></a>20</span>
+
+<p>Pending the decision of Parliament, the Imperial Government provisionally
+fixed the salary of the first Governor at £2,500 a year. In the
+session of 1861, Parliament, representing a population of 34,000 persons,
+not only voted an increase to £4,000, but also by statute made the payment
+retrospective as from 1st January, 1860. At this sum the salary remained
+until 1874, when Mr. Oscar de Satge, a member of the Opposition, carried
+a motion affirming the principle of an increase. This motion the Government
+accepted, and the salary was increased to £5,000 a year, at which
+figure it remained from that time until 1904, when it was reduced to £3,000.
+Three Governors successively filled the office for the fifteen years ending
+with November, 1874; and six for the thirty years between 1874 and
+October, 1904. In the latter year an amendment of the Constitution Act
+was made by a bill introduced by the Government, reducing the salary of
+future Governors to £3,000, for reasons exhaustively set forth by the
+Premier in moving the second reading. The chief grounds of reduction, it
+may be mentioned, were the altered situation created by the establishment
+of the Commonwealth, and the steps of a similar character already taken
+in the Southern States.</p>
+
+<p>Twenty-five Ministries have held office during the fifty-year period.
+On that led by the late Sir Robert Herbert comment has already been
+made. It ended a useful Queensland career in 1866, after more than six
+years of office. The succeeding Macalister Ministry, with an interruption
+of eighteen days by a second Herbert Ministry of an ephemeral nature,
+and with reconstructions, lasted until August, 1867, when it was displaced
+by the Mackenzie-Palmer Administration. Mr. Macalister was a clever
+politician; a concise and trenchant speaker; and a capital parliamentary
+leader in so far as the House work was concerned. But he was lacking in
+force, and his Ministry was, moreover, much in the nature of coalition
+representing both squatting and anti-squatting interests at a time when
+bitter controversy prevailed. Mr. (afterwards Sir) R. R. Mackenzie, who
+was held in general respect for his personal qualities, likewise lacked
+strength as a politician, and the real force behind him was Mr. (afterwards
+Sir) Arthur Hunter Palmer. His Ministry was at the time termed "pure
+merino," every member of it, save Mr. Pring, the Attorney-General, being
+identified with the pastoral industry.</p>
+
+<p>In November, 1868, the Lilley Ministry was formed. It lasted
+only till April, 1870, and was more than once reconstructed during
+its tenure of office. It included Mr. Macalister, between whom and the
+Premier there was inconvenient rivalry, but its members were all Liberals
+by reputation. The Premier, however, was Radical rather than Liberal in
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page21" id="page21"></a>21</span>
+his opinions, and his abolition of primary school fees without parliamentary
+authority, and the ordering of the steamer "Governor Blackall" in
+Sydney, with the object of fighting the A.S.N. Company, without the
+consent even of his colleagues, brought about the downfall of the Ministry
+as soon as Parliament met in 1870, only one supporter, the late Mr.
+Henry Jordan, voting with them in a division on a want of confidence
+motion. Mr. (afterwards Sir) Charles Lilley was perhaps the most
+accomplished debater that ever spoke in the Queensland Parliament, and
+throughout most of his public career, as the member for Fortitude Valley,
+he was a popular hero. As an educationist he was undoubtedly both
+sincere and enthusiastic, but his colleagues found his imperious moods
+difficult to contend against.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 600px;"><a href="images/page020-1200.jpg"><img src="images/page020-600.jpg" width="600" height="366" alt="COAL WHARVES, SOUTH BRISBANE" /></a>
+<p class="center">COAL WHARVES, SOUTH BRISBANE</p></div>
+
+<p>The Palmer Ministry met Parliament in May, 1870, and held office for
+more than three and a-half years, although for a great part of the time the
+Government had no working majority. Indeed, for months it fought, with
+a majority of one in a full House of 32, a determined Opposition in
+the Assembly ably led by Mr. Lilley. All business was blocked for many
+weeks, and eventually 13 members of the Opposition, headed by Mr.
+Lilley, waited as a deputation upon the Governor (Colonel Blackall)
+requesting his intervention on the ground that Ministers did not possess
+their confidence or the confidence of the House. The Governor declined to
+interpose, and subtly remarked that he had known many Oppositions in
+Parliament, but never yet knew one that had confidence in the Government
+of the day. The interview did not assist the Opposition cause. A
+second session opened on 5th July, 1870, and, being defeated two days
+later by 17 to 11, Mr. Palmer was granted a dissolution.<a id="footnotetagii1a" name="footnotetagii1a"></a><a href="#footnoteii1a"><sup>a</sup></a> The Premier
+had proved himself an indomitable fighter, and his appeal to the constituencies
+was not wholly unsuccessful. Obstruction continuing in the
+new Parliament, Mr. Palmer was granted another dissolution in June, 1871,
+and from that time had a fairly effective majority at his back for two years,
+when being defeated he was granted another dissolution, from which his
+party came back unsuccessful. If the Opposition of those days did not
+obstruct by means of the "stonewall" to the same extent that has been the
+case of recent years, they attained their end in another way. In the session
+of 1871-2 for a period of five weeks the Government failed to obtain a
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page22" id="page22"></a>22</span>
+quorum except on two occasions, on both of which there was a "count out."
+The Opposition were desirous of forcing the Government to pass a Redistribution
+of Seats Bill before Supply was granted, and by persisting in these
+tactics they compelled the Government to agree to a compromise.</p>
+
+<p>The Palmer Ministry on assuming office had found the public finances
+in a bad way, but partly through good management and partly with the
+help of good seasons and improving markets for exports, they retired in
+January, 1874, after a succession of surpluses, and with railway construction
+being vigorously pushed on both in Southern and Central districts.</p>
+
+<p>In January, 1874, when the new Parliament met after the general
+election, Mr. Palmer and his colleagues found themselves in so hopeless
+a minority that they resigned without awaiting a debate on the
+Address in Reply. Amidst great hilarity in the Assembly, and despite the
+vehement protests of the candidate, Mr. William Henry Walsh was
+elected Speaker, although a member of the Palmer party; and on his
+refusal to accept the office was humorously threatened with the penalty of
+disobedience to the order of the House. But after consideration he
+assumed the Speakership, and while in the chair discharged his duties with
+credit.</p>
+
+<p>The Macalister-Hemmant Ministry forthwith assumed office, Mr.
+Lilley, who made the announcement in the Assembly on their behalf,
+declining a portfolio. Shortly afterwards he was appointed a Judge of
+the Supreme Court. The Ministry was initiated with Mr. MacDevitt as
+Attorney-General, but in August following he retired, and Mr. S. W.
+Griffith, who had proved an inconvenient supporter of the Government as
+the leader of a subsection, accepted the portfolio. Mr. (afterwards Sir)
+Thomas McIlwraith was Mr. Macalister's Minister for Works, but at the
+close of the first session he differed from the Premier on the question of a
+great private railway scheme, and therefore resigned office. On the House
+reassembling in 1875 Mr. McIlwraith took the front cross-bench seat next
+the gangway on the Opposition side, and, while not approving of all the
+tactics of the party led by Mr. Palmer, gave it his general support. The
+first session of the Parliament had been distinguished by the passing of a
+Customs tariff incidentally protective, Mr. Hemmant, the Treasurer, showing
+uncommon qualities as a financial speaker. He closed his first year at
+the Treasury with an apparent deficit of £200,762. His predecessor, when
+making his Financial Statement in 1872, had anticipated a deficit. To
+prevent this he proposed&mdash;and Parliament agreed to the proposition&mdash;to
+transfer £350,000 from the Loan Fund to the Consolidated Revenue Fund
+to meet the Treasury bills floated or authorised to cover the accumulated
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page23" id="page23"></a>23</span>
+deficits of earlier years. Mr. Hemmant disapproved of this method of
+financing, and rectified matters as far as possible by transferring to a
+Surplus Revenue Fund £240,000, which left him with a deficit of £200,762.
+This was equivalent to recouping the Loan Fund to the extent of £240,000,
+as the money was to be used for public works which would, under ordinary
+circumstances, have been constructed out of loan moneys. In the next
+year, 1876, soon after the opening of Parliament, the appointment of the
+Premier as Agent-General was announced. Ministers consequently resigned,
+and the Governor (Mr. W. W. Cairns) sent for Mr. George Thorn,
+who to the surprise of political circles succeeded in forming a Ministry
+including Mr. Griffith and most of the late Cabinet. Mr. Thorn was
+personally a general favourite, but not conspicuously fit for the position
+which he had fortuitously attained. Mr. Griffith became the actual
+leader, however, and the session was completed without disaster. During
+the recess Mr. Thorn retired, to visit England, and was replaced in
+the Cabinet by Mr. John Douglas, whose scholarly speeches had given him
+a high reputation in the House. As Premier, however, Mr. Douglas was
+less successful than had been anticipated. Conspicuously fair in debate,
+he appeared invariably to feel the force of his opponents' arguments more
+than those on his own side of the House, and therefore his leadership
+wanted decision; but the sessions of 1877 and 1878 were passed through
+without any defeat compelling a premature dissolution.</p>
+
+<p>The Liberal Ministries from 1874 to 1878 had been fertile in legislation,
+but after the retirement of Mr. Macalister they were badly led, Mr.
+Griffith, who attained the Attorney-Generalship at the age of twenty-nine,
+having been unwisely kept in the background on the plea of political
+immaturity. It was evident, however, that chiefly to him the passage of all
+important measures of legislation had been due. The colony suffered
+severely from drought during the years 1876-7-8; financial depression was
+the inevitable result, and, as usual under such circumstances, the Government
+lost popularity.</p>
+
+<p>In November, 1878, the general election resulted in the return of a
+House determined to effect a change of Administration. On the new
+Parliament assembling in January, 1879, Ministers were at once defeated,
+and Mr. McIlwraith was sent for by the Governor. He met Parliament
+a few days afterwards with colleagues representing all parts of the
+colony, and obtained a four months' recess in which to mature his
+policy. On Parliament reassembling in mid-May, however, the position of
+the Government was less strong than had been anticipated. During the
+recess they had been retrenching sharply, and a number of dismissals
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page24" id="page24"></a>24</span>
+from the Ipswich railway workshops were declared to be tainted with
+partizanship. At no time in the first session, in a test division, did the
+Government sit with a majority of more than six, and usually they commanded
+only two or three. The Opposition, led by Mr. Griffith, were
+always at their posts, and the Government were frequently on the verge
+of defeat. The passing of a Three-million Loan Act and of the Divisional
+Boards Act, however, strengthened the Government's position, and in the
+following session the Torres Strait mail contract, making Brisbane the
+Australian terminus, though opposed by stonewalling measures for six
+consecutive weeks, added to their popularity.</p>
+
+<p>In the session of 1880 grave accusations were made against the
+Premier by Mr. Hemmant, who had taken up his residence in England.
+Mr. Hemmant presented a petition to Parliament charging the Premier
+with complicity in certain transactions connected with the purchase of a
+large quantity of steel rails for the Government which had involved
+Queensland in a heavy loss. The matter was referred to a select committee,
+on whose recommendation a Royal Commission was appointed to take
+evidence in England. Mr. Griffith visited London during the recess, and
+acted as honorary counsel for Mr. Hemmant. The Commission exonerated
+the Premier, but a great deal of party animosity was engendered, which did
+not die out for several years.</p>
+
+<p>In 1883 Sir Thomas McIlwraith ordered the British flag to be hoisted
+at Port Moresby, in Eastern New Guinea, annexing to the Empire that
+portion of Papua not already claimed by the Dutch, an act which showed
+true statesmanship and prophetic vision. Unfortunately, the Secretary of
+State for the Colonies, Earl Derby, repudiated the annexation on the
+ground that it was a usurpation of the sovereign rights of the Imperial
+authorities. At the same time he acknowledged the patriotic motives which
+had inspired the Premier of Queensland, and declared that the British
+Government would regard any attempt at annexation by a foreign Power
+as an unfriendly act. Whatever may have been the views of political parties
+at the time, matured judgment formed in the light of subsequent events
+endorses the action of Sir Thomas. The hoisting of the German flag on
+the northern portion of the territory annexed by Sir Thomas has brought
+a foreign Power almost to our doors, and too late the home Government
+endeavoured as far as possible to retrieve their blunder by annexing the
+south-eastern portion of Papua, which was handed over to the Commonwealth
+after federation.</p>
+
+<p>In the same year, the Premier, who had for many years been a strong
+advocate of railway construction by private enterprise on the land-grant
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page25" id="page25"></a>25</span>
+principle, brought forward a bill authorising the construction of what was
+commonly called the Transcontinental Railway, from Charleville to Point
+Parker, on the Gulf of Carpentaria. Against this proposal great popular
+clamour arose; the majority of the squatting members of the Assembly
+combined with the Opposition, and the second reading of the bill was
+negatived by 27 votes to 16. Sir Thomas McIlwraith, rightly regarding the
+rejection of the measure as equivalent to a vote of want of confidence,
+advised the Administrator of the Government, Sir J. P. Bell, to dissolve the
+Assembly. His Excellency accepted the advice, and the Premier asked for
+five months' Supply. Mr. Griffith, the greatest constitutional authority in
+Queensland, approved of the decision of the Administrator of the Government,
+only objecting to Supply being given for such a length of time.
+However, the House, by 24 to 19, agreed to pass the Supply asked for, and
+the dissolution took place in the middle of July.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 600px;"><a href="images/page024-1200.jpg"><img src="images/page024-600.jpg" width="600" height="367" alt="EXECUTIVE BUILDINGS, BRISBANE" /></a>
+<p class="center">EXECUTIVE BUILDINGS, BRISBANE</p></div>
+
+<p>The Opposition, led by Mr. Griffith, were returned with a large
+majority. Being defeated on the election of a Speaker and in two
+subsequent divisions, the Government resigned. Mr. Griffith was sent
+for, and formed a strong Administration. Parliament adjourned from
+November to January, when some pressing legislation was passed at once,
+including the repeal of the Railway Companies Preliminary Act, under
+which proposals were made by railway syndicates. On 6th March Parliament
+was prorogued until 8th July.</p>
+
+<p>The Premier had chosen as his Lands Minister Mr. Charles Boydell
+Dutton, a Liberal Barcoo squatter, with no previous experience of
+parliamentary life, but a determined land reformer. With the Premier's
+aid Mr. Dutton got the Land Act of 1884 safely through, and the
+Government secured credit for passing a most important measure of
+reform, one important change being the introduction of grazing farm
+leases, and another the resumption of the halves of all runs included
+in a comprehensive schedule of the unsettled districts. But the historical
+measure of the session and the decade was the Ten-million Loan
+Bill, which embodied a grand scheme for providing the entire colony
+with railways. The Opposition protested against the loan as unconstitutional
+on the ground that it covered a programme of railway construction
+which could not be completed for several years, but they dared not oppose
+any specific railway, and the bill passed without amendment. Sir Thomas
+McIlwraith retired from the Assembly in 1886, and during the whole life
+of the Parliament the Opposition found themselves helpless to resist the
+domination of the Ministry. But as the Administration aged its political
+force waned, and in 1887 the Treasurer, Mr. (afterwards Sir) J. R.
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page26" id="page26"></a>26</span>
+Dickson, and Mr. Macdonald-Paterson retired from the Ministry because
+of their disagreement with a land tax proposed in Cabinet by the Premier.
+Despite the large loan expenditure, too, there was a portentous succession
+of deficits, due to unfavourable seasons, and Sir Samuel Griffith found in
+1887 that his Government and party had outlived their popularity.</p>
+
+<p>Like his great rival, Sir Samuel gave abundant proof during his tenure
+of office of broad statesmanlike conceptions. No public man in Australia
+has done more to foster the federal spirit and bring about the union of the
+Australian colonies. He played a foremost part in creating the Federal
+Council, and to him is due the credit of drafting in 1887 the measure which
+was passed by all the colonial Parliaments granting a subsidy to an
+auxiliary Australasian naval squadron, although parliamentary vicissitudes
+robbed him of the honour of passing the bill in his own State until 1891.
+He is also entitled to the credit of making provision for the administration
+of British New Guinea by Queensland.</p>
+
+<p>In April, 1888, Parliament was dissolved, and when the new
+Parliament met in June the enfeebled Griffith Government were promptly
+ejected from office. Sir Thomas McIlwraith came in with a strong
+following, and he at once formed a Ministry which seemed likely to
+endure for several years. But at the close of the first session Sir Thomas
+retired from the Premiership with a view to visiting England on business.
+Mr. Boyd Dunlop Morehead then succeeded to the leadership. In September,
+1889, Sir Thomas McIlwraith resigned his seat in the Ministry,
+and the following session he appeared in the Assembly as an open opponent
+of his late colleagues. To make provision for a revenue deficit, the
+Government brought down a proposal for a general property tax. This
+quickly brought Sir Thomas McIlwraith into concerted action with Sir
+Samuel Griffith, then leading the Opposition, and caused the resignation of
+the Ministry in August, 1890. Almost immediately the Griffith-McIlwraith
+Ministry was announced. A year or two earlier such a fusion of parties
+would have been deemed impossible, but the two leaders had fought away
+their mutual differences, and the financial outlook was so alarming that the
+coalition was generally admitted to be imperative. The new Government
+carried many important measures, and effected material improvement in
+the finances.</p>
+
+<p>In March, 1893, just before the banking catastrophe occurred, Sir
+Samuel Griffith accepted the Chief Justiceship, and Sir Thomas
+McIlwraith assumed the Premiership. A dissolution followed, the Government
+securing a commanding majority in the new Assembly. But the
+Premier's health failed, and in October following his Ministry was merged
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page27" id="page27"></a>27</span>
+into that of Mr. (afterwards Sir) Hugh Nelson. Sir Thomas retained
+office without portfolio until March, 1895, when his connection with the
+Government ceased, though he retained his seat as a member of the House
+until the dissolution in 1896. After resigning office he left the colony, and
+died in England on 17th July, 1900.</p>
+
+<p>The new Premier proved a most capable financier, and although the
+depression in financial, commercial, and industrial affairs continued with
+great intensity he turned successive deficits into annual surpluses, and was
+soon enabled to negotiate loans in the London money market on unprecedently
+favourable terms. In April, 1898, Sir Hugh Nelson resigned
+Ministerial office and accepted the President's chair in the Legislative
+Council, that post having just become vacant by the death of Sir Arthur
+Palmer. Mr. Thomas Joseph Byrnes succeeded to the Premiership, and
+with Mr. Robert Philp as Treasurer it appeared as though the reconstructed
+Government had before it a life of several years. Five months
+afterwards, however, the young, brilliant, and much-esteemed Premier was
+removed by death, and Mr. Dickson was called to the Premiership. Fifteen
+months later the Dickson Government suffered defeat, and resigned office.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Anderson Dawson, the Labour leader in the Assembly, being sent
+for, assumed the Premiership with six other Labour colleagues, but was
+defeated immediately he met Parliament a few days later, and resigned.</p>
+
+<p>He was succeeded by Mr. Philp, who assumed office on 7th December,
+1899. There had been a drought in most parts of the West for a year or
+two previously, but wool prices were high, and better seasons were
+anticipated. The country had almost recovered from the blow sustained in
+1893. Federation threatened some loss of revenue, but compensation was
+looked for in the enhanced prosperity resulting from interstate <ins title="Transcriber's Note: Original reads 'freetrade'">free trade</ins>.
+But for the two first years of the twentieth century there was everywhere
+in the State a very deficient rainfall, and in most inland parts absolute
+droughts. The double loss to the Treasury through Federation and
+parsimonious Nature was very serious. Mr. Philp made reductions in
+public service expenditure, but kept loan expenditure at the normal level,
+sanguine that when the change came there would be a swift recovery,
+and hesitating to add to the depression by suspending the construction
+of railways and other public works. Though by the end of June, 1903,
+the accumulated deficit exceeded a million sterling, and the general
+election of 1902 had given the Government a rather diminished
+majority, there appeared to be no apprehension of a crisis even when
+Parliament met for its second session in July, 1903. But the weight
+of successive deficits and the protracted tenure of the "Continuous
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page28" id="page28"></a>28</span>
+Ministry" inspired a general desire for change; and, in September, Mr.
+Philp suddenly found himself without adequate support as the result of a
+number of influential Government supporters joining forces with the
+members of the Labour party.</p>
+
+<p>A new Ministry was at once formed, the Speaker, Mr. Arthur
+Morgan, resigning the chair and assuming the Premiership, Mr. William
+Kidston joining him as Treasurer. With a policy of retrenchment and
+reform the new Administration entered upon its career sustained by
+a strong backing of public opinion. Retrenchment had already been
+initiated by the late Government, and it was continued by Mr. Morgan and
+his colleagues. The bottom of the depression having been touched with the
+break-up of the drought, the financial year 1903-4 closed with a merely
+nominal deficit. In the next session, which opened in May, 1904, the
+Government encountered so much opposition that a dissolution was granted
+in July. So strongly were the constituencies in favour of the retention of
+office by Ministers that their party numbered 55 in a House of 72 when
+the new Parliament met in September, and the Government in that and the
+three following sessions were accordingly able to carry many of their
+measures of reform.</p>
+
+<p>In January, 1906, the death of Sir Hugh Nelson created a vacancy in
+the Presidency of the Legislative Council. The Premier, who had earned
+a reputation during his four years' occupancy of the Speaker's chair for an
+intimate and comprehensive knowledge of parliamentary procedure, was
+generally designated as peculiarly fitted to succeed to the position of
+President; and, having resigned both the Premiership and his seat as a
+member of the Assembly, he was translated to the Legislative Council.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Kidston then became Premier. On the 11th of April, 1907, the
+Assembly's term having almost expired by effluxion of time, a dissolution
+took place, and a general election followed. The two chief objects for
+which the coalition between Liberals and Labour members had been
+brought about in 1903&mdash;sound financial administration and electoral
+reform&mdash;having
+been secured, disintegration had commenced to set in in the
+Government ranks. On the one hand some of the Liberals were desirous of
+reunion with their former associates led by Mr. Philp, and on the other
+the more extreme section of the Labour party adopted a socialistic
+platform, thereby causing their more moderate colleagues who followed
+Mr. Kidston to break with them before the election. The respective
+manifestoes of the Premier and the leader of the Opposition, issued some
+weeks before the dissolution, were found to embody practically the same
+policy in so far as vital measures of legislation were concerned. Both
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page29" id="page29"></a>29</span>
+emphasised the necessity of having in office a Ministry possessing the steadfast
+support of a united following if full effect were to be given to their
+programme. The result was disappointing, for when the new House met
+in July the Philp party numbered 29, the Government party 25, and
+the Labour party 18. After a fight over the choice of the Speaker and
+Chairman of Committees, the Labour members gave a general support to
+the Government, but comparatively little progress could be made in consequence
+of the uncertainty of that support. The Legislative Council rejected
+several measures which both the Government and the Labour party were
+very anxious to see placed on the Statute-book. With a view to taking
+concerted action to overcome the veto of the Council on democratic legislation,
+Mr. Kidston made overtures to the Labour party for an offensive
+and defensive alliance in Parliament and at the polls. The Labour party
+replied that they were unable to give any assurance on the subject. Mr.
+Kidston then advised His Excellency, Lord Chelmsford, to recognise the
+principle that there resided in the Crown the power to nominate to the
+Legislative Council such a number of new members as might be required
+to overcome obstruction, and that the power should be exercised if, in the
+opinion of His Excellency's responsible advisers, such a course became
+necessary. The Governor declined to accept this advice, and the Premier
+resigned on 12th November.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 600px;"><a href="images/page028a-1200.jpg"><img src="images/page028a-600.jpg" width="600" height="163" alt="ROCKHAMPTON 1. Quay Street, from the North Side." /></a>
+<p class="center">ROCKHAMPTON 1. Quay Street, from the North Side.</p></div>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 600px;"><a href="images/page028b-900.jpg"><img src="images/page028b-600.jpg" width="600" height="420" alt="ROCKHAMPTON 2. Custom House, Quay Street." /></a>
+<p class="center">ROCKHAMPTON 2. Custom House, Quay Street.</p></div>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 600px;"><a href="images/page028c-900.jpg"><img src="images/page028c-600.jpg" width="600" height="417" alt="ROCKHAMPTON 3. East Street." /></a>
+<p class="center">ROCKHAMPTON 3. East Street.</p></div>
+
+<p>Mr. Philp, being sent for by His Excellency, formed a Ministry,
+which was at once met in the Assembly by successive votes of want
+of confidence, the members of the Labour party uniting with the late
+Ministerialists in the divisions. A dissolution was granted, even though
+the House refused to vote Supply to the Government, and early in the new
+year (1908) a general election took place, Mr. Philp losing four seats,
+the Labour party gaining that number, while the Kidston party were
+again returned with the same following. The effect was that the Philp
+and Kidston parties each numbered 25 and the Labour members
+22. As the two latter parties had in most cases assisted one another at
+the elections, the Philp Government resigned, and Mr. Kidston being
+recalled found his position practically unchanged, so far as relative numbers
+were concerned, and yet greatly strengthened as regards the constitutional
+reform he desired to effect. A short session was at once held. A reform
+of the Constitution limiting the vetoing power of the Legislative Council
+by providing for a referendum on any measure which the Council rejected
+twice, and also a number of democratic measures rejected by the Council
+in the two preceding sessions, were passed with the aid of the Labour
+party. When, however, the Government turned to legislation affecting the
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page30" id="page30"></a>30</span>
+material progress of the State, and introduced two bills to authorise the
+construction of railways to mineral fields (to Mount Elliott in the Cloncurry
+copper area and to Lawn Hills in the Gulf district) on agreements
+made with two private companies who undertook to provide in one case
+one-half and in the other case three-fourths of the capital required, despite
+the fact that the railways were to be constructed, worked, and managed by
+the Railway Commissioner, that the companies were to receive no interest
+on the money they advanced until the railways earned it, and that when at
+the end of fifteen years the Government repaid the advance the companies
+were only to receive a sum equal to what their investment was then
+earning capitalised at 3&frac12; per cent., the bills were obstructed by the
+Labour party, and were only passed with the assistance of the Philp party,
+under the closure, the Estimates being forced through by the same means
+at the close of the session. Before leaving on a mission to England, Mr.
+Kidston publicly intimated that he could no longer work with the Labour
+party. He returned in October, and the Philp party, recognising the
+mischievous futility of three-party government, agreed to accept the programme
+enunciated by Mr. Kidston at the election in 1907, and to join the
+Ministerial party, the Premier being granted a free hand, both by his
+colleagues and followers, in reconstructing the Government.</p>
+
+<p>The fusion of the two parties led to the immediate resignation of two
+Ministers and the formation of an Independent Opposition by these gentlemen
+and four more seceders from the Kidston party. A reconstruction of
+the Cabinet followed, three members of the Philp party taking office under
+Mr. Kidston. Mr. Philp declined to accept a portfolio, but undertook to
+give the new Government support as an unofficial member of the Assembly,
+an undertaking most loyally observed. Dissatisfaction was naturally felt
+by several members at the composition of the Cabinet, and when Parliament
+met on 17th November it was evident that the fusion had not had the
+desired effect of reducing the number of parties to two. On the Opposition
+side of the Chamber were the Labour party in direct opposition and the
+Independent Opposition of six sitting on the cross-benches, while on the
+Government back cross-benches were three or four members who joined
+forces with the Opposition in every division. The cohesive majority was
+still large enough to enable the Government to pass several railways, two or
+three bills, and the Estimates; but, unfortunately, it was found necessary to
+have recourse again to the closure to get the Estimates through the House
+before Christmas.</p>
+
+<p>Further defections took place during the recess. The sudden death of
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page31" id="page31"></a>31</span>
+the Speaker, Mr. John Leahy, and the election for Bulloo of a Labour
+member in his stead, reduced the Government majority to two. Such a
+condition of affairs rendered it impossible for any party in the House to
+carry on public business. A trial of strength took place over the election
+of a Speaker when the House met on 29th June, the Government having a
+majority of two. Two days later Mr. Bowman, the leader of the Labour
+party, moved a want of confidence amendment on the Address in Reply.
+A very protracted and acrimonious debate took place, and the motion
+was only defeated by a majority of one in a full House. Arrangements
+had been made earlier in the year for the holding of a conference of
+Commonwealth and State Premiers and Treasurers with a view to making
+a final effort to arrive at a mutual understanding regarding the financial
+relations of the Commonwealth and the States after the expiry of the ten-year
+period provided for by section 87 of the Commonwealth Constitution.
+As it was considered highly important that Queensland should be represented
+at this Conference, which was to be held in mid-August, the
+Government secured an adjournment for a fortnight, but only by applying
+the closure.</p>
+
+<p>The Conference came to a unanimous agreement with regard to the
+future division of the surplus Customs and Excise revenue, justifying the
+determination of the Government of this State to be represented. But the
+efforts of the Opposition to defeat the proposal of the Government to
+adjourn furnished additional evidence, if any were needed, that no business
+could be done in a House so evenly divided. When the Premier returned
+from the Conference, which had been held in Melbourne, after consultation
+with his party, he advised the Lieutenant-Governor to dissolve the
+Assembly, provided it agreed to grant temporary Supply. His Excellency
+accepted Mr. Kidston's advice, but stipulated that the Supply must be for
+the shortest time in which it was possible to hold an election and summon
+the new Parliament. After another fight, the Government closured through
+an Appropriation Bill covering Supply for ten weeks, and the House was
+dissolved on 31st August, the election being fixed for 2nd October.</p>
+
+<p>The result of the appeal to the country has been to bring about a
+practical restoration of two-party government, an ideal for which the
+Ministerialists have been striving ever since the session of 1906. The
+Government have won 41 seats and the Labour party 27, while the Independent
+Opposition, which went out 12 strong, have been reduced to 4. The
+Government have thus a majority of ten over the combined Opposition
+parties, and should be able to carry to a successful issue their policy of
+railway construction, immigration, and land settlement, and to steer the
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page32" id="page32"></a>32</span>
+State through the temporary difficulties arising from the pending rearrangement
+of the financial relations between the Commonwealth and the component
+States.</p>
+
+<p>It may be of interest to add that the last was the seventeenth
+Parliament of Queensland, which gives to each an average of about three
+years, the present maximum statutory term of the Legislative Assembly.
+The explanation is, of course, that in the earlier years of the colony
+the limit of the Assembly life-term was five years. As already stated,
+the Legislative Council when first constituted comprised 15 members.
+Since then the number has been periodically increased to correspond
+with the enlargement of the other Chamber. The present number of
+members of the Council is 44. Until 1865 the number of members
+of the Assembly was 26; thence till 1873 it was 32; thence till 1875
+it was 42, increased in 1875 by the creation of the electorate of Cook
+to 43, at which number it remained until 1879, when there were 55
+members. In 1886 the number was increased to 59, and in 1887 to 72, at
+which it still remains. Payment of members of the Assembly was first
+sanctioned in 1886 by an allowance of two guineas a day for attendance,
+and 1s. 6d. a mile for travelling expenses, the total in any one year for
+attendance not to exceed £200. In 1889 the payment was fixed at £300
+a year, with a mileage allowance for one journey to and fro each session,
+unless where an adjournment exceeded thirty days, when mileage was
+again payable. In 1892 the salary was reduced to £150 a year. In 1896 it
+was again raised to £300, at which amount it still remains. The members
+of the Legislative Council receive no payment.</p>
+
+<p>In the foregoing sketch of the Legislature of Queensland many
+omissions will probably be detected by the careful reader. But as a rule
+mention of the names of public men has had to be confined to Premiers
+and such other Ministers or members to whom for some usually apparent
+reason it is necessary to give prominence. Had space permitted, many
+interesting character sketches of prominent men of the past, as well as of
+the present, might have been written; and it must not be forgotten that
+some of the services most worth recording have been rendered by men
+whose names have not become household words, and whose reward has
+been found in the lifelong consciousness that they have unobtrusively done
+their duty to the State. Enough has probably been said to prove that
+responsible government in Queensland, initiated among a mere handful of
+people fifty years ago, and carried on amidst discouraging difficulties until
+to-day, has been attended by results of which no patriotic subject of the
+King need feel ashamed.</p>
+
+<p class="footnote"><a id="footnoteii1a" name="footnoteii1a"></a><a class="footnote" href="#footnotetagii1a">Footnote a:</a>
+An interesting incident occurred at the opening of the second session. The Speaker
+announced the receipt of a writ of election endorsing the return of the Right Honourable John
+Bright as member for Kennedy. As Mr. Bright had not been present during the preceding
+session&mdash;which had only lasted from 26th April till 4th May&mdash;the seat was declared vacant. This
+was not the first instance of an Australian constituency voluntarily disfranchising itself by
+electing a prominent British statesman by way of protest against some real or fancied injustice.
+</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 600px; margin-top: 2em;"><a href="images/page032-1200.jpg"><img src="images/page032-600.jpg" width="600" height="361" alt="TOWNSVILLE: FLINDERS STREET, LOKING WEST" /></a>
+<p class="center">TOWNSVILLE: FLINDERS STREET, LOOKING WEST</p></div>
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page33" id="page33"></a>33</span>
+
+<h2 style="margin-top: 2em;">CHAPTER II.</h2>
+
+<h3>PUBLIC FINANCE (1859-1884).</h3>
+
+<blockquote><p class="ind">
+<span class="outdent1">
+Importance of Sound Finance</span>.&mdash;A Great Colony Starts upon a Bank Overdraft.&mdash;First Year's
+ Revenue.&mdash;Land Sales as Revenue.&mdash;Deficits in First Decade.&mdash;Transfer of Loan Moneys
+ to Revenue to Balance Accounts.&mdash;Heavy Public Works Expenditure.&mdash;Crisis of 1866.&mdash;Inconvertible
+ Paper Currency Proposals.&mdash;Flotation of Treasury Bills.&mdash;Higher Customs
+ Duties.&mdash;Wiping Out a Deficit by Issue of Debentures.&mdash;Transfer of Surplus to Surplus
+ Revenue Account to Recoup Loan Fund.&mdash;Incidental Protection.&mdash;Railway Land Reserves.&mdash;Proceeds
+ Used as Ordinary Revenue.&mdash;Three-million Loan.&mdash;Condition of Affairs at
+ Close of First Quarter-Century.&mdash;Phenomenal Progress; Prospects Bright.
+</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>Sound finance is the sheet anchor of any Government, whether
+despotic or democratic. Without a prudent guiding hand at the Treasury
+the ship of State might as well be rudderless. In the fifty years of
+Queensland history financial mistakes have been made, from which much
+public loss as well as individual suffering has resulted. If those mistakes,
+or some of them, are laid bare in this book, the object is not to reflect upon
+Governments or individual Ministers, but to treasure the lessons thus
+taught for future use.</p>
+
+<p>Queensland began its career with a bank overdraft, for with "7&frac12;d.
+in the Treasury" on the date of the Queen's proclamation of the colony it
+was necessary to provide funds in anticipation of revenue collections. But
+at the outset borrowing was indulged in on a modest scale. For 1860 the
+revenue was £178,589, and the deficit only £1,514. For the second year
+there was a revenue surplus of £2,442 over the expenditure of £235,796.
+But there had been during the period an outlay of £63,210 on loan account.
+Besides this, of the total revenue for the two-year period&mdash;including the
+twenty-one days of 1859&mdash;the cash receipts from land sales, which strict
+political economists hold to be capital, were £114,803, equal to 27 per cent.
+of the total revenue. It may be assumed that the loan expenditure was
+entirely for permanent or reproductive works; but only 73 per cent. of
+the money spent for the service of the year was strictly revenue, the
+remainder arising from land sales. Yet as New South Wales practice had
+lent sanction to the use of land sales receipts as revenue, the Treasurer
+(Mr. R. R. Mackenzie) may be admitted to have managed well, since at
+the outset the estimates of revenue and expenditure were both wholly
+conjectural. Mr. Mackenzie's successors were less fortunate; for during
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page34" id="page34"></a>34</span>
+the first decade, although the annual revenue had quadrupled, there were
+only two years with surpluses.</p>
+
+<p>There was another scarcely defensible transaction during the first
+ten years' term. In 1864 the Treasurer, finding he would otherwise have
+a relatively heavy deficit, balanced his budget by transferring from
+Loan Fund to Revenue the total expenditure incurred upon immigration
+since the foundation of the colony. In that year the loan outlay was
+£401,421, including the transfer to revenue, an increase of £337,950 in a
+single year. Thus the loan expenditure was at the rate of about £5 10s.
+per head of the population as ascertained by the census of the year. The
+deficit of 1864 seems less excusable because the revenue had increased
+by over 25 per cent. for the year. The incident illustrates the danger of
+suddenly increasing loan expenditure, which produces industrial and commercial
+activity, but at once adds to the cost of public administration
+in various ways. Loan money spent on the same scale per capita in
+Queensland to-day as in 1864 would mean a total sum of about £3,000,000
+a year, whereas, even with the numerous railways lately started, the loan
+disbursements for 1908-9 did not quite reach 1&frac14; millions. Another
+consideration
+is that up to 1865 none of the loan works had become reproductive,
+and the 21&frac14; miles of railway then open for traffic did not earn
+working expenses. Further, the Government had been borrowing at 6
+per cent. interest, which meant that the 1&frac14; millions of loan indebtedness
+at the end of 1865 imposed a burden upon the taxpayers of about £75,000 a
+year, or not far from £1 per head of the population.</p>
+
+<p>In 1866, the time of the great crisis, the revenue expenditure increased
+by £241,690, creating a deficit of £200,653 for the year. The loan
+expenditure for the year was £965,346, bringing the total debt up to
+£2,214,123, equal to over £23 per head of the population. The total
+expenditure for the year, including loan, reached nearly £17 per head.
+It is not surprising that a mere handful of people, plunging into
+debt at that reckless speed, found their credit suddenly shattered. In
+1869, the last year of the decade, though the revenue had advanced
+to nearly three-quarters of a million, there was a deficit for the year of
+£37,217. For the ten years the net accumulated revenue deficit was
+£386,527, and the aggregate indebtedness nearly 3&frac14; millions. The interest
+charge was then about £225,000 per annum, and the entire weight
+of it fell upon consolidated revenue. The population being 109,897, the
+interest burden was at the rate of over £2 per head. It may here be
+remarked that in 1907-8 it was only £2 16s. 9d. per head, less railway net
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page35" id="page35"></a>35</span>
+earnings of about £1 12s., reducing the net burden to about £1 5s. per
+head. Recurring to the debacle of 1866, it should be mentioned that
+the catastrophe was largely due to the failure of the Agra Bank, when
+all railway works were suddenly suspended, and the colony was plunged
+into the depths of extreme depression. During the two preceding years the
+loan expenditure had been largely in excess of revenue disbursements, no
+less than £685,246 of borrowed money having been spent in 1865. This
+was at the rate of nearly £8 per head of the total population, and its sudden
+cessation threatened thousands of the people of the colony with ruin. For
+not only had their sources of income been suddenly cut off, and landed
+property become almost valueless, but increased taxation had to be imposed.</p>
+
+<p>Yet the catastrophe was not wholly the fault of the Government. It
+was the consequence of the monetary and commercial crisis in the
+mother country in 1866. The Sydney branch of the Agra and Masterman's
+Bank had engaged to furnish £50,000 monthly to the Queensland Government
+for the prosecution of railways and other reproductive works pending
+the negotiation of the loan authorised by Parliament. The bank was
+of good standing, and under ordinary conditions its contract would have
+amply secured the position of the Treasury. Its failure could not have
+been foreseen; but the incident proves the unwisdom of a Government
+leaning upon any banking institution for heavy advances which can
+only be made on the assumption that normal deposits are maintained. In
+Queensland the position was intensified by the proposal of the Macalister
+Government to issue inconvertible legal tender notes, because it gave
+countenance to the economic fallacy that any Government can make money
+to an indefinable amount with the aid of the printing press. The resignation
+of Ministers because their advice had been refused by the Governor shook
+for the moment the very foundations of authority; and had not Mr.
+Herbert's services been available on the eve of his departure for England
+the consequences might have been grave indeed. But he consented to take
+office without portfolio for a few days with several other members, and, by
+getting authority from Parliament to issue Treasury bills, he saved the
+country from financial chaos. As it was, the ordeal proved a severe test of
+the loyalty of the people of the colony.</p>
+
+<p>On the establishment of Queensland a Customs tariff imposing light
+revenue duties was inherited from New South Wales. Under it spirits
+bore a duty of only 7s. per gallon. In 1865 the Treasurer, Mr. (afterwards
+Sir) Joshua Peter Bell, introduced a bill to raise the spirit duties by 3s. per
+gallon, and the duty on other intoxicants in proportion. The bill passed the
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page36" id="page36"></a>36</span>
+second reading without debate, for it must have been felt that with the
+rapidly increasing interest charge further taxation ought years before to
+have been imposed. After the crisis of 1866 had subsided, further increased
+duties for temporary purposes were passed, as were also stamp duties, so
+that the revenue for the following year, despite the depression, showed the
+important increment of about £120,000. Happily the Crocodile goldfield,
+near Rockhampton, was discovered towards the close of 1866, and the
+Gympie goldfield during the next succeeding year. Hence for the
+remainder of the decade revenue, despite prolonged stagnation in business,
+steadily, if not rapidly, increased.</p>
+
+<p>In 1869 authority had been obtained from Parliament to liquidate the
+accumulated deficits by the issue of Treasury bills for the sum of £350,000,
+the increased duties of Customs imposed for temporary purposes in 1866
+being at the same time continued for twelve months. In January, 1872, the
+Treasurer (Mr. Bell) referred in committee of the Assembly to the
+accumulated deficit, stating that the Treasury bills which had temporarily
+provided for it were falling due, and that there was no hope of paying the
+amount out of revenue. He therefore announced the intention of the
+Government to retire the bills and fund the debt by issuing long-dated
+debentures. That having been done, the effect was to produce a surplus
+for the year 1872 of £487,333. This indicated that had the Government
+exhibited a little more confidence the whole amount of the deficit might
+have been paid off out of revenue; for in the next year, shortly before the
+Palmer Government went out of office, a further surplus of £158,874 was
+realised. This sum, with the excess surplus of £137,333 for the preceding
+year, totalled £296,207, leaving only £53,793 short of the entire amount of
+the Treasury bills. In the next year there would have been a surplus, but
+the Macalister Ministry, which assumed office early in January, 1874&mdash;Mr.
+William Hemmant being Treasurer&mdash;carried £240,000 to a surplus revenue
+account, and ended the year with a revenue deficit of £200,762. While the
+revenue of that year only increased by £40,913, the expenditure, in addition
+to the surplus revenue item, increased by £160,550. The Macalister
+Ministry could not keep down expenditure, and in 1875-6&mdash;the end of the
+financial year having been changed from December to June&mdash;with a revenue
+slightly exceeding 1&frac14; millions, they had a further deficit of £51,663. The
+same party continued in power for a further two years under the leadership
+successively of Mr. George Thorn and Mr. John Douglas. Revenue
+continued fairly elastic, and the deficit period was followed by two years
+showing small surpluses.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 600px;"><a href="images/page036a-1200.jpg"><img src="images/page036a-600.jpg" width="600" height="181" alt="HINCHINBROOK CHANNEL, NORTH QUEENSLAND" /></a>
+<p class="center">HINCHINBROOK CHANNEL, NORTH QUEENSLAND</p></div>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 600px;"><a href="images/page036b-1200.jpg"><img src="images/page036b-600.jpg" width="600" height="181" alt="THE NARROWS AND MOUNT LARCOMBE, NEAR GLADSTONE" /></a>
+<p class="center">THE NARROWS AND MOUNT LARCOMBE, NEAR GLADSTONE</p></div>
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page37" id="page37"></a>37</span>
+
+<p>Early in 1879 the McIlwraith Ministry assumed office, at a time when,
+as the Premier himself admitted in his Budget speech of 1880, the
+colony was "emerging from a state of depression induced by three bad
+seasons of an extraordinary character," so that the year 1878-9 closed
+with the considerable deficit of £216,808. This was partly due, however,
+to the operation of the Western Railway Act and the Railway Reserves
+Act, by which the most saleable land in the colony had been included in
+railway reserves, and the proceeds of sales, instead of as previously going
+into consolidated revenue, were placed to the credit of a special fund. Mr.
+(afterwards Sir Thomas) McIlwraith while in opposition had predicted
+that this course would produce a revenue deficit; consequently on attaining
+office he induced Parliament to sanction the transfer of all these sums,
+totalling £382,346, to consolidated revenue. Mr. McIlwraith argued that it
+would be impossible to construct a tithe of the railways needed in different
+parts of the colony out of the proceeds of land sales, and that it would be
+sufficient if the interest on railways, until they became fully reproductive,
+were defrayed from that source. Parliament accepted that view, and
+forthwith authorised a loan of 3 millions for a comprehensive schedule of
+railways proposed by the Government in 1879-80. Between August, 1879,
+and May, 1883, loans amounting to £5,553,000 were floated and a further
+sum of £1,233,000 was authorised, but not placed on the market. During
+the McIlwraith Administration of 1879-83 the revenue increased from
+rather less than 1&frac12; millions to 2&frac12; millions. The period was characterised
+by two deficits and three surpluses, showing accumulated surpluses of
+£272,412, without taking into account the sum of £382,346 transferred to
+revenue. During these years the colony was prosperous, the fair seasons,
+large loan expenditure, the establishment of the British-India service
+<i>via</i>
+Torres Strait, and the free introduction of immigrants, all combining to
+push the country along the path of progress; but prosperity had compelled
+a <i>pro rata</i> increase of expenditure.</p>
+
+<p>At the end of the quarter-century in 1884 the public debt was
+£16,570,850, on which the interest charge was £701,565. Of this amount
+£9,417,318 expended on railways was earning £2 18s. per cent. The
+length of lines open for traffic totalled 1,207 miles. The population was
+309,913. About £2,350,000 had been spent on immigration, of which
+nearly a third of a million had come from revenue, £1,778,000 from loan,
+and the rest from "special receipts"&mdash;partly contributions from immigrants.
+The year's imports were of the declared value of £6,381,976, and the
+exports £4,673,864. Joint stock bank assets exceeded 11 millions, liabilities
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page38" id="page38"></a>38</span>
+were nearly 7&frac34; millions, deposits exceeded 6 millions, and savings bank
+deposits were over 1 million. Of cattle there were 4&frac14; millions, of sheep
+less than 9&frac12; millions, while horses numbered 253,116. There were 6,979
+miles of telegraph line constructed. There were over 7 million acres of
+land alienated, which had produced over 4&frac34; millions sterling of revenue.
+The value of minerals won for the year was £1,325,624. There were 528
+schools with 60,701 scholars, 5,185 subscribers to public libraries, and
+60,257 volumes. Comparing these figures with those of 1860 it will be
+seen that, despite droughts, floods, and financial crises, the progress
+attained had been phenomenal.</p>
+
+<p>Thus in a financial aspect the first quarter-century closed glowingly,
+despite a severe Western drought in 1883. There had been rapid and
+apparently solid progression, and the disasters of 1866, which seemed at
+the time to threaten the solvency of Government and people alike, had
+become an unpleasant memory&mdash;a catastrophe very unlikely to recur for
+various reasons, among them being that the railways were beginning
+greatly to facilitate transport, as well as to show considerable net earnings;
+while instead of the Government borrowing at 6 per cent., as formerly,
+money in abundance could be got at 3&frac12; per cent. Moreover, mortgage
+loans and bank overdrafts bore a greatly reduced rate of interest.</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page39" id="page39"></a>39</span>
+
+<h2 style="margin-top: 2em;">CHAPTER III.</h2>
+
+<h3>PUBLIC FINANCE (1884-1893).</h3>
+
+<blockquote><p class="ind">
+<span class="outdent1">
+The Ten-million Loan</span>.&mdash;Ministers Practically Granted Control of Five Years' Loan Money.&mdash;Vigorous
+ Railway Policy.&mdash;Effect of Over-spending.&mdash;Inflation of Values.&mdash;Increased
+ Taxation.&mdash;Succession of Deficits.&mdash;Second McIlwraith Ministry.&mdash;A Protectionist Tariff.&mdash;Temporary
+ Increase of Revenue.&mdash;Heavy Contraction in 1890.&mdash;Another Big Loan;
+ Failure of Flotation.&mdash;The First Underwritten Australian Loan.&mdash;Amended Audit Act
+ Limiting Spending Power of Government.
+</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>At the end of 1883 the Griffith Ministry succeeded to office with a
+strong following. It was early in March, 1884, that the Appropriation and
+Loan Acts for 1883-4 became law, but the regular session of the year did
+not begin until 7th July. It was in this session that the Government
+introduced their colossal railway extension scheme, and their famous
+"Ten-million Loan Act"&mdash;actually, however, the amount was £9,980,000.
+This sum was to be spent during the following five years, which meant
+that the members of the Assembly voted in a lump sum, and on an
+unprecedented scale, the loan expenditure for the maximum term of the
+Parliament. The effect was also to ensure the life of the Ministry for the
+same term, as it was intended to expend about 2 millions sterling a year, or
+about £6 10s. per annum per head of the population. This was equal to
+about three-fourths of the total consolidated revenue for 1884.</p>
+
+<p>The Ministry no doubt meant well, and their preparation of a
+schedule of works to extend over five years was in the abstract commendable.
+But the expenditure of so much loan money provoked inflation
+in values, and led to unhealthy speculation in land. Although Ministers
+did not in any one year quite reach their 2-million conventional limit of
+loan outlay, the 10 millions were exhausted soon after their retirement
+from office, and a further loan had to be authorised to finish their
+uncompleted works. While such railways as the "Via Recta" (Ipswich to
+Warwick) and the Cloncurry to the Gulf lines were both on the 1884 loan
+schedule&mdash;the amount set down for each being £500,000&mdash;they have never
+been even commenced to this day, a quarter of a century since they were
+passed by the Assembly. Other lines then authorised absorbed more than
+the amount voted, and necessarily had afterwards to be completed to make
+them reproductive.</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page40" id="page40"></a>40</span>
+
+<p>The revenue not proving as expansive as the necessities of the
+Treasury required, an Act passed in 1885 imposed 5 per cent. ad valorem
+duties upon most kinds of industrial machinery, increased the spirit duties
+to 12s. per gallon, and levied upon log and undressed timber a duty of 1s.
+per 100 feet superficial and upon dressed timber of 1s. 6d. per 100 feet. In
+the following year the ad valorem duties were increased to 7&frac12; per cent.,
+except as to machinery, which remained at 5 per cent.; but small levies like
+these were as drops in the bucket by comparison with the constantly
+expanding needs of the Treasurer.</p>
+
+<p>The 10-million loan schedule did not exhaust the list of what were
+deemed necessary works. In 1886 a special Act was passed appropriating
+£123,000, to be raised by Treasury bills having a term of five years, for the
+duplication of the Brisbane-Ipswich railway, and the completion of the
+lines from Mackay to Eton and Hamilton, and from Ravenswood Junction
+to Ravenswood, respectively. In the year following an Act was passed
+authorising the issue of further Treasury bills amounting to £349,834 for
+the construction of eight small lines, and the extension of the Brisbane and
+Southport line, with a branch to Beaudesert, thus bringing the railways
+and works loan schedule of the Griffith Ministry up to £10,452,834.</p>
+
+<p>By the advent of the financial year 1888-9, most intelligent public men
+felt gravely disturbed. The bank deposits, which had been trebled in a
+decade, had to earn interest on the additional 7 millions of money held and
+advanced. When the Griffith Ministry retired from office in June, 1888,
+they had recorded four successive annual deficits aggregating £968,313,
+although between 1884-5 and 1887-8 the revenue had increased by
+£456,861, and there had been spent over 1&frac34; millions of loan money per
+annum in addition. During the year 1888-9, after Sir Thomas McIlwraith
+assumed office, the expenditure increased by £128,922, but he obtained a
+revenue increase of about £437,000. This increase chiefly arose from the
+heavier duties levied under the protectionist Customs tariff of 1888; but in
+1889-90 there was an almost equivalent shrinkage in both Customs and
+total revenue. Bad times partly accounted for the subsequent inelasticity
+of Customs receipts, for not until 1895-6 were the total revenue figures of
+1888-9 again touched.</p>
+
+<p>The year 1889-90 was characterised by a deficit of £483,979, for the
+drop of £402,857 in revenue and the increase of £197,969 in expenditure
+dislocated the finances, and caused the retirement of the Morehead Government
+after an ineffectual attempt to impose a general tax of 5 per
+cent. on all property, both real and personal. The coalition Griffith-McIlwraith</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 400px;"><a href="images/page040-900.jpg"><img src="images/page040-300.jpg" width="300" height="498" alt="BARRON GORGE, BELOW THE FALLS, CAIRNS RAILWAY" /></a>
+<p class="center1">BARRON GORGE, BELOW THE FALLS, CAIRNS RAILWAY</p></div>
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page41" id="page41"></a>41</span>
+<p>Administration followed, but could not in such a time of value
+shrinkages materially increase revenue, while expenditure was thought to
+be irreducible. Despite a Loan Act for 1&frac12; millions passed in 1888-9, to
+provide for works temporarily met by floating Treasury bills during the
+two preceding years, another large loan was authorised in 1890, its total
+being nearly 3&frac34; millions sterling. This money was needed to retire
+debentures maturing on 1st July, 1891, amounting to £1,170,950, and no
+less than £422,850 deficiency loss on the loans of 1882, 1884, and 1889,
+thus leaving little more than 2 millions for railway and harbour works.
+This 3&frac34; million Loan Act did not receive the Royal assent until December,
+1890, and the stock was issued a few months later at a most unfortunate
+time. The monetary tension which culminated in 1893 was already felt in
+the London market, and the credit of Queensland had become much
+impaired by the fact that during the preceding decade (1880-81 to 1889-90)
+the colony's obligations had increased by £16,706,834, bringing the funded
+public debt up to £28,105,684&mdash;nearly £70 per head of the population&mdash;while
+railway net earnings were steadily dwindling.</p>
+
+<p>The cable soon flashed the unwelcome news that only £1,554,834 was
+subscribed. After some difficulty a Stock Exchange syndicate was formed
+to underwrite £1,182,400 of the balance, the price realised for the whole
+amount taken up averaging £87 6s. 1d. per £100 of 3&frac12; per cent. stock.
+Thus the net proceeds of the loan of £3,704,800 were only £3,234,376, a
+depreciation loss of £470,424. The interest charge on this new loan was
+£129,668; so that the interest, while nominally 3&frac12; per cent., was really just
+4 per cent. on the money received, and, in addition, at due date (1930),
+£470,424 depreciation will have to be made good. But the tragedy did not
+end there, for the money borrowed, or the greater part of it, had not
+reached the Treasury in 1893, but ranked among the "suspended bank
+deposits" which then paralysed both Government and private depositors.</p>
+
+<p>That the time chosen for going on the money market was not opportune
+may be gathered from the fact that in 1889 Queensland 3&frac12; per cent.
+stock had brought £96 0s. 11d. per £100, and in 1894&mdash;three years after
+the forced sale at £87 6s. 1d. in 1891&mdash;an issue of our stock of the same
+denomination brought £98 14s. 0&frac14;d. per £100. It may be noted that the
+Queensland loan of 1890-91 was the first underwritten Government loan
+issued by an Australian colony, though since that time all Government
+loans have been underwritten. Heavy as our sacrifice in 1891 may have
+been, it was infinitely less disastrous than making default must have
+proved; and perhaps after all the experience gained was worth its cost,
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page42" id="page42"></a>42</span>
+for, although the colony staggered under the blow, its progress was checked
+only for the time.</p>
+
+<p>In 1890 an amending Audit Act was passed&mdash;Sir Thomas McIlwraith
+being then Treasurer&mdash;section 4 of which made the important provision
+that it should not be lawful for the Colonial Treasurer to expend any
+moneys standing to the credit of the Loan Fund Account except under the
+authority of an annual or special Appropriation Act, in like manner as
+moneys were expended out of the Consolidated Revenue Fund for the
+current expenses of government. By section 6 it was provided that,
+when it was necessary to expend for any work money in excess of the
+appropriation, then, if such sum were included in any Appropriation
+Act, the Governor in Council might authorise the additional expenditure
+from the Loan Fund. By section 8, annual Loan Estimates, specifying the
+nature of the work proposed, were to be submitted, as in the case of the
+Estimates of ordinary expenditure. This Act was passed to avoid the evil
+of placing large amounts of borrowed money at the uncontrolled disposal
+of the Ministry of the day.</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page43" id="page43"></a>43</span>
+
+<h2 style="margin-top: 2em;">CHAPTER IV.</h2>
+
+<h3>PUBLIC FINANCE (1893-1898).</h3>
+
+<blockquote><p class="ind">
+<span class="outdent1">
+Sir Hugh Nelson at the Treasury</span>.&mdash;Credit of Colony Restored.&mdash;Assistance to Financial Institutions
+ and Primary Industries.&mdash;Savings Bank Stock Act.&mdash;Public Debt Reduction Fund.&mdash;Treasurer's
+ Cautious and Prudent Administration.&mdash;Money Obtained in London at a
+ Record Price.
+</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>When the banking crisis occurred in 1893, Mr. (afterwards Sir) Hugh
+Nelson, who had previously held office with distinction as Railway
+Minister for about two years, reluctantly took charge of the embarrassed
+Treasury. Entering Parliament after the general election in 1883, he had
+from the first given evidence of more than common knowledge of public
+finance. Mr. Nelson was an exceedingly modest man, and an indifferent
+public speaker at best; but he possessed courage, thoroughness, and
+scholarly knowledge. In public matters he always aimed at taking the
+line of least resistance; but knowing what he knew in March, 1893, his
+assumption of office as Treasurer must be regarded as an act of heroism
+dictated by regard for the public welfare. Quietly and unobtrusively he
+worked, refusing all invitations to appear on public platforms, and while
+affecting contempt for politicians who constantly apostrophised "the
+people," he determined to set the affairs of the colony straight. Revenue
+at that time had almost touched bottom, and was very inelastic; and
+Mr. Nelson followed the example of his immediate predecessor in
+keeping a tight hand upon expenditure. For 1892-3 there had been a
+reduction of outlay of about £70,000 only, as compared with the preceding
+year, the June deficit having been reduced to £111,676; but in the next
+year he realised rather less revenue, yet reduced expenditure by £206,000,
+closing the year with a small deficit of £8,467. As this was the time in
+which most commercial and financial disaster was suffered from the crisis,
+this economy was a feat worth accomplishing, although the drastic
+reduction of expenditure tended to aggravate the crisis by delaying the
+restoration of confidence. After 1893-4 followed six surpluses.</p>
+
+<p>In the midst of the bank reconstructions of 1893 there had been a
+general election, and Parliament met on 25th May. Between then and 18th
+October, 1893, Mr. Nelson, as Treasurer in the McIlwraith Ministry,
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page44" id="page44"></a>44</span>
+passed those financial measures which were the greatest achievements of
+his career. An unpopular measure was his Civil Service Special Retrenchment
+Act, but it was imperative, and civil servants were indeed fortunate,
+when so large a number of their friends in private life were left destitute,
+in being able to draw their diminished salaries month by month. The
+Queensland National Bank Limited Agreement Act enabled that institution
+to resume business, though the public sacrifice was great. Acts were also
+passed for encouraging meat and dairy works; for advancing guaranteed
+loans by the Treasury to sugar works companies; for Treasury advances
+upon the notes of suspended joint stock banks; for the issue of Treasury
+notes, made legal tender throughout the colony save by the Treasury; and
+for the imposition of a yearly tax of 10 per cent. on notes issued by banks.
+In the same session was passed an Act for giving relief to public depositors,
+such as treasurers of hospitals and other public institutions, by making
+Treasury advances upon the amount of their locked-up deposits.</p>
+
+<p>Another important measure of this period was the Government
+Savings Bank Stock Act of 1894, under which any savings bank depositor
+may exchange his deposit for £10, or any multiple thereof, of Government
+stock redeemable in 1945, and bearing not more than 3&frac12; per cent. interest.
+In 1897 the amount of such stock issuable was increased from £1,000,000
+to £2,000,000. The object of this measure was to give depositors the
+opportunity of making investments in small amounts of Government stock,
+for which there would always be a buoyant market in the event of cash
+being required; and also to safeguard the Treasury by reducing the amount
+of money held on account of savings bank deposits repayable at call. In
+1897 the total deposits did not exceed 2&frac12; millions; to-day they total
+over 5 millions. It is therefore satisfactory to note that the Treasurer
+(Mr. Hawthorn) early in the current year made arrangements for enlarging
+the sale of savings bank stock in the manner intended by the author of
+the Act.</p>
+
+<p>In 1895 Mr. Nelson passed the amended Audit Act under which, if it
+appears by the Treasurer's annual statement that there is a surplus of
+receipts for any financial year, the money shall, before the 31st day of
+December following, be paid to the trustees of the Public Debt Reduction
+Fund created by the Act, and by them applied, first to the purchase of
+Treasury bills, and then to the purchase of inscribed stock at the current
+market price, stock so purchased to be cancelled. As a Treasurer with a
+deficit is bound to make provision for its liquidation at the end of a
+financial year, the effect of the Act has been to start every year with a
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page45" id="page45"></a>45</span>
+clean sheet. By this practice an ingenious Treasurer is deprived of the
+opportunity of juggling with accumulated surpluses.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 600px;"><a href="images/page044a-1200.jpg"><img src="images/page044a-600.jpg" width="600" height="181" alt="ON THE ROAD TO MARKET, CENTRAL QUEENSLAND" /></a>
+<p class="center">ON THE ROAD TO MARKET, CENTRAL QUEENSLAND</p></div>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 600px;"><a href="images/page044b-1200.jpg"><img src="images/page044b-600.jpg" width="600" height="180" alt="FAT CATTLE, CENTRAL QUEENSLAND" /></a>
+<p class="center">FAT CATTLE, CENTRAL QUEENSLAND</p></div>
+
+<p>In April, 1898, when Sir Hugh Nelson retired from active politics, he
+had just completed five years' service as Treasurer. During that time he
+had gone to the London money market only twice, and had issued stock to
+the amount of only 3&frac34; millions. Of that sum, moreover, the 2 millions
+asked for in 1894 was for retiring Treasury bills, and for the liquidation
+of the deficit on account of previously issued loans. In 1896 the Loan Act
+totalled £2,324,480, though it was not all placed by Sir Hugh Nelson.
+It provided for further railway extensions, and included half a million
+sterling for loans in terms of the Local Works Loans Act under the Sugar
+Works Guarantee Act; £600,000 was applied to the purchase at par of
+savings bank stock for cancellation, only 1&frac12; millions being placed on the
+London market. Of these two loans issued subsequent to the 1893 crisis,
+the first, bearing 3&frac12; per cent. interest, realised £98 14s. 0&frac14;d. net per
+£100
+of stock, and the other, floated in 1897, bearing 3 per cent., brought
+£95 15s. 10&frac34;d., the record price for money obtained by the issue of
+Queensland Government stock in London.</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page46" id="page46"></a>46</span>
+
+<h2 style="margin-top: 2em;">CHAPTER V.</h2>
+
+<h3>PUBLIC FINANCE (1898-1903).</h3>
+
+<blockquote><p class="ind">
+<span class="outdent1">
+The Philp Ministry</span>.&mdash;Large Surplus.&mdash;Loan Acts for Seven and a-half Millions Sterling.&mdash;Drought
+ Disasters and Sacrifices for Federation.&mdash;Accumulated Revenue Deficits of over
+ £1,000,000.&mdash;Rebuff on London Stock Exchange.&mdash;Resignation of Philp Ministry.
+</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>When Mr. Philp took charge of the Treasury in March, 1898, the
+credit of the colony appeared to have been fully restored. True, the
+funded public debt had grown to 33&frac12; millions, but the population had
+also increased to 484,700, so that the public debt proper was slightly more
+than £69 per head. The year 1897-8 closed with the small surplus of
+£20,724 at the Treasury, and revenue was steadily improving. In June,
+1899, Mr. Philp had the largest surplus realised for seventeen years, nearly
+£150,000, but then an era of drought began. Still revenue continued to
+advance until the establishment of federation in 1901, when financial
+trouble was accentuated. The year 1899-1900 had shown a small surplus
+of £47,789, to be followed by three successive deficits aggregating
+£1,151,469. Mr. Philp, an old colonist, an experienced business man, and
+with a full knowledge of its varied resources, had unbounded confidence in
+the future of the State. Soon after he became Premier at the close of
+1899, he essayed a bold public works policy, and during his first three years
+of office he induced Parliament to sanction the borrowing of nearly 7&frac12;
+millions sterling. But he did not issue the whole of the last 2&frac14; millions.
+Owing principally to the South African war, colonial stocks were not high
+in favour in 1900, and the Queensland Government, acting on the best
+advice, decided to call for tenders for the £1,400,000 of 3 per cent. stock
+placed on the English money market in July of that year. The loan only
+realised £91 5s. 1&frac12;d. per cent., about the same price that was obtained by
+New South Wales and West Australia in the same year. Of the balance
+of the loan, £900,000 was taken up in Queensland by the trustees of the
+Government Savings Bank at £97 per cent., and £46,600, sold locally and
+bearing 3&frac12; per cent. interest, realised £99 10s. 8&frac14;d. net, the local
+market not being affected by the adverse influences and the choice of
+investments which operated in London. In October, 1901, for £1,374,213
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page47" id="page47"></a>47</span>
+offered in London at 3 per cent., the extremely low price of £88 12s. 4d.
+was obtained; and in 1903, when the then Treasurer (Mr. T. B. Cribb)
+again sought to enter the London market with 3&frac12; per cent. stock, he could
+only place £750,000 worth at the low rate of £92 19s. 11&frac34;d. Times had
+indeed changed, and for the moment the State was practically excluded
+from the London money market. The balance of the loan has been, and is
+being, issued in Queensland, about £456,000 being still unsold.</p>
+
+<p>The year 1899-1900, from the revenue standpoint, was the record year
+of the century. Wool brought extremely high prices in London, and loan
+expenditure had been maintained during the previous two years at an
+average of a little over £1,000,000 per annum. For the next year, one-half
+of which was subsequent to the proclamation of the Commonwealth,
+revenue showed a decline of nearly half a million sterling, although loan
+outlay had been increased rather than lessened. Two reasons could be
+assigned for this shrinkage&mdash;a bad season in the West, and the dislocation
+of accounts resulting from federation. Still, in 1899-1900, the expenditure
+from revenue was fully maintained, with the result that on 30th June,
+1901, the deficit exceeded half a million.</p>
+
+<p>In the next year, 1901-2, there was a further decline of about half a
+million in revenue, arising (1) from one-fourth of the State's Customs
+revenue and the whole of its postal revenue being retained by the Commonwealth,
+and (2) from the sparse rainfall and the heavy drop in London
+wool prices. Thus, although the apparent expenditure showed a decline of
+about £650,000 due to the cost of the transferred departments being
+defrayed by the Commonwealth, the financial year ended with a deficit of
+£431,940. The year 1902 was the most disastrous with respect to rainfall
+that Australia ever experienced, and the drought struck Queensland with
+cruel intensity. The revenue of 1902-3 was maintained at nearly the level
+of the previous year, good rains having fallen early in 1903, while the
+expenditure was cut down by about a quarter of a million; yet there was
+a further deficit of £191,341, despite the fact that an income tax had been
+imposed and a Public Service Special Retrenchment Act passed which
+resulted in a saving of £87,000.</p>
+
+<p>The Philp regime practically ended with an accumulated deficit,
+as above mentioned, of £1,151,469; for, about two months after the close
+of the financial year 1902-3, the Ministry were compelled by a schism in
+their party to resign office. They had been long popularly stigmatised as
+the "Continuous Government." The work of the coalition of 1890 having
+been accomplished, Ministers had exhausted their popularity; yet the
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page48" id="page48"></a>48</span>
+probability is that but for the financial debacle the end would not have
+come quite so soon. The drought having by this time broken, a return of
+prosperity was naturally expected; but on the one hand Ministers had
+made enemies by severe retrenchment, and on the other hand they were
+blamed for having failed to balance their budget.</p>
+
+<p>When Parliament met on 21st July, 1903, Mr. Philp appeared still to
+command a working majority&mdash;though somewhat diminished by the general
+election of 1902-3 compared with that which had followed him for three
+years previously. But on the 8th of September the Treasurer, Mr. T. B.
+Cribb, carried his taxation resolutions in Committee of Ways and Means,
+after an acrimonious debate, by a majority of only two votes in a House
+of sixty-five, several prominent Government supporters voting with the
+Noes. Mr. Philp then moved the adjournment of the House, and next day
+announced the resignation of his Ministry.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 600px;"><a href="images/page048-1200.jpg"><img src="images/page048-600.jpg" width="600" height="367" alt="MAROOCHY RIVER AND NINDERRY MOUNTAIN, NORTH COAST RAILWAY" /></a>
+<p class="center">MAROOCHY RIVER AND NINDERRY MOUNTAIN, NORTH COAST RAILWAY</p></div>
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page49" id="page49"></a>49</span>
+
+<h2 style="margin-top: 2em;">CHAPTER VI.</h2>
+
+<h3>PUBLIC FINANCE (1903-1909).</h3>
+
+<blockquote><p class="ind">
+<span class="outdent1">
+The Morgan-Kidston Ministry</span>.&mdash;Economy in Revenue Expenditure.&mdash;Great Reduction in Loan
+ Outlay.&mdash;Equilibrium Established at the Treasury.&mdash;Retrenchment and Taxation.&mdash;Improvement
+ of Finances.&mdash;A Record Surplus for Queensland.&mdash;Land Sales Proceeds Act.&mdash;Abstention
+ from Borrowing.&mdash;First Loan Floated since 1903.&mdash;Sound Position of
+ Queensland.&mdash;Value of State Securities.&mdash;Reproductiveness of Railways Built out of Loan
+ Money.&mdash;Public Estate Improvement Fund.&mdash;How Recourse to Money Market has been
+ Avoided.
+</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>On the 15th September, 1903, the Speaker's resignation was announced,
+and on the 17th Mr. (now Sir) Arthur Morgan announced the formation
+of a new Ministry with himself as Premier, his colleagues including the
+leader, (the late Mr. W. H. Browne) and another prominent member of the
+Labour party (Mr. W. Kidston). The new Ministry came in expressly
+to restore the financial equilibrium, the Treasurer being Mr. Kidston.
+Retrenchment became the order of the day, although the Estimates of the
+late Government were adopted, having regard to the fact that the first
+quarter of the financial year had practically expired. The pruning-knife
+was applied with vigour, and loan expenditure rapidly lessened, although
+existing railway contracts had of course to be completed.</p>
+
+<p>On 30th June following, revenue showed an increase of £69,000, while
+expenditure had been reduced by £110,000, the financial year ending with a
+deficit of only £12,424. Loan expenditure had been brought down to
+£603,805, a reduction of no less than £418,600 compared with the previous
+year. In the middle of the session of 1904 the Premier advised a dissolution,
+which was granted; and after the general election the Ministry
+returned in such strength as to warrant Parliament in treating their
+policy, especially the financial part of it, as practically a mandate from the
+constituencies.</p>
+
+<p>In 1904-5 the revenue being within £41 of the amount of the preceding
+year, while the expenditure was about £26,000 less, a surplus, the first for
+five years, was recorded for the nominal sum of £13,995. Seeing that
+loan expenditure had been reduced to less than a quarter of a million, that
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page50" id="page50"></a>50</span>
+general retrenchment had been carried out, and that a recovery of trade
+and industry was not yet clearly apparent, the result must be deemed
+highly satisfactory; also, the Treasurer refused, after his first year of
+office, to continue the practice of charging to loan fund the amount spent
+by the Commonwealth Government on new works and buildings. The
+amount was not large, but even the £20,000 to £30,000 per annum so
+expended would, if transferred to loan, have improved the appearance of
+the State revenue account.</p>
+
+<p>In 1904 the obnoxious but necessary Special Retrenchment Act was
+re-enacted for the nine months of the financial year still remaining, the rate
+of deduction being diminished by one-half, while provision was made that
+any surplus revenue for the financial year should be paid to the public
+servants. The year closed with a surplus of £13,995, which was at once
+distributed <i>pro rata</i> among the retrenched officers. The continuation of
+the Act was not popular among public servants, but it was deemed
+necessary in the interests of the wider community; and, as the net result
+was that a public officer only lost 7s. 6d. for every £1 deducted from his
+salary during the two previous years, it can hardly be considered unfair,
+having regard to the losses sustained by the general public during the same
+period. Another unpopular measure was the Income Tax Amending Act,
+which exempted from taxation incomes of £100 and under, but in regard
+to the larger incomes somewhat increased the taxation then levied. In 1906
+a further Income Tax Amending Act was passed, adding to the taxation in
+some cases, but raising the exemption to £160 and granting an exemption
+of £120 on incomes between £160 and £200. In 1907 another amendment
+of the Act increased the exemption to £200 on all incomes, and reduced
+certain imposts, which had the effect of relinquishing revenue to the extent
+of £40,000 to £50,000 for the year. But times had then improved, and the
+Treasurer could afford this grateful relief to the poorer classes of the
+community.</p>
+
+<p>Early in 1906, owing to the death of Sir Hugh Nelson, Mr. Morgan
+retired from the Ministry, Mr. Kidston becoming Chief Secretary in his
+stead, while still retaining the Treasurership. Mr. Morgan then accepted
+the Presidency of the Legislative Council. In the year 1905-6 the revenue
+had become buoyant, the increase for the year being £258,124. The
+expenditure had also increased by over one-half that amount, the year
+closing with the surplus of £127,811. Loan outlay also showed an increase,
+totalling nearly £300,000. In 1906-7 there was a revenue jump of £454,389,
+with an increase in expenditure of £186,085, the record Queensland surplus
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page51" id="page51"></a>51</span>
+of £396,115 being realised.<a id="footnotetagii6a" name="footnotetagii6a"></a><a href="#footnoteii6a"><sup>a</sup></a> For 1907-8 the revenue increase was
+£180,486, while the expenditure increase was £461,299, and the surplus
+only £115,302. Loan outlay also advanced to £1,033,676. Including the
+Commonwealth collections the total revenue for 1907-8 approached 5&frac12;
+millions, or nearly 1 million in excess of the most fruitful year before
+federation.</p>
+
+<p>In November, 1906, a brief but important Act was passed providing
+that all moneys received in payment for auction sales of town, suburban,
+and country lands, or of such lands if subsequently purchased by selection,
+should hereafter be paid into the Loan Fund Account. But proceeds of
+the land sold under the Special Sales of Land Act of 1901 were not
+included, those moneys having been already appropriated to the repayment
+of sums borrowed upon certain Treasury bills issued in aid of revenue in
+former years. It is the policy of the Kidston Government, however, not to
+alienate lands under the Special Sales Act; therefore the deficits of former
+years which had been liquidated with the proceeds of Treasury bills, and
+practically formed a floating debt, are being gradually compensated for by
+the transfer of annual surpluses to the Public Debt Reduction Fund, the
+total amount of stock thus cancelled having on 30th June, 1908, reached the
+respectable amount of £942,641 since the inception of the fund.</p>
+
+<p>One of the wise determinations of Mr. Kidston as Treasurer was to
+keep off the London money market for several years at least after the
+rebuff received by his predecessor in 1903. Consequently he abstained
+from making any attempt to float a loan till March, 1909, when £2,000,000
+worth of 3&frac12; per cent. stock was disposed of. The net proceeds were equal
+to £94 9s. 6&frac12;d. per cent., a price about equivalent to that obtained by New
+South Wales a little earlier in the year. This, although dearer money than
+was obtained by issues of Queensland stock in the closing decade of the
+last century, compares not unfavourably with the prices obtained earlier in
+the financial year for other gilt-edged securities on the London market.</p>
+
+<p>The net average rate of interest payable on the public debt of Queensland
+on 30th June, 1908, was £3 14s. 1d. per cent., but this rather high
+rate arose from the fact that more than a moiety of the total debt was
+incurred many years ago, when all Australian stocks bore 4 per cent.
+interest. The lowest average rate now paid by any Australian State is
+£3 8s. 9d. by Western Australia, most of whose stock was issued during
+the closing decade of the 19th century, and bears from 3&frac14; to 3&frac12; per cent.</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page52" id="page52"></a>52</span>
+
+<p>Speaking generally, Queensland stands well on the London money
+market at present, as, according to the "Commonwealth Year Book"
+quotations from the "Economist" newspaper, the "middle price" of her
+3&frac12; per cents. quoted on 'Change on the 25th September of last year was
+£100, a figure only equalled at the time by Victoria among the Australian
+States; and in December following £99, which was on a par with New
+South Wales stock on the same date, and only 10s. per cent. below the
+quotation for Victorian stock. These prices, however, for comparative
+purposes seem to need slight adjustment on account of the interest
+respectively due at date of quotation.</p>
+
+<p>Having regard to the fact that the public debt of Queensland is
+higher than that of any other Australian State per head of the population,
+the policy of abstention from further borrowing from 1903 until
+1909 has been vindicated in a most gratifying manner. A pregnant
+fact is that more than one-half the entire public debt has been invested
+in railways which in 1908-9 returned £883,610<a id="footnotetagii6b" name="footnotetagii6b"></a><a href="#footnoteii6b"><sup>b</sup></a> in net earnings, all
+available for the payment of interest on capital, or equal to about £3 7s. 6d.
+per cent. per annum, which meant that our railway system was almost
+self-supporting, besides being the source of a large indirect gain to the
+Treasury by providing facilities for transport over 3,498 miles of line.
+It is no exaggeration to assert that directly and indirectly the railways
+assist the Treasury to the amount of the annual interest charge on the
+entire public debt of the State. Instead of the railways being a burden
+upon the taxpayer, as in former years, they have undoubtedly now become
+the backbone of the public credit. Seven years ago the interest charge on
+railway capital falling on the taxpayer amounted to £513,128. To-day, as
+shown by official figures, there is practically no such burden, and the
+existing state of the investment not only forms a complete justification for
+the railway policy of the past, but also for the vigorous way in which the
+construction of new lines is being pushed forward. With a continuance of
+good management it is apparent that the time is within measurable distance
+when the Railway Commissioner will, unless rates be reduced, hand to the
+State Treasurer a large annual surplus which will be available for lightening
+the public burdens.</p>
+
+<p>Among other minor financial reforms for which the Morgan and
+Kidston Governments have earned credit is the creation of the Public
+Estate Improvement Trust Account, to which is charged the cost of roads,
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page53" id="page53"></a>53</span>
+water supply, and other improvements made to Crown lands about to be
+thrown open for settlement, such cost being afterwards added to the selling
+price of those lands. Up to 30th June, 1908, 1&frac12; million acres of Crown
+land had thus been made available for selection by a total expenditure of
+£85,784, the value of which has thus been enhanced, it is estimated, by
+more than half a million sterling. This amount will ultimately find its way
+into consolidated revenue. And all this with a debtor balance of the
+account on 30th June, 1908, of only £58,287. Allowing that the profit is
+shown in figures yet to be realised, the estimated margin is so large that
+the result cannot be doubtful.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 600px;"><a href="images/page052a-1200.jpg"><img src="images/page052a-600.jpg" width="600" height="180" alt="SCENE ON BARCALDINE DOWNS, CENTRAL QUEENSLAND" /></a>
+<p class="center">SCENE ON BARCALDINE DOWNS, CENTRAL QUEENSLAND</p></div>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 600px;"><a href="images/page052b-1200.jpg"><img src="images/page052b-600.jpg" width="600" height="181" alt="BARCALDINE DOWNS HOMESTEAD, CENTRAL QUEENSLAND" /></a>
+<p class="center">BARCALDINE DOWNS HOMESTEAD, CENTRAL QUEENSLAND</p></div>
+
+<p>Loan expenditure on public works, though greatly reduced, was never
+entirely stopped by the Morgan and Kidston Governments. In 1903 they
+inherited from their predecessors a loan cash balance of 1&frac14; millions. By
+compelling the local bodies to pay up arrears of redemption on local loans,
+by investing about £603,000 of revenue surpluses in unissued stock, with
+the help of interest accruing on public loan cash balances, and the annual
+instalments paid by the Queensland National Bank in liquidation of its
+extended deposit debt, nearly 3&frac12; millions sterling was spent on loan
+account during the five years ended 30th June, 1909, without placing on the
+money market any part of the then unissued balance of the 1902 loan.</p>
+
+<p class="footnote"><a id="footnoteii6a" name="footnoteii6a"></a><a class="footnote" href="#footnotetagii6a">Footnote a:</a>
+The so-called surplus of £487,333 in 1872 was obtained by the transfer of £350,000 from
+loan fund to revenue.</p>
+
+<p class="footnote"><a id="footnoteii6b" name="footnoteii6b"></a><a class="footnote" href="#footnotetagii6b">Footnote b:</a>
+These net earnings are Treasury cash figures. They differ somewhat from the departmental
+figures, which do not deal with cash, but with book receipts and expenditure.</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page54" id="page54"></a>54</span>
+
+<h2>CHAPTER VII.</h2>
+
+<h3>THE BOOM DECADE (1880-1890).</h3>
+
+<blockquote><p class="ind">
+<span class="outdent1">
+A Great Boom Decade</span>.&mdash;Causes of Inflation of Values.&mdash;Excessive Rating Valuations.&mdash;False
+Basis of Assessing Capital Value.&mdash;Prodigality Succeeded by Financial Stringency and
+Collapse of Boom.&mdash;Difficulty in Determining Real Values.&mdash;Sir Hugh Nelson's Legislation.&mdash;Sound
+Finance.&mdash;Stability of State.&mdash;Prospects Good To-day.
+</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>The prospects of Queensland had seldom been brighter than they were
+at the opening of the 1880-90 decade. The seasons were good, the
+outlook was regarded as brilliant, and a general air of confidence reigned.
+The Government were spending loan money lavishly, and large amounts
+were being spent in introducing a stream of immigrants from Europe.
+These and other causes contributed to the prevailing over-confidence and the
+consequent excessive values put upon fixed property. One was the influx
+of capital for investment on private account, for the confidence felt in
+Queensland mortgage securities not only extended to the other colonies
+of Australia, but also to the mother country. Another was the
+discovery of subterranean water in Western Queensland, and the opinion
+expressed by geologists that more than one-half the total area of the
+colony, and that in the driest parts of the far West, was artesian water-bearing
+country. The discovery, it was argued, had added a new province
+to Queensland, and one whose fertility, water once provided, would not be
+excelled, despite a normally light rainfall, by any other part of the
+continent. One consequence was the sale of Western stations at high
+prices, and the investment by their late owners of the proceeds in city and
+town properties. They had experienced the risks of the far inland climate,
+and they wanted to invest in land in the seaport towns, which must quickly
+become centres of extensive trade.</p>
+
+<p>Another cause was the raising of rating values by the local authorities,
+of whom those having jurisdiction in suburban or country areas were
+endowed with £2 from the Treasury for every £1 raised by rates. To
+augment the claims for endowment, although the rate levies were in a few
+cases raised to the maximum legal limit, in most the valuations alone were
+raised, and the rate levy left untouched. It was held that it paid the
+property owner to contribute a high rate when with the endowment it
+meant three times that sum, most of which would be spent in improving his
+land by making roads and carrying on other local works calculated to
+enhance property values. A further cause of inflation was the cutting up
+of suburban land into 16-perch allotments, and selling them on long
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page55" id="page55"></a>55</span>
+terms to working men and to speculators. A still further cause was, as
+already mentioned, the influx of external money at reduced rates of interest
+through the financial institutions. At first rents were so high as apparently
+to justify an advance on true values; but as the expanding process went on
+vendors ridiculed a capital value based on income-earning capacity. "What
+is the use of talking nonsense!" the agent would exclaim; "it is not what
+this property will bring in annually now, but what it will be worth in
+twenty years' time."</p>
+
+<p>Even conservative loan institutions accepted valuations based on
+actual sales. Prices in many cases doubled and quadrupled in a few months
+without much regard to the income-earning power. Then people were told
+that Brisbane would by and by, with an immense railway mileage finding
+its terminus at the wharves, be as big as Sydney or Melbourne; that land in
+George-street and Collins-street was realising £2,000 per foot frontage,
+bare; and that therefore choice sites in Queen-street could not be worth
+less than £1,000 per foot frontage. Thus prices advanced until the second
+half of 1888, when the demand for real property almost ceased. From that
+time until 1893 values were as far as possible upheld by the mortgagees, for
+they believed that the stagnation must be but temporary. Then came the
+crisis in the world's money markets, and it smote Queensland with prostrating
+force. The gradual reduction of local authority endowments, followed
+by their abolition in the year 1902-3, and the consequent increase of rate
+burdens, had a depressing effect upon property values, so that even to-day,
+more than sixteen years after the collapse of the boom, city lands do not
+realise more than one-half the prices demanded and often obtained in 1888.</p>
+
+<p>It is easy to blame the leading parliamentarians of the time for their
+prodigality in expenditure; but, when the most experienced bankers of the
+time threw prudence to the winds under pressure of a flooded money
+market, we may at this distance of time judge public men less harshly than
+they were judged in 1893. Confidence was universal, and the man who
+raised a warning voice found himself figuratively "sent to coventry." An
+epidemic of swollen values pervaded the entire continent. Even so late as
+1893, two skilled and disinterested Ministers of the Crown, and both
+possessed of banking experience, who were commissioned by the Government
+to report confidentially on the securities of the Queensland National
+Bank soon after its suspension, failed to realise the full extent of the
+inflation of past years, or the depreciation in land values that had taken
+place despite the efforts made to maintain them. For they gave such a
+report of the values of the bank's securities as induced the Legislature
+to sanction an abortive scheme of reconstruction and the retention of
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page56" id="page56"></a>56</span>
+Government moneys. It is, however, to Sir Hugh Nelson's credit that, three
+years later, he passed through Parliament an amending Act, embodying the
+scheme which has since restored the bank to the status of a "national"
+institution.</p>
+
+<p>Nineteen years have elapsed since the close of this period of
+extravagant borrowing and reckless expenditure, both public and private.
+For some years past Queensland has been enjoying almost unexampled
+prosperity, and the question naturally arises whether that prosperity may
+not be followed by another crisis. On this point examination of fixed
+property values, which are a good index, leads to a favourable conclusion.
+Of city or town lands there has of late years certainly been no inflation.
+Farming and dairying land values have no doubt risen rapidly, but not
+more, perhaps, than in proportion to the enhanced stable income-earning
+value arising from the success of the sugar and dairying industries and
+the enlarged markets available since federation to farmers all over
+Australia. In pastoral country there has certainly been no such inflation
+as occurred in the 1880-90 decade. Buyers discounted the future when, to
+justify their anticipations, the 372,105 square miles of artesian water-bearing
+country should have been already opened up and the country
+made increasingly productive by the streams from thousands of bores.
+To-day, as shown elsewhere in this book, artesian water is flowing to
+such an extent in Queensland that it would, with complete reticulation,
+supply 12,000,000 people with 40 gallons a day each. This in a country,
+too, which formerly was almost destitute of surface water. More
+bores are every year being put down, while geological research has
+lately added considerably to the area of artesian water-bearing country
+in Queensland. Generally trade is sound to-day, while banking deposits
+have made but gradual progression in volume during the last twenty years.
+Close settlement is rapidly going on, and the pastoral industry, which
+furnishes about 50 per cent. of our exports, is in a most prosperous
+condition after several good seasons capped by recently advancing prices.
+Wool alone, whose producers are realising highly satisfactory profits,
+formed 28·55 per cent. of our exports in 1907. Over gold mining there
+may be a fleeting cloud, but every year's laboratory research extends the
+area of remunerative ore deposits by reducing the cost of treatment. The
+cost of production and transport in all the primary industries is being
+gradually lessened. Happily there is no boom, present or prospective, to
+disturb the steady progress of the country; and it is reassuring to learn
+from recent public speeches by eminent Australian bankers that they are
+refusing to make advances for other than legitimate development.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 600px;"><a href="images/page056-1200.jpg"><img src="images/page056-600.jpg" width="600" height="364" alt="SWAN CREEK VALLEY, NEAR YANGAN, WARWICK DISTRICT" /></a>
+<p class="center">SWAN CREEK VALLEY, NEAR YANGAN, WARWICK DISTRICT</p></div>
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page57" id="page57"></a>57</span>
+
+<h2 style="margin-top: 2em;">CHAPTER VIII.</h2>
+
+<h3>CROWN LANDS LEGISLATION.</h3>
+
+<blockquote><p class="ind">
+<span class="outdent1">
+The Code of 1860</span>.&mdash;Crown Lands Alienation Act of 1868.&mdash;Pastoral Leases Act of 1869.&mdash;Homestead
+Areas Act of 1872.&mdash;Crown Lands Alienation Act and Settled Districts Pastoral
+Leases Act of 1876.&mdash;The Griffith-Dutton Land Act of 1884.&mdash;Co-operative Communities
+Land Settlement Act.&mdash;Land Act of 1897.&mdash;Forms of Selection.&mdash;Act to Assist Persons to
+Settle on Land by Advances from the Treasury.&mdash;Extension of Pastoral Leases.&mdash;Closer
+Settlement Act.&mdash;Land Orders.
+</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>The land code of the session of 1860, so enthusiastically eulogised by
+Sir George Bowen in his despatch to the Secretary of State, unfortunately
+by no means settled the complex questions involved in the management
+of public lands extending over 15 degrees of longitude and 18
+degrees of latitude. Indeed, to-day the land laws are probably as
+complicated as ever they were in the history of Queensland, notwithstanding
+the desire of the Legislature to make them as simple as possible,
+and to meet the wants of every description of settler, whether he be a
+homestead selector with his 320 acres, a grazing farmer with his 20,000
+acres, or a pastoral lessee with his 1,000 square miles.</p>
+
+<p>During the first decade several Land Acts, amending the Acts of 1860,
+were passed; but by the advent of the year 1867 it was found that the
+facilities offered for settlement were inadequate, and that new methods,
+especially in the direction of mixed farming adapted to the country and
+climate, and demanding holdings of increased area, were indispensable if
+there was to be close settlement on a more extensive scale than that
+contemplated
+by the pastoralist. Among the members of the Assembly in 1867-8
+was Mr. Archibald Archer, of Gracemere, then member for Rockhampton,
+who earnestly voiced the popular contention that the upset price of £1
+per acre was excessive, and that the holdings permitted to the settler by
+law were too restricted in area. In October, 1867, the Minister for Lands
+was Mr. E. W. Lamb, an old-time New South Wales land office official, and
+then a Peak Downs squatter. He introduced a Crown Lands Alienation
+Bill, which, after discussions showing its futility, was, on the motion of Mr.
+Macalister, then in opposition, referred to a Select Committee comprising
+the Minister and Messrs. Archer and Fitzgerald, the latter member for
+Kennedy. In the next session a new bill was introduced, giving effect to
+the recommendations of the Select Committee, which provided for the
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page58" id="page58"></a>58</span>
+resumption of the halves of all runs within the Settled Districts, and for
+making available such resumed areas wherever required for settlement.
+The bill also provided for the opening of these areas to free selection before
+other than a feature survey had been made. This land was to be classified
+as (1) agricultural, in areas not exceeding 640 acres and at 15s. per acre;
+(2) first-class pastoral, in areas not exceeding 2,560 acres, at 10s. per acre;
+and (3) second-class pastoral, in areas not exceeding 7,680 acres, at 5s. per
+acre. The purchase was to be conditional upon actual occupation and
+improvement, the payment being spread over ten annual instalments, called
+rents, of 1s. 6d., 1s., and 6d. per acre respectively. Provision was also
+made for homestead selections not to exceed 80 acres of agricultural land
+or 160 acres of pastoral land, at a yearly rental for five years of 9d. an acre
+in the case of agricultural land and 6d. an acre for pastoral country. This
+measure, having become law, caused a tremendous rush for land, and in
+some cases, no doubt, too large areas were taken up, regarded from the
+standpoint of the public interest, the abuse partly arising from faulty
+classification by the Government Commissioners. By at least one of these
+officers it was held, for example, that land, no matter how accessible or
+good its quality, was only second-class pastoral if destitute of surface
+water. But, whatever abuses crept in, there can be no doubt that the Act
+of 1868 was the first legislation to place the people on the land in areas of
+such extent, of such quality, and at such prices as were then deemed
+requisite for successful occupation. Many of the most prosperous farmers
+of to-day, or their parents, settled under the 1868 Act, and now form most
+valuable members of the community.</p>
+
+<p>In 1869 the Pastoral Leases Act was passed by the Lilley Government,
+and gave the lessees in the unsettled districts a better tenure than they had
+before enjoyed&mdash;21 years in respect of new country and renewed leases,
+and 14 years in the case of existing leases, with septennial automatic
+reappraisements of rent in all instances. The Liberal members of the
+Assembly assented to a pre-emptive purchase clause in this Act by which
+a lessee was empowered to purchase on his run without competition
+an area of 2,560 acres, containing permanent improvements made by him,
+at the price of 10s. per acre. But it was only discovered by many members
+after the Act had become law that a run might mean a block of 25 square
+miles, and that a lessee with a dozen blocks could secure strategic freeholds
+in as many different parts of his holding. However, the provision remained
+unaltered until in 1884 the Minister for Lands in the Griffith Ministry (Mr.
+Charles Boydell Dutton) refused to sanction further purchases of the kind,
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page59" id="page59"></a>59</span>
+and during the same year endeavoured to sweep away the privilege by new
+legislation. Parliament, however, refused to repeal the provision, and
+would only consent to withhold the privilege of pre-emption in respect of
+leases acquired after the passage of the Land Act of 1884. Altogether 363
+pre-emptive selections in respect of as many runs were made. By the Act
+of 1868 the pastoral lessees in the settled districts had also been granted ten
+years' leases for the unresumed halves of their runs; but in both cases the
+Minister was empowered to resume part of any run on giving six months'
+notice.</p>
+
+<p>The Homestead Areas Act of 1872 provided for the setting apart of
+special areas as "homestead areas," to be exclusively settled as homestead
+selections, or selections taken up by virtue of land orders issued under the
+Immigration Act of 1869. A departure from the generally accepted
+principle of "homestead" settlement&mdash;that the land is granted at a nominal
+price in consideration of the selector personally residing on it&mdash;was made
+in providing for increased areas up to 320 acres at conditional purchase
+prices. This anomaly was corrected by the Act of 1876, which styled such
+larger homesteads "Conditional purchases in homestead areas."</p>
+
+<p>In 1876 Mr. Douglas, as Mr. Thorn's Minister for Lands, introduced
+an amending and consolidating Land Bill, repealing all existing alienation
+Acts. Extended powers were given to Land Commissioners to expedite
+settlement. Monthly Commissioners' Courts were provided for, but no
+decision of a Commissioner's Court, except in case of certificates of
+performance
+of conditions, was to be final until confirmed by the Minister.
+The most noteworthy provision reduced the maximum area that one person
+might select. The area conditionally selectable by one person was made not
+less than 40 acres nor more than 5,120 acres. The Act declared all leased
+land reverting to the Crown on the Darling Downs to be homestead areas,
+and empowered the Government to establish such areas elsewhere. Within
+these areas conditional purchase selections were restricted to 1,280 acres
+and homesteads to 80 acres. Personal and continuous residence by the
+selector was made compulsory, and, before the fee-simple could be acquired,
+permanent improvements to the value of 10s. per acre were required
+to be made. A homestead was protected against claims for debt. A
+Settled Districts Pastoral Leases Bill also became law this year, providing
+that on the expiration of the ten years' leases then held runs should be
+offered at auction on a five years' lease at a rental of not less than £2 per
+square mile, an outgoing lessee being allowed six months' grace in which
+to remove his stock. In 1882 the Act of 1876 was amended so as to
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page60" id="page60"></a>60</span>
+abolish the sale of runs by auction unless when there was no application
+for re-lease by the existing lessee, and lessees under the Act of 1876 were
+given the right to an extension of their leases for a period of ten years
+instead of five years. The rent, however, was to be subject to appraisement.</p>
+
+<p>The next great land measure was the Griffith-Dutton Act of 1884.
+Its main features were the abolition of the pre-emptive rights of pastoral
+lessees; the creation of a Land Board consisting of two members&mdash;an
+independent tribunal acting like Judges of the Supreme Court, and, like
+the Judges, holding office during good behaviour; and the introduction of
+the leasehold tenure in connection with grazing and agricultural farms.
+The object of the Government was to bring about close settlement. As it
+was recognised that it was not feasible at that time to devote the lands of
+Western Queensland to agriculture, provision was made for the gradual
+substitution of a smaller class of graziers for the pastoral lessees with their
+many hundreds of square miles of territory. Accordingly inducements, by
+way of fixity of tenure and compensation for improvements, were offered
+to pastoral tenants to surrender their existing leases and bring their
+holdings under the Act. The Crown was thereupon entitled to resume one-half,
+one-third, or one-fourth of such holdings, the proportion varying
+inversely with the length of time the leases had to run. These resumed
+areas were then divided into smaller holdings called "grazing farms," the
+maximum area being 20,000 acres, which were to be opened to selection on
+a thirty years' lease, with periodical reappraisements of rent by the Land
+Board. It was believed that the lessees of these smaller holdings would so
+improve the country that its carrying capacity would be greatly increased,
+and the Crown would derive a larger revenue from its pastoral lands,
+whilst at the expiration of the leases agricultural settlement might be
+possible. The success of the grazing farm system has amply justified the
+expectations of the framers of the Act. The leasehold principle was also
+applied to agricultural farms, the maximum area of which was fixed at
+1,280 acres, with a fifty years' tenure, but the selector was given the right
+to acquire a freehold after ten years' (later reduced to five years) personal
+occupation. Although dropping the name of "homestead," the Act
+maintained the homestead principle by providing for the freeholding of
+agricultural farms not exceeding 160 acres in area at 2s. 6d. per acre after
+five years' personal residence by the selector. The Act, which practically
+superseded the Pastoral Leases Act of 1869, continued the right of pastoral
+lessees to depasture their stock on the resumed areas until they were
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page61" id="page61"></a>61</span>
+required for closer settlement. It also repealed existing alienation Acts,
+and provided for all the contingencies which might be expected to arise.
+Among the repealed Acts were two which had given rise to much party
+contention in previous Parliaments&mdash;the Western Railway Act and the
+Railway Reserves Act, to which allusion is made in the parts of this work
+dealing with "Public Finance" and "Fifty Years of Legislation."</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 300px;"><a href="images/page060-800.jpg"><img src="images/page060-300.jpg" width="300" height="501" alt="SURPRISE CREEK FALLS, CAIRNS RAILWAY" /></a>
+<p class="center">SURPRISE CREEK FALLS, CAIRNS RAILWAY</p></div>
+
+<p>Amending Acts were passed in 1885, 1886, 1889, 1891, 1892, 1894, and
+1895, but these do not call for mention except to say that the Act of 1891
+introduced a new mode of selection called "unconditional," providing for
+selections up to 1,280 acres at prices one-third greater than those for
+agricultural farms, and payable in twenty annual instalments.</p>
+
+<p>In 1890 an Act was passed providing for a five years' extension of
+leases held under the 1869 Act and not affected by the Act of 1884. In
+1892 an Act (extended in 1894, 1895, 1897, and 1898) was passed giving
+a seven years' extension of term to pastoral lessees, and an extension of
+five years (afterwards increased to seven years) to the lessees of grazing
+farms selected before the introduction of the bill and situated in the
+southern part of the State, who should enclose their holdings with rabbit-proof
+fences.</p>
+
+<p>In 1893 the Co-operative Communities Land Settlement Act was
+passed at a time of stress, with a view to enabling men of good character
+but without capital to settle on the land with the aid of Government
+advances. In all, twelve "self-governing communities" were formed with
+a total adult male membership of 485. In no case did the venture prove
+successful, and by an amending Act passed in 1895 the several communities
+were dissolved, the members thereof were absolved from all liability to the
+Government for advances made, and the land and assets were suitably
+apportioned among the remaining members of the dissolved groups, to the
+number of 88. They were assigned an area aggregating 13,491 acres to
+be held on a five years' tenure at a rental of &frac34;d. per acre per annum,
+subject to a condition of personal residence and to the purchase of the land
+during the fifth year at 2s. 6d. an acre. Only three-fourths of these 88
+settlers brought their selections to freehold, and the last transaction was
+not closed till ten years had elapsed, instead of five, from the dissolution of
+the groups. Consequent on another period of depression, Parliament in
+1905 authorised another experiment by way of Government assistance to
+would-be settlers without means, but the communal element is not so
+prominent in the new measure, and the "self-government" principle is
+excluded. Only one settlement has been formed under the Act of 1905,
+and it is under Government control. While holding out some promises of
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page62" id="page62"></a>62</span>
+success, these are not so tangible as to lead to further ventures of the sort.
+Indeed, the need for them has disappeared with the return of prosperity.</p>
+
+<p>The last comprehensive Act, extending over 101 pages of the Statute-book,
+was passed in 1897, and it still remains the principal Land Act, upon
+which all subsequent amending measures have been grafted.</p>
+
+<p>It is fitting to set out briefly what are the modes by which it is sought
+to secure settlement on the public lands of the State after half a century of
+legislation.<a id="footnotetagii8a" name="footnotetagii8a"></a><a href="#footnoteii8a"><sup>a</sup></a> There is, first, the agricultural farm, in areas up to 1,280
+acres on a tenure of twenty years and paying an annual rental of one-fortieth
+part of the purchasing price, such rentals being actually instalments
+of the price, and leaving only one-half of the price to be paid at the end of
+the term. The price cannot be lower than 10s. per acre, and there are
+conditions of occupation and improvement to be performed. There is the
+agricultural homestead in areas ranging up to 640 acres, the area varying
+inversely with the quality of the land. This form of settlement is subject
+to conditions of personal residence and improvement. The homesteads are
+capable of being converted into freeholds after five years and up to ten
+years for a total price of 2s. 6d. per acre, payable at the rate of 3d. per acre
+per annum. There is the unconditional selection in areas up to 1,280 acres,
+with no conditions to perform but the payment of rent during twenty years
+at the rate of 5 per cent. of the purchasing price each year, the purchasing
+price being one-third higher than that at which the land was available for
+agricultural farm selection. There are the grazing selections in the remoter
+districts in areas up to 60,000 acres. These selections are not capable of
+being made freehold, but are held on leasehold tenures of 14, 21, or 28
+years, at rentals ranging from &frac12;d. to 6d. per acre per annum, and subject
+to conditions of occupation and fencing. There are the scrub selections
+not exceeding 10,000 acres each, intended to secure the destruction of
+useless scrub in the remoter districts and the conversion of the land into
+good pasture. The tenure is purely leasehold, with a term of thirty years
+and at a peppercorn rental for a period having relation to the extent of
+scrub to be destroyed. Leasehold tenures are preferred for the remoter
+lands, and they have the advantage of leaving the settler's capital free for
+the development of his land. In case any should prefer a leasehold tenure
+in the more closely settled districts, the law now provides for the substitution
+of "perpetual leases" for the agricultural farm tenure.</p>
+
+<p>The rapid spread of the prickly pear in some parts of the State has
+been a peremptory call for the occupation of the threatened country on any
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page63" id="page63"></a>63</span>
+terms. Provision has accordingly been made for prickly pear selections
+under conditions of eradicating the pest, the value of the land being
+assessed at rates ranging from a sum paid by the Government to the settler
+in addition to a free gift of the land, to a sum perhaps as high as £1 per
+acre to be paid by the settler to the Crown, such payments being in annual
+instalments of one-fifth or one-tenth, and commencing ten or five years
+respectively after the commencement of the lease, the period of exemption
+from payment having to be devoted to the task of eradication.</p>
+
+<p>Until 1901 the competitive principle was general in the selection of
+Crown lands, but in that year provision was made by a special Act to allot
+land non-competitively to bodies of settlers coming from abroad, who
+naturally desired to be assured of obtaining land in proximity to each other
+before pulling up their stakes and migrating to a new sphere of activity.
+Successive amendments have been made in this law, and, while in its
+inception it had application only to agricultural homestead selection, it has
+since been extended to all forms of selection tenure.</p>
+
+<p>The great drought, which ended in 1902, has stamped its mark
+indelibly upon the land legislation of the State. The earliest cry for relief
+came from the far West, where the remaining tenancies under the Pastoral
+Leases Act of 1869 chiefly lay. Large tracts of country had become
+forfeited, and the Crown tenants, unable to hold on to the remnants of
+their runs at the rents chargeable under their leases, applied for relief. To
+meet their case, the Pastoral Leases Act of 1900 was passed, which
+required the reoccupation of the abandoned country at nominal rents, and
+reduced the rents of the retained country to an extent that secured the
+reoccupation of 13,000 square miles. In the following year the Pastoral
+Holdings New Leases Act promised the relief of extended leases to the
+holders of pastoral country in the rest of the State, where the Act of
+1884 operated; but the drought still continuing, a further appeal was made
+to Parliament, and in the Pastoral Leases Act of 1902 opportunity was
+given to lessees to secure extensions of leases up to forty-two years
+according to situation, subject to reappraisement of rent and to certain
+rights of resumption reserved to the Crown. The chief desideratum of the
+lessees was extended tenures to enable them to finance on more favourable
+terms and recover from their immense drought losses. In consideration of
+this concession and the surrender of resumption rights which it involved,
+the State had to look for increased rentals. The reassessments of the
+rentals under the new leases, however, have not compensated the State for
+the large concessions made to its tenants.</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page64" id="page64"></a>64</span>
+
+<p>The Closer Settlement Act of 1906 superseded the Agricultural Lands
+Purchase Acts, 1894 to 1901. These statutes provide for the acquisition by
+the Government of private estates for the purpose of subdivision and sale
+in areas adapted for closer settlement, payments being extended over
+twenty-five years. The principle is not quite impervious to criticism, for
+unless great prudence is exercised the acquisition of these large estates
+has a tendency to raise the value of agricultural land; but a few figures
+showing the settlement which has taken place furnish convincing proof that
+the primary object of the Legislature has been achieved, and that rich
+arable lands, which previously produced nothing but natural grasses for the
+sustenance of sheep and cattle, have become the homes of many hundreds
+of thriving yeomen farmers and the support of numerous rising townships.
+Since the passage of the first of these Acts in 1894, a total area of 537,449
+acres has been repurchased at a cost of £1,490,489. Of this area 456,742
+acres had been surrendered by the former owners at the close of 1908. By
+the same date 364,334 acres had been selected at an aggregate price of
+£1,050,864, and 10,677 acres, with the improvements thereon, had realised
+£70,727 at auction, the purchasing price of the whole area disposed of
+amounting to £1,144,081. The area remaining in the hands of the Government,
+after deducting roads and reserves, was 78,781 acres, valued at
+£264,200, almost entirely consisting of land only recently acquired and not
+yet offered for settlement. On 31st December last, no less than 1,654
+agricultural selectors, the majority with families, and holding among them
+1,909 selections, were settled upon what but a few years ago were twenty-six
+sheep and cattle stations, with a mere handful of employees.</p>
+
+<p>It has been mentioned that the Alienation of Crown Lands Act of 1860
+provided for granting to any immigrant who had paid his passage-money,
+or to any other person by whom it had been paid, an £18 land order on
+arrival, and a further land order for £12 after he had resided two years
+in the colony. These land orders were made receivable as cash at
+any Crown land sale, and they led to a large traffic, as the fact that land
+orders could be bought from immigrants at a discount stimulated the
+demand for land, especially for town lots. At first these instruments
+could be bought at very low prices, but after a time the £18 land order had
+become of the recognised market value of £15 to £16 cash, and could be
+readily purchased at those prices from agents in Queen-street, Brisbane.
+But the effect upon land sales revenue alarmed the Government, and after
+a time they refused to receive land orders as payment in lieu of cash at
+sales of other than country land. In 1864 an Immigration Act was
+passed providing for the appointment of an Agent-General for Emigration
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page65" id="page65"></a>65</span>
+in London, and for the repeal of the land-order sections of the 1860
+Land Act. A new provision was made by which the Agent-General
+was empowered to issue to an approved passenger in London who had
+paid his passage-money a land-order warrant for £30. On arrival in the
+colony the passenger was granted in exchange for the warrant a non-transferable
+land order receivable as cash at face value at sales of suburban
+and country lands only. These restrictions lowered the market price of
+the instrument, although by means of a power of attorney the non-transferable
+provision was for a time evaded. Eventually, however, the
+restrictions were made so severe that for market purposes the land order
+was worth little, and immigrants who had come out and failed to settle on
+the land found themselves in possession of a document of no practicable
+value. The extent to which the land-order traffic prevailed will be understood
+when it is mentioned that, in 1865, of £218,431, the total revenue
+from land sales, only £59,461 was cash, the remainder being represented
+by land orders. By 1875 the system had become discredited, and was
+abolished by legislation, but outstanding land orders were still used. In
+1883-4 the amount so received had fallen to £16, while the cash receipts for
+sales were £378,637. The total value of land orders received as cash
+between 1861 and 1883-4 was £853,583. Some public men have contended
+that, if the initial practice of receiving the land order at face value in
+payment for any Crown land sold at auction had been continued, the
+Treasury would have been recouped by the larger demand and higher prices
+realised, but obviously a system which stimulated speculation in land was
+not good for the country, besides which it encouraged dummying. In 1886
+the Griffith Government determined to give the system a further trial, and
+in the Crown Lands Act Amendment Act of that year power was given to
+the Agent-General to issue land-order warrants to persons paying their own
+passages to Queensland. Each member of a family of twelve years of age
+and upwards was entitled to a £20 land order, and each child between the
+ages of one and twelve entitled the parent to a land order for £10. The
+land orders were not transferable, except in case of death, and were
+available for ten years for the payment of rent of Crown lands acquired
+by the immigrant. The Act authorising the issue of these land orders was
+repealed in 1894. The value of land orders issued under the Act amounted
+to £62,140, and of this sum only £8,956 was utilised. The great majority
+of the immigrants who received the orders had no desire to go on the land,
+and as the orders were not transferable they lapsed at the expiration of
+their currency to the extent of 85 per cent. of the whole.</p>
+
+<p class="footnote"><a id="footnoteii8a" name="footnoteii8a"></a><a class="footnote" href="#footnotetagii8a">Footnote a:</a> For fuller
+details regarding various forms of land selection, see Appendix E, post.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 400px;"><a href="images/page064-900.jpg"><img src="images/page064-300.jpg" width="300" height="498" alt="FOREST SCENE NEAR WOOMBYE, NORTH COAST RAILWAY" /></a>
+<p class="center">FOREST SCENE NEAR WOOMBYE, NORTH COAST RAILWAY</p></div>
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page66" id="page66"></a>66</span>
+
+<h2 style="margin-top: 2em;">CHAPTER IX.</h2>
+
+<h3>APPROPRIATION OF LAND REVENUE.</h3>
+
+<blockquote><p class="ind">
+<span class="outdent1">
+Land Sales Receipts; not Consolidated Revenue</span>.&mdash;Arguments used in favour of Treating Proceeds
+as Ordinary Revenue.&mdash;Auction Sales have now Practically Ceased.&mdash;Certain Proceeds
+Payable into Loan Fund.&mdash;Special Sales of Land Act; Appropriation of Receipts.
+</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>The revenue from sales of land for the first quarter-century was £4,672,659,
+besides £853,583 representing grants made in consideration of land orders
+issued to immigrants but not included in the revenue and expenditure
+returns. Nor does it include the sum of £382,346 received in cash for land
+sold within railway reserves and afterwards transferred to revenue. The
+latter amount must, however, be added to the cash receipts for land sold,
+which therefore totalled £5,055,005.</p>
+
+<p>The practice of treating proceeds of land sales as ordinary revenue
+has already been incidentally alluded to, but it may be well to refer more
+fully to the subject. It is held that the taxpayer ought annually to provide
+for current expenditure, and that if land is alienated from the Crown at
+all the net proceeds, after defraying the cost of administration, should be
+applied to the construction of public works that would otherwise be of a
+character to justify charging their cost to the Loan Fund.</p>
+
+<p>This principle in the abstract is unexceptionable; but in a new country
+much work is expected to be done by the Government for posterity in the
+nature of "invisible improvements"; in fact, it is so done, and cannot well
+be provided for by loan. Roads have to be cleared and formed, and
+buildings erected for the benefit of posterity as well as of those who so
+invest their money.</p>
+
+<p>Moreover, the advent of population enhances the value of both public
+and private estates, while the maintenance of great public works like
+railways involves in most cases a heavy revenue loss for years after the
+lines are open for traffic. Only in very recent times have our railway
+earnings approximated, after payment of working charges and maintenance,
+to the amount of the interest charge upon the capital invested in
+them; but they have immensely benefited the country by providing
+facilities for internal transport, and by enhancing the value of the land,
+Crown and other, which they intersect and make accessible. Years ago,
+when the railway debt of Queensland stood at about 17 millions, an
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page67" id="page67"></a>67</span>
+official estimate showed that, in making good the annual deficiency of
+interest and working expenses on the various open lines, at least as much
+had been spent by the Treasury as the entire first cost of their construction.
+So that contemporary colonists have still a charge against posterity
+for public works to be handed down, even though the first cost remains a
+liability in the form of interest upon inscribed stock held by the public
+creditor.</p>
+
+<p>Further, it has to be said that, since the railways have begun nearly to
+defray interest upon capital, the auction sale of Crown land, except in
+small areas, has practically ceased. The receipts from auction sales in
+1907-8 totalled only £33,391, and much of that sum would be absorbed were
+it charged with its share of the cost of administration. By the Land Sales
+Proceeds Act of 1906, all moneys received in payment for land sold under
+the authority of Part VI. of the Land Act of 1897&mdash;by auction sales of
+town, suburban, and country lands, or of such lands sold by selection after
+having been so offered&mdash;must be paid into the Loan Fund Account, and be
+applied to defraying the cost of such works as Parliament may from time
+to time determine shall be executed out of moneys standing to the credit of
+that fund. True, receipts for lands sold under the Special Sales of Land
+Act of 1901, being applied to the special purpose of retiring Treasury bills
+issued to make good revenue deficits, are excluded from the general law in
+this respect. But it is satisfactory that, even though the recognition of the
+principle that land is capital and not revenue has been tardy, it has now in
+Queensland the full force of statute law.</p>
+
+<p>As to the past, it has been argued with much reason that small areas
+alienated were for farming purposes, and soon became far more valuable
+than when held for grazing purposes by tenants of the Crown. As to the
+future, what Parliament seems determined to guard against by every
+possible means is the alienation of large areas of the public domain to
+persons who will use the land for speculative purposes, or who by locking
+it up will seek to check the wave of closer settlement which it is obviously
+in the best interests of the State to foster and stimulate.</p>
+
+<p>As the Special Sales of Land Act of 1901 still remains upon the
+Statute-book a few words in explanation of its provisions and objects may
+be useful. The first Act of this kind was passed in 1891&mdash;(1) to provide
+for maturing Treasury bills for £500,000 authorised but not issued in
+1887; (2) to make provision for meeting Treasury bills for £500,000
+floated to cover a revenue deficit in 1890; (3) to make good an anticipated
+deficit of £300,000 for the financial year 1891-2; and (4) to retire £120,945
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page68" id="page68"></a>68</span>
+worth of Brisbane Bridge debentures&mdash;a total of £1,420,945. Despite any
+statute to the contrary, country lands, not within twenty miles of a railway
+or the permanent survey of one, or of any navigable stream, were
+authorised to be sold by auction in areas of 320 acres to 5,120 acres, at the
+upset price of 10s. an acre. Payments might be extended over three years,
+but the unpaid instalments must bear 5 per cent. interest. Any land so
+offered and unsold would remain open for six months for purchase at the
+same price and on the same terms.</p>
+
+<p>The proceeds of these sales were to be applied (1) to payment of the
+sums appropriated by Parliament for the service of the financial years
+1891-2 and 1892-3 respectively, and (2) to the payment of interest upon
+and retirement of the Treasury bills before mentioned. In 1901 the Philp
+Government were in financial trouble through federal charges and the
+unexampled drought, and they passed a Treasury Bills Act and a Special
+Sales of Land Act, the former for the sum of £530,000; and the proceeds
+of the latter to be applied (1) to making good any revenue deficiency
+during the years 1901-2 and 1902-3, and (2) to the payment of interest
+upon and retirement of the bills issued under the Treasury Bills Act. In
+1902 another Treasury Bills Act covering £600,000 was passed by the same
+Government. The Auditor-General in his report for 1907-8 showed that
+there were still outstanding £1,130,000 in Treasury bills issued under the
+1901 and 1902 Acts, and maturing in 1912 and 1913 respectively. In the
+same report the Auditor-General refers to the sum of £8,148 received from
+special sales of land during the year, and appropriated to the payment of
+interest on Treasury bills. For some years past these special sales of land
+have been stopped, but instalments of payments were received annually
+until last year (1907-8), when they amounted to £3,279; but none are now
+outstanding, and the Act is practically a dead letter.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 600px;"><a href="images/page068a-1200.jpg"><img src="images/page068a-600.jpg" width="600" height="182" alt="HAULING TIMBER, NORTH COAST RAILWAY" /></a>
+<p class="center">HAULING TIMBER, NORTH COAST RAILWAY</p></div>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 600px;"><a href="images/page068b-1200.jpg"><img src="images/page068b-600.jpg" width="600" height="185" alt="STONY CREEK BRIDGE AND FALLS, CAIRNS RAILWAY" /></a>
+<p class="center">STONY CREEK BRIDGE AND FALLS, CAIRNS RAILWAY</p></div>
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page69" id="page69"></a>69</span>
+
+<h2 style="margin-top: 2em;">CHAPTER X.</h2>
+
+<h3>LOCAL GOVERNMENT IN QUEENSLAND.</h3>
+
+<blockquote><p class="ind">
+<span class="outdent1">
+First Municipality Established</span>.&mdash;Brisbane Bridge Lands.&mdash;Grant for Town Hall.&mdash;Consolidating
+Municipalities Act.&mdash;Provincial Councils Act.&mdash;Government Buildings not Rateable.&mdash;Brisbane
+Bridge Debentures and Waterway Acts.&mdash;Municipal Endowment.&mdash;Local
+Government Act of 1878.&mdash;Divisional Boards Act of 1879; Success of the Act.&mdash;Local
+Works Loans Act.&mdash;Two Pounds for One Pound Endowment Repealed.&mdash;Rating Powers
+Extended by Local Authorities Act of 1902.&mdash;Cessation of Endowment.&mdash;Valuation and
+Rating Act.&mdash;Decline in Land Values.&mdash;Unequal Incidence of Rates Levied.&mdash;Efficiency of
+Local Authorities.0
+</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>When Sir George Bowen proclaimed the establishment of Queensland
+there was only one municipality within the boundaries of the new colony.
+Brisbane had been incorporated just three months earlier, probably with
+the view of having the Mayor of a local authority to take his part in the
+inaugural celebrations. At that time the New South Wales Municipal
+Institutions Act of 1858 was in force, but it was quite inadequate to the
+needs of the country. Sir George Bowen, coming from residence among
+the crowded populations of Great Britain and several European countries,
+and recognising what powerful safeguards to public liberty municipal
+corporations had proved, publicly urged the establishment of local government
+in Queensland on every favourable opportunity.</p>
+
+<p>In 1861 two Municipalities Acts were passed, one empowering the
+Brisbane City Council to build a bridge across the river, and providing for
+endowment in the form of grants of Crown land not exceeding two-thirds
+of the unsold town and suburban allotments of Brisbane; also empowering
+the council to borrow for the purpose of erecting the structure.
+The other Act gave extended powers to municipal councils generally. It
+defined the rateable value of unoccupied lands to be 8 per cent. of their
+actual capital value, but the minimum rate of any allotment was not to
+be less than 10s. per annum. It also provided that unoccupied land might
+be leased for fourteen years by a council when rates had been permitted
+to fall into <ins title="Transcriber's Note: 'arrear' is archaic, but was probably correct in 1909">arrear</ins> for a term of four years. It further empowered a
+council to borrow on mortgage a sum not exceeding the estimated revenue
+for the ensuing three years. As additional endowment, it was provided
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page70" id="page70"></a>70</span>
+that the Governor in Council might pay to a municipal council every year
+one-third of the proceeds of land sold within its jurisdiction; and where
+one-half of the land in a municipality had been sold the council were to be
+entitled to one-half of the proceeds of future sales.</p>
+
+<p>In 1863 an Act was passed giving the Brisbane Council power to erect
+a town hall on allotment 4 and part of allotment 3 of section 12, with a
+frontage to Queen street and Burnett lane respectively of 99 ft., and a
+depth of 138 ft., to be granted by the Government on the passing of the
+Act. The council were empowered to borrow £20,000 for the purposes
+of the hall. The Brisbane Waterworks Act empowered the Government to
+grant a site for the proposed works on the heads of Enoggera Creek, but
+the Government were to borrow the sum necessary for construction, and
+to hand over the money to the council as it might be required.</p>
+
+<p>In 1864 an amending and consolidating Municipal Institutions Act
+was passed giving larger and more specific powers to municipal bodies. In
+the same year a Provincial Councils Act was passed, empowering the
+Government to appoint such councils in the country districts, and place at
+their disposal money from time to time voted by Parliament for roads and
+bridges within their jurisdiction. But the members, not being elective, had
+no power to levy rates, so that the councils would at best have been no
+more than bodies delegated with power by the Works Department to carry
+out works with which the Government could not conveniently grapple. The
+only provincial council established under the Act, however, was one for the
+Peak Downs district, of which all the members were Crown lessees. That
+council had its place of meeting at Clermont, and on first assembling it
+resolved not to admit the Press to its meetings. This exclusive policy,
+combined with the class character of its members, made the council at once
+unpopular, and after spending £2,000 which had been placed to its credit
+by the Government it ingloriously collapsed.</p>
+
+<p>In 1865 an Act was passed dividing the Brisbane Municipality into six
+wards, each returning two members. In 1868 an amendment of the 1864
+and 1865 Acts was passed enabling councils to forbid the erection of
+inflammable buildings. In the following year an Act was passed which
+forbade the levy of rates upon Government buildings. An Act of the same
+year enabled the Governor in Council to rescind any proclamation of town
+or suburban lands.</p>
+
+<p>In 1870 the Brisbane Bridge Debentures Act and the Brisbane Waterway
+Act were passed. By the former the council were empowered to
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page71" id="page71"></a>71</span>
+issue debentures, bearing 5 per cent. interest and covering £121,250, for the
+payment of its bridge liabilities. The preamble recited that a contract had
+been entered into with Mr. John Bourne for the construction of the bridge;
+that owing to alterations in the plan assented to by the Government the
+cost had been largely increased, and the work had in fact been suspended;
+that the bank overdraft, secured upon all the bridge lands and the rates,
+exceeded £100,000; and that Thomas Brassey, having supplied the ironwork
+of the bridge, had undertaken to complete the structure on certain
+conditions involved in the issue of the debenture loan above mentioned.
+The Waterway Act provided for the repayment to the council of the cost
+of certain waterways by the sale of lands specified in the schedule.</p>
+
+<p>In 1875 another Act was passed providing for the payment to the
+Brisbane Council of the cost of certain drainage works by the sale of city
+lands specified in its schedule. In the same year the Rockhampton Waterworks
+Act, being the first for a provincial body, was passed. In 1876 an
+Act was passed for endowing municipalities to the extent of £2 for £1 on
+the rates collected for the first five years after incorporation and £1 for £1
+in subsequent years.</p>
+
+<p>In 1878 was passed the ponderous Local Government Act, adapted
+from the recent Victorian legislation, but denounced by the Opposition in
+the Assembly at the time as far too cumbrous save for town municipalities.
+It formed, however, one of the bases of the Local Authorities Act of
+1902. In 1879 a new departure was made by the first McIlwraith Government
+by passing a rudimentary measure&mdash;the Divisional Boards Act&mdash;in
+which the Government took power to apply the Act simultaneously to all
+parts of the colony. It gave power to levy rates, and therefore excited
+popular anti-tax demonstrations. But much that was said against the bill
+proved on investigation to be inaccurate, and the endowment it provided of
+£2 for £1 collected in rates for the term of five years ultimately went far
+to neutralise the hostility expressed towards the measure. Also the bill
+provided that to give the boards a start an additional £100,000 should be
+divisible among them as soon as their respective valuations had been made
+and a certified copy of each had been forwarded to the Treasury. After a
+stern and protracted struggle in the Assembly the bill was passed, and
+immediately the Colonial Secretary of the time (Mr. A. H. Palmer) cut
+into "divisions" the entire area of the colony outside the boundaries of
+existing municipalities, and proclaimed seventy-four local governing areas
+under that name, each in three subdivisions with nine members for each
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page72" id="page72"></a>72</span>
+body. Then every division was invited to elect its first members, and
+rather more than one-half of them did so. Within four months from
+the passing of the Act&mdash;on 13th February, 1880<a id="footnotetagii10a" name="footnotetagii10a"></a><a href="#footnoteii10a"><sup>a</sup></a>&mdash;the whole of the
+members were gazetted, the Government having taken advantage of the
+power given to the Governor in Council to appoint the first members
+where no action had been initiated to elect them within ninety days after
+the passing of the Act. Thus the names of between 600 and 700 members
+were proclaimed on one day, and the new boards forthwith proceeded to
+put the Act into execution. In a comparatively short time valuations were
+made, and on receipt of a copy the Treasurer placed to the credit of the
+board, in the branch of the Queensland National Bank nearest to the
+division, an amount equal to 1s. in the pound of the valuation. This done,
+works were forthwith commenced in all parts of the country, and a few
+years later visitors from the South were wont to compliment the people of
+Queensland on the vast improvement made in their bush roads.</p>
+
+<p>In the following year (1880) the Local Works Loans Act was passed,
+and attracted attention in different parts of the Empire as the first measure
+that provided for advancing local loans by a Government on the scientific
+basis of a term measured by the life of each work, and in accordance with
+an actuarial scale set out in a table in the schedule. The longest term was
+forty years, that being given for the most durable works, the rate charged
+being 5 per cent. interest, with 16s. 8d. per annum redemption money.
+Thus a council could borrow for waterworks on a forty years' loan, and
+redeem the principal as well as defray the interest charge, by payment of
+regular half-yearly instalments of £2 18s. 4d. per cent. during the term.
+This Act soon became very popular, and with slight amendments&mdash;one
+being the reduction of the interest charge to 4 per cent., and the half-yearly
+instalment in the case of a forty years' loan to £2 10s. 0&frac12;d. per
+cent.&mdash;it still remains on the Statute-book as part of the Local Authorities
+Act of 1902. Several millions sterling have since been lent by the Government
+under this Act, and scarcely a local authority has defaulted except
+for a short period. The principle has also been extended to sugar works
+and other loans not contemplated originally; yet with firm administration,
+such as the Government for several years past have insisted upon, the
+future losses, if any, will be slight, and the benefit of the Act continue to
+be great.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 560px;"><a href="images/page072-1200.jpg"><img src="images/page072-560.jpg" width="560" height="337" alt="TIMBER GETTING, NORTH COAST DISTRICT" /></a>
+<p class="center">TIMBER GETTING, NORTH COAST DISTRICT</p></div>
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page73" id="page73"></a>73</span>
+
+<p>In 1887 Sir S. W. Griffith passed an amending and consolidating
+Divisional Boards Act in which many defects of the original measure were
+corrected. About the same time he passed an Act to relieve the Treasury
+from the excessive burden of the £2 for £1 endowment, which had been
+extended in 1884 for a second five-year period. Under the amended law
+only such sum as Parliament might vote in each year was to be rateably
+divided among all local authorities. After that time the endowment
+diminished until in 1893 it reached a very small sum. Afterwards the
+amount remained at about 6s. in the pound until 1902, when, in passing the
+new amending and consolidating Local Authorities Act of that year, the
+Philp Government made no provision for continuance of the endowment.
+In 1903, therefore, owing to the embarrassment of the Treasury in consequence
+of heavy deficits for several years in succession, the endowment
+altogether ceased, and since that time the Government have steadfastly
+refused to listen to proposals for renewing the payment, on the ground
+that each governing authority should raise its own revenue by taxation
+or otherwise, and not depend upon endowments collected by any other
+governing authority. The stoppage of the endowment was in some degree
+compensated for by the extension of the rating powers of the local
+authorities, but the exercise of these has no doubt accentuated the drop
+which occurred in assessment values after the crisis of 1893. Some
+councils, through failure to make use of their powers of rating, have had
+an insufficient income, so that in parts of the country the roads are now in
+a less traffickable condition than they were a quarter of a century ago. In
+other cases, however, the local bodies have so used the powers conferred
+upon them that they make no complaint of insufficient income.</p>
+
+<p>From the day of the presentation to Parliament of the Divisional
+Boards Bill there had always been an outcry, among the farming ratepayers
+chiefly, against the taxation of improvements. In 1890, therefore,
+after ten years' experience, the Government of the coalition, whose leaders
+had long been severed by difference of opinion on the subject of land
+taxation, perceived in a universal levy on the unimproved value, so called,
+a method of mutual reconciliation which would meet the demands of many
+true exponents of local government principles, and they agreed to introduce
+the new system. The "unimproved value" is by no means an accurate
+definition of what either the taxpayers or the Legislature at the time
+desired. But no one has yet discovered a more satisfactory definition, and
+therefore it stands.</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page74" id="page74"></a>74</span>
+
+<p>Up to 1890 the assessment had been on the net rent a property might
+be reasonably expected to yield after deducting the cost of rates and
+insurance and the amount necessary to maintain the property in a condition
+to command such rent. This was, in short, the old basis of assessment
+in the mother country; but to meet the objection to the assessment
+of improvements the Government, in introducing the first Divisional
+Boards Bill, had modified the valuation clause by the proviso that the
+improvements on land should be assessed at one-half their value. This was
+a modification of the New Zealand assessment method, and it gave fair
+satisfaction for a time.</p>
+
+<p>Country ratepayers for the most part approved the change to the
+unimproved value assessment; but speculators in unoccupied city, town,
+and suburban lands regarded it as a gross injustice. They not unnaturally
+complained that an allotment bare, or with a mere hut upon it, would pay
+as much in rates under the new system as the adjoining allotment which
+might be the site of spacious business premises or of a palatial dwelling.
+To this the reply was that the speculative holding of city and suburban
+lands inflicted gross injustice upon the man who wanted at existing value
+an allotment for his own use.</p>
+
+<p>The Valuation and Rating Act of 1890 passed, however; and the law as
+it stands has the undoubted merit of simplicity in valuations. On the other
+hand, the rate levied under the unimproved value assessment upon vacant
+lands is sometimes oppressive, and appreciably reduces their capital value.
+Another unforeseen effect has also been realised. The value of a highly
+improved allotment tends to become depressed to the value of the unproductive
+and unoccupied allotment contiguous or adjacent to it. Hence an
+intending buyer is apt to ascertain the local authority valuation of any
+land he needs, and to regulate his price accordingly. In a buoyant
+land market this might not much affect the selling value, but for twenty
+years past the land market for city or suburban properties has been the
+reverse of buoyant. So the unimproved value mode of assessment has
+apparently assisted to make a substantial reduction in the market value of
+city and suburban properties. But that is perhaps a less evil than may at
+first sight appear. The speculative inflation of land values is simply a tax
+upon the user for all time; and the moment the income-earning value is
+exceeded the excess must be regarded as an unjust charge upon posterity.</p>
+
+<p>Of course land values will eventually find their true level, whatever
+law of rating may be in force. It may be conceded that the unimproved
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page75" id="page75"></a>75</span>
+assessment has caused distress among landowners who had no means of
+improving their properties, and could only find a market for them at a
+heavy sacrifice. Still there is no disposition on the part of the majority of
+ratepayers to revert to the old annual value system, and there is not likely
+to be any alteration in the law in this respect unless for the removal of
+some obvious administrative anomaly. For, as the coalition leaders agreed
+nineteen years ago, the local rate has become a land tax pure and simple,
+and if it be held that more money is wanted for development the simpler
+course is to allow the local authorities to give another twist to the rating
+screw. This, as a matter of fact, most of them have of late years done,
+and in many local jurisdictions the rate is now 3d. in the pound, when
+twenty years ago only 1d. or 1&frac12;d. was levied. In 1884 the total local
+rates levied were £120,479; in 1908 the total was £452,052 for, it must
+be remembered, an identical aggregate area. A local authorities' rate has
+the distinct advantage in a young State like Queensland that, whereas a
+Treasury land tax would reach only the freeholders of less than 20,000,000
+acres, the local government rate is levied upon 460,000 square miles.</p>
+
+<p>The subjoined table is compiled from Statistics of Queensland for
+1884 and 1908 respectively:&mdash;</p>
+
+<h3><span class="sc">Amount Levied by Local Authorities.</span></h3>
+
+<table summary="Land Tax" align="center" width="auto" style="border-collapse: collapse;" border="0">
+<tr><th class="info">Year 1884.</th><th class="info">Year 1908.</th><th class="info">Increases, 1908.</th></tr>
+<tr><td class="info">
+<table summary="info" border="0">
+<tr><th><span class="sc">Cities and Towns</span>&mdash;</th><th class="center">£</th></tr>
+<tr><td>General Rates</td><td>46,208</td></tr>
+<tr><td>Separate</td><td>4,845</td></tr>
+<tr><td>Special</td><td>7,583</td></tr>
+<tr><td>&nbsp;</td><td>&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;</td></tr>
+<tr><td>Total</td><td>£58,636</td></tr>
+<tr><td><span class="sc">Divisions</span>&mdash;</td><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
+<tr><td>Total</td><td>£61,843</td></tr>
+<tr><td>&nbsp;</td><td>&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;</td></tr>
+<tr><td>Grand Total</td><td>£120,479</td></tr>
+</table>
+ </td>
+ <td class="info">
+ <table summary="info" border="0">
+<tr><th colspan="2"><span class="sc">Cities and Towns</span>&mdash;</th><th class="center">£</th></tr>
+<tr><td colspan="2">General Rates</td><td>150,744</td></tr>
+<tr><td>Separate</td><td rowspan="2" class="bigbrace">}</td><td rowspan="2">87,155</td></tr>
+<tr><td>Special</td></tr>
+<tr><td colspan="2">&nbsp;</td><td>&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;</td></tr>
+<tr><td colspan="2">Total</td><td>£237,899</td></tr>
+<tr><td colspan="2"><span class="sc">Shires</span>&mdash;</td><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
+<tr><td colspan="2">Total</td><td>£214,153</td></tr>
+<tr><td colspan="2">&nbsp;</td><td>&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;</td></tr>
+<tr><td colspan="2">Grand Total</td><td>£452,052</td></tr>
+</table>
+ </td>
+ <td class="info">
+ <table summary="info" border="0">
+<tr><th><span class="sc">Cities and Towns</span>&mdash;</th><th class="center">£</th></tr>
+<tr><td>General Rates</td><td>104,536</td></tr>
+<tr><td>Separate or</td><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
+<tr><td>Special</td><td>74,727</td></tr>
+<tr><td>&nbsp;</td><td>&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;</td></tr>
+<tr><td>Total</td><td>£179,263</td></tr>
+<tr><td><span class="sc">Shires</span>&mdash;</td><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
+<tr><td>Total</td><td>£152,310</td></tr>
+<tr><td>&nbsp;</td><td>&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;</td></tr>
+<tr><td>Grand Total</td><td>£331,573</td></tr>
+</table>
+ </td>
+</tr>
+</table>
+
+<p>Thus, since the unimproved value system came into force, the levies
+of the local authority rates have multiplied about three and a-half
+times. In 1884, when the first quarter-century closed, the divisional boards
+drew £2 for £1 as Treasury endowment, which, assuming the rates were
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page76" id="page76"></a>76</span>
+all collected, made their incomes from the combined sources £185,529
+for the year. In 1908, without a penny of endowment, their successors'&mdash;the
+shire councils&mdash;rate levy totalled £214,153, or £28,624 in excess of both
+rates and endowment in 1884. In 1884 the city and town councils levied
+rates amounting to £58,636, which with endowment added should have
+given them £117,272. In 1908 the cities and towns levied an aggregate of
+£237,899, an increase upon 1884 of £120,627, despite the loss of the £1 for
+£1 endowment.</p>
+
+<p>These figures are interesting in view of the agitation for a Treasury
+land tax. They show that in 1908, with a total of 53,948 city and town
+ratepayers, their rate contribution was on the average £4 8s. 2d. per ratepayer.
+At the same time 97,553 shire ratepayers contributed the average
+of only £2 3s. 11d. each. The wide discrepancy between the payments of
+town and country ratepayers seems anomalous, but when it is recollected
+that the urban councils, of which there are only thirty-five, undertake
+many public services, and that the entire area of incorporated cities and
+towns is only about 354 square miles, it will be realised that the circumstances
+widely differ from those of the shires, whose various jurisdictions
+embrace almost the entire area of the State, the official estimate being
+669,901 square miles. This area includes 210,359 square miles of
+unoccupied country, much of which is traversed by roads, but which
+presumably yields no rate revenue. Hence no useful comparison can be
+made between the rate levies of town and country local authorities respectively.
+At the same time a local "land" tax&mdash;which ranges from the
+general-rate of &frac12;d. in the pound in the case of shires, to 3d. in the
+pound, besides special and separate rates, in cities and towns, and which
+makes the average total contribution of town ratepayers more than twice
+the amount levied upon country ratepayers&mdash;may at no distant time call for
+rectification, especially if a so-called bursting-up tax should be deemed
+necessary to meet the wants of close settlement.</p>
+
+<p>Meanwhile there is room for congratulation in the fact that every
+square mile of the vast area of the State&mdash;coastal islands alone excepted&mdash;is
+incorporated, and that 160 local authorities with 1,310 members carry
+on the entire local government work of the country. These men, unlike
+members of Parliament, are unremunerated by the State, even free railway
+passes not being conceded to enable them to attend the periodical meetings.
+The alderman or shire councillor gives purely honorary service, and
+relieves the State Government of a vast amount of worry and expense.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 600px;"><a href="images/page076-1200.jpg"><img src="images/page076-600.jpg" width="600" height="360" alt="CAIRNS RANGE AND ROBB'S MONUMENT, NORTH QUEENSLAND" /></a>
+<p class="center">CAIRNS RANGE AND ROBB'S MONUMENT, NORTH QUEENSLAND</p></div>
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page77" id="page77"></a>77</span>
+<p>One good effect of local self-government is the exclusion from Parliament
+of the pestilent road-and-bridge member who in former years made
+himself so troublesome to Ministers and so often twisted the decision of
+the Assembly on important questions.</p>
+
+<p>It would be a bad thing indeed for Queensland if the local authorities,
+or any substantial percentage of them, became inefficient. There may be
+room for anxiety at evidences of decadence which at times come to the
+surface; but that local government in Queensland is a vigorous and living
+entity is fairly evident from the fact that with very few exceptions the 160
+city, town, and shire councils are members of the Local Authorities'
+Association which annually makes itself heard in conference in Brisbane.
+Manifestly the spirit of decentralisation is not dead in Queensland. The
+manner in which the various bodies have survived the stoppage of the
+Treasury endowment, simultaneously with the thrusting upon them of
+many new responsibilities by the Act of 1902, must be regarded as a clear
+indication that local government in Queensland retains undiminished
+vitality.</p>
+
+<p class="footnote"><a id="footnoteii10a" name="footnoteii10a"></a><a class="footnote" href="#footnotetagii10a">Footnote a:</a>
+See "Queensland Government Gazette" of date mentioned.</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page78" id="page78"></a>78</span>
+
+<h2 style="margin-top: 2em;">CHAPTER XI.</h2>
+
+<h3>PUBLIC INSTRUCTION.</h3>
+
+<blockquote><p class="ind">
+<span class="outdent1">
+Primary Education</span>: Board of National Education; Education Act of 1860; Board of General
+Education; Education Act of 1875; Department of Public Instruction; Higher Education
+in Primary Schools; Itinerant Teachers; Status of Teachers; Statistics.&mdash;Private
+Schools.&mdash;Secondary Education: Grammar Schools Act; Endowments, Scholarships, and
+Bursaries; Success of Grammar Schools; Exhibitions to Universities; Expenditure.&mdash;Technical
+Education: Beginning of System; Board of Technical Instruction; Transfer of
+Control to Department of Public Instruction; Statistics; Technical Instruction Act;
+Continuation Classes; Schools of Arts and Reading Rooms.&mdash;University: Royal Commissions;
+University Bill; Standardised System of Education.
+</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>From 10th December, 1859, the date of the founding of Queensland,
+to 30th September, 1860, primary education was under the control of
+a Board of National Education appointed by the Governor in Council.
+That board consisted of Sir Charles Nicholson (chairman), Messrs. R.
+R. Mackenzie, William Thornton, George Raff, and D. R. Somerset; the
+secretary was William Henry Day. There were then only two national
+schools in the whole of Queensland&mdash;namely, one in Drayton and one
+in Warwick. The system of primary education obtaining in New South
+Wales was continued, but the subject of education was one of the earliest
+matters which received the consideration of the first Parliament of Queensland,
+and in 1860 an Act to provide for primary education was passed.
+The Bill was initiated in the Legislative Council by Captain O'Connell, and
+Mr. R. G. W. Herbert had charge of the measure in the Legislative
+Assembly. The object of the Bill was to provide primary education under
+one general and comprehensive system, and to afford facilities to persons of
+all denominations for the education of their children in the same school
+without prejudice to their religious beliefs.</p>
+
+<p>PRIMARY EDUCATION.</p>
+
+<p>The Act provided for the appointment of a Board of General
+Education to consist of five members, together with a Minister of the
+Crown who would, <i>ex officio</i>, act as chairman. The members of the first
+Board were:&mdash;Mr. R. R. Mackenzie (chairman), Dr. W. Hobbs (vice-chairman),
+and Messrs. W. H. Day, J. F. McDougall, W. J. Munce, and
+George Raff.</p>
+
+<p>The scheme of primary education which the board framed was based
+generally upon the national system in operation in Ireland. Schools were
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page79" id="page79"></a>79</span>
+divided into two classes&mdash;vested and non-vested. The vested schools were
+unsectarian in character. The aid granted by the board towards the
+establishment,
+equipment, and up-keep of schools varied from time to time, and
+ranged from one-half to two-thirds. The board appointed the teachers.
+The salaries of teachers were supplemented by school fees, ranging from
+3d. to 1s. 6d. per week for each scholar according to his standard in the
+school work. When the board took office there were 10 teachers, 493
+pupils, and 4 schools&mdash;Drayton, Warwick, Brisbane (boys), and Brisbane
+(girls). The total expenditure in 1860 was £1,615 2s. 3d. School fees
+were abolished by the Premier, Mr. Lilley, from the 1st of January, 1870,
+and since that date primary State education has been free, Queensland
+being the first of the Australian colonies to adopt the principle of free
+public education.</p>
+
+<p>The Education Act of 1860 was superseded by the State Education
+Act of 1875, which came into operation on 1st January, 1876, and is still
+in force. When passed it was regarded as the most progressive Act in
+Australia. Its author was Mr. S. W. Griffith, the present Chief Justice of
+the Commonwealth, and he was the first Minister for Public Instruction.
+The first Under Secretary was Mr. C. J. Graham. On 31st December,
+1875, there were 230 schools in operation, the aggregate enrolment for the
+year being 33,643, and the average attendance 16,887. The number of
+teachers employed was 595, and the total expenditure for the year was
+£83,219 14s. 9d.</p>
+
+<p>The new Act provided that the whole system of public instruction in
+Queensland, formerly administered by the Board of General Education,
+should be transferred to a department of the public service, to be called
+the Department of Public Instruction.</p>
+
+<p>The Act provided that one-fifth of the cost must be contributed locally
+in the first instance towards the purchase of a school site, the erection of
+the necessary buildings, and the providing of furniture; thereafter the
+State bore the whole expenditure. Thus the State defrayed the total cost
+of repairs and maintenance, renewals, additions, and the like. State aid to
+non-vested schools was withdrawn as from 31st December, 1880.</p>
+
+<p>In 1895 a resolution was agreed to by the Legislative Assembly in
+favour of the establishment of superior State schools with a view to providing
+higher education for children in towns and populous centres where
+grammar schools did not exist. The ultimate result of this action was
+the passing of the State Education Act Amendment Act of 1897, which
+gave the Governor in Council power to prescribe that any subjects of
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page80" id="page80"></a>80</span>
+secular instruction might be subjects of instruction in primary schools.
+The department immediately took advantage of this amending Act, and
+provided for the teaching of mathematics, higher English, and science in
+the fifth and sixth classes.</p>
+
+<p>So far as the resources at its disposal have permitted, the Department
+of Public Instruction has done what it could to bring primary education
+within the reach of all the children of the State, and it may be safely
+claimed that wherever twelve children can be gathered together there exists
+a school. But where the children cannot be gathered into groups the department
+goes to the homes of the pupils. Itinerant teachers, fully equipped with
+buggies, camping outfits, school requisites, and other necessaries, traverse
+the sparsely settled districts in the far West and North where the establishment
+of schools is not possible. The travelling teachers look for the homes
+of the pupils, be those homes rude wayside inns, log cabins, or even tents,
+and an effort is made to visit each home not less than four times a year.
+Under this system the little ones are at least taught to read, to write, and to
+count. The itinerant teacher system was initiated in 1901, when one
+teacher was appointed. There are now twelve of these teachers, and the
+expenditure in this direction has risen from £411 per annum to £5,129 per
+annum.</p>
+
+<p>In 1906 the department began to appoint trained teachers to the charge
+of all schools where the attendance exceeded twelve. By this process
+properly qualified teachers will soon be in charge of 90 per cent. of the
+schools of the State. One of the most difficult problems which has to be
+faced in England, Scotland, America, and also in some of our sister States,
+is the adequate staffing of small country schools by efficient teachers.
+Queensland has solved that problem, and it is doubtful if any country has
+done better in that respect.</p>
+
+<p>Primary school teachers are officers of the State, and are not subject
+to the caprices of boards or local committees; they enjoy the protection
+and privileges of the Public Service Act, and the interests of no branch of
+the public service are more zealously protected by Parliament. They stand
+high in public estimation in Queensland, and that estimation is steadily
+rising. The pay on the whole is good&mdash;particularly that of head teachers,
+and the conditions of service are by no means unattractive.</p>
+
+<p>In 1908 the total expenditure on education (including school buildings)
+was £393,378 1s. 8d.; the total number of departmental schools open
+during that year was 1,141, the net enrolment of pupils being 94,193, and
+the average daily attendance 67,309.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 600px;"><a href="images/page080a-1200.jpg"><img src="images/page080a-600.jpg" width="600" height="186" alt="VIEW OF GYMPIE FROM NASHVILLE RAILWAY STATION" /></a>
+<p class="center">VIEW OF GYMPIE FROM NASHVILLE RAILWAY STATION</p></div>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 600px;"><a href="images/page080b-1200.jpg"><img src="images/page080b-600.jpg" width="600" height="183" alt="COKE OVENS, IPSWICH DISTRICT" /></a>
+<p class="center">COKE OVENS, IPSWICH DISTRICT</p></div>
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page81" id="page81"></a>81</span>
+
+<h3>PRIVATE SCHOOLS.</h3>
+
+<p>The number of private schools in operation in Queensland during 1908
+was 157, namely:&mdash;Church of England, 8; Roman Catholic, 61; Lutheran,
+2; undenominational, 86. These schools are not subsidised by the State.
+The number of teachers employed in them during the year totalled 665.
+The total enrolment of scholars was 14,098&mdash;males, 5,934; females, 8,164.
+The total average number of scholars attending the schools was 11,928&mdash;males,
+5,114; females, 6,814.</p>
+
+<h3>SECONDARY EDUCATION.</h3>
+
+<p>In 1860, that is within one year of the founding of Queensland as a
+separate State, an Act was passed to provide for the establishment of
+grammar schools, in which was to be given an education higher than that
+which could be given in the elementary schools. The following remarks
+made by Mr. R. G. W. Herbert, who introduced the bill in the Legislative
+Assembly, are very interesting. He said: "The question of education
+might be considered under three heads as primary, grammar school, and
+collegiate. The bill introduced into the other branch of the Legislature
+was intended to provide for primary education, principally under the
+national system, and would make adequate provision for imparting fundamental
+instruction at a cheap rate to all classes of youth without distinction
+of creed or religious profession. The bill he now introduced was intended
+to provide for a higher order of instruction of a useful and thoroughly
+practical character by establishing grammar schools easily accessible to the
+colonial youth of all denominations throughout the colony.... It was
+desirable that the instruction to be afforded in the grammar schools should
+be afforded at a cheap rate, so that as many as possible might avail themselves
+of it, and that it should be such as would best qualify the youth of
+the colony for discharging the duties that would devolve upon them in after
+life."</p>
+
+<p>Captain O'Connell, who had charge of the measure in the Legislative
+Council, said: "It was merely a sequel to the Primary Education
+Bill, and was designed to give those who might desire it a higher education
+than could be afforded by the primary schools. It was a matter of the
+greatest importance that a system of this kind should be established on a
+broad and permanent foundation, and therefore it was not difficult to
+perceive that the creation of primary schools such as were contemplated
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page82" id="page82"></a>82</span>
+under the other bill would be found extremely useful in carrying out the
+great objects now proposed to be accomplished."</p>
+
+<p>Under the provisions of the Grammar Schools Act a school may be
+established in any locality where a sum of not less than £1,000 has been
+raised locally, and the Governor in Council may grant towards the
+erection of school buildings and a residence for the principal a subsidy
+equal to twice the amount raised locally. An amending Act was passed in
+1864 providing that when certain conditions had been complied with an
+annual endowment of £1,000 might be granted to each grammar school.
+Each school is governed by a board of seven trustees; of these, four are
+appointed by the Government, and three are nominated by the subscribers
+to the building fund; they hold office for three years.</p>
+
+<p>There are ten grammar schools in the State&mdash;seven in Southern, two
+in Central, and one in Northern Queensland. The Ipswich Boys' Grammar
+School was the first to be established; it was erected in 1863. The last
+established was the school for girls in Rockhampton, which was founded
+in 1892.</p>
+
+<p>Each of the schools has qualified for the annual endowment of £1,000;
+of this amount the State pays £750 a year unconditionally, and £250 on the
+understanding that the school will receive a certain number of State
+scholars per annum, the scholarships held by these pupils being known as
+district scholarships. Queensland has always been liberal in the granting of
+scholarships, and at the present time no less than 102, including the district
+scholarships, are granted every year; of these, 70 are available for boys, and
+32 for girls. Each scholarship has a currency of three years. The State
+also grants seven bursaries to boys and three to girls. A bursary entitles
+the holder to free education at an approved secondary school for three
+years, together with a cash allowance of £30 per annum. The trustees of
+the various grammar schools also grant scholarships in addition to those
+provided by the State. In 1908 the aggregate enrolment of pupils in
+attendance at the grammar schools was 1,101, with an average daily attendance
+of 970; and of these pupils fully one-third were the holders of
+scholarships. Free railway passes to the nearest grammar school are
+granted to the holders of scholarships.</p>
+
+<p>To assist the children of poor parents to avail themselves of the
+scholarships which they may win, the Government grant a living allowance
+of £12 per annum to the winners of scholarships, provided that the income
+of the parents does not exceed £3 per week, or £30 per annum for each
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page83" id="page83"></a>83</span>
+bona fide member of the family. This rule came into operation on the 1st
+of January, 1909.</p>
+
+<p>It is generally recognised that the Queensland grammar schools do
+good work; the success of their students in the junior and senior examinations
+of the Sydney University abundantly justifies this conclusion. Each
+school constructs its own programme, but, broadly speaking, the curriculum
+of the several schools is designed to lead up to the Sydney University. As
+each school practically shapes its own course, the success of the institution
+depends very largely upon the personality, efficiency, and vigour of the
+principal. In addition to the State-endowed grammar schools there are
+several other secondary schools. Some of these are denominational, and
+others are conducted by private persons. Schools of this class are not
+endowed by the State, but the winners of State scholarships or bursaries
+may attend these institutions if the Governor in Council is satisfied that
+they are of a sufficiently high standard.</p>
+
+<p>Queensland has not so far placed the coping-stone on her educational
+system by establishing a University, but each year she grants three exhibitions
+to Universities outside the State. The exhibitions are open to competition,
+and the test examination is the senior examination of the Sydney
+University. Each exhibition has a currency of three years, and is worth
+£100 a year. The winners may attend any University approved by the
+Governor in Council.</p>
+
+<p>It will thus be seen that Queensland has been fairly liberal in providing
+the means of higher education for her children. A comparison with her
+sister States of New South Wales and Victoria emphasises this fact.
+During the year 1906-7 New South Wales, with a population of 1,528,697,
+and a revenue of £13,392,435, granted £12,945 towards secondary education;
+Victoria, with a population of 1,231,940, and a revenue of £8,345,534,
+granted £5,874; Queensland, with a population of 535,113, and a revenue
+of £4,307,912, granted £12,909, this amount being exclusive of the £900 per
+annum granted on account of exhibitions to Universities. In 1908 the
+amount granted by the State towards secondary education in Queensland
+was £14,272 11s. 11d.</p>
+
+<h3>TECHNICAL EDUCATION.</h3>
+
+<p>The system of technical education in Queensland is in its infancy, but
+no branch is likely to make more rapid and lusty growth or to have a more
+important bearing upon the industrial and commercial development of the
+State.</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page84" id="page84"></a>84</span>
+
+<p>The Brisbane Technical College has been in existence as a distinct
+institution since 1882. It is only since July, 1905, that the Education
+Department has been closely associated with the administration of technical
+education. Previous to 1902 technical colleges, with the exception of the
+Brisbane College, were carried on in connection with schools of arts under
+the control of local committees, the State subsidising the colleges to the
+extent of £1 for each £1 paid in fees or subscribed for technical college
+purposes.</p>
+
+<p>In 1902 a Board of Technical Education was created; the board held
+office until 1905, when this branch of education was placed under the
+control of the department, and a special officer was appointed to supervise
+the work. Endowment is now paid upon a differential scale, the distribution
+being based on the general and practical utility of the subjects taught,
+the subsidy ranging from 10s. to £3 for every £1 collected in fees. There
+were seventeen colleges in operation during 1908. The progress which
+has been made during the past five years is shown in the following table:&mdash;</p>
+
+<table summary="Endowments" align="center" width="auto" style="border-collapse: collapse;" border="0">
+<tr><th class="info">Year.</th><th class="info">Number of<br />&nbsp;Individual Students.&nbsp;</th><th class="info">Endowment.</th></tr>
+<tr><td class="info">1904<br />1905<br />1906<br />1907<br />1908</td><td class="info" style="padding-left: 2em">3,600<br />3,892<br />4,321<br />4,702<br />5,187</td>
+ <td class="info">
+ <table summary="endowment" border="0" style="border-collapse: collapse;">
+<tr><td class="dat1">£4,732<br />5,460<br />7,930<br />9,610<br />10,719</td><td class="dat1">4<br />4<br />13<br />4<br />12</td>
+<td class="dat1">6<br />11<br />5<br />2<br />7</td></tr>
+</table>
+ </td>
+</tr>
+</table>
+
+<p>The importance of a highly developed system of technical education
+has been fully realised in this State, and in 1908 a Technical Instruction
+Act was passed. It provides for the establishment of a central technical
+college in Brisbane which shall be maintained by, and be under the direct
+control of, the State. It is intended that this college shall be the recognised
+technical institute of Queensland, and it is hoped that it may ultimately be
+one of the most important institutions of the kind in Australia. The
+colleges outside the metropolis will be affiliated with the central college, but
+will remain under local control.</p>
+
+<p>In addition to liberal assistance to technical education, provision has
+been made for evening continuation classes. These classes are to enable
+pupils who have left school before completing their primary education to
+continue their education; to assist persons to obtain instruction in special
+subjects relating to their employment; and to prepare students for the
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page85" id="page85"></a>85</span>
+technical colleges. The classes are liberally endowed by the State, and
+very comprehensive regulations have been framed for their administration,
+the system being probably the best of its kind in the Commonwealth.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 600px;"><a href="images/page084a-1200.jpg"><img src="images/page084a-600.jpg" width="600" height="239" alt="GULF CATTLE READY FOR MARKET" /></a>
+<p class="center">GULF CATTLE READY FOR MARKET</p></div>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 600px;"><a href="images/page084b-1200.jpg"><img src="images/page084b-600.jpg" width="600" height="395" alt="BRIGALOW COUNTRY, WARRA, DARLING DOWNS" /></a>
+<p class="center">BRIGALOW COUNTRY, WARRA, DARLING DOWNS</p></div>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 600px;"><a href="images/page084c-1200.jpg"><img src="images/page084c-600.jpg" width="600" height="303" alt="HEREFORD COWS, DARLING DOWNS" /></a>
+<p class="center">HEREFORD COWS, DARLING DOWNS</p></div>
+
+<p>Schools of arts and reading rooms are also fostered by the State. A
+grant of 10s. is made for each £1 of subscriptions or donations, but the
+grant to any one institution cannot exceed £150 per annum.</p>
+
+<p>The State subsidises reading rooms at shearing sheds, sugar mills, and
+meat works to the extent of £1 for £1, with a view to assisting to provide
+reading matter, and such suitable recreation games as draughts, chess, &amp;c.,
+for the workers in those industries.</p>
+
+<p>The amount contributed by the State towards schools of arts and
+reading rooms is £5,000 per annum, and in 1908 there were 181 of these
+institutions.</p>
+
+<h3>UNIVERSITY.</h3>
+
+<p>The question of establishing a University has been under consideration
+from time to time for the past thirty-five years, and more than one Royal
+Commission has been appointed to inquire into and report upon the subject.
+In 1874 a commission recommended the immediate foundation of a
+University. In 1891 another commission was appointed, and made a similar
+recommendation. For various reasons, however, but principally financial
+stringency, no action was taken until September, 1899, when the Government
+introduced a bill for the establishment of a University. Unfortunately
+the bill did not become law, and Queensland remained without a University
+for another decade.</p>
+
+<p>The Government programme for the first session of 1909 included a
+University Bill, but owing to the untimely dissolution of the Assembly
+nothing was done in the matter. When Parliament met again on 2nd
+November, the bill was the first measure proceeded with. Both Houses
+being unanimously in favour of establishing a University on modern,
+democratic lines, it was speedily passed, and on 10th December, the jubilee
+of the foundation of Queensland, Government House was dedicated to the
+purposes of the University by His Excellency the Governor, Sir William
+MacGregor, in the presence of a large and representative gathering of
+citizens. With the State system of primary education established on a
+sound basis; technical education placed on a firm foundation and progressing
+steadily; secondary education linked to the other branches, and
+all leading towards the University, Queensland will have a system of
+education which will place her on a level with the most progressive of the
+nations.</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page86" id="page86"></a>86</span>
+
+<h2>PART III.&mdash;OUR JUBILEE YEAR.</h2>
+
+<h2 style="margin-top: 2em;">CHAPTER I.</h2>
+
+<h3>GENERAL REVIEW.</h3>
+
+<blockquote><p class="ind">
+<span class="outdent1">
+Good Seasons and General Prosperity</span>.&mdash;Land Settlement and Immigration.&mdash;The Sugar Crop.&mdash;Gold
+and Other Minerals.&mdash;Reduction in Cost of Mining and Treatment of Ores.&mdash;Vigorous
+Railway Extension.&mdash;Mileage Open for Traffic.&mdash;Efficiency of 3 ft. 6 in. Gauge.&mdash;Our
+Railway Investment.&mdash;The National Association Jubilee Show.&mdash;The General Election.&mdash;The
+Mandate of the Constituencies.&mdash;Government Majority.&mdash;Practical Extinction of Third
+Party.&mdash;Labour a Constitutional Opposition.&mdash;Federal Agreement with States.&mdash;Federal
+Union Vindicated.
+</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>During the half-century of Queensland's existence she has never experienced
+a more prosperous year than that of her Jubilee. Not only have the
+seasons been good, the rains well distributed though in some parts light, but
+prices of staple products have been high in the world's markets. The
+increase of sheep, cattle, and horses has been unusually large this year; the
+clip of wool has been highly satisfactory both in respect of quality and
+market value; the yield of butter and cheese has been above the average;
+and crops generally have been remunerative to the farmer. The wheat crop
+at the time this chapter is being written promises well, the area showing a
+considerable increase upon last year, while prices are certainly above the
+average. Trade and commerce have consequently been brisk and sound,
+and nearly all classes of the community have participated in the prosperity
+that has prevailed. Settlement upon the land has progressed by leaps and
+bounds; immigrants have begun to flow into the country in encouraging
+numbers, and, with few exceptions, the new arrivals have found a market
+for their labour at wages contrasting favourably with their earnings in the
+mother land.</p>
+
+<p>Of all staple products sugar alone shows declension in yield this year,
+but that arises, not from the season of 1909, but from the unprecedentedly
+severe frosts of the previous year. Yet, despite the lessened yield of cane,
+the sugar-growers do not complain of bad times, nor is their outlook
+discouraging.</p>
+
+<p>The gold yield has continued to fall off, but that is partly due to the
+prosperity of the pastoral and agricultural industries, which have attracted
+both capital and labour that under other circumstances would have been
+employed in prospecting for the precious metal. Silver and the baser
+metals have also exhibited a shrinkage in output, but that is explained by
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page87" id="page87"></a>87</span>
+the low prices which have ruled since the American crisis of two years ago.
+Two of the great mining companies in Central Queensland&mdash;the Mount
+Morgan Gold Mining Company and the Great Fitzroy Copper Mining
+Company&mdash;have both had a prosperous year, having found in simultaneous
+mining for gold and copper abundant scope for enterprise and energy; and
+improved methods of raising ore, as well as constantly lessened expense of
+treatment, have made the prospect for the future reassuring. Large profits
+are being made to-day in the treatment of the less rich but more abundant
+ores, which could not have been utilised even ten years ago except at
+ruinous loss. It is now recognised that a well-organised laboratory is as
+essential in the equipment of a great mine as a corps of skilled miners or
+a range of smelting furnaces. Hence it is that the mining outlook is
+encouraging, and that in the opinion of scientific experts the industry in
+Queensland has scarcely yet passed the infantile stage.</p>
+
+<p>It is natural that in accordance with the progressive spirit of the times
+the Government should have induced Parliament to authorise the expenditure
+of much more than the recent average amount of loan money in
+the construction of railways and other public works. No less than eleven
+railways, as stated in the Commissioner's report recently published, have
+been under construction this year. These lines are expected to be completed
+within a few months, so that nearly 4,000 miles will be open for traffic
+before the close of the financial year. Besides this large mileage for a
+population of 568,000 persons, 446 miles of other railways and tramways,
+more or less under the control of the State, are available for public traffic.
+Being of the same gauge as the State railways, they have been the means of
+developing large areas and materially improving the position of the Government
+lines. Thus the length of railway which will be open for traffic before
+30th June, 1910, will amount to 4,320 miles of the standard 3 ft. 6 in. gauge,
+which will be equal to the traffic of a comparatively dense population. The
+increased breadth of rolling-stock has been found to conduce to comfort
+without imperilling the safety of passengers, and by the use of heavier rails
+and more powerful engines the carrying capacity of the narrow-gauge lines
+has of late years been greatly increased.<a id="footnotetagiii1a" name="footnotetagiii1a"></a><a href="#footnoteiii1a"><sup>a</sup></a></p>
+
+<p>The Commissioner puts the total cost of our railway system on 30th
+June last, including £1,139,405 spent on lines not yet open, at £24,534,727.
+The total authorised outlay is, however, given as £27,221,805, so that at
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page88" id="page88"></a>88</span>
+the rate of expenditure of last year the balance unexpended will enable
+construction to be continued for over two years. The net revenue available
+for the defraying of interest accruing on capital for the financial year
+1908-9 was £883,610,<a id="footnotetagiii1b" name="footnotetagiii1b"></a><a href="#footnoteiii1b"><sup>b</sup></a> equal to £3 7s. 6d. per cent. The mean rate of
+interest payable on the total public debt of Queensland, which includes
+much stock bearing more than 3&frac12; per cent., is £3 14s. 1d. per cent., so that
+our railways may be deemed almost directly reproductive; and, what is
+still more satisfactory, they are rapidly improving in net earning capacity.
+As every extension adds to the volume of traffic, apart altogether from the
+added value given to Crown lands by providing them with railway communication,
+every inducement is held out to maintain a vigorous policy of
+construction. There is every reason to believe that in a few years our
+railway system will be the greatest and most stable of all contributors to
+the Consolidated Revenue; and when it is recollected that forty-five years
+ago there was not a mile of railway or tramway open for traffic in Queensland,
+the progress made in providing transport facilities is brought out in
+bold relief.</p>
+
+<p>One of the most noteworthy events of the Jubilee Year was the
+thirty-fourth exhibition of the National Agricultural and Industrial
+Association.
+This exhibition is the occasion of the most generally observed
+holiday of the year in the metropolis, and attracts thousands of visitors
+from all parts of Queensland, and many from the Southern States. It
+has come to be regarded as the annual meeting-ground of friends from
+widely separated localities. Year by year the attendance of visitors has
+grown, and the interest taken in the display has increased. This year
+special efforts were put forth by the council of the Association; and,
+fearing that their own resources would prove unequal to the strain, they
+applied to the Government for a jubilee grant. But the Government refused
+to do more than provide jubilee medals for certain classes of successful
+exhibitors, and enter some splendid exhibits from the State farms and
+others illustrative of the mineral wealth of Queensland. They held that to
+accede to the request would be to supply a precedent for similar applications
+from kindred associations in provincial towns, and that one of the glories
+of the metropolitan exhibition is that it is a self-supporting, self-reliant
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page89" id="page89"></a>89</span>
+institution. The sequel proved the correctness of this view, for the exhibition
+far exceeded all predecessors in magnitude, and gave a handsome
+profit to the National Association, which richly deserved such a reward for
+months of self-sacrificing work.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 300px;"><a href="images/page088-800.jpg"><img src="images/page088-300.jpg" width="300" height="498" alt="ABOVE STONY CREEK FALLS, CAIRNS RAILWAY" /></a>
+<p class="center">ABOVE STONY CREEK FALLS, CAIRNS RAILWAY</p></div>
+
+<p>The official opening was attended by unusual pomp and ceremony, the
+Governor-General of the Commonwealth, the Earl of Dudley, performing
+the task of declaring the exhibition open. His Excellency took advantage
+of the opportunity to impress upon the people of Queensland the urgent
+need for a vigorous immigration policy if the country is to be successfully
+developed and its well-being maintained.</p>
+
+<p>To attempt a detailed description of what was not inappropriately
+termed "Our Jubilee Carnival" would be beyond the province and the
+scope of this volume. When it is mentioned that the exhibits numbered
+over 8,000, the magnitude of the undertaking will be realised. It will be
+sufficient to mention a few salient points. For example, there were no less
+than 1,580 exhibits of live stock; and as, in the case of sheep and cattle, an
+entry often included pens and not single animals, the provision made for
+this attractive and paramount feature of the show was taxed to its utmost
+capacity. These pastoral exhibits represented stock yielding more than a
+moiety of the £14,000,000 worth of annual exports; and the industry
+connected with grazing stock on the natural pastures of the country not
+only employs much labour and contributes largely to the revenue of the
+State directly in the shape of Crown rents and railway freights, but it
+assists the Treasury indirectly in many other ways. The magnificent
+display of stud and pedigree stock and their products spoke volumes for the
+value of the indigenous grass crop which costs nothing to raise and only
+wire fencing to protect.</p>
+
+<p>Among the exhibits was a trophy of that world-commanding product,
+wool, of which the value exported from Australia in 1908 is given in the
+Federal Treasurer's Budget delivered in August last as £22,914,236. The
+Commonwealth returns do not differentiate between the various States,
+but, assuming the average value of the fleece to be the same throughout
+Australia, the value of Queensland's share of the clip was about £5,000,000.
+Another product which has the world for its market is cotton. Of this
+article there were three splendid exhibits&mdash;one from West Moreton, in
+Southern Queensland; another from Rockhampton, in Central Queensland;
+and the third from Cairns, in Northern Queensland. Nothing save
+the cost of labour in picking prevents cotton being classed among the staple
+products of our State, and it is hoped by experts that as families upon the
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page90" id="page90"></a>90</span>
+farms increase this difficulty will be removed. The Cairns exhibit was of
+Caravonica cotton, a variety of the valuable Sea Island species, concerning
+the extensive cultivation of which the most sanguine anticipations are
+expressed. In agricultural products emulation was greatly stimulated by
+the district exhibits, of which there were five, and on the whole they were
+superior to any that had ever before been shown in Queensland. Almost
+every product of the temperate and torrid zones appeared among the
+exhibits, though, of course, many of them are not yet being cultivated on
+a commercial scale. Among the most prominent of those of commercial
+value may be mentioned sugar, butter, cheese, hams, bacon, wheat, maize,
+fodder crops, potatoes, pineapples, and citrus and deciduous fruits, in all of
+which the displays were a revelation, not only to visitors from other parts
+of the continent and oversea, but also to many of our own people. The same
+may be remarked of the magnificent exhibits of gold, copper, tin, coal, and
+other minerals, which form so large a proportion of our wealth-producing
+exports. Statistics relating to the production and export of these commodities
+will be found in the appendices to this volume, and need not be
+further referred to here. Another attraction meriting special notice was
+the collection of gems and precious stones, the industry represented by
+which is at present struggling against the want of access to profitable
+markets; but the great interest aroused at the Franco-British Exhibition
+of last year by the magnificent display of Queensland gems is calculated
+to remove this disability, and to place the industry on a prosperous and
+permanent footing. The great variety of foods manufactured in Australia
+was another feature of the display, while in the machinery section the
+entries surpassed any previous exhibition in Queensland. Consequent upon
+the removal of border duties and the adoption of a uniform tariff, Queensland
+has suffered keenly from the competition of the Southern States.
+Statistics abundantly prove that some of our nascent manufactures have
+been checked seriously by such competition, although these losses are being
+gradually compensated for by gains in the form of enlarged free markets
+for products in which Queensland is safeguarded by natural conditions;
+but even freetraders must admit that our protective Customs duties are
+stimulating what are called native manufactures in a surprising degree, and
+that year by year Queensland and the Commonwealth at large are becoming
+less dependent upon the outside world for the products and manufactures
+which are essential to the existence of a civilised nation.</p>
+
+<p>Politically, 1909 has been rather a trying year, but the result of the
+general election on 2nd October seems to give promise of better things in
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page91" id="page91"></a>91</span>
+Parliament. Both the Premier and the Leader of the Opposition agree
+that the practical extinction of the third party by the appeal to the electorate
+will be beneficial to the country. The election also ratifies the fusion of
+parties carried out towards the end of last year, with the consequential
+placing of the Labour party in the position of a constitutional Opposition.
+These salutary changes are held to be equivalent to a restoration of
+responsible government, which had been practically suspended by the
+impossibility of any party carrying on the work of legislation without
+making humiliating terms with an irresponsible section. It was contended
+that there were three parties in the country, and that the existence of the
+same phenomenon in the Assembly proved it to be a true reflex of the
+electorate at large; but the late general election has dispelled that illusion,
+for on no occasion since the splitting up of parties had the issue been put
+in so clear-cut a form to the country. Another result of the election
+has been to add somewhat to the strength of the Labour members, who
+are now sufficiently numerous in the Assembly to give them a reasonable
+expectation of being called upon in due time to assume the responsibilities
+of government. The State must gain from the resolution of the House
+into two parties, for the purity and effectiveness of party government
+demand that His Majesty's Ministers shall always be faced by an
+Opposition fitted and prepared to become the advisers of the King's
+representative
+whenever the existing Administration loses the confidence of the
+Parliament and the country.</p>
+
+<p>As mentioned elsewhere, a most satisfactory event of the year is the
+prospect of a settlement of the financial relations between Commonwealth
+and States on a durable and mutually acceptable basis. Public opinion
+throughout the continent is so clearly in favour of the agreement that its
+ratification seems certain during the present financial year, and it seems
+also certain that it will come into force on 1st July next. From that
+date there is reason to hope that the benefits of federal union will
+become so conspicuous as to silence cavilling opponents and justify the
+aspirations of its advocates. The general opinion throughout the Commonwealth
+with respect to the vital question of national defence has undergone
+a marvellous change for the better during the past twelve months, the
+unanimity displayed justifying the most sanguine anticipations of future
+unbroken concert between Great Britain and her self-governing dominions,
+and the supremacy of the British Empire on the ocean, a supremacy which
+means the protection of the world's trade routes and unimpeded maritime
+commerce.</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page92" id="page92"></a>92</span>
+
+<p class="footnote"><a id="footnoteiii1a" name="footnoteiii1a"></a><a class="footnote" href="#footnotetagiii1a">Footnote a:</a> As indicative of the progress made in the local manufacture of railway stock, it may be
+mentioned, on the authority of the Commissioner, that one Brisbane engineering firm has this
+year completed its 100th locomotive for the Department.</p>
+
+<p class="footnote"><a id="footnoteiii1b" name="footnoteiii1b"></a><a class="footnote" href="#footnotetagiii1b">Footnote b:</a> Treasury figures. The Commissioner's figures differ somewhat from those of the
+Treasury. In estimating the percentage return the Railway Department takes into account only
+the expenditure on open lines, whilst the Treasury bases its calculations upon the expenditure on
+all lines, and charges the Railway Department with its proportion of loan deficiencies and flotation
+charges.</p>
+
+<h2 style="margin-top: 2em;">CHAPTER II.</h2>
+
+<h3>THE FEDERAL OUTLOOK.</h3>
+
+<blockquote><p class="ind">
+<span class="outdent1">
+Proclamation of the Commonwealth</span>.&mdash;The Referendum Vote.&mdash;Queensland's Small Majority in the
+Affirmative.&mdash;Representation in Federal Parliament.&mdash;The White Australia Policy.&mdash;Temporary
+Effect on Queensland.&mdash;An Embarrassed State Treasury.&mdash;Assistance to Sugar
+Industry.&mdash;Continued Protection Necessary.&mdash;Unequal Distribution of Federal Surplus
+Revenue.&mdash;The Transferred Properties.&mdash;Effect of Uniform Tariff.&mdash;Good Times Lessen
+Federal Burden on State.&mdash;The Agreement between Prime Minister and Premiers.&mdash;Better
+Feeling Towards Federation.&mdash;National Measures of Deakin Government.
+</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>After several vain attempts on the part of Australian statesmen to bring
+about federation, the Commonwealth Constitution Act was adopted by the
+several States in 1899 and ratified by the Imperial Parliament in 1900; and
+Her Majesty Queen Victoria issued a proclamation, declaring that on and
+after 1st January, 1901, the colonies of New South Wales, Victoria, South
+Australia, Queensland, Tasmania, and Western Australia should be
+federated under the name of the Commonwealth of Australia, the several
+colonies being thereafter known as "States." The union took place by the
+freewill of all the colonies, a popular vote being taken in each. The poll
+was small, only 583,865 electors recording their votes, of which number
+422,788 voted for federation and 161,077 against, the majority in favour
+being 261,711. In Queensland 38,488 voted in the affirmative and 30,996
+in the negative, giving the narrow majority of 7,492, equal to only 10·78
+per cent. of the total votes polled. That majority was obtained by an
+almost block pro-federation vote throughout the Centre and North of the
+colony, the majority in the Southern district, which contained about two-thirds
+of the population, being adverse to union. There was no objection
+to the abstract principle or to the wisdom of a federal union&mdash;rather the
+reverse; but Queensland had not been represented at any of the Conventions
+at which the Constitution was drafted, and no provision was made,
+such as was made in the case of West Australia, to meet the peculiar
+geographical, industrial, and financial circumstances of this State. In the
+absence of legislative safeguards and guarantees, the unsatisfactory
+experience of New South Wales administration in pre-separation days led
+the people of Southern Queensland to doubt whether the vaunted fraternal
+spirit would withstand the actual attrition of business competition. They
+feared that the great urban populations of Sydney and Melbourne would,
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page93" id="page93"></a>93</span>
+under the proposed democratic Constitution, secure for themselves
+industrial, commercial, and administrative advantages at the expense of
+their brethren, but none the less rivals, in the more remote parts of the
+continent. Believing that, though their occupations and products were the
+same as those of the Southern States, their interests were conflicting, the
+majority in Southern Queensland cast their votes against the union.
+Finding themselves in a minority, many of the opponents of federation
+deliberately refused to exercise the franchise in the first election, held in
+1901. Instead of taking steps to secure the return to the Commonwealth
+Parliament of men who would try to avert any evil consequences arising
+from non-representation at the Conventions and who would oppose any
+unfair discrimination, the short-sighted abstention of these people from
+voting enabled the Labour party, who certainly did not comprise a majority
+of the electors, to return nine out of our fifteen representatives in the two
+Houses.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 600px;"><a href="images/page092a-1200.jpg"><img src="images/page092a-600.jpg" width="600" height="183" alt="MOUNT MORGAN: OPEN CUT AND DUMPS" /></a>
+<p class="center">MOUNT MORGAN: OPEN CUT AND DUMPS</p></div>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 600px;"><a href="images/page092b-1200.jpg"><img src="images/page092b-600.jpg" width="600" height="182" alt="MOUNT MORGAN: MUNDIC AND COPPER WORKS." /></a>
+<p class="center">MOUNT MORGAN: MUNDIC AND COPPER WORKS.</p></div>
+
+<p>One of the first results of this predominance of Labour representation
+was the early passage of legislation abolishing Pacific Island labour in the
+sugar industry&mdash;which is almost exclusively confined to Queensland&mdash;and
+requiring all the islanders to leave Australia for their native homes not
+later than 31st December, 1906. With a view to compensating the cane-growers
+for the added cost of labour, and to induce them to abandon all
+forms of coloured labour, a bounty, ranging at the present time from 7s. 6d.
+per ton of cane in the extreme North to 6s. per ton in Southern Queensland
+and on the Northern Rivers of New South Wales, was offered upon all
+cane grown exclusively with white labour; while to provide funds for
+payment of the bounty an excise duty, first of £3 and then £4 per ton, was
+imposed. These radical changes occurred at a time, unfortunately, when
+the State was suffering from severe depression resulting from an unprecedented
+succession of adverse seasons and the substitution of a uniform
+protective Customs tariff for the State tariff, which had for years previously
+yielded a large revenue per head while affording protection to many native
+industries. The abolition of interstate Customs duties caused a further
+loss to the Queensland Treasury; so that the Government felt compelled to
+ask Parliament to impose new taxation as well as sanction severe retrenchment
+in order to check the alarming series of revenue deficits which, despite
+large loan expenditure, marked the stressful period. All this tended to
+make federation unpopular, and obscure the benefits the union under the
+Commonwealth Constitution was calculated to confer eventually.</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page94" id="page94"></a>94</span>
+
+<p>The popular sentiment was, however, overwhelmingly in favour of the
+White Australia policy; and even most of its opponents took exception to
+the hasty methods of enforcement rather than to the principle itself. Much
+difficulty was at first experienced in securing reliable white workers, but
+the remuneration year by year attracted, in increasing numbers, men
+accustomed to farm work, until, in 1908-9, the owners of about 90 per cent.
+of the cane grown found themselves in a position to claim the bounty.
+Pacific Island labour is now almost a thing of the past, though a few
+islanders who were not repatriated still engage in field work. In the more
+severely tropical of the sugar districts some Asiatic labour is also employed,
+the planters alleging that white men will not, unless at prohibitory
+wages, face the muggy heat of the cane-brake. The bounty, together
+with the £6 import duty, appears at length to have re-established the
+industry on a durable basis; but many growers look forward with some
+apprehension to the gradual extinction of the bounty and the possibility of
+a reduction in the import duty, holding that without the protection at
+present afforded Australian cane sugar cannot compete against the product
+of the cheap coloured labour of Java, Fiji, and Mauritius, or the beet sugar
+of Europe.</p>
+
+<p>A further objection to federation was found in the mode adopted of
+distributing the Federal surplus revenue among the States. The 87th
+section of the Constitution required that for ten years the Federal Government
+should not expend on its own purposes more than one-fourth of the
+net Customs and Excise revenue of the Commonwealth, and that the
+balance of such revenue should be returned to the States. Prior to
+federation this had been interpreted to mean that each State would receive
+back not less than three-fourths of the net Customs and Excise revenue
+collected within its jurisdiction. But the Commonwealth Crown law officers
+placed a different construction on the section, and held that, so long as at
+least three-fourths of the net Customs revenue was distributed collectively,
+the Commonwealth had no obligation to return that proportion to any
+individual State. This has caused great uncertainty and embarrassment to
+the Queensland Treasurer, and has impelled many public men to stigmatise
+the union as a curse instead of a blessing.</p>
+
+<p>In illustration of the unequal division of the surplus Federal revenue
+among the States, it may be mentioned that, according to a table published
+by the Commonwealth Auditor-General, while the aggregate sum beyond
+the three-fourths of Customs and Excise revenue returned to the States
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page95" id="page95"></a>95</span>
+amounted to £6,059,087, Queensland actually received £44,951 less
+than her three-fourths during the eight and a-half years ended 30th June,
+1909; and her Treasurer was much embarrassed by the uncertainty of the
+return owing to tariff alterations and the determination of the Federal
+Government to defray from revenue otherwise accruing to the State under
+the Constitution Act the cost of permanent buildings, which the State had
+formerly provided for out of loan moneys.</p>
+
+<p>Another grievance of the States&mdash;especially of Queensland, which
+borrowed largely to construct its 10,253 miles of telegraph lines, and
+incurred a heavy annual charge upon revenue in providing postal communication
+throughout its vast and scantily populated territory&mdash;is
+that the Commonwealth Government treat section 85 of the Constitution
+as a dead letter. This provision expressly enacts that "the Commonwealth
+shall compensate the State for the value of any property passing to the
+Commonwealth under this section"; but not a penny of compensation has
+ever been paid, although there is a considerable interest charge to be met
+annually by the State Treasuries on account of money borrowed for the
+purposes of these transferred properties.</p>
+
+<p>The chief revenue loss suffered by the Queensland Treasury under
+federation arose from the passing of the uniform tariff, which drew
+considerably less than the former State tariff from the pockets of the
+taxpayers. Of course the remedy had to be sought in other taxation,
+and it could only be found in direct levies much more objectionable
+than the indirect charge imposed by Customs duties. However, the feat
+was ultimately accomplished, despite the depressed condition of the State
+through years of scanty rainfall and the enormous losses of live stock
+consequent thereon; but successive State Governments have had to bear
+much unmerited odium and have suffered in popularity on account of their
+efforts to restore financial equilibrium when the principal disturbing element
+was the advent of federation and not State mismanagement.</p>
+
+<p>Since times began to improve throughout Australia, the Federal burden
+has been less in evidence; and at the late Melbourne Conference, held to
+confer with the Commonwealth Government with the view to adjust mutual
+relations, no State Premier recognised more frankly than did Mr. Kidston
+the claims of the Federal Government to increased revenue to defray the
+cost of old-age pensions, naval and military defence, and other great
+national objects. The provisional agreement entered into by the Conference
+was recognised by all the Premiers as less advantageous than they had
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page96" id="page96"></a>96</span>
+desired, but they were unanimous in admitting that under the altered
+conditions it was the best they could now hope for. On the Commonwealth
+side it was recognised that the States had made a large voluntary surrender,
+and that the position of the Federal Treasury would be greatly strengthened
+under the operation of the agreement. The apparent dread of diminishing
+Customs revenue in after years was clearly not well founded, because the
+Commonwealth Parliament can easily, by readjustment of duties, make up
+any deficiency. On the other hand, an immense advantage will be gained
+by both parties to the agreement from the separation of Federal and State
+finances except in respect of the liability of the Commonwealth to hand over,
+and the right of the States to receive, a fixed annual contribution of 25s. per
+head of the population. The representatives of the States granted a further
+concession to the Commonwealth by permitting the retention of an additional
+£600,000 of the Customs revenue for the current year to reimburse
+the cost of old-age pensions not already provided for by the Commonwealth
+Trust Fund created by the Surplus Revenue Act of 1908. The bill
+embodying the agreement received the approval of the statutory majority in
+both Houses of Parliament. It now rests with the electors of the Commonwealth
+to accept or reject the necessary amendment of the Constitution;
+and there is every reason to hope that the compact will be made as
+permanent as any other part of the Constitution. In that event, the
+relations between Commonwealth and States will undoubtedly improve, and
+harmonious co-operation for the public welfare may be safely anticipated
+from the Parliaments. The Federal session of 1909 has been distinguished
+by the passage of epoch-making bills for the appointment of a High
+Commissioner in London and for naval and military defence, measures
+which are calculated to raise the Commonwealth to an exalted position in
+the scale of young nations.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 400px;"><a href="images/page096-map1-1100.jpg"><img src="images/page096-map1-400.jpg" width="400" height="544" alt="QUEENSLAND 1859" /></a>
+<p class="center">QUEENSLAND 1859</p></div>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 400px;"><a href="images/page096-map2-1100.jpg"><img src="images/page096-map2-400.jpg" width="400" height="549" alt="QUEENSLAND 1909" /></a>
+<p class="center">QUEENSLAND 1909</p></div>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 600px;"><a href="images/page096-map3-1200.jpg"><img src="images/page096-map3-600.jpg" width="600" height="443" alt="AUSTRALIA 1859 SHOWING Self-Governing Colonies" /></a>
+<p class="center">AUSTRALIA 1859 SHOWING <span class="sc">Self-Governing Colonies</span></p></div>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 600px;"><a href="images/page096-map4-1200.jpg"><img src="images/page096-map4-600.jpg" width="600" height="435" alt="THE WORLD Showing relative position of AUSTRALIA." /></a>
+<p class="center">THE WORLD Showing relative position of AUSTRALIA.</p></div>
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page97" id="page97"></a>97</span>
+
+<h2>PART IV.&mdash;THE PRIMARY INDUSTRIES.</h2>
+
+<h2 style="margin-top: 2em;">CHAPTER I.</h2>
+
+<h3>THE PASTORAL INDUSTRY.</h3>
+
+<blockquote><p class="ind">
+<span class="outdent1">
+Importance of Industry</span>.&mdash;Small Beginnings in New South Wales.&mdash;Extension of Industry.&mdash;Stocking
+of Darling Downs and Western Queensland.&mdash;Rush for Pastoral Lands.&mdash;Difficulties
+of Early Squatters.&mdash;Influx of Victorian Capital.&mdash;Changes in Method of
+Working Stations.&mdash;Boom in Pastoral Properties.&mdash;Checks from Drought.&mdash;Discovery of
+Artesian Water.&mdash;Conservation of Surface Water.&mdash;Introduction of Grazing Farm System.&mdash;Closer
+Settlement of Darling Downs.&mdash;Cattle-Rearing.&mdash;Meat-Freezing Works.&mdash;Overstocking.&mdash;Dairying.&mdash;Station
+Routine.&mdash;Charm of Pastoral Life.&mdash;Shearing.&mdash;Hospitality
+of Squatters.&mdash;Attraction of Industry as Investment and Occupation.
+</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>The pastoral industry in Queensland is, in point of duration, well
+within the compass of a single life. In about seventy years it has attained
+its present dimensions, and, as progress in the early years was very slow,
+its magnitude to-day supplies striking testimony to the energy and
+enterprise of two generations. The description of Queensland as a huge
+sheep and cattle farm with contributive industries, which without very
+great extravagance might have been offered forty years ago, has long
+ceased to be applicable. But though other industries have grown into
+importance, reducing its pre-eminence, the pastoral still retains its
+unquestioned
+lead and is deservedly regarded as the main source of the
+State's wealth. Bearing in mind that the total exports from Queensland
+for 1907 were rather over fourteen and a-half millions sterling, of which
+pastoral produce claimed more than half, it will be seen that this title
+to precedence cannot be challenged. With an abatement of £529,000
+for butter&mdash;dairying being associated with agriculture&mdash;this imposing
+sum is the direct product of the natural grasses. It can hardly be
+surprising then, after realising the potential wealth of these pastures, that
+visitors should be struck with the fact that rainfall&mdash;past, present, and
+prospective&mdash;is a constant and very prominent topic in all grades of social
+intercourse.</p>
+
+<p>That a continent so suited to the abundant propagation of animal life
+should have been so poorly equipped by Nature with an indigenous fauna
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page98" id="page98"></a>98</span>
+can only be accounted for by Australia's primeval isolation. Similar vast
+prairie lands, which in America sustained countless herds of bison and
+in Africa literally swarmed with antelope and many species of game, were
+in Australia almost uninhabited. The absence of large rivers and a
+general scarcity of water had doubtless much to do with this destitute
+condition of the great pasture lands of the interior, but still the wonder
+remains that a continent which now carries more sheep than any other
+country in the world should have been in its original state, except along
+its coastal belt, almost tenantless. The fierce carnivora of the older world
+were entirely unrepresented, the principal denizen of the lonely land being
+the timid kangaroo; but the curious problems presented by the Australian
+fauna have compensated the naturalist for its modest numbers.</p>
+
+<p>In Queensland what is recognised as the Western Interior occupies
+about half the area of the State and is distinct in its geological formation
+from the coastal belt, the waters of which run into the ocean to the east
+and north. The region of these watersheds, with the exception of some
+comparatively limited areas of downs country on the heads of the rivers,
+is regarded as unsuitable for sheep, the rainfall being more abundant than
+on the Western waters and the grass coarser, so that cattle are almost
+exclusively run there. In the Western Interior are the true sheep
+pastures. The farther one goes west the more treeless the country
+becomes. Here undulating downs for the most part stretch to the horizon,
+intersected by watercourses fringed with timber, and although in summer
+many of these creeks shrink to a chain of disconnected waterholes, few of
+which are permanent, they offer abundant opportunities for water conservation.
+In the last few years many for several miles of their course
+have been converted into running streams by artesian bores.</p>
+
+<p>Before, however, dwelling on the present position, we must briefly
+glance at the origin of pastoral enterprise in Australia and its tardy
+extension to Queensland.</p>
+
+<p>As soon as settlement was established, the new land had to be
+stocked with the domesticated animals of the old. Captain Phillip, the
+first Governor, in 1788 made a very modest start. He brought with him
+from England 7 horses, 7 cattle, and 29 sheep, besides pigs, rabbits, and
+poultry. Remembering that in those days England was from six to nine
+months distant from the new settlement, it is not perhaps surprising that
+pastoral progress was slow. In 1800 there were only 6,124 sheep and
+1,044 cattle in Australia. But five years prior to this the seed destined to
+produce a giant growth was already germinating. A shrewd young
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page99" id="page99"></a>99</span>
+soldier had detected the germ of Australia's future wealth. With a
+strange prescience, unaided by experience, Captain Macarthur recognised
+that the dry climate of Australia was peculiarly adapted to the growth of
+a fine type of wool. Starting from most unpromising ewes from India, he
+gradually improved the strain by the introduction of Spanish blood. He was
+fortunate at the start in getting three rams from the Cape, part of a gift
+from the King of Spain to the Dutch Government, and by sedulous culling
+with a bold disregard for carcass, although fat wethers at the time sold for
+£5, he succeeded in establishing a good merino flock the wool from which
+created an excellent impression in England. English manufacturers, who
+had hitherto drawn their limited stocks of clothing wool from Spain,
+welcomed the promise of a new source of supply.</p>
+
+<p>Macarthur had taken some wool with him to England, when deported
+in consequence of a fatal duel in 1803, and its fine quality was at once
+recognised and appreciated. He was fortunate in being still there in the
+following year, when George the Third, in the hope of encouraging the
+production of fine wool, sold a portion of his Kew stud flock, the progeny
+of Negretti sheep, another gift of the Spanish King, so that they might
+be distributed amongst his subjects. Macarthur was the principal buyer,
+securing seven rams and a ewe at very moderate prices, the highest being
+under £30. He was an enthusiast, and could see the enormous possibilities
+of the virgin continent he had left, with its mild dry climate and almost
+limitless pasture lands, for the maintenance of great flocks, the wool of
+which could be improved to the finest type. He asked the British
+Government for a grant of land to feed his flocks, assuring them that he
+was "so convinced of the practicability of supplying this country with
+any quantity of fine wool that it may require that I am earnestly solicitous
+to prosecute this important object, and on my return to New South Wales
+will devote my whole attention to accelerating its complete attainment."
+This request&mdash;in spite of the adverse opinion of Sir Joseph Banks as to
+the suitability of the new land for wool-growing&mdash;was granted, Lord
+Camden instructing the Governor of New South Wales to grant
+Macarthur such lands "as would enable him to extend his flocks in such
+a degree as may promise to supply a sufficiency of animal food for the
+colony as well as a lucrative article of export for the support of our
+manufactures at home." Macarthur selected near Mount Taurus, and the
+Camden estate, long famous as the source from which many studs were
+either formed or replenished, was established. How limited at this time
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page100" id="page100"></a>100</span>
+was the world's production of this superfine wool&mdash;suited to the manufacture
+of the finest fabrics&mdash;may be gathered from the fact of one bale of
+Macarthur's being sold at Garraway's Coffee House in 1807 at 10s. 6d. per
+lb., the cloth from which provided England's Farmer King with a coat.</p>
+
+<p>But not till the merino had passed beyond coastal influences was the
+improvement of growth due to an eminently suitable habitat fully realised.
+Wentworth and others had in 1813 pushed across the Blue Mountains,
+and the occupation of the interior began. In the Mudgee district, which
+was stocked with sheep about 1824, the clip improved so distinctly on
+the original Spanish stock as to form almost a new type. Increasing in
+length and gaining in softness and elasticity, it has commanded ever-increasing
+attention from manufacturers, and has long been recognised as
+the premier fine wool of the world.</p>
+
+<p>Tasmania, starting with Macarthur's stock, and following on his
+breeding lines, had proved peculiarly adapted for the growth of a dense
+fleece of fine wool. As numbers rapidly increased in this small island,
+flockmasters had to look about for an outlet. This was easily found on
+the mainland, and sheep were soon pouring across the narrow strait into
+the district of Port Phillip, which in 1851 was proclaimed the colony of
+Victoria.</p>
+
+<p>After Macarthur's death in 1834, his system of breeding was carefully
+followed by his widow, and when in 1858 the flock was dispersed the stud
+ewes numbered about 1,000. These, passing into the hands of flockmasters
+of New South Wales and Victoria, were the foundation of many
+of the noted studs of to-day. The Victorian flocks, starting from the
+Tasmanian, early competed with the island of their origin in excellence,
+and, though Tasmania still maintains its reputation as the home from which
+the studs of the other States are constantly replenished, it has of late
+years gone largely into crossbreds. The most noted studs, however, are
+still maintained undefiled, except that the introduction of the American
+Vermont blood has been in some cases cautiously tried, with results that
+have provoked much controversy.</p>
+
+<p>Other pioneers of the industry, the Rev. Samuel Marsden for one,
+started with the same Spanish blood, crossed with the hardy and prolific
+Indian ewe, but unlike Macarthur they found the temptations of the fat
+stock market irresistible. Remembering the great price fat wethers
+commanded in those early days, it must be admitted that the temptation
+was considerable. Macarthur, however, by steadily rejecting all mutton
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page101" id="page101"></a>101</span>
+breeds and making a fine description of fleece his one object, deserves
+grateful recognition as the founder of the Australian merino.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 600px;"><a href="images/page100a-1200.jpg"><img src="images/page100a-600.jpg" width="600" height="183" alt="FAT CATTLE, CENTRAL QUEENSLAND" /></a>
+<p class="center">FAT CATTLE, CENTRAL QUEENSLAND</p></div>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 600px;"><a href="images/page100b-1200.jpg"><img src="images/page100b-600.jpg" width="600" height="181" alt="CATTLE COUNTRY, WEST MORETON" /></a>
+<p class="center">CATTLE COUNTRY, WEST MORETON</p></div>
+
+<p>Although the settlement of Moreton Bay was started in 1824, it
+was long before the pastoral industry made any progress in the territory
+which is now Queensland. In that year Governor Brisbane sent Oxley
+to explore Moreton Bay and report on its suitability for a convict out-station.
+From information given by two white castaways living with the
+blacks, he found the river which Cook in 1770 and Flinders ten years
+later had failed to discover&mdash;though both, confident of its existence, had
+spent days in the Bay searching for its embouchure. Sheep and cattle
+were sent as supplies. But in a few years the settlement was abandoned,
+the officials and prisoners returning to New South Wales; and in 1842,
+when Moreton Bay was proclaimed a free settlement, the Government
+live stock were dispersed by sale amongst the settlers. Blacks were
+numerous and very hostile, and, though cattle throve well, the country was
+found unsuitable for sheep, so that expansion from the Moreton district
+was very slow.</p>
+
+<p>But already in 1827 one man had been favoured with a glimpse of
+what is still regarded as the garden of Queensland. Allan Cunningham,
+starting from the Hunter, had pushed steadily North for 500 miles till
+he emerged from the broken highlands of New England on to the famous
+Downs which he named after Sir Charles Darling. He was enraptured
+with the country, which he described as clothed "with grasses and herbage
+exhibiting an extraordinary luxuriance of growth." Yet it was thirteen
+years before anyone took advantage of his discovery. To a later generation
+acquainted with the great value of the lands, which as a distinguished
+botanist Cunningham could not have failed to recognise, this appears one
+of the most astounding facts in the history of exploration. Many a time
+he must have discoursed to his friend Patrick Leslie on the rich vision he
+had been privileged to look on, yet it was not till 1840 that the latter with
+a small flock followed in his footsteps. What increases the surprise at
+this apparently strange lack of enterprise is that the year after Cunningham
+had found the Darling Downs he visited Moreton Bay, and succeeded
+in crossing the range from the coast by a gap since known by his name
+and reached the vicinity of his old camp, thus demonstrating that the
+natural port of this rich region was little over a hundred miles distant.
+Leslie, who settled in the neighbourhood of where the flourishing town of
+Warwick now stands, was rapidly followed by others who established
+the fine squattages that have since become famous. Although a few
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page102" id="page102"></a>102</span>
+sheep had previously been introduced in the Moreton district, Leslie
+and his confreres must be regarded as the fathers of sheep-farming in
+Queensland.</p>
+
+<p>Difficulties of carriage long retarded any attempt to occupy the
+splendid territory farther West which Sir James Mitchell had explored in
+1846 and Kennedy had farther penetrated a year later, crossing the
+Barcoo and discovering the Thomson River. Though the existence of
+these vast rolling plains was known, the presumption that no industry
+requiring a fair amount of labour could pay, handicapped with five to six
+hundred miles of land carriage, checked any attempt to occupy them.
+Nor was this unreasonable. The difficulties and uncertainties of such an
+undertaking might well prompt hesitation. Yet, in view of the rich
+returns from flocks elsewhere, it was impossible that these solitudes
+should for very long await easier conditions. A few adventurous spirits
+pushed out to these great undulating plains. Their example was quickly
+followed. In the early sixties a general migration westward began, and
+wherever water was met with the country was taken up. In 1869 an Act
+was passed granting 21-year leases to applicants who had taken up areas
+and stocked them to the extent of twenty-five sheep or five cattle to the
+square mile. It was found that on these Western pastures, rich with
+succulent grasses and saline shrubs all the year round, and in winter
+abounding in herbage of many descriptions, all stock grew and fattened
+amazingly. The climate, too, falsified all predictions, and instead of
+converting the wool to hair, which experts had prognosticated as the
+inevitable result of an ardent summer, grew an excellent fleece of fine
+lustrous combing wool. A frantic rush for country set in. Flocks and
+herds were hurried out by jealous owners anxious to forestall one another
+in the scramble for leases. In a few years the whole territory, except
+where absence of water forbade settlement, was parcelled out in sheep and
+cattle runs. It had not yet been recognised how country destitute of
+surface water could be utilised. On these neglected areas are now many
+prosperous sheep-runs, the pioneers little suspecting the inexhaustible
+supplies awaiting the magic touch of the boring-rod to provide the
+abundant streams they longed for.</p>
+
+<p>With such easy conditions of tenure and lands of unsurpassable
+quality for grazing, it might naturally be expected that these pioneers
+amassed easy fortunes. The falsification of such expectation is a melancholy
+story. Though the cattle-men in many cases managed to struggle
+on, the majority of the sheep-owners went under. The difficulties were
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page103" id="page103"></a>103</span>
+enormous. Railways had not yet penetrated the country, though a small
+start had been made. Wool took from six to nine months reaching the
+coast by bullock dray, and the carriage of supplies to the station cost more
+than the goods themselves. Frequently the next clip was awaiting carriage
+ere the previous one had left the station. Wages were high, and all forms
+of labour scarce. The quality of sheep, too, was poor, many of them being
+the culls from Southern flocks, bought at high prices. The depression in
+the wool market, with high rates of interest on borrowed money, strained
+the pioneer's resources to breaking point, and in too many cases years of
+strenuous endeavour and hardship ended in ruin.</p>
+
+<p>But brighter days were in store. As railways pushed out, the attention
+of Victorian capitalists was attracted by the potentialities of Western
+Queensland. The phenomenal gold production of Victoria had produced
+a plethora of money seeking investment, which constituted Melbourne the
+financial capital of Australia. This accumulated wealth, after fructifying
+New South Wales, flowed into Queensland. A Victorian invasion began.
+The knell of the shepherd had sounded, wire fences taking his place.
+Sheep that had hitherto been run in flocks of 1,500 to 2,000, tended during
+the day by a man and a dog and yarded at night, were now turned into
+large paddocks by tens of thousands with only a boundary rider to look
+to the fences. It was found by this method that the carrying capacity of
+country was enormously increased. Yarded sheep, driven to and fro twice
+daily, destroy more grass than they can eat, whereas when left to themselves
+it is all utilised. The smaller the paddocks, the less the sheep
+wander and the larger the number that can be carried on a given area.
+It was found, too, that stocking greatly improved the water. On the
+spongy surface of virgin country, untrodden by any hoof, there was little
+"run" off the surface after rain, but when hardened by the tread of stock
+the creeks received a fairer share of the downpour. The best rams
+procurable from the Darling Downs and noted Southern studs rapidly
+improved the flocks. In 1873 wool rose to a price not touched for many
+years; a boom in Queensland stations set in, and the remnant of the
+pioneers who elected to do so sold out at prices that gave a rich though
+tardy reward for long and toilsome enterprise.</p>
+
+<p>Although the general course of the industry has been one of great
+prosperity, it has not been without its serious checks. A severe drought
+throughout nearly the whole of Australia, culminating in 1902, inflicted
+terrible losses of both sheep and cattle. Waterholes supposed to be
+permanent dried up; and pastures within reach of those which proved
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page104" id="page104"></a>104</span>
+permanent were trodden into a desert condition till the stock were too
+weak to travel back to the surviving pasturage. The outlook was so
+gloomy that almost universal ruin seemed impending. It is sad to think
+that whilst stock were perishing in multitudes abundant subterranean
+streams, flowing southward to discharge uselessly in the Great Australian
+Bight, might have been available to avert this national calamity. The uses
+of adversity have never been more strikingly exemplified than by the
+number of artesian bores put down since that hard experience. These, as
+the cost of sinking decreases, are multiplying yearly. The artesian basin
+exists throughout nearly three-fifths of Queensland, and whilst the origin
+of these subterranean stores is still somewhat of a mystery they are
+apparently inexhaustible. The supply and the depth at which water is
+obtained vary considerably; the former runs as high as 3,000,000 gallons
+per diem, and the latter averages about 1,600 feet.</p>
+
+<p>Whilst artesian boring has been prosecuted with commendable enterprise,
+the storage of surface water on an extensive scale has not yet
+received the attention it deserves. Many schemes have been mooted for
+conserving a portion of the huge volume of water that in the rainy season
+flows through regions which would gladly retain a share, to waste itself
+in the Southern Ocean. Doubtless in the future a problem of such
+fascination will attract the best engineering skill, and a number of inland
+lakes will result. But that day may yet be distant. One such scheme only
+need be noticed. The Diamantina River, which in time of flood stretches
+out to many miles in breadth, flows south-westward through several degrees
+of Western Queensland. At a point known as Diamantina Gates it finds
+an exit through a narrow gorge in a low range. Although never yet tested
+by accurate survey, competent judges have surmised that a substantial
+dam at this spot would throw back an amount of water which would constitute
+a veritable inland sea. Other large rivers&mdash;the Thomson, Barcoo,
+Hamilton, Georgina&mdash;also offer to the hydraulic engineer splendid opportunities
+of winning distinction.</p>
+
+<p>In 1884 a notable change of land policy was adopted. The 1869
+leases were expiring, and it was recognised that the big squattages could
+not longer be allowed to monopolise the country. Room was required
+for smaller holdings. All available country was already occupied under
+the 1869 leases, and, although under another Act 5,120 acres could be
+acquired with conditions of improvement and residence, there was no way
+of getting an area capable of carrying 10,000 sheep. There did not exist a
+small squatting class. The Minister for Lands, Mr. C. B. Dutton&mdash;himself
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page105" id="page105"></a>105</span>
+a large squatter&mdash;recognised the desirability of creating such a
+class, which would stand in the same relation to the "squattocracy" that
+the yeomen of Britain do to the large landowners. In granting a new
+lease to the original lessee, Dutton's Act required him to surrender a
+portion of his run, from a half to a quarter according to the length of
+time his lease had been running. A Land Board independent of Ministerial
+control was appointed to arrange an equitable division of the runs
+and to fix the rent of the new lease, which was for fifteen years. Two
+years later this was increased to twenty-one years, on condition of the
+lessee surrendering another quarter of his area at the end of the fifteenth
+year. The portions resumed from the old squattages were surveyed into
+areas up to 20,000 acres and thrown open to selection. The old lessee&mdash;who
+regarded any area under 400 square miles as a paltry holding and
+counted his crop of calves by thousands and his yearly lambing increase by
+tens of thousands&mdash;ridiculed the new departure, maintaining that any
+man must starve on such an absurdly inadequate area as 20,000 acres.
+But these sinister predictions did not deter selectors from testing the
+question. At first grazing farms were only very gradually applied for,
+but a few years' experience justified Mr. Dutton's expectations, and a great
+demand set in, till now, as soon as opened to selection, there is a keen
+competition for them. The difficulty is to survey them fast enough to
+provide for requirements. The maximum area has since been increased so
+that now as much as 60,000 acres can be held by an individual, provided
+the total rent does not exceed £200. It is not unusual for three or four
+grazing farmers to combine and manage the combined leasehold as a
+co-partnership, which, although not provided for in the Act, is sanctioned
+by the Land Court.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 600px;"><a href="images/page104a-1200.jpg"><img src="images/page104a-600.jpg" width="600" height="163" alt="HORSES AT GOWRIE, DARLING DOWNS" /></a>
+<p class="center">HORSES AT GOWRIE, DARLING DOWNS</p></div>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 600px;"><a href="images/page104b-1200.jpg"><img src="images/page104b-600.jpg" width="600" height="144" alt="SHEEP AT GOWRIE, DARLING DOWNS" /></a>
+<p class="center">SHEEP AT GOWRIE, DARLING DOWNS</p></div>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 600px;"><a href="images/page104c-1200.jpg"><img src="images/page104c-600.jpg" width="600" height="234" alt="HORSES, WESTERN QUEENSLAND" /></a>
+<p class="center">HORSES, WESTERN QUEENSLAND</p></div>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 600px;"><a href="images/page104d-1200.jpg"><img src="images/page104d-600.jpg" width="600" height="234" alt="FAT CATTLE, BURRANDILLA, CHARLEVILLE" /></a>
+<p class="center">FAT CATTLE, BURRANDILLA, CHARLEVILLE</p></div>
+
+<p>A new Act in 1902 offered those who elected to take advantage of it
+a fresh lease, at the expiration of the current one, of from ten to forty-two
+years, according to classification; and farther resumptions were made for
+closer settlement. The classification, which was decided by the Land
+Court, was governed by the degree of remoteness from railway and the
+demand for land in the neighbourhood.</p>
+
+<p>The low range of hills surrounding the Darling Downs encloses over
+2,000,000 acres of land of a quality that invites the plough to convert it
+into the granary of the State. As the railway to the New South Wales
+border takes its rather serpentine course southwards, coasting round many
+of the undulations to avoid cutting through them, the traveller looks upon
+a land which he must recognise as capable of maintaining a large farming
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page106" id="page106"></a>106</span>
+population. What he actually saw till quite recently was paddock after
+paddock of sheep on each side, then a paddock of cattle and horses, and
+again more sheep. It was palpable that this could not continue indefinitely.
+The railway built at the cost of the general taxpayers had greatly increased
+the value of these estates and rendered their working more profitable. The
+owners of these flocks and herds had done good service to the State, and
+deserved the most generous treatment. Successors of the original pioneers,
+they had bred the stock that helped to occupy the West, and had founded
+studs that enabled others to replenish their flocks and herds from the
+purest sources. It was important above all things that no legislative
+interference
+should harass men who deserved so well of Queensland, and that
+no step should be taken to dispossess them which could be suspected of
+any taint of harshness. In time, doubtless, they would themselves have
+parcelled out their estates for tillage, but the process would have been slow,
+the easy terms of payment possible to a Government borrowing money at
+a low rate of interest not being generally convenient to an individual, and
+time in the development of a young country is important. Parliament
+therefore took the matter in hand and decided that where possible these
+landholders should be bought out on a valuation made by an independent
+tribunal. A number of properties have been bought by the Government,
+cut up into farms of from 80 acres upwards, and sold to farmers
+on liberal terms, payment extending over twenty-five years. Mixed
+farming and dairying are the chief purposes to which the land has
+been put, and busy townships have sprung up at the railway stations
+where a few years ago the stationmaster, his family, and an assistant
+porter formed the bulk of the resident population. Breeding lambs for
+export is found to be a profitable branch of the pastoral business on the
+Downs, and the breeding of crossbreds is consequently increasing, the
+Lincoln or Leicester being mated with the merino. Southdown and
+Romney rams have also been tried, but the Lincoln cross has been generally
+preferred. Crossbred lambs three to four months old bring 10s. in
+Brisbane, the railage costing from 1s. to 1s. 3d.</p>
+
+<p>So far little mention has been made of cattle. It may be generally
+stated that where country is suitable for sheep, or, more accurately
+speaking, where they can be profitably run, cattle are only depastured
+in very small herds. The coastal belt and the Northern Gulf region are
+exclusively cattle country, and in the extreme West, although sheep thrive
+excellently, the long carriage causes cattle to be preferred, the expense of
+cattle management being much below that of sheep. The product of
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page107" id="page107"></a>107</span>
+these distant pastures travels on the hoof to market, the Western cattle
+being noted for their great weight of flesh and the distance they carry it
+without great waste. Most of the herds have been improved to a high
+degree of excellence by importation of some of the best blood in England,
+and high-class stud herds have been long established in the different
+States from which drafts of herd bulls are drawn as required at from
+about 10 to 15 guineas per head.</p>
+
+<p>With a population of little over half a million occupying a territory
+of 670,500 square miles, it will be realised that the yearly cast of "fats"
+greatly exceeds local requirements. The Southern States take a large
+number. New South Wales and Victoria are the best customers, as, with
+a combined population of roughly five times that of Queensland, the total
+of their cattle is only slightly in excess of the Queensland herd.
+South Australia is also a regular buyer of "fats." The "stores"
+that go South to be fattened beyond the State are almost exclusively
+bullocks of three to four years. Amongst the "fats" of ripe ages is
+a proportion of dry cows, and a limited number of breeders and mixed
+cattle also find sale with Southern buyers. But these outlets would have
+been quite inadequate for the absorption of the Queensland annual surplus
+had not meat-preserving come to the rescue of the stock-owner. Before
+freezing works were established, boiling down was the one resource, the
+tallow, hides, and sheepskins giving a meagre return, whilst the valuable
+carcass went to the pigs. The late Sir Arthur Hodgson, a leading
+pastoralist, used to relate with humorous comments his experiences with
+a first draft of sheep from his Darling Downs station (Eton Vale),
+brought to Brisbane to be boiled down at the Kangaroo Point works.
+During the process the owner&mdash;educated at Eton, and subsequently a
+Minister of the Crown in Queensland&mdash;went round daily with a handcart
+selling the legs of mutton at sixpence apiece. Such commercial enterprise
+has long fallen into desuetude.</p>
+
+<p>To bring the surplus meat of Australia within reach of the eager
+millions of Europe has not been an easy problem, but it has at length been
+fairly solved by freezing the carcass, though much has yet to be done in
+discovering the best method of distribution of so perishable an article
+and its proper treatment from the freezing chamber to the spit. The
+various works buy cattle at about 18s. to 20s. per 100 lb., the weight of
+bullocks averaging about 750 lb., though many mobs, notably the huge
+beasts from the West, go as much as 200 lb. beyond this. The works are
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page108" id="page108"></a>108</span>
+also buyers of fat sheep, a 50-lb. wether two or three months after shearing
+bringing from 9s. to 10s. In the six years 1901-6 the exports of frozen
+meat from Australia totalled 353,514,135 lb. of beef and 371,692,090 lb. of
+mutton.</p>
+
+<p>An occupation the profits of which are capable of such large additions
+by increasing numbers is apt to foster a spirit of gambling. In a season
+of bountiful rainfall it is almost impossible to over-stock country, and
+owners too often take the risk of availing themselves to the full of
+Nature's prodigality. Such a policy is most dangerous. When the time of
+more limited rainfall comes the owner of over-stocked pastures pays a
+heavy toll for his improvidence, whereas he who has regulated his numbers
+on the assumption of fair average seasons comes scathless through the time
+of trial.</p>
+
+<p>Dairying comes more within the department of agriculture, as crops
+must be grown for feed, the dairy-farmer being necessarily the occupant
+of a very limited area. The benefit dairying has been to the small stock-owner
+can hardly be exaggerated. In old days the owner of a herd of
+50 to 100 head could look only for a poor living, working for wages for
+part of the year whilst his family looked after the herd. Now he is a
+rich man. The monthly cheque from the creamery for a man milking 25
+cows easily reaches an average of £20. Except in the few cases where the
+business has been conducted in a large way by capitalists, it is mostly an
+enterprise for small men. The work is unremitting, the herd having to
+be milked twice a day, but the rewards are sure and ample. Butter and
+cheese factories have sprung up like mushrooms in the last few years,
+there being now 79 in the State. The yield of butter for 1907 totalled
+22,789,158 lb. As returns depend on the amount of butter-fat produced,
+owners have converted the ordinary breeds of cattle to good dairy herds
+by plentiful introductions of the true milking strains&mdash;Jersey, Alderney,
+Ayrshire, Holstein, and milking Shorthorn.</p>
+
+<p>Many will probably wonder how cattle grazed over an area of many
+hundred square miles of country, which in the outside districts is probably
+unfenced, can be mustered or even kept on the run. Cattle are docilely
+subservient to custom, and once broken into "camps" will voluntarily
+seek repose in these shelters. On a well-managed station the crack of a
+whip will start any mob within hearing trotting for their camp, formed
+in a clump of shade on the creek, or, if shade is available, on some
+better galloping ground. Others, seeing them on the move, head towards
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page109" id="page109"></a>109</span>
+the same well-known resort, there to pass the day till the shadows
+lengthen, only moving off in the cool of the evening to feed. If they are
+being mustered for branding, the cows with calves are "cut out" and
+brought to the stockyard to be dealt with; if for a butcher to select a draft
+of fats, these only are taken and delivered either on the spot or where
+arranged. At the general muster, which is only made every few years, as
+the cattle are brought in they are put through a lane in the yard, the long
+lock at the tip of the tail being cut short; they are thus easily distinguished
+on the run, so that only long-tails are brought in subsequently. A "bang-tail"
+muster is recorded in the station books, and, as all sales and other
+disposals are carefully noted and an allowance made of from 3 to 5 per
+cent. for deaths, it is not necessary to repeat an operation taxing horseflesh
+so severely at nearer intervals than three to five years. Stock-horses
+become very clever, and will turn and twist with a beast through the mob,
+the rider's whip playing on either side till the animal is run out. Large
+tailing yards are maintained in different parts of the run to avoid much
+driving, and at weaning time the weaners are herded for a month or six
+weeks and yarded at night, which has a quieting effect they never forget.
+A well-managed herd is noted for absence of rowdyism amongst its
+members. On a well-improved station the bullocks, heifers, and weaners
+will be in separate paddocks, and at a certain season the bulls are taken
+out of the herd and put in a paddock by themselves.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 600px;"><a href="images/page108a-1200.jpg"><img src="images/page108a-600.jpg" width="600" height="181" alt="WOOL TEAMS, WYANDRA, WARREGO DISTRICT" /></a>
+<p class="center">WOOL TEAMS, WYANDRA, WARREGO DISTRICT</p></div>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 600px;"><a href="images/page108b-1200.jpg"><img src="images/page108b-600.jpg" width="600" height="184" alt="HAULING CEDAR, ATHERTON, NORTH QUEENSLAND" /></a>
+<p class="center">HAULING CEDAR, ATHERTON, NORTH QUEENSLAND</p></div>
+
+<p>Much has been written of the Australian squatter's life, both in fact
+and in fiction; yet the charm it exercises remains unexplained. The invigorating
+influence of perfect health doubtless has something to do with it,
+as well as the utter freedom and escape from all conventionality. Much of
+the bushman's time is passed in the saddle, and his dress consists of moleskin
+trousers, the sleeves of his shirt rolled up to the elbow, and a soft
+shady hat. He rises at daybreak and after an early breakfast starts his
+day's work. As frequently he will not return to the homestead till
+nightfall, his lunch is in his saddle-pouch, to be enjoyed in the shade by
+some waterhole, where he boils the quart "billy" that dangles all day
+from a dee on his saddle, and makes the inevitable brew of tea. Probably
+he has companions and is mustering a paddock half the size of an English
+county; bringing the sheep to the drafting yards, it may be to draft out
+the fats from a mob of several thousand wethers, or perhaps to take lambs
+from their mothers for weaning, or to separate the sexes in a mob of
+mixed weaners, or to bring sheep to the shed for shearing.</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page110" id="page110"></a>110</span>
+
+<p>Shearing is of all times the busiest. At this season men, each
+usually riding one horse and leading another packed with his swag,
+roam the country in gangs and undertake the work at contract rates,
+which of late have been raised from 20s. per 100 to 24s. There
+will be from ten to forty men on the shearing board, according to
+the size of the flock; and in most of the large sheds men write
+beforehand to bespeak a stand. Shearers earn great wages; a good
+man will do from 100 to 200 per day, though the latter number is of
+course exceptional. The introduction of shearing machines has helped
+to increase the shearer's daily tally. A host of other men are employed in the
+shed. Boys gather the fleeces which they throw on a table where they are
+skirted, the trimmings being divided into "locks and pieces" and "bellies,"
+and the rolled fleece is thrown on another long table at which the wool-classer
+presides. He is an expert, and orders each to its respective bin,
+according to quality&mdash;judged by condition, length of staple, and brightness.
+From the various bins so graded men feed the wool-press worked by two
+wool-pressers, who turn out, sew, and brand the bales, of an average
+weight of from 3 to 4 cwt. Wagons are waiting to convey these to the
+railway, horse and bullock teams being almost equally used. A whip
+cracks like a pistol shot, and with lowered heads, the bullocks straining at
+the yoke, the first team draws slowly off to the incomprehensible objurgations
+of the driver, an incredible number of bales in three tiers piled on
+the wagon and securely roped.</p>
+
+<p>But this bustling activity is not confined to the shed. Shorn sheep
+have to be returned to their paddocks, fresh mobs brought in, and the
+morrow's shearing housed in the shed to escape the night's dew or a
+chance shower. From daylight to dark during this harvest time everyone
+is at full stretch. The shearers have their own cook and "find" themselves,
+sharing together in a general mess; and as they earn good money
+they "do themselves" really well, denying themselves no delicacy obtainable
+at the station store. The whistle sounds at 6 p.m.; the last fleece has been
+gathered, and the men stroll to their camp to discard sodden shirts and
+moleskins and clean up generally before supper. The twilight is short,
+night chasing it swiftly from the world. The weird charm of a Queensland
+night in the bush penetrates with a calm satisfaction difficult to
+analyse. It is, let us suppose, spring or summer, and the stars appear to
+hang low from the deep clear indigo vault. The silence is unbroken,
+appealing to some indefinable emotion. No cry of beast or bird ruffles the
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page111" id="page111"></a>111</span>
+stillness, save perhaps the faint tinkle of the bell-bird or the solemn plaint
+of the mopoke from some distant scrub. The men are sitting outside their
+hut smoking, or with tired limbs stretched on the short dry grass lying
+full length drawing the quiet night into their blood, its cool soft breath
+soothing the fatigue of the arduous day's toil. Very entertaining to a
+listener would be the symposium of experiences and amazing political
+theories of these rough good-humoured toilers, whilst in the pauses one
+might perhaps enjoy the fantasia executed by the musician of the party
+on his concertina.</p>
+
+<p>Life at the homestead of many of the old-established stations differs
+little from that of a wealthy country home in other parts of the world.
+Froude in his "Oceana" draws a diverting picture of his anticipations of
+a bush home and its reality. He had pictured a log-hut in the wilderness,
+and was taken to Ercildoune, where he was amazed to find a mansion
+amidst splendid gardens, with conservatories, elaborate drawing-rooms,
+well-dressed ladies, and all the appurtenances and customs of refined life.
+Expecting chops, damper, and tea, the culinary triumphs of a skilful <i>chef</i>
+would strike an author in quest of the barbaric life with a keen reproach.
+Had Mr. Froude visited Queensland, he might have found something more
+suitable for literary treatment. Although in the older settled districts,
+especially on the Darling Downs, the lessees live in comfortable, well-furnished
+homes, many bush homesteads are still very primitive. The
+farther a station is from the railway the more the owner is inclined to
+dispense with the superfluous, till in many cases he restricts himself to
+the absolutely necessary. But every year sees an improvement in this
+respect. Hospitality is unlimited, any visitor being sure of a welcome and
+a night's lodging; he turns his horses into his host's paddock, and, if there
+are ladies of the household, his evening is enlivened with music and
+cultured talk.</p>
+
+<p>Some of the more gigantic enterprises are conducted by squatting
+companies, the sheep numbering several hundred thousand and the cattle
+up to thirty or forty thousand. But these stupendous figures need not
+deter small investors. In the purchase of a station the goodwill is an asset
+to be paid for, and in many cases this is valued at a high figure. The
+selector who takes up a grazing farm pays nothing for goodwill, and gets
+into what is possibly a going concern from the outset with no other payment
+than the year's rent and the value of the existing improvements
+erected by the former lessee before the area was resumed from his
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page112" id="page112"></a>112</span>
+holding. It may happen that the country is bare of all improvements, in
+which case he has to fence it before he gets a lease, his neighbours being
+liable for half the cost of this work, which forms their common boundary.
+He pays a higher rent than the representative of the pioneer who
+created the goodwill which has descended by purchase. What more
+desirable opening can be found for a young man of limited capital than
+a farm that will carry 10,000 sheep or 1,500 cattle? He leads the
+healthiest life in the world, and, although it is full of hard work and
+includes what would be thought hardships in the home he comes from, a
+manly youth takes the latter with a frolic welcome, and if he works hard
+he also plays hard when the occasional races, cricket carnival, and
+festivities in the nearest township or perhaps at some neighbouring
+station give the occasion. But above all things it is important that he
+should not invest till he has gained experience. There is no difficulty in
+acquiring this, as stockowners are without exception glad of the assistance
+of a willing young fellow who accepts the knowledge acquired and perhaps
+a trifling salary as an equivalent for his time and work. After a couple
+of years of this novitiate as a "Jackeroo," he will be equipped for facing
+the future on his own account, which with ordinary steadfastness, energy,
+and forethought he may regard with confidence.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 600px;"><a href="images/page112a-1200.jpg"><img src="images/page112a-600.jpg" width="600" height="336" alt="DAIRY CATTLE ON DARLING DOWNS" /></a>
+<p class="center">DAIRY CATTLE ON DARLING DOWNS</p></div>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 600px;"><a href="images/page112b-1200.jpg"><img src="images/page112b-600.jpg" width="600" height="201" alt="SHEEP, JIMBOUR, DARLING DOWNS" /></a>
+<p class="center">SHEEP, JIMBOUR, DARLING DOWNS</p></div>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 600px;"><a href="images/page112c-1200.jpg"><img src="images/page112c-600.jpg" width="600" height="237" alt="HORSES, IVANHOE STATION, WARREGO" /></a>
+<p class="center">HORSES, IVANHOE STATION, WARREGO</p></div>
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page113" id="page113"></a>113</span>
+
+<h2 style="margin-top: 2em;">CHAPTER II.</h2>
+
+<h3>AGRICULTURE IN QUEENSLAND.</h3>
+
+<blockquote><p class="ind">
+<span class="outdent1">
+Tripartite Division of Queensland</span>.&mdash;Climate.&mdash;Development of Agriculture in Queensland.&mdash;Wide
+Range of Products.&mdash;Early History.&mdash;Exclusion of Farmers from Richest Lands.&mdash;Origin
+of Mixed Farming.&mdash;Extension of Industry Westward.&mdash;Inexperience of Early Settlers.&mdash;Cotton-growing.&mdash;Chief
+Crops.&mdash;Dairying.&mdash;Cereal-growing.&mdash;Farming in the Tropics.&mdash;Farming
+on the Downs.&mdash;Farming in the West.&mdash;Irrigation.&mdash;Conservation of Water.&mdash;Timber
+Industry.&mdash;Land Selection.&mdash;Assistance Given by the Government.&mdash;Immigration.&mdash;Attractions
+of Queensland.&mdash;Defenders of Hearth and Home.
+</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>Situated between 10&frac12; degrees and 29 degrees South latitude and 138
+degrees and 153&frac12; degrees East longitude, Queensland covers 670,500
+square miles, or 429,120,000 acres&mdash;greater than the combined areas of
+France, Germany, and Austro-Hungary. Of this immense territory 53·5
+per cent. lies within the Tropics, and 46·5 per cent. within the South
+Temperate Zone.</p>
+
+<p>The State may be divided into three belts&mdash;the tropical, stretching
+from Cape York to the 21st parallel in the neighbourhood of Mackay; the
+sub-tropical, between Mackay and Gladstone, about 24 degrees South; and
+the temperate, from Gladstone to the 29th parallel on the border of New
+South Wales.</p>
+
+<p>These three zones lend themselves, in turn, to a tripartite subdivision
+of littoral, tableland, and Western plain. Running generally in a North
+and South direction, and distant from the Eastern coast 30 to 100 miles,
+the Great Dividing Range separates the littoral from a series of tablelands
+having an altitude of 3,000 ft. at the two extremes, with a lesser elevation
+between Herberton in the North and the Darling Downs in the South.
+Almost imperceptibly the intermediate plateau sinks into a vast plain,
+which extends westward for hundreds of miles and into South Australia.</p>
+
+<p>The mountain barrier between coast and tableland, though rarely
+exceeding 4,000 ft. in height, is still sufficiently lofty to cause the clouds
+of
+the Pacific to deposit most of their moisture on the Eastern slopes. The
+precipitation in this coastal belt ranges from a yearly average of
+135 in. at Geraldton (at the foot of the Bellenden-Ker Mountains, in the
+North) to 40 in. between the Tropic of Capricorn and Brisbane, with a
+heavier fall wherever the mountains are in close proximity to the ocean.
+On the Western side of the Great Divide the rainfall decreases from 40 in.
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page114" id="page114"></a>114</span>
+to about 30 in. at the Western limit of the tableland, and, gradually
+diminishing with increasing distance from the seaboard, averages only
+about 10 in. in the extreme South-west.</p>
+
+<p>Temperature, rainfall, and soil necessary for the successful cultivation
+of almost every known crop are to be found in Queensland. Pastoral
+pursuits and mining have been the principal wealth-producers in the past;
+but steadily agriculture is coming to the front, and, long before the present
+generation has passed away, will occupy first place among the primary
+industries. That it has not done so already is due partly to the comparative
+youth of the country and its small population, and partly to its rich
+natural pastures and vast mineral resources. For many years the fascination
+of a pastoral life and the search for gold, with the hope of winning
+fortunes in those avocations, proved more attractive than the regular,
+uneventful life of the farmer, with its prospect of a competence; but
+the old-time glamour of grazing and mining is passing away, and the
+independence of the farmer is now preferred to the lot of station hand or
+working miner.</p>
+
+<p>On the inestimable value of a rural population to the permanent well-being
+of a nation Mr. Roosevelt, the late President of the United States,
+lays stress in these pregnant words:&mdash;</p>
+
+<blockquote><p>
+"I warn my countrymen that the great recent progress made in city life is not a
+full measure of our civilisation; for our civilisation rests at bottom on the wholesomeness,
+the attractiveness, and the completeness, as well as the prosperity, of life in
+the country. The men and women on the farms stand for what is fundamentally
+best and most needed in our national life. Upon the development of country life
+rests ultimately our ability, by methods of farming requiring the highest intelligence,
+to continue to feed and clothe the hungry nations; to supply the city with fresh
+blood, clean bodies, and clear brains that can endure the terrific strain of modern life;
+we need the development of men in the open country, who will be in the future, as in
+the past, the stay and strength of the nation in time of war, and its guiding and controlling
+spirit in time of peace."
+</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>Too large a proportion of the people of Australia is already congregated
+in the capital cities on the seaboard, and this centripetal tendency constitutes
+one of the problems most difficult of solution in our young
+communities, as it is proving in the older countries of the world. Here,
+however, we are not confronted with the obstacle of high-priced land, and
+no effort is being spared to turn the tide of settlement to the true source of
+national virility and prosperity&mdash;the land.</p>
+
+<p>The suitability of the State for agriculture is amply demonstrated
+by the condition of those engaged in that industry, for there is no
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page115" id="page115"></a>115</span>
+considerable class in the community so prosperous. Comfortable homes,
+well-stocked farms, overflowing barns, and other evidence of labour richly
+rewarded, bear witness to this fact. The abundance of a series of fat years
+more than compensates for the loss of crops and stock in occasional years
+of drought, and these losses it is possible to minimise by devoting attention
+to afforestation, the conservation of water, irrigation, and the storage of
+fodder.</p>
+
+<p>Diversity of products is to be expected in a country stretching through
+18&frac12; degrees of latitude, possessing an infinite variety of soils, and divided
+into a hot and humid coastal belt, an elevated tableland with cool climate
+and moderate rainfall, and a huge plain with light rainfall and dry,
+invigorating
+atmosphere. There is probably no country in the world with so
+wide an agricultural range. To mention crops which can be, and are being,
+grown with gratifying results would be to set forth in detail nearly every
+crop of economic value found in the torrid or the temperate zone.
+Wherever Nature is so generous with her gifts there must be accompanying
+drawbacks in the shape of vegetable and insect pests, but, by the application
+of intelligence and industry, the farmers of Queensland are able to
+combat these petty foes.</p>
+
+<p>Some of the principal objects of culture have a remarkably extensive
+distribution. Citrus fruits, fodder crops and artificial grasses, pumpkins
+and melons, flourish in every part of the State. Maize is very prolific
+throughout the littoral and on the tableland. Sugar-cane and tropical fruits
+grow luxuriantly on all the coastal lands. Most of the fruits of the British
+Isles and Continental Europe are at home everywhere except on the coast
+north of the Tropic of Capricorn, and reach perfection on the elevated
+lands of the Darling Downs. Cereals and root crops are produced in the
+Southern and Central West districts equal in quality and yield to the crops
+in the Southern States and oversea countries.</p>
+
+<p>"Agriculture," says Professor Robert Wallace, of Edinburgh
+University, "is one of the oldest of human arts, dating from long before
+the dawn of history. The savage who lives on the roots and fruits he
+finds ready to his hand stands lower in the scale than the huntsman living
+by the chase. The herdsman leading a nomadic life belongs to a higher
+stage of human culture; but civilisation in any full sense only begins
+amongst men with settled habitations, who till the soil for their sustenance."
+Judged by this standard, Queensland has passed through the
+evolutionary stages. Eighty-five years ago, when the first British settlers
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page116" id="page116"></a>116</span>
+landed on the shores of Moreton Bay, the country was sparsely inhabited
+by savages of the lowest type, dependent upon native roots and fruits and
+the chase for a subsistence. For a quarter of a century, settlement on the
+coast was confined to a few convicts and military guards stationed at
+Brisbane and Ipswich, and a handful of free settlers. In the year 1840
+some adventurous spirits, searching for sheep country west of the Main
+Range, found themselves on the magnificent tableland which Allan
+Cunningham had discovered in 1827, and which, during the intervening
+years, had remained untrodden by the foot of a white man. Soon the
+whole of the Darling Downs was parcelled out into large sheep stations.
+Agriculture, until the advent of small selectors many years later, was only
+represented by garden patches of cereals, vegetables, and fruit trees, grown
+for the use of the station-owners and their employees.</p>
+
+<p>On the Eastern side of the Range the industry was in almost as backward
+a state before the arrival of the first shipment of agriculturists in
+the ship "Fortitude" in January, 1849. Gangs of convicts felled the
+scrub on the banks of the Brisbane River adjacent to the barracks; with
+the hoe they planted maize among the stumps and tree-trunks under the
+constant surveillance of armed guards, and, when the corn was ripe,
+dragged it in carts to the windmill on Wickham terrace, still a conspicuous
+landmark, though now used as an observatory. There the maize was
+ground into "hominy," an important item in the menu of those days.</p>
+
+<p>A band of Moravian missionaries settled at what is now known as
+Nundah, and they and the majority of the "Fortitude" immigrants were
+the real pioneers of agriculture in the infant settlement.</p>
+
+<p>Land orders, free immigration, and the discovery of gold were all
+factors in the development of the country, and the demand for farm lands
+led to the unlocking of areas previously given over to grazing. The
+pastoralists regarded agriculturists with disfavour, and in some cases with
+open antagonism. By the exercise of "pre-emptive rights," which their
+influence in the Legislature secured for them, they converted into freehold
+large blocks of the best land, as well as strategic areas by the possession of
+which they were able to close against settlement immense tracts preeminently
+suitable for farming. This was particularly the case in the
+settled districts of Moreton, Darling Downs, Wide Bay, and Burnett, and
+to a lesser degree in Maranoa. To such an extent was the right of preemption
+used that many squatters seriously crippled themselves, the price
+paid being too high for grazing to be remunerative on their freehold lands.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 600px;"><a href="images/page116-1200.jpg"><img src="images/page116-600.jpg" width="600" height="360" alt="HARVESTING WHEAT, EMU VALE, NEAR WARWICK" /></a>
+<p class="center">HARVESTING WHEAT, EMU VALE, NEAR WARWICK</p></div>
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page117" id="page117"></a>117</span>
+<p>When, in after years, it would have been to their advantage to subdivide
+and sell to farmers, it was not in their power to give titles. In the course
+of time railways were built through some of these large estates, but their
+earning power was seriously hampered by country capable of supporting a
+very large agricultural population being devoted to pasturing sheep and
+cattle. As the most satisfactory solution of the difficulty, successive
+Governments have repurchased a number of properties at a cost exceeding
+a million sterling, and resold them in small areas to farmers, with highly
+gratifying results both to the settlers and to the State.</p>
+
+<p>The immediate effect of the exclusive policy adopted by the
+pastoralists, however, was to force many selectors to take up land in dense
+scrubs on steep mountain slopes and in river pockets which were useless
+to stockowners. They had literally to hew their homes out of the jungle.
+Having no roads, they were thrown upon their own resources, and were
+obliged to live very largely upon the produce of their farms. Erecting a
+rude makeshift fence around a clearing of a few acres, the "cocky" or
+"cockatoo farmer," as he was contemptuously styled by those who
+regarded him as an interloper, planted maize and pumpkins among the
+remains of the scrub. Despite the ravages of bird and beast, he persevered,
+until at last success began to crown his efforts. A cow or two
+provided him with milk and butter, any surplus butter being sold to the
+storekeepers in the towns which quickly followed in the wake of settlement.
+Lucerne, sorghum, and other fodder crops formed part of his
+husbandry, live stock multiplied, and thus commenced that system of
+mixed farming to which thousands of the farmers of Queensland owe
+their prosperity. The coming of neighbours and the making of roads
+rendered life less lonely. With increasing prosperity, improved implements
+and methods were adopted. The plough succeeded the hoe; the
+harvester or the reaper and binder took the place of sickle and scythe;
+and the slab humpy or bark hut gave way to the comfortable farmhouse.</p>
+
+<p>Though these early selectors were driven into almost inaccessible
+scrub, they were at least within the region of heavy rainfall, and, even
+where some distance from permanent streams, suffered little from drought.
+Settlers who went over the Range, profiting by the experience of the
+pastoral pioneers regarding the vicissitudes of climate, avoided the mistake
+of relying upon a single crop, or, to use a homely phrase, of putting all
+their eggs in one basket&mdash;an error which brought ruin to thousands upon
+thousands of the people who, between thirty and forty years ago, flocked
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page118" id="page118"></a>118</span>
+from the Atlantic seaboard to the arid regions of America, west of the
+Mississippi. Mixed farming became the general rule on the further side
+of the Main Range, so that, if wheat and maize failed, the farmers had
+their flocks and herds and their shearing cheques as a standby until the
+next harvest was garnered.</p>
+
+<p>It is sometimes said with scorn that there is comparatively little real
+farming in Queensland; but the conditions peculiar to settlement in the
+State are responsible for the trend of agricultural development. In the
+United States and Canada, the flood of immigration and the part played
+by the great railway companies as land-owners and promoters of settlement
+to provide traffic for their railways led to the creation of small
+holdings, which, in turn, led to intense cultivation of field and orchard
+crops. In Queensland, immigration has never been conducted on an
+extensive scale, and, indeed, for over a decade almost ceased. There was
+no great demand for land, and, as the mistaken belief long prevailed that
+the quantity of arable land was small, the area of so-called agricultural
+farms was made sufficiently large to enable a man to make a living from
+stock-raising, dairying, and pig-breeding. Field labourers being scarce
+and stock cheap, the farmer's aim has rather been to grow feed for his
+stock than crops for human consumption. He has followed the line of
+least resistance, so using his land as to carry on his operations with family
+labour and a little casual assistance during the busy seasons.</p>
+
+<p>Events have justified this mixed farming from the point of view of
+the farmer, and doubtless the monthly returns from dairying will cause
+most of the farmers of Southern and Central Queensland to rely chiefly
+upon that industry so long as high prices continue, and to look to pig-breeding
+and lamb-fattening as subsidiary branches. But for the swelling
+tide of newcomers the supplies of rich scrub, alluvial flat, and volcanic
+downs country must sooner or later prove inadequate. Indeed, within the
+last few years settlers have been turning their attention to land which was
+once regarded as inferior. From the lighter soils of plain and upland
+larger and more certain crops of grain are being won, and on these lands
+dairying will take second place to cereal production.</p>
+
+<p>Since an enlightened Legislature has resumed many millions of acres
+previously held under pastoral lease, and repurchased large estates in
+districts enjoying the advantages of railway communication, there has
+been no need to go far afield, and settlement has been chiefly confined to
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page119" id="page119"></a>119</span>
+the lands adjacent to the rivers and railways in the coastal belt, on the
+Darling Downs, and, of recent years, in the Burnett district.</p>
+
+<p>Still, within the last thirty years, from one cause or another, groups
+of settlers have made their homes far beyond those limits. Thus the
+wheat lands of Maranoa were settled when there was no farming more
+than a few miles to the west of Toowoomba. Over eighteen hundred
+years ago Tacitus wrote of our Saxon forefathers: "They live apart, each
+by himself, as woodside, plain, or fresh spring attracts him." And this
+racial characteristic is strong in many of their descendants in Queensland.
+Better results and greater profits might have accrued from concentration,
+but the wonderful development of the British Empire owes much to this
+centrifugal impulse and to the spirit of independence and self-reliance
+which it has fostered; and as the flag has followed the adventurer in so
+many parts of the globe, so are the scattered pioneers of our Western
+lands nuclei around whom settlement is gradually gathering.</p>
+
+<p>To people coming for the most part from the mother country, experience
+constituted no safe guide to the agricultural possibilities of their new
+home in the South. Naturally, mistakes were made and time and money
+lost before they discovered which crops were the most profitable, and on
+what kind of land those crops could be grown with greatest certainty of
+success.</p>
+
+<p>When Dr. Lang induced the "Fortitude" immigrants to cast in their
+lot with the Moreton Bay settlement, in whose welfare he took so deep an
+interest, his desire was to establish the cultivation of cotton, to which he
+believed the climate and soil were specially adapted. But, despite the
+heavy crops produced on the river flats, cotton did not prove remunerative
+until, after the outbreak of the American Civil War in 1861, the Lancashire
+spinners were reduced to such straits that they gladly paid high prices for all
+that could be obtained from Queensland. The product was of excellent
+quality, but the cost of picking precluded competition with countries where
+cheap labour was plentiful, and, with the return to normal conditions in
+the United States after the termination of the war, cotton passed almost
+out of cultivation, and has never since become a crop of commercial
+importance. An effort was made some years back to resuscitate the
+industry by the offer of a Government bonus upon manufactured piece
+goods. The bounty was earned by a mill at Ipswich, but the industry did
+not long survive the stoppage of the bonus. Since the drought of 1902
+cotton has again been grown, principally in West Moreton and North
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page120" id="page120"></a>120</span>
+Queensland, as a subsidiary crop, and farmers have been encouraged to
+extend their operations by the recent offer of a bounty by the Commonwealth;
+but, until machinery takes the place of hand-picking, farmers are
+likely to prefer crops which are not subject to competition with the cheap
+labour of other lands.</p>
+
+<p>The first European colonists in America found there two valuable
+native products&mdash;maize and tobacco. Australia, on the other hand, presented
+a virgin field to the agriculturist. Like the rest of the Commonwealth,
+Queensland, blessed with the richest natural pastures, possesses no
+indigenous food plants of proved economic value. The early settlers
+naturally availed themselves of the wealth of native grasses and edible
+shrubs, and became graziers. When a commencement was made with
+agriculture, farmers sowed the crops to which they had been accustomed
+in Great Britain. Though these grew well, it was soon found that they
+were, on the whole, better adapted to the elevated downs than to the
+forcing climate on the coast. Maize, sugar-cane, and the fruits of the
+tropics, on the other hand, revelled in the sunshine and moist atmosphere
+of the seaboard.</p>
+
+<p>The farmer's first consideration is how he may utilise his land to the
+best advantage. The most profitable crops are those for which there is a
+world-wide demand but only a limited area of production, and therefore
+little competition for the grower; or, alternatively, crops which, by reason
+of natural advantages, he can produce more abundantly and at less cost
+than his competitors. Next in value are crops for which he has a
+monopoly in a limited but protected market, or enjoys natural advantages
+which give him a partial monopoly in such a market. Of less value, but
+still profitable, are crops which he can place on the market as cheaply as
+his rivals.</p>
+
+<p>In the first-mentioned category the Queensland farmer has butter,
+cheese, hams, and bacon. With good stock, cheap land, unrivalled
+pastures, and a climate which permits production to go on uninterruptedly
+from January to December, Queensland is most favourably situated, and
+farmers have not been slow to profit by their natural advantages.</p>
+
+<p>Large as are the present dimensions of the dairying industry, they are
+small compared with the possibilities of expansion. Already the value of
+butter, cheese, and milk is well over £1,000,000 per annum, the butter
+export alone being worth considerably more than half that sum. The
+export has multiplied tenfold in the last six years; and, as Queensland is
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page121" id="page121"></a>121</span>
+the leading cattle State, there is every justification for believing that in
+dairy produce she will soon become one of the principal exporting States
+of the Commonwealth.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 350px;"><a href="images/page120-875.jpg"><img src="images/page120-350.jpg" width="350" height="584" alt="SURPRISE CREEK CASCADE, CAIRNS RAILWAY" /></a>
+<p class="center">SURPRISE CREEK CASCADE, CAIRNS RAILWAY</p></div>
+
+<p>So late as twenty years ago, much of the butter consumed in
+Queensland came from the Southern States. The local product was
+inferior in quality, although an agreeable change from the imported
+salted butter. The passage of the protective tariff of 1888 gave a great
+impetus to the production of butter and cheese. A heavy impost was
+placed on dairy produce, and the Government lent further aid to the
+industry by sending experts through the farming districts in charge of
+travelling dairies. Valuable instruction was given; the cream separator
+came into general use, and there was soon a noticeable improvement in
+both butter and cheese. Factories sprang into existence in every agricultural
+centre, and by degrees the farmers became suppliers of cream instead
+of manufacturers of butter. Speedily production overtook the local consumption,
+importations ceased, and manufacturers began to look oversea
+for a market for their surplus stocks. Difficulties at once arose in connection
+with refrigerated space and freight rates. Regular shipments and
+rapid transport involved transhipment at Sydney from the coastal
+steamers, increased expense, and risk of deterioration. A State subsidy
+induced first one and then another shipping company to make Brisbane its
+terminal port in Australia, and to provide refrigerated chambers for
+butter at reduced freights; and now Queensland, in respect of these
+matters, is on precisely the same footing as the other States.</p>
+
+<p>On the first appearance of Queensland butter in London, lower prices
+were obtainable than were paid for other brands with an established
+reputation, and some dissatisfaction was expressed by buyers on account
+of variations in quality. To remedy this, legislation was passed providing
+for Government inspection and grading of all butter intended for export.
+Whether grading and price do or do not stand in the relations of cause
+and effect, it is beyond dispute that it is only since the initiation of the
+system that Queensland butter has been on a parity with the butter of the
+Southern States and New Zealand, and the general standard is undoubtedly
+higher than in pre-grading days.</p>
+
+<p>Coincident with the improvement in the quality of the butter, a great
+change for the better has taken place in the dairy herds. Good milking
+strains have been introduced, and more attention is paid to the feeding of
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page122" id="page122"></a>122</span>
+the cows, with the result that it is by no means uncommon for the milk
+from one cow to bring as much as £8 or £9 a year.</p>
+
+<p>The tariff of 1888 and the educative policy of successive Governments
+have also been largely responsible for the establishment of the allied
+industry of bacon and ham curing on a firm basis, and local brands are
+favourably known in many parts of the world.</p>
+
+<p>Under the heading of crops for which our farmers enjoy a monopoly
+in a limited but protected market&mdash;or natural advantages which are
+equivalent to a partial monopoly&mdash;are sugar, maize, tomatoes, tropical and
+citrus fruits, and cigar tobacco. The Commonwealth tariff gives Queensland
+a practical monopoly in Australia for sugar. She has a virtual
+monopoly for tropical fruits, being the only State in which these
+are produced in excess of local requirements. The warmer climate
+and earlier crop give her temporary command of the Southern markets for
+citrus fruits, tomatoes, maize, and a number of minor products, before
+they mature in the cooler South, an advantage that will extend in time to
+many other crops, with the increasing interchange arising from interstate
+free trade.</p>
+
+<p>Chief among products which can be placed as cheaply on the market
+as in other countries are the cereals. Queensland has all the essentials of
+a great grain-producing country. Her name does not yet figure among
+the list of exporters of foodstuffs, but the reasons for her backwardness
+are not far to seek.</p>
+
+<p>At the close of 1908 the number of people in the State, scattered over
+its 670,500 square miles of territory, was only 558,000&mdash;little more than
+the population of Sydney or Melbourne, and less than that of several
+second-class cities in the mother country. Probably not more than ten
+per cent. of the people are engaged in farming, but, acre for acre and man
+for man, Queensland compares favourably with countries that are
+regarded as primarily agricultural. The lands most sought after have been
+scrub, deep alluvial flats, and black and chocolate loams; and, until
+recently, it was on land of this kind that most of the wheat and barley was
+grown. Heavy crops were harvested, as a rule, but the results were not
+uniformly satisfactory, and it is now recognised that these highly fertile
+lands are better suited for other forms of cultivation than the growth of
+cereals. For several years, incoming selectors&mdash;many Southern wheat
+farmers from preference&mdash;have been settling to the west of the heavy
+Downs country on the lighter soils of ridge and plain. From these lands,
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page123" id="page123"></a>123</span>
+of which Queensland has a practically unlimited supply, but which the
+settlers of twenty or even ten years ago regarded as poor, more and more
+of the wheat crop is now coming. With less labour and at less expense
+than on the heavy soils, the farmer has greater certainty of a payable
+yield.</p>
+
+<p>Sugar has first place among agricultural products from Port Douglas
+to the Mary River, followed by maize and the luscious fruits of the tropics.
+From Maryborough to the Tweed, maize takes precedence of sugar.
+Crops of less importance are potatoes, pumpkins, citrus fruits, pineapples,
+and bananas. In the Central and Southern divisions of the coastal belt,
+where dairying is the chief industry, large areas are under fodder crops
+and permanent grasses. From the Northern section of the littoral,
+thousands of bunches of bananas are shipped weekly to the South.
+Mangoes and pineapples are also sent South in very considerable quantities.
+Citrus fruits and tomatoes ripen at least two months earlier in
+North Queensland than in New South Wales and Victoria, and this fact
+has led to an important and profitable trade in these commodities being
+opened up with Sydney and Melbourne. The spices and food and other
+economic plants of the tropics grow to perfection north of Mackay. Cigar
+tobacco of good quality is being grown in small quantities in several parts
+of the North, and the Commonwealth bounty and the willingness of
+manufacturers to take the leaf should lead in time to the bulk of the cigars
+consumed in Australia being made from Queensland leaf. Despite the
+heat and humidity of the climate, dairying is being carried on with success
+as far north as Cairns, and at Atherton on the hinterland it promises to
+become an important industry.</p>
+
+<p>Except on the Darling Downs, progress on the tableland has been
+retarded until a comparatively recent date through the land being locked
+up in pastoral leaseholds. At Atherton in the North and on the Burnett
+lands in the South, however, agricultural settlement is proceeding by leaps
+and bounds. Following the usual practice on scrub land, maize and
+grasses are the principal objects of culture, as they can be planted among
+the fallen timber and converted into milk long before the land can be put
+under the plough.</p>
+
+<p>The Darling Downs, famous for their beauty and fertility, well
+deserve their title of "Garden of Queensland." Other districts, notably
+Atherton and the Burnett, have as good land, and the latter may have an
+equal area; but nowhere can there be seen 4,000,000 acres of splendid
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page124" id="page124"></a>124</span>
+agricultural country requiring so little labour to bring it under cultivation.
+Far beyond the horizon stretch these fine lands, formerly clothed with
+nutritious natural grasses, but now passing into cultivation and dotted
+over with prosperous homesteads. More than 70 per cent. of the wheat,
+oats, and barley of Queensland comes from the Downs, which are capable
+of supporting a population far larger than the whole State now contains.
+Shipments of malting barley grown on the Downs attracted such
+favourable notice in England a few years back that offers were made to
+buy large quantities, and modern and well-equipped malting houses have
+since been built at Toowoomba and Warwick by a leading firm of English
+maltsters. Oats are grown for hay, no grain being ground into meal.
+There is an increasing tendency, founded on experience, to look to the
+lighter soils for cereal production, and to put the heavier volcanic soils of
+the Eastern Downs to uses for which they are better adapted. To dairying
+much of the prosperity of the Downs farmers is due. Butter and cheese
+factories have been erected every few miles along the railway line, and the
+number of cream-cans awaiting transport on every platform bear striking
+testimony to the importance of the industry. Most of the fruits of
+Northern and Southern Europe flourish, and the many fine orchards
+between Stanthorpe and the New South Wales border are giving handsome
+returns to their fortunate owners. In the neighbourhood of Texas, to the
+west of Warwick, pipe tobacco of fine flavour is being cultivated. The
+extension of the railway from Warwick to Goondiwindi has rendered
+available additional areas suitable for this crop, and circumstances favour
+the creation of a great industry.</p>
+
+<p>The boundless plains of the West, where the annual rainfall varies
+from 30 inches to 10 inches, are the seat of the pastoral industry, and
+agriculture
+is still in its infancy. In the vicinity of Roma, on the Southern and
+Western Railway, wheat is the staple crop. Further West, on river banks
+and adjacent to artesian bores, vegetables, grapes, and oranges are grown.
+The oranges at Barcaldine, in the Central West, have been pronounced by
+the Government Fruit Expert to be the finest he has seen. In the same
+locality areas of grain, lucerne, and other hay crops show the capabilities
+of the plain lands when irrigated; but these small patches do not constitute
+an industry. The soil has in it all the elements of fertility, and is
+of inexhaustible depth; but, unhappily, the rainy season does not coincide
+with the period of growth of the cereals for which these lands seem
+otherwise intended by Nature; and until science becomes the handmaid of
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page125" id="page125"></a>125</span>
+husbandry, and irrigation is demonstrated to be both practicable and
+remunerative, agriculture is likely to make little headway in the West.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 600px;"><a href="images/page124a-1200.jpg"><img src="images/page124a-600.jpg" width="600" height="270" alt="PINEAPPLE FARM, WOOMBYE, NORTH COAST RAILWAY" /></a>
+<p class="center">PINEAPPLE FARM, WOOMBYE, NORTH COAST RAILWAY</p></div>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 600px;"><a href="images/page124b-1200.jpg"><img src="images/page124b-600.jpg" width="600" height="169" alt="SUGAR-MILL, HUXLEY, ISIS RAILWAY" /></a>
+<p class="center">SUGAR-MILL, HUXLEY, ISIS RAILWAY</p></div>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 600px;"><a href="images/page124c-1200.jpg"><img src="images/page124c-600.jpg" width="600" height="272" alt="A FIELD OF MAIZE, EEL CREEK, GYMPIE" /></a>
+<p class="center">A FIELD OF MAIZE, EEL CREEK, GYMPIE</p></div>
+
+<p>The farmers of Queensland may well lay to heart the experience of
+America. Forty years ago disaster overtook every attempt at cultivation
+west of the Mississippi basin until the aid of irrigation was invoked. The
+response to the application of water was immediate, and millions of acres
+are now under intense cultivation in the dry belt, and supporting a
+population far outnumbering that of Australia.</p>
+
+<p>These are the words in which an American writer graphically
+describes the wonderful work that has been done on lands that bear a
+striking resemblance to those of Western Queensland both in regard to
+climate and soil:&mdash;</p>
+
+<blockquote><p>
+The actual amount of land that may be reclaimed and cultivated in the semi-arid
+region furnishes no measure of the value of irrigation in this vast district. By
+enabling thousands to engage in farming, irrigation has made it possible to use the
+surrounding plains as the pasture for great numbers of beef cattle. In many
+instances small herds are owned by the farmers themselves, but to a large extent
+their crops are bought by those whose sole business is cattle-raising. Thus all the
+resources of the region are brought into use, and a wonderful prosperity has
+followed as the logical result.</p>
+
+<p>From Canada to Mexico the revolution of the Great Plain is now in full tide.
+It is the most democratic page in the history of American irrigation. It has saved
+an enormous district from lapsing into a condition of semi-barbarism. It has not
+only made human life secure, but revolutionised the industrial and social economy
+of the locality.</p>
+
+<p>To a considerable extent it has replaced the quarter-lot with the small farm,
+and the single crop with diversified cultivation. It has transformed the speculative
+instincts of the people into a spirit of sober industrialism. It has raised the
+standard of living and improved the character of the homes. It has planted the rose
+bush and the pansy where only the sunflower cast its shadow, and it has twined the
+ivy and the honeysuckle over doors which formerly knew not the touch of beauty.
+It has made neighbours and society where once there were loneliness and heart-hunger.
+It has broken the chains of hopeless mortgages and crowned industry with
+independence.
+</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>The history of irrigation in the United States reads like a romance.
+Competent authorities have expressed the opinion that truly scientific
+farming is only possible where irrigation takes the place of rain, and
+where the elements of fertility are retained in the soil. American experience
+supports this view. Farms of from ten to forty acres support whole
+families in comfort, if not in affluence, and one acre yields as much as five
+of the best land in the rainfall belt. Whether land is used for mixed
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page126" id="page126"></a>126</span>
+farming or crop cultivation, the best results are achieved when moisture
+can be applied or withheld according to the needs of the crop. Without
+irrigation, crops may be more certain in the coastal belt and on the
+intermediate
+tableland, but with irrigation the advantage will undoubtedly lie
+with our Western lands. A downpour may do irremediable harm to a
+ripening crop or at harvest time, and to that danger the plain lands of
+the interior are less liable than those in the region of heavier rainfall.</p>
+
+<p>In some parts of Queensland, principally near the coast, irrigation
+has already attained some prominence. In 1907 water was applied artificially
+to 9,612 acres. Of this area, 4,492 acres were in the Burdekin
+Delta, the water being drawn from the Burdekin, from lagoons, and from
+wells. The rainfall is comparatively light, and the marked increase in the
+cane crop on the irrigated lands is apparent to the most casual observer.
+In the Bundaberg district 2,350 acres were irrigated from the Burnett
+River and from wells; the vegetable and fruit growers of Bowen irrigated
+356 acres; and water was applied to 482 acres in the neighbourhood of
+Rockhampton. Artesian water was supplied to 100 acres at Barcaldine
+and 240 acres at Hungerford far out on the New South Wales border.</p>
+
+<p>In the Western States of America, where water is measured out with
+mathematical accuracy and applied with clockwork regularity, agriculture
+has been raised almost to the rank of an exact science. The soil of
+Western Queensland is quite equal to that of the States in fertility, and
+similar methods should here produce similar results. When even the
+sterile Sahara is gradually disappearing before the irrigation works of
+French engineers, there is no need to despond regarding the future of the
+very driest parts of Queensland.</p>
+
+<p>In Egypt and Spain and in several of the American States, the water for
+irrigation is obtained from perennial streams drawing their supplies from
+distant snow-clad mountains. Kansas differs in this respect from other
+States. The description of the rivers of Western Kansas by an American
+humorist might have been penned with equal appositeness of the rivers
+of Western Queensland: "They are a mile wide, and an inch thick;
+they have a large circulation, but very little influence." Fortunately for
+Kansas, water is everywhere procurable by sinking shallow wells. In
+Dakota and Texas, thousands of millions of gallons are poured on to the
+land daily from thousands of artesian wells. Though lofty mountain chains
+are lacking, with summits high above the line of perpetual snow and giving
+birth to rivers rivalling Nile and Mississippi in volume, both of these
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page127" id="page127"></a>127</span>
+latter sources of supply are available in Queensland. East and west of the
+Great Divide, abundance of water has been obtained from wells. Our
+western rivers may flow intermittently on the surface, but sub-artesian
+water is plentiful in many localities, and the great artesian basin, with its
+area of no less than 372,000 square miles, coincides generally with that
+part of the State which has a rainfall of 20 inches or less, a wise Providence
+having apparently created this huge subterranean reservoir to guard
+against excessive evaporation and to compensate for the light rains.</p>
+
+<p>There is still another supply open. Allowing for a very large
+percentage of the water that finds its way into the watercourses of the
+West sinking into the earth or being lost through evaporation, a tremendous
+quantity that now runs to waste could be conserved by works such as
+the Government of New South Wales are constructing in the Murrumbidgee
+basin. Irrigation on a large scale is beyond the means of individuals&mdash;it
+must be undertaken either by private co-operation or by State enterprise;
+and preferably the latter. Irrigation and afforestation are both
+necessary for the successful development of the West. If water can be
+supplied to settlers at a cost which is not prohibitive, whether it be drawn
+from storage reservoirs or from subterranean sources, the face of the
+country will quickly be changed. Instead of a handful of pastoral lessees
+controlling in some instances areas of hundreds of thousands of acres, a
+much larger population of grazier farmers will be settled on much smaller
+holdings, enjoying all the benefits&mdash;educational, social, and civic&mdash;which
+result from concentrated settlement.</p>
+
+<p>A product of the land which is intimately connected with settlement,
+if somewhat outside the scope of this chapter, is timber. The forests of
+Queensland are very extensive, and contain numerous timbers of great
+value for building and cabinet-making. Chief among the former are
+several species of pine, hardwood, beech, and ash. The most beautiful and
+valuable of the ornamental woods are red cedar, silky oak, bean-tree, and
+maple. In the earliest settled districts in the South most of these have
+become comparatively scarce. The timber-getter has been through the
+scrubs and forests, and much that could not be converted into lumber has
+been destroyed by fire, to make the ground ready for the plough. In
+North Queensland there are immense quantities available, especially of the
+ornamental varieties, and a profitable trade has been opened up with the
+southern part of the State and with Sydney and Melbourne. Formerly the
+timber became the property of the selector, but now a royalty is charged,
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page128" id="page128"></a>128</span>
+which yields the Crown a considerable revenue, and selection is deferred
+until the marketable trees have been removed. To prevent the exhaustion
+of the supplies, and as a preliminary to reafforestation, reserves have been
+proclaimed in several parts of the State to act as nurseries.</p>
+
+<p>Of the 429,120,000 acres contained in Queensland, at the close of 1908
+some 21,500,000 acres&mdash;or just one-twentieth of the total area&mdash;had been
+selected as agricultural farms and homesteads; 31,000,000 acres were held
+as grazing and scrub selections, 56,000,000 acres were under occupation
+license or depasturing right, and 186,000,000 acres under pastoral lease, the
+remainder consisting either of reserves, mineral lands, or unoccupied land
+in remote localities.</p>
+
+<p>From every district where land is open to agricultural selection,
+however, comes the report that the demand is keen. No sooner is an
+area thrown open to selection than it is eagerly applied for, and the
+number of those who signify their desire to become personal residents in
+order to obtain priority is fast increasing. The Australian States, New
+Zealand, the British Isles, and Germany are all furnishing their quota of
+seekers after the cheap and excellent lands Queensland has to offer.</p>
+
+<p>Provision has been made by the Legislature for all kinds of settlement&mdash;purely
+agricultural, mixed farming, and grazing. The areas vary,
+being governed by the quality of the land, rainfall, the presence or absence
+of permanent water, and proximity to a market or a railway&mdash;in other
+words, by the amount required to provide the settler with a comfortable
+income. The State is a generous landlord, and every allowance is made
+for the difficulties of selectors in the earlier stages of their occupancy.
+The man who wishes to acquire a freehold has the opportunity of gratifying
+his desire. The man who objects to that tenure has it in his power to
+obtain a lease in perpetuity. The best settler being generally the man who
+intends to earn his living entirely from the soil, and is prepared to reside
+continuously upon the land, men of that class are very properly accorded
+priority over those who do not intend to reside in person. Particulars
+regarding the different tenures and the conditions upon which land may
+be obtained from the Crown will be found in Appendix E.</p>
+
+<p>The State assists the agriculturist in many ways. The Agricultural
+College at Gatton is doing valuable service in training young men and in
+carrying on experimental work. Six State farms, at two of which apprentices
+are taken, have been established in as many widely separated districts
+to ascertain by experiment the crops and methods of cultivation most
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page129" id="page129"></a>129</span>
+suited to local conditions, and impart the results of their labours to the
+neighbouring farmers. Some of these farms have valuable stud flocks and
+dairy herds, from which settlers can obtain high-class stock. At Cairns
+tropical products are being tested and propagated at a State nursery. Useful
+educational work is also being done at the Sugar Experiment Station at
+Mackay. These institutions are under the direct supervision of the Department
+of Agriculture, which also employs experts in dairying, fruit culture,
+and tobacco growing and curing. A botanist, an entomologist, and an
+agricultural chemist are highly necessary and valuable members of the
+departmental staff, and much useful information is disseminated through
+the medium of the "Agricultural Journal," published by the Department.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 600px;"><a href="images/page128a-1200.jpg"><img src="images/page128a-600.jpg" width="600" height="183" alt="THRESHING WHEAT, EMU VALE, KILLARNEY RAILWAY" /></a>
+<p class="center">THRESHING WHEAT, EMU VALE, KILLARNEY RAILWAY</p></div>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 600px;"><a href="images/page128b-1200.jpg"><img src="images/page128b-600.jpg" width="600" height="180" alt="COFFEE PLANTATION, KURANDA, CAIRNS RAILWAY" /></a>
+<p class="center">COFFEE PLANTATION, KURANDA, CAIRNS RAILWAY</p></div>
+
+<p>In addition to giving instruction, the Government have built sheds in
+the principal farming centres on the Darling Downs for the storage of
+wheat and other grain until the farmers can dispose of their crops to
+advantage. Cheap money is supplied through the medium of the Agricultural
+Bank. There are trust funds from which advances are made to those
+who desire to build co-operative flour or sugar mills, butter and cheese
+factories, or meat-preserving works. Railways have been constructed in
+the older farming districts, produce is carried at moderate rates, and
+subsidies are given to steamship companies for the carriage of produce to
+oversea markets.</p>
+
+<p>All this has been done for the man already on the land. Much is
+likewise being done to help the man who wishes to become a settler.
+Railways are being built into districts in which the Crown owns large
+areas fit for close settlement. In other localities roads are made, land is
+cleared, and wells and bores are sunk. Money is advanced on liberal
+terms and at a low rate of interest by the Agricultural Bank for the
+making of improvements and the purchase of stock, implements, and
+machinery. Land is cheap, and special concessions are given by the
+Railway Department to new settlers when taking up their land. The
+annual rent forms an instalment of the purchase money, and payments
+may be deferred during the initial years of occupancy, when the selector
+is under heavy expense and is getting little or no return from his land.</p>
+
+<p>North and south along the coast, and west to the setting sun, long
+stretches of thick wood or grassy plain present themselves to the eye,
+solitary as in the dawn of creation, only awaiting the advent of the settler
+to be transformed into a scene of bustling activity.</p>
+
+<p>Endowed with a sunny and salubrious climate, a fruitful soil, an
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page130" id="page130"></a>130</span>
+immense territory, Queensland has room for many millions of people; but
+those people must be of European birth or descent. For many years the
+settled policy of the country in regard to immigration was conservative.
+Now, however, all political parties are agreed upon the need for a larger
+population&mdash;but primarily an agrarian population. The great obstacles to
+immigration from Europe on any considerable scale are distance and
+expense. America is distant but a few days' sail, and the cost of a passage
+is correspondingly low. To place Queensland on an equally favourable
+footing, the Government have arranged with the British-India Steam
+Navigation Company to bring adult males from the United Kingdom to the
+State upon payment by the immigrants of £4 each. The rate for adult
+females is £2 per head, and £8 for males and females over 40 and under 55
+years of age. Free passages may be granted to agricultural labourers introduced
+under contract if the employer pays a fee of £5 and guarantees a
+year's employment at approved wages. The balance of the passage-money
+in every case is paid by the State. Female domestic servants, and the wives
+and children of contract or part-paying immigrants, are carried free.
+Immigrants may select land before leaving the old country, with the option
+of getting a refund if not satisfied with their choice after their arrival in
+Queensland. Full particulars of the various forms of immigration will be
+found in Appendix F.</p>
+
+<p>In 1908 the number of those who came from the British Isles was
+only 2,584, but the numbers are increasing since the inauguration of the
+B.I.S.N. service <i>via</i> Torres Strait, 2,737 immigrants having arrived
+during
+the first nine months of this year. Hundreds of desirable settlers and
+their families are coming every year from the Southern States and
+New Zealand, attracted by the cheaper land and brighter prospects.
+The stream of newcomers is now but a tiny rivulet; but, when each
+proclaims to his friends his success in the land of his adoption, that rivulet
+will swell to a mighty river.</p>
+
+<p>Cheap passages and the cheap land across the Atlantic have till now
+turned westward the eyes of the millions of Europe anxious to become
+their own masters and to live a wider, freer life than is possible in their
+native lands. Queensland is taking steps to bring her attractions more
+prominently under the notice of the British and European public in order
+to secure a share of the rural populations of the Old World for herself.
+She has advantages&mdash;natural, material, social, and political&mdash;in no way
+inferior to those presented by other countries. Life and liberty are
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page131" id="page131"></a>131</span>
+nowhere more secure. A wide expanse of sea divides us from the nearest
+foreign Power. Living is cheaper and existence easier than in those
+lands to which the people of Europe are flocking. The sun is always
+shining, and winter, instead of being a period of enforced idleness, is a
+season when labour is greatly in demand. Crop succeeds crop without
+pause, and seed-time and harvest follow each other in quick procession.
+Stock feed in the open throughout the year, and winter brings little
+diminution in the yield of dairy produce.</p>
+
+<p>With free institutions, individual liberty, and great natural resources,
+Queensland is destined to become the home of a numerous and prosperous
+people. It is our manifest duty to see that it forms part of a strong,
+self-reliant,
+British nation beneath the Southern Cross, linked in the bonds of
+affection with the Motherland and our brethren across the seas, with arms
+open in welcome to our kin and colour, but ready to defend ourselves
+against aggression. In the great work, the men who are subduing the
+wilderness and converting it into a smiling garden can be relied upon to
+play their part. Nature is a tender foster-mother; freedom is in the air.
+Stalwart in frame, courageous in heart, true scions of the race from which
+they spring, rejoicing in their manhood, grateful for their heritage, the
+yeomen of Queensland are the pride of their country.</p>
+
+<div class="poem"> <div class="stanza">
+<p>"Not without envy Wealth at times must look</p>
+<p>On their brown strength who wield the reaping-hook</p>
+<p class="i4">And scythe, or at the forge-fire shape the plough</p>
+<p>Or the steel harness of the steeds of steam;</p>
+<p class="i4">All who, by skill and patience, anyhow</p>
+<p>Make service noble, and the earth redeem</p>
+<p>From savageness. By kingly accolade</p>
+<p>Than theirs was never worthier knighthood made."</p>
+ </div> </div>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page132" id="page132"></a>132</span>
+
+<h2 style="margin-top: 2em;">CHAPTER III.</h2>
+
+<h3>THE SUGAR INDUSTRY.</h3>
+
+<blockquote><p class="ind">
+<span class="outdent1">
+Sugar-cane in the Northern Hemisphere</span>.&mdash;The Rise of the Beet Industry.&mdash;Abolition of Slave
+Labour in West Indies.&mdash;Reorganisation of Industry on Scientific Basis.&mdash;Establishment
+of Industry in Queensland.&mdash;Difficulties of Early Planters.&mdash;Stoppage of Pacific Island
+Labour.&mdash;Evolution of Small Holdings and Erection of Central Mills.&mdash;Reintroduction of
+Pacific Islanders.&mdash;Stoppage of Pacific Island Labour by Commonwealth Legislation.&mdash;Bonus
+on White-grown Sugar.&mdash;Benefits Arising from Separating Cultivation and Manufacture.&mdash;Contrast
+between Past and Present Methods.&mdash;Scientific Cultivation.&mdash;Recent
+Statistics.&mdash;The Future of the Industry.&mdash;Queensland Leading the Van in Establishing
+White Agriculturists in Tropics.
+</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>Long before the Christian era classical and sacred writers made mention
+of that "sweet cane" whose product plays so important a part in the
+everyday requirements of modern life.</p>
+
+<p>Sugar-cane was introduced into Spain by the Moors early in the
+eighth century. The Moorish empire sank before the combined might of
+Spain in 1492, and in that year Columbus added a new world to the realm
+of Castile. Within a few years the sugar industry had taken firm root in
+the West Indies, and on every isle dotting the Spanish Main waved
+countless fields of cane, yielding crops beside which the production of
+Andalusia, already waning under the dead hand of Spain, paled into
+insignificance.</p>
+
+<p>To the first Spanish planters is due the system upon which the sugar
+industry was conducted in the tropics for more than three hundred years.
+The haughty hidalgo, scorning to labour with his own hands, forced into
+his service the unresisting natives of the West. Unused to strenuous toil,
+they sank beneath the burden. Touched with pity for their sad lot, and
+anxious to save them from extirpation, Las Casas, "the Apostle of the
+Indians," urged the substitution of the children of Ham, whom he and all
+good Christians believed to have been doomed to perpetual bondage; and
+African slavery thus became an established institution in the West.</p>
+
+<p>Whether under Spanish or British rule, the sugar industry of the
+West Indies, and of all other tropical countries to which it was extended,
+was carried on under a system of large plantations, owned as a rule by
+men of good family, who, deeming personal control beneath their dignity,
+deputed to overseers of meaner rank the supervision of their servile
+labourers. The profusion of Nature, coupled with vicarious management
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page133" id="page133"></a>133</span>
+and the absence of competition, engendered extravagance, improvident
+husbandry, and wasteful and unscientific manufacture, the while there
+rose to Heaven&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="poem"> <div class="stanza">
+<p>"Steaming up, a lamentation and an ancient tale of wrong,</p>
+<p>Like a tale of little-meaning, tho' the words are strong;</p>
+<p>Chanted from an ill-used race of men that cleave the soil,</p>
+<p>Sow the seed, and reap the harvest with enduring toil."</p>
+ </div> </div>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 600px;"><a href="images/page132-1200.jpg"><img src="images/page132-600.jpg" width="600" height="363" alt="SUGAR-MILL, CHILDERS, NORTH COAST RAILWAY" /></a>
+<p class="center">SUGAR-MILL, CHILDERS, NORTH COAST RAILWAY</p></div>
+
+<p>Until well on in the nineteenth century little progress was made either
+in cultivation or manufacture. For more than three hundred years the
+history of the industry was one of slave labour, crude methods, and
+planters to whom life in the tropics meant exile from Europe, and whose
+sole object was to amass wealth to be spent in the pleasures of the courts
+of St. James, Versailles, or Madrid.</p>
+
+<p>The first blow struck at the old-time theory that the tropics were
+created solely to supply the needs of dwellers in temperate climes was
+dealt by Napoleon when he took steps to establish the beet-sugar industry
+in France. His object was twofold&mdash;to render Continental Europe, which
+was then lying at his mercy, independent of Britain and the British
+colonies; and to cripple the trade of the only Power which had never
+stooped to his sway. Unconsciously, at the same time he laid the foundation
+of a tropical Britain peopled by the British race.</p>
+
+<p>The successful establishment of the beet-sugar industry called for the
+application of industrial, scientific, and organising capacity of the highest
+order, and the Governments of France and other European countries
+fostered its development by heavy bounties.</p>
+
+<p>The abolition of slavery in the British West Indies in 1834 and the
+later emancipation of the negroes in the United States so disorganised the
+sugar industry of the West that those engaged in it were too engrossed
+with their own affairs to heed the progress of the beet industry of Europe.
+The output of beet sugar steadily forged ahead until, in the early eighties,
+it was almost equal to the output of cane sugar. Tropical planters and
+manufacturers then found themselves engaged in a life-and-death struggle
+for which they were ill-equipped. Forced by inexorable necessity to face
+the situation, they realised that only by following the example of their
+rivals&mdash;by calling in the aid of science both in cultivation and in manufacture,
+and by paying the strictest attention to the financial side of their
+enterprise&mdash;could they hope to hold their own.</p>
+
+<p>Just at the time that the Southern States of America were fighting
+desperately in defence of the slave system, the foundations of the
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page134" id="page134"></a>134</span>
+Queensland sugar industry were being laid. Despite the high prices then
+ruling for sugar, the profits were not large, owing to the primitive methods
+of cultivation and manufacture adopted on the plantations. In time, even in
+this remote quarter of the globe the growth of the beet industry compelled
+the planters to make radical changes. Antiquated husbandry, crude processes,
+and wasteful management were superseded by modern scientific
+methods. The subdivision of large estates, the substitution of small white
+growers for gangs of unskilled coloured labourers, and the establishment
+of co-operative central factories were Queensland's contribution to the
+solution of the problem of Beet <i>versus</i> Cane.</p>
+
+<p>As Napoleon in his wildest dreams had no conception that his anti-British
+policy would ultimately lead to the expansion and evolution of
+the sugar industry of the tropics, so the Queenslander who first planted a
+few sticks of sugar-cane on the shores of Moreton Bay half a century ago
+little foresaw that from that humble beginning would develop the greatest
+agricultural industry of this State&mdash;an industry which, if treated with
+continued consideration and sympathy by the Commonwealth, bids fair to
+revolutionise the hitherto accepted view of the relations of the white races
+to the tropics. Yet, if we read aright the brief history of the Queensland
+sugar industry, and appreciate its present position, that first planter
+commenced
+a work which is likely to lead to permanent settlement in the
+tropics by men of European descent.</p>
+
+<p>There was little to distinguish the establishment of our sugar industry
+from similar ventures in other parts of the tropics where the supply of
+cheap coloured native labour was insufficient for the requirements of the
+planters. The men who opened up the first plantations in Queensland
+were not Australians, except by adoption. Their experience had been
+gained in Java, Mauritius, the West Indies, and elsewhere. They came to
+this country imbued with the old notion that the best and most economical
+means of carrying on tropical agriculture was to cultivate large estates by
+the aid of gangs of coloured labourers; and it is a moot point whether,
+fifty years ago, any other method of establishing tropical industries in
+Queensland was possible. Certain land concessions were given to
+encourage the newcomers, and they were permitted to import Pacific
+Islanders, under Government supervision, as contract labourers for work
+in the fields.</p>
+
+<p>Not all the early planters had been sugar-growers previously. In the
+Mackay district, which has always been one of the chief sugar centres, the
+first settlers grew cotton, tobacco, and arrowroot. But early in the sixties
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page135" id="page135"></a>135</span>
+it was recognised that the production of sugar offered the most satisfactory
+and profitable field for their enterprise. Generally, they were representatives
+of that class of whom Benjamin Kidd, in his "Control of the
+Tropics," says: "The more advanced peoples, driven to seek new outlooks
+for their activities, will be subject to a gradually increasing pressure to
+turn their attention to the great natural field of enterprise which still
+remains in the development of the tropics."</p>
+
+<p>It was not sufficient for these early planters to take up land and plant
+their crops; they had to erect mills, where the cane could be converted into
+sugar, and this required capital. The cost of labour, provisions, and
+supplies was enormous. Communication along the coast was such that
+goods were taken North in small sailing vessels, and the pioneers were
+quite accustomed to travelling in a small steamer which anchored under
+the lee of a convenient island during the darkness of the night. Those
+who see the condition of the industry which has evolved from these first
+efforts must, in justice to the pioneers, recall the difficulties and risks
+which were faced by them.</p>
+
+<p>Forty years ago the industry was an infant struggling with its teething
+troubles, still liable to premature death. In 1871 there were only 9,581
+acres under sugar-cane in the whole of Queensland, and the production
+of sugar was only 3,762 tons, not equal to half the output of one of our
+large modern factories. The industry was then chiefly confined to the
+South, but it soon made its way northwards, and expanded so rapidly that,
+in 1881, the area under cane had increased to 28,026 acres, and there were
+no less than 103 mills in operation.</p>
+
+<p>The industry then entered upon the first of its great reverses. Owing
+to the enormous increase in the output of beet sugar in Europe, prices
+fell rapidly. The first of the larger class of factories, conducted on
+modern lines, with improved appliances, came into existence, and small
+mills, unable to compete successfully, began to close. Labour supplies
+from the South Sea Islands became more expensive, and a class of white
+men, originally labourers who had saved money, took up selections as
+sugar farms, and sought to dispose of their crops of cane to the
+planter-proprietors
+of existing mills. The latter, alarmed by the passage of legislation
+decreeing an end to the employment of coloured labour, planted
+larger areas with the object of taking off as much cane as possible before
+they were deprived of the services of the Polynesian labourers then under
+contract. The immediate result was that the small farmers were unable
+to sell their crops at reasonable rates; and to help them the Government
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page136" id="page136"></a>136</span>
+of the day, whose avowed policy it was to have the industry carried on by
+white labour, decided to advance money to groups of these farmers to
+enable them to erect co-operative factories for the treatment of their cane.
+As an experiment, two such factories were built in the Mackay district,
+where the need was most clamant; and thus was laid the foundation of the
+central mill system, which has given such an impetus to the growth of the
+industry, conducted on the basis of white labour. Tentative though the
+experiment was, and though for many years not a complete financial
+success from the point of view of the mills, the erection of these mills at
+least showed that the interests of the farmer and the factory were mutually
+interdependent.</p>
+
+<p>It was seen almost at once by the large planter that the farmer,
+working in the field beside his employees, was more eager for success than
+when he worked as labourer or overseer for another. The control of the
+factories, under directorates of farmers, was found to be more satisfactory
+and more economical than when in the hands of planters or managers with
+old-fashioned ideas of organisation&mdash;with managers, sub-managers, and
+large administrative staffs. Five years after the first loan was granted by
+the Government, and barely three after the rollers were started in the first
+of the two pioneer mills, these facts had become manifest. It says much
+for the sense and courage of the planters that this revolution in established
+methods did not dismay them, and their wisdom was shown in setting to
+work energetically to put the new methods into practice in the conduct of
+their own business.</p>
+
+<p>In 1891 the Colonial Sugar Refining Company set the example by
+cutting up one of its large estates into farms of moderate size. Ten years
+earlier that estate was a cattle station, employing a couple of white men
+and a few aboriginals. Before the first six months of 1891 had passed, it
+was the home of fifty or sixty settlers, a number trebled within the next
+few years.</p>
+
+<p>The new departure largely overcame the labour difficulty; in addition
+to that, it went far to meet the low prices for sugar. Many of the factories
+still continued to make sugar for sale in the open market, and a considerable
+quantity found its way, profitably, to London.</p>
+
+<p>In 1892 a special Commissioner of the London "Times" (Miss Flora
+Shaw, now Lady Lugard) travelled through the sugar districts, and noted
+the evolution which was taking place. She seemed to foresee the future
+more clearly than many of those actually engaged in the industry. "Even
+the sugar industry," she wrote, "appears as a whole to be half-unconscious
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page137" id="page137"></a>137</span>
+of the results of the reorganisation through which it has
+passed, and lies, as it were, still asleep in the dawn of its own prosperity."</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 600px;"><a href="images/page136a-1200.jpg"><img src="images/page136a-600.jpg" width="600" height="326" alt="SISAL HEMP AND CANEFIELDS, SOUTH ISIS" /></a>
+<p class="center">SISAL HEMP AND CANEFIELDS, SOUTH ISIS</p></div>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 600px;"><a href="images/page136b-1200.jpg"><img src="images/page136b-600.jpg" width="600" height="328" alt="CANEFIELDS, ISIS RAILWAY" /></a>
+<p class="center">CANEFIELDS, ISIS RAILWAY</p></div>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 600px;"><a href="images/page136c-1200.jpg"><img src="images/page136c-600.jpg" width="600" height="235" alt="SUGAR CANE AND MILL, HUXLEY, ISIS RAILWAY" /></a>
+<p class="center">SUGAR CANE AND MILL, HUXLEY, ISIS RAILWAY</p></div>
+
+<p>The middle nineties saw the fuller development of the central mill
+system. More groups of farmers were formed, loans were obtained from
+the Government, and further factories, mostly large and all well-equipped
+with the most modern machinery, were erected. A sudden demand arose
+in all parts of the coastal belt for sugar lands. The wiser of the planters
+subdivided their estates; owners of lands hitherto unutilised cut them up,
+and sold them to the inrush of farmers. The financial crisis of the early
+nineties and the action of Parliament in removing the embargo on the
+introduction of Pacific Islanders were no doubt contributing factors to the
+rapid increase in the number of would-be sugar-growers; but, whatever
+the cause, certain it is that at this time the spurt in cane cultivation and
+white settlement was greater than at any other period in the history of
+the industry in Queensland.</p>
+
+<p>The year 1898 saw no less than 111,012 acres under cane, with a
+sugar production of 163,734 tons. The factories employed 3,709 men,
+nearly all Europeans, and the declared value of the sugar sent away from
+Queensland exceeded £1,300,000. The actual number of farmers cultivating
+cane in that year is not ascertainable, but it approximated 2,500.</p>
+
+<p>It may fairly be claimed that Queensland has conquered her tropical
+littoral. Between Nerang in the South and Port Douglas in the North
+stretches a coastline of nearly 1,000 miles. At intervals along this great
+distance are large areas under cane and a number of considerable towns
+almost entirely dependent upon the sugar industry&mdash;including important
+centres like Bundaberg, with over 10,000 inhabitants, and Mackay
+and Cairns, each containing over 5,000 souls. Uninhabited swamps
+and forests and mountain lands&mdash;covered with rank tropical grasses
+or dense growths of trees and creepers&mdash;have given place to cultivated
+fields, in which stand thousands of comfortable homes rendered
+accessible by well-made roads, while many districts are provided with most
+of the adjuncts to modern civilisation. In fact, the white settler and
+worker live under conditions in no way inferior to those prevailing in
+agricultural centres in other parts of the world. European brains and
+European labour have brought into being a flourishing industry, and
+converted into one of the healthiest portions of Australia, fitted to become
+the permanent home of millions of our own race, a malarial belt where it
+had for long been thought none but coloured people would ever be able to
+labour and live.</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page138" id="page138"></a>138</span>
+
+<p>The latter end of the nineties and the opening years of the present
+decade saw a further development of the principle of white settlement in
+our tropics. The federation of the Australian States offered the sugar-producer
+some escape from the keen competition of the world's markets
+through its fiscal policy of unhampered interstate freetrade, with protection
+against the world.</p>
+
+<p>The Commonwealth Parliament, in its first session (1901), decided
+that the eight or nine thousand Pacific Islanders employed in cultivation
+should be returned to their islands, granting, by way of compensation for
+the increased cost of production, a bounty upon all white-grown sugar.
+As was the case under somewhat similar circumstances nearly twenty years
+before, this withdrawal of coloured labour gave a great impetus to planting.
+There was naturally some anxiety as to whether the supply of white labour
+in the future would be sufficient; but the profits made in the industry
+enabled the farmers to pay high wages at harvest time, and men flocked to
+the sugar districts from all parts of Australia.</p>
+
+<p>One result of the labour legislation has been that many of the growers
+on large areas have considered it to their interest still further to subdivide
+their holdings, and their action has had the effect of increasing largely the
+number of farmers. It was estimated that last year the registered white
+growers of sugar-cane in Queensland numbered no less than 4,425. In
+addition to these, there is still a small number employing casual coloured
+labour. Of the whole output of 151,000 tons of sugar, fully 93 per cent.
+was produced without the aid of any coloured labour. In other words,
+white men almost exclusively, whether as employers or as workers, are
+now engaged in developing our tropical resources, and peopling with our
+own race solitudes previously untrodden save by a few aboriginal natives.</p>
+
+<p>Less than thirty years ago it was the belief of most of those engaged
+in sugar production that the work of the mills was one of extreme complexity,
+and that success depended upon the possession of some special
+secret in the working. At that time the planter was also the miller. Now
+the work of cultivation is generally dissociated from the manufacture of
+sugar. Principally owing to the proprietary interest of the farmers in the
+various central mills, every stage of the work is openly and intelligently
+discussed, results are compared, and an efficiency attained which in many
+respects is equal to any in the sugar world. The factories no longer make
+sugar for the open market, but sell to the refiners. Analytical chemists
+check the work at every stage in the factory, and labour-saving appliances
+are the rule and not the exception. A modern factory is a wonderful
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page139" id="page139"></a>139</span>
+illustration of the application of science, mechanical invention, and
+organisation
+to human industry.</p>
+
+<p>Nothing can better indicate the evolution of the Queensland sugar
+industry during the past forty years than a comparison between one of the
+first mills established in the State and one of the most modern.</p>
+
+<p>Forty years ago the sugar-cane was drawn in a cart close to the single
+set of crushing rollers, flung on the ground, and then fed, stick by stick,
+through the rollers, emerging with less than half the juice extracted. The
+crushed sticks were taken out and spread on the ground in the open, until
+dry enough to be collected and brought to the furnaces for use as fuel. In
+the modern factory the cane arrives by tram or train, is mechanically
+placed on a long endless carrier, and passes, at the rate of twenty tons or
+more per hour, through several sets of rollers, the refuse, caught by
+strainers, returning to the rollers, while the megass, or exhausted fibre,
+goes direct to the furnaces.</p>
+
+<p>The old mill crushed enough cane during six months to make two or
+three hundred tons of sugar. The modern factory deals with sufficient to
+produce anything from six to ten thousand tons, and in some cases more.</p>
+
+<p>Steam has taken the place of fires at the boiling stations, and boiling
+<i>in vacuo</i> has been as fully adopted in Queensland as in other parts of the
+sugar-producing world. In the old mill the <i>masse cuite</i>, the last stage of
+the product before the sugar is dried off, had to be dug out from tanks,
+men standing up to their knees in the sticky substance, and handling it in
+buckets. Now, the <i>masse cuite</i> goes direct from the vacuum pans to the
+receivers, and thence into the centrifugals. There the molasses is
+separated, and the sugar is carried automatically to the bags standing on
+weighing machines only a few feet from the railway trucks which are
+waiting to take the product to the ship's hold.</p>
+
+<p>The old-style factory carried on its operations solely by day. The
+present-day factory is lit throughout with electric light, and works day and
+night (Sunday excepted) for five or six months, employing, according to
+its capacity, from 100 to 150 men. Around each factory has sprung up a
+small settlement of artisans, storekeepers, and others, while, under a
+statute passed by the Queensland Parliament, the employees are decently
+housed, fed, and assured of good sanitation, their mental, moral, and
+financial welfare being provided for by the institution of reading and
+recreation rooms, and the establishment of branches of the Government
+Savings Bank.</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page140" id="page140"></a>140</span>
+
+<p>Turning to the agricultural operations, similar evidence of the evolution
+of the industry is to be found. Time was when a visitor could stand
+on some slight eminence and look over vast areas of cane, the vista
+unbroken save for a few trees, or the plantation roads running like ribbons
+through a sea of waving green. Now the prospect discloses the homes of
+farmers standing out amongst the cane, with all the evidences of a closely
+settled and thriving population. The large gangs of labourers tending the
+cultivation have for the most part disappeared. Instead, the farmer and
+his sons, with possibly one or two labourers, work side by side in the fields.</p>
+
+<p>At harvest time long lines of carts drawing cane to the mills no longer
+make a picturesque feature in the landscape; locomotives now haul cane-trains
+over the hundreds of miles of narrow-gauge tramline which radiate
+from the factories to all points from which supplies of cane are drawn.
+Where but a few years back was naught but the lonely bush, its silence
+broken only by the lowing of a few cattle, the occasional passing of an
+aboriginal stockman or a party of drovers, carriers, or a chance swagman&mdash;birds
+of passage between the inland stations and the ports on the coast&mdash;townships
+have sprung into being, and every half-mile reveals the home
+of the farmer nestling among his fields of emerald green.</p>
+
+<p>During the past few years, mainly owing to the satisfactory prices
+received for their cane, the farmers have been profitably employed.
+They have learned in the school of experience that cane cultivation
+requires practical knowledge, and that in many cases their land needs
+special treatment, which they must study for themselves. Nothing has
+brought this fact home to the farmers more thoroughly than the work of
+the Sugar Experiment Station at Mackay, and the valuable reports
+published by the late Director, Dr. W. Maxwell.</p>
+
+<p>In the early seventies the sugar-planters of Mackay awoke one
+morning to discover the whole of their crops destroyed, as if a fire
+had passed over them. They then grew only one variety of cane, which
+had become diseased. Fresh varieties had to be introduced from abroad,
+with all the risk of introducing canes that were worthless, or, worse still,
+of bringing in pests or diseases. So far, sugar-cane in Queensland has
+been singularly and fortunately free from natural enemies. Thanks to the
+work of Mr. H. Tryon, the Government Entomologist, the grower readily
+recognises the presence of insect pests, and knows how to deal promptly
+with them on their first appearance.</p>
+
+<p>The farmer is learning to know his cane; he studies its habits, and is
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page141" id="page141"></a>141</span>
+quick to appreciate the good and bad effects of his operations. The
+analyses at the mills have directed his attention to the importance of cane
+being a good sugar-producer, and, as he is in many cases a shareholder in
+a factory, he is alive to the fact that weight of cane is not the only essential
+to success. For many years the need for securing canes richer in sugar
+was largely neglected all over the world, but recently efforts have
+been made to repeat in the case of cane the splendid results won by such
+men as the late Sir J. B. Lawes and the French chemist, Vilmorin, in connection
+with the sugar-producing qualities of the beet. The officials at the
+Queensland Sugar Experiment Stations have tested fully sixty varieties of
+cane, including some from Papua, to discover the agricultural and milling
+value of each.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 600px;"><a href="images/page140a-1200.jpg"><img src="images/page140a-600.jpg" width="600" height="183" alt="CAMBANORA GAP, HEAD OF CONDAMINE, KILLARNEY" /></a>
+<p class="center">CAMBANORA GAP, HEAD OF CONDAMINE, KILLARNEY</p></div>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 600px;"><a href="images/page140b-1200.jpg"><img src="images/page140b-600.jpg" width="600" height="186" alt="MINTO CRAG, DUGANDAN, FASSIFERN DISTRICT" /></a>
+<p class="center">MINTO CRAG, DUGANDAN, FASSIFERN DISTRICT</p></div>
+
+<p>It is only natural that in an industry whose operations extend over
+so many degrees of latitude conditions must greatly vary. Irrigation is
+necessary in some districts, notably in the Burdekin Delta, which lies in a
+dry belt. Drainage is the prime requisite in other places. Fertilisation
+varies with the soils, and information as to the latter has been compiled in
+a series of exhaustive analyses made by Dr. W. Maxwell at the laboratory
+in Bundaberg. In South Queensland the cane frequently takes two years
+to mature, while in the extreme North fifteen months after planting it is
+fit for the rollers.</p>
+
+<p>According to the official estimate of the Commonwealth Treasurer for
+1908, 4,825 farmers were then engaged in the industry in Queensland, 91·7
+per cent. of whom employed white labour only, the number of employees
+being in round figures 30,000. In 1902 the number of farmers was only
+2,496, showing the rapidity with which closer settlement is taking place.
+It is true that of late there has been a reduction in the area under
+cultivation,
+but this is probably attributable to the tendency to make "intense
+cultivation" a feature of the industry in order to solve the labour problem.
+Some of the larger areas under crop have been curtailed, and the reduction
+has not been made good by the increased settlement; but, as in the eighties
+those engaged in the industry found, possibly unconsciously, a remedy for
+the dearth of labour, so we may reasonably expect that the present difficulty
+in obtaining men for the ordinary work of cultivation will be met by new
+developments.</p>
+
+<p>What does the future hold for us? Can we continue the work of
+building up a white nation beneath a tropical sun&mdash;a task which in many
+parts of the world is considered quixotic? The areas available for cane
+cultivation are still enormous, and, though hesitancy and doubt may for a
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page142" id="page142"></a>142</span>
+time join hands in checking expansion, the main facts remain that there is
+room for the people and that there is a demand for the product. Australia,
+in her fiscal policy, has recognised that the sugar industry is a national
+industry, and our statesmen realise that it is doing for the Australian
+tropics what no other industry on the coastal lands has yet seriously
+attempted&mdash;what, indeed, no other country in the world is as yet prepared
+to try.</p>
+
+<p>Assuming, as we have a right to assume, a sympathetic Australian
+Government, we can turn to the future with eyes full of hope. There
+are many directions in which we may look for the expansion of the
+industry. The increasing population of the Commonwealth involves an
+added capacity to consume the product. The field of invention in regard to
+the harvesting of the cane has yet to be explored and exploited. At present
+the cost of cutting and loading a field of cane is from eight to ten times
+that of harvesting an equal amount of sugar beets. Experiments are
+constantly being made with mechanical appliances for cutting and loading
+and unloading cane, and this is one direction in which Queenslanders may
+look forward hopefully to the time when they will not only lessen the
+volume of labour required, but when they will reduce the burdensome
+nature of the work, and place the cane-sugar industry in a position to
+compete successfully with the great beet-sugar industry of Europe.</p>
+
+<p>Some 250,000 gallons of rum are distilled annually at Bundaberg, but
+we are told officially that 4,000,000 gallons of molasses go to waste every
+year. The conversion of this product into foodstuffs for live stock as an
+adjunct to the main industry would add materially to the profits.</p>
+
+<p>In some sugar districts, dairying is finding a footing, and possibly the
+time is not far distant when a form of mixed farming will enable the cane-grower
+to utilise more of the by-products of his industry, at the same
+time rendering him more independent of unfavourable meteorological
+conditions. Generally speaking, improvement in the quality and quantity
+of the cane, intense culture, mechanical inventions, and the use of by-products
+are all within the bounds of possibility, and will make for further
+progress.</p>
+
+<p>But all these things are of secondary importance compared with the
+need of a settled working population. Back from the coast lies a range of
+mountains, rising often 3,000 feet above the level of the sea. Along and
+behind these mountains are excellent lands, well suited for close settlement
+and for the production of cereals, and the fruits and vegetables so greatly
+needed in the more humid areas of the littoral belt. The climate of this
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page143" id="page143"></a>143</span>
+elevated hinterland is excellent, and the close settlement of these lands will
+furnish one of the safeguards of the sugar industry, seeing that a permanent
+population within easy reach will always be available for employment
+in the canefields and sugar-mills. To a large extent, the populations of
+the lowlands and the highlands will be mutually dependent upon each
+other.</p>
+
+<p>In the early days of settlement in East and West Moreton and on the
+Darling Downs, the small selector, with no capital in many cases save a
+pair of strong hands, a courageous heart, and a tireless energy, made
+his way every year to the squatter's shearing shed. No thought had he
+of "knocking down" his hard-earned cheque. Labour disputes never
+entered his mind. With his earnings he paid his rent and improved his
+land. It was men of this stamp who built up the great agricultural
+industry of Southern Queensland, and they and their descendants of
+the second and third generations are the very cream of the farmers of
+to-day. It is to a similar class of settlers in the sugar districts and their
+hinterland that we look for the proper settlement and development of our
+tropical lands. And in our aspirations for a great white agricultural
+population we are entitled to expect the sympathetic assistance of our
+kinsmen in the South and of the Empire at large. For not only are we
+doing what we can to make a prosperous and contented people, but we are
+doing a great work for the whole of the white races. We are proving that
+the tropics can be conquered and permanently settled by people of our own
+race and colour; we are holding one of the gateways of the East; and we
+are garrisoning an important outpost of the Empire. Kipling's stirring
+words, written of Queensland, find an echo in the hearts of Queenslanders&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="poem"> <div class="stanza">
+<p>The northern stirp beneath the southern skies&mdash;</p>
+<p class="i4">I build a Nation for an Empire's need,</p>
+<p>Suffer a little, and my land shall rise,</p>
+<p class="i4">Queen over lands indeed!</p>
+ </div> </div>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page144" id="page144"></a>144</span>
+
+<h2 style="margin-top: 2em;">CHAPTER IV.</h2>
+
+<h3>A HALF-CENTURY OF MINING.</h3>
+
+<blockquote><p class="ind">
+<span class="outdent1">
+The Quest for Gold a Colonising Agency</span>.&mdash;Earliest Discoveries of the Precious Metal in
+Queensland.&mdash;Port Curtis.&mdash;Rockhampton District.&mdash;Peak Downs.&mdash;Gympie.&mdash;Ravenswood.&mdash;Charters
+Towers.&mdash;Palmer.&mdash;Mount Morgan.&mdash;Croydon.&mdash;Later Discoveries.&mdash;Yield at
+Charters Towers and Mount Morgan.&mdash;Copper Mining.&mdash;Tin.&mdash;Silver.&mdash;Queensland the
+Home of All Kinds of Minerals and Precious Stones.&mdash;Mineral Wealth in Cairns Hinterland.&mdash;Copper
+Deposits in Cloncurry District.&mdash;The Etheridge.&mdash;Anakie Gem Field.&mdash;Opal
+Fields.&mdash;Extensive Coal Measures.&mdash;Railway Communication with Mining Fields.&mdash;Value
+of Queensland Mineral Output.&mdash;Prospects of Industry.
+</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>The quest for gold, to say nothing of other minerals, has had much to
+do with the settlement and development of Queensland, apart from the
+direct advantages conferred on the State by her mining industry. It has
+brought to our shores many thousands of people who would not otherwise
+have come here; it has helped to open up for occupations other than
+mining previously unknown and unexplored regions that, but for the
+prospector, might have lain dormant for many more years; while the
+successful development of the territory's rich and almost unlimited
+mineral wealth has aided in making our State known in other parts of the
+world, and thus assisted in attracting hither the people and capital that
+have been the chief contributing factors to our wonderful progress.</p>
+
+<p>Fifty years ago, when what is now Queensland, casting itself
+free from the parental skirts of New South Wales, began to walk
+alone, its mining industry did not exist. It would not be correct to say
+that gold&mdash;here, as elsewhere in Australia, the first to be sought and found
+of the numerous minerals that have since proved a source of so much
+wealth to the State&mdash;had not been then discovered upon our shores.
+Fifteen years before, men attached to an official establishment at Gladstone,
+Port Curtis, found "colours" of the yellow metal; and in 1858, the
+year preceding "Separation," occurred the Canoona "rush," which
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page145" id="page145"></a>145</span>
+proved so disastrous to the 15,000 or 20,000 adventurers who then swarmed
+to the Rockhampton district in search of the "saint-seducing gold." But
+the so-called "colours" detected at picturesque Gladstone were nothing
+more than can to this day be traced in scores of places in Queensland;
+while the find at Canoona proved a fiasco so great as to spread abroad the
+impression that this part of Australia, as a prospective field for mining
+enterprise, was a delusion. But was it? Within a dozen miles or so of the
+scene of the Canoona disappointment was situated the "mountain of
+gold" that has since earned world-wide fame under the name of Mount
+Morgan; and by the end of Queensland's first half-century the Rockhampton
+(or Central) district has turned out gold to the sum of nearly
+3,500,000 fine ounces, representing a money value of over £14,500,000&mdash;the
+bulk of it won within the last moiety of the half-century.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 600px;"><a href="images/page144a-1200.jpg"><img src="images/page144a-600.jpg" width="600" height="182" alt="MOUNT MORGAN: COPPER WORKS, LOOKING NORTH" /></a>
+<p class="center">MOUNT MORGAN: COPPER WORKS, LOOKING NORTH</p></div>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 600px;"><a href="images/page144b-1200.jpg"><img src="images/page144b-600.jpg" width="600" height="183" alt="MOUNT MORGAN: GENERAL VIEW OF WORKS" /></a>
+<p class="center">MOUNT MORGAN: GENERAL VIEW OF WORKS</p></div>
+
+<p>Three years after the foundation of the colony of Queensland gold in
+payable quantities was discovered on the Peak Downs, inland from
+Rockhampton; but it was not till the finding of the Gympie field late in
+1867&mdash;eight years after severance from New South Wales&mdash;that Queensland
+first definitely took rank as a gold producer. Within six months
+from the time when the wandering digger Nash, fossicking in the gullies
+running into the upper Mary River, found the promising specimens in his
+dish which made him hasten to Maryborough to report his discovery, 15,000
+men had flocked to the spot from all parts of Australia. The place had
+hardly been heard of before. Pressmen in Brisbane did not even know
+how to spell the name "Gympie" when first the news arrived; but within
+a very few weeks its fame spread far and wide. The gullies in the vicinity
+of Nash's claim were rich and numerous. One nugget brought to light
+weighed nearly a thousand ounces, and was worth £3,675. Soon alluvial
+gave place to quartz mining, and within five years gold to the value of
+more than £1,500,000 had been won. Up to the end of 1908&mdash;that is, in
+forty-one years&mdash;the field had produced gold worth £10,350,000, and is still
+"going strong." Like all other fields, it has of course had its ups and
+downs, and just now is recovering its feet after one of its "downs."
+Last year Gympie produced gold to the value of nearly £270,000; the
+grade of its ore is improving, and its monthly yields are now showing
+comparative increases.</p>
+
+<p>Since the discovery of the Gympie goldfield there has been no cessation
+in the progress of mining in Queensland. From one end of the
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page146" id="page146"></a>146</span>
+territory to another the existence of gold and other minerals has from
+time to time been disclosed. For many years&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="poem"> <div class="stanza">
+<p>"Gold! Gold! Gold! Gold!</p>
+<p>Bright and yellow, hard and cold&mdash;"</p>
+ </div> </div>
+
+<p>but still much to be desired&mdash;was the magnet which attracted the peripatetic
+prospector away from the comforts of civilisation into the rugged
+wilds of the coastal ranges and the gullies and stony stream-beds of the
+eastern watershed; and for a long while it was only the gold discoveries
+that attracted much attention. A year or so after the Gympie find,
+the Ravenswood goldfield, south-west from Townsville, "broke out," to
+use the phrase of the old-time digger. In 1869 the precious metal was
+found on the Gilbert River, and the Gilbert, Etheridge, and Woolgar
+fields were proclaimed. Then came Charters Towers, our premier goldfield,
+in 1872; the Palmer, inland from Cooktown (then the very far
+North), in 1873; the Hodgkinson, a little more to the south, in 1875; the
+great Mount Morgan in 1882; Croydon in 1886; and other discoveries,
+until Dickie, a veteran prospector, found the Hamilton and Alice River
+fields in the Peninsula&mdash;the former in 1899 and the latter as late as 1904.</p>
+
+<p>In its thirty-six years of existence Charters Towers has turned out
+over 5,800,000 ounces&mdash;more than £24,600,000 worth of gold; last year's
+output was of the value of £700,000; and to-day the indications in the
+deeper ground of the field are such that there is reason to expect that both
+the term of its existence and the volume of its output will be greatly
+extended. At Mount Morgan&mdash;the show mine of Queensland, and one of
+the greatest in the world&mdash;there has been quarried out of the hill and dug
+from the depths beneath stone that, under treatment by works in every
+way worthy of such a mine, has, in a little over twenty-two years, yielded
+gold to the value of over £13,760,000; has paid in wages and other
+expenditure about £7,000,000; and has given to the fortunate holders of its
+1,000,000 shares some £7,230,000 in dividends. That is what the big mine
+has done. What is it doing now? True, the phenomenal yields of gold
+and the high grade of its auriferous ores that characterised the earlier
+years of its history showed signs of diminishing as time went on; but
+diminishing yields were counterbalanced by improved methods of mining
+and treatment, with consequent reduction of costs; and a few years since
+copper as well as gold was found in the lower levels, with the result that
+the mine has become at once the most productive copper and the most
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page147" id="page147"></a>147</span>
+productive gold mine of the State. It has already turned out copper to
+the value of about £1,500,000, which has to be added to the gold yield,
+given above, to arrive at its total product; while the value of the mine's
+aggregate output for 1908 (over £1,017,000) was greater, with perhaps
+one exception, than that of any previous year in its history.</p>
+
+<p>Though for some years gold was the only string to the bow
+of Queensland's mining industry, that state of things has long since
+changed. In the early sixties copper was mined in the State, but then and
+for many years afterwards only to a limited extent. Tin came on the
+scene in 1872. During the first forty years of Queensland's existence the
+gold won within her borders was four times the worth of all other
+minerals and coal produced; but so rapid has been the increase during the
+past ten years in the production of the industrial metals&mdash;or "other
+minerals," as they are officially termed, to distinguish them from gold&mdash;that
+in 1907 their value exceeded that of the gold yield by over £170,000.
+Indeed, during the five years ending with that year there was an almost
+phenomenal expansion. The output of 1902 was of the value of only
+£589,960. In the following year it increased to £846,280, and then for
+four years jumped up by leaps and bounds, until in 1907 the yield was
+worth no less than £2,153,226.</p>
+
+<p>The known mineral-producing country of Queensland extends over
+an immense area. It begins on the southern border, where the Silver Spur
+mine maintains a constant output of silver and other mineral products, and
+where the Stanthorpe district, our first stanniferous field, still materially
+assists, with the aid of dredges, in the tin production of the State; and
+extends northerly a hundred miles beyond the goldfield of Coen, in the
+Cape York Peninsula. Over this immense distance of some 1,300 miles
+from south to north, and extending inland from 50 to 200 miles from the
+eastern coast, are located at varying intervals fields producing gold, silver,
+copper, tin, coal, lead, sapphires, manganese, wolfram, molybdenite,
+bismuth, and graphite; while further to the west are the opal fields of
+Jundah, Opalton, and Kynuna, the copper deposits of the vast Cloncurry
+district, the silver-lead mines of Lawn Hills in the Burketown district,
+and the Croydon goldfield, also on the Gulf waters. Queensland, with a
+huge area of 670,500 square miles and a scant population of little more
+than half a million of people, has a hundred proclaimed gold, mineral, and
+coal fields, having a combined area of about 50,000,000 acres.</p>
+
+<p>Apart from goldfields, by far the most important and productive of
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page148" id="page148"></a>148</span>
+these areas is the tract of country which forms the hinterland of the port
+of Cairns&mdash;a tract which includes the tin-mining centres of Herberton,
+Stannary Hills, Irvinebank, Nymbool, and Reid's Creek; the copper and
+silver-lead mines of Chillagoe and Mungana; the copper mines of Mount
+Molloy and O.K.; the wolfram, molybdenite, and bismuth mines of
+Wolfram Camp, Bamford, and Mount Carbine; and the antimony deposits
+of the Mitchell River. The two large mineral fields into which this
+portion of the State is now officially divided&mdash;Chillagoe and Herberton&mdash;have
+together an area of over 8,500,000 acres. The port of Cairns
+was not established till 1876&mdash;seventeen years after the foundation of
+the State. Now there yearly pass through it from the area mentioned
+minerals worth from £600,000 to £800,000, exclusive of the mineral
+product from the Etheridge and Croydon fields, which also, for the most
+part, finds an outlet through the same channel. Copper and tin are
+responsible for more than half the amount named, but the potentialities of
+the district as far as other minerals are concerned are almost unlimited.
+Of wolfram&mdash;taking only one example&mdash;this part of the State alone can
+supply the world's demand, and have a good deal to spare afterwards.
+The Queensland Government Geologist has estimated that the wolfram-bearing
+country in this portion of Queensland extends over an area of 3,500
+square miles. Given anything like a permanent demand and a fair and steady
+market, wolfram production would soon take a prominent position in our
+mining industry. The historical tin mine of the district is the Vulcan, at
+Irvinebank, which has attained the greatest depth (1,450 feet) reached by
+any tin mine in Queensland, and where the appliances for recovering the
+metal are more up-to-date than at Dolcoath, the most famous tin mine of
+Cornwall. During the twenty-five years of its existence, the Vulcan Mine
+has from 106,000 tons of tin ore produced over 9,790 tons of concentrates,
+worth something approaching £500,000, and has paid its lucky shareholders
+dividends to the extent of £160,000. The opening up of this large
+and prolific district is largely due to the enterprise of the Chillagoe
+Company, which not only has developed extensively its several mines and
+erected large ore-treatment works, but has built the railway&mdash;in length
+93 miles&mdash;which connects those mines and numerous others with
+the Government railway at the top of the Coastal Range at Mareeba, and
+is building a further extension to the Etheridge field, nearly 150 miles
+further inland.</p>
+
+<p>Queensland is known as a country of magnificent distances, and one
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page149" id="page149"></a>149</span>
+example of its vast expanse is the extent of the copper area of the
+Cloncurry district, which is tapped by the Great Northern Railway 480
+miles westward from the port of Townsville. This district is by far the
+largest tract of copper-bearing country in Australia, and one of the
+largest in the world. As the crow flies, it extends north and south for
+more than 150 miles, and east and west some 80 or 100 miles. Over this
+large area, covering at least 15,000 square miles, copper has been proved
+to exist. At the close of 1907 there were on the Warden's books over 800
+mineral leases, besides some hundreds of claims and several freeholds.
+The outcrops throughout the district have been described by one of the
+Government Geologists as innumerable and phenomenally rich. But
+the district is still in the prospecting stage, and it is yet too soon to
+pronounce an opinion as to whether the deposits generally will live at
+depth, or of what value they will be if they do, although it may safely be
+said that the developments in the more important mines during the past
+twelve months have been distinctly encouraging. Smelting operations are
+already in progress at two, if not three, of the principal mining centres of
+the district, and a railway extension from Cloncurry 74 miles southward is
+now in course of construction. Another Queensland mineral field of vast
+extent is the Etheridge. It has an area equal to half that of Scotland, and
+the Warden for the field, when he undertakes his periodical patrol, has an
+itinerary of about 400 miles.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 600px;"><a href="images/page148-1200.jpg"><img src="images/page148-600.jpg" width="600" height="362" alt="CHARTERS TOWERS: PLANT'S DAY DAWN" /></a>
+<p class="center">CHARTERS TOWERS: PLANT'S DAY DAWN</p></div>
+
+<p>Passing reference has been made to the sapphire field of Anakie, in
+Central Queensland, and to the opal to be found in her trackless West. As
+a matter of fact, isolated finds of many kinds of gems besides these two
+have been made in widely separated parts of the State, but as a recognised
+branch of the mining industry opal and sapphire mining has for years
+occupied an important place. In the Anakie field, 190 miles from Rockhampton,
+on the Central Railway, the existence of gem-stones was officially
+reported as early as 1892. Ten years later the Government Geologist,
+reporting on these sapphire fields, stated that "the total distance along
+which deposits are found ... is altogether about fifteen miles. Of
+an area of 400 square miles examined, fifty square miles contain deposits
+carrying sapphires of more or less value." In 1905, another member
+of the Geological staff reported that the most important recent development
+had been the opening up of a second bed of the sapphire wash at a
+depth of 25 feet, and that excellent stones, freer from flaws than those
+nearer the surface, were being obtained from the lower deposit. Mining
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page150" id="page150"></a>150</span>
+for these precious stones, many of which are of the most beautiful description,
+has been to a considerable extent detrimentally affected by the difficulty
+experienced in getting a regular market and what is considered a fair
+price for the gems; but, notwithstanding this drawback, there was a large
+expansion in the industry during the four years preceding 1907&mdash;the
+annual production having increased in that period from £7,000 to £35,000
+in value. In 1908, however, there was a considerable falling off, mainly
+because miners were not satisfied with the prices obtainable; but, with an
+improvement in this respect, renewed activity on the field, which even now
+supports a population of over 1,000 persons, may be looked for.</p>
+
+<p>The opal-bearing country extends over a much wider area than
+sapphires. The width of this country is, roughly, about 250 miles, while in
+length it extends right from the New South Wales border half-way up the
+State in a curve bending towards the South Australian border. The chief
+centres of production have been Kynuna (near Winton), Opalton and
+Fermoy (in the Longreach district), Eromanga, and Yowah (near Thargomindah).
+The Queensland opal is recognised as being unsurpassed
+for its brilliance and iridescence, and there is reason to believe
+that much more will be found than has yet been unearthed; but
+the quest for it is difficult owing to the arid nature and vast extent
+of the western plains where it occurs. In good seasons men in those
+regions find ready employment on the pastoral stations; in very dry
+ones, they cannot prospect for the precious stone, and the result has been
+that the industry has fluctuated even more than that of sapphire mining.
+The highest point was attained in 1895, when the value of the opal product
+reached nearly £33,000. Of late years Queensland has been blessed with
+good seasons, and the uncertain occupation of opal mining has, with many
+men, given place to the more regular and more comfortable station
+life. While the opal, the sapphire, and other precious stones have been dug
+from Queensland's earth, her Northern waters have for years yielded the
+lustrous pearl, and in 1908 pearl-shell to the value of £71,000 was exported.</p>
+
+<p>Sir William Ramsay, speaking as a scientific authority, lately stated
+that the day will come when Great Britain, if she continue to be
+dependent on her own coal supplies, will find it difficult not only to carry
+on her manufactures but to provide fuel for household purposes. Well,
+when that day does come, she can send to Queensland for what coal she
+wants. Here there are coal measures in abundance&mdash;in the South, Central,
+and Northern divisions of the State, and on the Darling Downs. True,
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page151" id="page151"></a>151</span>
+we have not yet done much in the way of production, but all that is
+wanted is a market, and coal, both bituminous and anthracitic, can be dug
+out of the earth and sent away in practically unlimited quantities. Of
+ironstone, also, there is an abundance, and that, too, in such close proximity
+to the coal supplies that when the time arrives for Australia to enter
+earnestly into the enterprise of iron and steel manufacture Queensland
+should play an important part both in producing the raw material and in
+preparing the product for the market.</p>
+
+<p>With only one or two exceptions, all the important mining centres of
+Queensland are now connected with the eastern coast by rail, and those
+that are not are being rapidly linked up. During the year 1908 thirteen
+new railways were authorised by Parliament, five of them to serve mineral
+districts. Four of these lines are now under construction; and in addition
+the railway to the Etheridge field is completed for two-thirds of its length.</p>
+
+<p>To sum up: Queensland during the half-century of her existence has
+produced gold to the value, in round numbers, of over £69,000,000, and
+other minerals, coal, and precious stones worth more than £21,000,000&mdash;or
+an aggregate of £90,000,000. Last year's mineral production was
+worth £3,844,000, so that, even at the same rate of output, in less than
+three years we shall have topped the £100,000,000. The number of men
+obtaining employment in connection with the industry during 1908 was
+just upon 21,000&mdash;only 4,000 less than Queensland's total population in
+1859. The value of machinery and plant used for mining and ore
+reduction purposes throughout the State is over £2,000,000. The worth of
+the coal output of the West Moreton district alone last year (£193,000)
+was more than the total revenue of Queensland during the first year of her
+existence; while the mineral product of the Herberton district during the
+same period was nearly four times as great.</p>
+
+<p>In the space available for this article it has been possible to take
+but a cursory view of the mineral progress which has characterised the
+first half-century of Queensland's life, but enough has been written to
+show that that progress has been remarkable, if not phenomenal. And
+who shall say what strides will be made during the next fifty years, or
+venture to predict what will be the value of our mineral wealth in the
+year 1959? It is a safe rule "not to prophesy till you know," but even
+the most timid prophet could hardly hesitate to predict expansion for
+Queensland's mining industry. Where there has been so much growth in
+the past, and where there is such an unlimited field for greater growth in
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page152" id="page152"></a>152</span>
+the years to come, it would be absurd to suppose that there will be no
+further advance. As a matter of fact, many well qualified to judge do not
+hesitate to say that the industry is as yet in its infancy. It has been truly
+said of gold that "what it is, there it is"; and what you have to do is to
+find where it is. When it is remembered, however, that the prominent hill
+known as Mount Morgan, with its millions' worth of golden ore, was
+within a day's journey of the populous town of Rockhampton, and
+remained undiscovered until 1882, although alluvial gold had been found
+at its base for years previously and the disappointed miners from Canoona
+had twenty-three years before swarmed in its vicinity; when we recollect
+that only quite recently nuggets have been found in the streets of some of
+the oldest of Victorian mining townships, who shall say what has yet to be
+unearthed in the wide expanses of Queensland's bush, a great deal of which
+is already known to be "rich with the spoils of Nature"?</p>
+
+<div class="poem"> <div class="stanza">
+<p>"Full many a gem of purest ray serene,</p>
+<p>The dark unfathom'd caves of ocean bear;"</p>
+ </div> </div>
+
+<p>and the experience of the last half-century amply justifies the belief that
+untold millions lie hidden in the earthen depths of Queensland.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 600px;"><a href="images/page152a-1200.jpg"><img src="images/page152a-600.jpg" width="600" height="187" alt="GYMPIE: SCOTTISH GYMPIE GOLD MINE" /></a>
+<p class="center">GYMPIE: SCOTTISH GYMPIE GOLD MINE</p></div>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 600px;"><a href="images/page152b-1200.jpg"><img src="images/page152b-600.jpg" width="600" height="182" alt="GYMPIE: No. 1 NORTH ORIENTAL AND GLANMIRE" /></a>
+<p class="center">GYMPIE: No. 1 NORTH ORIENTAL AND GLANMIRE</p></div>
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page153" id="page153"></a>153</span>
+
+<h2 style="margin-top: 2em;">CHAPTER V.</h2>
+
+<h3>OUR ASSET IN ARTESIAN WATER.</h3>
+
+<blockquote><p class="ind">
+<span class="outdent1">
+Erroneous Judgment of Western Queensland</span>.&mdash;Scarcity of Surface Water.&mdash;Water Supply Department.&mdash;Discovery
+of Artesian Water in New South Wales.&mdash;Prospecting in Queensland.&mdash;Difficulties
+Experienced by Early Borers.&mdash;First Artesian Flowing Bore.&mdash;Dr. Jack's First
+Estimate of Artesian Area.&mdash;Revised Figures.&mdash;Number of Bores and Estimated Flow.&mdash;Area
+Capable of being Irrigated with Artesian Water.&mdash;Cost of Boring.&mdash;Value of Artesian
+Water.&mdash;Extent of Intake Beds.&mdash;Waste of Water.&mdash;Necessity for Government Control of
+Wells.&mdash;Value of Water for Irrigation, Consumption, and Motive Power.&mdash;Artesian Water
+a Great National Asset.
+</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>Fifty years ago the white population of Australia, including Tasmania,
+scarcely exceeded a million persons. At that time the theory was generally
+accepted that only a fringe of the coast south of the tropic of Capricorn
+would be found habitable by a British or European population. The
+reports of explorers led to the conclusion that the vast inland area of our
+continent was an irreclaimable arid desert, save when, at long and uncertain
+intervals, it was ravaged by destructive floods, the water from which,
+licked up by a fiery sun or absorbed by a porous subsoil, disappeared from
+the surface with marvellous rapidity. A little more than forty years ago
+squatting occupation had been pushed towards the interior of the continent
+with not only rapid strides, but it was held by many explorers with a
+presumptuous boldness that could only be followed by disaster. So deeply
+had this conviction been driven into the minds of experienced men that a
+distinguished Australian explorer, the late Sir A. C. Gregory, declared in
+his late maturity, little more than ten years ago, that on what is now some
+of the richest and most productive country in Western Queensland a
+bandicoot could not live; and on the statement being challenged he said
+he spoke from personal experience as an explorer after two visits separated
+by an interval of nine years. The country more particularly so condemned
+was the well-known pastoral run, Wellshot, a little to the south of Longreach,
+and one of the largest and finest wool-growing properties in
+Australia.</p>
+
+<p>It must be frankly conceded that the occupation by flocks and herds
+nearly forty years ago of what was then known as the Barcoo and Thomson
+country was venturesome to the point of recklessness. Except in the sandy
+beds of these rivers there was practically no surface water of a permanent
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page154" id="page154"></a>154</span>
+nature; and the average rainfall was so inadequate, not to mention its
+capriciousness, and the ground in many places so porous, that
+any attempt to provide artificial water by the construction of dams or
+tanks seemed almost tempting Providence. Yet there arose a persistent
+belief, afterwards more than justified, that underneath the arid surface
+was flowing water in great abundance. The rainfall, however copious in
+exceptional seasons, certainly did not reach the sea, and the hypothesis
+that great subterranean rivers would disclose themselves to a systematic
+search attracted much notice. In the dry year of 1883 the necessity of an
+improved water supply if the country was not to be denuded of stock
+forced itself upon the attention of our leading public men. The
+Premier, the late Sir Thomas McIlwraith, decided to constitute a
+Government Hydraulic Department with a competent engineer at its
+head. There had previously been so-called hydraulic engineers, but
+their work was chiefly confined to the water supply of a few towns and
+of the more settled districts on the coast. But Sir Thomas McIlwraith,
+as a runholder in the Far West, realised that nothing but heroic efforts,
+assisted by the Government, would save the country from desertion, with
+appalling loss to its adventurous occupiers and their flocks and herds. Mr.
+J. Baillie Henderson was at the time in the Queensland public service, and
+the Premier knew that he had served with distinction as an engineer
+in the Water Supply Department of Victoria. That gentleman was therefore
+selected to organise a Water Supply Department in Queensland, and
+on 1st February, 1883, he was gazetted Hydraulic Engineer, an appointment
+which he has ever since held with credit to himself and advantage to
+the country.<a id="footnotetagiv5a" name="footnotetagiv5a"></a><a href="#footnoteiv5a"><sup>a</sup></a></p>
+
+<p>At that time the existence of artesian water in Queensland was no
+more than suspected. It had been tapped four years previously in New
+South Wales, but the boring appliances were so inadequate as to make
+the process tedious and of questionable practicability on an extensive
+scale. In Queensland some prospecting work had been done, and in some
+places fair supplies of water obtained by sinking ordinary wells. But in
+the Far West there was little scope for enterprise in that direction. Hence
+some extensive dams were constructed across watercourses ordinarily dry,
+but without conspicuous success. For often the rush of flood waters either
+carried away the embankments, or the reservoirs they created quickly
+silted up, or the porousness of the subsoil could not be entirely combated
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page155" id="page155"></a>155</span>
+by "puddling." Then streams at times complaisantly abandoned their
+old channels and formed new ones, leaving the intended reservoirs
+high and dry after the most deluging rains. After a time it was found
+that better sites than the beds of main watercourses could be found for
+dams, and that the construction of tanks would suffice in many places to
+provide sufficient water for a scattered population and the increasing
+numbers of live stock, although the expense of this mode of conservation
+was great for the limited supply obtained. Evidently, if the Far West was
+ever to be completely utilised, its almost illimitable areas of splendid
+pastures must be watered by some more effective means.</p>
+
+<p>Attention was at this time attracted to the success of the few artesian
+bores in New South Wales, and to the vast scale on which water had
+been tapped by that means in the United States of America. The chief
+obstacles, however, were the great depth at which artesian water might
+be expected to be found, and the utter inadequacy of the boring machinery
+then in use in Australia; moreover, the search was most needed in the
+areas practically inaccessible by reason of the absence of surface water.
+For a considerable time, as is disclosed in the digest of the Hydraulic
+Engineer's annual reports reproduced in Appendix H, little progress could
+be made.</p>
+
+<p>It was not until October, 1884, in fact&mdash;just twenty-five years ago&mdash;that
+information was obtained of the striking of sub-artesian<a id="footnotetagiv5b" name="footnotetagiv5b"></a><a href="#footnoteiv5b"><sup>b</sup></a> water by
+the Messrs. Bignell at Widgeegoara Station, close to the New South Wales
+border. The place was visited by Mr. Henderson, and by him reported
+upon encouragingly. In the same month the Treasurer received a letter
+from the late Hon. George King, of Gowrie Station, Darling Downs,
+directing attention to the "Walking Beam Rig" machine, an American
+well-boring apparatus, by the use of which it had been ascertained that his
+firm might have saved £4,500 out of the £6,000 spent by it in well-sinking
+in the Warrego district. The letter being referred to the Hydraulic
+Engineer, that officer recommended the introduction of American bore-sinking
+machinery, and the engagement of American skilled drillers who
+would undertake to give instruction in the use of the machinery as well as
+engage in drilling work for the Government of Queensland. Delays
+occurred, however, apparently through the unwillingness of the Government
+to adopt the advice tendered. It was not until December, 1885, that
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page156" id="page156"></a>156</span>
+Mr. Arnold, an American well-borer, was despatched to Blackall to sink a
+bore there. The first attempt failed, but afterwards water was struck in
+abundance, though not by him, or until after the first Queensland flowing
+well had been sunk by the Government at Barcaldine in December, 1887.</p>
+
+<p>In April, 1887, the Hydraulic Engineer had visited Thurulgoona
+Station, and there found that Mr. Loughead, with the "Canadian Pole
+Tool" boring apparatus, had obtained a supply of excellent fresh artesian
+water from a depth of 1,009 feet, the flow rising 20 inches above ground.
+From that date boring went on apace, and the exploratory success of the
+Government encouraged private persons to follow their lead. There were
+failures to strike artesian water, of course, both on the part of the Government
+and private persons, but on the whole the results have been such as to
+add to Queensland occupiable country equivalent to a great new province
+in the Far West.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 600px;"><a href="images/page156-1200.jpg"><img src="images/page156-600.jpg" width="600" height="475" alt="map of artesian water-bearing country in Australia" /></a></div>
+
+<p>The map presented herewith shows the area of artesian water-bearing
+country in Australia as estimated by Dr. R. L. Jack, formerly Government
+Geologist. Since 1893 Queensland has been credited with the area of
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page157" id="page157"></a>157</span>
+376,832 square miles, this being equal to 56 per cent. of the estimated
+total. But that total has since been reduced to 569,000 square
+miles, and late information shows that the approximate area of the
+Queensland artesian basin, as ascertained by scaling off the most
+recent map issued by the Hydraulic Engineer, is 372,105 square
+miles&mdash;4,727 square miles less than the area given in his report for
+1893. Yet the revised figures bring the Queensland artesian area up to
+65 per cent. of the Australian total. The difference is accounted for
+by later information acquired in the field. Of the 372,105 square miles
+mentioned the area of 146,430 square miles has been tested and found to
+be less or more artesian or sub-artesian. Mr. Henderson says: "The flows
+from many of the artesian bores which at one time or another yielded
+artesian water have failed, but owing to the suspension of the hydraulic
+survey the available data are quite insufficient to admit of a trustworthy
+estimate being made of the area so affected."</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 600px;"><a href="images/page156a-1200.jpg"><img src="images/page156a-600.jpg" width="600" height="448" alt="FLOWING ARTESIAN WELLS, WESTERN QUEENSLAND" /></a>
+<p class="center">FLOWING ARTESIAN WELLS, WESTERN QUEENSLAND</p></div>
+
+<p>The total supply of bore water has not been ascertained by actual
+measurement except from Government bores. But all possible reports of
+reputed flows have been obtained from the owners of private bores, and
+the figures cut down to 47 per cent. of the furnished estimates. This
+reduction is not an arbitrary one, however, but is the equivalent of the
+difference found to exist between the average estimate and the measured
+flow of such bores as the Hydraulic Department has been enabled to test.</p>
+
+<p>Information from the Hydraulic Engineer's office shows that up to the
+end of May last there were 716 flowing bores in Queensland, pouring forth
+an enormous supply of sparkling water estimated at slightly over 479&frac14;
+million gallons a day, equal to a discharge of 175,000 million gallons
+per annum.<a id="footnotetagiv5c" name="footnotetagiv5c"></a><a href="#footnoteiv5c"><sup>c</sup></a> This flow, if conserved in tanks and pipes, would furnish a
+population of nearly 12 millions with 40 gallons of water per capita a day.
+It would irrigate 644,366 acres of cultivated land with 12 inches of water
+per annum.<a id="footnotetagiv5d" name="footnotetagiv5d"></a><a href="#footnoteiv5d"><sup>d</sup></a> An area so irrigated, utilised solely for wheat-growing,
+would produce, at 20 bushels per acre, nearly 13 million bushels of grain,
+which is equal to 28·87 per cent. of the entire Commonwealth wheat
+crop for the year 1907-8. The average Commonwealth yield for the last
+five years, however, was 61&frac12; million bushels. The average area under
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page158" id="page158"></a>158</span>
+wheat for the same period was 5,864,114 acres, the average yield for the
+Commonwealth therefore being slightly over 10&frac12; bushels to the acre. As
+much wheat is cut for fodder, and as irrigated land should produce a
+largely increased crop, 20 bushels per acre for such land seems a moderate
+estimate. Moreover, in 1902-3, the Commonwealth crop was under 12&frac12;
+million bushels, or less than one-fifth of the mean average for the succeeding
+five years. At the same time the area of land under crop was in 1902-3
+but little below the succeeding five-year average on an acre of land.<a id="footnotetagiv5e" name="footnotetagiv5e"></a><a href="#footnoteiv5e"><sup>e</sup></a></p>
+
+<p>The presumably perpetual daily flow of 479&frac14; million gallons of
+artesian water&mdash;the quantity named being equal to only 47 per cent. of the
+reputed flow in the case of unmeasured wells&mdash;has cost, so far as an
+estimate can be made, £1,873,515. This works out at the average of
+£2,616 per flowing bore, supplying 669,369 gallons a day. Calculating on
+the basis of 5 per cent., including interest and redemption payments, the
+annual charge for this money is equal to £131 per well, spread over a forty-one
+years' term, the average cost to each well-owner being thus £1 for
+1,865,000 gallons of water a year. Thus, although much money has been
+lost in sinking unsuccessful bores, the investment has on the whole been
+amazingly profitable, even allowing that a further annual charge for maintenance
+must be added.</p>
+
+<p>It need hardly be said, however, that in practice this enormous flow of
+artesian water could not be utilised solely either for human consumption or
+for irrigation. Under existing conditions the first claim upon it may be
+said to be for the sustenance of live stock, as the domestic consumption in
+the region of the flow is comparatively trifling. And here arises a problem
+of vast importance. Will this flow be perpetual, or will it gradually decline
+until exhaustion of the sources of supply ultimately takes place? The latter
+contingency there seems to be little reason to fear, for the area of the
+intake beds, estimated by Dr. R. L. Jack at 5,000 square miles, affords the
+assurance that our artesian springs will be constantly replenished by the
+rainfall over that large extent of country. Yet, when the existing number
+of artesian wells has been doubled or trebled, it seems not improbable that
+many of them will become sub-artesian, and only yield their fertilising
+streams in response to pumping-power. On this question, however, expert
+opinions widely differ. But, taking the experience of America and other
+countries in which artesian springs have been tapped, it may be said that
+the flow steadily decreases as the number of bores multiplies.</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page159" id="page159"></a>159</span>
+
+<p>The Hydraulic Engineer estimates that about two-thirds of the
+artesian water at present tapped flows to waste. As to the definition of
+"waste," however, there is sharp conflict of opinion. A pastoralist who
+distributes a supply of a million gallons of bore water a day by replenishing
+dry creeks or constructing artificial channels may contend that in his case
+the loss by evaporation or soakage is not waste, but an expenditure of
+water necessary to make his artesian well serve its desired purposes. To
+control and distribute by means of reticulating pipes the product of all
+Queensland's flowing bores would involve a heavy investment of capital,
+and one not warranted by the existing population in the artesian area&mdash;a
+population mainly dependent upon sheep-raising and wool-growing for
+subsistence. But the time may come when it will be deemed indispensable
+that flowing wells should be brought under Government control, or their
+product be subject, as in the case of surface water, to riparian rights. The
+pastoralist who has spent several thousand pounds in sinking a successful
+bore not unnaturally claims the water issuing from it as his own property;
+but public policy may require that after diverting so much as may be
+requisite for his reasonable individual uses the remainder shall be made
+available for the occupiers of neighbouring lands.</p>
+
+<p>The information that little more than one-half the area of the artesian
+basin in Queensland has yet been explored is in some respects disappointing,
+but it is reassuring in others. For if the unexplored country yields as
+much water per square mile of surface as is now pouring forth from the
+wells on the tested area&mdash;which is not yet fully developed&mdash;the total daily
+yield will ultimately approach 1,000 millions of gallons. Never, according
+to official information, was bore-sinking more active than it is during the
+current year, and the thoughtful reader will sympathise with Mr. Henderson's
+repeated expression of regret that want of money some years ago
+compelled the department to discontinue both exploration on scientific
+lines and the periodical measurement of all artesian flows. For with
+careful surveys of the entire water-bearing area much capital might be
+saved by teaching where copious springs might or might not be expected
+to be met with; while with measurement and registration of all flows the
+question as to the perpetuity or the contrary of the supply would be placed
+beyond controversy. In that case legislation could be initiated with confidence,
+and the public interest safeguarded with the least possible disturbance
+of private interests.</p>
+
+<p>An important consideration in connection with the artesian area is
+that the land watered by bores is as a rule more than commonly fertile.
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page160" id="page160"></a>160</span>
+Its pastures produce some of the most nutritious natural grasses and
+herbage found on the face of the earth; and, what is of immense significance,
+they are grasses and herbage that either would not live or would
+deteriorate under a tropical sun, with a rainfall equal to the coastal
+average. Thus it may be argued that artesian bore water&mdash;at any rate,
+when so free from mineral impregnation as to be unquestionably potable&mdash;is
+more valuable, gallon for gallon, than the supply direct from the clouds.</p>
+
+<p>In several of his numerous reports the Hydraulic Engineer makes
+reference to the subject of irrigation by means of artesian water. It is
+certain that the water from some bores, while useful for live stock, is not
+fit for either domestic use or for irrigation. The Hydraulic Department
+many years ago began what was intended to be a systematic analysis of
+bore water with the view to providing an official record that would be
+highly useful for public purposes. But in one case at least water pronounced
+by the Government Analyst as useless even for stock was highly
+esteemed on the run whence it was obtained; and evidently much has yet to
+be learned as to the value of subterranean waters not regarded as potable by
+scientific standards.</p>
+
+<p>Some of the most copiously flowing bores, however, discharge water
+of unexceptional quality, whether for domestic use, manufacturing purposes,
+or irrigation. The Hydraulic Engineer doubts, having regard to the
+immense quantity of water required for irrigation, whether it will ever
+be found useful for that purpose in so far as the greater agricultural
+industries are concerned; but for intense cultivation around the homestead
+he thinks bore water might well be utilised. In some cases it
+would be in sufficiently large supply for the raising of green fodder
+for stud stock&mdash;perhaps even for protection against minor local droughts.
+An irrigated crop needs three or four waterings of 3 inches each, and as
+each inch means 22,614 gallons, the quantity required for a crop, with four
+waterings, would be 271,368 gallons per acre; so that a cultivation plot of
+20 or 30 acres would absorb from 5 to 8 million gallons a year, according to
+the seasons, the nature of the soil, or the soakage.</p>
+
+<p>While doubtful as to the suitability of bore water for irrigation
+on a large scale, Mr. Henderson strongly advocates its being applied to
+machinery of small power. Many years ago he directed attention in
+one of his annual reports to the extensive use of water power in competition
+with steam in certain parts of America; and it is satisfactory to
+note that in some inland towns of Queensland the American example has
+been followed. In quite a number of towns the public water service is
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page161" id="page161"></a>161</span>
+artesian, and in a few it is the motive power of electric lighting systems.
+The information that the flowing wells of Queensland are discharging
+daily 320 million gallons of water "to waste" indicates that when population
+in the artesian area becomes more dense bore power will become an
+invaluable aid in economic manufacture. The water so harnessed would
+not be wasted, as every gallon would still be available for human or animal
+consumption.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 600px;"><a href="images/page160-1200.jpg"><img src="images/page160-600.jpg" width="600" height="361" alt="ABERDARE COLLIERY, IPSWICH DISTRICT" /></a>
+<p class="center">ABERDARE COLLIERY, IPSWICH DISTRICT</p></div>
+
+<p>The money value of the water annually discharged from the flowing
+bores of Queensland runs into stupendous figures, even at the rate of 6d.
+per 1,000 gallons. At that rate its annual value would exceed 4&frac14; millions
+sterling. Capitalise this sum at 4 per cent., and the artesian water flow
+of Queensland becomes worth upwards of 109&frac14; millions sterling, less, of
+course, the cost of maintenance and supervision similarly capitalised. And
+this colossal endowment is the result during the last quarter of a century
+of a total expenditure of less than 2 millions sterling. Granting that to
+utilise all this water already under pressure would mean a very large
+additional expenditure in tanks, aqueducts, and pipes, that expenditure
+may be calculated in advance to a minute fraction in every case, and it
+would of course be disbursed gradually as the demand for the delivery of
+water under pressure developed with the increase of population and the
+multiplication of industries. It must be apparent, therefore, that any
+needful public expenditure to ascertain whether the flow diminishes or
+increases as the years go on, and to prevent waste if waste there be, is
+more than justified. Indeed, should any great public loss be suffered for
+want of State control of this life-giving national asset, it might be difficult
+for Parliament entirely to clear itself from blame if charged with neglecting
+the reiterated advice of its own responsible officer in this respect.</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page162" id="page162"></a>162</span>
+
+<p class="footnote"><a id="footnoteiv5a" name="footnoteiv5a"></a><a class="footnote" href="#footnotetagiv5a">Footnote a:</a>
+For digest of Hydraulic Engineer's reports, 1883 to 1908 inclusive, see Appendix H, post.</p>
+
+<p class="footnote"><a id="footnoteiv5b" name="footnoteiv5b"></a><a class="footnote" href="#footnotetagiv5b">Footnote b:</a>
+"Sub-artesian" is a term applied when the water in a bore rises to or near the surface,
+but does not automatically flow along it.</p>
+
+<p class="footnote"><a id="footnoteiv5c" name="footnoteiv5c"></a><a class="footnote" href="#footnotetagiv5c">Footnote c:</a>
+t will be seen on reference to Appendix H that since the Hydraulic Engineer supplied
+his figures a number of additional flowing bores have been sunk, and have substantially increased
+the aggregate flow, although, the figures not having been officially verified, the aggregate flow
+remains in the text as from the 716 bores recognised by the Hydraulic Engineer.</p>
+
+<p class="footnote"><a id="footnoteiv5d" name="footnoteiv5d"></a><a class="footnote" href="#footnotetagiv5d">Footnote d:</a>
+The quantity of water deposited on an acre of land by an inch of rain is 22,614 gallons.</p>
+
+<p class="footnote"><a id="footnoteiv5e" name="footnoteiv5e"></a><a class="footnote" href="#footnotetagiv5e">Footnote e:</a>
+See "Commonwealth Year Book," 1909, page 382.</p>
+
+<h2>APPENDICES.</h2>
+
+<h3 class="app">APPENDIX A.</h3>
+
+<h2 class="app">READJUSTMENT OF WESTERN BOUNDARY.</h2>
+
+<p>The following summary of correspondence between Governor Bowen and the
+Secretary of State for the Colonies gives information in addition to that
+furnished in "The Subdivision of Australia," page xiv., relating to the readjustment of
+the Queensland western boundary:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>On 30th September, 1860, Sir George Bowen&mdash;in transmitting an Address passed
+by the Queensland Legislature asking that "the western boundary of Queensland
+should be declared to extend at least so far as to include the Gulf of
+Carpentaria, without which declaration the Legislature would not feel authorised in taking
+steps towards the development of the colony in that direction"&mdash;referred to the
+opinion of Mr. A. C. Gregory, then Surveyor-General, that "a boundary at the
+141st meridian would just cut off from Queensland the greater portion of the
+only territory available for settlement, <i>i.e.</i>, the Plains of Promise, and the
+only safe harbour, <i>i.e.</i>, Investigator Road, in the Gulf of Carpentaria." The
+Governor added that until receipt of the Duke of Newcastle's despatch of 21st October, 1859,
+enclosing the opinion of the Law Officers of the Crown, the general belief here
+was that the western boundary of Queensland was identical with the eastern boundary
+of Western Australia, that is, with the 129th degree of east longitude. But now the
+Law Officers had declared expressly that the 141st meridian was the western
+boundary, he urged that the prayer of the local Legislature should be complied with by
+extending the boundary to the 138th meridian of east longitude.</p>
+
+<p>On 8th December, 1860, Governor Bowen again wrote to the Colonial Office
+urging that the boundary should be extended, and contending that the question
+was of Imperial as well as colonial importance. Replying on 26th February, 1861, the
+Duke of Newcastle said that South Australia had asked for the territory desired
+by Queensland, and that certain gentlemen in Victoria were desirous of forming
+a settlement on the northern coast of Australia. His Grace added that there were
+doubts whether the Government had the power to annex the territory as desired,
+and if these doubts had any foundation he would submit a Bill to the Imperial
+Parliament to remove them. In September, 1861, Sir George Bowen again urged
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page163" id="page163"></a>163</span>
+the annexation of the territory, remarking that "Queensland can gain little but
+trouble and expense from undertaking the management and protection of any
+future settlement on the Gulf of Carpentaria; for it is certain that so soon as
+it becomes self-supporting it will demand to be erected into a separate colony." On
+14th December following the Duke of Newcastle wrote to the Governor stating that
+he had "no objection to the proposal that this territory should be temporarily
+annexed to the colony of Queensland, and accordingly that Letters Patent would
+be issued for giving effect to this arrangement under 24 and 25 Vict., cap. 44."
+But his Grace warned the Governor that the annexation would probably be revoked when
+the growth of population or other circumstances rendered separation desirable in
+the interests of the new territory. He closed with these words&mdash;"I am not
+prepared to abandon definitely, on the part of Her Majesty's Government, the power to
+deal with districts not yet settled, as the wishes or convenience of the future
+settlers may hereafter require."</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page164" id="page164"></a>164</span>
+
+<h3 class="app">APPENDIX B.</h3>
+
+<h2 class="app">THE FIRST PARLIAMENT.</h2>
+
+<h3>(First Session, 1860.)</h3>
+
+<h4>THE GOVERNOR:</h4>
+
+<p class="center">His Excellency Sir George Ferguson Bowen, K.C.M.G.</p>
+
+<h4>THE MINISTRY:</h4>
+
+<h4><i>With Seats in the Legislative Assembly.</i></h4>
+<table summary="Ministry, Legislative Asssembly" align="center" width="auto" border="0">
+<tr><td class="left">
+Colonial Secretary&mdash;The Honourable Robert George Wyndham Herbert.<br />
+Attorney-General&mdash;The Honourable Ratcliffe Pring.<br />
+Colonial Treasurer&mdash;The Honourable Robert Ramsay Mackenzie.
+</td></tr></table>
+
+<h4><i>With Seats in the Legislative Council.</i></h4>
+<table summary="Ministry, Legislative Council" align="center" width="auto" border="0">
+<tr><td class="left">
+Minister without Portfolio&mdash;The Honourable Maurice Charles O'Connell.<a id="footnotetagba" name="footnotetagba"></a><a href="#footnoteba"><sup>a</sup></a><br />
+Minister without Portfolio&mdash;The Honourable John James Galloway.<a id="footnotetagbb" name="footnotetagbb"></a><a href="#footnotebb"><sup>b</sup></a>
+</td></tr></table>
+
+<h4>MEMBERS OF THE LEGISLATIVE COUNCIL (15).</h4>
+
+<table summary="Members, Legislative Council" align="center" width="auto" border="0">
+<tr><td class="left">
+President&mdash;The Honourable Sir Charles Nicholson.<a id="footnotetagbc" name="footnotetagbc"></a><a href="#footnotebc"><sup>c</sup></a><br />
+Chairman of Committees&mdash;The Honourable Daniel Foley Roberts.<a id="footnotetagbd" name="footnotetagbd"></a><a href="#footnotebd"><sup>d</sup></a>
+</td></tr></table>
+
+<table summary="Legislative Council" align="center" width="auto" border="0">
+
+<tr><td class="left"><a href="#footnotebc"><sup>c</sup></a> Balfour, Hon. John.</td>
+<td class="left"><a href="#footnotebd"><sup>d</sup></a> Harris, Hon. George.</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="left"><a href="#footnotebc"><sup>c</sup></a> Bigge, Hon. Francis Edward.</td>
+<td class="left"><a href="#footnotebc"><sup>c</sup></a> Laidley, Hon. James.</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="left"><a href="#footnotebc"><sup>c</sup></a> Compigne, Hon. Alfred William.</td>
+<td class="left"><a href="#footnotebc"><sup>c</sup></a> Massie, Hon. Robert George.</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="left"><a href="#footnotebd"><sup>d</sup></a> Fitz, Hon. Henry Bates.</td>
+<td class="left"><a href="#footnotebc"><sup>c</sup></a> McDougall, Hon. John Frederick.</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="left"><a href="#footnotebc"><sup>c</sup></a> Fullarton, Hon. George.</td>
+<td class="left"><a href="#footnotebc"><sup>c</sup></a> O'Connell, Hon. Maurice Charles.</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="left"><a href="#footnotebc"><sup>c</sup></a> Galloway, Hon. John James.</td>
+<td class="left"><a href="#footnotebd"><sup>d</sup></a> Simpson, Hon. Stephen.</td></tr>
+</table>
+
+<p class="center" style="margin-top: 0;"><a href="#footnotebc"><sup>c</sup></a>Yaldwyn, Hon. William Henry.</p>
+
+<h4>MEMBERS OF THE LEGISLATIVE ASSEMBLY (26).</h4>
+
+<table summary="Members, Legislative Assembly" align="center" width="auto" border="0">
+<tr><td class="left">
+Speaker&mdash;The Honourable Gilbert Eliott (<i>Wide Bay</i>).<br />
+Chairman of Committees&mdash;Arthur Macalister (<i>Ipswich</i>).
+</td></tr></table>
+
+<table summary="Legislative Assembly" align="center" width="auto" border="0">
+
+<tr><td class="left">Blakeney, Charles William (<i>Brisbane</i>).</td>
+<td class="left">Lilley, Charles (<i>Fortitude Valley</i>).</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="left">Broughton, Alfred Delves (<i>West Moreton</i>).</td>
+<td class="left">Mackenzie, Robert Ramsay (<i>Burnett</i>).</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="left">Buckley, Henry (<i>East Moreton</i>).</td>
+<td class="left">Moffatt, Thomas de Lacy (<i>Western Downs</i>).</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="left">Coxen, Charles (<i>Northern Downs</i>).</td>
+<td class="left"><a id="footnotetagbe" name="footnotetagbe"></a><a href="#footnotebe"><sup>e</sup></a> Nelson, William Lambie (<i>West Moreton</i>).</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="left">Edmondstone, George (<i>East Moreton</i>).</td>
+<td class="left">O'Sullivan, Patrick (<i>Ipswich</i>).</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="left">Ferrett, John (<i>Maranoa</i>).</td>
+<td class="left">Pring, Ratcliffe (<i>Eastern Downs</i>).</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="left">Fitzsimmons, Charles (<i>Port Curtis</i>).</td>
+<td class="left">Raff, George (<i>Brisbane</i>).</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="left">Forbes, Frederick Augustus (<i>Ipswich</i>).</td>
+<td class="left">Richards, Henry (<i>Brisbane South</i>).</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="left">Gore, St. George Richard (<i>Warwick</i>).</td>
+<td class="left">Royds, Charles James (<i>Leichhardt</i>).</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="left">Haly, Charles Robert (<i>Burnett</i>).</td>
+<td class="left">Taylor, James (<i>Western Downs</i>).</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="left">Herbert, Robert George Wyndham (<i>Leichhardt</i>).</td>
+<td class="left">Thorn, George, sen. (<i>West Moreton</i>).</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="left">Jordan, Henry (<i>Brisbane</i>).</td>
+<td class="left">Watts, John (<i>Drayton and Toowoomba</i>).</td></tr>
+</table>
+
+<p class="footnote"><a id="footnoteba" name="footnoteba"></a><a class="footnote" href="#footnotetagba">Footnote a:</a>
+Captain O'Connell resigned on 28th August, and became President of Legislative Council.</p>
+
+<p class="footnote"><a id="footnotebb" name="footnotebb"></a><a class="footnote" href="#footnotetagbb">Footnote b:</a>
+Appointed 28th August, 1860; resigned 10th November, 1860.</p>
+
+<p class="footnote"><a id="footnotebc" name="footnotebc"></a><a class="footnote" href="#footnotetagbc">Footnote c:</a>
+Appointed for five years by Sir William Denison.</p>
+
+<p class="footnote"><a id="footnotebd" name="footnotebd"></a><a class="footnote" href="#footnotetagbd">Footnote d:</a>
+Appointed for life by Sir G. F. Bowen.</p>
+
+<p class="footnote"><a id="footnotebe" name="footnotebe"></a><a class="footnote" href="#footnotetagbe">Footnote e:</a>
+Unseated on petition in June, 1860&mdash;disqualified, being a minister of religion; succeeded
+by Joseph Fleming.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 600px;"><a href="images/page164a-1200.jpg"><img src="images/page164a-600.jpg" width="600" height="184" alt="COCOA-NUT PALMS, JOHNSTONE RIVER, NORTH QUEENSLAND" /></a>
+<p class="center">COCOA-NUT PALMS, JOHNSTONE RIVER, NORTH QUEENSLAND</p></div>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 600px;"><a href="images/page164b-1200.jpg"><img src="images/page164b-600.jpg" width="600" height="184" alt="CUSTOM HOUSE AND PETRIE BIGHT, BRISBANE" /></a>
+<p class="center">CUSTOM HOUSE AND PETRIE BIGHT, BRISBANE</p></div>
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page165" id="page165"></a>165</span>
+
+<h3 class="app">APPENDIX C.</h3>
+
+<h2 class="app">THE EIGHTEENTH PARLIAMENT.</h2>
+
+<h3 class="app">(1909.&mdash;Second Session.)</h3>
+
+<h4>THE GOVERNOR:</h4>
+
+<p class="center">His Excellency Sir William MacGregor, G.C.M.G., C.B.</p>
+
+<h4>THE LIEUTENANT-GOVERNOR:</h4>
+
+<p class="center">The Honourable Sir Arthur Morgan.</p>
+
+<h4>THE MINISTRY:</h4>
+
+<h4><i>With Seats in the Legislative Assembly.</i></h4>
+
+<table summary="Ministry, Legislative Asssembly" align="center" width="auto" border="0">
+<tr><td class="left">
+Vice-President of Executive Council and Chief Secretary&mdash;The Honourable William Kidston.<br />
+Secretary for Public Lands&mdash;The Honourable Digby Frank Denham.<br />
+Treasurer&mdash;The Honourable Arthur George Clarence Hawthorn.<br />
+Secretary for Public Instruction and Secretary for Public Works&mdash;The Honourable Walter Henry Barnes.<br />
+Home Secretary and Secretary for Mines&mdash;The Honourable John George Appel.<br />
+Secretary for Railways and Secretary for Agriculture&mdash;The Honourable Walter Trueman Paget.<br />
+</td></tr></table>
+
+<h4><i>With Seats in the Legislative Council.</i></h4>
+
+<table summary="Ministry, Legislative Asssembly" align="center" width="auto" border="0">
+<tr><td class="left">
+Minister without Portfolio&mdash;The Honourable Andrew Henry Barlow.<br />
+Attorney-General&mdash;The Honourable Thomas O'Sullivan.
+</td></tr></table>
+
+<h4>MEMBERS OF THE LEGISLATIVE COUNCIL (44).</h4>
+<table summary="Members, Legislative Council" align="center" width="auto" border="0">
+<tr><td class="left">
+President&mdash;The Honourable Sir Arthur Morgan.<br />
+Chairman of Committees&mdash;The Honourable Peter MacPherson.
+</td></tr></table>
+
+<table summary="Legislative Council" align="center" width="auto" border="0">
+<tr><td class="left">Annear, Hon. John Thomas.<a id="footnotetagca" name="footnotetagca"></a><a href="#footnoteca"><sup>a</sup></a></td>
+<td class="left">Lalor, Hon. James.</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="left">Barlow, Hon. Andrew Henry.</td><td class="left">Marks, Hon. Charles Ferdinand, M.D.</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="left">Beirne, Hon. Thomas Charles.</td><td class="left">McDonnell, Hon. Frank.</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="left">Brentnall, Hon. Frederick Thomas.</td><td class="left">McGhie, Hon. Charles Stewart.</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="left">Brown, Hon. William Villiers.</td><td class="left">Miles, Hon. Edward David.</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="left">Callan, Hon. Albert James.</td><td class="left">Moreton, Hon. Berkeley Basil.</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="left">Campbell, Hon. William Henry.</td><td class="left">Murphy, Hon. Peter.</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="left">Carter, Hon. Arthur John.</td><td class="left">Nielson, Hon. Charles Frederick.</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="left">Clewett, Hon. Felix.</td><td class="left">Norton, Hon. Albert.</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="left">Cowlishaw, Hon. James.</td><td class="left">O'Sullivan, Hon. Thomas.</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="left">Davey, Hon. Alfred Allen.</td><td class="left">Parnell, Hon. Arthur Horatio.</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="left">Deane, Hon. John.</td><td class="left">Plant, Hon. Edmund Harris Thornburgh.</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="left">Fahey, Hon. Bartley.</td><td class="left">Power, Hon. Francis Isidore.</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="left">Gibson, Hon. Angus.</td><td class="left">Raff, Hon. Alexander.</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="left">Gray, Hon. George Wilkie.</td><td class="left">Smith, Hon. Robert Harrison.</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="left">Groom, Hon. Henry Littleton.</td><td class="left">Smyth, Hon. Joseph Capel.</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="left">Hall, Hon. Thomas Murray.</td><td class="left">Stevens, Hon. Ernest James.</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="left">Hart, Hon. Frederick Hamilton.</td><td class="left">Taylor, Hon. William Frederick, M.D.</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="left">Hinchcliffe, Hon. Albert.</td><td class="left">Thomas, Hon. Lewis.</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="left">Jensen, Hon. Magnus.</td><td class="left">Thynne, Hon. Andrew Joseph.</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="left">Johnson, Hon. Thomas Alexander.</td><td class="left">Turner, Hon. Henry.</td></tr>
+</table>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page166" id="page166"></a>166</span>
+
+<h4>MEMBERS OF THE LEGISLATIVE ASSEMBLY (72).</h4>
+<table summary="Members, Legislative Asssembly" align="center" width="auto" border="0">
+<tr><td class="left">
+Speaker&mdash;The Honourable Joshua Thomas Bell (<i>Dalby</i>).<br />
+Chairman of Committees&mdash;William Drayton Armstrong (<i>Lockyer</i>).
+</td></tr></table>
+
+<table summary="Legislative Assembly" align="center" width="auto" border="0">
+<tr><td class="left">Allan, James (<i>Brisbane South</i>).</td><td class="left">Keogh, Denis Thomas (<i>Rosewood</i>).</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="left">Allen, Barnett Francis Samuel (<i>Bulloo</i>).</td><td class="left">Kidston, Hon. William (<i>Rockhampton</i>).</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="left">Appel, Hon. John George (<i>Albert</i>).</td><td class="left">Land, Edward Martin (<i>Balonne</i>).</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="left">Barber, George Phillips (<i>Bundaberg</i>).</td><td class="left">Lennon, William (<i>Herbert</i>).</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="left">Barnes, George Powell (<i>Warwick</i>).</td><td class="left">Lesina, Vincent Bernard Joseph (<i>Clermont</i>).</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="left">Barnes, Hon. Walter Henry (<i>Bulimba</i>).</td><td class="left">Macartney, Edward Henry (<i>Brisbane North</i>).</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="left">Blair, James William (<i>Ipswich</i>).</td><td class="left">Mackintosh, Donald (<i>Cambooya</i>).</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="left">Booker, Charles Joseph (<i>Maryborough</i>).</td><td class="left">McLachlan, Peter Alfred (<i>Fortitude Valley</i>).</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="left">Bouchard, Thomas William (<i>Brisbane South</i>).</td><td class="left">Mann, John (<i>Cairns</i>).</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="left">Bowman, David (<i>Fortitude Valley</i>).</td><td class="left">Maughan, William John Ryott (<i>Ipswich</i>).</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="left">Brennan, James (<i>Rockhampton North</i>).</td><td class="left">May, John (<i>Flinders</i>).</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="left">Breslin, Edward Denis Joseph (<i>Port Curtis</i>).</td><td class="left">Morgan, Godfrey (<i>Murilla</i>).</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="left">Bridges, Thomas (<i>Nundah</i>).</td><td class="left">Mulcahy, Daniel (<i>Gympie</i>).</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="left">Collins, Charles (<i>Burke</i>).</td><td class="left">Mullan, John (<i>Charters Towers</i>).</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="left">Corser, Edward Bernard Cresset (<i>Maryborough</i>).</td><td class="left">Murphy, William Sidney (<i>Croydon</i>).</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="left">Cottell, Richard John (<i>Toowong</i>).</td><td class="left">Nevitt, Thomas (<i>Carpentaria</i>).</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="left">Coyne, John Harry (<i>Warrego</i>).</td><td class="left">O'Sullivan, James (<i>Kennedy</i>).</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="left">Crawford, James (<i>Fitzroy</i>).</td><td class="left">Paget, Hon. Walter Trueman (<i>Mackay</i>).</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="left">Cribb, James Clarke (<i>Bundanba</i>).</td><td class="left">Payne, John (<i>Mitchell</i>).</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="left">Denham, Hon. Digby Frank (<i>Oxley</i>).</td><td class="left">Petrie, Andrew Lang (<i>Toombul</i>).</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="left">Douglas, Henry Alexander Cecil (<i>Cook</i>).</td><td class="left">Philp, Hon. Robert (<i>Townsville</i>).</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="left">Ferricks, Miles Aloysius (<i>Bowen</i>).</td><td class="left">Rankin, Colin Dunlop Wilson (<i>Burrum</i>).</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="left">Foley, Thomas (<i>Townsville</i>).</td><td class="left">Roberts, Thomas Robert (<i>Drayton and Toowoomba</i>).</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="left">Forrest, Hon. Edward Barrow (<i>Brisbane North</i>).</td><td class="left">Ryan, Thomas Joseph (<i>Barcoo</i>).</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="left">Forsyth, James (<i>Moreton</i>).</td><td class="left">Ryland, George (<i>Gympie</i>).</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="left">Fox, George (<i>Normanby</i>).</td><td class="left">Somerset, Henry Plantagenet (<i>Stanley</i>).</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="left">Grant, Kenneth McDonald (<i>Rockhampton</i>).</td><td class="left">Stodart, James (<i>Logan</i>).</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="left">Grayson, Francis (<i>Cunningham</i>).</td><td class="left">Swayne, Edward Bowdick (<i>Mackay</i>).</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="left">Gunn, Donald (<i>Carnarvon</i>).</td><td class="left">Theodore, Edward (<i>Woothakata</i>).</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="left">Hamilton, William (<i>Gregory</i>).</td><td class="left">Thorn, William (<i>Aubigny</i>).</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="left">Hardacre, Herbert Freemont (<i>Leichhardt</i>).</td><td class="left">Tolmie, James (<i>Drayton and Toowoomba</i>).</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="left">Hawthorn, Hon. Arthur George Clarence (<i>Enoggera</i>).</td><td class="left">Walker, Harry Frederick (<i>Wide Bay</i>).</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="left">Hodge, Robert Samuel (<i>Burnett</i>).</td><td class="left">White, John (<i>Musgrave</i>).</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="left">Hunter, David (<i>Woolloongabba</i>).</td><td class="left">Wienholt, Arnold (<i>Fassifern</i>).</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="left">Hunter, John McEwan (<i>Maranoa</i>).</td><td class="left">Winstanley, Vernon (<i>Charters Towers</i>).</td></tr>
+</table>
+
+<p class="footnote"><a id="footnoteca" name="footnoteca"></a><a class="footnote" href="#footnotetagca">Footnote a:</a>
+Acting Chairman of Committees.</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page167" id="page167"></a>167</span>
+
+<h3 class="app">APPENDIX D.</h3>
+
+<h2 class="app">FIFTY YEARS OF LEGISLATION.</h2>
+
+<p>In the following epitome of Queensland legislation during the last half-century
+no mention is made of Land Acts, Local Government Acts, Revenue or Loan Acts,
+or Education Acts, those subjects being dealt with in the text of the book. The
+rule has been to notice in this appendix the first legislation of the Parliament on
+each subject exclusive of those above mentioned, and only to refer to amending Acts
+of a consolidating and extending character. Nor is any attempt made to furnish a
+digest of the Acts mentioned, but only to direct attention to what are deemed the
+salient points of each.</p>
+
+<p class="ind">The first session of the first Parliament has been specially dealt with in "Our Natal Year."</p>
+
+<h3>THE FIRST PARLIAMENT: 29th May, 1860-22nd May, 1863.</h3>
+
+<p>It may not be generally known that in 1861, before Government railways were
+authorised in Queensland, an Act was passed incorporating the Moreton Bay Tramway
+Company, formed to construct a railway "from Ipswich to the interior of the
+colony." The company failed to raise the capital required, however, and the project
+fell through. In the same year a Loan Act was passed, but it made no provision for
+railway construction. In 1861 an Act was passed giving facilities for the
+naturalisation of aliens. A Fencing Act, a Carriers Act, and a Masters and Servants Act also
+found a place on the Statute-book. There were also passed a Savings Bank Act, a
+Supreme Court Act, and, among several others, twenty-two in all, the Real Property
+Act of 1861, which adopted the Torrens system of registration of titles, and may
+be regarded as one of the most useful reforms of the fifty-year period. An Act to
+facilitate the incorporation of religious and charitable institutions also
+became law.
+In 1862 an Act to provide for the appointment of a second Supreme Court Judge, at
+a salary of £1,500 a year, was passed, the result being the introduction of the late
+Chief Justice Cockle, much to the dissatisfaction of the late Mr. Justice
+Lutwyche, who, having been sole Judge before separation, preferred a prior claim to the
+appointment. Interference with political and party affairs was the alleged cause
+of this non-recognition of seniority; and the charge had some justification, as his
+Honour once issued an address to the electors through the Press urging them to
+vote for a Liberal candidate. Another noticeable measure was an Act to provide
+for the introduction of labourers from British India. In all thirteen measures were
+passed in this session, the last of the first Parliament.</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page168" id="page168"></a>168</span>
+
+<h3>THE SECOND PARLIAMENT: 22nd July, 1863-29th May, 1867.</h3>
+
+<p>In 1863 the second Parliament passed twenty-seven Acts, among them one
+empowering the Government to construct a railway from Ipswich to Toowoomba,
+"and such other lines as may hereafter be specified," and providing generally
+for the management of railways. The Inquests on Fires Act, the Liens on Crops Act, the
+Trading Companies Act, the Queensland Bank Act, the Civil Service Act&mdash;providing
+liberal allowances for retiring public officers&mdash;Police, Publicans, and
+Quarantine Acts, and other measures, made this a very fertile session. In 1864 no less
+than thirty Acts became law, including the Gold Export Duty Act, imposing a duty
+of 1s. 6d. per ounce on the precious metal. The Immigration Act of 1864, providing
+for the issue of land-order warrants by the Agent-General, instead of land orders,
+and generally restricting the traffic in these instruments, was passed. The Marriage
+Laws Act, the Military Contribution Act, appropriating £3,640 towards the cost of Her
+Majesty's troops in the colony, the Volunteer Corps Act, the Small Debts Act,
+the Roads Closing Act, the Bank of New South Wales Act, and the Brisbane Gas
+Company Act, with several others, became law. The publication of "Hansard" was
+begun in this year.</p>
+
+<p>Twenty-two Acts were passed in 1865, among them one for the Prevention of
+the Careless Use of Fire, a Selectors Relief Act, the Industrial and Reformatory
+Schools Act, and eight measures amending the Criminal law. In 1866 twenty-six
+measures were passed, including the Friendly Societies Enabling Act, the
+Inquests of Deaths Act, abolishing coroners' juries and providing for magisterial inquiries
+at a cost of two guineas each as a fee to the presiding justice. The Standard Weight
+for Agricultural Produce Act and an Act declaring Port Albany, Cape York, a free
+port also became law, as well as a number of legal statutes.</p>
+
+<h3>THE THIRD PARLIAMENT: 6th August, 1867-27th August, 1868.</h3>
+
+<p>The third Parliament commenced its career in 1867 with a list of forty-eight
+Acts. The Constitution Act of 1867 and the Legislative Assembly Act of the same
+year laid the foundation of the Queensland Legislature, while the basis of our
+judiciary is the Supreme Court Act, the District Court Act, the Small Debts Act,
+and the Jury Act, all passed in the same session. Other important measures which
+were passed were Probate Act, Succession Act, Statute of Frauds and Limitations,
+Equity Act, Trustees and Incapacitated Persons Act, and the Polynesian Labourers Act,
+the latter the first of a long series of statutes legalising and regulating
+Polynesian labour. Most of the others were amendments of Acts passed in previous sessions.
+In August, 1868, the Parliament was prematurely dissolved.</p>
+
+<h3>THE FOURTH PARLIAMENT: 18th November, 1868-13th July, 1870.</h3>
+
+<p>The fourth Parliament opened in November, 1868, and the first session lasted
+till April, 1869. Only nineteen Acts were passed in the two sessions of 1868 and
+1869. In the latter year two measures were passed to encourage the establishment of industries,
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page169" id="page169"></a>169</span>
+one by means of grants of land, while the other authorised bonuses for the
+manufacture of woollen and cotton goods&mdash;the growth of cotton having attained some
+prominence during the American Civil War in the early sixties. The principal
+work of the session, however, was the passage of the Pastoral Leases Act, and an Act
+to repeal the Civil Service Act of 1863, on the ground that it was imposing undue
+liabilities on the Treasury. The session of 1870 only lasted for a week, and was
+consequently barren.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 560px;"><a href="images/page168a-1200.jpg"><img src="images/page168a-560.jpg" width="560" height="440" alt="IN THE SCRUB COUNTRY, KIN KIN, NORTH COAST RAILWAY" /></a>
+<p class="center">IN THE SCRUB COUNTRY, KIN KIN, NORTH COAST RAILWAY</p></div>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 560px;"><a href="images/page168b-1200.jpg"><img src="images/page168b-560.jpg" width="560" height="439" alt="ON THE BLACKALL RANGE, NORTH COAST RAILWAY" /></a>
+<p class="center">ON THE BLACKALL RANGE, NORTH COAST RAILWAY</p></div>
+
+<h3>THE FIFTH PARLIAMENT: 16th November, 1870-21st June, 1871.</h3>
+
+<p>The fifth Parliament lived only seven months. It met in November, 1870, and
+passed twenty-two Acts, among them being the University Act of 1870, giving the
+Governor in Council power to establish local examinations for degrees in connection
+with universities in Great Britain and Ireland. In this year an Act legalising
+the collection of border duties was passed. An Act providing for a pension of £400 a
+year to the Assembly's first Speaker also became law, but has not since been
+used as a precedent. By the Country Publicans Act a license for a house not within five
+miles of any town in which the Towns Police Act was in force was reduced to £15. The
+Gold Fields Homestead Act authorised the granting of agricultural leaseholds not
+exceeding forty acres on any proclaimed goldfield. A Wages Act enabled an
+employee to claim six months' pay from a mortgagee on taking over a property. In
+the session of 1871 only six Acts were passed, one repealing the proviso to
+section 10 of the Constitution Act of 1867 which required a two-thirds majority of both
+Houses to a bill altering the number or apportionment of members of the Assembly. The
+other measures of this session demand no notice here.</p>
+
+<h3>THE SIXTH PARLIAMENT: 8th November, 1871-1st September, 1873.</h3>
+
+<p>The sixth Parliament met in November, 1871, and passed six measures in its
+first session, none of them of more than temporary importance save the
+comprehensive Brands Act, which received the Governor's assent in the following year.
+The main session of 1872 was fertile in practical legislation, the Health Act and a
+Railway Act&mdash;providing for the fixing of compensation for land resumptions by a
+railway arbitrator, and empowering the Governor in Council to accept proposals for
+railway construction from private individuals or corporations&mdash;becoming law with
+twenty-four other measures. An Act of this year provided for the gradual
+abolition of the export duty on gold; another provided for homestead areas on liberal
+terms; and another for the sale of mineral lands. A number of legal measures, all of an
+amending character, also became law. And finally, a Loan Act, authorising the
+Government to raise £1,466,499 for railways from Ipswich to Brisbane and from
+Westwood to Comet River on the Central Railway, and other public works, gave a
+new impetus to development. In 1873 the Parliament met at the end of May, and
+after the session had lasted two months the Houses were prorogued for the
+purpose of a dissolution. Only six Acts were passed during the session, and those of no
+permanent significance except, perhaps, an equally elaborate and Algerine
+Customs Act.</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page170" id="page170"></a>170</span>
+
+<h3>THE SEVENTH PARLIAMENT: 7th January, 1874-2nd October, 1878.</h3>
+
+<p>The seventh Parliament opened on 7th January, 1874, and the Palmer Government,
+being defeated on the election for the Speakership, at once retired. After
+nearly three months' adjournment to enable the new Ministry to formulate its
+policy, the session was resumed at the end of March, and eighteen public and six private
+Acts were passed. Among the most important was the Audit Act, which, among
+other provisions, altered the opening date of the financial year to 1st July,
+instead of 1st January, with the object of getting the work done during the cool weather.
+But the Act failed in this respect, for Governments seldom care to call Parliament
+together much before mid-July, in time to provide for the first Treasury payments of the
+new financial year. On the other hand, the Assembly members usually protract the
+sittings until close to Christmas week, at whatever date the session opens.
+Among the other measures passed in 1874 were the Insolvency Act, of which Mr. S. W.
+Griffith was the author; the Crown Remedies Act, providing for the conduct of
+suits on behalf of the Crown; a Supreme Court Act, making provision for the
+appointment of a third Judge to be stationed at Bowen, and fixing the salaries and pensions
+of the Judges at the amounts still payable; a comprehensive Goldfields Act; an
+Act for the protection of oysters and the establishment of oyster fisheries; and an
+Act to encourage the manufacture of sugar. In 1875 sixteen Acts were passed, one of the
+two most important being the Western Railway Act, providing for the reservation
+of the land for fifty miles on either side of a straight line drawn from Dalby to
+Roma, and the sale of such lands to pay for the construction of a railway to connect
+the two towns. The other and great measure of the session, however, was the
+State Education Act, the scope of which is elsewhere explained.</p>
+
+<p>In 1876 twenty-three Acts were passed, two of them being temporary Supply
+Acts, measures which first became necessary with the alteration of the date of
+the financial year. A Crown Lands Alienation Act, passed this year, is noticed
+elsewhere, as is also the Customs Duties Act, introducing a tariff incidentally protective.
+Mr. Groom's Friendly Societies Act became law, as also did Mr. Griffith's Judicature
+Act, and the Fire Brigades Act. A Municipality Endowments Act provided a £2 for £1
+endowment for municipalities during the first five years after their
+establishment, and then £1 for £1. The Department of Justice was provided for, enabling a layman to
+hold the portfolio of Minister for Justice in a Ministry, and, so far as
+official practice was concerned, to qualify such Minister to discharge the duties of the
+Attorney-General.</p>
+
+<p>In 1877, twenty-eight measures were placed on the Statute-book, including the
+Navigation Act, Bank Holidays Act, Chinese Immigration Regulation Act, an Act to
+punish disorderly conduct in places of religious worship, the Victoria Bridge
+Act, and the first of a series of enactments for the destruction of marsupials and the
+protection of native birds. But the most important piece of legislation was the Railway
+Reserves Act, which, before it was finally repealed, caused considerable trouble in
+regard to the disposal of the moneys received from the sale of land within the reserves which
+were set apart in the various districts to provide funds for the construction of
+railways in the several reserves.</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page171" id="page171"></a>171</span>
+
+<p>In 1878, the last session of the seventh Parliament, only a few measures were
+passed, among them, however, being the Deceased Wife's Sister Marriage Act, the
+Intestacy Act, a comprehensive Local Government Act, and a Volunteer Act. An
+Electoral Districts Act redistributed the electorates of the colony, and
+increased the number of members of the Assembly from 43 to 55.</p>
+
+<h3>THE EIGHTH PARLIAMENT: 15th January, 1879-26th July, 1883.</h3>
+
+<p>In January, 1879, a new Parliament opened, and the ensuing five years
+contributed but a moderate number of Acts to the Statute-book. First in political
+importance was the Divisional Boards Act of 1879; then the Licensing Boards Act;
+the Orphanages Act; the Bills of Exchange Act; and the Life Insurance Act,
+providing among other things that after an insured person had held a policy for life
+assurance, endowment, or annuity for three years his age, unless in the case of
+fraud, should be deemed to have been admitted by the company, and also protecting the
+interest of the assured in the event of his insolvency. A short Act was passed
+requiring all moneys received under the Western Railway Act and the Railway
+Reserves Act to be paid into the consolidated revenue fund; and a Loan Act for
+£3,053,000 was also placed on the Statute-book. The Local Works Loans Act,
+referred to elsewhere, was also passed. The Rabbit Act, passed on the initiative of a
+private member, Mr. E. J. Stevens, was the forerunner of several measures having for
+their object the extermination of this national pest. In 1880, out of the twenty-four
+Acts passed, four were for appropriations, and four for private purposes. A new
+Pacific Island Labourers Act became law, providing for the engagement of all islanders
+under the inspection of a Government agent travelling in the recruiting vessel,
+restricting the employment of the islanders to tropical and semi-tropical agriculture, and
+making provision for their payment and treatment. The Post Card and Postal Notes Act
+provided for the issue of those instruments. The greatest political measure was
+the Railway Companies Preliminary Act, passed with the view of inducing capitalists
+to undertake railway construction in consideration of land grants.</p>
+
+<p>In 1881 fifteen Acts, exclusive of appropriations, were passed, among which
+were the Macalister Pension Act, authorising the payment to the ex-Agent-General
+of a pension of £500 a year; the Pearl-shell and Beche-de-mer Fishery Act; the
+Sale of Food and Drugs Act, and the United Municipalities Act. In 1882, with the
+exception of the Tramways Act, nearly all the measures passed were amending
+Acts.</p>
+
+<p>In 1883 only two measures were passed&mdash;the Queensland Stock Inscription Act
+and an Appropriation Act&mdash;dissolution following upon the defeat of the
+Government on the second reading of the Transcontinental Railway Bill, which was introduced
+to ratify an agreement made with a company, represented by General Feilding,
+under the provisions of the Railway Companies Preliminary Act of 1880, for the
+construction of a railway from Charleville to Point Parker on the Gulf of
+Carpentaria.</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page172" id="page172"></a>172</span>
+
+<h3>THE NINTH PARLIAMENT: 7th November, 1883-4th April, 1888.</h3>
+
+<p>The ninth Parliament opened on 7th November, 1883, and the Government resigned
+after being thrice defeated. Mr. Griffith became Premier, and he at once set to
+work to reverse the policy of his rival in several respects. The Assembly passed a bill to
+repeal the Labourers from British India Acts of 1862 and 1882, but the Council
+rejected it. The passage of the Chinese Immigrants Regulation Act (introduced
+by Mr. Macrossan as a private Opposition member), which restricted the number of
+Chinese passengers arriving by any vessel to one to every fifty tons register,
+and imposed a landing fee of £30 per head on such passengers, had a salutary effect
+in limiting this form of Asiatic immigration. The Pacific Island Labourers Act
+Amendment Act further safeguarded the interests of white workers in Queensland.
+The Railway Companies Preliminary Act was repealed, and its repeal put a stop to
+the negotiations which had been going on in connection with the Transcontinental
+Railway under the previous Government.</p>
+
+<p>The chief measure passed in the regular session of 1884 was the Crown
+Lands Act, which has been dealt with elsewhere. A comprehensive Defence
+Act established the principle of compulsory service in time of war. Among other
+measures passed were a comprehensive Health Act, a Bills of Exchange Act, a
+Wages Act, a Pharmacy Act, and the Native Birds Protection Act; also the
+Patents, Designs, and Trade Marks Act. Many of the other Acts were legal measures, but
+one may be mentioned as of interest&mdash;the New Guinea and Pacific Jurisdiction
+Contribution Act, which provided for the amount of annual contribution by
+Queensland in the event of a British Protectorate being established over Eastern New
+Guinea and other islands in the Western Pacific. An Act of interest to civil
+servants was that which required all fees thereafter received by them to be paid into the
+Treasury. The Acts of this single session&mdash;the first of Mr. Griffith's
+Premiership&mdash;extended over 405 pages of the then quarto Statute-book.</p>
+
+<p>The Officials in Parliament Act&mdash;passed to create an additional Minister, to
+readjust the division of portfolios between the two Houses, and to render
+officers in the Imperial and Queensland military and naval forces eligible to sit in the
+Legislative Assembly&mdash;had the effect of bringing about an innovation not intended at the
+time the Act was passed, and which had no parallel in parliamentary government in the
+Empire. The passage of section 3 involved the repeal of sections 5 and 6 of the
+Legislative Assembly Act of 1867, the latter of which made it obligatory for
+members of the Assembly to submit themselves for re-election upon taking office as
+Ministers. Curiously enough, the effect of this repeal was not discovered until certain
+Ministerial changes were made in 1893. The members of the McIlwraith Government in 1888
+and the members of the Griffith-McIlwraith Coalition in 1890 went before their
+constituents for re-election; but since the latter year the practice has ceased, and the
+electors have now no opportunity of showing by their votes whether they approve
+or disapprove of Cabinet changes.</p>
+
+<p>The session of 1885 was also productive of much legislation. There were a new
+Licensing Act containing local option provisions, a Federal Council (Adopting)
+Act, and an Undue Subdivision of Land Prevention Act, making the minimum width of
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page173" id="page173"></a>173</span>
+new streets 66 feet, and of lanes 22 feet, and buildings were not to be erected
+within 33 feet of the middle line of a lane; while suburban or country lands could not
+be sold in areas of less than 16 perches. This measure put a stop to subdivisions which
+could only be regarded as a grave abuse. The law relating to parliamentary elections
+was consolidated and amended. Another Act prohibited the introduction of Pacific
+Islanders after 31st December, 1890. Altogether eighteen measures, irrespective
+of appropriations, were passed. During this and the following session a series of
+conflicts arose over the power of the Legislative Council to amend bills dealing
+with appropriation and taxation. In 1884 a bill was introduced which made provision
+for granting to members of the Assembly payment of expenses at the rate of £2 2s.
+per sitting day, with a maximum amount of £200 per annum, and in addition payment
+of travelling expenses to and from electorates once a year at the rate of 1s.
+6d. per mile. The bill was laid aside by the Council. It was reintroduced in 1885, and
+again laid aside by the Council. The Government thereupon included a sum of £7,000 in
+the annual Appropriation Bill for the payment of members' expenses, and the
+Council took the extreme step of amending the Appropriation Bill by omitting this vote.
+After communications had passed between the two Chambers, it was agreed to
+submit to the Imperial Crown Law Officers two questions to settle whether the Council
+possessed co-ordinate powers with the Assembly in the amendment of all bills,
+including money bills, and the Judicial Committee of the Privy Council decided
+against the Council. The following year, the Members' Expenses Bill was passed
+by the Council without any attempt at amendment. The Council having also amended
+the rating clauses of a Local Government Bill in 1885, the bill was laid aside
+by the Assembly. It was reintroduced next year, and again amended by the Council.
+Warned by the fact that a Divisional Boards Bill had been laid aside by the
+Council because the Assembly claimed that the Upper House had no power to amend rating
+clauses, the Assembly accepted the Council's amendments, but at the same time
+asserted their sole power of altering taxation provisions.</p>
+
+<p>In the year 1886 no less than thirty-two Acts, exclusive of appropriations and
+private measures, were passed. Among them was the Elections Tribunal Act, which
+gave to a Supreme Court Judge, assisted by a panel of members of the Assembly
+acting as assessors, the decision of election petitions, as the trying of such
+petitions before an Elections and Qualifications Committee consisting of members of the
+Assembly had proved unsatisfactory. The Members' Expenses Bill was also passed.
+The important Justices Act was a measure of this session. The Labourers from
+British India Acts were repealed, the repealing measure having been rejected
+by the Council in the 1883-4 session, thus closing the door to the long-desired
+importation of coolie labour for pastoral holdings. Two measures of great
+importance to workers which were placed on the Statute-book in this session were the
+Employers Liability Act and the Trade Unions Act. The Offenders Probation Act
+embodied a new departure in the treatment of first offenders, which has since
+been copied by many other countries. Another Act which proved of material assistance
+to the working classes was the Building Societies Act. Several of the measures were
+amendments of the work of former Parliaments.</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page174" id="page174"></a>174</span>
+
+<p>The session of 1887, though less fruitful than the three preceding sessions, was
+by no means barren. Twenty-one bills were passed, one of which made provision
+for a contribution to the British New Guinea civil list. The Divisional Boards
+Bill, which had been laid aside by the Council in 1886, was reintroduced. The
+taxation clauses were this year embodied in a separate bill&mdash;the Valuation
+Bill&mdash;and both measures became law. An Electoral Districts Bill was also passed,
+increasing the number of members of the Assembly to 72. No change has since been made
+in the representation of the State. The passage of this bill was urged as a
+reason for not passing the Australasian Naval Force Bill, the Opposition contending
+that no important legislation should be attempted after Parliament had agreed to a
+redistribution of seats, and Sir S. W. Griffith was in this way prevented from giving
+legislative force to the agreement which he had drafted, and which was passed into law in
+all the other colonies before its author finally succeeded in securing its passage
+in Queensland in the year 1891. The session closed in December, 1887, but the
+Assembly was not dissolved until four months later.</p>
+
+<h3>THE TENTH PARLIAMENT: 12th June, 1888-5th April, 1893.</h3>
+
+<p>The tenth Parliament opened on 12th June, 1888, and the Griffith Ministry gave
+place to that of Sir Thomas McIlwraith. Only ten public measures were passed,
+however, exclusive of appropriations. The struggle of the session arose on the
+Customs Bill, imposing protectionist duties, and increasing the complexity of
+the tariff. On entering Parliament in 1874, Mr. Macrossan had earnestly demanded,
+on behalf of the Northern miners, effectual anti-Chinese legislation, but the
+attitude of the Imperial Government compelled the Queensland Parliament to proceed
+warily. In 1877 an Act was passed requiring the master of any ship to pay £10 for each
+Chinese passenger landed, and forbidding more than one to every 10 tons burthen,
+a penalty of £10 being imposed in each case of breach. In 1884 the number to be
+introduced was further restricted to one Chinese for each 50 tons, with a
+landing payment of £30, and £30 penalty for each landed in excess of the prescribed
+number. In 1888 the representatives of the various Australasian Governments met at
+Sydney, as, owing to the unwillingness of the Imperial Government to give the Royal
+assent to the legislation desired, there was doubt as to whether a measure passed by an
+individual colony would be assented to. The conference agreed to a bill, and the
+Queensland Parliament passed it in 1888, but it did not become law until
+February, 1890. It placed the limitation at one Chinese passenger to every 500 tons
+registered, made the penalty on the master £500 for every Chinese landed in excess of the
+number, and, in default of payment, twelve months' imprisonment, and £100 for a
+master failing to report at the Customs. For failure to supply a correct list of
+Chinese passengers the master rendered himself liable to a penalty of £200 for
+each act of default, and £30 for permitting Chinese to land without payment of the
+landing tax. A Chinaman landing illegally, either overland or by ship, was
+himself liable to a penalty of £50, and, in default of payment, to six months' imprisonment.
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page175" id="page175"></a>175</span>
+A comprehensive Railways Act was passed, its main object being to entrust the
+control of the railways to three Commissioners. The other measures were not of
+permanent interest.</p>
+
+<p>The session of 1889, under the Morehead Administration, was more productive.
+The Totalisator Restriction Act was among the measures passed, as was also the
+Trustees Act. The Civil Service Act, which embodied superannuation provisions
+on the basis of a 4 per cent. contribution from salary, was passed, but the
+superannuation sections were repealed in 1894 chiefly because of the representations of
+junior officers who alleged that the system was unjust. The Payment of Members
+Act repealed the Members' Expenses Act of 1886, and under it members were paid
+an annual salary of £300. The session was also notable by reason of the passage
+of the Defamation Act, introduced by Sir S. W. Griffith as a private member, by
+which journalists were relieved of the Algerine law under which their profession had
+previously been carried on.</p>
+
+<p>The session of 1890 was marked by the formation of the Griffith-McIlwraith
+Ministry, and the passing of twenty-seven Acts, many of importance, one of them
+being the Married Women's Property Act. The dividend duty was first imposed in
+this session, and sketching fortifications was made a penal offence; but the
+more important measures of this year are elsewhere noticed.</p>
+
+<p>In the session of 1891 a comprehensive Water Authorities Act, which is still in
+force, became law. An Act permitting solicitors to do work for their clients by
+agreement was passed, as was also an Act for the better protection of women and
+girls. In all thirty-eight measures, many of them of a legal character, became
+law in this session. The one of greatest importance was the Australasian Naval Force
+Act, to which allusion has already been made.</p>
+
+<p>In 1892 thirty-nine Acts were passed, among which was one for the treatment and
+isolation of lepers; others provided for strengthening the law penalising bakers
+for selling bread under weight; for subsidising railway construction by grants of
+land; for the establishment of harbour boards, and the levy of harbour dues; for
+penalising the publication of indecent advertisements; for making a person accused of an
+indictable offence and the wife or husband of such accused person a competent
+but not a compellable witness for the defence; for raising the Chief Justice's
+salary to £3,500 with a view to securing the services of Sir S. W. Griffith; for reducing
+the payment of members of the Assembly to £150 per annum; and for taxing the
+receipts of totalisators on racecourses, a duty being imposed of sixpence in the pound of
+money passed through the totalisators. A new principle in rabbit legislation was
+introduced by an Act encouraging pastoral lessees to destroy the pest by
+granting them an extension of their leases as compensation for their outlay. The Pacific
+Island Labourers (Extension) Act reversed the decision of Parliament in 1885,
+and permitted the reintroduction of islanders for work in the sugar industry. The
+recruiting continued from this date until terminated by the Commonwealth
+legislation of 1901. This session proved a very long one, the Houses sitting from March till
+November.</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page176" id="page176"></a>176</span>
+
+<h3>THE ELEVENTH PARLIAMENT: 26th May, 1893-22nd February, 1896.</h3>
+
+<p>The eleventh Parliament was opened on 26th May, 1893, Sir Thomas McIlwraith
+being then Premier. A Ministerial crisis was produced on the Railway Border Tax
+Bill, which imposed a duty of £2 10s. per ton on every bale of Queensland wool
+taken across the border. Ministers tendered their resignations, but the Governor, Sir
+Henry Norman, declined to accept them. In a minute read in the Assembly, His
+Excellency expressed the opinion that the vote in question did not constitute a
+vote of want of confidence in Ministers, and he gave it as his belief that on most
+questions of importance likely to arise they would have the support of a substantial
+majority of members of the Assembly. Consequently Sir Thomas McIlwraith continued in office,
+and both Houses passed the bill. It was a retaliatory measure against the New
+South Wales Railway Commissioners because of the preferential rates conceded by them
+to draw traffic to Sydney that legitimately belonged to Brisbane. The Meat and
+Dairy Produce Act became law in this year; also the Sugar Works Guarantee Act,
+and the Co-operative Communities Land Settlement Act, which proved an utter
+failure in spite of the passing of amending Acts in the two succeeding years.
+Various financial measures noticed elsewhere were also passed, these last being
+rendered imperative by the banking crisis which then paralysed industry and
+commerce. At the end of the session, Sir Thomas McIlwraith's health failing him, he
+retired from the Premiership, which was taken by Sir Hugh Muir Nelson.</p>
+
+<p>In 1894 the session opened on 17th July, and one of the most hotly contested
+measures was the Peace Preservation Bill, introduced in consequence of the
+disturbances connected with the shearers' strike in the West in 1891, and the apprehension
+that they would be repeated unless drastic legislation was enacted. Its passage
+was strenuously opposed by the Labour Opposition, and it was only forced through the
+Assembly by the application of the closure. Violent scenes culminated in the
+suspension of eight Labour members, the suspension being followed by an appeal
+by the ejected members to the Supreme Court, when that court decided that
+Parliament was the only tribunal for determining matters affecting its own jurisdiction. In
+all thirty-six measures were passed, but the majority were either financial or
+designed to amend existing statutes which caused friction in operation. The effort at this
+time seemed to be rather to pass practicable laws than enact measures embodying
+so-called advanced principles. The most noteworthy of these laws was the Agricultural
+Lands Purchase Act, which authorised the purchase by the Government of large
+estates at a cost not exceeding £100,000 in any one year, and the subdivision of
+the land into farms.</p>
+
+<p>In 1895 thirty-five Acts were the product of the session, and they were
+generally
+characterised by the same adaptation of means to ends that was noticeable in the
+preceding year. In fact, during these two years the colonies were all suffering a
+recovery which did not incite to heroic legislation for securing the rights of
+man, including woman. Deserving of special mention are the Suppression of Gambling
+Act, and the Railways Guarantee Act which made provision for local authorities
+guaranteeing the State against loss in connection with the construction and working
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page177" id="page177"></a>177</span>
+of railways built under the Act. In consequence of friction between the three
+Railway Commissioners, an Act was passed in this year reducing the number of
+Commissioners to one, Mr. Mathieson, the Chief Commissioner, being retained. A
+short measure of considerable value was the Standard Time Act, the object of
+which was to place Queensland in line with New South Wales and Victoria by adopting
+the time of the 150th meridian of east longitude as the standard time for the three
+colonies.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 400px;"><a href="images/page176-800.jpg"><img src="images/page176-350.jpg" width="350" height="580" alt="BARRON GORGE, CAIRNS RAILWAY, NORTH QUEENSLAND" /></a>
+<p class="center">BARRON GORGE, CAIRNS RAILWAY, NORTH QUEENSLAND</p></div>
+
+<h3>THE TWELFTH PARLIAMENT: 17th June, 1896-15th February, 1899.</h3>
+
+<p>In 1896 there was a general election, and the new Parliament opened on 17th
+June. Public confidence had been fairly restored after the financial crisis of
+1893, and thirty-five Acts were passed, not one of which was of a highly
+contentious political nature. Even the Factories and Shops Act, introduced by
+the Government, was supported by the Labour party; indeed, no party or section
+opposed it, although the compulsory closing of shops at 1 p.m. on Saturdays
+throughout an area within the radius of ten miles of the General Post Office
+excited much individual opposition. Mr. Mathieson having accepted the position
+of Chief Commissioner of the Victorian railways, an amending Railways Act was
+passed empowering the Governor in Council to appoint a Commissioner for three
+years, reducing the salary from £3,000 to £1,500, and providing for the
+appointment of a Deputy Commissioner. Mr. R. J. Gray, one of the three original
+Commissioners, was appointed Commissioner, and Mr. Thallon, the present
+Commissioner, became his deputy. A measure of some importance repealed the
+existing Payment of Members Act, and made the new Act an integral part of the
+Constitution, the salary being fixed at £300 a year. The object, as stated by
+the Government, was to stop the incessant agitation that was carried on in
+political circles on the one hand for an increase, and on the other for a
+reduction of the salary.</p>
+
+<p>In the session of 1897, Sir Hugh Nelson being still Premier, thirty Acts were
+passed. There was again a remarkable absence of measures of a party character,
+most of them being useful amendments of existing laws. Of these the Elections
+Consolidating Act was important. The Home Secretary, Mr. J. F. G. Foxton,
+deserves credit for introducing this session the Aboriginals Protection and
+Restriction of the Sale of Opium Act, the first measure for the preservation and
+care of our fast-disappearing aboriginal blacks. It must be recorded with shame
+that the Government of Queensland should have allowed so many years to pass
+before taking steps to protect the race who had been dispossessed of their
+heritage from some of the curses attendant on our civilisation. Since 1897 the
+stigma no longer rests on our fair fame, everything possible being done now to
+save the natives from extinction. In this year, too, the Mareeba to Chillagoe
+Railway Act, which has proved very beneficial to the Cairns hinterland, became
+law. A comprehensive Land Act, occupying 110 pages of the Statute-book, was
+passed, and also an amending and consolidating Trustees and Executors Act.</p>
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page178" id="page178"></a>178</span>
+
+<p>The session of 1898&mdash;the last of the Parliament&mdash;opened on 26th July,
+and closed on 30th December. The principal work of this session was the passage
+of an amending Mining Act which greatly improved the condition of the working
+miners. Other measures were an Act to incorporate the Brisbane Technical
+College, and the Game and Fishes Acclimatisation Act, providing for the
+proclamation of districts, for an open season, for the issue of game licenses,
+and the appointment of guardians. Sir Hugh Nelson, in consequence of the death
+of Sir A. H. Palmer, had been translated to the Presidency of the Legislative
+Council, and the Premiership was assumed by Mr. T. J. Byrnes on 13th April. Mr.
+Byrnes died in the following September, and was succeeded by Mr. (afterwards
+Sir) J. R. Dickson.</p>
+
+<p>On 1st December, 1899, Mr. Dickson and his colleagues resigned in consequence of
+a vote of the Assembly, and for seven days the Dawson Labour Ministry held
+office, but they were defeated immediately on the reassembling of the House. In
+the meantime Mr. Philp had been chosen leader of the Opposition, and on 7th
+December he returned to power as Premier with most of his old colleagues.</p>
+
+<h3>THE THIRTEENTH PARLIAMENT: 16th May, 1899-4th February, 1902.</h3>
+
+<p>The year 1899 was remarkable for the passage of two great measures&mdash;the
+Australasian Federation Enabling Act, passed in a session specially summoned for
+the purpose, which authorised a referendum to be taken on the new Constitution;
+and the invaluable and monumental Criminal Code Act, extending with its four
+schedules over 270 pages of the Statute-book. The Code was compiled by Sir S. W.
+Griffith, and was afterwards submitted to the whole of the Judges of the Supreme
+and District Courts before being presented to Parliament. A bill was also passed
+legitimising children born before marriage on the subsequent marriage of their
+parents. The other public measures of the session were for amending purposes.</p>
+
+<p>The session of 1900 was a fairly active one, thirty-four measures being passed.
+A short Act of far-reaching importance empowered the Government to enter into
+arrangements with the Governments of the United Kingdom, Canada, Victoria, New
+South Wales, and New Zealand, for laying a Pacific cable. By a short measure the
+Government were empowered to prohibit the exportation of arms or naval stores. A
+great consolidating and amending Health Act was passed; also a measure, in
+connection with the appointment of Dr. Maxwell, of Honolulu, for the
+establishment of sugar experiment stations. In this year the Railway
+Commissioner was reappointed for three years at a salary of £2,000 per annum,
+being an increase of £500. The Factories and Shops Act of 1896 was repealed, and
+a more comprehensive measure passed. An amending Defence Act was passed
+providing, among other things, for the military training of boys between twelve
+and eighteen years. An Act also became law providing for the inspection of
+grammar schools by a graduate of a British or Australian University. Another
+measure provided for the holding of the first Commonwealth elections, and for
+the temporary division of the State into nine electorates for the House of
+Representatives election. Several bills
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page179" id="page179"></a>179</span> authorising the construction of
+railways to mineral fields by private companies evoked the bitter opposition of
+the Labour party. To force them through the popular House the Government were
+obliged to introduce an amendment of the Standing Orders, colloquially known as
+the "guillotine," and to closure the bills through the House.</p>
+
+<p>In the session of 1901 twenty-seven Acts were passed. The Chief Justice's
+salary, on the retirement of Sir S. W. Griffith to accept the Federal Chief
+Justiceship, was reduced to its former amount of £2,500 a year. The first
+legislation to eradicate the prickly pear took place in this year. The bill was
+introduced by a private member, Mr. Bell, who has always taken a keen interest
+in the destruction of this pest. It was based on the principle that close
+settlement is the only effective remedy, and offered inducements to settlers to
+select infested lands. The Public Service Act was so amended as to constitute
+the members of the Ministry for the time being the members of the board. A
+measure was passed requiring every life assurance company carrying on business
+in Queensland to hold £10,000 in Queensland securities, and otherwise protecting
+policy-holders. An Agricultural Bank Act was passed authorising the Government
+to advance to settlers on the land loans for carrying out improvements. An
+Animals Protection Act was also passed for the more effectual prevention of
+cruelty to animals.</p>
+
+<h3>THE FOURTEENTH PARLIAMENT: 8th July, 1902-21st July, 1904.</h3>
+
+<p>The fourteenth Parliament opened on 8th July, 1902, twenty-seven public measures
+becoming law in the first session. An amending Aboriginals Protection Act,
+chiefly dealing with the sale of opium, was passed. The sum to be paid as duty
+on totalisator stakes or bets was increased to one shilling in the pound from
+the sixpence provided by the Act of 1892. A Railway Act amending measure was
+passed authorising the appointment of a Commissioner for a term of seven years,
+and making other changes to facilitate the working of the department. In
+consequence of the drought and Federal embarrassments, the Public Service
+Special Retrenchment Act was passed, reducing the salaries of public servants on
+a sliding scale; and an Income Tax Bill became law, imposing a tax of sixpence
+in the pound upon incomes derived from personal exertion, and one shilling in
+the pound when derived from property, incomes under £100 being mulcted in 10s.,
+and when not exceeding £150 £1 a year. Provision was made for the appointment of
+a Government department for collecting the tax, and the last section enacted
+that the tax should cease on 1st January, 1905. The monumental Local Government
+Act of 1902 also became law in this year.</p>
+
+<p>The next session opened in July, and closed in December, 1903, but in
+mid-September progress was suspended by a change of Ministry, the Morgan-Kidston
+Government assuming office. Among the measures passed after the change of
+Ministry was an Act providing that the senior puisne Judge resident in Brisbane
+should be the senior puisne Judge of the Supreme Court, and discretionary power
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page180" id="page180"></a>180</span>
+was given to the Governor in Council with regard to filling the vacancy
+created on the Supreme Court bench through the acceptance by Sir S. W. Griffith
+of the more dignified position of Chief Justice of the High Court of the
+Commonwealth. The Government were subjected to severe criticism for making no
+appointment, but the number of Judges was allowed to remain at four until the
+appointment of Mr. Justice Shand in November, 1908.</p>
+
+<p>Parliament reassembled in May following, and sat two months, when a dissolution
+was granted on 21st July, in consequence of the Government being left without a
+working majority.</p>
+
+<h3>THE FIFTEENTH PARLIAMENT: 20th September, 1904-11th April, 1907.</h3>
+
+<p>The fifteenth Parliament opened on 20th September following, and sat until
+Christmas. Among the measures passed was a comprehensive Dairy Produce Act
+providing for the appointment of inspectors; the registration of premises, a fee
+being charged proportioned to the number of cows kept; for compulsory grading of
+butter for export; and for the general regulation of dairies. The Income Tax was
+continued, but gave relief to persons with small incomes, though on the whole it
+yielded more revenue. Owing to the exigencies of the Treasury, the Public Service
+Special Retrenchment Act was continued for a further period of nine months, but
+the rate of retrenchment was reduced by one-half, and provision was made for
+devoting any surplus revenue at the close of the year to the repayment to public
+servants of the amounts so deducted from their salaries, and in this way they
+received a return equal to 8s. in the pound.<a id="footnotetagda" name="footnotetagda"></a><a href="#footnoteda"><sup>a</sup></a> A Registration of Clubs Act and
+fourteen other measures were also passed.</p>
+
+<p>An extraordinary session of twenty days was held in January, 1905, to reconsider
+the Elections Bill, rejected by the Legislative Council in December previously.
+This having been done, and the Council having agreed to the bill, Parliament was
+prorogued, and met for the regular session of the year in July following, the
+sittings being continued till the Christmas holidays.</p>
+
+<p>The ordinary session of 1905 was a busy one, though the measures generally were
+short and of a practical nature. A distinguishing feature of the work of this
+Parliament was the humanitarian and social legislation which was placed on the
+Statute-book. The interests of workers generally were conserved by the Workers'
+Compensation Act, which made injuries or fatal accidents met with by employees a
+charge upon the industry in which they were engaged. The comfort of a very large
+number of workers in the pastoral and sugar industries was provided for by the
+Shearers and Sugar Workers Accommodation Act. A most valuable piece of
+legislation was the Infant Life Protection Act, the object of which was to
+prevent the alarming sacrifice of infant life in nursing homes from neglect, all
+such homes having to be registered and made subject to Government inspection. An
+Act imposing a <span class="pagenum"><a name="page181" id="page181"></a>181</span>
+penalty of £10 upon any person selling or giving tobacco
+or cigars to a young person under the age of sixteen years was passed, as was
+also an Act forbidding the sale or supply of firearms to a young person under
+fourteen years, and also forbidding such young person to use or carry firearms,
+the penalty for a breach of the Act being £20. Another measure of interest,
+which was passed in response to the request of a large number of workers, was an
+Act providing for railway employees a Board of Appeal against disciplinary
+decisions of superior officers. A short Act became law giving the right to women
+to admission and practice as barristers, solicitors, or conveyancers. Quite a
+number of other small Acts was passed, among them being a Fertilisers Act, the
+object of which was to prevent loss to farmers by the sale of fraudulent
+fertilisers.</p>
+
+<p>The most contentious measure of the session of 1906, which opened, as usual, in
+July, was the Railways Act, its principal object being to hold the ratepayers of
+a benefited area responsible for all losses in working a newly-constructed
+railway. It empowers the local authority to levy a railway rate to make good the
+deficiency, if any, after providing for working expenses and interest at the
+rate of three per cent. on capital expended on the line. If the local authority
+fails to levy and collect the railway rate, the Commissioner is empowered to do
+so. An important principle of the Act requires, when lands in a benefited area
+are being valued for rating purposes, that to the capital value shall be added
+the enhancement through the railway facilities provided. The object of the Act
+is undoubtedly good, in so far as it discourages landowners from agitating and
+bringing political pressure upon the Government in favour of railway
+undertakings not justified by the prospective traffic. It was supposed that
+persons desiring a new railway would hesitate to guarantee the Government
+against loss through its construction, but the applications for new lines have
+not been less numerous since the passing of the Act than when the burden fell
+entirely upon the general taxpayer. Yet there can be no doubt that many
+unwarranted undertakings have been quashed by the liability imposed upon local
+landowners.</p>
+
+<p>During the session there were thirty-four Acts passed, among them one for the
+protection of opossums, native bears, and other wild animals specified in the
+schedule, by the proclamation of a close season, and the prohibition of the use
+of cyanide as poison by collectors of skins for export. The Mining Machinery
+Advances Act empowered the Minister to advance loans from moneys appropriated by
+Parliament to persons or companies erecting machinery for carrying on mining
+operations or treating metalliferous ores, such loans to be made on the basis of
+£1 for £1 of money expended by the applicant. A comprehensive Weights and
+Measures Act also became law. Another useful measure was the amending Public
+Works Land Resumption Act, the compensation provisions being greatly improved.
+The Etheridge Railway Act also passed in this session despite the objection of
+several members of the Labour party to "syndicate" lines. The opposition of
+these members, however, was not characterised by the obstructive tactics adopted
+in regard to similar measures in 1908.</p>
+
+<p class="footnote"><a id="footnoteda" name="footnoteda"></a><a class="footnote" href="#footnotetagda">Footnote a:</a> See page <a href="#page50">50</a>, ante.</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page182" id="page182"></a>182</span>
+
+<h3>THE SIXTEENTH PARLIAMENT: 23rd July to 31st December, 1907.</h3>
+
+<p>The sixteenth Parliament was elected in May, 1907, but none of the three
+parties, into which the Assembly was divided by the cleavage between the
+moderate and the extreme sections of the Labour party consequent upon the
+adoption by the latter of the socialistic objective at the Convention held
+earlier in the year at Rockhampton, came back with a majority, and little
+legislation was found possible, the only public Acts passed relating to
+Appropriations, Children's Courts, Poor Prisoners' Defence, and an amending
+Income Tax measure raising the exemption to £200, and giving other relief to
+taxpayers. Towards the end of November the Government, failing to pass several
+democratic measures through the Council and to obtain adequate support from the
+Labour party, resigned, and Parliament was dissolved on 31st December on the
+advice of Mr. Philp, who had been called on to form a new Government from the
+Opposition party, and had failed to secure a parliamentary majority.</p>
+
+<h3>THE SEVENTEENTH PARLIAMENT: 3rd March, 1908-31st August, 1909.</h3>
+
+<p>The result of the appeal to the constituencies was to leave parties much as
+before, the Kidston and Labour parties being slightly strengthened numerically,
+and the Philp party&mdash;the Government at the moment&mdash;weakened
+correspondingly, they and the Kidston party numbering 25 each, while the Labour
+party were 22 strong. Mr. Philp's appeal having thus failed, he retired, and Mr.
+Kidston, being recalled, sought to secure for his Government more than casual
+support from the Labour party. The House met on 3rd March, 1908. The session
+lasted barely seven weeks, and among the fifteen measures which became law were
+the following:&mdash;An amending Constitution Bill repealing the provisoes to
+section 9 of the principal Act, the first of which required a two-thirds vote of
+both Houses to any amendment for varying the mode of appointment or number of
+members of the Legislative Council; and the second, that any such amending bill
+should not receive the Royal assent until it had lain thirty days on the table
+of both Houses of the Imperial Parliament. Another Constitution Bill provided
+for a referendum to the electors when a bill passed by the Assembly had been
+twice rejected by the Council. The first of the above-mentioned bills received
+the Governor's assent forthwith, but as to the second such assent was reserved,
+and the bill transmitted to England. On 19th August, however, the King's assent
+was proclaimed, and the incompatibilities between the two Houses were thus
+satisfactorily adjusted by a comparatively simple process. A measure which
+aroused strong party feeling was a bill to amend the Elections Act by repealing
+the postal voting sections, substituting provisions to enable absent voters to
+vote at any polling place in the State, and also ensuring greater secrecy by
+having the ballot papers from places where a small number of votes are recorded
+counted in some larger centre. A useful Land Surveyors Act was passed, requiring
+registration after approval of candidates by a board to be constituted under the
+Act, and prescribing a variety of other regulations for the purposes of securing
+the competence and protecting the interests of surveyors generally. Other
+measures placed on the Statute-book included an Old Age Pensions Act, which has
+now lapsed in consequence of the passing of a Commonwealth pensions law; an Act
+for the Inspection of <span class="pagenum"><a name="page183" id="page183"></a>183</span>
+Machinery and Scaffolding; an amending Factories and Shops Act containing many
+democratic provisions; a Wages Boards Act, which has been kindly taken to by
+both employers and employed, and promises to adjust most of the differences
+between masters and men; a Religious Instruction in State Schools Referendum
+Act, the poll to be taken on the same day as the polling for the first Federal
+election after the passing of the Act; and an amending Technical College Act
+dissolving the councils of both metropolitan technical colleges, and vesting the
+property and future management in the Government. Two bills were also passed
+authorising the construction of railways to the Mount Elliott and Lawn Hills
+mineral fields. These bills directly led to the Labour party assuming an
+attitude of open hostility to the Government, and brought the latter and the
+Opposition, led by Mr. Philp, together, as the policy put before the electors by
+these two parties was identical in almost every respect.</p>
+
+<p>Before the opening of the second session on 17th November, 1908, the Kidston and
+Philp parties were fused into one on the common basis of the policy enunciated
+by Mr. Kidston in 1907 at Rockhampton. A reconstruction of the Cabinet preceded
+the meeting of Parliament. When the session closed on 22nd December very little
+legislative work had been done, most of the Government time being occupied with
+consideration of the Estimates, the Labour party, which had then become the
+Opposition proper, again offering obstruction to Government measures, and again
+compelling resort to the closure. An important measure of a non-party character
+was passed, however, for a revision of the statute law in many important
+details. The most significant measure of the session was the Loan Act of 1908,
+authorising the borrowing of £3,208,000, the vote affording proof of the
+determination of the Government and Parliament to enter upon a vigorous policy
+of railway and public works extension.</p>
+
+<p>The third session of the seventeenth Parliament opened on 29th June, 1909. The
+two sides of the House were so evenly balanced, owing to several supporters of
+the Government having crossed to the Opposition benches, that the majority of
+the Government was reduced to one. Finding themselves impotent to transact
+public business, the Government advised the Lieutenant-Governor to grant a
+dissolution, provided the House would grant Supply. This was done, and His
+Excellency accordingly dissolved the Assembly on 31st August.</p>
+
+<h3>THE EIGHTEENTH PARLIAMENT: 2nd November, 1909.</h3>
+
+<p>The eighteenth Parliament met on 2nd November. The Address in Reply was adopted
+without division on the 5th, and Parliament at once proceeded to the business
+outlined in the Opening Speech of His Excellency the Lieutenant-Governor, a
+laudable desire to transact business without unnecessary discussion being
+evinced. The most important measure was the University of Queensland Act, which
+was passed in time to enable the dedication ceremony to take place on 10th
+December, Queensland's jubilee day. Of vital importance to Brisbane and its
+suburbs was the Metropolitan Water and Sewerage Act. An amendment of the
+Workers' Compensation Act and a Workers' Dwellings Act also became law.
+Resolutions were also passed approving of the construction of railways in
+various parts of the State.</p>
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page184" id="page184"></a>184</span>
+
+<h3 class="app">APPENDIX E.</h3>
+
+<h2 class="app">LAND SELECTION IN QUEENSLAND.</h2>
+
+<h4>[OFFICIAL COMPILATION.]</h4>
+
+<p>The State is divided into Land Agents' Districts, in the principal town of each
+of which there is a Government Land Office and Land Agent. Plans and information
+respecting the quality, rents, and prices of lands available for selection may
+be obtained on personal or written application to the Land Agent of the District
+in which the land is situated, or to the Officer in Charge, Inquiry Office,
+Department of Public Lands, Brisbane.</p>
+
+<p>Land is opened or made available for Selection by proclamation in the
+<i>Government Gazette</i>. The proclamation, which is made not less than four weeks
+before the time appointed for the opening, specifies the modes in which the land
+may be selected, the area, rent, price, &amp;c.</p>
+
+<p>The several modes of Selection for which the law provides are&mdash;(1)
+Agricultural Selections, <i>i.e.</i>, Agricultural Farms, Perpetual Leases,
+Agricultural Homesteads, and Free Homesteads; (2) Grazing Selections, <i>i.e.</i>,
+Grazing Farms and Grazing Homesteads; (3) Scrub Selections; (4) Unconditional
+Selections; and (5) Prickly Pear Selections. The more accessible lands are
+usually set apart for agricultural selection in areas up to 1,280 acres, or, if
+pear infested, as Prickly Pear Selections in areas up to 5,000 acres; while
+opportunities of acquiring Grazing Selections in areas up to 60,000 acres are
+given over a great extent of Queensland territory.</p>
+
+<p>Except in the case of Scrub Selections, Unconditional Selections, and Prickly
+Pear Selections, no person who is under the age of sixteen years, or who seeks
+to acquire the land as the agent or servant or trustee of another, will be
+allowed to select. A single girl under the age of twenty-one years is debarred
+from selecting an Agricultural Homestead, Free Homestead, or Grazing Homestead.
+A married woman is not competent to select a Homestead unless she has obtained
+an order for judicial separation or an order protecting her separate property,
+or is living apart from her husband and has been specially empowered by the Land
+Court to select a Homestead. A married woman may, however, acquire a Grazing
+Homestead by transfer after the expiry of five years of the term of lease. An
+alien may, under certain conditions, acquire a selection, but, unless he becomes
+a naturalised British subject within three years thereafter, all his right,
+title, and interest in the land will become forfeited.</p>
+
+<p>Applications for selections must be made in the prescribed form, in triplicate,
+and be lodged with the Land Agent for the District in which the land is
+situated.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 600px;"><a href="images/page184a-1200.jpg"><img src="images/page184a-600.jpg" width="600" height="235" alt="FARM SCENE, BLACKALL RANGE" /></a>
+<p class="center">FARM SCENE, BLACKALL RANGE</p></div>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 600px;"><a href="images/page184b-1200.jpg"><img src="images/page184b-600.jpg" width="600" height="272" alt="SISAL HEMP, CHILDERS, NORTH COAST RAILWAY" /></a>
+<p class="center">SISAL HEMP, CHILDERS, NORTH COAST RAILWAY</p></div>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 600px;"><a href="images/page184c-1200.jpg"><img src="images/page184c-600.jpg" width="600" height="309" alt="WOOL TEAMS, LONGREACH, CENTRAL QUEENSLAND" /></a>
+<p class="center">WOOL TEAMS, LONGREACH, CENTRAL QUEENSLAND</p></div>
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page185" id="page185"></a>185</span>
+<p>They must be signed by the applicant, but may be lodged in the Land Office by
+his duly constituted attorney, and must be accompanied by the prescribed
+deposit. In the case of a Prickly Pear Selection the deposit must be the full
+amount of the prescribed survey fee, and in other cases, except Free Homesteads,
+a year's rent and one-fifth of the survey fee. In the case of a Free Homestead
+application the deposit consists of an application fee of £1 and one-fifth of
+the survey fee. Ordinarily, applications take priority in the order of their
+being lodged with the Land Agent, but applications lodged <i>prior</i> to the time
+proclaimed as that at which land is to be open for selection are regarded as
+simultaneous with those lodged at that time.</p>
+
+<p>If land is open for Selection in two or more modes alternatively, and there are
+simultaneous applications to select it under different modes, priority among
+such applications is given to an application for the land as an Agricultural
+Homestead as against an application for it as an Agricultural Farm; to an
+application for it as an Agricultural Farm as against an application for it as
+an Unconditional Selection; and, if the land is open for Grazing Selection, to
+an application for it as a Grazing Homestead as against an application for it as
+a Grazing Farm.</p>
+
+<p>In the case of simultaneous applications for the same land, as an Agricultural
+Farm, priority is secured by an applicant, other than a married woman or a
+single girl under twenty-one years of age, who, when making application,
+undertakes to personally reside on the land during the first five years of the
+term. In other cases of simultaneous applications for the same land by the same
+mode of selection, priority is determined by lot, unless in the case of
+simultaneous applications for the same land as a Grazing Selection,
+Unconditional Selection, or Prickly Pear Selection, a higher rental is tendered
+than that proclaimed. In that event the tender most favourable to the Crown
+secures priority.</p>
+
+<p>Under the Special Selections Act land may be set apart for any body of settlers
+who, having some measure of common interest or capacity for mutual help, are
+desirous of acquiring land in the same locality. The procedure to be followed is
+for a request to be made to the Minister by the members of the body, explaining
+the grounds on which they are co-operating and setting out the land they desire
+to acquire. Should the request be acceded to, the land will be opened for
+selection in the usual way, but for a period to be set out in the proclamation
+it will only be available for the members of the body of settlers for whom it
+has been set apart.</p>
+
+<p>When an application has been accepted by the Land Commissioner and approved by
+the Land Court, and the applicant has paid for any improvements there may be on
+the land, he becomes entitled to receive a license to occupy the land in the
+case of an Agricultural Selection or a Grazing Selection, or a lease in the case
+of a Scrub Selection, Unconditional Selection, or Prickly Pear Selection. Within
+six months after the issue of a license, the selector must commence to occupy
+the land, and must thereafter continue to occupy it in the manner prescribed.</p>
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page186" id="page186"></a>186</span>
+
+<h3>AGRICULTURAL SELECTIONS.</h3>
+
+<h4 class="app"><span class="sc">Agricultural Farms.</span></h4>
+
+<p>The largest area that may be acquired by any one person as an Agricultural
+Farm is 1,280 acres. If the same person is the selector of both an Agricultural
+Farm and an Agricultural Homestead, the joint areas must not exceed 1,280 acres.
+The purchasing price may range from 10s. an acre upwards, as may be declared by
+proclamation. The term is twenty years. The annual rent is one-fortieth of the
+purchasing price, and the payments are credited as part of the price.</p>
+
+<p>The land must be continuously occupied by the selector residing personally on it
+or by his manager or agent doing so. Within five years from the issue of the
+license to occupy, or such extended time as the Court may allow, the selector
+must enclose the land with a good and substantial fence, or make substantial and
+permanent improvements on it equal in value to such a fence. On the completion
+of the improvements the selector becomes entitled to a lease of the farm, and
+may thereafter mortgage it; or, with the permission of the Minister, may
+subdivide or transfer it; or, with the approval of the Court, may underlet it.</p>
+
+<p>The selector of an Agricultural Farm, who has obtained priority by undertaking
+to reside personally thereon during the first five years of the lease, must
+comply strictly with that undertaking, and is not allowed during such period to
+mortgage, transfer, or assign the holding.</p>
+
+<p>After five years of the term have elapsed, the prescribed conditions of
+occupation and improvement having been duly performed, a deed of grant may be
+obtained on payment of the balance of the purchasing price and deed fees.</p>
+
+<h4><span class="sc">Perpetual Lease Selections.</span></h4>
+
+<p>Land proclaimed to be open for Agricultural Farm Selection may also be opened
+for Perpetual Lease Selection, and the latter mode may be conceded priority of
+application over the former. The rent for the first period of ten years of the
+lease is 1&frac12; per cent. on the proclaimed purchasing price of the land for
+Agricultural Farm Selection. The rent for each succeeding period of ten years
+shall be determined by the Land Court. The same conditions of occupation and
+improvement as are prescribed for Agricultural Farms are attached to Perpetual
+Lease Selections, and, except as specially prescribed, the provisions relating
+to Agricultural Farms apply to them also. As the name implies, the selections
+are leases in perpetuity, and are not capable of being converted to freeholds.</p>
+
+<h4><span class="sc">Agricultural Homesteads.</span></h4>
+
+<p>Land open for selection as Agricultural Farms is not available for Agricultural
+Homesteads unless so proclaimed. The area allowed to be selected as an
+Agricultural Homestead varies with the value of the land, and is fixed by
+proclamation within the following limits, viz.:&mdash;160 acres in the case of
+land valued for Agricultural Farm Selection at not less than £1 an acre; 320
+acres in the case of land valued at less than £1 but not less than 15s. an acre;
+and 640 acres in the case of <span class="pagenum"><a name="page187" id="page187"></a>187</span>
+land valued at less than 15s. an acre. The price for an Agricultural Homestead
+is 2s. 6d. an acre, the annual rent 3d. an acre, and the term ten years.</p>
+
+<p>The land must be continuously occupied by the selector residing personally
+thereon.</p>
+
+<p>Within five years from the issue of the license to occupy, or such extended time
+as the Land Court may allow, the selector must enclose the land with a good and
+substantial fence, or make substantial and permanent improvements on it equal in
+value to such fence. On the completion of the improvements the selector becomes
+entitled to a lease, which, however, is not negotiable in any way.</p>
+
+<p>At any time after five years from the commencement of the term, on the selector
+proving that the conditions have been duly performed and that the sum expended
+in improvements on the land has been at the rate of 10s., 5s., or 2s. 6d. an
+acre respectively according to the value of the land, he may pay up the
+remaining rents so as to make his total payments equal to 2s. 6d. an acre, and
+obtain a deed of grant of the land in fee-simple. A deed fee must be paid.</p>
+
+<h4><span class="sc">Free Homesteads.</span></h4>
+
+<p>Land is not available for Free Homestead Selection unless specially so
+proclaimed, and the area of no selection must exceed 160 acres. The term is five
+years, and during that period the selector must occupy the land by personally
+residing on it, and must effect improvements to the total value of 10s. per
+acre. A Free Homestead cannot be sold or mortgaged until a deed of grant is
+obtained.</p>
+
+<h3>GRAZING SELECTIONS.</h3>
+
+<h4 class="app"><span class="sc">Grazing Farms.</span></h4>
+
+<p>The greatest area which may be applied for as a Grazing Farm under any
+circumstances is 60,000 acres, but, as in the case of other modes of selection,
+each proclamation opening land for grazing selection declares the maximum area
+which may be selected in the area to which it applies. In the event of lands
+open under different proclamations and of a total area exceeding 20,000 acres
+being applied for by the same person, a rental limitation of £200 per annum must
+be observed as well as the maximum areas declared by the several proclamations.
+Thus, of lands open at 2d. an acre, the greatest area obtainable would be 24,000
+acres; at 1&frac12;d. an acre, 32,000 acres, and so on. The term may be fourteen,
+twenty-one, or twenty-eight years, as the opening proclamation may declare. The
+annual rent for the first period of seven years may range from &frac12;d. an acre
+upwards, as may be proclaimed or tendered. The rent for each subsequent period
+of seven years will be determined by the Land Court.</p>
+
+<p>A Grazing Farm must be continuously occupied by the selector residing
+personally on it, or by his manager or agent doing so.</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page188" id="page188"></a>188</span>
+
+<p>Within three years from the issue of the license to occupy, or such extended
+time as the Land Court may allow, the selector must enclose the land with a good
+and substantial fence, and must keep it so fenced during the whole of the term.
+In the case of two or more contiguous farms, not exceeding in the aggregate
+20,000 acres, the Court may by Special License permit the selectors to fence
+only the outside boundaries of the whole area. If the proclamation declaring the
+land open for selection so prescribed, the enclosing fence must be of such
+character as to prevent the passage of rabbits. In the case of a group of
+contiguous Grazing Farms not exceeding eight in number, or 200 square miles in
+total area, and which are situated within a District constituted under "<i>The
+Rabbit Boards Act, 1896</i>," the Court may by Special License permit the enclosure
+of the whole area with a fence of such character as to prevent the passage of
+rabbits, instead of requiring each farm to be separately enclosed.</p>
+
+<p>The selectors of a group of two or more Grazing Farms, the area of none of which
+exceeds 4,000 acres, may associate together for mutual assistance, and on making
+proof of <i>bona fides</i> to the Commissioner may receive from him a Special License
+enabling not less than one-half of the whole number by their personal residence
+on some one or more of the farms to perform the condition of occupation in
+respect of all the farms.</p>
+
+<p>When a Grazing Farm is enclosed in the manner required, the selector becomes
+entitled to a lease of it, and may thereafter mortgage it; or, with the
+permission of the Minister, may subdivide or transfer it; or, with the approval
+of the Court, may underlet it.</p>
+
+<h4><span class="sc">Grazing Homesteads.</span></h4>
+
+<p>Land open for selection as Grazing Farms must also be open for selection as
+Grazing Homesteads, and at the same rental and for the same term of lease. As
+already stated, an application to select as a Grazing Homestead takes precedence
+of a simultaneous application to select the same land as a Grazing Farm. The
+requirements of the law as regards Grazing Homesteads are the same as in the
+case of Grazing Farms, except in the following respects:&mdash;</p>
+
+<blockquote><p>
+(1.) During the first five years of the term of a Grazing Homestead the
+condition of occupation must be performed by the continuous
+personal residence of the selector on the land.</p>
+
+<p>(2.) Before the expiration of five years from the commencement of the
+term, or the death of the original lessee, whichever first happens, a
+Grazing Homestead is not capable of being assigned or transferred.
+Unless with the special permission of the Minister, a Grazing Homestead
+may not be mortgaged.
+</p></blockquote>
+
+<h3>SCRUB SELECTIONS.</h3>
+
+<p>Lands entirely or extensively overgrown by scrub may be opened for selection as
+Scrub Selections up to 10,000 acres in area and with a term of thirty years.
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page189" id="page189"></a>189</span> These are classed according to the proportion covered by scrub, and for
+periods varying from five to twenty years, according to the classification, no
+rent is chargeable. During the first period the selector must clear the whole of
+the scrub in equal proportions each year, and must keep it cleared, and must
+enclose the selection with a good and substantial fence. The annual rent payable
+for the subsequent periods ranges from &frac12;d. to 1d. an acre. A negotiable lease
+is issued to the selector when his application has been approved by the Court.</p>
+
+<h3>UNCONDITIONAL SELECTIONS.</h3>
+
+<p>The greatest area allowed to be acquired by any one person as an Unconditional
+Selection in one district is 1,280 acres; the price per acre ranges from 13s.
+4d. upwards, and is payable in twenty annual instalments. As the term implies,
+no other condition than the payment of the purchase money is attached to this
+mode of selection. A negotiable lease for the term of twenty years is issued to
+the selector when his application to select has been approved by the Court. A
+deed of grant may be obtained at any time on payment of the balance of the
+purchasing price and the deed fee.</p>
+
+<h3>PRICKLY PEAR SELECTIONS.</h3>
+
+<h4 class="app"><span class="sc">Prickly Pear Infested Selections.</span></h4>
+
+<p>Prickly Pear Infested Selections comprise lands heavily infested with prickly
+pear. The area must not exceed 5,000 acres.</p>
+
+<p>The term is fifteen years, with a peppercorn rental for the first ten years and
+an annual rent of one-fifth of the purchasing price for the remaining five
+years. During the first ten years of the term the land must be absolutely
+cleared of prickly pear&mdash;one-tenth of the pear being eradicated during each
+year&mdash;and must be kept clear for the remainder of the term. The freehold
+may be obtained prior to the expiry of the term on proof being made that the
+land has been maintained free from prickly pear for three years consequent on
+the eradication having been completed in advance of the prescribed period.</p>
+
+<h4><span class="sc">Prickly Pear Frontage Selections.</span></h4>
+
+<p>Prickly Pear Frontage Selections are confined to proclaimed prickly pear
+frontage areas, comprising lands free from or only lightly infested with prickly
+pear, but which adjoin and do not extend for more than seven miles from lands
+heavily infested. The greatest area allowed is 5,000 acres.</p>
+
+<p>The term is fifteen years, with a peppercorn rental for the first five years and
+an annual rent of one-tenth of the purchasing price during the remaining ten
+years. <span class="pagenum"><a name="page190" id="page190"></a>190</span>
+During the first five years of the term the land must be absolutely cleared of
+prickly pear, one-fifth of the pear being eradicated during each year, and must
+be kept clear during the balance of the term. The freehold may be obtained prior
+to the expiry of the term on proof being made that the land has been maintained
+free from prickly pear for three years consequent on the eradication having been
+completed in advance of the prescribed period.</p>
+
+<h4><span class="sc">Prickly Pear (Bonus) Selections.</span></h4>
+
+<p>In the case of Prickly Pear (Bonus) Selections, the freehold of the land, and a
+bonus in addition, are granted in return for the complete eradication of the
+pear. The maximum amount per acre payable as bonus is stated in the opening
+proclamation, but each applicant must lodge a tender specifying a bonus per acre
+not in excess of that mentioned in the proclamation. In the case of simultaneous
+applications for the same land, priority attaches to the lowest tender. The size
+of the portions opened must not exceed 2,560 acres. The term of lease is ten
+years, at a peppercorn rental throughout. The land must be absolutely cleared of
+prickly pear during the first seven years&mdash;one-seventh each year&mdash;and
+the clearing must be maintained until the expiry of the lease. One-seventh of
+the bonus payable may be claimed at the end of each of the first seven years of
+the term, on proof to the satisfaction of the Commissioner that the condition of
+eradication has been complied with. If the eradication is completed at an
+earlier date than is required by the conditions of the lease, the balance of the
+bonus will then become payable. The freehold may be obtained prior to the expiry
+of the term on proof being made that the land has been maintained free from
+prickly pear for three years consequent on the eradication having been completed
+in advance of the prescribed period.</p>
+
+<h3>OTHER MODES OF ACQUISITION.</h3>
+
+<p>Crown lands may be acquired in fee-simple by auction purchase in areas up to
+5,120 acres. There is no limitation to the area of freehold land which may be
+held by any one person. The minimum purchasing price for agricultural land
+bought at auction is £1 an acre, and for other land 10s. an acre. Terms up to
+ten years may be allowed, with interest at 5 per cent. per annum on instalments
+paid after six months from the time of sale, or the purchaser may elect to hold
+the land as a lease in perpetuity at a rental, for the first ten years, equal to
+3 per cent. of the purchasing price, and for such rent for each succeeding
+period of ten years as the Land Court may determine.</p>
+
+<p>Opportunity is also afforded for the occupation of Crown lands for pastoral
+purposes from year to year under an occupation license, or for a fixed term not
+exceeding forty-two years under pastoral lease. There is no limitation to the
+area which may be held by one person under either of these tenures.</p>
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page191" id="page191"></a>191</span>
+
+<h2>TERMS AND CONDITIONS OF SELECTION ON REPURCHASED ESTATES.</h2>
+
+<h3>"<span class="sc">The Closer Settlement Act of 1906.</span>"</h3>
+
+<h3>AGRICULTURAL FARMS.</h3>
+
+<ul class="none"><li>
+1. An application to select must be made in the prescribed form, in triplicate,
+and be lodged with the Land Agent for the district in which the land is
+situated. It must be signed by the applicant, but may be lodged in the District
+Land Office by his duly constituted attorney, and must be accompanied by a
+deposit of one-tenth of the purchasing price of the land and one-fifth of the
+prescribed survey fee.</li>
+
+<li>2. In the case of simultaneous applications for the same land, priority is
+secured by an applicant, other than a married woman or a single girl under
+twenty-one years of age, who, when making application, undertakes to reside
+personally on the land during the first five years of the term of lease. In
+other cases of simultaneous applications for the same land priority is
+determined by lot.</li>
+
+<li>3. Land cannot be acquired in the interest of another person, and an applicant
+is required to declare that he requires the land for his own exclusive benefit,
+and not as the agent, servant, or trustee of any other person. An alien may, on
+passing a reading and writing test, acquire a selection; but unless he becomes a
+naturalised subject of the King within three years thereafter, all his right,
+title, and interest in the land will become forfeited.</li>
+
+<li>4. The term of the lease of a selection is twenty-five years, dating from the
+1st January or 1st July nearest to the date of the Commissioner's license to
+occupy the land.</li>
+
+<li>5. No rent will be payable during the second, third, or fourth years of the
+term. The rent payable during the remainder of the term will be at the rate of
+£8 2s. 7d. for every £100 of the purchasing price of the land, and will be
+allocated to principal and interest according to the table appended hereto.</li>
+
+<li>6. Within two years of the issue of a license to occupy, the selector must
+enclose the land with a good and substantial fence, or make substantial and
+permanent improvements on it of a value equal to the cost of such a fence, and
+must within such period make application to the Commissioner for a certificate
+that he has performed this condition.</li>
+
+<li>7. When the prescribed improvements are made, a lease will be issued to the
+selector, and the selection may then be mortgaged, or, with the permission of
+the Minister, may be subdivided or transferred, or, with the approval of the
+Land Court, may be sublet, except in the case of a selection on which the
+selector has undertaken to reside personally during the first five years of the
+term, in which case neither the lease nor the selector's right, title, or
+interest thereunder can be mortgaged, except to the trustees of the Agricultural
+Bank, assigned, or transferred during such period.</li>
+
+<li>8. A selection must be occupied by the residence thereon of the selector in
+person, or by his duly appointed agent, as the case may require or permit,
+during the whole term or until the leasehold tenure is determined by freehold.
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page192" id="page192"></a>192</span></li>
+
+<li>9. At any time after five years' occupation the leasehold tenure may be
+converted into freehold by payment of the unpaid balance of the purchasing
+price. The amount payable in any year, after payment of the rent for that year,
+shall be at the rate specified in the last column of the appended table for
+every £100 of the purchasing price.</li></ul>
+
+<blockquote style="margin-top: 2em;"><p class="ind"><span class="outdent1">
+<span class="sc"><b>Table of the Annual Payments</b></span></span> <span class="sc"><b>to be made as Instalments of Purchase Money
+(showing Principal and Interest separately), and the Payment, exclusive of Rent,
+to be made in any Year after the Fifth to Acquire the Freehold of any Selection
+under "The Closer Settlement Act of 1906."</b></span></p></blockquote>
+
+<table align="center" width="auto" summary="Annual Payments to Acquire Freehold on Selection" style="border-collapse: collapse;" border="0">
+<tr>
+ <th class="info1b" rowspan="2" width="20%">&nbsp;</th>
+ <th class="info1b" colspan="3" width="60%"><span class="sc">Annual Payment.</span></th>
+ <th class="info1b" rowspan="2" width="20%">Payment to be made<br /> in any Year<br /> after the Fifth<br /> to acquire Freehold.</th>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <th class="info1b">Principle.</th>
+ <th class="info1b">Interest.</th>
+ <th class="info1b">Total.</th>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="info" valign="top" style="border-bottom: 0; line-height: 130%;"><br />1st &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;year ... ... ... <br />2nd &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;"<br />3rd &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;"<br />4th
+ &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;"<br />5th &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;"<br />6th &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;"<br />7th &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;"<br />8th &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;"
+ <br />9th &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;"<br />10th &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;"<br />
+ 11th &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;"<br />12th &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;"<br />13th &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;"<br />14th &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; "<br />15th &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;"<br />
+ 16th &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;"<br />17th &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;"<br />18th &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;"<br />19th &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;"<br />20th &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;"<br />
+ 21st &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;"<br />22nd &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;"<br />23rd &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;"<br />24th &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;"<br />25th &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;"<br />
+ </td>
+ <td class="infonbc" valign="top">
+<table summary="principle" border="0" style="border-collapse: collapse;">
+<tr><td class="dat1">£<br /></td><td class="dat1">s.<br /></td><td class="dat1">d.<br /></td></tr>
+<tr><td class="dat1">10</td><td class="dat1">0</td><td class="dat1">0</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="dat1">&nbsp;</td><td class="dat1">...</td><td class="dat1">&nbsp;</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="dat1">&nbsp;</td><td class="dat1">...</td><td class="dat1">&nbsp;</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="dat1">&nbsp;</td><td class="dat1">...</td><td class="dat1">&nbsp;</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="dat1">&nbsp;</td><td class="dat1">...</td><td class="dat1">&nbsp;</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="dat1">&nbsp;</td><td class="dat1">...</td><td class="dat1">&nbsp;</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="dat1">&nbsp;</td><td class="dat1">...</td><td class="dat1">&nbsp;</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="dat1">&nbsp;</td><td class="dat1">...</td><td class="dat1">&nbsp;</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="dat1">1</td><td class="dat1">18</td><td class="dat1">7</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="dat1">3</td><td class="dat1">14</td><td class="dat1">6</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="dat1">3</td><td class="dat1">18</td><td class="dat1">2</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="dat1">4</td><td class="dat1">2</td><td class="dat1">1</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="dat1">4</td><td class="dat1">6</td><td class="dat1">3</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="dat1">4</td><td class="dat1">10</td><td class="dat1">6</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="dat1">4</td><td class="dat1">15</td><td class="dat1">1</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="dat1">4</td><td class="dat1">19</td><td class="dat1">10</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="dat1">5</td><td class="dat1">4</td><td class="dat1">10</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="dat1">5</td><td class="dat1">10</td><td class="dat1">0</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="dat1">5</td><td class="dat1">15</td><td class="dat1">6</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="dat1">6</td><td class="dat1">1</td><td class="dat1">4</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="dat1">6</td><td class="dat1">7</td><td class="dat1">4</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="dat1">6</td><td class="dat1">13</td><td class="dat1">7</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="dat1">7</td><td class="dat1">0</td><td class="dat1">4</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="dat1">7</td><td class="dat1">7</td><td class="dat1">4</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="dat1">7</td><td class="dat1">14</td><td class="dat1">10</td></tr>
+</table>
+</td><td class="infonbc" valign="top">
+<table summary="interest" border="0" style="border-collapse: collapse;">
+<tr><td class="dat1">£<br /></td><td class="dat1">s.<br /></td><td class="dat1">d.<br /></td></tr>
+<tr><td class="dat1">&nbsp;</td><td class="dat1">...</td> <td class="dat1">&nbsp;</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="dat1">&nbsp;</td><td class="dat1">...</td><td class="dat1">&nbsp;</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="dat1">&nbsp;</td><td class="dat1">...</td><td class="dat1">&nbsp;</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="dat1">&nbsp;</td><td class="dat1">...</td><td class="dat1">&nbsp;</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="dat1">8</td><td class="dat1">2</td><td class="dat1">7</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="dat1">8</td><td class="dat1">2</td><td class="dat1">7</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="dat1">8</td><td class="dat1">2</td><td class="dat1">7</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="dat1">8</td><td class="dat1">2</td><td class="dat1">7</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="dat1">6</td><td class="dat1">4</td><td class="dat1">0</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="dat1">4</td><td class="dat1">8</td><td class="dat1">2</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="dat1">4</td><td class="dat1">4</td><td class="dat1">5</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="dat1">4</td><td class="dat1">0</td><td class="dat1">6</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="dat1">3</td><td class="dat1">16</td><td class="dat1">4</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="dat1">3</td><td class="dat1">12</td><td class="dat1">1</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="dat1">3</td><td class="dat1">7</td><td class="dat1">6</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="dat1">3</td><td class="dat1">2</td><td class="dat1">9</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="dat1">2</td><td class="dat1">17</td><td class="dat1">9</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="dat1">2</td><td class="dat1">12</td><td class="dat1">7</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="dat1">2</td><td class="dat1">7</td><td class="dat1">1</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="dat1">2</td><td class="dat1">1</td><td class="dat1">3</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="dat1">1</td><td class="dat1">15</td><td class="dat1">3</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="dat1">1</td><td class="dat1">9</td><td class="dat1">0</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="dat1">1</td><td class="dat1">2</td><td class="dat1">3</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="dat1">0</td><td class="dat1">15</td><td class="dat1">3</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="dat1">0</td><td class="dat1">7</td><td class="dat1">9</td></tr>
+</table>
+</td><td class="infonbc" valign="top">
+<table summary="total" border="0" style="border-collapse: collapse;">
+<tr><td class="dat1">£<br /></td><td class="dat1">s.<br /></td><td class="dat1">d.<br /></td></tr>
+<tr><td class="dat1">10</td><td class="dat1">0</td> <td class="dat1">0</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="dat1">&nbsp;</td><td class="dat1">...</td><td class="dat1">&nbsp;</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="dat1">&nbsp;</td><td class="dat1">...</td><td class="dat1">&nbsp;</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="dat1">&nbsp;</td><td class="dat1">...</td><td class="dat1">&nbsp;</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="dat1">8</td><td class="dat1">2</td><td class="dat1">7</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="dat1">8</td><td class="dat1">2</td><td class="dat1">7</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="dat1">8</td><td class="dat1">2</td><td class="dat1">7</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="dat1">8</td><td class="dat1">2</td><td class="dat1">7</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="dat1">8</td><td class="dat1">2</td><td class="dat1">7</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="dat1">8</td><td class="dat1">2</td><td class="dat1">7</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="dat1">8</td><td class="dat1">2</td><td class="dat1">7</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="dat1">8</td><td class="dat1">2</td><td class="dat1">7</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="dat1">8</td><td class="dat1">2</td><td class="dat1">7</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="dat1">8</td><td class="dat1">2</td><td class="dat1">7</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="dat1">8</td><td class="dat1">2</td><td class="dat1">7</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="dat1">8</td><td class="dat1">2</td><td class="dat1">7</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="dat1">8</td><td class="dat1">2</td><td class="dat1">7</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="dat1">8</td><td class="dat1">2</td><td class="dat1">7</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="dat1">8</td><td class="dat1">2</td><td class="dat1">7</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="dat1">8</td><td class="dat1">2</td><td class="dat1">7</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="dat1">8</td><td class="dat1">2</td><td class="dat1">7</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="dat1">8</td><td class="dat1">2</td><td class="dat1">7</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="dat1">8</td><td class="dat1">2</td><td class="dat1">7</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="dat1">8</td><td class="dat1">2</td><td class="dat1">7</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="dat1">8</td><td class="dat1">2</td><td class="dat1">7</td></tr>
+</table> </td>
+ <td class="infon" valign="top">
+<table summary="total" border="0" style="border-collapse: collapse;">
+<tr><td class="dat1">£<br /></td><td class="dat1">s.<br /></td><td class="dat1">d.<br /></td></tr>
+<tr><td class="dat1">&nbsp;</td><td class="dat1">...</td><td class="dat1">&nbsp;</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="dat1">&nbsp;</td><td class="dat1">...</td><td class="dat1">&nbsp;</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="dat1">&nbsp;</td><td class="dat1">...</td><td class="dat1">&nbsp;</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="dat1">&nbsp;</td><td class="dat1">...</td><td class="dat1">&nbsp;</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="dat1">&nbsp;</td><td class="dat1">...</td><td class="dat1">&nbsp;</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="dat1">98</td><td class="dat1">4</td><td class="dat1">2</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="dat1">94</td><td class="dat1">19</td><td class="dat1">10</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="dat1">91</td><td class="dat1">12</td><td class="dat1">3</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="dat1">88</td><td class="dat1">1</td><td class="dat1">6</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="dat1">84</td><td class="dat1">7</td><td class="dat1">0</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="dat1">80</td><td class="dat1">8</td><td class="dat1">10</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="dat1">76</td><td class="dat1">6</td><td class="dat1">9</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="dat1">72</td><td class="dat1">0</td><td class="dat1">6</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="dat1">67</td><td class="dat1">10</td><td class="dat1">0</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="dat1">62</td><td class="dat1">14</td><td class="dat1">11</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="dat1">57</td><td class="dat1">15</td><td class="dat1">1</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="dat1">52</td><td class="dat1">10</td><td class="dat1">3</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="dat1">47</td><td class="dat1">0</td><td class="dat1">3</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="dat1">41</td><td class="dat1">4</td><td class="dat1">9</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="dat1">35</td><td class="dat1">3</td><td class="dat1">5</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="dat1">28</td><td class="dat1">16</td><td class="dat1">1</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="dat1">22</td><td class="dat1">2</td><td class="dat1">6</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="dat1">15</td><td class="dat1">2</td><td class="dat1">2</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="dat1">7</td><td class="dat1">14</td><td class="dat1">10</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="dat1"></td><td class="dat1"></td><td class="dat1"></td></tr>
+</table>
+ </td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="info" style="border-top: 0;">&nbsp;</td>
+<td class="info">
+<table summary="totals" border="0" style="border-collapse: collapse;">
+<tr><td class="dat1">£100</td><td class="dat1">0</td><td class="dat1">0</td>
+</tr>
+</table>
+</td>
+<td class="info">
+<table summary="totals" border="0" style="border-collapse: collapse;">
+<tr><td class="dat1">£80</td><td class="dat1">14</td><td class="dat1">3</td>
+</tr>
+</table>
+</td>
+<td class="info">
+<table summary="totals" border="0" style="border-collapse: collapse;">
+<tr><td class="dat1">£180</td><td class="dat1">14</td><td class="dat1">3</td>
+</tr>
+</table>
+</td>
+<td class="info" style="border-top: 0;">&nbsp;</td>
+</tr>
+</table>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 600px; margin-top: 2em;"><a href="images/page192-1200.jpg"><img src="images/page192-600.jpg" width="600" height="364" alt="VIEW ON BARRON RIVER, CAIRNS RAILWAY" /></a>
+<p class="center">VIEW ON BARRON RIVER, CAIRNS RAILWAY</p></div>
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page193" id="page193"></a>193</span>
+
+<h2>AN ACT TO FACILITATE THE ACQUIREMENT OF SELECTIONS BY CERTAIN BODIES OF SETTLERS.</h2>
+
+<h3>"<span class="sc">The Special Selections Act of 1901.</span>"</h3>
+
+<h4><span class="sc">Preamble.</span></h4>
+
+<p>Whereas it is desirable to promote closer settlement upon the agricultural lands
+of Queensland by affording to bodies of settlers special facilities for the
+acquirement of Agricultural Selections to be held in conjunction with portions
+in adjacent Agricultural Townships: Be it therefore enacted by the King's Most
+Excellent Majesty, by and with the advice and consent of the Legislative Council
+and Legislative Assembly of Queensland in Parliament assembled, and by the
+authority of the same, as follows:&mdash;</p>
+
+<h4><span class="sc">Short Title and Construction of Act.</span></h4>
+
+<ul class="none">
+<li>1. This Act may be cited as "<i>The Special Selections Act of 1901</i>," and shall be
+read and construed with and as an amendment of "<i>The Land Act, 1897</i>,"
+hereinafter called the Principal Act.
+
+<h4><span class="sc">Proclamation of Lands to which this Act Applies.</span></h4>
+
+2. (1.) The Governor in Council may from time to time, by proclamation, declare
+any unoccupied country lands to be open for selection as Agricultural
+Homesteads, or as Agricultural Farms, or as Prickly Pear Selections, or as
+Perpetual Lease Selections, or as Grazing Selections, or as Agricultural Farms
+to be held in conjunction with Grazing Farms under the provisions of this Act by
+members of the body of settlers in the proclamation specified.
+
+Notwithstanding the provisions of section eighty-three of the Principal Act,
+such proclamation declaring the lands mentioned therein open for selection as
+Agricultural Homesteads need not also declare such lands to be also open for
+selection as Agricultural Farms.
+
+No Agricultural Homestead to be selected under the provisions of this Act shall
+exceed three hundred and twenty acres.
+
+<p>No Prickly Pear Selection to be selected under the provisions of this Act shall
+exceed two thousand five hundred and sixty acres.</p>
+
+No Grazing Farm to be held in conjunction with an Agricultural Farm selected
+under the provisions of this Act shall exceed two thousand acres, and the total
+aggregate area of the Agricultural Farm and the Grazing Farm held in conjunction
+therewith shall not exceed three thousand two hundred and eighty acres.
+
+No other Grazing Selection to be selected under the provisions of this Act shall
+exceed three thousand acres.
+
+Such lands shall remain open for selection under the provisions of this Act for
+such time as may be declared by Proclamation.
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page194" id="page194"></a>194</span>
+
+During such time such lands shall be open to be selected only by persons who
+shall, at the time and in the manner prescribed, furnish to the Commissioner for
+the District in which the lands are situated proof that they are members of the
+body of settlers for whom such lands have been set apart.
+
+<h4><span class="sc">Maximum Area.</span></h4>
+
+(2.) No person shall at the same time apply for or hold two or more Homesteads
+under the provisions of this Act the aggregate area of which is greater than
+three hundred and twenty acres, or two or more Prickly Pear Selections under the
+provisions of this Act the aggregate area of which is greater than two thousand
+five hundred acres, or two or more Grazing Selections under the provisions of
+this Act the aggregate area of which is greater than three thousand acres.
+
+<h4><span class="sc">Agricultural Townships.</span></h4>
+
+(3.) The Governor in Council may by proclamation set apart any Crown lands in
+the said District as Agricultural Townships, and may cause the whole or any part
+of such lands to be subdivided into portions for purposes of residence. Such
+lands shall be in the vicinity of the lands open for selection under the
+foregoing provisions.
+
+<p>The area of any portion shall not exceed ten acres.</p>
+
+Any selector of a selection under the provisions of this Act shall also be
+entitled to one of the portions in an Agricultural Township, which portion
+shall, for the purposes of this Act, be deemed to be a part of the Selection, so
+that the condition of occupation may be performed by the residence of the
+selector either upon the Selection or upon the portion in the Township.
+
+The area of the portion in the Township shall not, however, be taken into
+consideration in estimating the maximum area which a selector may apply for or
+hold.
+
+<h4><span class="sc">Improvements.</span></h4>
+
+(4.) In order that the selector may become the purchaser of an Agricultural
+Selection under this Act, the certificate of the Commissioner given under
+section one hundred and thirty-four or one hundred and thirty-eight, as the case
+may be, of the Principal Act must show that a sum at the rate of ten shillings
+per acre has been expended in substantial and permanent improvements on the
+land.
+
+The value of any improvements made upon the portion in the Township shall be
+reckoned as part of the improvements required to be made upon the Selection.
+
+The provisions of this subsection do not apply to Prickly Pear Selections or to
+Perpetual Lease Selections or Grazing Selections.
+
+<h4><span class="sc">Condition of Occupation.</span></h4>
+
+(5.) During the first five years of the term of the lease of an Agricultural
+Farm (including an Agricultural Farm held in conjunction with a Grazing Farm)
+selected under this Act, the condition of occupation shall be performed by the
+continuous and <span class="pagenum"><a name="page195" id="page195"></a>195</span> <i>bona fide</i> personal residence of the lessee on the
+Selection; and subsection <span class="sc">5A</span> of section one hundred and thirty-two of the
+Principal Act shall accordingly be applicable.<a id="footnotetagea" name="footnotetagea"></a><a href="#footnoteea"><sup>a</sup></a>
+
+(6.) During the first five years of the term of the lease of a Prickly Pear
+Selection selected under this Act, the lessee shall occupy the land; such
+condition of occupation shall be performed by the continuous and <i>bona fide</i>
+personal residence of the lessee on the Selection; and during such period
+subsection <span class="sc">5A</span> of section one hundred and thirty-two of the Principal Act, except
+the last paragraph thereof, shall be applicable to every such Prickly Pear
+Selection.
+
+(7.) Notwithstanding anything in the Principal Act, or any Act amending the
+same, when the proclamation opening the land for selection so declares, lots
+which are not contiguous may be applied for and held as one selection under this
+Act.
+
+<h4><span class="sc">Regulations.</span></h4>
+
+3. The Governor in Council may make Regulations prescribing the manner in
+which applicants for selections under the provisions of this Act shall givemproof of
+their qualification to become selectors, and prescribing such other matters and things
+as may be necessary to give effect to the provisions of this Act.</li></ul>
+
+<p class="footnote"><a id="footnoteea" name="footnoteea"></a><a class="footnote" href="#footnotetagea">Footnote a:</a>
+Inter alia the subsection referred to provides that the lessee shall not, during the first five
+years of the term of the lease, mortgage, assign, or transfer the lease.</p>
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page196" id="page196"></a>196</span>
+
+<h3 class="app">APPENDIX F.</h3>
+
+<h2 class="app">IMMIGRATION TO QUEENSLAND.</h2>
+
+<h4>[OFFICIAL COMPILATION.]</h4>
+
+<h3>ASSISTED IMMIGRANTS.</h3>
+
+<p>1. Immigrants approved by the Agent-General, who deposit with him the sum
+of £50, shall be provided with passages by a steamer from the United Kingdom to
+any port in Queensland for £5, the £50 deposit to be returned to them on their
+arrival in Queensland.</p>
+
+<h3>NOMINATED IMMIGRANTS.</h3>
+
+<p>2. Persons resident in Queensland wishing to obtain passages for their friends
+or relatives in the United Kingdom, or on the Continent of Europe, may do so
+under the provisions of the 9th section of "<i>The Immigration Act of 1882</i>," at
+the following rates:&mdash;</p>
+
+<table summary="rates for sponsored immigrants" align="center" width="auto" border="0">
+<tr>
+ <td>&nbsp;</td>
+ <td>£</td>
+ <td style="padding-right: 0;"><i>s.</i></td>
+ <td style="padding-right: 0;"><i>d.</i></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td>Males between 18 and 40 years</td>
+ <td>4</td>
+ <td>0</td>
+ <td>0</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td>Females between 18 and 40 years</td>
+ <td>2</td>
+ <td>0</td>
+ <td>0</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td>Males and Females over 40 and under 55 years</td>
+ <td>8</td>
+ <td>0</td>
+ <td>0</td>
+</tr>
+</table>
+
+<p>A full description of the nominee must appear on the application form supplied
+by the Immigration Department of Queensland. The application must be signed
+by the nominor, who must be of full age.</p>
+
+<p>The Immigration Agent or Clerk of Petty Sessions must satisfy himself by
+personal inquiry that the person for whose passage application is made is a
+relative or personal friend of the applicant.</p>
+
+<p>Passage warrants shall be made out in duplicate. One copy, to be marked
+"provisional," will be issued to the applicant and the other copy, to be marked
+"final," will be sent to the Agent-General, who will cause inquiries to be made
+through his agents as to the eligibility of the persons named therein to be
+nominated under the provisions of this Order.</p>
+
+<p>If the Agent-General is satisfied that all the conditions of this Order have
+been complied with he will, upon surrender of the provisional warrant, issue the
+final warrant to the person nominated, which will entitle him to a passage
+contract ticket.</p>
+
+<p>A memorandum shall be printed on the provisional warrant stating that it must be
+surrendered and exchanged for a final warrant at the office of the Agent-General
+before a passage can be obtained.</p>
+
+<p>The Agent-General will refuse to issue a final warrant to any person named in a
+provisional warrant if he finds that such person is not eligible to be nominated
+under the provisions of this Order, or that the description in the application
+is incorrect in any material particular, or that the nominee is otherwise
+undesirable.</p>
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page197" id="page197"></a>197</span>
+
+<h3>CONTRACT IMMIGRANTS.</h3>
+
+<p>3. Free passages may be granted from the United Kingdom to any part of
+Queensland to agricultural labourers introduced under contract if the employer
+pays a fee of £5 for each labourer introduced, provides him with suitable
+accommodation, and guarantees him a year's employment at wages approved by the
+Chief Secretary. The choosing of such labourers to be left to the Agent-General,
+unless they are known to the applicant, in which case the Agent-General's duty
+is restricted to passing or rejecting them.</p>
+
+<h3>FREE IMMIGRANTS.</h3>
+
+<p>4. The Agent-General may grant free passages to the wives and children (under
+the age of 18 years) of assisted, nominated, and contract immigrants and to
+female domestic servants who are desirous of emigrating to Queensland.</p>
+
+<p>5. The Chief Secretary may direct that a passage warrant be not issued in
+respect of any person nominated or proposed to be indented.</p>
+
+<p>6. The Order in Council of the fourth day of June, 1891, published in the
+<i>Government Gazette</i> of the 5th June, 1891, shall be and is hereby rescinded.</p>
+
+<p>And the Honourable the Chief Secretary is to give the necessary directions
+herein accordingly.</p>
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page198" id="page198"></a>198</span>
+
+<h3 class="app">APPENDIX G.</h3>
+
+<h2 class="app">SOME STATISTICS AND THEIR STORY.</h2>
+
+<p>The figures contained in this Appendix, save those for 1908, and in relation to
+certain financial matters for 1908-9, are drawn from the Statistics for 1908
+laid before Parliament this year, but all are official.</p>
+
+<h3>GROWTH OF POPULATION.</h3>
+
+<p>The population of Queensland, estimated at 28,056 on 31st December, 1860, a
+little more than a year after separation from New South Wales, more than doubled
+during the succeeding three years. Thence it again more than doubled in the next
+eight years, the census of April, 1871, providing a basis for the estimate of
+125,146 at the end of that year. Thence to 1882, two years before the close of
+the quarter-century, the figures had again nearly doubled, the population on
+31st December, 1884, reaching 309,913.</p>
+
+<p>Of the number of arrivals in excess of departures there is no record for 1860 or
+1861, but of the total increase, 51,509, for the four years ended 1865 the
+recorded arrivals in excess of departures aggregated 46,422, leaving only 5,087
+for excess of births over deaths for the period. In 1866, in spite of the crisis
+resulting from the Agra and Masterman's Bank failure, there was still an excess
+of 6,632; but by the next following year the number of such excess had fallen to
+917, while the net increase of population in that year was only 3,648.</p>
+
+<p>The census of 1886, the second year of the new quarter-century, showed a total
+population of 342,614, and the next census five years later 410,330. This marked
+the end of the "boom" period, and the amount spent on immigration, as compared
+with 1883 and 1884, was cut down in the next year by nearly three-fourths, or
+from the maximum of £361,632 in 1883-4 to £91,143 in 1889-90. In 1891 there was
+severe commercial depression, and by that time arrivals had annually decreased,
+and departures came very near in numbers to the arrivals. During the next ten
+years the increase in population, as shown by the census, was 95,614, bringing
+the total up to 505,944.</p>
+
+<p>Here it may be explained that the intercensus estimates between 1891 and 1901
+proved fallacious, for the total number in the latter year was 6,660 less than
+the estimate had been for two years previously, although the arrivals for the
+intervening period recorded an excess over departures of 6,389. So that adding
+to that number the 17,350 increase by excess of births over deaths the
+population in 1901 would have been shown as 536,343 had the estimates between
+the censuses been continued on similar lines. The error would therefore have
+been 30,399 had not the census figures in 1901 enabled an adjustment to be made.
+Similar over-estimating had occurred previously, it is understood, through many
+oversea departures not being recorded by those who supplied information to the
+department. Of late years allowances have been made for unrecorded arrivals and
+departures in preparing the intercensus <span class="pagenum"><a name="page199" id="page199"></a>199</span>
+returns, and it may be hoped that in future the discrepancies will be less
+disconcerting than in the past.</p>
+
+<p>The population at the end of the first quarter-century having been 309,913, and
+on 31st December last year (1908) 558,237, the increase for the period was
+248,324. But the second quarter-century does not actually close until 31st
+December next, when the total population should be approximately 570,000 souls.
+During the half-century, therefore, the number of people in Queensland as
+compared with the population in 1859 may be taken to have multiplied by
+twenty-two. In other words, at the time of separation, a year earlier than the
+official record begins, the total population was scarcely greater than it now is
+in several of our provincial cities.</p>
+
+<h3>PUBLIC FINANCE.</h3>
+
+<p>Public revenue, which began in 1860 with a total of £178,589, reached £2,720,656
+in 1884-5, the figures of the natal year being multiplied nearly fifteen times
+at the close of the quarter-century. The second quarter-century showed continued
+increase until 1888-9, but the figures of that year were not again reached until
+1895-6. They progressed until in 1899-1900, the last year before federation,
+they reached over 4½ millions sterling, an amount not again realised till
+1908-9. In 1901 the State figures were considerably disturbed by the
+proclamation of the Commonwealth on 1st January. In 1901-2 there was a large
+apparent decline of £1,053,145, the Commonwealth having taken over the whole of
+the postal and telegraph revenue and about one-fourth of the Customs. There was
+also a considerable loss by the discontinuance of State border duties, as well
+as by the Commonwealth tariff, which took effect in the second quarter of
+1901-2, many revenue duties being either sacrificed or lowered in favour of
+protectionist imposts which only yielded revenue until they excluded imports. By
+1908-9, despite the loss of post-telegraph and Customs revenue, the total
+receipts at the State Treasury formed the half-century record of £4,766,244.</p>
+
+<p>The expenditure on loan account began with the foundation of the colony. At the
+end of the first quarter-century the public debt amounted to £16,570,850,
+exclusive of Government Savings Bank and Treasury bills obligations. In the
+first decade of the second quarter it had almost doubled, standing at the end of
+1894 at £30,639,534. By the end of 1900 there had been a further increase of
+nearly 5 millions, and on 30th June, 1909, it stood at £41,568,827, or at the
+rate of £74 per head of the estimated population. But the railway net earnings
+alone of the last two financial years (1907-8 and 1908-9) have provided a mean
+sum of £884,616 per annum towards the interest charge.</p>
+
+<h3>LAND STATISTICS.</h3>
+
+<p>In 1860 there were 108,870 acres of land alienated in Queensland. In 1872 the
+area exceeded 1 million acres, the first quarter-century closing in 1884 with
+over 7 million acres. The 10-million-acre limit was passed in 1890, and the
+15-million-acre limit in 1908, when the total area alienated was 15,108,439
+acres.</p>
+
+<p>The cash received at the Treasury from land sales up to the close of 1884 was
+over 4¾ millions, and at the close of 1908 exceeded 8½ millions sterling. In
+process of <span class="pagenum"><a name="page200" id="page200"></a>200</span>
+alienation there were then over 6 million acres. For the last ten years the
+total area leased or otherwise in occupation has been recorded. In 1899 the area
+thus occupied was 296&frac12; million acres, and in 1906 only 247 million acres.
+Since then there has been some recovery in this respect, the total occupied area
+of Crown lands being now 273,180,864 acres. The unoccupied area in 1899 was over
+131&frac14; million acres, and in 1902 only 121&frac12; million acres. Since then there
+has been both an increase and a decrease, the area unoccupied in 1908 being
+almost 135 million acres, equal to nearly one-third of the total area of the
+State. This unoccupied land consists largely of rangy and waterless country, but
+a not inconsiderable area would be occupiable were water and transport
+facilities provided, and much of it is in what the geologists have delimited as
+the artesian area.</p>
+
+<h3>LIVE STOCK.</h3>
+
+<p>In 1860 the number of live stock in Queensland totalled&mdash;Horses, 23,504;
+cattle, 432,890; sheep, 3,449,350; pigs, 7,147. There was an almost continual
+yearly increase in horses until 1902, when drought reduced the number by 62,997,
+or at the rate of about 14 per cent. Not until 1907 was this loss recovered,
+when the total number of horses stood at 488,486, the number being still further
+increased in 1908 to 519,969. There was an almost uninterrupted increase of
+cattle until 1882, when the total exceeded 4&frac14; millions. At the close of the
+quarter-century the number was 4,266,172. In 1885 and 1886, owing to a drought,
+there was again a small decline in cattle numbers, but from that time there was
+a continued increase until 1894, when the total of 7 millions was recorded. But
+droughts and the tick pest had cut them down to less than 2&frac12; millions in
+1903. In 1908 the number had recovered to 4,321,600. The enlarged Australian
+consumption has been a factor in the shrinkage of numbers, but the large
+increase in prices fully compensated the owners for the diminished numbers of
+their herds. The increased price of wool during recent years renders the same
+remark applicable to the sheep-owners of the State; and it may be said generally
+that the pastoral industry was never in a more flourishing condition.</p>
+
+<p>Sheep, which totalled fewer than 3&frac12; millions in 1860, reached 7&frac14; millions
+in 1866, and 9 millions two years later. Thence till 1878 there was a series of
+fluctuations which brought the total in that year below 6 millions. But in 1882
+the number had vaulted to over 12 millions, after which there was a descent to a
+little more than 9&frac14; millions at the close of the quarter-century. The year
+1885 closed with a further decrease, but by 1887 the number had increased to
+nearly 13 millions. Three years later it reached 18 millions, and in 1892 it
+touched the record of nearly 21&frac34; millions. By 1900, which had been preceded
+by bad seasons, the number of sheep had dropped to 10&#8531; millions, and in the
+second year of the twentieth century the low-water mark of less than 7&frac14;
+millions was touched. Since then there has been a rapid increase, and the
+numbers in 1908 had recovered to 18,348,851, or within 3,359,459 of the record
+number of seventeen years ago. It must be mentioned that, while scanty rainfall
+on the Western pastures was accountable for much of the depletion in stock
+numbers, overstocking and absence of possible provision for bad seasons had much
+to do with the losses incurred. However, the second quarter-century
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page201" id="page201"></a>201</span>
+will close with flocks in number almost equal to those of 1892, and with fleeces
+immensely more valuable than the pastures then carried, and the stock-carrying
+capacity of the country has also been much increased by fencing, water
+conservation, and artesian wells.</p>
+
+<p>Pigs are also becoming a valuable asset of the Queensland dairy farmer. In
+1860 they numbered 7,147; at the close of the quarter-century, 51,796; and in
+December, 1908, 124,749.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 600px;"><a href="images/page200-1200.jpg"><img src="images/page200-600.jpg" width="600" height="364" alt="HAULING TIMBER, BARRON RIVER, NORTH QUEENSLAND" /></a>
+<p class="center">HAULING TIMBER, BARRON RIVER, NORTH QUEENSLAND</p></div>
+
+<h3>DAIRYING.</h3>
+
+<p>The phenomenal growth of the dairying industry is shown by the table headed
+"Dairying." It shows that, whereas in 1860 10,400 lb. butter were imported and
+450 lb. exported, in 1908 there were 23,838,357 lb. made, 13,752,118 lb.
+exported, and only 201,924 lb. imported. Even in 1896 Queensland could hardly be
+accounted a butter-exporting country, when the shipments were only 13,942 lb.,
+the imports 1,003,680 lb., and the quantity made 6,164,240 lb., for in that year
+the excess of imports was 989,738 lb.; while in 1908 the excess of exports was
+13,550,194 lb., or more than a moiety of the amount manufactured. Of cheese, in
+1896 the quantity made was 1,921,404 lb., whereas in 1908 it had increased to
+3,199,510 lb., and the amount exported was 732,090 lb., the excess of exports
+over imports being 685,629 lb. Twenty-five years ago the excess of imports over
+exports was 1,068,033 lb., which meant that there were practically no exports.
+Even in 1896 the cheese exported totalled only 8,505 lb. It is evident that the
+dairying industry in Queensland is yet only in its youth, and that in another
+quarter of a century the exports of both cheese and butter will have increased
+enormously.</p>
+
+<h3>SUGAR PRODUCTION.</h3>
+
+<p>Sugar first appears as a Queensland export in 1870, the quantity being, however,
+only 26 cwt. By 1879 the quantity had reached 206,269 cwt., the quarter-century
+closing in 1884 with 368,626 cwt., valued at £454,759. But these figures do not
+represent the quantity of sugar manufactured, the total in 1884 being given at
+33,361 tons, the export being 18,431 tons. In 1885 the export, as compared with
+the previous year, increased by 58&frac12; per cent. in value. In 1888 the value
+declined to £384,375, or by more than one-half as compared with 1886. Thence for
+many years there was a fluctuating export, a drop to £681,038 in 1897 being
+followed by a jump to £1,329,876 in 1898. Two years later there was a heavy fall
+to £669,389 worth; then two years' progression followed by a fall to £646,875 in
+1903. In 1904, owing to the Commonwealth bounty and good seasons, there was a
+recovery to £1,257,815, followed by substantial progression each following year,
+till 1907, when the record export of £1,779,624 was made. In 1908, owing to
+abnormal frosts, there was a decline to £1,482,320.</p>
+
+<p>The quantity of sugar made of course showed corresponding fluctuations. In 1896
+the 100,000-ton limit of manufacture was for the first time passed. It was
+followed by a slight drop in the following year, but in 1898 the record to that
+date in manufacture, as well as in export, was made, the product of the mills
+reaching the <span class="pagenum"><a name="page202" id="page202"></a>202</span>
+high figure of 163,734 tons. After that year there was a fluctuating decline in
+manufacture to the minimum of 76,626 tons in 1902, the great drought year; but
+there was an improvement in 1903, and in 1905 152,722 tons were manufactured,
+the two following years being very close together with a mean production of
+186,342 tons. In 1908 the sugar manufactured was 151,098 tons, a decrease,
+through frost, of 37,209 tons for the year. In glancing through the figures not
+only will the effects of good and bad seasons be recognised, but also of the
+suspension of kanaka labour importation in 1888, its revival in 1890, and the
+payment of the Commonwealth bounty during the last five years.</p>
+
+<h3>MINERAL PRODUCTION.</h3>
+
+<p>When in 1866 railway construction suddenly ceased, both on the Southern and
+Central (then called the Northern) lines, there was general distress, mitigated
+shortly afterwards by the discovery of gold at the Crocodile Field, near
+Rockhampton; and in 1867 by the opening up of the Gympie Goldfield. The first
+important discovery of gold, however, had been on the Peak Downs in 1862, after
+which the production of that metal advanced from 2,783 oz. in 1863 to 15,660 oz.
+in 1864, slightly in excess of which level it remained for the next two years.
+The gold raised then jumped to 35,581 oz. in 1867, and to 111,589 oz. in 1868.
+During the next two years the production dropped by about 19,000 oz., but it
+recovered to 115,986 oz. in 1871. In 1874 it made another big jump to 254,959
+oz., owing to the discoveries at the Palmer, Charters Towers, and elsewhere in
+the North. This volume of production was rather more than maintained during the
+next two years, after which there was a fluctuating annual diminution until
+1887, when there was a recovery to 348,890 oz. For seven years of the first
+quarter-century the value of gold won exceeded a million sterling per annum,
+high-water mark being touched in 1875&mdash;a year of heavy rainfall and
+abundant water&mdash;with a gold yield of £1,196,583.</p>
+
+<p>In gold production the second quarter-century opened well with a total of
+250,137 oz., and this yield for 1885 was followed by continuous progression
+until 1889, when the total of 634,605 oz., valued at £2,695,629, was reached.
+Thence for seven years there was a fluctuating decline, the minimum of 477,976
+oz. being touched in 1891. From that year there was a gradual recovery until in
+1898 647,487 oz. was reached, the record being made with 676,027 oz. in the last
+year of the century. Since then there has been a continuous annual decline until
+the total gold raised in 1908 had fallen to 465,085 oz., which is rather less
+than half the quantity declared to be exported in 1898 and 1903. But the export
+and production figures of course differ, the former being the actual weight
+exported in the year, which may be less or more than the production. Moreover,
+the production figures are stated in fine ounces, so that the difference between
+gold won and exported is considerably less than the figures would at first sight
+indicate.</p>
+
+<p>Of copper the recorded quantity produced in 1860 was only one ton, valued at
+£50; but two years later the value reached £10,332 through the discovery of the
+Peak Downs mines. The two following years showed an almost entire cessation of
+export, although some £90,000 worth had been won. In 1865 the value of copper
+produced <span class="pagenum"><a name="page203" id="page203"></a>203</span>
+was £58,440. Thence there was fluctuating progression until 1871, when the value
+rose to £174,300, with a further rise to £196,000 in 1872. Declension followed
+until in 1882 the production had dropped to £14,982, the quarter-century closing
+in 1884 with a total of £30,872 worth. The explanation is that during the period
+there was practically only one copper mine at work in Queensland, and that in
+1871 the policy was commenced of smelting all the richer ores and paying the
+highest possible dividends. In one year an amount of about £300,000, equal to
+the total capital of the company, was distributed, and shortly afterwards the
+mine was closed for want of remunerative ore. Had money been freely spent in
+exploration, as at the Mount Morgan Gold Mine, and only moderate dividends paid
+to the shareholders, it is believed that the life of the Peak Downs Copper Mine
+would have been indefinitely prolonged.</p>
+
+<p>During sixteen years of the second quarter-century copper mining languished, the
+highest production in any one year being valued at £20,340, while in 1891 the
+lowest descended to £865. In 1901, however, through the opening of the Chillagoe
+mine, the production rose to £194,227 worth; by 1906 it had continuously
+ascended to £916,546, and in 1907 to £1,028,179. In 1908 there was a phenomenal
+decline in production value, owing to the low price obtainable for copper, the
+total being stated at £882,901.</p>
+
+<p>The first production of tin is recorded in 1872, when the yield was valued at
+£109,816, through the discovery of stream tin in the Severn River district of
+Queensland. The record year for tin production of the half-century was in 1873,
+when the value raised was £606,184. Thence there was a fluctuating decline in
+output till 1884, which closed with £130,460 worth for the year.</p>
+
+<p>In the second quarter-century there was a fluctuating diminution of production,
+till in 1898 it was only worth £36,502. After that date there was a continuous
+improvement, the figures reached in 1907 being £496,766. The tin won in 1908 was
+declared to be of the value of only £342,191, the reduction arising chiefly from
+lowered market prices.</p>
+
+<p>The coal raised in Queensland in 1860 was only 12,327 tons; in 1884 120,727 tons
+were raised; and in 1908 the production was 696,332 tons, valued at £244,922.</p>
+
+<h3>IMPORTS AND EXPORTS.</h3>
+
+<p>The imports into Queensland in 1860 were of the declared value of £742,023; at
+the close of the first quarter-century they exceeded 6&frac14; millions a year; in
+1900 they exceeded 7 millions; in 1908 they totalled nearly 9&frac12; millions.</p>
+
+<p>The declared value of exports totalled a little more than half a million in
+1860; the first quarter-century closed in 1884 with a total of under 4&frac34;
+millions. In 1889 the value was slightly under 7&frac34; millions, and in 1908 it
+reached over 14 millions. During the last quarter-century the exports have
+trebled in value, while the imports have increased by only about 48·4 per cent.
+These figures indicate that the State is rapidly liquidating its external
+indebtedness on private account, whatever may be the increase in public loan
+obligations.</p>
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page204" id="page204"></a>204</span>
+
+<h3>RAILWAYS.</h3>
+
+<p>Railways form a very gratifying asset. In 1865 there were only twenty-one miles
+open for traffic, and they yielded no net revenue. In 1884 there were 1,207
+miles open, of which the net earnings were £273,096. In 1898 2,742 miles open
+had £534,992 of net earnings. In 1901 there were 2,801 miles open, with net
+earnings of £223,853 only, the cause being the historic drought of the period.
+Since then there has been a rapid increase in both traffic and profit, the net
+earnings of 3,498 miles in 1908-9 having been £885,622. These figures afford
+complete justification for a policy of vigorous construction, for they show that
+the capital invested in our railways, £25,183,529, earned £3 10s. 4d. per cent.
+in 1907-8. In 1908-9 the net earnings were £883,610, the return on capital
+invested being £3 7s. 6d. per cent.</p>
+
+<p>With the object of supplying the latest official data, the Government
+Statistician, Mr. Thornhill Weedon, has compiled the following tables, which
+practically divide the half-century into four equal periods. It must be borne in
+mind that, except under the heading "Finance," the statistics are for the
+calendar year and not for the financial year, which closes on 30th June:&mdash;</p>
+
+<h3>COMPARATIVE STATISTICS.</h3>
+
+<h3>VITAL STATISTICS.</h3>
+
+
+<table summary="vital statistics" align="center" width="90%" style="border-collapse: collapse;" border="0">
+<tr>
+ <th class="info" rowspan="2"></th>
+ <th class="info" colspan="5"><span class="sc">Calendar Year.</span></th>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <th class="info">1860.</th>
+ <th class="info">1872.</th>
+ <th class="info">1884.</th>
+ <th class="info">1896.</th>
+ <th class="info">1908.</th>
+</tr>
+
+<tr><td class="infon"><span style="float: right;">No.</span>Births</td><td class="infonr">1,236</td><td class="infonr">5,265</td><td class="infonr">10,679</td><td class="infonr">14,017</td><td class="infonr">14,828</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="infon"><span style="float: right;">No.</span>Marriages </td><td class="infonr">278</td><td class="infonr">1,125</td><td class="infonr">2,661</td><td class="infonr">2,823</td><td class="infonr">4,009</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="infon"><span style="float: right;">No.</span> Deaths</td><td class="infonr">478</td><td class="infonr">1,936</td><td class="infonr">6,861</td><td class="infonr">5,645</td><td class="infonr">5,680</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="infon"><span style="float: right;">No.</span>Population, State</td><td class="infonr">28,056</td><td class="infonr">133,553</td><td class="infonr">309,913</td><td class="infonr">472,179</td><td class="infonr">558,237</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="infonq"><span style="float: right;">No.</span>Population, Brisbane<a id="footnotetagaga" name="footnotetagaga"></a><a href="#footnoteaga"><sup>a</sup></a></td><td class="infonb">6,051</td><td class="infonb">15,002</td><td class="infonb">23,001</td><td class="infonb">110,554</td><td class="infonb">137,670</td></tr>
+</table>
+
+<p class="footnote"><a id="footnoteaga" name="footnoteaga"></a><a class="footnote" href="#footnotetagaga">Footnote a:</a>
+The area in 1860, 1872, and 1884 is not quite the same as that in 1896 and 1908, but the population quoted is fairly representative.</p>
+
+<h3>FINANCE.</h3>
+
+<table summary="finance" align="center" width="90%" style="border-collapse: collapse;" border="0">
+<tr>
+ <th class="info" rowspan="2"></th>
+ <th class="info" colspan="5"><span class="sc">Financial Year.</span></th>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <th class="info">1860.</th>
+ <th class="info">1872.</th>
+ <th class="info">1883-4.</th>
+ <th class="info">1895-6.</th>
+ <th class="info">1907-8.<a id="footnotetagagb" name="footnotetagagb"></a><a href="#footnoteagb"><sup>b</sup></a></th>
+</tr>
+<tr><td class="infon"><span class="sc">Revenue&mdash;</span></td><td class="infonr"></td><td class="infonr"></td><td class="infonr"></td><td class="infonr"></td><td class="infonr"></td></tr>
+<tr><td class="infon"><span style="float: right;">£</span>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;From Customs and Excise</td><td class="infonr">59,210</td><td class="infonr">419,853</td><td class="infonr">900,916</td><td class="infonr">1,361,212</td><td class="infonr">1,498,131</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="infon"><span style="float: right;">£</span>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;From other sources</td><td class="infonr">119,379</td><td class="infonr">576,471</td><td class="infonr">1,665,442</td><td class="infonr">2,280,371</td><td class="infonr">3,953,501</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="infon"><span style="float: right;">£</span>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Total Revenue<br /></td><td class="infonr">178,589</td><td class="infonr">996,324</td><td class="infonr">2,566,358</td><td class="infonr">3,641,583</td><td class="infonr">5,451,632</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="infon"><span style="float: right;">£</span><span class="sc">Expenditure&mdash;</span></td><td class="infonr">&nbsp;</td><td class="infonr">&nbsp;</td><td class="infonr">&nbsp;</td><td class="infonr">&nbsp;</td><td class="infonr">&nbsp;</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="infon"><span style="float: right;">£</span>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;From Revenue</td><td class="infonr">161,503</td><td class="infonr">865,743</td><td class="infonr">2,532,045</td><td class="infonr">3,567,947</td><td class="infonr">5,336,330</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="infonq"><span style="float: right;">£</span>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;From Loan</td><td class="infonb">19,384</td><td class="infonb">156,424</td><td class="infonb">1,665,823</td><td class="infonb">592,158</td><td class="infonb">1,033,676</td></tr>
+</table>
+
+<p class="footnote"><a id="footnoteagb" name="footnoteagb"></a><a class="footnote" href="#footnotetagagb">Footnote b:</a>
+The figures for 1907-8 include both Federal and State collections and disbursements on Queensland account.</p>
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page205" id="page205"></a>205</span>
+
+<h3>BANKING.</h3>
+
+<table summary="banking" align="center" width="90%" style="border-collapse: collapse;" border="0">
+<tr>
+ <th class="info" rowspan="2"></th>
+ <th class="info" colspan="5"><span class="sc">Calendar Year.</span></th>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <th class="info">1860.</th>
+ <th class="info">1872.</th>
+ <th class="info">1884.</th>
+ <th class="info">1896.</th>
+ <th class="info">1908.</th>
+</tr>
+
+<tr><td class="infon"><span class="sc">Banking Companies&mdash;</span></td><td class="infonr">574,661</td><td class="infonr">2,200,346</td><td class="infonr">11,155,423</td><td class="infonr">18,850,945</td><td class="infonr">19,122,646</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="infon"><span style="float: right;">£</span>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Assets</td><td class="infonr">490,861</td><td class="infonr">1,489,515</td><td class="infonr">9,338,716</td><td class="infonr">15,481,960</td><td class="infonr">14,698,195</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="infon"><span style="float: right;">£</span>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Advances</td><td class="infonr">332,173</td><td class="infonr">1,842,848</td><td class="infonr">7,662,543</td><td class="infonr">11,346,303</td><td class="infonr">16,072,757</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="infon"><span style="float: right;">£</span>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Liabilities</td><td class="infonr">286,917</td><td class="infonr">1,590,283</td><td class="infonr">6,322,025</td><td class="infonr">10,879,640</td><td class="infonr">15,440,427</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="infon"><span style="float: right;">£</span>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Deposits</td><td class="infonr">&nbsp;</td><td class="infonr">&nbsp;</td><td class="infonr">&nbsp;</td><td class="infonr">&nbsp;</td><td class="infonr">&nbsp;</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="infon"><span class="sc">Savings Bank&mdash;</span></td><td class="infonr">&nbsp;</td><td class="infonr">&nbsp;</td><td class="infonr">&nbsp;</td><td class="infonr">&nbsp;</td><td class="infonr">&nbsp;</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="infon"><span style="float: right;">No.</span>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Depositors</td><td class="infonr">163</td><td class="infonr">8,121</td><td class="infonr">33,067</td><td class="infonr">58,226</td><td class="infonr">100,324</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="infonq"><span style="float: right;">£</span>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Amount to credit at end of year</td><td class="infonb">7,545</td><td class="infonb">466,754</td><td class="infonb">1,220,614</td><td class="infonb">2,329,381</td><td class="infonb">4,921,881</td></tr>
+</table>
+
+<h3>CROWN LANDS.</h3>
+
+<table summary="crown lands" align="center" width="90%" style="border-collapse: collapse;" border="0">
+<tr>
+ <th class="info" rowspan="2"></th>
+ <th class="info" colspan="5"><span class="sc">Calendar Year.</span></th>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <th class="info">1860.</th>
+ <th class="info">1872.</th>
+ <th class="info">1884.</th>
+ <th class="info">1896.</th>
+ <th class="info">1908.</th>
+</tr>
+<tr><td class="infon"><span style="float: right;">Acres</span>Area Alienated</td><td class="infonr">108,870</td><td class="infonr">1,069,208</td><td class="infonr">7,099,275</td><td class="infonr">12,850,843</td><td class="infonr">15,108,439</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="infon"><span style="float: right;">Acres</span>In Process of Alienation</td><td class="infonc">...</td><td class="infonc">...</td><td class="infonc">...</td><td class="infonr">1,776,034</td><td class="infonr">6,200,930</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="infon"><span style="float: right;">Acres</span>Leased or otherwise occupied&nbsp;&nbsp;</td><td class="infonr">41,027,200</td><td class="infonr">123,737,093</td><td class="infonr">316,113,760</td><td class="infonr">254,787,200</td><td class="infonr">273,180,864</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="infonq"><span style="float: right;">Acres</span>Not occupied</td><td class="infonb">387,983,930</td><td class="infonb">304,313,699</td><td class="infonb">105,906,965</td><td class="infonb">159,705,923</td><td class="infonb">134,629,767</td></tr>
+</table>
+
+<h3>LIVE STOCK.</h3>
+
+<table summary="live stock" align="center" width="90%" style="border-collapse: collapse;" border="0">
+<tr>
+ <th class="info" rowspan="2"></th>
+ <th class="info" colspan="5"><span class="sc">Calendar Year.</span></th>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <th class="info">1860.</th>
+ <th class="info">1872.</th>
+ <th class="info">1884.</th>
+ <th class="info">1896.</th>
+ <th class="info">1908.</th>
+</tr>
+
+<tr><td class="infon">Horses</td><td class="infonr">23,504</td><td class="infonr">92,798</td><td class="infonr">253,116</td><td class="infonr">452,207</td><td class="infonr">519,969</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="infon">Cattle</td><td class="infonr">432,890</td><td class="infonr">1,200,992</td><td class="infonr">4,266,172</td><td class="infonr">6,507,377</td><td class="infonr">4,321,600</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="infon">Sheep</td><td class="infonr">3,449,350</td><td class="infonr">6,687,907</td><td class="infonr">9,308,911</td><td class="infonr">19,593,696</td><td class="infonr">18,348,851</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="infonq">Pigs</td><td class="infonb">7,147</td><td class="infonb">35,732</td><td class="infonb">51,796</td><td class="infonb">97,434</td><td class="infonb">124,749</td></tr>
+</table>
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page206" id="page206"></a>206</span>
+
+<h3>DAIRYING.</h3>
+
+<table summary="dairying" align="center" width="90%" style="border-collapse: collapse;" border="0">
+<tr>
+ <th class="info" rowspan="2"></th>
+ <th class="info" colspan="5"><span class="sc">Calendar Year.</span></th>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <th class="info">1860.</th>
+ <th class="info">1872.</th>
+ <th class="info">1884.</th>
+ <th class="info">1896.</th>
+ <th class="info">1908.</th>
+</tr>
+<tr><td class="infon"><span class="sc">Butter&mdash;</span></td><td class="infonr">&nbsp;</td><td class="infonr">&nbsp;</td><td class="infonr">&nbsp;</td>
+<td class="infonr">&nbsp;</td><td class="infonr">&nbsp;</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="infon"><span style="float: right;">Lb.</span>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Made</td><td class="infonc">...</td><td class="infonc">...</td>
+<td class="infonc">...</td><td class="infonr">6,164,240</td><td class="infonr">23,838,357</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="infon"><span style="float: right;">Lb.</span>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Imported</td><td class="infonr">10,400</td><td class="infonr">454,698</td>
+<td class="infonr">1,271,964</td><td class="infonr">1,003,680</td><td class="infonr">201,924</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="infon"><span style="float: right;">Lb.</span>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Exported</td><td class="infonr">450</td><td class="infonr">1,310</td>
+<td class="infonr">12,724</td><td class="infonr">13,942</td><td class="infonr">13,752,118</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="infon"><span style="float: right;">Lb.</span>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Excess of Imports</td><td class="infonr">9,950</td><td class="infonr">453,388</td>
+<td class="infonr">1,259,240</td><td class="infonr">989,738</td><td class="infonc">...</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="infon"><span style="float: right;">Lb.</span>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Excess of Exports</td><td class="infonc">...</td><td class="infonc">...</td>
+<td class="infonc">...</td><td class="infonc">...</td><td class="infonr">13,550,194</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="infon"><span style="float: right;">Per Lb.</span>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Estimated Wholesale Price of Butter</td><td class="infonr">1s. 11&frac14;d.</td>
+<td class="infonr">9&frac12;d.</td><td class="infonr">11d.</td><td class="infonr">10d.</td><td class="infonr">10&frac34;d.</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="infon"><span class="sc">Cheese&mdash;</span></td><td class="infonr">&nbsp;</td><td class="infonr">&nbsp;</td><td class="infonr">&nbsp;</td>
+<td class="infonr">&nbsp;</td><td class="infonr">&nbsp;</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="infon"><span style="float: right;">Lb.</span>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Made</td><td class="infonc">...</td><td class="infonc">...</td>
+<td class="infonc">...</td><td class="infonr">1,921,404</td><td class="infonr">3,199,510</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="infon"><span style="float: right;">Lb.</span>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Imported</td><td class="infonr">1,559</td>
+<td class="infonr"><span style="float: left;">lb.</span>186,916</td><td class="infonr">1,069,620</td><td class="infonr">77,275</td><td class="infonr">46,464</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="infon"><span style="float: right;">Lb.</span>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Exported</td><td class="infonr">247</td>
+<td class="infonr"><span style="float: left;">lb.</span>20</td><td class="infonr">1,587</td><td class="infonr">8,505</td><td class="infonr">732,093</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="infon"><span style="float: right;">Lb.</span>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Excess of Imports</td><td class="infonr">1,312</td>
+<td class="infonr"><span style="float: left;">lb.</span>186,896</td><td class="infonr">1,068,033</td><td class="infonr">68,770</td><td class="infonc">...</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="infonq"><span style="float: right;">Lb.</span>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Excess of Exports</td><td class="infonbc">...</td>
+<td class="infonbc">...</td><td class="infonbc">...</td><td class="infonbc">...</td><td class="infonb">685,629</td></tr>
+</table>
+
+<h3>AGRICULTURE.</h3>
+
+<table summary="agriculture" align="center" width="90%" style="border-collapse: collapse;" border="0">
+<tr>
+ <th class="info" rowspan="2"></th>
+ <th class="info" colspan="5"><span class="sc">Calendar Year.</span></th>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <th class="info">1860.</th>
+ <th class="info">1872.</th>
+ <th class="info">1884.</th>
+ <th class="info">1896.</th>
+ <th class="info">1908.</th>
+</tr>
+<tr><td class="infon"><span style="float: right;">Acres</span>Total Area Cropped</td><td class="infonr">3,838</td><td class="infonr">62,491</td>
+<td class="infonr">187,381</td><td class="infonr">322,678</td><td class="infonr">535,900</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="infon"><span style="float: right;">Acres</span>Wheat, Area for Grain</td><td class="infonr">196</td><td class="infonr">3,661</td>
+<td class="infonr">11,389</td><td class="infonr">34,670</td><td class="infonr">80,898</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="infon"><span style="float: right;">Bushels</span>Wheat, Result of Crop</td><td class="infonr">...</td><td class="infonr">78,734</td>
+<td class="infonr">195,727</td><td class="infonr">601,254</td><td class="infonr">1,202,799</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="infon"><span style="float: right;">Acres</span>Maize, Area for Grain</td><td class="infonr">1,526</td><td class="infonr">21,143</td>
+<td class="infonr">61,064</td><td class="infonr">115,715</td><td class="infonr">127,655</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="infon"><span style="float: right;">Bushels</span>Maize, Result of Crop</td><td class="infonc">...</td><td class="infonc">...</td>
+<td class="infonr">1,312,939</td><td class="infonr">3,065,333</td><td class="infonr">2,767,600</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="infon"><span style="float: right;">Acres</span>English Potatoes, area</td><td class="infonr">333</td><td class="infonr">2,837</td>
+<td class="infonr">3,775</td><td class="infonr">7,672</td><td class="infonr">6,227</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="infon"><span style="float: right;">Tons</span>English Potatoes, Result of Crop</td><td class="infonc">...</td><td class="infonc">...</td>
+<td class="infonr">6,834</td><td class="infonr">18,451</td><td class="infonr">11,550</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="infon"><span style="float: right;">Acres</span>Sugar-cane, Area Cut</td><td class="infonc">...</td><td class="infonr">5,018</td>
+<td class="infonr">29,930</td><td class="infonr">66,640</td><td class="infonr">92,219</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="infon"><span style="float: right;">Tons</span>Sugar-cane, Result of Crop, Cane</td><td class="infonc">...</td><td class="infonc">...</td>
+<td class="infonc">...</td><td class="infonc">...</td><td class="infonr">1,433,315</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="infonq"><span style="float: right;">Tons</span>Sugar-cane, Result of Crop, Sugar Made</td><td class="infonbc">...</td><td class="infonb">6,266</td>
+<td class="infonb">33,361</td><td class="infonb">100,774</td><td class="infonb">151,098</td></tr>
+</table>
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page207" id="page207"></a>207</span>
+
+<h3>MINING.</h3>
+
+<table summary="mining" align="center" width="90%" style="border-collapse: collapse;" border="0">
+<tr>
+ <th class="info" rowspan="2"></th>
+ <th class="info" colspan="5"><span class="sc">Calendar Year.</span></th>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <th class="info">1860.</th>
+ <th class="info">1872.</th>
+ <th class="info">1884.</th>
+ <th class="info">1896.</th>
+ <th class="info">1908.</th>
+</tr>
+<tr><td class="infon"><span style="float: right;">Oz.</span>Gold raised in Queensland</td><td class="infonr">2,738</td><td class="infonr">124,163</td>
+<td class="infonr">250,127</td><td class="infonr">502,146</td><td class="infonr">465,085</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="infon"><span style="float: right;">£</span></td><td class="infonr">11,631</td><td class="infonr">5<ins title="Transcriber's Note: '3' could be '2' - scan smudged and unclear">3</ins>7,365</td><td class="infonr">1,062,471</td>
+<td class="infonr">2,132,979</td><td class="infonr">1,975,554</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="infon"><span style="float: right;">£</span>Silver raised in Queensland</td><td class="infonc">...</td><td class="infonc">...</td>
+<td class="infonr">35,327</td><td class="infonr">32,162</td><td class="infonr">117,889</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="infon"><span style="float: right;">Tons</span>Copper raised in Queensland</td><td class="infonr">1</td><td class="infonr">2,448</td>
+<td class="infonr">1,653</td><td class="infonr">580</td><td class="infonr">14,698</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="infon"><span style="float: right;">£</span></td><td class="infonr">50</td><td class="infonr">196,000</td><td class="infonr">30,872</td>
+<td class="infonr">21,042</td><td class="infonr">882,901</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="infon"><span style="float: right;">Tons</span>Tin raised in Queensland</td><td class="infonc">...</td><td class="infonr">1,407</td>
+<td class="infonr">3,383</td><td class="infonr">1,554</td><td class="infonr">4,826</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="infon"><span style="float: right;">£</span></td><td class="infonc">...</td><td class="infonr">109,816</td><td class="infonr">130,460</td>
+<td class="infonr">49,018</td><td class="infonr">342,191</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="infon"><span style="float: right;">Tons</span>Coal raised in Queensland</td><td class="infonr">12,327</td><td class="infonr">27,727</td>
+<td class="infonr">120,727</td><td class="infonr">371,390</td><td class="infonr">696,332</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="infon"><span style="float: right;">£</span></td><td class="infonr">9,244</td><td class="infonr">16,120</td><td class="infonr">60,025</td>
+<td class="infonr">154,987</td><td class="infonr">244,922</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="infon"><span style="float: right;">£</span>All other in Queensland</td><td class="infonc">...</td><td class="infonc">...</td><td class="infonr">6,469</td>
+<td class="infonr">30,440</td><td class="infonr">281,030</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="infonq"><span style="float: right;">£</span>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Total</td><td class="infonb">20,925</td>
+<td class="infonb">849,301</td><td class="infonb">1,325,624</td><td class="infonb">2,420,628</td><td class="infonb">3,844,487</td></tr>
+</table>
+
+<h3>SECONDARY PRODUCTION.</h3>
+
+<table summary="secondary production" align="center" width="90%" style="border-collapse: collapse;" border="0">
+<tr>
+ <th class="info" rowspan="2"></th>
+ <th class="info" colspan="5"><span class="sc">Calendar Year.</span></th>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <th class="info">1860.</th>
+ <th class="info">1872.</th>
+ <th class="info">1884.</th>
+ <th class="info">1896.</th>
+ <th class="info">1908.</th>
+</tr>
+
+<tr><td class="infon"><span style="float: right;">No.</span><span class="sc">Factories</span></td><td class="infonr">13</td><td class="infonr">593</td>
+<td class="infonr">955</td><td class="infonr">1,332</td><td class="infonr">1,481</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="infon"><span style="float: right;">No.</span>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Hands Employed</td><td class="infonc">...</td><td class="infonc">...</td>
+<td class="infonc">...</td><td class="infonr">19,733</td><td class="infonr">29,510</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="infon"><span style="float: right;">£</span>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Plant and Machinery</td><td class="infonc">...</td><td class="infonc">...</td>
+<td class="infonc">...</td><td class="infonr">6,145,548</td><td class="infonr">4,484,340</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="infon"><span style="float: right;">£</span>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Output</td><td class="infonc">...</td><td class="infonc">...</td
+><td class="infonc">...</td><td class="infonr">6,482,824</td><td class="infonr">11,242,437</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="infon"><span style="float: right;">Lb.</span>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Leather</td><td class="infonc">...</td><td class="infonr">427,168</td>
+<td class="infonr">2,221,856</td><td class="infonr">3,324,832</td>
+<td class="infonr"><a id="footnotetagec" name="footnotetagec"></a><a href="#footnoteec"><sup>(a)</sup></a>152,611</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="infon"><span style="float: right;">Lb.</span>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Butter</td><td class="infonc">...</td><td class="infonc">...</td>
+<td class="infonc">...</td><td class="infonr">6,164,240</td><td class="infonr">23,838,357</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="infon"><span style="float: right;">Lb.</span>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Cheese</td><td class="infonc">...</td><td class="infonc">...</td>
+<td class="infonc">...</td><td class="infonr">1,921,404</td><td class="infonr">3,199,510</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="infon"><span style="float: right;">Lb.</span>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Bacon and Hams</td><td class="infonc">...</td><td class="infonc">...</td>
+<td class="infonc">...</td><td class="infonr">5,108,726</td><td class="infonr">11,324,323</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="infon"><span style="float: right;">Lb.</span>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Meat, Cured</td><td class="infonc">...</td><td class="infonc">...</td>
+<td class="infonr">4,283,024</td><td class="infonr">69,442,447</td><td class="infonr">50,418,522</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="infonq"><span style="float: right;">Super. Ft.</span>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Timber, Sawn</td><td class="infonbc">...</td><td class="infonbc">...</td>
+<td class="infonbc">...</td><td class="infonb">22,309,900</td><td class="infonb">100,759,016</td></tr>
+</table>
+
+<p class="footnote"><a id="footnoteec" name="footnoteec"></a><a class="footnote" href="#footnotetagec">Footnote a:</a> Now collected on sides.</p>
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page208" id="page208"></a>208</span>
+
+<h3>IMPORTS.</h3>
+
+<table summary="imports" align="center" width="90%" style="border-collapse: collapse;" border="0">
+<tr>
+ <th class="info" rowspan="2"></th>
+ <th class="info" colspan="5"><span class="sc">Calendar Year.</span></th>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <th class="info">1860.</th>
+ <th class="info">1872.</th>
+ <th class="info">1884.</th>
+ <th class="info">1896.</th>
+ <th class="info">1908.</th>
+</tr>
+
+<tr><td class="infon"><span style="float: right;">£</span>Apparel, including Boots and Shoes</td><td class="infonr">32,701</td><td class="infonr">113,371</td><td class="infonr">318,910</td><td class="infonr">232,077</td><td class="infonr">552,071</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="infon"><span style="float: right;">£</span>Linen, Drapery, and Haberdashery</td><td class="infonr">154,454</td><td class="infonr">293,155</td><td class="infonr">742,357</td><td class="infonr">806,638</td><td class="infonr">1,233,776</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="infon"><span style="float: right;">£</span>Wine, Beer, and Spirits</td><td class="infonr">66,909</td><td class="infonr">177,601</td><td class="infonr">394,764</td><td class="infonr">247,259</td><td class="infonr">325,484</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="infon"><span style="float: right;">£</span>Tobacco, Cigar, &amp;c.</td><td class="infonr">17,727</td><td class="infonr">30,659</td><td class="infonr">78,093</td><td class="infonr">74,501</td><td class="infonr">204,131</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="infon"><span style="float: right;">£</span>Wheat, Flour, Biscuits, &amp;c.</td><td class="infonr">95,318</td><td class="infonr">208,447</td><td class="infonr">383,504</td><td class="infonr">555,460</td><td class="infonr">483,794</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="infon"><span style="float: right;">£</span>Other Grain and Products thereof</td><td class="infonr">4,867</td><td class="infonr">42,991</td><td class="infonr">197,929</td><td class="infonr">118,968</td><td class="infonr">202,549</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="infon"><span style="float: right;">£</span>Potatoes and Onions</td><td class="infonr">3,410</td><td class="infonr">15,789</td><td class="infonr">77,897</td><td class="infonr">104,233</td><td class="infonr">147,584</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="infon"><span style="float: right;">£</span>Green Fruit, Jams, and Jellies</td><td class="infonr">3,487</td><td class="infonr">27,755</td><td class="infonr">118,309</td><td class="infonr">73,184</td><td class="infonr">175,967</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="infon"><span style="float: right;">£</span>Hardware, Machinery, Metals, and Metal Goods</td><td class="infonr">63,622</td><td class="infonr">217,659</td><td class="infonr">1,019,374</td><td class="infonr">766,217</td><td class="infonr">1,661,999</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="infon"><span style="float: right;">£</span>Stationery, Books, Paper, &amp;c.</td><td class="infonr">16,482</td><td class="infonr">26,528</td><td class="infonr">148,682</td><td class="infonr">135,127</td><td class="infonr">220,746</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="infon"><span style="float: right;">£</span>Kerosene and other Oils</td><td class="infonb">3,916</td><td class="infonb">32,580</td><td class="infonb">69,202</td><td class="infonb">94,048</td><td class="infonb">156,460</td></tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="info" style="border-top: 0;"><span style="float: right;">£</span>Total all imports</td>
+ <td class="infor">742,023</td>
+ <td class="infor">2,218,717</td>
+ <td class="infor">6,381,976</td>
+ <td class="infor">5,433,271</td>
+ <td class="infor">9,471,166</td>
+</tr>
+</table>
+
+<h3>EXPORTS&mdash;HOME PRODUCTION.</h3>
+
+<table summary="exports" align="center" width="90%" style="border-collapse: collapse;" border="0">
+<tr>
+ <th class="info" rowspan="2"></th>
+ <th class="info" colspan="5"><span class="sc">Calendar Year.</span></th>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <th class="info" width="15%">1860.</th>
+ <th class="info" width="15%">1872.</th>
+ <th class="info" width="15%">1884.</th>
+ <th class="info" width="15%">1896.</th>
+ <th class="info" width="15%">1908.</th>
+</tr>
+<tr><td class="infon"><span style="float: right;"><br />Lb.</span><br />Wool&mdash;Clean<br />
+<span style="float: right;">Lb.</span>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Greasy&nbsp;<br /><br /></td><td style="padding: 0;">
+<table summary="wool" align="center" width="auto" border="0">
+<tr>
+ <td align="left" valign="top" rowspan="2" class="bigbrace" style="padding: 0;">}</td>
+ <td class="dat1" rowspan="2" style="padding: 0;">5,007,167</td><td rowspan="2" class="bigbrace" style="padding: 0;">{</td>
+</tr>
+</table>
+</td><td class="infonr"><br />12,622,067<br />5,171,245</td><td class="infonr"><br />9,030,701<br />26,495,276</td><td class="infonr"><br />24,479,769<br />64,012,465</td>
+<td class="infonr"><br />23,459,014<br />66,802,873</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="infon"><span style="float: right;">£</span>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Clean<br />
+<span style="float: right;">£</span>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Greasy<br /><br /></td><td style="padding: 0;">
+<table summary="wool" align="center" width="auto" border="0" style="margin-top:-0.7em;">
+<tr>
+ <td align="right" valign="top" rowspan="2" class="bigbrace" style="padding: 0;">}</td>
+ <td class="dat1" rowspan="2" style="padding: 0;">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;444,188</td><td rowspan="2" class="bigbrace" style="padding: 0;">{</td>
+</tr>
+</table>
+</td>
+<td valign="top" class="infonr">952,450<br />217,362</td><td class="infonr">682,774<br />1,206,730</td><td class="infonr">1,130,170<br />1,846,814</td><td class="infonr">1,670,664<br />2,459,190</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="infon"><span style="float: right;">£</span>&nbsp;Total Value</td><td class="infonr" style="padding: 0;">
+<table summary="info" align="center" width="auto" border="0"><tr><td>&nbsp;</td><td class="dat1">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;444,188</td><td>&nbsp;</td></tr></table>
+</td><td class="infonr">1,169,812</td><td class="infonr">1,889,504</td><td class="infonr">2,976,984</td><td class="infonr">4,129,854</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="infon"><span style="float: right;">Tons</span>Tallow&mdash;Quantity</td><td class="infonr" style="padding: 0;">
+<table summary="info" align="center" width="auto" border="0"><tr><td>&nbsp;</td><td class="dat1">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;640</td><td>&nbsp;</td></tr></table>
+</td><td class="infonr">2,890</td><td class="infonr">2,623</td><td class="infonr">18,554</td><td class="infonr">7,292</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="infon"><span style="float: right;">£</span>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Value</td><td class="infonr" style="padding: 0;">
+<table summary="info" align="center" width="auto" border="0"><tr><td>&nbsp;</td><td class="dat1">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;25,628</td><td>&nbsp;</td></tr></table>
+</td><td class="infonr">100,201</td><td class="infonr">76,019</td><td class="infonr">337,967</td><td class="infonr">197,229</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="infon"><span style="float: right;">£</span>Gold&mdash;Value</td><td class="infonr" style="padding: 0;">
+<table summary="info" align="center" width="auto" border="0"><tr><td>&nbsp;</td><td class="dat1">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;14,565</td><td>&nbsp;</td></tr></table>
+</td><td class="infonr">660,396</td><td class="infonr">923,010</td><td class="infonr">2,089,166</td><td class="infonr">1,941,229</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="infon"><span style="float: right;">£</span>Copper&mdash;Value</td><td class="infonr" style="padding: 0;">
+<table summary="info" align="center" width="auto" border="0"><tr><td>&nbsp;</td><td class="dat1">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;50</td><td>&nbsp;</td></tr></table>
+</td><td class="infonr">257,723</td><td class="infonr">3,014</td><td class="infonr">32,401</td><td class="infonr">831,699</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="infon"><span style="float: right;">£</span>Tin&mdash;Value<br /></td><td class="infonc">...</td><td class="infonr">108,310</td><td class="infonr">228,457</td><td class="infonr">46,779</td><td class="infonr">290,389</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="infon"><span style="float: right;">£</span>Live Stock (Horses, Cattle, Sheep)</td><td class="infonr" style="padding: 0;">
+<table summary="info" align="center" width="auto" border="0"><tr><td>&nbsp;</td><td class="dat1">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;510</td><td>&nbsp;</td></tr></table>
+</td><td class="infonr">366,003</td><td class="infonr">572,010</td><td class="infonr">859,367</td><td class="infonr">1,699,381</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="infon"><span style="float: right;">£</span>Meat (all kinds, including extract)</td><td class="infonr" style="padding: 0;">
+<table summary="info" align="center" width="auto" border="0"><tr><td>&nbsp;</td><td class="dat1">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;5,356</td><td>&nbsp;</td></tr></table>
+</td><td class="infonr">67,579</td><td class="infonr">70,833</td><td class="infonr">898,545</td><td class="infonr">850,772</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="infon"><span style="float: right;">Cwt.</span>Sugar&mdash;Quantity</td><td class="infonc">...</td><td class="infonr">23,959</td><td class="infonr">368,626</td><td class="infonr">1,507,503</td><td class="infonr">2,645,333</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="infon"><span style="float: right;">£</span>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Value</td><td class="infonc">...</td><td class="infonr">36,833</td><td class="infonr">454,759</td><td class="infonr">863,080</td><td class="infonr">1,482,320</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="infon"><span style="float: right;">£</span>Hides and Skins</td><td class="infonr" style="padding: 0;">
+<table summary="info" align="center" width="auto" border="0"><tr><td>&nbsp;</td><td class="dat1">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;14,030</td><td>&nbsp;</td></tr></table>
+</td><td class="infonr">93,218</td><td class="infonr">109,291</td><td class="infonr">449,265</td><td class="infonr">421,987</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="infon"><span style="float: right;">£</span>Pearlshell</td><td class="infonbc">...</td><td class="infonbc">...</td><td class="infonr">94,021</td><td class="infonr">94,865</td><td class="infonr">49,898</td></tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="info" style="border-top: 0;"><span style="float: right;">£</span>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Total all Exports</td>
+ <td class="info2">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;523,477</td>
+ <td class="infor">2,998,934</td>
+ <td class="infor">4,673,864</td>
+ <td class="infor">9,163,726</td>
+ <td class="infor">14,194,977</td>
+</tr>
+</table>
+
+ <table summary="layout" align="center" width="auto" border="0" style="margin-top: 2em;">
+<tr>
+<td><div class="figcenter"><a href="images/page208a-400.jpg"><img src="images/page208a-200.jpg" width="200" height="660" alt="FALLS NEAR KILLARNEY" /></a>
+<p class="center">FALLS NEAR KILLARNEY</p></div>
+</td>
+<td><div class="figcenter"><a href="images/page208b-400.jpg"><img src="images/page208b-200.jpg" width="200" height="660" alt="ABORIGINAL TREE CLIMBERS" /></a>
+<p class="center">ABORIGINAL TREE CLIMBERS</p></div>
+</td>
+</tr>
+</table>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page209" id="page209"></a>209</span>
+
+<h3>INTERCOMMUNICATION.</h3>
+
+<table summary="intercommunication" align="center" width="90%" style="border-collapse: collapse;" border="0">
+<tr>
+ <th class="info" rowspan="2"></th>
+ <th class="info" colspan="5"><span class="sc">Calendar Year.</span></th>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <th class="info">1860.</th>
+ <th class="info">1872.</th>
+ <th class="info">1884.</th>
+ <th class="info">1896.</th>
+ <th class="info">1908.</th>
+</tr>
+<tr><td class="infon"><span class="sc">Railways&mdash;</span></td><td class="infonr">&nbsp;</td><td class="infonr">&nbsp;</td><td class="infonr">&nbsp;</td>
+<td class="infonr">&nbsp;</td><td class="infonr">&nbsp;</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="infon">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Miles Open</td><td class="infonc">...</td><td class="infonr">218</td><td class="infonr">1,207</td>
+<td class="infonr">2,430</td><td class="infonr">3,498</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="infon"><span style="float: right;">No.</span>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Passengers</td><td class="infonc">...</td><td class="infonr">40,539</td>
+<td class="infonr">1,025,552</td><td class="infonr">2,462,020</td><td class="infonr">6,538,411</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="infon"><span style="float: right;">£</span>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Cost of Construction</td><td class="infonc">...</td><td class="infonr">2,345,385</td>
+<td class="infonr">8,631,835</td><td class="infonr">17,248,678</td><td class="infonr">23,102,158</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="infon"><span style="float: right;">£</span>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Net Revenue</td><td class="infonc">...</td><td class="infonr">18,213</td>
+<td class="infonr">273,096</td><td class="infonr">424,862</td><td class="infonr">806,797</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="infon"> <span class="sc">Shipping&mdash;</span></td><td class="infonr">&nbsp;</td><td class="infonr">&nbsp;</td><td class="infonr">&nbsp;</td>
+<td class="infonr">&nbsp;</td><td class="infonr">&nbsp;</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="infon"><span style="float: right;">No.</span>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Inward Vessels</td><td class="infonr">210</td><td class="infonr">522</td>
+<td class="infonr">1,042</td><td class="infonr">649</td><td class="infonr">881</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="infon"><span style="float: right;">Tonnage</span></td><td class="infonr">45,736</td><td class="infonr">148,630</td><td class="infonr">572,124</td>
+<td class="infonr">562,759</td><td class="infonr">1,601,107</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="infon"><span style="float: right;">No.</span>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Outward Vessels</td><td class="infonr">183</td><td class="infonr">507</td>
+<td class="infonr">1,061</td><td class="infonr">645</td><td class="infonr">847</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="infonq"><span style="float: right;">Tonnage</span></td><td class="infonb">39,503</td><td class="infonb">143,380</td><td class="infonb">579,988</td>
+<td class="infonb">531,289</td><td class="infonb">1,563,911</td></tr>
+</table>
+
+<h3>CHARITABLE INSTITUTIONS, EDUCATION, AND PUBLIC LIBRARIES.</h3>
+
+<table summary="charitable institutions, education, and public libraries" align="center" width="90%" style="border-collapse: collapse;" border="0">
+<tr>
+ <th class="info" rowspan="2"></th>
+ <th class="info" colspan="5"><span class="sc">Calendar Year.</span></th>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <th class="info">1860.</th>
+ <th class="info">1872.</th>
+ <th class="info">1884.</th>
+ <th class="info">1896.</th>
+ <th class="info">1908.</th>
+</tr>
+
+<tr><td class="infon"><span class="sc">Charitable Institutions&mdash;</span></td><td class="infonr">&nbsp;</td><td class="infonr">&nbsp;</td>
+<td class="infonr">&nbsp;</td><td class="infonr">&nbsp;</td><td class="infonr">&nbsp;</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="infon">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Number</td><td class="infonr">6</td><td class="infonr">21</td><td class="infonr">46</td>
+<td class="infonr">77</td><td class="infonr">107</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="infon">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Persons Relieved<br /></td><td class="infonr">397</td><td class="infonr">2,796</td>
+<td class="infonr">11,614</td><td class="infonr">19,917</td><td class="infonr">28,310</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="infon"><span class="sc">Education&mdash;</span></td><td class="infonr">&nbsp;</td><td class="infonr">&nbsp;</td>
+<td class="infonr">&nbsp;</td><td class="infonr">&nbsp;</td><td class="infonr">&nbsp;</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="infon">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Number of Schools</td><td class="infonr">41</td><td class="infonr">210</td>
+<td class="infonr">528</td><td class="infonr">957</td><td class="infonr">1,104</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="infon">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Scholars on Rolls</td><td class="infonr">1,890</td><td class="infonr">23,728</td>
+<td class="infonr">60,701</td><td class="infonr">103,733</td><td class="infonr">105,436</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="infon">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Average Attendance<br /></td><td class="infonc">...</td><td class="infonc">...</td>
+<td class="infonc">...</td><td class="infonc">...</td><td class="infonr">67,309</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="infon"><span class="sc">Public Libraries&mdash;</span></td><td class="infonr">&nbsp;</td><td class="infonr">&nbsp;</td>
+<td class="infonr">&nbsp;</td><td class="infonr">&nbsp;</td><td class="infonr">&nbsp;</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="infon">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Number of Subscribers</td><td class="infonr">538</td><td class="infonr">1,711</td>
+<td class="infonr">5,185</td><td class="infonr">6,904</td><td class="infonr">12,770</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="infonq">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Volumes in Libraries</td><td class="infonb">4,945</td><td class="infonb">20,890</td>
+<td class="infonb">60,257</td><td class="infonb">129,883</td><td class="infonb">249,257</td></tr>
+</table>
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page210" id="page210"></a>210</span>
+
+<h2>APPENDIX H.</h2>
+
+<h3>DIGEST OF HYDRAULIC ENGINEER'S REPORTS.</h3>
+
+<h3>OUR ARTESIAN WATER SYSTEM.</h3>
+
+<p>The water supply problem is of importance so momentous, and the official
+information collected by the Hydraulic Engineer being scattered through reports
+covering about twenty-five years&mdash;from 1883 until 1908&mdash;it is thought desirable
+to
+present the main official facts in a convenient digest for the general reader.</p>
+
+<h3>SUB-ARTESIAN WATER IN 1884.</h3>
+
+<p>Up to 1883, when the McIlwraith Government created the Hydraulic Engineer's
+Department by appointing Mr. J. B. Henderson to organise it, little had been
+done by the State for the improvement of the water supply of the country except
+in cities and towns. At that time no artesian water was known to exist in
+Queensland, but there was a popular belief that there were great underground
+supplies, especially in Western Queensland. Many station-owners had been active,
+and the diamond drill had been brought into use, but deep drilling had not then
+been undertaken. In October, 1884, the Hydraulic Engineer reported that he had
+just visited Widgeegoara Station, where the owners, Messrs. E. and J. Bignell,
+partly by sinking shafts and partly by boring, had obtained an underground
+pumped supply aggregating 94,000 gallons every twenty-four hours. This resulted
+from sinking four 5 ft. × 2&frac12; ft. shafts an average depth of 102 ft. each, and
+thence boring and tubing below the bottom of each shaft to the average depth of
+161 ft. Of the total quantity 20,000 gallons a day was obtained from the
+Four-mile well, a shaft sunk to a depth of 150 ft. below the natural surface.
+Besides this there was a homestead well 33 ft. deep. Analyses of the water
+showed that, in the opinion of the Government Analyst, only in one bore was it
+useful for watering sheep, it being brackish; but according to the station
+reports the supply from the Four-mile well and Nos. 1 and 2 shaft-bores was good
+stock water. Mr. Henderson warmly commended the Messrs. Bignell's enterprise.</p>
+
+<h3>IMPROVED BORING MACHINERY.</h3>
+
+<p>During the same month the late Hon. George King, of Gowrie, brought under the
+notice of the department a report by Mr. Darley, C.E., to the Government of New
+South Wales respecting certain American well-boring machinery by the use of
+which in Mr. King's opinion three-fourths of the cost of £6,000 incurred by his
+firm in sinking shafts in the Warrego district might have been saved. Besides
+which much greater depths could be reached, a machine costing £600 in America
+being capable of <span class="pagenum"><a name="page211" id="page211"></a>211</span>
+boring 2,000 ft. The matter being referred to the Hydraulic Engineer, that
+officer made inquiries which induced him heartily to endorse Mr. King's
+suggestion that the Government should secure from America a machine with two men
+experienced in working it and capable of themselves making any ordinary repairs.
+Mr. Henderson also recommended that a staff should be trained by the Americans
+after arrival, and expressed the opinion that this course would save both money
+and time, and prove a large gain to the colony. But he reminded the Minister
+that until there had been an abundant rainfall extensive operations in
+bore-sinking in the West could not be carried on, though he advised the
+introduction of a sufficient number of machines and enough tubing in order that
+during the next season, if rain fell, work should be vigorously commenced.</p>
+
+<p>On 4th September, 1885, the Hydraulic Engineer replied in unequivocal terms to a
+minute of his Minister requesting him to comply with the wish expressed that he
+should purchase a Victorian diamond drill, then under offer, for
+coal-prospecting purposes. Mr. Henderson strongly recommended that no drill be
+purchased unless capable of boring holes at least from 5 in. to 2 in. in
+diameter. He also pointed out that where drifts and loose gravels were met with,
+and tubed, a deep bore must be commenced of large diameter to ensure success.
+Although the proposed drills were not ostensibly to be used for water-finding,
+it is evident that the Hydraulic Engineer, in reporting upon them, had that kind
+of work in view.</p>
+
+<h3>GOVERNMENT URGED TO IMPORT PLANT AND MEN.</h3>
+
+<p>On 2nd December following the Hydraulic Engineer addressed the Minister touching
+water-boring operations, and pointed out that, while there would be no
+difficulty in importing the machinery and appliances requisite for deep bores,
+he was convinced that men must be introduced from America to start and teach
+others here to work them. He recommended that an efficient plant should be
+ordered capable of boring up to 12 in. in diameter to a depth of 2,500 ft., for
+(say) £1,000, delivery at the works, and four good drillers under a two years'
+engagement brought out to work them at 21s. to 23s. per day, apparently of
+twelve hours; board, lodging, and travelling expenses to be defrayed by the
+Government.</p>
+
+<h3>OBSTACLES FROM DROUGHT.</h3>
+
+<p>On 20th February, 1886, the Hydraulic Engineer wrote that, understanding from
+conversations with the Minister that "the policy of the Government is to carry
+on water conservation works and boring for underground water with increased
+energy, he recommends the purchase of three Wright and Edwards' boring machines,
+capable of reaching a depth of 1,000 ft., for delivery within four months from
+the date of order." Three days later Mr. Henderson wrote:&mdash;"Unfortunately
+it can be said with much truth that, ever since the department's existence, the
+seasons have been unfavourable in the extreme for carrying out its plans." After
+mentioning the specific difficulties encountered, he added:&mdash;"I do not
+share in the idea that the late rains broke up the drought, as I cannot disguise
+from myself the fact that they have not been general, or even yet of sufficient
+quantity."</p>
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page212" id="page212"></a>212</span>
+
+<h3>FIRST BORING STARTED AT BLACKALL.</h3>
+
+<p>Although the Hydraulic Engineer, so long before as December, 1884, had
+recommended the Minister to import American boring machinery with men trained to
+work it, it was not until 19th October, 1886, nearly two years later, that he
+was able to announce that his advice had been so far followed that Mr. Arnold,
+an American borer from Honolulu, had gone to Blackall with a Pennsylvania
+Walking Beam Oil Rig boring machine which had been constructed in Brisbane. It
+seems that so long previously as July, 1885, two tenders for boring by
+Americans&mdash;one being from Mr. Arnold&mdash;were submitted by the Hydraulic
+Engineer to the Minister, with the intimation that they were both too vague for
+acceptance, and expressing the hope that Mr. Arnold, "who seemed a man of
+considerable experience, would submit a more liberal and definite offer." The
+same report mentions that on the 30th June previously the Blackall bore had been
+carried to a depth of 775 ft., and that at 127 ft. good water had been struck
+that rose to a height of 60 ft. below the surface, but was deemed insufficient
+for the requirements of the town. Up to that time nine bores had been completed,
+chiefly by the ineffective Tiffin auger, but not one had reached artesian water,
+the deepest being that at Blackall, and the average depth 371 ft.</p>
+
+<h3>ARTESIAN WATER STRUCK AT THURULGOONA.</h3>
+
+<p>In his report of 12th November, 1887, the Hydraulic Engineer states that it is
+essential that only the best quality of tubing, or "casing," should be used in
+bores. In April he had visited, by direction of the Treasurer, Thurulgoona
+Station, on the New South Wales border, and there carefully inspected boring
+operations. He found that one bore had, by means of the Canadian Pole Tool
+boring machine, been sunk to 1,079 ft., a supply of excellent water having been
+struck at a depth of 1,009 ft., "the water overflowing in my presence to a
+height of about 20 in. above the surface of the ground." This was apparently the
+first artesian water Mr. Henderson had seen in Queensland, though he had years
+previously seen the artesian well at Sale, in Victoria; and he naturally
+pronounced the opinion that the result at Thurulgoona was "very satisfactory."
+During this year boring had been carried on in Queensland without success so far
+as the formation of flowing wells was concerned. Mr. Arnold, having sunk to
+1,039 ft. at Blackall, resigned, but it was decided to continue sinking, all the
+tubing being recovered with the exception of a few feet, and being capable of
+use several times over if need be. During this year also tenders had been
+received from Mr. Loughead, of Thurulgoona, to put down three bores of 2,500 ft.
+in Queensland, and Mr. Henderson reported that there was every prospect of a
+tender being received from a company recently formed in Brisbane at a slightly
+lower price than Mr. Loughead had named.</p>
+
+<h3>GOVERNMENT'S FIRST FLOWING WELL.</h3>
+
+<p>It was at this time, after three years' fighting with difficulties arising from
+drought, the want of knowledge of deep-boring machinery, and the indisposition
+of the Government to spend much money in so speculative an undertaking, that the
+first <span class="pagenum"><a name="page213" id="page213"></a>213</span>
+gleam of daylight appeared. On 6th October, 1888, the Hydraulic Engineer
+reported that four contracts had been entered into for deep boring, with as many
+different persons or companies, in the aggregate over 20,000 ft. Included among
+these was the contract with the Canadian Pole Tool Company (of which the late
+Mr. Percy Ricardo was then the financial head, and Mr. William Woodley, who had
+been induced to come over from Canada, was the head driller) for completing the
+Blackall bore to a depth of 2,000 ft. if necessary. In this bore, on 26th April,
+1888, after many vexatious stoppages, "an abundant supply of overflowing,
+sparkling, fresh artesian water, excellently adapted for domestic purposes, was
+tapped at a depth of 1,645 ft." The rate of flow, as measured from 3 in. piping
+attached to a screw plug and valve to control the flow, was found to be 210,000
+gallons per diem, with a temperature of 119 degrees. This had been an expensive
+bore, for it cost £5,748. It was not the first artesian water officially
+utilised in Queensland, for four months earlier than water rose to the surface
+in the Blackall bore the Barcaldine bore was yielding 175,416 gallons of water a
+day, at a temperature of 101 degrees, obtained from a depth of 691 ft., and at a
+cost of only £1,220.</p>
+
+<h3>THIRTEEN ADDITIONAL BORES.</h3>
+
+<p>These results were so encouraging that the Hydraulic Engineer recommended the
+sinking of thirteen additional bores, and the recommendation was approved. As
+early as possible tenders were advertised, and there then seemed some difficulty
+in getting eligible applications, partly, it may be assumed, because of the
+activity of private enterprise in bore-sinking. To those engaged in this
+undertaking Mr. Henderson in his 1889 report pays a graceful tribute,
+congratulating them on their successes, and expressing regret at their failures,
+in which they only met the same luck as the Government had encountered. It was
+in this report also that the Hydraulic Engineer suggested that a map be prepared
+showing the position, altitude, and other useful particulars of all Government
+and private bores and wells in Queensland, and he invited information from all
+persons capable of giving it. Mr. Henderson mentioned the successful sinking of
+the Cunnamulla bore, having a flow of 22,500 gallons per hour of "excellent
+fresh water," with a pressure of 186 lb. to the square inch, a temperature of
+106 degrees, and a depth of 1,402 ft. The total cost of this bore was £1,928.
+The success of the Tambo bore was also reported at the same time, 8,333 gallons
+per hour having been obtained at a depth of 1,002 ft., with a temperature of 98
+degrees, and for a cost of £1,515.</p>
+
+<h3>THE CHARLEVILLE BORE.</h3>
+
+<p>The Hydraulic Engineer's report dated 11th September, 1890, supplies evidence of
+the importance of the discoveries made up to that date of artesian water in
+Queensland. The striking of a supply of 3,000,000 gallons a day of "water clear,
+colourless, soft, and potable" in the Charleville bore is noted with
+satisfaction. In the text of the report this was said to be, so far as the
+writer knew, the "best well <span class="pagenum"><a name="page214" id="page214"></a>214</span>
+in Australia," but a footnote added that soon afterwards a bore in the
+Cunnamulla district was reported to have been tapped with a daily supply of
+3&frac12; million gallons. The depth of the Charleville bore was only 1,370 ft., and
+its cost £2,389. The striking of a supply of 1,095,000,000 gallons per annum at
+so small a cost was naturally a subject for both official and general
+congratulation.</p>
+
+<h3>INFORMATION SOUGHT AS TO PRIVATE BORES.</h3>
+
+<p>In the same year is reported the striking of water in the Muckadilla bore, which
+yielded about 10,000 gallons a day from a depth of over 3,000 ft., and was then
+believed to be the deepest bore in Australia. The cost was £2,673. A somewhat
+better supply was afterwards struck at 3,262 ft. In this report the Hydraulic
+Engineer expresses regret that through the absence of barometrical measurements,
+owing to scarcity of money, the height above sea level of proposed sites for
+bores was not known, but sites were selected from surface indications and the
+results achieved by sinking in the neighbourhood. The wells sunk by the
+Government had been of much use in assisting private enterprise to select likely
+sites, but it would have been more satisfactory had better information been
+obtained by the use of the spirit level. Acknowledgments were made to those who
+had responded to the circular invitation sent out for information, and regret
+was expressed that in some cases there had been no response. The effort made,
+however, had enabled several new features to be embodied in the report, among
+which was a table containing a list of both public and private bores, and a
+large map locating, so far as possible, the position of each. Another map showed
+the rainfall in different parts of the colony, while a handsome diagram of the
+Brisbane rainfall was furnished for the first time. Both of these remained
+features of the Hydraulic Engineer's annual reports until 1901, when revenue
+considerations compelled their suspension.</p>
+
+<h3>HINDRANCES FROM FLOODS.</h3>
+
+<p>During 1890 excessive rains and bad roads hindered work in bore-sinking, instead
+of the dry periods which had been the cause of embarrassment for the preceding
+seven years. The only newly completed bore during this year was that at
+McKinlay, which at 1,002 ft. gave a supply of 224,000 gallons a day. Water was
+struck in two other bores, but of insufficient quantity, and work was still
+proceeding. The obstacles encountered in boring, often from the breaking of
+machinery, but more frequently from the want of thoroughly skilled drillers,
+must have been disheartening, especially in cases where the sinking was done
+without useful scientific information, and bores had to be abandoned after
+months&mdash;even years in cases&mdash;of labour and worry.</p>
+
+<p>In his report of 20th January, 1893, the Hydraulic Engineer discusses at length
+the question of artesian water supply. The country is, he holds, now in a much
+improved position to encounter long droughts. Valuable information has been and
+is still being obtained by exploration as to the prospects of artesian water
+being <span class="pagenum"><a name="page215" id="page215"></a>215</span>
+found, and also as to the conservation of surface water by artificial means. He
+says that fifteen bores, averaging 1,571 ft. each, have been sunk by the
+department, and that although the work has been of a pioneering character only
+one sunk to the contract depth has proved a failure. He estimates that about
+88,000 square miles in the western country have been proved to be water-bearing,
+and he urges that as large areas still remain to be explored the present is a
+favourable time for inviting tenders for the work.</p>
+
+<h3>STREAM-GAUGING RECOMMENDED.</h3>
+
+<p>In this report the Hydraulic Engineer directs attention to the necessity of
+acquiring information as to the extent of our surface-water resources. In three
+of the southern colonies, he mentions, a systematic practice of gauging streams
+has for some time been in force. The work will be useless unless it is carried
+on for a number of years. The essential thing to be ascertained is not the
+maximum flow of a stream, but the minimum; or rather, perhaps, the maximum that
+can be expected from a stream in a season of maximum aridity. "Without such
+data," he continues, "no fair distribution of water, no scheme of water supply,
+or irrigation, or drainage can be well considered; nor can storage and
+distribution or drainage works be economically designed, or their permanency and
+efficiency ensured." He therefore urges the matter of stream-gauging upon the
+favourable consideration of the Government, adding that the paramount necessity
+of active administration in respect of water conservation generally has been
+recognised by Parliament by legislation already placed upon the Statute-book.</p>
+
+<h3>WASTE OF ARTESIAN WATER.</h3>
+
+<p>Two official pages of the 1893 report are devoted to the "misuse of water," a
+member of Parliament having already objected to the application of the word
+"waste" to water allowed to flow unchecked from bores. The aggregate capacity of
+the ten Government bores then flowing was 5,000,000 gallons daily, all measured;
+while of the 137 private wells the flow was estimated at 100,000,000 gallons
+daily. This total of 105,000,000 gallons would be equivalent to a rainfall of 29
+in. on 91 square miles of country. This was the rate of average rainfall on the
+assumed outcrop of water-bearing country that supplied the artesian area. And it
+had to be remembered that a part of this rainfall of 29 in. had to be carried
+off by streams as well as by evaporation, and therefore did not sink into the
+water-bearing strata of the arid west. As to the extent of the outcrop, it was
+estimated not to exceed one-eighth of a mile, with a total length of 1,600
+miles, which meant a total supply of 200 square miles of water-bearing outcrop
+area.<a id="footnotetag1ha" name="footnotetag1ha"></a><a href="#footnote1ha"><sup>a</sup></a>
+Arguing on these and other grounds, the report contends that the falling
+off of the yield of many bores affords proof that, wherever the supply comes
+from, the outflow already exceeds the inflow. The Engineer
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page216" id="page216"></a>216</span> can only
+regard as wasted two-thirds of the water that now flows from the artesian bores
+in Queensland; indeed, adopting the language of an American, "the waste is a
+crime against the well-owner and against the State."</p>
+
+<p class="footnote"><a id="footnote1ha" name="footnote1ha"></a><a class="footnote" href="#footnotetag1ha">Footnote a:</a>
+For fuller particulars see Hydraulic Engineer's Report for 1893, pages 5 and 6.</p>
+
+<h3>CONTROL OF FLOW NECESSARY.</h3>
+
+<p>The Hydraulic Engineer adds that while he cannot assert that the artesian flow
+is being exhausted, he yet holds that the flow ought to be controlled by
+legislative action.<a id="footnotetag2ha" name="footnotetag2ha"></a><a href="#footnote2ha"><sup>a</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="footnote"><a id="footnote2ha" name="footnote2ha"></a><a class="footnote" href="#footnotetag2ha">Footnote a:</a>
+On this passage the Hydraulic Engineer notes that, in 1891, a bill was introduced into
+Parliament by Sir Thomas McIlwraith for controlling the artesian water supply, and passed
+through the Assembly, but was rejected by the Council. Since then no action in that direction has
+been taken.</p>
+
+<h3>IRRIGATION BY BORES.</h3>
+
+<p>The same report contains an interesting article on irrigation. It points out
+that at the beginning of 1892 there were only 200 irrigators among the land
+cultivators of the colony, and that the area irrigated was only 5,000 acres. It
+was believed that in the last year the amount of land so fertilised had largely
+increased. Many of the plants and distributing apparatus were of a most
+primitive kind. "Some are expensive, others badly erected, and not a few are of
+a type ill-adapted to the object in view."</p>
+
+<p>The report goes on to discuss the probability or otherwise of water in
+sufficient quantities for irrigation being obtainable by conservation. In
+summarising his argument the Hydraulic Engineer says, "Looking at the question
+broadly, I am much disposed to regard the possibilities of a sufficiently
+abundant supply of water being obtained for irrigation, especially for land in
+small areas devoted to intense culture, as of considerable promise." He then
+urges the inadequacy of artesian wells for the irrigation of large areas,
+pointing out, among other things, that the entire discharge of the wells then
+flowing in Queensland would suffice to irrigate only 219 square miles to a depth
+of 1 ft. He thinks that in Queensland we shall have to depend upon "natural"
+water for irrigation purposes.</p>
+
+<h3>A VALUABLE MAP&mdash;376,832 SQUARE MILES IN ARTESIA.</h3>
+
+<p>A new feature in the 1893 report was the map giving information as to (1)
+artesian bores applied for, (2) under contract, (3) in progress, and (4)
+completed. It showed that out of a total of 668,497 square miles of the "Rolling
+Downs Formation" (Lower Cretaceous) no less than 376,832 square miles, chiefly
+in the arid west, was likely to be water-bearing. This estimate, it may be
+noted, has been very slightly reduced of late, but the scope for exploration in
+water-finding seems still great in Western Queensland. The report alludes to the
+success attained in the Queensland manufacture of well-boring machinery. All the
+plant used, the wire rope alone excepted, was manufactured in the colony, where
+improvements had <span class="pagenum"><a name="page217" id="page217"></a>217</span> been made in the originally imported article. Yet it
+is admitted that the apparatus used was "not a perfectly scientific one, because
+it does not produce a core by means of which the nature of the strata and the
+angle and direction of the dip can be fully ascertained." Queensland yellow-wood
+(<i>Flindersia Oxleyana</i>) had quite replaced American timber in the manufacture of
+drilling poles.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 600px;"><a href="images/page216-1200.jpg"><img src="images/page216-600.jpg" width="600" height="361" alt="SCENE ON LOGAN RIVER, SOUTH QUEENSLAND" /></a>
+<p class="center">SCENE ON LOGAN RIVER, SOUTH QUEENSLAND</p></div>
+
+<h3>EFFECT OF GOOD SEASONS.</h3>
+
+<p>In closing, the Hydraulic Engineer reports that the succession of good seasons
+experienced (years 1890-93), and the abundance of water and grass resulting, has
+occasioned much inattention to water conservation, and he also expresses regret
+that financial exigencies have compelled the dispensing with some valued members
+of his staff. The article is illustrated by diagrams, and the studious reader
+will peruse it with profit.</p>
+
+<h3>THE SOURCE OF ARTESIAN WATER.</h3>
+
+<p>In his report for 1st November, 1894, the Hydraulic Engineer recurs to the
+source of artesian water. He regrets that very little can be added to the
+previous assumption that it lies in the outcrops of the porous beds of the Lower
+Cretaceous formation on the western slope of the coast range; and he urges the
+necessity of accumulating facts relating to the bores already sunk, and
+complains that some owners neglect to give the department the information
+sought. He urges that legislation should make the furnishing of statistical
+matter of this kind compulsory. He doubts whether, in the absence of information
+as to the precise geological conditions subsisting beneath the surface, a map of
+Queensland can ever be prepared showing with certainty where artesian water can
+be found; but much may be done by accumulating accurate information with respect
+to the sinking of bores, nature of strata passed through, amount and pressure of
+flow, temperature of water, and depth beneath the surface whence obtained in
+each case. The map issued by the Geological Department would show the
+water-bearing areas, which means the formation in which water may be expected to
+be found; but bores can only be put down with reasonable certainty when the
+entire western country has been prospected.</p>
+
+<h3>THE LIFE OF ARTESIAN WELLS.</h3>
+
+<p>The life of an artesian well with a permanent spring, says the report, is
+limited by the durability of the casing. The corrosive action of some water is
+much greater than others; but there should be no difficulty in renewing the
+casing when necessary. It has often been discovered that an interruption of the
+flow, or its serious diminution, is the result of worn-out casing. So much is
+this the case that there is still controversy as to whether there is any general
+diminution in the supply consequent upon continuous waste.</p>
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page218" id="page218"></a>218</span>
+
+<h3>ARTESIAN WATER POWER.</h3>
+
+<p>The report then discusses the question of using artesian water for power in the
+industries. The Hydraulic Engineer points out that of the total horse-power used
+in the United States at that time about 39·5 per cent. was hydrodynamic.
+Artesian water, he says, can be applied to driving all kinds of machinery, "from
+a sewing machine or a cream separator to a saw or flour mill; and for
+fire-extinguishing it is most excellent." He therefore recommends the employment
+in Western Queensland of turbines and Pelton wheel motors for sheep-shearing,
+electric lighting, and other kinds of machinery used there, pointing out that
+the horse-power available was&mdash;At Blackall, 8·04; at Cunnamulla, 41·53; at
+Charleville, 123·41; and at Thargomindah, 63·51.<a id="footnotetag3ha" name="footnotetag3ha"></a><a href="#footnote3ha"><sup>a</sup></a>
+He further recommends the utilisation of the artesian supply for street mains, a
+suggestion since carried out with great public advantage in several western
+towns. While Mr. Henderson doubts the utility of artesian water for irrigation,
+he says that, generally speaking, it is quite as valuable as that from town
+mains, rivers, and falls for developing power. The aggregate area to date in
+which precious artesian water has been found in Queensland is 117,000 square
+miles, and he feels that this area would be rapidly enlarged by exploration by
+both Government and private borings. The shallowest completed flowing well in
+Queensland at that date was 60 ft., and the deepest 3,630 ft.; the average depth
+so far as known to the department was 1,289 ft.</p>
+
+<p class="footnote"><a id="footnote3ha" name="footnote3ha"></a><a class="footnote" href="#footnotetag3ha">Footnote a:</a>
+Mr. Henderson notes that these horse-powers have since been very much reduced.</p>
+
+<h3>STATIC PRESSURE AND HYDRAULIC PRESSURE.</h3>
+
+<p>Explaining why the volume flowing from a well does not depend upon the diameter
+of the "static" pressure of the water, Mr. Henderson says that the flow depends
+principally upon the relative altitudes of the outcrops of the water-bearing
+beds, and of the mouth of the bore or well, and upon the character and texture
+of the porous beds from which the well derives its supply. The static pressure
+is ascertained by stopping the flow by artificial means, when the pressure
+generally rises, sometimes quickly, at other times slowly, until it reaches a
+maximum. But when the well is again opened it will be found that the static
+pressure has been more or less reduced by friction. This reduced pressure is
+called the "hydraulic." The hydraulic pressure can never exceed the static
+pressure; nor can the volume of water flowing from an artesian well be
+ascertained by its pressure, or the height to which the water may rise over the
+top of the casing, any more than the pressure can be ascertained by knowing its
+volume.<a id="footnotetag3hb" name="footnotetag3hb"></a><a href="#footnote3hb"><sup>b</sup></a></p>
+
+<p>In the same report is announced the striking at Winton, at a depth of 3,235 ft.
+of a supply amounting to 100,000 gallons a day, at a temperature of 140 degrees.
+It was determined to continue sinking under a new contract.</p>
+
+<p class="footnote"><a id="footnote3hb" name="footnote3hb"></a><a class="footnote" href="#footnotetag3hb">Footnote b:</a>
+See Votes and Proceedings, 1894-5, for Hydraulic Engineer's Report, 1st November, 1894,
+page 5.</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page219" id="page219"></a>219</span>
+
+<h3>SUBTERRANEAN WATER BELONGS TO THE STATE.</h3>
+
+<p>Mr. Henderson again returns to the misuse of water, suggesting that the utility
+of the artesian supply can easily be tested by intense cultivation of a small
+area at each bore. He complains that one of Queensland's most valuable assets is
+not as carefully guarded as it should be. He estimates that the quantity allowed
+to run uncontrolled and generally misused amounts to 66,000,000 gallons per
+diem, or 66 per cent. of the estimated total flow in Queensland. He invites
+attention to a recommendation in a previous report that all underground or
+artesian water should be declared State property. This would not prevent owners
+of artesian water taking and using a reasonable supply of water, but all
+consumption beyond what might be called a "liberal" amount should be paid for,
+the State receiving the water rate. The experience of America in this matter
+proved that in some States control by the Government was enforced, while in
+others the greatest care was exercised to prevent any further granting of
+subterranean water franchises unless the absolute right of the State was
+reserved to regulate the consumption. Appended to the report is a copy of a
+recommendation by a Commission in the State of Colorado for regulating,
+distributing, and using water. Mr. Henderson thinks the recommendation too
+severe, but insists that some State control should be exercised.</p>
+
+<p>The same report contains an interesting review of the condition of irrigation
+enterprise in Queensland, and again insists that scientific stream-gauging is
+indispensable if surface water is to be made generally available for irrigation
+purposes.</p>
+
+<h3>EXTENT OF ARTESIAN SUPPLY.</h3>
+
+<p>The report dated 5th October, 1895, recurs to the Hydraulic Engineer's previous
+estimate that the outcrops of the water-bearing beds of the country covered an
+area of about 200 square miles. He is glad to learn that Mr. R. L. Jack,
+Government Geologist, had since worked the matter out, and, while approving of
+Mr. Henderson's suggestion as to the source of artesian supplies in Queensland,
+estimated the area as 5,000 square miles, or twenty-five times the Engineer's
+estimate. This information seems to have allayed Mr. Henderson's dread of the
+exhaustion of the supply, for he says that the Geologist's figures indicate that
+"the gathering-ground is larger than can possibly be required for years to come
+if there is no extensive leakage, of which as yet there is no evidence that I am
+aware of." He next writes strongly in favour of a comprehensive search for
+artesian water by the Government, and of Government aid being offered by loan to
+persons willing to sink bores on Crown lands or even on private property. Such
+assistance would encourage settlement by leaving the settler in possession for
+other purposes of money which would otherwise be spent on water provision on his
+holding, and prove an incalculable benefit to the State by mitigating periodical
+droughts.</p>
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page220" id="page220"></a>220</span>
+
+<h3>PROGRESS TO 1895.</h3>
+
+<p>The report then gives statistics relative to artesian bores as
+follows:&mdash;Number of bores, 397; average depth, 1,195 ft. Of these 286
+overflow with a total output of 213&frac12; million gallons per diem. Total cost of
+boring and casing, £860,321, as nearly as could be estimated, "remarkable
+results for eight years' work, as in 1887 boring in Queensland was in its
+infancy." With a view to greater accuracy provision for the salaries of two
+inspectors had been made on the Estimates for the year, in order that uniform
+records might be secured as to the strata pierced, the flow, the pressure and
+temperature of the water, amount of rainfall at the outcrop of water-bearing
+beds, and the alleged diminution of artesian streams. The suggestion is then
+made that land, the leases carrying water rights, might be made available for
+settlement in small areas around tanks and bores.</p>
+
+<h3>THE WINTON BORE.</h3>
+
+<p>In this report the Hydraulic Engineer is able to announce the success of the
+Winton bore. At about 3,555 ft. a daily supply of 720,000 gallons of excellent
+artesian water was struck, and boring being continued to 4,010 ft. without
+increasing the supply work ceased, the total cost of the bore having been about
+£7,000. An article on irrigation shows a total irrigated area of 7,641 acres, an
+increase for the year of 2,240 acres. Included in the area are 2,000 acres of
+natural grass land and 2,000 acres sown with artificial grasses; also 11&frac12;
+acres irrigated from artesian wells in the Warrego district. Flood mitigation is
+also dealt with at length, and a system of flood warnings on the various streams
+recommended.</p>
+
+<h3><span class="sc">Dr. R. L. JACK'S OPINION.</span></h3>
+
+<p>The report for 2nd October, 1896, brings records up to date. By map it is shown
+that not only does the water-bearing country extend over 56 per cent. of the
+area of Queensland, but also continues into New South Wales and South Australia,
+and enters Western Australia. It "marks the position of the ancient Cretaceous
+sea which connected the Gulf of Carpentaria with the Great Australian Bight,"
+and "divided the continent into two islands." "They were," wrote Dr. R. L. Jack,
+"laid down by this sea; their present position is due to subsequent general
+upheaval, and they lie directly and unconformably on schists and slates of
+undetermined age, or on granite or gneiss. Except in Queensland, where they are
+overlaid here and there by the remains of the Upper Cretaceous or Desert
+Sandstone formations which have not been removed by denudation, they seem to be
+covered to a considerable extent by Tertiary rocks. The Desert Sandstone beds
+lie horizontally but unconformably on those of the Rolling Downs, which dip to
+the south." <a id="footnotetag4ha" name="footnotetag4ha"></a><a href="#footnote4ha"><sup>a</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="footnote"><a id="footnote4ha" name="footnote4ha"></a><a class="footnote" href="#footnotetag4ha">Footnote a:</a>
+See "Geology and Palaeontology of Queensland and New Guinea," by R. L. Jack, F.G.S.,
+Government Geologist, and R. Etheridge, jun,. Government Palaeontologist, New South Wales,
+page 390.</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page221" id="page221"></a>221</span>
+
+<h3>IMPROVED DRILLING MACHINERY.</h3>
+
+<p>In the same report the improvement in drilling machinery is discussed, and
+Queensland manufacturers are congratulated on making American and Canadian
+machines with improvements which greatly add to their efficiency. Bores in
+Queensland are generally begun with 10-in. casing, and carried to not lower than
+500 ft. Then 8-in., 6-in., and 5-in. casings are used. The necessity of these
+casings being as perfect as possible is emphasised by the Engineer. The cost of
+sinking bores by contract, which is almost the universal method, depends upon
+the facilities offered by the site for the transport of wood and water, but the
+range then was from 17s. to 24s. per foot for the first 500 ft., and increased
+with depth until, at 4,000 ft. odd, sinking had cost 55s. per foot. The
+inspectors appointed the previous year had done good work, though the wet season
+delayed travelling. Sectional diagrams compiled from the inspectors' reports
+appear among the appendices.</p>
+
+<p>Then follows an interesting description of surface artesian water known as
+Elizabeth Springs, in latitude half a degree south of the tropic, and in 140&frac34;
+degrees west longitude. The account of these remarkable springs is well worth
+reading.<a id="footnotetag5ha" name="footnotetag5ha"></a><a href="#footnote5ha"><sup>a</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class="footnote"><a id="footnote5ha" name="footnote5ha"></a><a class="footnote" href="#footnotetag5ha">Footnote a:</a>
+See Votes and Proceedings for 1897 for Hydraulic Engineer's Report, 2nd October, 1896,
+page 5.</p>
+
+<h3>PROGRESS TO 1896.</h3>
+
+<p>Number of bores in Western Queensland to October, 1896, 454; average depth,
+1,168 ft.; feet bored, 530,332 (nearly 100 miles); overflow, 193,000,000 gallons
+per diem. There were also nineteen deep bores on the coast. The total cost had
+been £928,081.</p>
+
+<h3>BORES IN THE GULF TOWNS.</h3>
+
+<p>Reporting on 2nd August, 1897, the Hydraulic Engineer mentions that the
+Burketown bore has been carried to a depth of 2,304 ft., with a supply of
+155,560 gallons of good water at a pressure of 60 lb. per square inch, and a
+temperature of 155 degrees, the cost being £4,155. A few months earlier the
+Normanton bore had struck water at 2,330 ft., for 293,000 gallons a day, with a
+temperature of 151 degrees, at a total cost of £3,803.</p>
+
+<h3>PROGRESS COMPARED WITH SOUTHERN COLONIES.</h3>
+
+<p>The same report glances at the progress made in artesian water discovery in the
+southern colonies. Queensland aggregate flows on 30th June, 1897, were estimated
+at 140,000,000 gallons daily, or 51,135,000,000 gallons annually. This would
+suffice to cover 294 square miles with water 1 ft. deep, or 100 square miles
+35&#8531; in. deep. In New South Wales, in 1897, there were thirty-four flowing and
+twelve pumping bores, yielding 22½ million gallons of water per diem. In
+Victoria only one or two flowing bores had been put down, the country being
+generally unfavourable for artesian <span class="pagenum"><a name="page222" id="page222"></a>222</span>
+water. In South Australia there were in all sixty-two bores, seven being still
+in progress, but of the total only nineteen wells gave good fresh water, and
+twenty-two wells salt water. Seeing that artesian water exploration began in the
+three colonies named before any steps were taken in Queensland, the success here
+may be regarded as phenomenal, although of course a very considerable amount of
+capital was lost in sinking abortive bores.</p>
+
+<h3>GRAZING FARM SELECTORS' BORE.</h3>
+
+<p>The report dated 15th September, 1898, mentions that the Bando bore sunk for the
+Lands Department for the accommodation of grazing farm selectors was completed
+during the year at a depth of 2,081 ft., giving a supply of 2,000,000 gallons
+daily, and at a cost of £3,289. It was estimated to water 146,000 acres. The
+Roma bore for the town supply had also been completed at a depth of 1,678 ft.,
+and yielded a controlled supply of 111,000 gallons daily, which sufficed for the
+wants of the town.</p>
+
+<h3>STATISTICS TO DATE.&mdash;THARGOMINDAH ILLUMINATED.</h3>
+
+<p>Particulars of thirty-seven bores sunk in the colony to a depth of 3,000 ft. and
+over are given. Of these eleven had reported flows, either large or small,
+during the year, three had been abandoned, and nine were still in progress. The
+yield of 376 bores in the colony was estimated at 214,000,000 gallons a day, the
+average per bore being over half a million gallons. Besides these, fifty-five
+sub-artesian wells&mdash;those whose water did not rise above the
+surface&mdash;yielded 2&frac12; million gallons a day; and perennial springs gave an
+ascertained continuous flow of nearly 4,000,000 gallons a day. The report calls
+attention to a serious diminution in the yield of certain wells, and says that
+it has been ascertained in some cases that the loss was due to loss of head, and
+not to any leakage or obstruction in the casing. The Hydraulic Engineer
+therefore again urges legislation to give the Government control of bore water.
+As to power, it is mentioned that a small electrical installation had been set
+up at Thargomindah by the Bulloo Divisional Board, and that the number of lamps
+of sixteen candle-power that would exhaust the bore power was 150 to 200.</p>
+
+<h3>THE DROUGHT OF 1899.</h3>
+
+<p>When the report dated 30th August, 1899, was prepared the country was held in
+the throes of a protracted drought, and the Hydraulic Engineer speaks of
+compression in his report on the ground of economy. For years past the reports
+had been becoming increasingly bulky, appendices and maps being supplied on a
+generous scale. Government expenditure in bore-sinking had now nearly ceased,
+presumably because private enterprise had already benefited greatly by
+Government prospecting for water, and the same necessity did not exist for State
+action as in previous years. The new feature of the departmental year's work is
+stated to have been the comparative analysis of the height of bore sites and the
+water potentials <span class="pagenum"><a name="page223" id="page223"></a>223</span>
+thereat, upon which the iso-potential map, with the full description given in
+page 56 of the report, is based. By this time the number of bores sunk to a
+depth of 3,000 ft. and over was fifty, an increase for the year of thirteen,
+which shows that private enterprise was still active in the search for artesian
+water. The total number of flowing bores in the colony was given as 440, with a
+yield of water of nearly 266&frac12; million gallons a day.</p>
+
+<p>The report dated 25th August, 1900, mentions that during the year in the Adavale
+bore 9,000 gallons of water a day had been struck at 1,494 ft., and although
+further sinking had been carried to 2,930 ft. there was no increase in the
+supply. By this time the number of bores sunk to 3,000 ft. and over had
+increased by nine, or to fifty-nine, while the aggregate flow of artesian water
+was put at over 321&frac12; million gallons per day.</p>
+
+<h3>REGRETTABLE ECONOMIES.</h3>
+
+<p>The report dated 31st August, 1901, was the last to supply the very full
+information customarily given annually by the department. There was almost
+universal drought and difficulty. In some parts of the State, however, the
+drought had broken, so that needful works could be again pushed on. But this was
+by no means the end of the great drought of 1898-1903, and the appendices and
+valuable maps which added so greatly to the permanent value of the reports of
+the department were discontinued, and only a brief report was presented. This is
+much to be regretted, but retrenchment was enforced by revenue shrinkages and
+the dislocation temporarily caused by federal union. Happily, however, the
+information has since been carefully collected, and is now available to complete
+this sketch of the work done and results achieved since the year 1883, when the
+department was created under Mr. Henderson's direction. In the 1901 report the
+success of the Adavale bore is recorded, the depth being 3,398 ft., with a flow
+of 990,890 gallons per day, and at a total cost of £5,369. The striking of a
+supply of water in the Dalby bore to the amount of 46,470 gallons an hour at a
+depth of 1,841 ft. is also mentioned in this report. This success is interesting
+on account of the site being the furthest easterly where artesian water has been
+found.</p>
+
+<p>The report for 1902 was cut down to the minimum limit. It was prepared while the
+country was in the grip of the worst drought ever known, and yet private
+enterprise was active as ever in bore-sinking, no less than thirty-six flowing
+wells having been completed during the year. The total number in the State was
+thus brought up to 563, yielding 375,000,000 gallons a day, the average flow per
+bore being 666,231 gallons.</p>
+
+<h3>ADDITIONAL FLOWING BORES IN 1903.</h3>
+
+<p>The report for 1903 was brief. During the year the number of flowing bores had
+increased by thirteen, and the aggregate flow by 10,000,000 gallons. The average
+flow was 669,279 gallons, or 3,048 gallons increase upon the flow for the
+preceding year. <span class="pagenum"><a name="page224" id="page224"></a>224</span>
+This in the face of the diminution of the flow in many bores cannot be
+considered unsatisfactory. The entire cost of well-boring in the State to 1903
+is set down at £1,463,326, including abortive bores, and heavy sums for carriage
+of boring plant in the earlier days. It is mentioned in this report that the
+Whitewood bore, Bimerah, yielding only 70,000 gallons a day, at 5,045 ft., is
+still the deepest in Queensland. The shallowest is given as at Manfred Downs, at
+10 ft., yielding 2,000 gallons a day; and the hottest water at Elderslie No. 2,
+where from a depth of 4,523 ft. emerge more than 1&frac12; million gallons per diem
+at a temperature only 10 degrees below boiling point. The greatest static
+pressure is at the Thargomindah bore, where it is nearly 240 lb. to the square
+inch.</p>
+
+<h3>LATER INFORMATION.</h3>
+
+<p>Since 1902 until this year annual reports at length have not been furnished by
+the Hydraulic Engineer; but this year the work has been resumed, and advance
+information supplied in a condensed form.</p>
+
+<p>In the foregoing epitome of the Hydraulic Engineer's reports extending over
+twenty-five years, no particular mention has been made of the failures
+inevitable when either the Government or private persons were engaged in deep
+boring for water exploration. The following particulars show some of the
+obstacles encountered in tapping the subterranean springs of our arid western
+country:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>In his report for 1902 the Hydraulic Engineer mentioned that a contract had been
+entered into with Mr. W. Woodley for the sinking of a bore at Eromanga to a
+depth of 2,000 ft. for the sum of £1,438, but that work could not be prosecuted
+in consequence of the prevailing drought in the West. The contract depth was
+reached on 29th August, 1903, without finding water. A further contract to carry
+the bore to 3,000 ft. was subsequently entered into, and on 30th June, 1904, at
+a depth of 2,612 ft., the work was suspended until the arrival of casing, which
+was delayed by rain. It was not until November, 1904, that the casings reached
+the bore site, and that work could be resumed. A suspension of work occurred on
+4th March following for want of a competent driller. Boring was resumed in
+August and continued till March, 1906, without success. The only water tapped up
+to that time was a supply of 10,000 gallons per diem at a depth of 1,640 ft. The
+casings were allowed to remain in the bore, the gross cost of which had been
+£4,480. In May, 1906, a new contract with Mr. Woodley, for sinking another bore
+to a depth of 3,000 ft., was entered into. At 1,660 ft. a supply of 12,000
+gallons a day was tapped; but, this being considered insufficient, another
+contract for deepening the bore to 3,500 ft. was entered into with Mr. Woodley,
+the additional cost being £1,000. On 9th March, 1908, the depth of 3,500 ft. was
+reached without any additional supply. Then a contract for sinking a further 500
+ft. was entered into. At 3,980 ft. a small flow was tapped which dribbled over
+the surface, and the 4,000 ft. depth being reached arrangements were made for
+sinking another 100 ft. At 4,050 ft. a small flow of 110 gallons per hour was
+struck. At 4,135 ft. the flow increased to 250 gallons per hour. Delays occurred
+after this,<span class="pagenum"><a name="page225" id="page225"></a>225</span>
+until January, 1909, when boring was resumed, and at 4,270 ft. a flow of 306,234
+gallons per diem was struck. The water was then brought under control, and found
+to have a pressure of 219 lb. per square inch, with a temperature of 198 degrees
+F. The water was fresh and drinkable, though having a slightly gaseous taste;
+but this was not noticeable after it had stood exposed to the air for a little
+time. On completion of the surface fittings the discharge was measured, and the
+flow ascertained to be 256,825 gallons per diem. The cost had not been adjusted
+at the date of our information, but it will be understood that a work extending
+over five years, and then yielding a comparatively small supply, makes
+bore-sinking a highly speculative industry, even in what the geologists declare
+to be artesian water-bearing country.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 600px;"><a href="images/page224a-1200.jpg"><img src="images/page224a-600.jpg" width="600" height="186" alt="COOKTOWN AND ENDEAVOUR RIVER, NORTH QUEENSLAND" /></a>
+<p class="center">COOKTOWN AND ENDEAVOUR RIVER, NORTH QUEENSLAND</p></div>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 600px;"><a href="images/page224b-1200.jpg"><img src="images/page224b-600.jpg" width="600" height="179" alt="PEARLING FLEETS OFF BADU ISLAND, TORRES STRAIT" /></a>
+<p class="center">PEARLING FLEETS OFF BADU ISLAND, TORRES STRAIT</p></div>
+
+<p>At the Kynuna bore, work had been suspended at the time of the last annual
+report at a depth of 2,221 ft., the flow being 807,608 gallons a day. When cased
+to the bottom the flow was 880,154 gallons per day. It was handed over to the
+Winton Shire Council, the total cost having been £2,610, half of which was
+granted as a loan to the council by the Government, and the other half as a free
+gift.</p>
+
+<p>Another unsuccessful bore was at Windorah, where, under contract, a depth of
+4,000 ft. was reached, with no water save an insignificant spring touched at 103
+ft. below the surface. The total cost, including casing and supervision, was
+£7,508.</p>
+
+<p>A bore at the joint expense of the Booringa Shire Council and the Government was
+started at Mitchell in January, 1908, and on 18th May, at a depth of 1,405 ft.,
+the work was stopped, the supply, equal to 205,000 gallons a day, being
+considered sufficient. The cost of the bore was £1,935.</p>
+
+<h3>SUMMARY BY THE HYDRAULIC ENGINEER.</h3>
+
+<p>Summarising the information supplied in the accompanying tables, Mr. Henderson
+writes:&mdash;"The total continuous yield from 716 bores&mdash;the flows from
+which have been estimated by various persons, not connected with the department,
+and communicated to me either directly or through the public prints, for the
+accuracy of which I cannot vouch, and measured under the hydraulic survey which
+was suspended in 1899 and not yet resumed&mdash;is now estimated at 479,268,000
+gallons per diem; hence the average flow per bore is 669,369 gallons in the same
+time.</p>
+
+<p>"These figures do not include the flows from nine sub-artesian wells the flow
+from which is artificially produced by cutting down the outlet, but which it is
+understood have since ceased to flow, nor do they include the yield from 215
+sub-artesian wells which are pumped more or less regularly during periods of
+drought, and which are estimated to yield 8,600,000 gallons per day, or an
+average of 40,000 gallons per well if pumped continuously night and day; but as
+it is impossible to form a trustworthy estimate of the daily volume raised I
+have put it down at what I think is approximately true&mdash;namely, 1,720,000
+gallons.</p>
+
+<p>"I may also mention that owing to the suspension of the departmental hydraulic
+survey previously mentioned, I have obtained no official data relating to
+perennial springs. The last data to hand are given in my summarised report for
+the year 1902."</p>
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page226" id="page226"></a>226</span>
+
+<h3>WELLS SUCCESSFUL AND ABANDONED.</h3>
+
+<p>The following table shows the progress of boring and artesian supplies to end of
+1908 [but it must be stated that only part of the data for the years 1907 and
+1908 is to hand:&mdash;</p>
+
+<table summary="artesian wells" align="center" width="90%" style="border-collapse: collapse;" border="0">
+
+<tr>
+ <th class="info">Sunk by</th>
+ <th class="info">Artesian<br />Flows.</th>
+ <th class="info">Pumped<br />Supplies.</th>
+ <th class="info">Progress<br />Abandoned<br />or Uncertain.</th>
+ <th class="info">Total.</th>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="info" style="border-bottom: 0;"><a id="footnotetag6ha" name="footnotetag6ha"></a><a href="#footnote6ha"><sup>a</sup></a> Government<br />
+ Local Governing Authorities<br />Private Owners<br /></td>
+ <td class="infor">32<br />16<br />668</td>
+ <td class="infor">10<br />0<br />205</td>
+ <td class="infor">76<br />24<br />315</td>
+ <td class="infor">118<br />40<br />1,188</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="info" style="border-top: 0;">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Total to end of 1908</td>
+ <td class="infor">716</td>
+ <td class="infor">215</td>
+ <td class="infor">415</td>
+ <td class="infor">1,346</td>
+</tr>
+</table>
+
+<p class="footnote"><a id="footnote6ha" name="footnote6ha"></a><a class="footnote" href="#footnotetag6ha">Footnote a:</a>
+Pioneering bores sunk to explore and ascertain the artesian possibilities of new country.</p>
+
+<h3>AGGREGATE MILEAGE BORED, AND AVERAGE FOR EACH WELL.</h3>
+
+<p>For comparison with former years I may mention (writes Mr. Henderson) that the
+total aggregate number of feet bored in search of artesian water in Queensland
+up to end of 1908 is estimated, from the best information at hand, at 1,498,700
+ft., equal to 283·84 miles. The average depth per bore is 1,113 ft. The total
+aggregate depth bored is as follows:&mdash;</p>
+
+<table summary="aggregate mileage bored" align="center" width="auto" style="border-collapse: collapse;" border="0">
+<tr>
+ <th class="info">Date</th>
+ <th class="info">Miles.</th>
+ <th class="info">Increase in Each Year.</th>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="info">
+ <table summary="totals" border="0" style="border-collapse: collapse;">
+<tr><td class="dat1b">Up to the end of October, 1894</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="dat1b">Up to the end of October, 1895</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="dat1b">Up to the end of September, 1896</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="dat1b">Up to the end of June, 1897</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="dat1b">Up to the end of June, 1898</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="dat1b">Up to the end of June, 1899</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="dat1b">Up to the end of June, 1900</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="dat1b">Up to the end of June, 1901</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="dat1b">Up to the end of June, 1902</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="dat1b">Up to the end of June, 1903</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="dat1b">Up to the end of June, 1904</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="dat1b">Up to the end of June, 1905</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="dat1b">Up to the end of June, 1906</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="dat1b">Up to the end of June, 1907</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="dat1b">Up to the end of December, 1907</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="dat1b">Up to the end of December, 1908</td></tr>
+</table>
+ </td>
+ <td class="info">
+ <table summary="totals" border="0" style="border-collapse: collapse;">
+<tr><td class="dat1">82·75</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="dat1">92·21</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="dat1">102·43</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="dat1">111·02</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="dat1"><a id="footnotetagahb" name="footnotetagahb"></a><a href="#footnoteahb"><sup>b</sup></a>135·85</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="dat1">159·61</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="dat1"><a id="footnotetagahc" name="footnotetagahc"></a><a href="#footnoteahc"><sup>c</sup></a>184·98</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="dat1">202·01</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="dat1">215·04</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="dat1">221·87</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="dat1">225·04</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="dat1">229·53</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="dat1">236·41</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="dat1"><a id="footnotetagahd" name="footnotetagahd"></a><a href="#footnoteahd"><sup>d</sup></a>273·66</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="dat1"><a id="footnotetagahe" name="footnotetagahe"></a><a href="#footnoteahe"><sup>e</sup></a>276·50</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="dat1"><a href="#footnoteahe"><sup>e</sup></a>283·84</td></tr>
+</table>
+ </td>
+ <td class="info">
+ <table summary="totals" border="0" style="border-collapse: collapse;">
+<tr><td class="dat1">&nbsp;</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="dat1">9·46 miles in twelve months</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="dat1">10·22 miles in eleven months</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="dat1">8·59 miles in nine months</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="dat1"><a href="#footnoteahb"><sup>b</sup></a>24·83 miles in twelve months</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="dat1">23·76 miles in twelve months</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="dat1"><a href="#footnoteahc"><sup>c</sup></a>25·37 miles in twelve months</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="dat1">17·03 miles in twelve months</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="dat1">13·03 miles in twelve months</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="dat1">6·83 miles in twelve months</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="dat1">3·17 miles in twelve months</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="dat1">4·49 miles in twelve months</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="dat1">6·88 miles in twelve months</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="dat1"><a href="#footnoteahd"><sup>d</sup></a>37·25 miles in twelve months</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="dat1"><a href="#footnoteahe"><sup>e</sup></a> 2·84 miles in six months</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="dat1"><a href="#footnoteahe"><sup>e</sup></a> 7·34 miles in twelve months</td></tr>
+</table>
+ </td>
+</tr>
+</table>
+
+<p class="footnote"><a id="footnoteahb" name="footnoteahb"></a><a class="footnote" href="#footnotetagahb">Footnote b:</a>
+This includes a considerable number of old bores discovered and added to the 1898 year's list.</p>
+
+<p class="footnote"><a id="footnoteahc" name="footnoteahc"></a><a class="footnote" href="#footnotetagahc">Footnote c:</a>
+This includes thirty-four sub-artesian wells and bores in the Dalby district, representing an aggregate of
+3,500 ft.</p>
+
+<p class="footnote"><a id="footnoteahd" name="footnoteahd"></a><a class="footnote" href="#footnotetagahd">Footnote d:</a>
+Data collected by Police Department at the beginning of 1907, which include a number of old bores not
+previously heard of.</p>
+
+<p class="footnote"><a id="footnoteahe" name="footnoteahe"></a><a class="footnote" href="#footnotetagahe">Footnote e:</a>
+Only a small part of data to hand, which was chiefly compiled from newspaper reports. It is a fact
+well known to this Department that never before was there in any year so much boring done as during the
+years 1907 and 1908.</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page227" id="page227"></a>227</span>
+
+<h3>FLOWING ARTESIAN BORES&mdash;1908.</h3>
+
+<h3>Number of artesian flows of various magnitudes to end of 1908:&mdash;</h3>
+
+<table summary="artesian flows" width="auto" align="center" border="0">
+<tr>
+ <td class="left">Under 10,000 gallons per day</td>
+ <td class="right2">49</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="left">From&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;10,001 to&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;150,000 gallons per day</td>
+ <td class="right2">151</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="left">From&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;150,001 to&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;750,000</td>
+ <td class="right2">296</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="left">From&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;750,001 to 1,500,000</td>
+ <td class="right2">129</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="left">From&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;1,500,001 to 2,500,000</td>
+ <td class="right2">57</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="left">Exceptional flows of over 2,500,000 gallons per day</td>
+ <td class="right2">34</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="left">&nbsp;</td>
+ <td class="right2">&mdash;&mdash;</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="left">Total flowing bores</td>
+ <td class="right2">716</td>
+</tr>
+</table>
+
+<p>The continuous yield of water is estimated at 479,268,000 gallons per diem,
+equal to 1,763·22 acre feet, or 2·755 square miles of water 1 ft. deep, in the
+same time.</p>
+
+<p>The average flow of the 716 bores is thus 669,369 gallons per day, and their
+average depth is 1,575 ft.</p>
+
+<p>The estimated value of 1,346 borings is £1,873,375.</p>
+
+<h3>ARTESIAN WELLS OVER 3,000 FEET DEEP.</h3>
+
+<p>The following is a list, compiled from the latest available information, of the
+Artesian Wells of the State over 3,000 ft. deep, in order of their depth:&mdash;</p>
+
+<table summary="artesian wells" align="center" width="90%" style="border-collapse: collapse;" border="0">
+
+ <tr><th class="info">Name of Bore.</th><th class="info">Date of<br />Commencement.</th><th class="info">Depth.</th><th class="info"> Date of Completion<br />or Suspension.</th></tr>
+<tr><td class="infon">&nbsp;</td><td class="infon">&nbsp;</td><td class="center">Feet.</td><td class="infon">&nbsp;</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="infon">&nbsp;&nbsp;1. Bimerah Run, No. 3, Whitewood </td><td class="infonr"> 11 Aug, 1898&nbsp; </td><td class="center"> 5,045 </td><td class="infonr"> June, 1900</td></tr>
+ <tr><td class="infon">&nbsp;&nbsp;2. Bimerah Run, No. 1, Bothwell </td><td class="infonr"> May, 1895&nbsp; </td><td class="center"> 4,860 </td><td class="infonr"> July, 1897</td></tr>
+ <tr><td class="infon">&nbsp;&nbsp;3. Elderslie Run, No. 2, Cathedral </td><td class="infonr"> April, 1900&nbsp; </td><td class="center"> 4,523 </td><td class="infonr"> Sept., 1902</td></tr>
+ <tr><td class="infon">&nbsp;&nbsp;4. Ruthven Run, No. 1 </td><td class="infonr"> 1 Aug., 1905&nbsp; </td><td class="center"> 4,515 </td><td class="infonr"> April, 1908</td></tr>
+ <tr><td class="infon">&nbsp;&nbsp;5. Ayrshire Downs Run, No. 1 </td><td class="infonr"> Jan., 1895&nbsp; </td><td class="center"> 4,438 </td><td class="infonr"> Sept., 1897</td></tr>
+ <tr><td class="infon">&nbsp;&nbsp;6. Warbreccan Run </td><td class="infonr"> Jan., 1894&nbsp; </td><td class="center"> 4,333 </td><td class="infonr"> 22 April, 1898</td></tr>
+ <tr><td class="infon">&nbsp;&nbsp;7. Manuka Run, No. 1 </td><td class="infonr"> Aug., 1896&nbsp; </td><td class="center"> 4,310 </td><td class="infonr"> April, 1898</td></tr>
+ <tr><td class="infon">&nbsp;&nbsp;8. Bimerah Run, No. 2, Munjerie </td><td class="infonr"> Oct., 1897&nbsp; </td><td class="center"> 4,310 </td><td class="infonr"> Jan., 1900</td></tr>
+ <tr><td class="infon">&nbsp;&nbsp;9. Eromanga (Government) </td><td class="infonr"> 16 July, 1906&nbsp; </td><td class="center"> 4,270 </td><td class="infonr"> Jan., 1909</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="infon">10. Rockwood Run, No. 1, Glenariffe </td><td class="infonr"> 15 Dec., 1891&nbsp; </td><td class="center"> 4,220 </td><td class="infonr"> 15 July, 1897</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="infon">11. Albilbah Run, No. 1, Cable End </td><td class="infonr"> 1 July, 1889&nbsp; </td><td class="center"> 4,205 </td><td class="infonr"> Sept., 1902</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="infon">12. Ruthven Run, No. 1 </td><td class="infonr"> 1 Aug., 1903&nbsp; </td><td class="center"> 4,105 </td><td class="infonr"> 22 June, 1905</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="infon">13. Lorne, No. 1 </td><td class="infonr">...&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;</td><td class="center"> 4,057 </td><td class="infonr">In Progress</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="infon">14. Minnie Downs Run </td><td class="infonr"> 11 May, 1899&nbsp; </td><td class="center"> 4,040 </td><td class="infonr"> 30 April, 1902</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="infon">15. Malboona, Manuka Resumption </td><td class="infonr"> 18 Feb., 1899&nbsp; </td><td class="center"> 4,032 </td><td class="infonr"> 7 June, 1900</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="infon">16. Winton (Government) </td><td class="infonr"> 16 July, 1889&nbsp; </td><td class="center"> 4,010 </td><td class="infonr"> 25 June, 1895</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="infon">17. Darr River Downs Run, No. 4, Overnewton </td><td class="infonr"> Feb., 1892&nbsp; </td><td class="center"> 4,006 </td><td class="infonr"> 28 Mar., 1894</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="infon">18. Thornleigh (Kargoolnah Shire) </td><td class="infonr"> May, 1901&nbsp; </td><td class="center"> 4,003 </td><td class="infonr"> 15 Sept., 1902</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="infon">19. Windorah (Government) </td><td class="infonr"> 1 July, 1902<a id="footnotetagah1a" name="footnotetagah1a"></a><a href="#footnoteah1a"><sup>a</sup></a></td><td class="center">4,001 </td><td class="infonr">24 May,1905</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="infon">20. Vindex Run, No. 2 </td><td class="infonr"> Oct., 1898&nbsp; </td><td class="center"> 4,000 </td><td class="infonr"> June, 1900</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="infon">21. Ayrshire Downs Run, No. 3 </td><td class="infonr"> Sept., 1899&nbsp; </td><td class="center"> 3,983 </td><td class="infonr"> Sept., 1902</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="infon">22. Katandra and Stamfordham Runs, No. 1 </td><td class="infonr"> 8 Oct., 1892&nbsp; </td><td class="center"> 3,980 </td><td class="infonr"> &mdash; 1896</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="infon">23. Evesham, No. 1 </td><td class="infonr">...&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;</td><td class="center">3,970 </td><td class="infonr">In Progress</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="infon">24. Malvern Hills Run, Gowan </td><td class="infonr"> 1 July, 1890<a id="footnotetagah1b" name="footnotetagah1b"></a><a href="#footnoteah1b"><sup>b</sup></a></td><td class="center">3,942 </td><td class="infonr">10 May,1894</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="infon">25. Darr River Downs Run, No. 2, Fairlie </td><td class="infonr"> 1 Nov., 1899&nbsp; </td><td class="center"> 3,890 </td><td class="infonr"> May, 1891</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="infon">26. Talleyrand, Camoola District </td><td class="infonr">...&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;</td><td class="center">3,870 </td><td class="infonr">&mdash;1898</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="infon">27. Burenda Run, No. 3, Gidyea Creek </td><td class="infonr"> 16 Oct., 1895&nbsp; </td><td class="center"> 3,840 </td><td class="infonr"> Sept., 1898</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="infon">28. Oondooroo Run </td><td class="infonr"> Jan., 1900&nbsp; </td><td class="center"> 3,800 </td><td class="infonr"> 1 April, 1901</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="infon">29. Mount Abundance, No. 2 </td><td class="infonr"> &mdash; 1907&nbsp; </td><td class="center"> ... </td><td class="infonr"> &mdash; 1908</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="infon">30. Albilbah Run, No. 2, Jackson's </td><td class="infonr"> 21 Dec., 1889&nbsp; </td><td class="center"> 3,800 </td><td class="infonr"> &mdash; 1893</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="infon">31. Greendale, No. 1 </td><td class="infonr">...&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<a id="footnotetagah1c" name="footnotetagah1c"></a><a href="#footnoteah1c"><sup>c</sup></a></td><td class="center">3,799 </td><td class="infonr">In Progress</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="infon">32. Vindex Run, No. 3 </td><td class="infonr">24 July, 1901&nbsp; </td><td class="center"> 3,795 </td><td class="infonr">6 Sept., 1902</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="infon">33. Muckadilla (Government)<span class="pagenum"><a name="page228" id="page228"></a>228</span> </td><td class="infonr"> 21 Oct., 1889&nbsp; </td><td class="center"> 3,762 </td><td class="infonr"> 24 Dec., 1898</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="infon">34. Redcliffe Run, Redcliffe </td><td class="infonr"> Jan., 1893&nbsp; </td><td class="center"> 3,750 </td><td class="infonr"> 20 Mar., 1895</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="infon">35. Clio G. F., Ayrshire Downs Resumption </td><td class="infonr">&mdash;&nbsp;&nbsp; 1901&nbsp; </td><td class="center"> 3,745 </td><td class="infonr"> April, 1902</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="infon">36. Katandra and Stamfordham Runs, No. 2 </td><td class="infonr">...&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;</td><td class="center"> 3,723 </td><td class="infonr">&mdash;&nbsp;&nbsp; 1896</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="infon">37. Ayrshire Downs Run, No. 2 </td><td class="infonr"> 11 April, 1898&nbsp; </td><td class="center"> 3,721 </td><td class="infonr"> Sept., 1899</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="infon">38. Roma Town, No. 2 </td><td class="infonr"> 28 June, 1899&nbsp; </td><td class="center"> 3,710 </td><td class="infonr"> 17 Oct., 1900</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="infon">39. Nive Downs Run, No. 2, The Ironbarks </td><td class="infonr"> 1 Jan., 1893&nbsp; </td><td class="center"> 3,710 </td><td class="infonr"> 5 Sept., 1894</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="infon">40. Roma Mineral Oil Company </td><td class="infonr">&mdash;&nbsp;&nbsp; 1907<a id="footnotetagah2d" name="footnotetagah2d"></a><a href="#footnoteah2d"><sup>d</sup></a> </td><td class="center"> 3,702 </td><td class="infonr"> Dec., 1908</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="infon">41. Wellshot Run, No. 4 </td><td class="infonr"> Sept., 1901&nbsp; </td><td class="center"> 3,698 </td><td class="infonr">&mdash;&nbsp;&nbsp; 1902</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="infon">42. Elderslie Run, No. 3 </td><td class="infonr"> Mar., 1900&nbsp; </td><td class="center"> 3,680 </td><td class="infonr"> 18 May, 1901</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="infon">43. Kensington Downs Run </td><td class="infonr">&mdash;&nbsp;&nbsp; 1897&nbsp; </td><td class="center"> 3,650 </td><td class="infonr"> June, 1898</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="infon">44. Wyora, Winton District </td><td class="infonr"> 23 May, 1899&nbsp; </td><td class="center"> 3,650 </td><td class="infonr"> 12 Mar., 1900</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="infon">45. Darr River Downs Run, No. 3 </td><td class="infonr"> Jan., 1890&nbsp; </td><td class="center"> 3,650 </td><td class="infonr"> Aug., 1891</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="infon">46. Darr River Downs Run, No. 1, Nine-mile </td><td class="infonr"> 23 Dec., 1888&nbsp; </td><td class="center"> 3,600 </td><td class="infonr"> Mar., 1899</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="infon">47. Longreach Town, Aramac Shire </td><td class="infonr"> April, 1897&nbsp; </td><td class="center"> 3,590 </td><td class="infonr"> 10 Dec., 1897</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="infon">48. Noondoo Run, No. 2, Dareel </td><td class="infonr"> Nov., 1897&nbsp; </td><td class="center"> 3,586 </td><td class="infonr"> July, 1899</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="infon">49. Manuka Run, No. 2 </td><td class="infonr"> Feb., 1899&nbsp; </td><td class="center"> 3,581 </td><td class="infonr"> June, 1901</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="infon">50. Fairbairn, Dagworth Resumption </td><td class="infonr">&mdash;&nbsp;&nbsp; 1900&nbsp; </td><td class="center"> 3,579 </td><td class="infonr"> Sept., 1900</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="infon">51. Wellshot Run, No. 3, Totness </td><td class="infonr"> 27 Oct., 1894&nbsp; </td><td class="center"> 3,561 </td><td class="infonr"> 17 June, 1895</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="infon">52. Barcaldine Downs Run, No. 1, Twenty-mile</td><td class="infonr">&mdash;&nbsp;&nbsp; 1889&nbsp; </td><td class="center"> 3,533 </td><td class="infonr"> 21 Jan., 1896</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="infon">53. Lansdowne Run, No. 3, Downfall </td><td class="infonr"> Oct., 1894&nbsp; </td><td class="center"> 3,529 </td><td class="infonr"> Jan., 1896</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="infon">54. Jericho (Government) </td><td class="infonr"> Mar., 1902&nbsp; </td><td class="center"> 3,518 </td><td class="infonr"> 15 June, 1903</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="infon">55. Lerida Run, No. 1 </td><td class="infonr"> Sept., 1897&nbsp; </td><td class="center"> ?3,511 </td><td class="infonr"> 16 July, 1898</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="infon">56. Katandra and Stamfordham Runs, No. 4 </td><td class="infonr">...&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<a id="footnotetagah2e" name="footnotetagah2e"></a><a href="#footnoteah2e"><sup>e</sup></a> </td><td class="center"> 3,510 </td><td class="infonr">&mdash;&nbsp;&nbsp; 1907</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="infon">57. Wellshot Run, No. 1, Bradnich </td><td class="infonr"> 16 Nov., 1892&nbsp; </td><td class="center"> 3,504 </td><td class="infonr"> 2 Nov., 1893</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="infon">58. Elderslie Run, No. 1, Farewell </td><td class="infonr"> Oct., 1896&nbsp; </td><td class="center"> 3,500 </td><td class="infonr"> July, 1898</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="infon">59. Lerida Run, No. 2, Glenullen </td><td class="infonr"> 12 July, 1898&nbsp; </td><td class="center"> 3,500 </td><td class="infonr"> 3 Mar., 1900</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="infon">60. Westlands Run, No. 2, Buffalo </td><td class="infonr"> 18 April, 1893&nbsp; </td><td class="center"> 3,480 </td><td class="infonr"> 13 May, 1896</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="infon">61. Acacia Downs G. F., Bowen Downs </td><td class="infonr"> Feb., 1897&nbsp; </td><td class="center"> 3,480 </td><td class="infonr"> 20 July, 1897</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="infon">62. Hamilton Downs Run, No. 2, Campsie </td><td class="infonr"> July, 1898&nbsp; </td><td class="center"> 3,457 </td><td class="infonr"> Jan., 1900</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="infon">63. Tintinchilla Run, Milo </td><td class="infonr"> Before 1895&nbsp; </td><td class="center"> 3,411 </td><td class="infonr"> Mar., 1895</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="infon">64. Dagworth Run, No. 2, Pinnacle </td><td class="infonr"> April, 1898&nbsp; </td><td class="center"> 3,400 </td><td class="infonr"> Dec., 1898</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="infon">65. Adavale Town (Government) </td><td class="infonr"> 27 Dec., 1899&nbsp; </td><td class="center"> 3,398 </td><td class="infonr"> 8 Nov., 1900</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="infon">66. Westbury, Camoola District </td><td class="infonr">...&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;</td><td class="center"> 3,340 </td><td class="infonr">&mdash;&nbsp;&nbsp; 1900</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="infon">67. Dagworth Run, No. 1, Crescent Creek </td><td class="infonr"> April, 1892&nbsp; </td><td class="center"> 3,335 </td><td class="infonr"> July, 1893</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="infon">68. Arabella Run </td><td class="infonr"> 13 April, 1896&nbsp; </td><td class="center"> 3,335 </td><td class="infonr"> 16 May, 1897</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="infon">69. Jacondol G. F., Campbell's, Barcaldine </td><td class="infonr"> Mar., 1895&nbsp; </td><td class="center"> 3,333 </td><td class="infonr">&mdash;&nbsp;&nbsp; 1905</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="infon">70. Thomson Watershed (Government) </td><td class="infonr"> Aug., 1891&nbsp; </td><td class="center"> 3,319 </td><td class="infonr"> July, 1893</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="infon">71. Burenda Run, No. 2, Burenda </td><td class="infonr"> Nov., 1894&nbsp; </td><td class="center"> 3,315 </td><td class="infonr"> 14 Sept., 1895</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="infon">72. Bowen Downs Run, No. 4, Muttaburra road </td><td class="infonr"> Aug., 1891&nbsp; </td><td class="center"> 3,308 </td><td class="infonr"> Oct., 1894</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="infon">73. Hamilton Downs Run, No. 1, Clio </td><td class="infonr">...&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;</td><td class="center"> 3,301 </td><td class="infonr"> April, 1895</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="infon">74. Noorindoo Run, No. 1 </td><td class="infonr"> Mar., 1901&nbsp; </td><td class="center"> 3,300 </td><td class="infonr">&mdash;&nbsp;&nbsp; 1904</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="infon">75. Cooinda, Winton North District </td><td class="infonr"> 7 June, 1898&nbsp; </td><td class="center"> 3,298 </td><td class="infonr"> 20 Jan., 1899</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="infon">76. Portland Downs Run </td><td class="infonr"> 14 Aug., 1897&nbsp; </td><td class="center"> 3,280 </td><td class="infonr"> 14 June, 1899</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="infon">77. Chatsworth Run, No. 1 </td><td class="infonr"> ?&nbsp;1894&nbsp; </td><td class="center"> 3,266 </td><td class="infonr"> 5 Feb., 1895</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="infon">78. Sesbania Run, No. 2 </td><td class="infonr"> May, 1898&nbsp; </td><td class="center"> 3,252 </td><td class="infonr"> 19 Sept., 1898</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="infon">79. Alice Downs Run, No. 2, Norwood </td><td class="infonr">11 April, 1898&nbsp; </td><td class="center"> 3,248 </td><td class="infonr"> Dec., 1898</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="infon">80. Mount Cornish Run, No. 2 </td><td class="infonr">...&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; </td><td class="center"> 3,219 </td><td class="infonr"> 4 June, 1907</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="infon">81. Sesbania Run, No. 5 </td><td class="infonr"> 5 June, 1901&nbsp; </td><td class="center"> 3,186 </td><td class="infonr"> Mar., 1902</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="infon">82. Sesbania Run, No. 6 </td><td class="infonr">...&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;</td><td class="center"> 3,179 </td><td class="infonr">&mdash;&nbsp;&nbsp; Aug., 1909</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="infon">83. Terrick Terrick Run, Lorne </td><td class="infonr"> &mdash; &nbsp;&nbsp;1907<a id="footnotetagah2f" name="footnotetagah2f"></a><a href="#footnoteah2f"><sup>f</sup></a> </td><td class="center"> 3,140 </td><td class="infonr">&mdash;&nbsp;&nbsp; 1908</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="infon">84. Sesbania Run, No. 4 </td><td class="infonr"> Feb., 1899&nbsp; </td><td class="center"> 3,103 </td><td class="infonr"> Jan., 1900</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="infon">85. Noorindoo Run, No. 2 </td><td class="infonr"> Feb., 1903&nbsp; </td><td class="center"> 3,103 </td><td class="infonr"> 2 April, 1904</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="infon">86. Noondoo Run, Narine </td><td class="infonr">&mdash;&nbsp;&nbsp; 1896&nbsp; </td><td class="center"> 3,098 </td><td class="infonr"> Nov., 1897</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="infon">87. Birkhead Run, No. 1, Macfarlane </td><td class="infonr"> 29 June, 1898&nbsp; </td><td class="center"> 3,095 </td><td class="infonr">&mdash;&nbsp;&nbsp; 1906</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="infon">88. Authoringa and Riversleigh Runs,
+ No. 2, Rocky </td><td class="infonr"> 1 Jan., 1896&nbsp; </td><td class="center"> 3,086 </td><td class="infonr"> June, 1898</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="infon">89. Llanrheidol Run, No. 2, Acacia </td><td class="infonr"> June, 1896&nbsp; </td><td class="center"> 3,085 </td><td class="infonr"> 3 April, 1897</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="infon">90. Hughenden M. C. Town Bore </td><td class="infonr"> 3 Jan., 1894&nbsp; </td><td class="center"> 3,069 </td><td class="infonr"> July, 1898</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="infon">91. Muttaburra District, Brookwood </td><td class="infonr"> ?&nbsp;1895&nbsp; </td><td class="center"> 3,065 </td><td class="infonr"> April, 1895</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="infon">92. Authoringa, No. 3, Spinifex </td><td class="infonr"> Aug., 1898&nbsp; </td><td class="center"> 3,060 </td><td class="infonr">&mdash;&nbsp;&nbsp; 1899</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="infon">93. Muttaburra District, Weewondilla </td><td class="infonr">...&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;</td><td class="center"> 3,060 </td><td class="infonr"> Dec., 1903</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="infon">94. Albion Downs Run </td><td class="infonr"> Oct., 1897&nbsp; </td><td class="center"> 3,033 </td><td class="infonr"> Sept., 1899</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="infon">95. Muttaburra, Crossmoor </td><td class="infonr">&mdash;&nbsp;&nbsp; 1906&nbsp; </td><td class="center"> 3,030 </td><td class="infonr"> 27 July, 1908</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="infon">96. Barcaldine North District, Fairview </td><td class="infonr">...&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;</td><td class="center"> 3,028 </td><td class="infonr"> 20 July, 1907</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="infon">97. Myall Plains, Boombah </td><td class="infonr"> Feb., 1907&nbsp; </td><td class="center"> 3,024 </td><td class="infonr"> Dec., 1908</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="infon">98. Lansdowne, No. 2, Narambla </td><td class="infonr"> Nov., 1889&nbsp; </td><td class="center"> 3,005 </td><td class="infonr"> Feb., 1892</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="infon">99. Yarrawonga Run, Ada </td><td class="infonr">...&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;</td><td class="center"> 3,000 </td><td class="infonr"> June, 1898</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="infonq"><span style="margin-left: -0.5em;">100. Tarra Grazing Farm</span>, No. 4</td><td class="infonb">...&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;</td><td class="infonbc"> 3,000 </td><td class="infonb">&mdash;&nbsp;&nbsp; 1906</td></tr>
+
+</table>
+
+<p class="footnote"><a id="footnoteah1a" name="footnoteah1a"></a><a class="footnote" href="#footnotetagah1a">Footnote a:</a>
+Abandoned or suspended at 4,001 feet.</p>
+
+<p class="footnote"><a id="footnoteah1b" name="footnoteah1b"></a><a class="footnote" href="#footnotetagah1b">Footnote b:</a>
+Abandoned at 3,942 feet.</p>
+
+<p class="footnote"><a id="footnoteah1c" name="footnoteah1c"></a><a class="footnote" href="#footnotetagah1c">Footnote c:</a>
+In progress at 3,799 feet.</p>
+
+<p class="footnote"><a id="footnoteah2d" name="footnoteah2d"></a><a class="footnote" href="#footnotetagah2d">Footnote d:</a>
+In progress at 3,702 feet.</p>
+
+<p class="footnote"><a id="footnoteah2e" name="footnoteah2e"></a><a class="footnote" href="#footnotetagah2e">Footnote e:</a>
+Abandoned or suspended at 3,510 feet.</p>
+
+<p class="footnote"><a id="footnoteah2f" name="footnoteah2f"></a><a class="footnote" href="#footnotetagah2f">Footnote f:</a>
+In progress at 3,140 feet.</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page229" id="page229"></a>229</span>
+
+<p>The hydraulic survey, suspended some years ago, has not yet been resumed;
+therefore the foregoing return, furnished by the Hydraulic Engineer in advance
+of his report, has been compiled from unofficial documents which have not yet
+been verified, and is given for what it is worth.</p>
+
+<h3>STATISTICS SUPPLIED BY WELL-BORING COMPANIES.</h3>
+
+<p>In order to make the record of artesian boring in Queensland as complete as
+possible, the following information has been obtained from the two principal
+drilling firms at present engaged in the State. It will be noticed that the list
+of the Intercolonial Boring Company includes three bores in South
+Australia:&mdash;</p>
+
+<h3><span class="sc">List of Bores over 3,000 feet in Depth put down by Intercolonial <br />Boring Company,
+Limited.</span></h3>
+
+<table summary="Intercolonial Boring Company" width="auto" align="center" border="0">
+
+<tr><th class="lp">Name of Bore.</th><th class="lp">Depth.<br />Feet.</th><th>Date Completed.</th></tr>
+<tr><td class="lp">Ayrshire Downs, No. 3</td><td class="lp">3,983</td><td class="lp">September, 1902</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="lp">Brookwood, No. 1</td><td class="lp">3,065</td><td class="lp">May, 1895</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="lp">Boombah, No. 1</td><td class="lp">3,024</td><td class="lp">December, 1908</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="lp">Chatsworth, No. 1</td><td class="lp">3,266</td><td class="lp">February, 1895</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="lp">Cooindah, No. 1</td><td class="lp">3,289</td><td class="lp">January, 1899</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="lp">Dagworth, No. 1</td><td class="lp">3,335</td><td class="lp">July, 1893</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="lp">Dagworth, No. 2</td><td class="lp">3,400</td><td class="lp">December, 1898</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="lp">Dareel, No. 1</td><td class="lp">3,586</td><td class="lp">July, 1899</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="lp">Elderslie, No. 3</td><td class="lp">3,626</td><td class="lp">May, 1901</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="lp">Evesham, No. 1</td><td class="lp">3,970</td><td class="lp">In progress</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="lp">Fairview, No. 2</td><td class="lp">3,028</td><td class="lp">July, 1907</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="lp">Greendale, No. 1</td><td class="lp">3,799</td><td class="lp">In progress</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="lp">Goyder's Lagoon, S.A.</td><td class="lp">4,850</td><td class="lp">March, 1905</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="lp">Hamilton Downs, No. 1</td><td class="lp">3,301</td><td class="lp">April, 1895</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="lp">Hamilton Downs, No. 2</td><td class="lp">3,457</td><td class="lp">January, 1900</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="lp">Kynuna, No. 7</td><td class="lp">3,226</td><td class="lp"> December, 1908</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="lp">Lerida, No. 1</td><td class="lp">3,511</td><td class="lp">July, 1898</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="lp">Lerida, No. 2</td><td class="lp">3,500</td><td class="lp">March, 1900</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="lp">Llanrheidol, No. 2</td><td class="lp">3,085</td><td class="lp">April, 1897</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="lp">Lorne, No. 1</td><td class="lp">4,057</td><td class="lp">In progress</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="lp">Manuka, No. 2</td><td class="lp">3,581</td><td class="lp">June, 1901</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="lp">Mungeranie, S.A.</td><td class="lp">3,360</td><td class="lp">February, 1900</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="lp">Mulka, S.A.</td><td class="lp">3,445</td><td class="lp">December, 1906</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="lp">Mount Cornish, Tablederry</td><td class="lp">3,219</td><td class="lp">June, 1907</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="lp">Mount Cornish, <ins title="Transcriber's Note: '3' could be '5' - scan smudged and unclear">No. 3</ins></td><td class="lp">3,015</td><td class="lp">June, 1909</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="lp">Narine, No. 1</td><td class="lp">3,098</td><td class="lp">November, 1897</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="lp">Ruthven, No. 1</td><td class="lp">4,105</td><td class="lp">June, 1905</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="lp">Ruthven, No. 2</td><td class="lp">4,515</td><td class="lp">April, 1908</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="lp">Roma Mineral Oil</td><td class="lp">3,715</td><td class="lp">In progress</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="lp">Sesbania, No. 2</td><td class="lp">3,252</td><td class="lp">September, 1898</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="lp">Sesbania, No. 4</td><td class="lp">3,103</td><td class="lp">January, 1900</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="lp">Sesbania, No. 5</td><td class="lp">3,186</td><td class="lp">March, 1902</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="lp">Sesbania, No. 6</td><td class="lp">3,179</td><td class="lp">August, 1909</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="lp">Vindex, No. 2</td><td class="lp">4,000</td><td class="lp">June, 1900</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="lp">Vindex, No. 3</td><td class="lp">3,795</td><td class="lp">September, 1902</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="lp">Warbreccan, No. 1</td><td class="lp">4,333</td><td class="lp">June, 1898</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="lp">Winton (deepened)</td><td class="lp">4,010</td><td class="lp">June, 1895</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="lp">Wyora, No. 1</td><td class="lp">3,600</td><td class="lp">March, 1900</td></tr>
+</table>
+
+<p class="ind2">Note.&mdash;Bores marked S.A. are in South Australia.</p>
+
+<p class="ind2"><span class="outdent1">Brisbane, 1st October</span>, 1909.</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page230" id="page230"></a>230</span>
+
+
+<h3><span class="sc">Bores Completed and in Progress by Woodley Limited, Brisbane,<br />
+since 31st March, 1909.</span></h3>
+
+<p class="ind4"><span class="outdent">1. Bore at Millie Station</span>, near Charleville, D. McNeill owner. Depth, 1,732 ft.; water 8 in.
+over casing; flow &frac34;-million gallons per diem.</p>
+
+<p class="ind4"><span class="outdent">2. At Claverton Downs</span>, near Wyandra, Mrs. Whitney owner. Depth, 1,955 ft.; water 22 in.
+over casing; flow about 1&frac12; million gallons.</p>
+
+<p class="ind4"><span class="outdent">3. At Bendena Station</span>, Burgess and Co. owners. Depth, 2,232 ft.; water 4 ft. 6 in. over casing;
+flow about 3&frac12; million gallons.</p>
+
+<p class="ind4"><span class="outdent">4. At Bonus Downs Station</span>, Mitchell, Sir S. McCaughey owner. Depth, 3,424 ft. 6 in.; water
+rising to 60 ft. below surface; boring ceased in slate formation.</p>
+
+<p class="ind4"><span class="outdent">5. At Eurella Station</span>, Donald Fletcher owner. Depth at end of September, 2,124 ft., still in progress;
+water rising to within 150 ft. of the surface.</p>
+
+<p class="ind4"><span class="outdent">6. At Clifton Station</span>, C. H. T. Schmidt owner. Depth, 26th June, 225 ft.; in progress.</p>
+
+<p class="ind4"><span class="outdent">7. At Koreelah Station</span>, Charleville. Depth at end of June, 400 ft.; in progress.</p>
+
+<p class="ind4"><span class="outdent">8. At Comongin Station</span>, Bulloo, McLean, Barker, and Co. owners. Depth on 30th June, 600 ft.;
+in progress.</p>
+
+<p class="ind4"><span class="outdent">9. At Aberglassie Station</span>, J. R. and H. C. Loughran owners. Starting.</p>
+
+<p class="ind4"><span class="outdent">10. At Cytherea Station</span>, R. T. Winter owner. Starting.</p>
+
+<p class="ind4"><span class="outdent">11. At Airlie Downs</span>, A. Leeds owner. Starting.</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page231" id="page231"></a>231</span>
+
+<h2>APPENDIX J.</h2>
+
+<h3>CLIMATIC CONTRASTS.</h3>
+
+<h3>COMPARATIVE VITAL STATISTICS.</h3>
+
+<p>Vital statistics are set forth by the various Government Statists of Australia
+with extreme particularity. But it is not easy to make comparative analyses for
+the purpose of ascertaining the birth rates, marriage rates, or death rates in
+the different States of Australia. The birth rates per 1,000 of the population
+give no accurate bases for comparison. They supply only what the statists call
+the crude birth rate. The information necessary to ascertain true comparative
+birth rates involves knowledge of the number of women of the different
+child-bearing ages in the several States; the proportion of marriages at
+different ages in each; the number of married women, their ages, and also the
+number of spinsters. Married women in their teens are more fertile than in their
+twenties, in their twenties than in their thirties, in their thirties than in
+their forties. So that to ascertain the true birth rate the comparative number
+of married or marriageable women in the contrasted countries must be
+ascertained. For example, if there were 20,000 married women in Queensland
+between twenty and thirty; and 60,000 married women of the same age in New South
+Wales; and if the number of births among those 20,000 and 60,000 respectively
+were ascertained, the true birth rate among women of that age would be obtained.
+Similar remarks apply to the death rate. The comparison must be made between a
+given number of men or women of the same ages, and then the true comparative
+death rate per 1,000 of such persons will be ascertainable, but not otherwise.</p>
+
+<p>It is supposed in many parts of Australia that North Queensland is less
+salubrious than South Queensland, and that the Southern States are healthier
+than Queensland as a whole. The crude death rate does not give a basis for this
+assumption, because there are fewer old people and fewer young children per
+1,000 of the population in sparsely peopled areas than in settled districts. The
+lightest average mortality is among persons between the ages of two and eighteen
+years; the greatest mortality among children under two years. Information is not
+procurable showing the number of persons in Queensland in age groups, this
+information being only obtainable in census years.</p> <span class="pagenum"><a name="page232" id="page232"></a>232</span>
+
+<p>The Queensland Government Statistician has furnished the accompanying table,
+based on the results of the censuses of 1891 and 1901, showing the relative
+salubrity of different parts of the Commonwealth in those two years for all the
+States save Western Australia; and it will be noticed that it differentiates
+also between children north and south of the Tropic of Capricorn in Queensland.
+These figures are valuable for comparative purposes.</p>
+
+<p>It will be noticed that among children under two years the rate of mortality
+north of the Tropic of Capricorn in 1891 was 74.85 per 1,000, and in 1901 73.42
+per 1,000. South of the tropic the corresponding figures were 70.33 and 64.97
+per 1,000 respectively, the difference in favour of the south being 4.52 and
+8.45 per 1,000. Of children under five years in the north the mortality was
+39.44 and 32.80 respectively; while south of the tropic it was 33.54 and 29.72
+respectively. Thus the difference in favour of the south was 5.90 and 3.08
+respectively. Above the age of five years the difference between north and south
+is rather more marked, but the comparison of these, for reasons analogous to
+those stated above with respect to comparative birth or death rates, is
+valueless.</p>
+
+<p>If we take the New South Wales figures, we find that as to children under two
+years the mortality in 1891 was 85.12, and in 1901 72.42 per 1,000. Thus North
+Queensland compares very favourably with the parent State by 10.27 in 1891, and
+unfavourably in 1901 by only 1 per 1,000. With South Queensland the comparison
+shows a difference against New South Wales in 1891 of 14.79 per 1,000, and of
+7.45 per 1,000 in 1901. As to children under five years the difference in favour
+of New South Wales in 1891, as against North Queensland, was only 0.16 per
+cent., and in 1901 0.43 per 1,000; and as against South Queensland it was 5.74
+on the wrong side in 1891, and 2.65 in 1901. It is needless further to analyse
+the figures, but evidently the only States whose mortality among young children
+is more favourable than South Queensland are South Australia and Tasmania.</p>
+
+<p>Although these figures are official it may be wise to use them with reservation.
+The comparatively high mortality north of the Tropic of Capricorn is fully
+accounted for by the absence of the comforts of life in that newly settled area.
+In 1901 the mortality beyond the tropic was, for children under five years,
+almost the same as in New South Wales and Victoria. So that, so far as young
+children are concerned, we need not fear that the climate of Tropical Queensland
+will be found unfavourable to the British race.</p>
+
+<p>The death ratio of the population is somewhat higher in the tropics than in the
+South for each age group mentioned, and consequently of course for persons of
+all ages; this applies to both the years cited, 1891 and 1901. These years have
+been <span class="pagenum"><a name="page233" id="page233"></a>233</span> selected as, being "Census" years, the numbers at each age can
+then be definitely determined. The mortality rate for 1901 showed a distinct
+improvement on that for 1891 in all instances except with persons over five
+years of age in the South; as regards these the experience for 1901 was
+fractionally less satisfactory than in 1891.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 400px;"><a href="images/page232-900.jpg"><img src="images/page232-400.jpg" width="400" height="603" alt="'QUEENSLAND and Territory of PAPUA 1909'" /></a>
+<p class="center">"QUEENSLAND and Territory of PAPUA 1909"</p></div>
+
+<p class="center"><b><span class="sc">Return showing the Population, Number of Deaths, and the Rate of Mortality
+at Certain Ages for the Years 1891 and 1901.</span></b></p>
+
+<table summary="Population statistics" align="center" width="90%" style="border-collapse: collapse;" border="0">
+<tr>
+ <th class="info" rowspan="2">&nbsp;</th>
+ <th class="info" colspan="3" style="border-right: 5px double gray;"><span class="sc">1891.</span></th>
+ <th class="info" colspan="3"><span class="sc">1901.</span></th>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <th class="info">Census<br />Population.</th>
+ <th class="info">Number of<br />Deaths.</th>
+ <th class="info">Ratio<br />per 1,000<br />of the<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;Population.&nbsp;&nbsp;</th>
+ <th class="info" style="border-left: 5px double gray;">Census<br />Population.</th>
+ <th class="info">Number of<br />Deaths.</th>
+ <th class="info">Ratio<br />per 1,000<br />of the<br />Population.</th>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="info">QUEENSLAND&mdash;<br /><span class="sc">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;North of the Tropic of Capricorn</span>&mdash;<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Under 2 years</td>
+ <td class="infor" valign="bottom">6,426</td>
+ <td class="infor" valign="bottom">481</td>
+ <td class="infor" valign="bottom" style="border-right: 5px double gray;">74·85</td>
+ <td class="infor" valign="bottom">6,933</td>
+ <td class="infor" valign="bottom">509</td>
+ <td class="infor" valign="bottom">73·42</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="info">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Under 5 years<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Over 5 years</td>
+ <td class="infor">15,061<br />93,925</td>
+ <td class="infor">594<br />1,088</td>
+ <td class="infor" style="border-right: 5px double gray;">39·44<br />11·58</td>
+ <td class="infor">17,166<br />132,466</td>
+ <td class="infor">563<br />1,448</td>
+ <td class="infor">32·80<br />10·93</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="info" style="border-bottom: 5px double gray;">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;All ages</td>
+ <td class="infor" style="border-bottom: 5px double gray;">108,986</td>
+ <td class="infor" style="border-bottom: 5px double gray;">1,682</td>
+ <td class="infor" style="border-bottom: 5px double gray; border-right: 5px double gray;">15·43</td>
+ <td class="infor" style="border-bottom: 5px double gray;">149,632</td>
+ <td class="infor" style="border-bottom: 5px double gray;">2,011</td>
+ <td class="infor" style="border-bottom: 5px double gray;">13·44</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="info"><span class="sc">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;South of the Tropic of Capricorn</span>&mdash;<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Under 2 years</td>
+ <td class="infor" valign="bottom">18,598</td>
+ <td class="infor" valign="bottom">1,308</td>
+ <td class="infor" valign="bottom" style="border-right: 5px double gray;">70·33</td>
+ <td class="infor" valign="bottom">18,454</td>
+ <td class="infor" valign="bottom">1,199</td>
+ <td class="infor" valign="bottom">64·97</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="info">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Under 5 years<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Over 5 years</td>
+ <td class="infor">45,264<br />239,468</td>
+ <td class="infor">1,518<br />1,970</td>
+ <td class="infor" style="border-right: 5px double gray;">33·54<br />8·23</td>
+ <td class="infor">45,460<br />308,174</td>
+ <td class="infor">1,351<br />2,645</td>
+ <td class="infor">29·72<br />8·58</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="info" style="border-bottom: 5px double gray;">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;All Ages</td>
+ <td class="infor" style="border-bottom: 5px double gray;">284,732</td>
+ <td class="infor" style="border-bottom: 5px double gray;">3,488</td>
+ <td class="infor" style="border-bottom: 5px double gray; border-right: 5px double gray;">12·25</td>
+ <td class="infor" style="border-bottom: 5px double gray;">353,634</td>
+ <td class="infor" style="border-bottom: 5px double gray;">3,996</td>
+ <td class="infor" style="border-bottom: 5px double gray;">11·30</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="info"><span class="sc">Whole State</span>&mdash;<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Under 2 years</td>
+ <td class="infor" valign="bottom">25,024</td>
+ <td class="infor" valign="bottom">1,789</td>
+ <td class="infor" valign="bottom" style="border-right: 5px double gray;">71·49</td>
+ <td class="infor" valign="bottom">25,387</td>
+ <td class="infor" valign="bottom">1,708</td>
+ <td class="infor" valign="bottom">67·28</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="info">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Under 5 years<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Over 5 years</td>
+ <td class="infor">60,325<br />333,393</td>
+ <td class="infor">2,112<br />3,058</td>
+ <td class="infor" style="border-right: 5px double gray;">35·01<br />9·17</td>
+ <td class="infor">62,626<br />440,640</td>
+ <td class="infor">1,914<br />4,093</td>
+ <td class="infor">30·56<br />9·29</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="info">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;All Ages</td>
+ <td class="infor">393,718</td>
+ <td class="infor">5,170</td>
+ <td class="infor" style="border-right: 5px double gray;">13·13</td>
+ <td class="infor">503,266</td>
+ <td class="infor">6,007</td>
+ <td class="infor">11·94</td>
+</tr>
+</table>
+
+<p class="footnote"><span class="sc">Note.</span>&mdash;Death rates calculated on the estimated mean population of the two
+years mentioned above and published in the Reports on Vital Statistics
+were&mdash;</p>
+
+<table summary="death rates" align="center" width="40%">
+ <tr><td> 1891</td><td>12·77</td></tr>
+ <tr><td>1901</td><td>11·88</td></tr>
+</table>
+
+<p class="footnote">The utilisation of Census figures in order to quote the age condition at the
+time is accountable for the slight difference in the total ratio.</p>
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page234" id="page234"></a>234</span>
+
+<p class="center" style="margin-top: 2em;"><b><span class="sc">Return showing the Population, Number of Deaths, and the Rate of Mortality at
+Certain Ages for the Years 1891 and 1901</span></b>&mdash;<i>continued:</i></p>
+
+<table summary="Population statistics" align="center" width="90%" style="border-collapse: collapse;" border="0">
+<tr>
+ <th class="info" rowspan="2">&nbsp;</th>
+ <th class="info" colspan="3" style="border-right: 5px double gray;"><span class="sc">1891.</span></th>
+ <th class="info" colspan="3"><span class="sc">1901.</span></th>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <th class="info">Census<br />Population.</th>
+ <th class="info">Number of<br />Deaths.</th>
+ <th class="info">Ratio<br />per 1,000<br />of the<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;Population.&nbsp;&nbsp;</th>
+ <th class="info" style="border-left: 5px double gray;">Census<br />Population.</th>
+ <th class="info">Number of<br />Deaths.</th>
+ <th class="info">Ratio<br />per 1,000<br />of the<br />Population.</th>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="info"><span class="sc">New South Wales</span>&mdash;&mdash;<br /><br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Under 2 years</td>
+ <td class="infor" valign="bottom">66,719 </td>
+ <td class="infor" valign="bottom">5,679</td>
+ <td class="infor" valign="bottom" style="border-right: 5px double gray;">85·12</td>
+ <td class="infor" valign="bottom">64,376</td>
+ <td class="infor" valign="bottom">4,662</td>
+ <td class="infor" valign="bottom">72·42</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="info">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Under 5 years<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Over 5 years</td>
+ <td class="infor"> 165,750<br />966,484</td>
+ <td class="infor">6,510<br />9,776</td>
+ <td class="infor" style="border-right: 5px double gray;">39·28<br />10·12</td>
+ <td class="infor">159,146<br />1,199,987</td>
+ <td class="infor">5,151<br />10,870</td>
+ <td class="infor">32·37<br />9·06</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="info" style="border-bottom: 5px double gray;">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;All ages</td>
+ <td class="infor" style="border-bottom: 5px double gray;"> 1,132,234</td>
+ <td class="infor" style="border-bottom: 5px double gray;">16,286</td>
+ <td class="infor" style="border-bottom: 5px double gray; border-right: 5px double gray;">14·38</td>
+ <td class="infor" style="border-bottom: 5px double gray;">1,359,133</td>
+ <td class="infor" style="border-bottom: 5px double gray;">16,021</td>
+ <td class="infor" style="border-bottom: 5px double gray;">11·79</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="info"><span class="sc">Victoria</span>&mdash;<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Under 2 years</td>
+ <td class="infor" valign="bottom">62,102</td>
+ <td class="infor" valign="bottom">5,822</td>
+ <td class="infor" valign="bottom" style="border-right: 5px double gray;">93·75</td>
+ <td class="infor" valign="bottom">54,669</td>
+ <td class="infor" valign="bottom">3,817</td>
+ <td class="infor" valign="bottom">69·82</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="info">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Under 5 years<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Over 5 years</td>
+ <td class="infor">148,359<br />982,104</td>
+ <td class="infor">6,518<br />12,113</td>
+ <td class="infor" style="border-right: 5px double gray;">43·93<br />12·33</td>
+ <td class="infor">131,986<br />1,069,355</td>
+ <td class="infor">4,251<br />11,653</td>
+ <td class="infor">32·21<br />10·90</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="info" style="border-bottom: 5px double gray;">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;All Ages</td>
+ <td class="infor" style="border-bottom: 5px double gray;">1,130,463</td>
+ <td class="infor" style="border-bottom: 5px double gray;">18,631</td>
+ <td class="infor" style="border-bottom: 5px double gray; border-right: 5px double gray;">16·48</td>
+ <td class="infor" style="border-bottom: 5px double gray;">1,201,341</td>
+ <td class="infor" style="border-bottom: 5px double gray;">15,904</td>
+ <td class="infor" style="border-bottom: 5px double gray;">13·24</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="info"><span class="sc">South Australia</span>&mdash;<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Under 2 years</td>
+ <td class="infor" valign="bottom">17,875</td>
+ <td class="infor" valign="bottom">1,180</td>
+ <td class="infor" valign="bottom" style="border-right: 5px double gray;">66·01</td>
+ <td class="infor" valign="bottom">15,988</td>
+ <td class="infor" valign="bottom">1,059</td>
+ <td class="infor" valign="bottom">66·24</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="info">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Under 5 years<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Over 5 years</td>
+ <td class="infor">45,166<br />270,367</td>
+ <td class="infor">1,407<br />2,804</td>
+ <td class="infor" style="border-right: 5px double gray;">39,940<br />318,568</td>
+ <td class="infor">31·15<br />10·37</td>
+ <td class="infor">1,166<br />2,808</td>
+ <td class="infor">29·19<br />8·81</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="info" style="border-bottom: 5px double gray;">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;All Ages</td>
+ <td class="infor" style="border-bottom: 5px double gray;">315,533</td>
+ <td class="infor" style="border-bottom: 5px double gray;">4,211</td>
+ <td class="infor" style="border-bottom: 5px double gray; border-right: 5px double gray;">13·35</td>
+ <td class="infor" style="border-bottom: 5px double gray;">358,508</td>
+ <td class="infor" style="border-bottom: 5px double gray;">3,974</td>
+ <td class="infor" style="border-bottom: 5px double gray;">11·08</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="info"><span class="sc">Tasmania</span>&mdash;<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Under 2 years</td>
+ <td class="infor" valign="bottom">8,414</td>
+ <td class="infor" valign="bottom">524</td>
+ <td class="infor" valign="bottom" style="border-right: 5px double gray;">62·28</td>
+ <td class="infor" valign="bottom">8,484</td>
+ <td class="infor" valign="bottom">492</td>
+ <td class="infor" valign="bottom">57·99</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="info">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Under 5 years<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Over 5 years</td>
+ <td class="infor">21,466<br />125,201</td>
+ <td class="infor">599<br />1,635</td>
+ <td class="infor" style="border-right: 5px double gray;">27·90<br />13·06</td>
+ <td class="infor">20,865<br />151,610</td>
+ <td class="infor">531<br />1,283</td>
+ <td class="infor">25·45<br />8·46</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="info" style="border-bottom: 5px double gray;">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;All Ages</td>
+ <td class="infor" style="border-bottom: 5px double gray;">146,667</td>
+ <td class="infor" style="border-bottom: 5px double gray;">2,234</td>
+ <td class="infor" style="border-bottom: 5px double gray; border-right: 5px double gray;">15·23</td>
+ <td class="infor" style="border-bottom: 5px double gray;">172,475</td>
+ <td class="infor" style="border-bottom: 5px double gray;">1,814</td>
+ <td class="infor" style="border-bottom: 5px double gray;">10·52</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="info"><span class="sc">Western Australia</span>&mdash;&mdash;<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Under 2 years</td>
+ <td class="infor" valign="bottom">...&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;</td>
+ <td class="infor" valign="bottom">...&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;</td>
+ <td class="infor" valign="bottom" style="border-right: 5px double gray;">...&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;</td>
+ <td class="infor" valign="bottom">9,303</td>
+ <td class="infor" valign="bottom">882</td>
+ <td class="infor" valign="bottom">94·81</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="info">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Under 5 years<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Over 5 years</td>
+ <td class="infor">6,835<br />42,947</td>
+ <td class="infor">293<br />576</td>
+ <td class="infor" style="border-right: 5px double gray;">42·87<br />13·41</td>
+ <td class="infor">20,675<br />163,449</td>
+ <td class="infor">957<br />1,562</td>
+ <td class="infor">46·29<br />9·56</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="info">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;All Ages</td>
+ <td class="infor">49,782</td>
+ <td class="infor">869</td>
+ <td class="infor" style="border-right: 5px double gray;">17·46</td>
+ <td class="infor">184,124</td>
+ <td class="infor">2,519</td>
+ <td class="infor">13·68</td>
+</tr>
+</table>
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page235" id="page235"></a>235</span>
+
+
+<h3 class="app">RAINFALL AND TEMPERATURE.</h3>
+
+<p>The subjoined map shows the curves of equal mean annual rainfall for every
+10·0 inches for Australia, compiled from the most recent information:&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 520px;"><a href="images/page235-1200.jpg"><img src="images/page235-520.jpg" width="520" height="454" alt="DISTRIBUTION OF THE RAINFALL OF THE COMMONWEALTH of" /></a>
+<p class="center">DISTRIBUTION OF THE RAINFALL OF THE <span class="sc">COMMONWEALTH of AUSTRALIA</span></p></div>
+
+<p>The following table shows the relative rainfalls at the six Australian capital
+cities for the periods set severally against them; also for the ten-year period
+subsequent to 1896, during which the average precipitation was much below that
+of the total number of years over which the records extend:&mdash;</p>
+
+
+<table summary="rainfall stats" align="center" width="auto" style="border-collapse: collapse;" border="0">
+<tr>
+ <td class="info2">Place.</td>
+ <td class="info2">Total<br />Number<br />of<br />Years.</td>
+ <td class="info2">Average<br />Rainfall<br />for all<br />Years.</td>
+ <td class="info2">Ten Years'<br />Average<br />Rainfall.</td>
+ <td class="info2">Difference<br />between<br />the Two.</td>
+ <td class="info2">Difference<br />for<br />Ten Years.</td>
+ <td class="info2">Ten Years'<br />Percentage<br />per Annum<br />above or<br />below<br />True Mean.</td>
+</tr>
+<tr><td class="infon">&nbsp;</td><td class="infon">&nbsp;</td><td class="infonc">Inches.</td><td class="infonc">Inches.</td><td class="infonc">Inches.</td>
+<td class="infonc">Inches.</td><td class="infon">&nbsp;</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="infon">Brisbane</td><td class="infonr">57</td><td class="infonr">47·47</td><td class="infonr">39·16</td><td class="infonr">-8·31</td>
+<td class="infonr">83·10</td><td class="infonr">-18</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="infon">Sydney</td><td class="infonr">67</td><td class="infonr">48·80</td><td class="infonr">44·28</td><td class="infonr">-4·52</td>
+<td class="infonr">45·20</td><td class="infonr">-9</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="infon">Melbourne</td><td class="infonr">63</td><td class="infonr">26·35</td><td class="infonr">25·50</td><td class="infonr">-0·85</td>
+<td class="infonr">8·50</td><td class="infonr">-3</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="infon">Perth</td><td class="infonr">31</td><td class="infonr">33·03</td><td class="infonr">32·54</td><td class="infonr">-0·49</td>
+<td class="infonr">4·90</td><td class="infonr">-1</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="infon">Hobart</td><td class="infonr">66</td><td class="infonr">23·38</td><td class="infonr">22·98</td><td class="infonr">-0·40</td>
+<td class="infonr">4·00</td><td class="infonr">-2</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="infonq">Adelaide</td><td class="infonb">67</td><td class="infonb">20·89</td><td class="infonb">20·53</td><td class="infonb">-0·36</td>
+<td class="infonb">3·60</td><td class="infonb">-2</td></tr>
+</table>
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page236" id="page236"></a>236</span>
+
+<p style="margin-top: 2em;">The following table supplies similar information with respect to seventeen
+representative Queensland stations, from which it will be seen that the mean
+annual rainfall at Geraldton for twenty-one years was 145·27 inches, and for the
+ten years subsequent to 1896 135·81 inches. Thus Geraldton is by far the wettest
+place in the State. The lightest mean rainfall for the same period was at
+Boulia, which recorded 11·45 inches; and for the ten years, 8·72 inches. The
+last column of the table shows that the fall for the ten years was under the
+average at every station mentioned, the shortage at Cooktown having been 28 per
+cent. each year of the ten. The number of wet days is not supplied, except for
+the capital cities. The driest part of Australia&mdash;that which receives a
+rainfall of 10·0 inches and under&mdash;comprises an area equalling nearly
+one-third of the Commonwealth, and includes the central Territory of South
+Australia, the extreme western parts of New South Wales, the south-western parts
+of Queensland, and the south-eastern, central, and part of the north-western
+portions of Western Australia. The limits of this dry area are shown by the
+10·0-inch isohyetal line:&mdash;</p>
+
+<table summary="rainfall stats" align="center" width="auto" style="border-collapse: collapse;" border="0">
+<tr>
+ <td class="info2">Place.</td>
+ <td class="info2">Total<br />Number<br />of<br />Years.</td>
+ <td class="info2">Average<br />Rainfall<br />for all<br />Years.</td>
+ <td class="info2">Ten Years'<br />Average<br />Rainfall.</td>
+ <td class="info2">Difference<br />between<br />the Two.</td>
+ <td class="info2">Difference<br />for<br />Ten Years.</td>
+ <td class="info2">Ten Years'<br />Percentage<br />per Annum<br />above or<br />below<br />True Mean.</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="infon">&nbsp;</td><td class="infon">&nbsp;</td><td class="infonc">Inches.</td><td class="infonc">Inches.</td><td class="infonc">Inches.</td><td class="infonc">Inches.</td><td class="infon">&nbsp;</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="infon">Cooktown</td><td class="infonr">29 </td><td class="infonr">68·96</td><td class="infonr">49·91</td><td class="infonr">-19·05</td><td class="infonr">190·50</td><td class="infonr">-28</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="infon">Geraldton</td><td class="infonr">21</td><td class="infonr">145·27</td><td class="infonr">135·81</td><td class="infonr">-9·46</td><td class="infonr">94·60</td><td class="infonr">-7</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="infon">Brisbane</td><td class="infonr">57</td><td class="infonr">47·47</td><td class="infonr">39·16</td><td class="infonr">-8·31</td><td class="infonr">83·10</td><td class="infonr">-18</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="infon">Mackay</td><td class="infonr">36</td><td class="infonr">69·42</td><td class="infonr">61·73</td><td class="infonr">-7·69</td><td class="infonr">76·90</td><td class="infonr">-11</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="infon">Maryborough</td><td class="infonr">36</td><td class="infonr">46·58</td><td class="infonr">39·49</td><td class="infonr">-7·09</td><td class="infonr">70·90</td><td class="infonr">-15</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="infon">Goondiwindi</td><td class="infonr">28</td><td class="infonr">29·27</td><td class="infonr">22·99</td><td class="infonr">-6·28</td><td class="infonr">62·80</td><td class="infonr">-21</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="infon">Tambo</td><td class="infonr"> 21</td><td class="infonr">22·87</td><td class="infonr">18·08</td><td class="infonr">-4·79</td><td class="infonr">47·90</td><td class="infonr">-21</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="infon">Bowen</td><td class="infonr">36</td><td class="infonr">40·40</td><td class="infonr">35·62</td><td class="infonr">-4·78</td><td class="infonr">47·80</td><td class="infonr">-12</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="infon">Blackall</td><td class="infonr">27</td><td class="infonr">22·59</td><td class="infonr">17·92</td><td class="infonr">-4·67</td><td class="infonr">46·70</td><td class="infonr">-21</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="infon">Charleville</td><td class="infonr">34</td><td class="infonr">19·71</td><td class="infonr">15·30</td><td class="infonr">-4·41</td><td class="infonr">44·10</td><td class="infonr">-22</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="infon">Hughenden</td><td class="infonr">22</td><td class="infonr">19·12</td><td class="infonr">14·92</td><td class="infonr">-4·20</td><td class="infonr">42·00</td><td class="infonr">-22</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="infon">Thursday Island</td><td class="infonr">16</td><td class="infonr">68·11</td><td class="infonr">63·99</td><td class="infonr">-4·12</td><td class="infonr">41·20</td><td class="infonr">-6</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="infon">Springsure</td><td class="infonr">30</td><td class="infonr">26·25</td><td class="infonr">22·54</td><td class="infonr">-3·71</td><td class="infonr">37·10</td><td class="infonr">-14</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="infon">Boulia</td><td class="infonr">21</td><td class="infonr">11·45</td><td class="infonr">8·72</td><td class="infonr">-2·73</td><td class="infonr">27·30</td><td class="infonr">-24</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="infon">Thargomindah</td><td class="infonr">25</td><td class="infonr">12·53</td><td class="infonr">10·03</td><td class="infonr">-2·50</td><td class="infonr">25·00</td><td class="infonr">-20</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="infon">Cloncurry</td><td class="infonr">23</td><td class="infonr">19·35</td><td class="infonr">17·02</td><td class="infonr">-2·33</td><td class="infonr">23·30</td><td class="infonr">-12</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="infonq">Normanton</td><td class="infonb">35</td><td class="infonb">37·11</td><td class="infonb">35·26</td><td class="infonb">-1·85</td><td class="infonb">18·50</td><td class="infonb">-5</td></tr>
+</table>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page237" id="page237"></a>237</span>
+
+<p style="margin-top: 2em;">The following table shows the distribution of the average rainfall from 10·0
+inches and under to over 40·0 inches:&mdash;</p>
+
+<table summary="rainfall stats" align="center" width="auto" style="border-collapse: collapse;" border="0">
+<tr>
+ <td class="info2">Average Annual<br />Rainfall.</td>
+ <td class="info2"> N.S.W.</td>
+ <td class="info2">Victoria.</td>
+ <td class="info2">Queensland.</td>
+ <td class="info2">South<br />Australia.</td>
+ <td class="info2">Northern<br />Territory.</td>
+ <td class="info2">Western<br />Australia.</td>
+ <td class="info2">Tasmania</td>
+ <td class="info2">Commonwealth.</td></tr>
+
+<tr><td class="infonc">sqr. mls.</td><td class="infonc">sqr. mls.</td><td class="infonc">sqr. mls.</td><td class="infonc">sqr. mls.</td>
+<td class="infonc">sqr. mls.</td><td class="infonc">sqr. mls.</td><td class="infonc">sqr. mls.</td><td class="infonc">sqr. mls.</td><td class="infonc">sqr. mls.</td></tr>
+
+<tr><td class="infon">Under 10 inches</td><td class="infonr">81,144</td><td class="infonr">nil</td><td class="infonr">135,600</td><td class="infonr">306,663</td>
+<td class="infonr">6,300 </td><td class="infonr">408,300 </td><td class="infonr">nil</td><td class="infonr">938,007</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="infon">10-20 inches</td><td class="infonr">116,363</td><td class="infonr">36,300</td><td class="infonr">255,300</td><td class="infonr">57,935</td>
+<td class="infonr">213,430 </td><td class="infonr">400,720 </td><td class="infonr">nil</td><td class="infonr">1,080,048</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="infon">20-30 inches</td><td class="infonr">77,910</td><td class="infonr">27,900</td><td class="infonr">173,400</td><td class="infonr">13,908</td>
+<td class="infonr">96,790 </td><td class="infonr">113,700 </td><td class="infonr">11,395</td><td class="infonr">515,003</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="infon">30-40 inches</td><td class="infonr">20,414</td><td class="infonr">18,770</td><td class="infonr">58,700</td><td class="infonr">1,198</td>
+<td class="infonr">120,600 </td><td class="infonr">39,100 </td><td class="infonr">5,396</td><td class="infonr">264,178</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="infon">Over 40 inches</td><td class="infonb">14,541</td><td class="infonb">4,914</td><td class="infonb">47,500</td><td class="infonb">366</td>
+<td class="infonb">86,500 </td><td class="infonb">14,100 </td><td class="infonb">9,424</td><td class="infonb">177,345</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="infonq">Total Area </td><td class="info2">310,372</td><td class="info2">87,884</td><td class="info2">670,500</td><td class="info2">380,070</td>
+<td class="info2">523,620</td><td class="info2">975,920</td><td class="info2">26,215 </td><td class="info2">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;2,974,581</td></tr>
+</table>
+
+<p style="margin-top: 2em;">The comparative rainfalls and temperatures at the respective State capitals, and
+at Canberra, the embryo Federal capital, are shown in the following table:&mdash;</p>
+
+<table summary="Rainfall and Temperature" align="center" width="auto" style="border-collapse: collapse;" border="0">
+<tr>
+ <th class="info" rowspan="2">Place.</th>
+ <th class="info" rowspan="2">Height<br />above<br />M.S.L.</th>
+ <th class="info" colspan="3"><span class="sc">Annual Rainfall.</span></th>
+ <th class="info" colspan="6"><span class="sc">Temperature.</span></th>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <th class="info">Average.</th>
+ <th class="info">Highest.</th>
+ <th class="info">Lowest.</th>
+ <th class="info">Mean<br />Summer.</th>
+ <th class="info">Mean<br />Winter.</th>
+ <th class="info">Highest<br />on<br />Record.</th>
+ <th class="info">Lowest<br />on<br />Record.</th>
+ <th class="info">Average<br />Hottest<br />Month.</th>
+ <th class="info">Average<br />Coldest<br />Month.</th>
+</tr>
+<tr><td class="infon">&nbsp;</td><td class="infonc">Ft.</td><td class="infonc">Ins.</td><td class="infonc">Ins.</td><td class="infonc">Ins.</td>
+<td class="infonc">Fahr.</td><td class="infonc">Fahr</td><td class="infonc">Fahr</td><td class="infonc">Fahr</td><td class="infonc">Fahr</td><td class="infonc">Fahr</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="infon">Perth</td><td class="infonc">197</td><td class="infonr">33·05</td><td class="infonr">46·73</td><td class="infonr">20·48</td><td class="infonr">73·9</td>
+<td class="infonr">55·6</td><td class="infonr">112·0</td><td class="infonr">33·6</td><td class="infonr">75·1</td><td class="infonr">54·6</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="infon">Adelaide</td><td class="infonc">141</td><td class="infonr">20·38</td><td class="infonr">30·87</td><td class="infonr">13·43</td><td class="infonr">72·3</td>
+<td class="infonr">52·0</td><td class="infonr">116·3</td><td class="infonr">32·2</td><td class="infonr">73·3</td><td class="infonr">52·5</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="infon">Brisbane</td><td class="infonc">137</td><td class="infonr">50·00</td><td class="infonr">88·23</td><td class="infonr">24·11</td><td class="infonr">7<ins title="Transcriber's Note: '6' could be '3' or '5' ... best guess; scan unclear: part of number missing">6</ins>·0</td>
+<td class="infonr">60·0</td><td class="infonr">108·9</td><td class="infonr">36·1</td><td class="infonr">77·3</td><td class="infonr">58·0</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="infon">Sydney</td><td class="infonc">144</td><td class="infonr">49·35</td><td class="infonr">82·81</td><td class="infonr">23·01</td><td class="infonr">70·8</td>
+<td class="infonr">53·9</td><td class="infonr">108·5</td><td class="infonr">35·9</td><td class="infonr">71·5</td><td class="infonr">52·3</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="infon">Melbourne</td><td class="infonc">91</td><td class="infonr">25·62</td><td class="infonr">44·25</td><td class="infonr">15·61</td><td class="infonr">64·9</td>
+<td class="infonr">49·2</td><td class="infonr">111·2</td><td class="infonr">27·0</td><td class="infonr">66·3</td><td class="infonr">47·7</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="infon">Hobart</td><td class="infonc">160</td><td class="infonr">23·40</td><td class="infonr">40·67</td><td class="infonr">13·43</td><td class="infonr">61·4</td><td class="infonr">47·0</td><td class="infonr">105·0</td><td class="infonr">27·7</td><td class="infonr">62·1</td><td class="infonr">45·7</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="infonq">Canberra<br />(District)</td><td class="infonq8">
+<table summary="layout" align="center" width="auto" border="0">
+<tr>
+ <td class="bigbrace1">{</td>
+ <td class="dat">2,000<br />to<br />2,900</td>
+ <td class="bigbrace1">}</td>
+</tr>
+</table>
+</td><td class="infonb">23·00</td><td class="infonb">50·69</td><td class="infonb">16·56</td><td class="infonb">69·7</td><td class="infonb">45·0</td><td class="infonb">109·0</td>
+<td class="infonb">16·0</td><td class="infonb">72·0</td><td class="infonb">42·0</td></tr>
+</table>
+
+<p style="margin-top: 2em;">The mean humidity at the several capitals is as follows:&mdash;Brisbane mean
+averages, 68·1; highest, 85; lowest, 47. Sydney mean averages, 73, 90, 55.
+Melbourne mean averages, 72, 76, 67. Adelaide mean averages, 56, 84, 33. Perth
+mean averages, 63, 83, 45. Hobart mean averages, 72, 76, 67.</p>
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page238" id="page238"></a>238</span>
+
+<h2 class="app">APPENDIX K.&mdash;EDUCATION STATISTICS.</h2>
+
+<h2 class="app">I.&mdash;STATE PRIMARY EDUCATION (1907).</h2>
+
+<table summary="state primary education" align="center" width="auto" style="border-collapse: collapse;" border="0">
+<tr><th class="info">&nbsp;</th><th class="info">Queensland.</th><th class="info">New South Wales.</th><th class="info">Victoria.</th></tr>
+<tr><td class="infonq"><br />Amount per head of estimated population<br />Amount per district scholar</td><td class="infonb" valign="top">
+<table summary="Qld." border="0" style="border-collapse: collapse;">
+<tr><td class="dat1">£</td><td class="dat1">s.</td><td class="dat1">d.</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="dat1">0</td><td class="dat1">10</td><td class="dat1">11</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="dat1">3</td><td class="dat1">3</td><td class="dat1">2</td></tr>
+</table>
+ </td><td class="infonb">
+<table summary="N.S.W." border="0" style="border-collapse: collapse;">
+<tr><td class="dat1">£</td><td class="dat1">s.</td><td class="dat1">d.</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="dat1">0</td><td class="dat1">10</td> <td class="dat1">6</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="dat1">3</td><td class="dat1">9</td><td class="dat1">2</td></tr>
+</table>
+ </td><td class="infonb">
+<table summary="Vic." border="0" style="border-collapse: collapse;">
+<tr><td class="dat1">£</td><td class="dat1">s.</td><td class="dat1">d.</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="dat1">0</td><td class="dat1">9</td><td class="dat1">6</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="dat1">2</td><td class="dat1">18</td><td class="dat1">7</td></tr>
+</table>
+ </td>
+</tr>
+</table>
+
+<h3>II.&mdash;PRIVATE SCHOOLS (1908).</h3>
+
+<table summary="private schools" align="center" width="auto" style="border-collapse: collapse;" border="0">
+<tr>
+ <td class="info2">&nbsp;</td>
+ <td class="info2">Undenominational.</td>
+ <td class="info2">Church of<br />England.</td>
+ <td class="info2">Roman<br />Catholic.</td>
+ <td class="info2">Lutheran.</td>
+ <td class="info2">Total.</td>
+</tr>
+<tr><td class="infon">Number of schools</td><td class="infonr">86</td><td class="infonr">8</td><td class="infonr">61</td><td class="infonr">2</td><td class="infonr">157</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="infon">Teachers&mdash;Male</td><td class="infonr">26</td><td class="infonr">6</td><td class="infonr">57</td><td class="infonr">2</td><td class="infonr">91</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="infon">Teachers&mdash;Female</td><td class="infonr">170</td><td class="infonr">32</td><td class="infonr">372</td><td class="infonr">&nbsp;</td><td class="infonr">574</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="infon">Gross enrolment&mdash;Male</td><td class="infonr">786</td><td class="infonr">236</td><td class="infonr">4,883</td><td class="infonr">29</td><td class="infonr">5,934</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="infon">Gross enrolment&mdash;Female</td><td class="infonr">1,386</td><td class="infonr">344</td><td class="infonr">6,400</td><td class="infonr">34</td><td class="infonr">8,164</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="infon">Average daily attendance&mdash;Male</td><td class="infonr">654</td><td class="infonr">216</td><td class="infonr">4,220</td><td class="infonr">24</td><td class="infonr">5,114</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="infonq">Average daily attendance&mdash;Female</td><td class="infonb">1,289</td><td class="infonb">297</td><td class="infonb">5,200</td><td class="infonb">28</td><td class="infonb">6,814</td></tr>
+</table>
+
+<h4><span class="sc">Church of England Schools</span> (1909).<a id="footnotetaga" name="footnotetaga"></a><a href="#footnotea"><sup>a</sup></a></h4>
+
+<table summary="Church of England Schools" align="center" width="90%" style="border-collapse: collapse;" border="0">
+
+ <tr><th class="info">Schools.</th><th class="info">On Roll.</th><th class="info">Average<br />Attendance.</th><th class="info">Teachers.</th></tr>
+<tr><td class="infon">St. John's Day School, Brisbane</td><td class="infonc">44 boys, 134 girls</td><td class="infonc">33 boys, 107 girls</td><td class="infonc">6, and 1 music<br />and 1 drawing</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="infon">Holy Trinity Day School, Woolloongabba</td><td class="infonc">33 boys, 42 girls</td><td class="infonc">30 boys, 37·6 girls</td><td class="infonc">3</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="infon">St. Paul's Day School, Maryborough</td><td class="infonc">35</td><td class="infonc">29</td><td class="infonc">2</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="infon">High School for Boys, Southport</td><td class="infonc">112</td><td class="infonc">112</td><td class="infonc">9</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="infon">Glennie Memorial School for Girls, Toowoomba</td><td class="infonc">50</td><td class="infonc">Very good</td><td class="infonc">6</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="infon">Eton High School for Girls, Toorak, Hamilton</td><td class="infonc">50</td><td class="infonc">97 per cent.</td><td class="infonc">9</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="infon">St. Paul's Day School, Ipswich</td><td class="infonc">35 boys, 62 girls</td><td class="infonc">25·3 boys, 47 girls</td><td class="infonc">4</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="infon">Theological College, Nundah</td><td class="infonc">14 students</td><td class="infonc">...</td><td class="infonc">3</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="infon">Tufnell Orphanage, Nundah</td><td class="infonc">70 children</td><td class="infonc">...</td><td class="infonc">5 workers</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="infon">Industrial Home, Clayfield</td><td class="infonc">21 inmates</td><td class="infonc">...</td><td class="infonc">2 instructors</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="infonq">High School for Girls, Stanthorpe</td><td class="infonbc">...</td><td class="infonbc">...</td><td class="infonbc">...</td></tr>
+</table>
+
+<p class="footnote"><a id="footnotea" name="footnotea"></a><a class="footnote" href="#footnotetaga">Footnote a:</a>
+Furnished by Mr. A. A. Orme, Diocesan Registry, Brisbane.</p>
+
+<h4><span class="sc">Roman Catholic Schools</span> (1909).<a id="footnotetagb" name="footnotetagb"></a><a href="#footnoteb"><sup>b</sup></a></h4>
+
+<table summary="private schools" align="center" width="90%" style="border-collapse: collapse;" border="0">
+<tr><td class="infont"><span class="sc"><br />Schools Taught by Sisters</span>&mdash;</td><td class="infontr"><br />On&nbsp;Roll.</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="infon">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<i>Archdiocese of Brisbane</i>&mdash;</td><td class="infonr">&nbsp;</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="infon"><p class="foo"><span class="outdent1">Brisbane (High School)</span>, All Hallows; (Primary)&mdash;Elizabeth street, Ivory street, South
+ Brisbane, Kangaroo Point, Red Hill, Wooloowin, Toowong, Rosalie; Sandgate; Ipswich;
+ Helidon; Toowoomba (2); Dalby; Roma; Warwick; Stanthorpe; Gympie (2); Maryborough;
+ Bundaberg; Beaudesert; Southport; (Orphanage), Nudgee</p></td><td class="infonr" valign="bottom">6,226</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="infon">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<i>Diocese of Rockhampton</i>&mdash;</td><td class="infonr" valign="bottom">&nbsp;</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="infon"><p class="foo"><span class="outdent1">(High School), Rockhampton</span>; Townsville; Charters Towers; (Primary), Rockhampton;
+ Townsville; Charters Towers; Mount Morgan; Hughenden; Gladstone; Longreach;
+ Winton; Mackay; Ravenswood; Clermont; Emerald; (Orphanage), Neerkol</p></td><td class="infonr" valign="bottom">4,228</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="infon">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<i>Diocese of Cooktown</i>&mdash;</td><td class="infonr" valign="bottom"></td></tr>
+<tr><td class="infon"><p class="foo"><span class="outdent1">(High School), Cooktown;</span> (Primary), Cooktown; Cairns; Geraldton; Mareeba</p></td><td class="infonr" valign="bottom">572</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="infon"><span class="sc">Schools Taught by Christian Brothers</span>&mdash;</td><td class="infonr" valign="bottom"></td></tr>
+<tr><td class="infon">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<i>Archdiocese of Brisbane</i>&mdash;</td><td class="infonr" valign="bottom"></td></tr>
+<tr><td class="infon"><p class="foo"><span class="outdent1">(College), Nudgee;</span> (High School and Primary), Brisbane; Ipswich; Toowoomba;
+Gympie; Maryborough</p></td><td class="infonr" valign="bottom">1,880</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="infon">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<i>Diocese of Rockhampton</i>&mdash;</td><td class="infonr" valign="bottom"></td></tr>
+<tr><td class="infon"><p class="foo"><span class="outdent1">(High School and Primary)</span>, Rockhampton; Charters Towers</p></td><td class="infonr" valign="bottom">740</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="infon">&nbsp;</td><td class="infonr" valign="bottom">&ndash;&mdash;&mdash;</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="infonq"><p style="text-align: right; padding-right: 1em;">Total</p></td><td class="infonb" valign="bottom">13,646</td></tr>
+
+</table>
+
+<p class="footnote"><a id="footnoteb" name="footnoteb"></a><a class="footnote" href="#footnotetagb">Footnote b:</a> Supplied by the Church authorities.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 600px;"><a href="images/page238-1200.jpg"><img src="images/page238-600.jpg" width="600" height="359" alt="GOVERNMENT HOUSE, NOW DEDICATED TO UNIVERSITY PURPOSES" /></a>
+<p class="center">GOVERNMENT HOUSE, NOW DEDICATED TO UNIVERSITY PURPOSES</p></div>
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page239" id="page239"></a>239</span>
+
+<h3 class="app">APPENDIX L.</h3>
+
+<h2 class="app">INAUGURATION OF THE UNIVERSITY OF QUEENSLAND.</h2>
+
+<p>In older lands Time seems to move with so deliberate a step that his march is
+scarcely noticed, and the passing of fifty years is but a small matter, though
+within the past half-century discovery after discovery, advance after advance,
+has been made. Still these things have come gradually, and, like all the great
+triumphs of peace, have been achieved calmly, orderly, and almost imperceptibly.
+It has been different in these new countries, whose practical history
+comprehends scarcely more than the span of one man's life. Queensland has grown
+out of nothing (from the point of view of civilisation) to a fair stature of
+importance. Fifty years is the sum of its existence as a self-governing State,
+but within that brief period the country has been reclaimed from the wilderness,
+and made the home of a happy, progressive, and enlightened people. Bearing in
+mind what Queensland was fifty years ago, and what it is to-day, it will be
+admitted that its jubilee was eminently worth celebrating, not in a mere spirit
+of festivity, but in the spirit of a people conscious of what has been done, and
+full of enthusiasm for continued development. No better evidence of that could
+have been afforded than by the particular method of celebration decided
+upon&mdash;the dedication of the most historic building in Queensland to the
+purposes of a University. It would have been easy to have devised a more showy
+plan, to have arranged for festivities that would have given greater immediate
+pleasure, but it would not have been possible to have marked the jubilee day
+with anything so admirably calculated to promote the best interests of the
+people, or so likely to abide in the public memory. That was the view of Mr.
+Kidston and his Government, to whom belong the honour of having given effect to
+the long-cherished aspirations of that numerous body who desire to see
+Queenslanders an educated as well as a prosperous people. For many years there
+had been a movement afoot for the establishment of a University. As far back as
+1891, a Royal Commission, under the presidency of the late Sir Charles Lilley,
+had inquired into the matter and reported strongly in favour of the project.
+Premiers who were themselves graduates of universities and cultured, far-seeing
+men had recognised the need for a University, but the matter obstinately
+remained in the air. For some sixteen years, largely supported by the Sydney
+University, a Council had carried on University Extension Lectures, educating
+not only the students, but the public. Finally, the present Premier, realising
+that the time was ripe for a definite forward move, placed educational reform in
+the forefront of his policy, and succeeded in getting legislation passed for the
+establishment of the institution and in securing a liberal provision for
+maintaining it. This much achieved, everything was sufficiently far advanced for
+an impressive dedicatory ceremony on the day chosen for celebrating the jubilee
+of Queensland&mdash;Friday, <span class="pagenum"><a name="page240" id="page240"></a>240</span>
+10th December, 1909. It was not possible, of course, for the University to be
+actually in operation by that date, but it was possible to take the first step
+by solemnly setting apart for its uses the building in which it is proposed to
+conduct it. That was precisely what was done on this occasion, and with a simple
+dignity and an earnestness of purpose that could not well have been surpassed.
+Everything combined to make the day and the event memorable, to lift it out of
+the commonplace of public occasions, in a word to make it historic&mdash;the
+most historic event since the promulgation of Queensland's free Constitution.
+The building itself had been the honoured home of every Governor since 1861. As
+was happily phrased in one of the speeches, it had been the centre of social and
+political life. What more appropriate than that it should be invested with a new
+function&mdash;be given, as it were, a new lease of life in the great cause of
+citizen-making? What more interesting than that the chief figure in the
+ceremonial should be Sir William MacGregor, himself a great witness to the value
+of university training, a distinguished servant of the Empire, one of the select
+band of Empire builders who have united ripe scholarship with tireless energy
+and firm grasp of national business and the ways of the world? It was a
+singularly happy circumstance that this was his first important public act as
+Governor of Queensland. But a few days before he had taken over the reins of
+government from the hands of the Lieutenant-Governor, Sir Arthur Morgan. As
+befitted the occasion and the interest which they had taken in the matter of the
+University, Sir Arthur and Mr. Kidston also took a prominent part in the
+ceremony. The presence of Professor David, of the Sydney University, who was a
+prominent member of the Shackleton Expedition to the Antarctic regions, and of
+Professor Stirling, of the Adelaide University, lent additional distinction to
+the event, visibly representing, as it did, the cordiality with which those
+important institutions regarded the advent of Queensland into the sisterhood of
+Australian University-States.</p>
+
+<p>Never before in its history had Government House been the scene of a gathering
+so unique. The Premier struck the keynote of the whole proceedings, when he said
+that they were met "to erect this white stone, as it were, to mark this point in
+our national progress." He was alluding to the marble tablet, which had been
+affixed to the wall near the main entrance, recording the dedication of the
+building to its new purposes. Also, he declared the democratic foundation of the
+institution in the significant sentence: "In very truth it may be said that the
+Queensland University is of the people, and I trust that the Senate, when they
+start to manage this institution, will remember that it is also to be for the
+people."</p>
+
+<p>To the ceremony were bidden all who could lend to it distinction and interest.
+It was no mere official or exclusive gathering, but one which represented in
+full measure the democratic character of the Queensland people. Those high in
+place were there; those who in university life had won honour; those who had
+laboured to lay the foundations of the educational system of which this was the
+culmination; the people for whose children this was to be in a real and
+practical sense the great training school and character-building institution;
+the children from whose ranks were to be drawn the earliest students. The scene
+was one which will live in <span class="pagenum"><a name="page241" id="page241"></a>241</span>
+memory long after the University has begun its work, and will be recalled when
+in their gladsome, perhaps boisterous, fashion the students hold their
+commemoration days, or when in more thoughtful times the men and women who have
+gone forth from it girded for the battle of life revisit its shady walks and
+studious halls. The building and its charming environments lent themselves to an
+impressive spectacle. In the bright summer day, the well-kept grounds and the
+rich foliage of the neighbouring gardens presented a picture of rare colour and
+beauty. Beyond lay the broad river glistening in the sunlight. Above arched the
+ineffable azure scarcely flecked by clouds. In the distance lay the far
+spreading city, with its pulsating life and varied activities. Under the shadow
+of the graceful building and in a sweeping semi-circle were massed the
+spectators, with eyes concentrated on the main portico, which had been converted
+into a stage for the interesting drama of the afternoon. A curved structure had
+been thrown out from the masonry, and decorated and canopied with maroon and
+white. Grouped around this were arranged the chairs provided for the seven
+hundred invited guests. Among these were many wearing their university costumes,
+which vied in colour and variety with the dresses of the ladies. Beyond this
+enclosure were drawn up, rank behind rank, 250 boys and 550 girls chosen from
+the fifth and sixth classes of the metropolitan schools, each wearing
+Queensland's colours, maroon and white, and 200 State school cadets in uniform.
+All had been assembled in Alice street, and marched in procession to the space
+allotted to them. They were there for the double purpose of supplying a choir
+and adding to the representative character of the assembly. Beyond their lines
+were gathered the members of the general public. The arrangements entailed a
+good deal of planning and forethought, but every part of the ordered and
+dignified ceremony was smoothly carried out. The military element, drawn from
+the 9th Australian Infantry Regiment, was lined up along the whole front of
+Government House, the scarlet coats and white helmets supplying a fringe of
+colour to that part of the picture.</p>
+
+<p>The time fixed for the ceremony was half-past 3 o'clock. The reserved enclosure
+was then filled, the intermediate space was thronged with school children and
+cadets, and the outer circle was made up of those whom interest or curiosity had
+drawn to the spot. It was no small evidence of the genuineness of that interest
+that, though hundreds were too far away to hear the speeches, they remained
+during the whole proceedings. They took their cue from those who were nearer,
+and when they saw or heard them applauding they joined in and swelled the volume
+of enthusiasm. One of the first to take his place on the dais was Mr. W. H.
+Barnes, to whom it had fallen, as Secretary for Public Instruction, to pilot the
+University Bill through the Legislative Assembly. Not long afterwards there came
+Mr. A. H. Barlow, M.L.C., the veteran Minister, who had had much to do with the
+preparation of the measure, and who had charge of it during its progress through
+the Upper House. Among early arrivals were Miss MacGregor, His Excellency's
+daughter, and Mrs. Kidston. Punctually at half-past 3 His Excellency the
+Governor, Sir William MacGregor, arrived, dressed in his Windsor uniform and
+wearing the long flowing blue silk <span class="pagenum"><a name="page242" id="page242"></a>242</span>
+cloak and decorations of the Grand Cross of St. Michael and St. George,
+accompanied by Lady MacGregor and Mr. Kidston, Premier of Queensland. Mrs.
+Kidston presented Lady MacGregor with a beautiful bouquet, and almost at the
+same time the band of the 9th Regiment struck up "The National Anthem," the
+whole assemblage rising as the patriotic strains were heard. The duties usually
+devolving upon a chairman fell to the Premier, who occupied a chair on one side
+of a small flag-draped table, while His Excellency sat on the other side. Near
+by were the Lieutenant-Governor, Sir Arthur Morgan, wearing his robes of office,
+the Chief Justice (Sir Pope A. Cooper) in court dress, the Speaker of the
+Legislative Assembly (Mr. J. T. Bell) in his flowing robes, Professor David
+(representative of the Sydney University) in his official robe, Professor
+Stirling (the representative of the University of Adelaide) wearing the scarlet
+robe of an M.D. of Cambridge, and His Grace Archbishop Donaldson in the scarlet
+and ermine of a D.D. Central Queensland had a venerable representative in the
+person of the Right Rev. Dr. Hay, Moderator of the Presbyterian General
+Assembly. The Roman Catholic Archbishop, the Right Rev. Dr. Dunne, had as his
+representative Rev. Father Byrne, the Administrator of his diocese. The
+distinguished company included also Mr. Justice Real and Mrs. Real, Mr. Justice
+Chubb and Mrs. Chubb, Mr. Justice Shand, Mr. D. F. Denham (Minister for Lands)
+and Mrs. Denham, Mr. T. O'Sullivan, M.L.C. (Attorney-General) and Mrs.
+O'Sullivan, Mr. W. T. Paget (Minister for Agriculture and Railways) and Miss
+Paget, Mr. J. G. Appel (Home Secretary) and Miss Appel, Mrs. Barnes, Mr. A. G.
+C. Hawthorn (Treasurer) and Mrs. Hawthorn, Mr. W. Lennon, M.L.A. (Acting Leader
+of the Opposition) and Mrs. Lennon, Miss Celia Cooper, Mr. C. W. Costin (Clerk
+of Parliaments), Mr. Anthony Musgrave, (Private Secretary to His Excellency),
+Captain Scarlett, A.D.C., and Captains Newton and Claude Foxton, honorary
+AA.D.C. Members of both Houses of Parliament, prominent public servants, the
+mayors and aldermen of Brisbane and South Brisbane, representatives of other
+metropolitan civic bodies, leading citizens, and consular representatives had
+their seats in the enclosure fronting the official dais.</p>
+
+<p>By a happy arrangement the ceremony was inaugurated by the assembled children
+singing "The National Anthem," to which were added three of the patriotic verses
+of "The Australian Anthem" composed by Queensland's sweet singer, the late J.
+Brunton Stephens. The fresh musical voices rang out true and clear, carrying far
+through the still, scented air the simple words of devotion and patriotism&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="poem"> <div class="stanza">
+<p>What can Thy children bring?</p>
+<p>What save the voice to sing</p>
+<p class="i4">"All things are Thine"?&mdash;</p>
+<p>What to Thy throne convey?</p>
+<p>What save the voice to pray</p>
+<p>"God bless our land alway,</p>
+<p class="i4"> This land of Thine"?</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page243" id="page243"></a>243</span>
+ </div><div class="stanza">
+<p>Oh, with Thy mighty hand</p>
+<p>Guard Thou the Motherland;</p>
+<p class="i4">She, too, is Thine.</p>
+<p>Lead her where honour lies,</p>
+<p>We beneath other skies</p>
+<p>Still clinging daughterwise,</p>
+<p class="i4">Hers, yet all Thine.</p>
+ </div><div class="stanza">
+<p>Britons of ev'ry creed,</p>
+<p>Teuton and Celt agreed,</p>
+<p class="i4">Let us be Thine.</p>
+<p>One in all noble fame,</p>
+<p>Still be our path the same,</p>
+<p>Onward in Freedom's name,</p>
+<p class="i4">Upward in Thine!</p>
+ </div> </div>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 600px;"><a href="images/page242-1200.jpg"><img src="images/page242-600.jpg" width="600" height="361" alt="VIEW OF DEDICATION CEREMONY" /></a>
+<p class="center">VIEW OF DEDICATION CEREMONY</p></div>
+
+<p>The last notes had scarcely died away, when the Premier rose to invite His
+Excellency to assent to the University Bill of 1909, and to dedicate the
+building to the University. He prefaced that proceeding by a speech, which
+summarised the course of progress in Queensland, touched upon the difficulties
+it had been necessary to overcome, and the achievements in settlement and
+development which had made this ceremony possible. More than that, it focussed
+as it were in a few sentences the destined scope of the University, and the
+liberal provisions by which it was to be made <ins title="Transcriber's Note: Original reads 'acessible'">accessible</ins> to "all our young
+people without regard to class, or creed, or sex." Twenty foundation
+scholarships were the generous birthday gift to the University. There was a
+great outburst of enthusiasm at this announcement, and the applause rang out
+again with renewed strength when His Excellency stepped forward, and read a
+congratulatory message from His Majesty the King. This was a fitting prelude to
+the able and statesmanlike speech which His Excellency made. This over, Mr.
+Costin presented the University Bill for His Excellency to sign. His Excellency
+dipped his pen in the ink held by a handsome silver inkstand, and affixed his
+signature to the charter of the University. Then, pressing an electric button,
+he revealed to view a marble tablet&mdash;the white stone of which the Premier
+spoke&mdash;designed "to mark this point in our national progress."</p>
+
+<p>The building had now been dedicated, but it yet remained symbolically to hand it
+over to the people. This was done by His Excellency's presentation to Mr. J. T.
+Bell of the University Act, and Mr. Bell's acceptance of it on behalf of the
+people of Queensland. Eloquent speeches from Mr. Bell, Professor David, and
+Professor Stirling followed, each in his turn drawing from the assemblage the
+endorsement of enthusiastic applause. Once more the aid of the children was
+invoked, and, under the direction of Mr. George Sampson, F.R.C.O., they sang to
+the music of "The Old <span class="pagenum"><a name="page244" id="page244"></a>244</span>
+Hundredth" "The Children's Ode," specially written for the occasion by Mr. W. J.
+Byram&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="poem"> <div class="stanza">
+<p>Dear land, the queen of all fair climes!</p>
+<p class="i4"> To jewels of thy diadem</p>
+<p class="i4"> We add to-day its brightest gem,</p>
+<p>A guiding star for after-times.</p>
+ </div><div class="stanza">
+<p>Thy sons shall grow in wisdom's power,</p>
+<p class="i4"> Thy daughters win an ampler grace,</p>
+<p class="i4"> And both shall mould that higher race</p>
+<p>Gifted with learning's priceless dower.</p>
+ </div><div class="stanza">
+<p>Here as the seasons wax and wane</p>
+<p class="i4"> May Science still increase her store,</p>
+<p class="i4"> And Truth be reverenced more and more,</p>
+<p>And Tolerance and Justice reign.</p>
+ </div><div class="stanza">
+<p>Father of all, our effort bless!</p>
+<p class="i4"> Without thy aid we are as nought,</p>
+<p class="i4"> We are but children to be taught</p>
+<p>Thy way that leads to perfectness.</p>
+ </div> </div>
+
+<p>One graceful ceremony remained, and that typical of beauty, life, and
+growth&mdash;the planting of a tree to be known as "The University Tree," its
+destiny to grow with the University, and afford grateful shade to those brought
+within its wholesome influence. The pleasant duty of planting devolved upon Lady
+MacGregor, and it was carried out by means of a silver trowel presented to her
+by the Premier. The business of the afternoon had now concluded; the first step
+toward the establishment of the University had been taken: its future home had
+been dedicated.</p>
+
+<h3>THE DEDICATION SPEECHES.</h3>
+
+<p>The PREMIER (Hon. W. Kidston), in rising to ask His Excellency to dedicate
+Government House to the purposes of the University, said: Your Excellency and
+Ladies and Gentlemen,&mdash;To-day Queensland completes her first half-century
+as a self-governing community; and we are met to honour the occasion&mdash;to
+erect a white stone, as it were, to mark this point in our national progress.
+Fifty years ago a handful of settlers, not quite 24,000 in number, claimed and
+obtained the right to manage their own affairs; and the British Government, in
+granting that right, virtually handed over to those few pioneers the ownership
+of this vast territory now called Queensland&mdash;a territory exceeding in area
+the combined areas of England, Scotland, Ireland, France, Portugal, Spain, and
+Italy. If we consider how few they were and the way in which they undertook the
+work of opening up and civilising this vast territory, we must recognise that
+our first pioneers were men of enterprise, of self-reliance, and of high
+courage. (Hear, hear.) Although our population has increased twenty-four times
+since then, we are still but a handful in this vast land.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 600px;"><a href="images/page244-1200.jpg"><img src="images/page244-600.jpg" width="600" height="360" alt="THE PREMIER (HON. W. KIDSTON) OPENING THE PROCEEDINGS" /></a>
+<p class="center">THE PREMIER (HON. W. KIDSTON) OPENING THE PROCEEDINGS</p></div>
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page245" id="page245"></a>245</span>
+<p>When we try to compare the Queensland of to-day with the Queensland of fifty
+years ago&mdash;the cities and towns that have been built where then was the
+untrodden bush; the thousands of miles of railways and the many thousands of
+miles of roads, like a network all over this great area; the rivers that have
+been spanned by bridges; the harbours that have been made; the endless miles of
+telegraph lines that give rapid communication between the townships scattered
+all over the State&mdash;all the things that go to mark a civilised
+people&mdash;when we consider to what extent that work has been carried out by
+such a mere handful of people, we may well commend the men who have preceded us.
+(Hear, hear.) And it was not only in the matter of material development that
+these men did good work. Many years ago they established an educational system
+which still obtains&mdash;a system so effective and comprehensive that all over
+this vast territory of Queensland wherever ten or a dozen children can be
+brought together there you will find a State school. (Hear, hear.) And even
+beyond that, by means of the itinerant teachers, the scattered children of the
+bush are sought out and have at least the rudiments of education brought to
+their isolated homes. (Hear, hear.) To-day we seek to commemorate our
+establishment as a self-governing community, and at the same time to show our
+appreciation of the excellent work done by our predecessors in opening up this
+new land and in promoting the civilising and humanising agencies that have made
+Queensland what she is; and I hold that we can show our appreciation of the good
+work our predecessors did in no better way than by imitating and continuing that
+good work. We who have eaten of the fruit of the trees which our predecessors
+planted; we, the men of to-day, may also seek to plant so that the children of
+to-morrow may gather the fruit. (Hear, hear.)</p>
+
+<p>Perhaps, Your Excellency, I am not just the person to discuss educational
+methods, or to seek here to give instructions to the Senate who will manage this
+University; but I may express the hope that the University of Queensland will
+provide for the youth of Queensland the highest culture and the best university
+training that can be got, at any rate, this side of the line. (Hear, hear.) At
+the same time I would not have it forgotten that Queensland is a hive of working
+bees; and all our educational institutions, from Kindergarten to University,
+should keep that fact in view. There is this difference between the youngest
+University in the Empire and the oldest: Oxford was established by a King; the
+University of Queensland is established by the People. (Hear, hear.) Queensland
+is democratic not only in her political institutions: she is democratic in heart
+and sentiment; and the desire of our people for a University is simply the
+desire that Queensland may be an educated democracy&mdash;the safest, the
+strongest, and the happiest community in which men can live. (Hear, hear.) I
+would have the Senate always remember that it was the desire of our people that
+inspired the crowning of our educational system by the establishment of a
+University, that in very truth the Queensland University is "of the people," and
+I trust that the Senate will never forget that it should be "for the people."
+(Hear, hear.) It is not all of us who can go to a University or directly share
+in its advantages; yet the whole community should, and I hope will, receive
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page246" id="page246"></a>246</span>
+a general benefit. I hope that its influence will radiate downwards through all
+the ranks of our social organism; that those who have the advantage and the
+privilege of the more liberal education which our University will give will be
+like the leaven which the woman put in three measures of meal, and will leaven
+the whole community. (Hear, hear.)</p>
+
+<p>Parliament has made what I think is fairly adequate financial provision for our
+University. A sum of £50,000 is being set aside from this year's revenue for
+meeting what may be called the initial cost. (Hear, hear.) And, besides that, a
+sum of £10,000 a year is being provided for what may be called the annual
+working charges. (Hear, hear.) I may also announce to-day that the Cabinet,
+subject of course to the approval of Parliament, has resolved to institute a
+certain number of foundation scholarships as a step towards equalising
+educational opportunities for our young people and by way of opening the door to
+ability and special merit. (Applause.) It has been decided to establish twenty
+foundation scholarships&mdash;(applause)&mdash;tenable for three years, each of
+which will carry free entrance to the University and £26 per year, or, in cases
+where students, to attend the University, must live away from home, £52 a year.
+These scholarships will be equally open to all our young people without regard
+to class, or creed, or sex. (Applause.) There will also be a foundation gold
+medal, carrying a prize of £100 a year for two years, for the purpose of
+encouraging original chemical research&mdash;(applause)&mdash;a similar medal
+and prize of a similar amount, tenable for two years, for
+engineering&mdash;(applause)&mdash;and a foundation travelling scholarship of
+£200 a year, tenable for two years. (Applause.) The scholarships will of course
+be competed for annually, so that in the third and each succeeding year there
+will be sixty of these scholarship students at our University. (Applause.)</p>
+
+<p>I now ask Your Excellency, as representing His Majesty, to assent to the Bill,
+which has been approved by both Houses of Parliament, for the establishment and
+endowment of the University of Queensland, and on behalf of our people to
+dedicate
+this building, now your home, to the purposes of the University. (Loud
+applause.)</p>
+
+<p><span class="sc">His Excellency Sir</span> WILLIAM MacGREGOR said: Mr. Kidston, Ladies and
+Gentlemen,&mdash;The first duty I have to perform here to-day is to read to you
+a telegram which I received this forenoon from the Right Honourable the
+Secretary of State for the Colonies. This telegram is dated London, 9th
+December, at 1.45 p.m., and is addressed "The Governor, Brisbane." The Secretary
+of State says:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"I am commanded by His Majesty the King to convey to you the following
+message:&mdash;</p>
+
+<blockquote><p> "His Majesty the King heartily congratulates the people of Queensland on the
+completion of fifty years of responsible government. It is the earnest hope of
+His Majesty the King that the enterprise and loyalty which have marked the first
+half-century of the State of Queensland may be its abiding heritage and that the
+prosperity which is evident at the close of this period may be multiplied
+abundantly in the years to come." "CREWE." </p></blockquote>
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page247" id="page247"></a>247</span>
+
+<p>For two reasons I have put in writing what I have to say on the important
+subject that has brought us here to-day. The first is that I cannot make myself
+heard by a large audience. The second is that we are assembled here on the
+occasion of the Jubilee of Queensland, and that fifty years hence the Jubilee of
+the University of this State will also be celebrated, and it is desirable that
+those who participate in that ceremony should know in what spirit the University
+is being founded: what are our hopes, our aspirations, what appreciation we have
+of our duty towards our posterity and the future of the great country we and
+they have to develop. I trust that for this reason all speeches made here to-day
+may be carefully recorded, as we now enter upon a new phase of the intellectual
+life of Queensland, a matter that cannot but be of far-reaching importance to
+the next and succeeding generations of this State.</p>
+
+<p>I deem it a fortunate circumstance that, a few days after my arrival in
+Brisbane, I should have the privilege of participating in a ceremonial for the
+establishment of "The University of Queensland," of taking part in a State
+function of historical and of great social and economic importance.</p>
+
+<p>We live in an age of more rapid progress than any that has ever preceded our own
+day: and for my part I am prepared to believe that we owe to education the
+enormous advances in recent years in health, wealth, and in the amenities and
+comforts of life. It is now well known to us all that the nation that is
+backward in education is, or soon will be, behind in all that makes a people
+great and prosperous.</p>
+
+<p>I am aware that these facts were fully recognised by many men in Queensland long
+years ago, for I well remember the former efforts that were made to found a
+University here&mdash;efforts that failed through causes that happily no longer
+exist. One of the most noticeable facts in the social and economic life of
+English-speaking people in recent years is the great impulse that has been given
+to the development and extension of university teaching. It may with a good show
+of reason be said that Australasia led up to the great educational revival of
+the last quarter of a century, by the opening of the now famous Universities, of
+Sydney in 1852, of Melbourne in 1855, and of Adelaide in 1876. Then followed the
+University of Tasmania in 1889. The wave of university education has left the
+United States with 40 universities, 16 of which are very great, and 415
+colleges. The movement has been as pronounced in Canada, where higher education
+is receiving great attention, due in a large measure to the splendid liberality
+of wealthy and patriotic citizens. The same influence has been profoundly felt
+in the United Kingdom. The Victoria University was founded in 1880, and the
+London University was reconstituted in 1900. Birmingham University dates from
+1900, Liverpool University from 1903, the University of Wales from 1903, Leeds
+University from 1904, Sheffield University from 1905, and the two national
+Universities of Ireland from 1908. To come nearer home, New Zealand has her
+University and affiliated colleges; and West Australia is at this moment taking
+active steps for the establishment of her own State University, so that it
+remains at present doubtful whether Queensland or West Australia is to play the
+part of the most retiring of this pleiad of Australasian Universities. Hitherto
+the youth of Queensland has had to go elsewhere for residential university education.
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page248" id="page248"></a>248</span>
+Fortunately for Queensland, she has had an active and influential committee for
+university extension lectures, the members of which have patriotically performed
+good service to the State by arranging for lectures that have helped to procure
+from beyond the State university certificates of competence by a considerable
+number of the youth of this country. This committee has fortunately been able to
+do enough to demonstrate how much we need a University of our own. They are
+entitled to the warm thanks of the community for what they have done. I have had
+an opportunity of knowing from the admirable lectures of Professor David, on the
+4th and 8th of this month, how interesting, instructive, and valuable those
+lectures can be. I have said enough to show you that if Queensland did not now,
+without any further delay, proceed to found her University, this, one of the
+greatest, most promising, and wealthiest provinces in the Empire, would, as far
+as education is concerned, occupy a very conspicuous and unenviable position
+among the great countries of the world; especially would this be the case in
+regard to the sister States and Dominions.</p>
+
+<p>What is a University? I have seen a University defined as a place at which
+students from any quarter of the universe could be received to study,
+irrespective of nationality. What we understand here by a University, and what
+we aim at, is an institution where any person can find the fullest and best
+instruction of the day in any branch of knowledge. It will be the head
+corner-stone of the system of education that has been legalised in this State, a
+school that will be accessible to all, and will afford equal chances and
+opportunities to rich and poor alike, without reference to sex or religious
+denomination. I know of no institution in modern social life that equals the
+University in giving a fair chance in life to the youth that is capable and is
+able and willing to work; although, for my part, I can only regard schools of
+all grades as only preparatory for the studies that have to be incessantly
+pursued after one ceases to attend classes, if one does not resign oneself to
+falling behind; thus the primary school prepares for the secondary school, and
+that school leads to the university, which last furnishes the highest and best
+intellectual equipment for one's life work, an equipment of such character that
+it can be obtained and be certified to by the university, and by that alone. It
+supplies to the bearer the hall-mark of the State that the man or woman that
+bears it has had the best instruction that the country can supply.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 600px;"><a href="images/page248-1200.jpg"><img src="images/page248-600.jpg" width="600" height="358" alt="HIS EXCELLENCY SIR W. MacGREGOR ADDRESSING THE AUDIENCE" /></a>
+<p class="center">HIS EXCELLENCY SIR W. <span class="sc">MacGREGOR</span> ADDRESSING THE AUDIENCE</p></div>
+
+<p>What is to be taught in the University? You will find that the University Act
+makes provision for the establishment of certain faculties in which instruction
+shall be given; the preamble shows that the University is to provide "a liberal
+and practical education in the several pursuits and professions of life in
+Queensland." In no other country can the pursuits and professions of social and
+economic life be greater than they are, or will be, in Queensland, having regard
+to the extraordinary multiplicity of its resources. Such a broad purpose as that
+set out in the University Act leaves little option to the ruling power of the
+University as to what subjects are to be taught. That question is determined in
+a large measure by the work of other universities, for it is a foregone
+conclusion that the University of Queensland is not to occupy a position in the
+educational world inferior to that of any sister university in Australasia. We
+are well aware that their standard is high; and we recognise <span class="pagenum"><a name="page249" id="page249"></a>249</span>
+that we start late, and are therefore behind, and that we have a hard task
+before us to overtake the other universities; but this has to be done, and will
+be done. I dwell on this because there should exist no misconception as to the
+scope of the Queensland University, especially in regard to what is called the
+classical side of instruction, in contradistinction to the scientific or
+practical. We recognise that the literary records of the world have, in the
+main, been successively committed to the languages of the Chaldeans, the Greeks,
+the Romans, and the Anglo-Saxons. If those languages are dead, their remains are
+so constantly brought before us every hour of our lives that acquaintance with
+those of them that are usually taught in what is called the faculty of arts
+forms a necessary and indispensable part of the education of every accomplished
+or finished scholar, and of most professional men or women. At the same time,
+therefore, that this University will provide the best tuition in the classical
+languages of the past, we cannot but see that times have changed; that, for
+example, in no country in Europe or America could the Prime Minister now conduct
+official business in Latin with King or Governor, as was the case in England not
+very long ago. No Prime Minister could now electrify a drooping Parliament with
+a Latin quotation, as Pitt did. So far as I know, the last Parliament in Europe
+to use Latin as its language ceased to do so some three-score of years ago. The
+classics have come into disfavour owing in a large measure to the fact that they
+were overdone, that time was wasted on utterly valueless subtleties in learning
+them. They were associated with too much book and too little practical work.
+Here we shall have a course of classics, an arts faculty, equal to that of other
+universities, but without unduly encroaching on other faculties of more modern
+development and of more direct utility in the evolution of modern economic life.
+It would, however, be unreasonable to expect that the University of Queensland
+could be brought into the world full-grown at its birth. The University of
+Sydney began with four professors. I am informed by the very distinguished
+gentleman who is Chancellor of the University of Adelaide that the now great
+University of that city entered on its career, in rented premises, thirty-four
+years ago, with three chairs&mdash;classics, mathematics, and natural science.
+Now it has faculties of arts, science, law, medicine, electrical, mining, civil
+engineering, commerce, and music; and it has ranked, by letters patent, for the
+last twenty-eight years, with the old universities of the United Kingdom. The
+Adelaide University now has eleven professors and twenty-six lecturers. It
+supplies to us a splendid example of courage, of energy, and of perseverance,
+and that example we mean to follow. (Applause.) Our late start is not without
+some compensation, for not only are we able to profit from the experience of
+others, but, what is equally important, we can adapt our University courses to
+the needs of the country untrammelled by the vested interests and the threadbare
+traditions that make it so difficult for old universities to adapt themselves to
+the exigencies of modern educational requirements. If one thinks of Queensland
+as she was this day fifty years ago, and as she is to-day, it can be seen that
+he would be a bold man that would predict what faculties, what tuition, may be
+required, and may be given, in the Queensland University half a century from
+now. The moral to be drawn from this is, to make a start on an elastic
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page250" id="page250"></a>250</span>
+plan that may admit of indefinite expansion. We require a broad and strong
+foundation, able to carry a great edifice, sufficient to provide the most
+comprehensive tuition, not only in what is known, but also to facilitate and
+encourage original research and invention, as set out in the Act. Even sport
+will not be forgotten, for it is an important consideration, in a
+non-residential university, to foster that feeling and regard for a bountiful
+mother that should animate the students of every great University. One thing is
+abundantly clear: that because we are determined to have a university equal to
+the needs of this great State, a university that shall stimulate those of the
+sister States, and because we start at so late a date, we must begin with the
+very best teachers that can be procured, the most learned and enthusiastic men
+in their several departments. On those men will in a large measure depend the
+future character and standing of our University. The best men will be the
+cheapest. Queensland can afford to employ them, and we know they will be a
+profitable investment. (Applause.) A university costs money, much money,
+especially in the technical departments, such as engineering, mining, and
+agriculture. The endowment of universities has been recognised in recent years
+as having such strong claims on public funds that they cannot be overlooked.
+That principle is accepted here. Our nearest neighbours have conferred valuable
+land areas on their universities; and they have been very liberal to them in
+money grants. In this respect the oldest of our Universities, that of Sydney,
+led the way with wisdom and a liberal hand, and to-day New South Wales reaps her
+reward. It may safely be assumed that the Parliament and Government of
+Queensland will be equally liberal and far-seeing. But the different
+Universities have in recent years profited in an extraordinary manner from the
+munificence of private citizens. In ten years the technical schools, colleges,
+and universities of the United States received in that way £23,000,000. Perhaps
+the largest amount of such gifts in any one year was in 1903, when they received
+£3,350,000. It appears that in 1907 nearly £300,000 was bequeathed to
+universities and colleges in the United Kingdom. It has become a common practice
+for private citizens to found a university chair to bear the name of a person
+whose memory it is desired to preserve and to honour. Others that are not in a
+position to do so much as that have very frequently established a bursary or
+scholarship, sometimes sufficiently large to maintain a student at the
+university, or to partly do so. The bursaries that produce the best results are
+those that are given by open competition. But others that are limited to a
+specified name or locality, according to the desire of the donors, are very
+useful. Some men of good will are not permitted by their means to do more than
+to found a prize for proficiency in some branch taught in the university. This
+State possesses an enormous area; the productions are varied in a very unusual
+degree, and they are of enormous value present and prospective; and there can be
+no reason to suppose that Queenslanders are to be less generous and patriotic
+towards their University than our neighbours have been towards theirs. I shall
+be satisfied if we have citizens here as generous as Russell in Sydney, as
+Ormond in Melbourne, and Elder and Hughes in Adelaide. I think that no more
+patriotic nor useful disposition of one's money could be made. We start under
+the best auspices, for we have before us now a most gracious message of
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page251" id="page251"></a>251</span>
+congratulation and good wishes from His Majesty the King, whose life is devoted
+to the welfare of his subjects, and there are with us to-day representatives
+from the great Universities of Sydney and Adelaide. Each of these Universities
+has sent us a man of world-wide reputation. I know well what I am saying when I
+tell you that the names of Professors David and Stirling are as well known, and
+are as highly honoured, by the learned men and women of Europe and America as by
+the people of Australia. (Applause.) It is a great honour to us to have such
+representatives here to-day, and for their presence we owe hearty thanks to
+their respective Universities, and I bid them a hearty and appreciative welcome
+to Brisbane, for I feel sure that they and the Universities they represent will
+always extend to us sympathy, good advice, and an excellent example; and I am
+certain that they will be delighted to see us here in a position to offer them
+that healthful emulation that cannot but be advantageous to all concerned. I
+now, ladies and gentlemen, take the first practical step towards the founding of
+the University of Queensland by complying with the request of the Hon. William
+Kidston, Premier of the State, to assent to the University Bill of 1909; and I
+shall thereafter, in your presence, deliver this copy of the Act to the Hon.
+Joshua Thomas Bell, who will receive it on behalf of the people of Queensland;
+and, this done, I shall, by unveiling a commemorative tablet, dedicate this
+building to the purposes of the University of Queensland. (Loud applause.)</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 600px;"><a href="images/page250-1200.jpg"><img src="images/page250-600.jpg" width="600" height="359" alt="HIS EXCELLENCY UNVEILING THE DEDICATION TABLET" /></a>
+<p class="center">HIS EXCELLENCY UNVEILING THE DEDICATION TABLET</p></div>
+
+<p><span class="sc">His Excellency</span>, having signed the University Bill, and assented to it on behalf
+of His Majesty the King, handed a copy to Mr. Bell, Speaker of the Legislative
+Assembly, saying: It is with profound pleasure and great hope that I present
+this Act to you on behalf of the people of Queensland. (Applause.)</p>
+
+<p><span class="sc">His Excellency:</span> I now proceed to unveil the commemorative tablet which dedicates
+this house to the University of Queensland.</p>
+
+<p>By pressing a button, His Excellency unveiled a tablet bearing the following
+inscription:&mdash;</p>
+
+<table summary="layout" align="center" width="60%" border="0">
+<tr>
+ <td>
+<p class="center" style="margin-top: 2em;">DEDICATED</p>
+<p class="center">TO THE UNIVERSITY OF QUEENSLAND</p>
+<p class="center">BY HIS EXCELLENCY THE GOVERNOR,</p>
+<p class="center">SIR WILLIAM MACGREGOR, G.C.M.G.,</p>
+<p class="center">ON BEHALF OF THE PEOPLE OF QUEENSLAND,</p>
+<p class="center">ON 10TH DECEMBER, 1909,</p>
+<p class="center">THE FIFTIETH ANNIVERSARY</p>
+<p class="center">OF THE</p>
+<p class="center">ESTABLISHMENT OF RESPONSIBLE GOVERNMENT</p>
+<p class="center">IN QUEENSLAND.</p>
+
+<p class="author1">W. KIDSTON,</p>
+
+<p style="float: right;">CHIEF SECRETARY.</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+</table>
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page252" id="page252"></a>252</span>
+
+<p style="margin-top: 2em;">The <span class="sc">Hon.</span> J. T. BELL (<i>Speaker of the Legislative Assembly</i>) said: Your
+Excellency, Mr. Kidston, Your Grace, Ladies and Gentlemen,&mdash;If I may for a
+second, before uttering the few sentences I propose to do, mention a personal
+matter in regard to His Excellency, I should like to do it, and that is to
+express the consternation I felt at the announcement which His Excellency made
+that in his opinion all the speeches that are delivered upon this occasion
+should be of such a character that they may be perused with pleasure and with
+instruction by those who are celebrating the jubilee of this institution fifty
+years hence. May I say that I find it sufficiently difficult to cope with my
+contemporaries without having to make in addition provision for posterity? I
+listened to His Excellency's address with the greatest satisfaction, as everyone
+did who heard it, because it was felt to be a fitting deliverance for such an
+occasion as this. Whether now, or five years hence, or ten years hence, or when
+the jubilee of this institution is celebrated&mdash;as it will be
+celebrated&mdash;anyone who wants authoritative information concerning the
+present education systems of the world, of the Empire, and particularly of
+Australia and in regard to this University, can turn to His Excellency's
+deliverance with the knowledge that he can get all the information there. (Hear,
+hear.) I at least feel&mdash;and so does everyone who has any acquaintance with
+the fact&mdash;sympathy with the allusion which His Excellency made during his
+remarks to that body of men who are known as the University Extension Council. I
+do not know how far back their labours began&mdash;it was certainly more than
+ten years&mdash;but these men, free from any instinct of self-advertisement, and
+prompted only by influences that were unselfish, did their very best in our
+small community years ago, and year after year, to lay the foundations of a
+university. (Hear, hear.) I am of opinion, although these things are difficult
+to trace, that it was the labour of these men of the University Extension
+Council, and their influence upon the public and upon the men in public life,
+which really laid the foundations of this gathering, and caused the Government
+of the day to institute the University. I say all honour to those men, and I
+hope that their names will be perpetuated somewhere or other. (Hear, hear.) I
+should like to say that in dedicating this building to the purposes of a
+University, those of us who are Queenslanders born and bred, not of the first
+but even of the second generation, must feel some interest in the transformation
+that such an edifice undergoes. I can only hope that it will play its part as
+well as a University edifice as it did as a Government House. Ever since, I
+suppose, 1861 or 1862, it has been the home of Her Majesty's or His Majesty's
+representative in this State. It was the headquarters of the social and
+political life of the State, and it has, through its various inhabitants,
+performed its duties well. There is this to be said, that it has housed in the
+past men of the character that it will house in the future&mdash;men who
+possessed qualifications that equally adapted them to live in this building in
+the future, and within its new surroundings, as they were qualified to inhabit
+it in the past. Let us think for a moment of some of the men who have made this
+building historical. Let us think of Sir George Bowen, our first Governor, a man
+who, before he became private secretary to Mr. Gladstone, was the representative
+of the Crown in the Ionian Isles, was an Oxford don, a fellow of his college,
+and a man with an academic reputation. He came out here and lived with us, and
+in one way at least his<span class="pagenum"><a name="page253" id="page253"></a>253</span>
+classical impulses have left their impression on the community in the
+nomenclature of a number of creeks and hills in Southern Queensland. (Hear,
+hear.) Then we had Lord Lamington, a man of some academic pretensions; but,
+greatest of all from a university standpoint, we had Lord Chelmsford, a man who
+was an honour to his college, his university, and to the State which he
+governed. (Hear, hear.) He was one of the very few men in the public service of
+Great Britain who had ever come south of the line who were able to say they were
+fellows of All Souls&mdash;(applause)&mdash;which represents in university
+distinction what the V.C. means in the military field. (Applause.) He was a man
+of qualifications that we were proud to have in our Governor, and I know that
+when the proposal was made to him that this building which he inhabited should
+be converted into a university he was one of the first and most enthusiastic
+advocates of the proposal. (Applause.) Lastly, we come to the last occupant of
+the building, our present Governor, Sir William MacGregor, and no happier
+instance can be found of what a university education can do to produce an Empire
+builder and a stern man of the world than is to be found in the person of His
+Excellency. Whatever may be the class of inhabitants who are going to labour
+within these walls in the future, they have had forerunners of whom they have no
+reason to be ashamed. Just let me add a few sentences more. This building has
+some distinct advantages from a university point of view. The sole object of a
+university is not to instruct men to pass examinations; it has a wider sphere
+than that. There was a time&mdash;it existed through ages&mdash;when the
+conception of a university was an institution that turned out scholars. To-day,
+I venture to say, it has become recognised that the duty and the object of a
+university is the production of citizens. (Applause.) And you will not produce
+citizens merely by making them go to lectures and periodically answer questions
+in an examination. In the university life one of the chief and most valuable
+features is the comradeship, the common citizenship with the other members of
+the university, the participation in athletic sports, the <i>esprit de corps</i> that
+comes from belonging to such an institution. And from that aspect I look with
+pleasure upon the Brisbane River, only a few yards away, where we shall find in
+the future, I hope, a university boat club, which club has always been a
+prominent feature of universities in Great Britain, as it is now becoming in
+Germany. And in connection with athletics, and especially aquatic athletics, you
+will find the students of this University will uphold the reputation of British
+students. (Applause.) I do not propose to speak at any greater length. I am
+convinced that after the liberal and, as far as we can see at the present time,
+adequate provision that has been made by the Government of the day for the
+management of this University, you will see men attending it who will make their
+mark upon the community. (Hear, hear.) I repeat that I hope that the test of the
+success of this University is not going to be purely a literary test, though let
+it be tested in that way too. I am convinced that those who look at the
+University from the broader standpoint feel confident that this University is
+not going to turn out merely scholars&mdash;merely men who can pass
+examinations&mdash;but is going to turn out men of the world, and is going to
+have a striking effect upon the tone of our <span class="pagenum"><a name="page254" id="page254"></a>254</span>
+citizenship. (Hear, hear.) I hope that not merely morals, but, in some degree at
+all events, manners, will be cultivated in this University; and we, a handful of
+people, who spend comparatively enormous sums every year on primary and
+secondary education, shall have additional reason to be proud when we see the
+effects of the University now inaugurating being spread throughout the land.
+(Applause.) I thank Your Excellency for dedicating this building to the purposes
+of a University, and I rejoice that we have a man of your character performing
+such a ceremony. (Applause.)</p>
+
+<p><span class="sc">The Hon.</span> W. KIDSTON: I have here apologies from the Chancellors of the
+Universities of Melbourne and Tasmania, regretting their inability to be present
+with us to-day. One of the pleasing features of this celebration is the kindly
+and friendly way in which the Universities of sister States have received the
+advent of their younger sister, the University of Queensland. (Hear, hear.) But
+the Universities of Sydney and Adelaide have done more: they have sent Professor
+David and Professor Stirling respectively to say a few words to us on this
+occasion and to wish us Godspeed. I now ask Professor David to speak.
+(Applause.)</p>
+
+<p><span class="sc">Professor</span> DAVID (<i>Sydney University</i>) said: Your Excellency, Mr. Kidston, Your
+Grace, and Ladies and Gentlemen,&mdash;It is a great honour for me, as
+representing the elder sister amongst the Universities of Australia, to bring a
+message of goodwill to our young University&mdash;the University of Queensland.
+(Applause.) It is under happy auspices that this young University is having this
+grand building, with such fine memories of the past, dedicated to its uses. We
+have in our present representative of His Majesty a gentleman of ripe
+scholarship and learning, one who has been throughout his whole life, as he is
+now and as he long will be too, a great power for good, a great power for all
+that is uplifting and ennobling to the British Empire&mdash;Sir William
+MacGregor. (Applause.) We have, too, this dedication ceremony performed in the
+presence of a representative of the Government who has shown that he has the
+greatest possible grip of all that is needed to make a university such as this
+young University a People's University; one, too, who has at heart, I know, the
+good and prosperity of his country&mdash;the Honourable the Premier, Mr.
+Kidston. (Applause.) The present Ministry, with great foresight, have resolved
+to make this University not merely a University of Brisbane, but the University
+of Queensland. (Hear, hear.) And it seems to me, as one who has studied
+university matters for some years in the past, that it is an act of great wisdom
+on the part of those who have controlled the inception of this movement that
+they have decided to associate here together the Technical College and the
+University. (Applause.) I feel sure that the association will make for the good
+of both these institutions, which never should be divorced from one another, and
+between which there should be nothing more than friendly rivalry, and always an
+interchange of courtesy, of hospitality, and of confidence. (Applause.) Another
+point, and a very important one, which I was delighted to hear from the lips of
+Mr. Kidston, is that this University is to be able to appeal to the farthest
+boundaries of <span class="pagenum"><a name="page255" id="page255"></a>255</span>
+this great State, by virtue of these sixty splendid scholarships which the
+Government have decided to endow&mdash;(applause)&mdash;that will bring in many
+boys and girls who otherwise, through remoteness or want of means, would have
+been unable to avail themselves of this University education. Thus I am sure
+that, although this University will start, no doubt, with but a small number of
+students, even amongst the small group of students who may come first to this
+University the nation will reap no less rich reward than did the University of
+Sydney when it started with a mere handful of students. That University
+celebrated its Jubilee only in 1902, and amongst its first handful of students
+was no less a man than he who was the honoured Chancellor of our University, Sir
+William Windeyer; than he who did so much not only for New South Wales but
+Australian science, our late Government Astronomer, Mr. H. C. Russell; than he
+who is now an ornament to the Bar, an honour to his University, and a great
+honour to this State and to the whole of this Commonwealth, Sir Samuel Griffith.
+(Applause.) Certainly it will not be for want of plenty of good material that
+this University will not flourish, for we in Sydney know of what splendid
+materials your grammar schools, both for boys and girls, are made, as well as
+many of your other schools. We know it right well in Sydney, for there, many a
+time and oft, your boys and girls take prizes over the heads of our own.
+(Applause.) Then a word in conclusion, and that is this, Your Excellency, and
+ladies and gentlemen: That, just as in medieval times when the universities were
+started, Feudalism, which made for isolation and all that was selfish, was
+broken down chiefly by the University influence, which gathered the people and
+drew them together in that great bond of brotherhood and learning, so in these
+troublous times, when class is ranged against class, and when Labour is pitted
+against Capital, surely we need the levelling influence of a
+University&mdash;not an influence to level down but an influence to level up in
+a noble, common brotherhood. (Applause.) We need universities as well as we need
+"Dreadnoughts" and Kitcheners&mdash;as we do need them to keep our country
+foremost in the arts, not only of war&mdash;even in war a university may do
+much; we have a Director of Military Studies at our University at Sydney, and I
+trust you will have one here&mdash;but to keep us foremost in the arts of peace.
+In the matter of the foundation of the universities of the Old World, you will
+remember that it was through the Crusaders that those universities were founded.
+It was the fiery zeal for Faith that started those universities. The Crusaders
+were brought into contact with the learning of the Eastern World, and so
+Learning and Faith were brought together in the foundations of those old
+Universities of Paris and Oxford. Sometimes Learning only flourished: sometimes
+only Faith: sometimes Reverence only, sometimes Faith. May it be our fervent
+prayer that in this noble hall both Reverence and Learning shall for ever dwell
+together in sweet harmony. (Applause.) As representing the older sister
+University of Sydney, from the bottom of my heart I wish to our young sister
+University on this historic occasion all goodwill&mdash;a message of goodwill, a
+message of Godspeed. (Applause.)</p>
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page256" id="page256"></a>256</span>
+
+<p><span class="sc">Professor</span> STIRLING (<i>Adelaide University</i>) said: Your Excellency, Mr. Premier,
+and Ladies and Gentlemen,&mdash;My first duty is to present to the Government of
+Queensland, on behalf of the University of Adelaide, its very cordial thanks for
+the invitation so courteously extended to it that it should be represented on an
+occasion which will assuredly be a memorable episode in the annals of this great
+and prospering State. And in this connection I am desired by our Chancellor, Sir
+Samuel Way, to convey to this gathering his great regret that his judicial
+duties, now of a very exacting kind, have prevented his acceptance of the
+invitation extended to him in the first place as our chief official, and of
+doing honour to the event that is being celebrated. My second and principal duty
+is to offer the cordial congratulations of the University I represent to the
+Government of Queensland, and through it to its whole people, that now at last,
+after many years, the keystone is being placed upon the arch of the educational
+edifice of this State. (Hear, hear, and applause.) I have had the honour of
+being connected with the University of Adelaide ever since its foundation, now
+thirty-four years ago. I can well remember its early struggles, its efforts to
+take a fitting place in our national life, and I am glad to have lived long
+enough to see many of its aspirations fulfilled&mdash;(hear,
+hear)&mdash;aspirations that have been fulfilled in spite of what has not always
+been a very whole-hearted support either on the parts of successive Governments
+or of the people for whose benefit it was intended. But I think it is now well
+recognised that the University is playing a useful and essential part in the
+intellectual life of the community, and that any arrest to its progress would be
+nothing short of national disaster. These recollections of our early struggles
+lead me to say that it will now be very interesting to us, as onlookers, to see
+whether this last-born of the great educational centres of
+Australia&mdash;founded as it has been by a Government that claims to be at
+least as democratic as the Governments of its sister States&mdash;will escape
+the criticisms, sometimes quite undeserved, that have at one time or another
+been directed, certainly against my own University, and, as I think I may say
+also, against its sister institutions. Then, too, in the adjustment of the work
+of the University there will no doubt recur the perennial
+discussion&mdash;indeed it has already been initiated to-day by His
+Excellency&mdash;as to the relative importance in an educational system of
+culture as opposed to material science. I am glad that I am not called upon to
+enter into that question to-day. But, speaking now from a point of view which
+concerns literature no less than science, I may be permitted to say that it is
+gratifying to hear the announcement of the Honourable the Premier that the
+claims of original research will be brought within the scope of the institution
+which takes its origin to-day. (Applause.) Surely it is a desirable, even a
+necessary, function of the chief seat of learning of a State that its professors
+and teachers should not only teach that which is known, but that they should
+themselves be contributors to the sum of human knowledge. There can be no doubt
+that the prestige of a university depends far more upon the extent to which its
+teachers are known as originators of knowledge than upon their daily routine
+lectures, however honestly or however ably these may be delivered.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 600px;"><a href="images/page256-1200.jpg"><img src="images/page256-600.jpg" width="600" height="361" alt="LADY MacGREGOR PLANTING THE UNIVERSITY TREE" /></a>
+<p class="center">LADY MacGREGOR PLANTING THE UNIVERSITY TREE</p></div>
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page257" id="page257"></a>257</span>
+<p>Every professor worthy the name will admit that the burden of teaching,
+unrelieved and uninspired by the stimulus of independent work and thought, may
+indeed become destructive of the intellectual energies. This infant University,
+launched as it is upon its career with the goodwill of a prudent Government and
+with, I believe, to an unusual degree the good wishes and support of the people,
+has the great advantage that it may profit by the example of the institutions
+that have preceded it; and fortunate will be the University of Queensland if, by
+adopting the good that may be discerned in its sister institutions, and by
+avoiding their mistakes, if such have been made, it shall enter upon and pursue
+a blameless career of which all men shall speak well. Even in their relatively
+short careers, as time goes for States and institutions, it can be perceived
+that the Australian Universities have to some extent developed individualities
+of their own, and this is just what is to be desired. A Minister of France under
+the Third Empire once made it his boast that on the same day and at the same
+hour every corresponding class in every Lycee throughout the length and breadth
+of the land was performing the same allotted task. That boast bespoke an
+undesirable uniformity which is not likely to find favour in British
+communities, least of all in these States, where we have become accustomed to
+strike out new lines in education for ourselves. Therefore, it is to be desired
+that the University of Queensland will in its turn, evolve an individuality of
+its own, that it will be inspired by the particular requirements of the State
+whose interests it serves; and, further, may I express the hope that the fact
+will become recognised, which has not easily gained recognition in the
+Australian communities&mdash;namely, that a well-founded and well-equipped
+university may be one of the best assets, material as well as intellectual, that
+can be possessed by any State or Nation. Your Excellency, I have been ordered to
+be brief in my remarks, and, interesting as are many of the thoughts that arise
+on such an exceptional occasion, I must conclude by expressing once more, on
+behalf of the University I have the honour to represent, and with all
+earnestness and sincerity, our fervent hope that this University of Queensland,
+so auspiciously inaugurated, will prosper to the uttermost, and that it will
+grow in usefulness and dignity as it grows in years, and that at length it will
+stand forth as a noble monument to the great State whose far-seeing Government
+and whose public-spirited citizens have this day launched it on its career of
+promise. (Applause.)</p>
+
+<p><span class="sc">The Hon.</span> W. KIDSTON: I have now to invite Her Excellency, Lady MacGregor, to
+plant a "University tree," which I hope will grow and flourish as we expect the
+University to do, and that in the years to come, when many who are here to-day
+have passed away, the tree will be known as "Lady MacGregor's tree."</p>
+
+<p>On a spot in front of the dais, Her Excellency planted a tree with a silver
+trowel on which was inscribed: "To Lady MacGregor, from the Chief Secretary of
+Queensland, Hon. W. Kidston, 10th December, 1909." Lady MacGregor then declared
+the tree well and truly planted.</p>
+
+<hr />
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page258" id="page258"></a>258</span>
+
+<p class="center">BRISBANE:</p>
+
+<p class="center">ANTHONY JAMES CUMMING, GOVERNMENT PRINTER.</p>
+
+<p class="center">1909.</p>
+
+<hr />
+
+<table align="center" width="80%" summary="transcriber's note" style="margin-top: 2em;">
+<tr>
+ <td class="note">
+<h4>Transcriber's Note:</h4>
+
+<p>Missing or damaged punctuation has beed repaired.</p>
+
+<p>L.s., <i>locus sigilli</i> ( = the place of the seal).</p>
+
+<p>The mid-dot, usual for the period, was used for decimals, and where used, has
+been retained.</p>
+
+<p>Part of the text of Map 8 was on the next page after 2 pages of maps, and has
+been moved to join the beginning of the map 8 text, for better flow.</p>
+
+<p>The Barwan River, described in the Proclamation in the Government Gazette, and under Queensland (Map 9) is now known as the Barwon
+River.</p>
+
+<p>Illustrations (photographs) through the book appear facing every 4th or 8th
+page. Where a photograph intersects a paragraph of text, it has been moved to
+the end of the next (or preceding) paragraph.</p>
+
+<p>Page 27: 'freetrade' corrected to 'free trade'<br />
+"... the enhanced prosperity resulting from interstate free trade."</p>
+
+<p>Page 69: 'arrear', archaic, but probably correct in 1909.<br />
+"... unoccupied land might be leased for fourteen years by a council when rates
+had been permitted to fall into arrear for a term of four years."
+(Webster's Dictionary, 1913 Edition).</p>
+
+<p>Page 207: Mining: 1872: Gold raised in Queensland: £537,365<br />
+ The first '3' could be '2'. The scan is smudged and unclear.</p>
+
+<p>Page 229: 'Mount Cornish, No. 3'.<br />
+ The '3' may be a '5'. The scan is smudged and unclear.</p>
+
+<p>Page 237: Brisbane, mean summer temperature, '76.0' could be '73.0' or '75.0'. This is a 'best guess'; the scan is smudged and unclear, and part of the number is missing.
+'76.0' has been selected after a careful comparison of the '6' with nearby numbers. 76.0°F is also closest to the current Brisbane mean summer temperature of 24.8°C, or 76.6°F,
+and in the same chart, the current Brisbane mean winter temperature of 15.6°C, or 60°F is the same as that given in this 1909 book (60°F).</p>
+
+<p>Page 243: 'acessible' corrected to 'accessible'<br />
+"... by which it was to be made accessible to "all our young people without
+regard to...."</p>
+
+<p>The corrections and explanations listed above are also indicated in the text by a dashed line at the appropriate place:<br />
+Move the mouse over the word, and the original text, or explanation, <ins title="Transcriber's Note: Original reads 'apprears'">appears</ins>.</p>
+</td></tr></table>
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+<pre>
+
+
+
+
+
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+Project Gutenberg's Our First Half-Century, by Government of Queensland
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Our First Half-Century
+ A Review of Queensland Progress Based Upon Official Information
+
+Author: Government of Queensland
+
+Release Date: April 21, 2012 [EBook #39495]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK OUR FIRST HALF-CENTURY ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by far Nick Wall, Lesley Halamek, and the Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This
+file was produced from images generously made available
+by The Internet Archive/American Libraries.)
+
+
+
+
+
+
+[Illustration: GOVERNMENT HOUSE]
+
+
+ JUBILEE MEMORIAL VOLUME
+
+
+
+
+ OUR FIRST HALF-CENTURY
+
+
+ A REVIEW OF QUEENSLAND PROGRESS
+
+
+
+
+ BASED UPON OFFICIAL INFORMATION
+
+
+ [Illustration: QUEENSLAND JUBILEE 1859-1909]
+
+
+ BY AUTHORITY OF THE GOVERNMENT OF QUEENSLAND
+
+
+
+
+ BRISBANE
+
+ PRINTED AND PUBLISHED BY ANTHONY J. CUMMING, GOVERNMENT PRINTER
+
+ 1909.
+
+
+
+
+PREFACE.
+
+
+The object of this work, as the title implies, is to furnish the
+reader with a succinct review of the salient facts of Queensland
+progress, first as an autonomous British colony of the Australian
+group, and second as a State of the Commonwealth of Australia,
+retaining all constitutional rights unimpaired save in so far as they
+may be qualified by the provisions of "The Commonwealth of Australia
+Constitution Act of 1900." In treating of federation as thus
+accomplished the object has been to set forth dispassionately, yet
+clearly, the general results of the change upon the well-being of the
+State, and the reasonable anticipations of its future when the objects
+of federal union have been more completely attained.
+
+This is not a volume of statistics, yet in a fifty-year review it
+would be impossible entirely to avoid the use of figures. These,
+however, have been availed of sparingly; and, to avoid encumbering the
+text, tables compiled by the Government Statistician contrasting the
+progress made, by presenting the figures for the first, middle, and
+last (available) years of the fifty-year period, have been included
+as appendices. Every effort has been made to ensure accuracy, and to
+embody in the volume all the information possible without overloading
+it with detail.
+
+For the series of diagrams illustrative of the subdivision of
+Australia into separate colonies between 1787 and 1863 acknowledgment
+is due to the Under Secretary for Lands of New South Wales, under
+whose authority they were compiled from data in the Public Library,
+Sydney.
+
+
+
+
+TABLE OF CONTENTS.
+
+
+ PAGES.
+
+ PREFACE iii
+
+ TABLE OF CONTENTS v-x
+
+ LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS xi-xiv
+
+ INTRODUCTION xv-xx
+
+ THE SUBDIVISION OF AUSTRALIA xxi-xxiv
+
+ JUBILEE ODE--"QUEEN OF THE NORTH" xxv-xxviii
+
+
+
+
+_PART I.--OUR NATAL YEAR._
+
+
+CHAPTER I.
+
+THE BIRTH OF QUEENSLAND.
+
+ Issue of Letters Patent and Order in Council.--Appointment
+ of Sir George Ferguson Bowen as First Governor.--Continuity
+ of Colonial Office Policy.--Instructions to Governor.
+ --Munificent Gift of all Waste Lands of the Crown.
+ --Temporary Limitation of Electoral Suffrage.--Responsible
+ Government Unqualified by Restrictions or Reservations.
+ --Governor-General of New South Wales Initiates Elections 1-4
+
+CHAPTER II.
+
+INITIATION OF RESPONSIBLE GOVERNMENT.
+
+ Arrival of Sir George Bowen in Brisbane.--The First
+ Responsible Ministry.--Injunctions to Governor by
+ Secretary of State in regard to Choice of Ministers.
+ --Ex-members of New South Wales Legislature take Umbrage.
+ --The Governor on the Characteristics of Various Classes
+ of Colonists.--The Governor a Dictator.--The Microscopic
+ Treasury Balance.--Gladstone as Site of Capital.
+ --Mr. Herbert as a Parliamentary Leader 5-7
+
+CHAPTER III.
+
+DIFFICULTIES OF EARLY ADMINISTRATIONS.
+
+ Meeting of First Parliament.--Amendment on Address in
+ Reply defeated by Speaker's Casting Vote.--Adoption of
+ Address in Reply.--Compromise between Parties
+ Indispensable.--Successful Inauguration of Responsible
+ Government.--The Governor's Egotism.--Mr. Herbert's
+ Retirement.--Mr. Macalister Succeeds.--Financial and
+ Political Crisis.--Proposed Inconvertible Paper
+ Money.--Governor Undeservedly Blamed 8-10
+
+
+CHAPTER IV.
+
+THE FIRST SESSION OF PARLIAMENT.
+
+ Work of the First Session.--Four Land Acts Passed.
+ --Summary of Land "Code."--Pastoral Leases.--Upset
+ Price of Land L1 per acre.--Agricultural Reserves.
+ --Land Orders to Immigrants.--Cotton Bonus.--Lands
+ for Mining Purposes.--Renewal of Existing Leases.
+ --Governor's Laudation of "Code."--Praises Parliament.
+ --Abolition of State Aid to Religion.--Primary and
+ Secondary Education.--Wool Liens.--First Estimates and
+ Appropriation Act 11-14
+
+CHAPTER V.
+
+QUEENSLAND IN 1860.
+
+ Rush of Population.--High Prices for Stock for occupying
+ New Country.--Sparse Population.--Rockhampton most
+ Northerly Port of Entry.--Navigation inside Barrier Reef
+ Unknown.--Tropical Queensland Unexplored.--Ignorance of
+ Climate, Resources, and Conditions.--Primary Industries
+ in 1860.--Primitive Means of Communication.--Public
+ Revenue, Bank Deposits, and Institutions 15-18
+
+
+_PART II.--FROM NATAL YEAR TO JUBILEE._
+
+
+CHAPTER I.
+
+THE LEGISLATURE.
+
+ The Governor.--His Functions: Political and Social.
+ --His Emoluments.--Administrations that have held
+ Office.--Number of Members of Council and Assembly.
+ --Emoluments of Assembly Members.--Good Results of
+ Responsible Government in Queensland 19-32
+
+CHAPTER II.
+
+PUBLIC FINANCE (1859-1884).
+
+ Importance of Sound Finance.--A Great Colony Starts upon
+ a Bank Overdraft.--First Year's Revenue.--Land Sales as
+ Revenue.--Deficits in First Decade.--Transfer of Loan
+ Moneys to Revenue to Balance Accounts.--Heavy Public
+ Works Expenditure.--Crisis of 1866.--Inconvertible Paper
+ Currency Proposals.--Flotation of Treasury Bills.
+ --Higher Customs Duties.--Wiping Out a Deficit by Issue
+ of Debentures.--Transfer of Surplus to Surplus Revenue
+ Account to Recoup Loan Fund.--Incidental Protection.
+ --Railway Land Reserves.--Proceeds Used as Ordinary
+ Revenue.--Three-million Loan.--Condition of Affairs at
+ Close of First Quarter-Century.--Phenomenal Progress;
+ Prospects Bright 33-38
+
+CHAPTER III.
+
+PUBLIC FINANCE (1884-1893).
+
+ The Ten-million Loan.--Ministers Practically Granted
+ Control of Five Years' Loan Money.--Vigorous Railway
+ Policy.--Effect of Over-spending.--Inflation of
+ Values.--Increased Taxation.--Succession of Deficits.
+ --Second McIlwraith Ministry.--A Protectionist Tariff.
+ --Temporary Increase of Revenue.--Heavy Contraction
+ in 1890.--Another Big Loan; Failure of Flotation.
+ --The First Underwritten Australian Loan.--Amended
+ Audit Act Limiting Spending Power of Government 39-42
+
+
+CHAPTER IV.
+
+PUBLIC FINANCE (1893-1898).
+
+ Sir Hugh Nelson at the Treasury.--Credit of Colony
+ Restored.--Assistance to Financial Institutions and
+ Primary Industries.--Savings Bank Stock Act.--Public
+ Debt Reduction Fund.--Treasurer's Cautious and Prudent
+ Administration.--Money Obtained in London at a Record
+ Price 43-45
+
+
+CHAPTER V.
+
+PUBLIC FINANCE (1898-1903).
+
+ The Philp Ministry.--Large Surplus.--Loan Acts for Seven
+ and a-half Millions Sterling.--Drought Disasters and
+ Sacrifices for Federation.--Accumulated Revenue Deficits
+ of over L1,000,000.--Rebuff on London Stock Exchange.
+ --Resignation of Philp Ministry 46-48
+
+
+CHAPTER VI.
+
+PUBLIC FINANCE (1903-1909).
+
+ The Morgan-Kidston Ministry.--Economy in Revenue
+ Expenditure.--Great Reduction in Loan Outlay.
+ --Equilibrium Established at the Treasury.
+ --Retrenchment and Taxation.--Improvement of
+ Finances.--A Record Surplus for Queensland.--Land
+ Sales Proceeds Act.--Abstention from Borrowing.
+ --First Loan Floated since 1903.--Sound Position
+ of Queensland.--Value of State Securities.
+ --Reproductiveness of Railways Built out of Loan
+ Money.--Public Estate Improvement Fund.--How
+ Recourse to Money Market has been Avoided 49-53
+
+
+CHAPTER VII.
+
+THE BOOM DECADE (1880-1890).
+
+ A Great Boom Decade.--Causes of Inflation of Values.
+ --Excessive Rating Valuations.--False Basis of
+ Assessing Capital Value.--Prodigality Succeeded by
+ Financial Stringency and Collapse of Boom.
+ --Difficulty in Determining Real Values.--Sir Hugh
+ Nelson's Legislation.--Sound Finance.--Stability of
+ State.--Prospects Good To-day 54-56
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII.
+
+CROWN LANDS LEGISLATION.
+
+ The Code of 1860.--Crown Lands Alienation Act of
+ 1868.--Pastoral Leases Act of 1869.--Homestead Areas
+ Act of 1872.--Crown Lands Alienation Act and Settled
+ Districts Pastoral Leases Act of 1876.--The
+ Griffith-Dutton Land Act of 1884.--Co-operative
+ Communities Land Settlement Act.--Land Act of 1897
+ --Forms of Selection.--Act to Assist Persons to
+ Settle on Land by Advances from the Treasury.
+ --Extension of Pastoral Leases.--Closer Settlement
+ Act.--Land Orders 57-65
+
+
+CHAPTER IX.
+
+APPROPRIATION OF LAND REVENUE.
+
+ Land Sales Receipts; not Consolidated Revenue.
+ --Arguments used in favour of Treating Proceeds as
+ Ordinary Revenue.--Auction Sales have now Practically
+ Ceased.--Certain Proceeds Payable into Loan Fund.
+ --Special Sales of Land Act; Appropriation of Receipts 66-68
+
+
+CHAPTER X.
+
+LOCAL GOVERNMENT IN QUEENSLAND.
+
+ First Municipality Established.--Brisbane Bridge Lands.
+ --Grant for Town Hall.--Consolidating Municipalities
+ Act.--Provincial Councils Act.--Government Buildings
+ not Rateable.--Brisbane Bridge Debentures and Waterway
+ Acts.--Municipal Endowment.--Local Government Act of
+ 1878.--Divisional Boards Act of 1879; Success of the
+ Act.--Local Works Loans Act.--Two Pounds for One Pound
+ Endowment Repealed.--Rating Powers Extended by Local
+ Authorities Act of 1902.--Cessation of Endowment.
+ --Valuation and Rating Act.--Decline in Land Values.
+ --Unequal Incidence of Rates Levied.--Efficiency
+ of Local Authorities 69-77
+
+
+CHAPTER XI.
+
+PUBLIC INSTRUCTION.
+
+ Primary Education: Board of National Education; Education
+ Act of 1860; Board of General Education; Education Act of
+ 1875; Department of Public Instruction; Higher Education
+ in Primary Schools; Itinerant Teachers; Status of
+ Teachers; Statistics.--Private Schools.--Secondary
+ Education: Grammar Schools Act; Endowments, Scholarships,
+ and Bursaries; Success of Grammar Schools; Exhibitions to
+ Universities; Expenditure.--Technical Education:
+ Beginning of System; Board of Technical Instruction;
+ Transfer of Control to Department of Public Instruction;
+ Statistics; Technical Instruction Act; Continuation
+ Classes; Schools of Arts and Reading Rooms.--University:
+ Royal Commissions; University Bill; Standardised System
+ of Education 78-85
+
+
+_PART III.--OUR JUBILEE YEAR._
+
+
+CHAPTER I.
+
+GENERAL REVIEW.
+
+ Good Seasons and General Prosperity.--Land Settlement and
+ Immigration.--The Sugar Crop.--Gold and Other Minerals.
+ --Reduction in Cost of Mining and Treatment of Ores.
+ --Vigorous Railway Extension.--Mileage Open for Traffic.
+ --Efficiency of 3 ft. 6 in. Gauge.--Our Railway Investment.
+ --The National Association Jubilee Show.--The General
+ Election.--The Mandate of the Constituencies.--Government
+ Majority.--Practical Extinction of Third Party.--Labour a
+ Constitutional Opposition.--Federal Agreement with States.
+ --Federal Union Vindicated 86-91
+
+
+CHAPTER II.
+
+THE FEDERAL OUTLOOK.
+
+ Proclamation of the Commonwealth.--The Referendum
+ Vote.--Queensland's Small Majority in the Affirmative.
+ --Representation in Federal Parliament.--The White
+ Australia Policy.--Temporary Effect on Queensland.
+ --An Embarrassed State Treasury.--Assistance to Sugar
+ Industry.--Continued Protection Necessary.--Unequal
+ Distribution of Federal Surplus Revenue.--The
+ Transferred Properties.--Effect of Uniform Tariff.
+ --Good Times Lessen Federal Burden on State.--The
+ Agreement between Prime Minister and Premiers.--Better
+ Feeling Towards Federation.--National Measures of Deakin
+ Government 92-96
+
+
+_PART IV.--THE PRIMARY INDUSTRIES._
+
+
+CHAPTER I.
+
+THE PASTORAL INDUSTRY.
+
+ Importance of Industry.--Small Beginnings in New South
+ Wales.--Extension of Industry.--Stocking of Darling Downs
+ and Western Queensland.--Rush for Pastoral Lands.
+ --Difficulties of Early Squatters.--Influx of Victorian
+ Capital.--Changes in Method of Working Stations.--Boom
+ in Pastoral Properties.--Checks from Drought.--Discovery
+ of Artesian Water.--Conservation of Surface Water.
+ --Introduction of Grazing Farm System.--Closer Settlement
+ of Darling Downs.--Cattle-Rearing.--Meat-Freezing Works.
+ --Over-stocking.--Dairying.--Station Routine.--Charm of
+ Pastoral Life.--Shearing.--Hospitality of Squatters.
+ --Attraction of Industry as Investment and Occupation 97-112
+
+
+CHAPTER II.
+
+AGRICULTURE IN QUEENSLAND.
+
+ Tripartite Division of Queensland.--Climate.--Development
+ of Agriculture in Queensland.--Wide Range of Products.
+ --Early History.--Exclusion of Farmers from Richest Lands.
+ --Origin of Mixed Farming.--Extension of Industry Westward.
+ --Inexperience of Early Settlers.--Cotton-growing.--Chief
+ Crops.--Dairying.--Cereal-growing.--Farming in the Tropics.
+ --Farming on the Downs.--Farming in the West.--Irrigation.
+ --Conservation of Water.--Timber Industry.--Land Selection.
+ --Assistance Given by the Government.--Immigration.
+ --Attractions of Queensland.--Defenders of Hearth and Home 113-131
+
+
+CHAPTER III.
+
+THE SUGAR INDUSTRY.
+
+ Sugar-cane in the Northern Hemisphere.--The Rise of the
+ Beet Industry.--Abolition of Slave Labour in West
+ Indies.--Reorganisation of Industry on Scientific
+ Basis.--Establishment of Industry in Queensland.
+ --Difficulties of Early Planters.--Stoppage of Pacific
+ Island Labour.--Evolution of Small Holdings and Erection
+ of Central Mills.--Reintroduction of Pacific Islanders.
+ --Stoppage of Pacific Island Labour by Commonwealth
+ Legislation.--Bonus on White-grown Sugar.--Benefits
+ Arising from Separating Cultivation and Manufacture.
+ --Contrast between Past and Present Methods.--Scientific
+ Cultivation.--Recent Statistics.--The Future of the
+ Industry.--Queensland Leading the Van in Establishing
+ White Agriculturists in Tropics 132-143
+
+
+CHAPTER IV.
+
+A HALF-CENTURY OF MINING.
+
+ The Quest for Gold a Colonising Agency.--Earliest
+ Discoveries of the Precious Metal in Queensland.--Port
+ Curtis.--Rockhampton District.--Peak Downs.--Gympie.
+ --Ravenswood.--Charters Towers.--Palmer.--Mount Morgan.
+ --Croydon.--Later Discoveries.--Yield at Charters
+ Towers and Mount Morgan.--Copper Mining.--Tin.--Silver.
+ --Queensland the Home of All Kinds of Minerals and
+ Precious Stones.--Mineral Wealth in Cairns Hinterland.
+ --Copper Deposits in Cloncurry District.--The Etheridge.
+ --Anakie Gem Field.--Opal Fields.--Extensive Coal
+ Measures.--Railway Communication with Mining Fields.
+ --Value of Queensland Mineral Output.--Prospects of
+ Industry 144-152
+
+
+CHAPTER V.
+
+OUR ASSET IN ARTESIAN WATER.
+
+ Erroneous Judgment of Western Queensland.--Scarcity of
+ Surface Water.--Water Supply Department.--Discovery of
+ Artesian Water in New South Wales.--Prospecting in
+ Queensland.--Difficulties Experienced by Early Borers.
+ --First Artesian Flowing Bore.--Dr. Jack's First
+ Estimate of Artesian Area.--Revised Figures.--Number of
+ Bores and Estimated Flow.--Area Capable of being
+ Irrigated with Artesian Water.--Cost of Boring.--Value
+ of Artesian Water.--Extent of Intake Beds.--Waste of
+ Water.--Necessity for Government Control of Wells.
+ --Value of Water for Irrigation, Consumption, and
+ Motive Power.--Artesian Water a Great National Asset 153-161
+
+
+_APPENDICES._
+
+ APPENDIX A--READJUSTMENT OF WESTERN BOUNDARY 162-163
+
+ APPENDIX B--THE FIRST PARLIAMENT 164
+
+ APPENDIX C--THE EIGHTEENTH PARLIAMENT 165-166
+
+ APPENDIX D--FIFTY YEARS OF LEGISLATION 167-183
+
+ APPENDIX E--LAND SELECTION IN QUEENSLAND 184-195
+
+ APPENDIX F--IMMIGRATION TO QUEENSLAND 196-197
+
+ APPENDIX G--SOME STATISTICS AND THEIR STORY 198-209
+
+ APPENDIX H--DIGEST OF HYDRAULIC ENGINEER'S REPORTS 210-230
+
+ APPENDIX J--CLIMATIC CONTRASTS 231-237
+
+ APPENDIX K--EDUCATION STATISTICS 238
+
+ APPENDIX L--INAUGURATION OF THE UNIVERSITY OF QUEENSLAND 239-257
+
+
+
+
+INDEX TO ILLUSTRATIONS.
+
+
+ Government House (_C. E. S. Fryer_) _Frontispiece_
+ Facing Page
+
+ First Gazette, 10th December, 1859 xiv
+
+ Writ of Summons for First Election xx
+
+ Governors of Queensland (_C. E. S. Fryer_) xxiv
+
+ Premiers of Queensland " " xxviii
+
+ Houses of Parliament, Brisbane " " 4
+
+ View from River Terrace, Brisbane " " 8
+
+ Barron Falls, Cairns Railway, North Queensland " " 12
+
+ Treasury Buildings, Brisbane " " 16
+
+ Coal Wharves, South Brisbane " " 20
+
+ Executive Buildings, Brisbane " " 24
+
+ Views of Rockhampton, Central Queensland " " 28
+
+ Townsville: Flinders Street, looking West " " 32
+
+ Hinchinbrook Channel, North Queensland " " 36
+
+ The Narrows and Mount Larcombe, near Gladstone " " 36
+
+ Barron Gorge below the Falls, Cairns Railway " " 40
+
+ On the Road to Market, Central Queensland (_W. E. Perroux_) 44
+
+ Fat Cattle, Central Queensland " " 44
+
+ Maroochy River and Ninderry Mountain, N.C. Railway (_C. E. S. Fryer_) 48
+
+ Scene on Barcaldine Downs, Central Queensland (_W. E. Perroux_) 52
+
+ Barcaldine Downs Homestead, Central Queensland " " 52
+
+ Swan Creek Valley, near Yangan, Warwick District (_C. E. S. Fryer_) 56
+
+ Surprise Creek Falls, Cairns Railway " " 60
+
+ Forest Scene near Woombye, North Coast Railway " " 64
+
+ Hauling Timber, North Coast Railway " " 68
+
+ Stony Creek Bridge and Falls, Cairns Railway (_C. E. S. Fryer_) 68
+
+ Timber Getting, North Coast Railway " " 72
+
+ Cairns Range and Robb's Monument, N. Queensland " " 76
+
+ View of Gympie from Nashville Railway Station " " 80
+
+ Coke Ovens, Ipswich District " " 80
+
+ Gulf Cattle Ready for Market (_H. J. Walton_) 84
+
+ Brigalow Country, Warra, Darling Downs 84
+
+ Hereford Cows, Darling Downs 84
+
+ Above Stony Creek Falls, Cairns Railway (_C. E. S. Fryer_) 88
+
+ Mount Morgan: Open Cut and Dumps (_Mount Morgan G.M. Co._) 92
+
+ Mount Morgan: Mundic and Copper Works " " 92
+
+ Cattle Country, West Moreton 100
+
+ Fat Cattle, Central Queensland (_C. E. S. Fryer_) 100
+
+ Horses at Gowrie, Darling Downs 104
+
+ Sheep at Gowrie, Darling Downs 104
+
+ Horses, Western Queensland (_H. J. Walton_) 104
+
+ Fat Cattle, Burrandilla, Charleville " " 104
+
+ Wool Teams, Wyandra, Warrego District (_C. E. S. Fryer_) 108
+
+ Hauling Cedar, Atherton, North Queensland " " 108
+
+ Dairy Cattle on Darling Downs 112
+
+ Sheep, Jimbour, Darling Downs 112
+
+ Horses, Ivanhoe Station, Warrego 112
+
+ Harvesting Wheat, Emu Vale, near Warwick (_C. E. S. Fryer_) 116
+
+ Surprise Creek Cascade, Cairns Railway " " 120
+
+ Pineapple Farm, Woombye, North Coast Railway " " 124
+
+ Sugar-Mill, Huxley, Isis Railway " " 124
+
+ Field of Maize, Eel Creek, Gympie " " 124
+
+ Threshing Wheat, Emu Vale, Killarney Railway " " 128
+
+ Coffee Plantation, Kuranda, Cairns Railway " " 128
+
+ Sugar-Mill, Childers, North Coast Railway " " 132
+
+ Sisal Hemp and Cane Fields, South Isis " " 136
+
+ Canefields, Isis Railway (_C. E. S. Fryer_) 136
+
+ Sugar Cane and Mill, Huxley, Isis Railway " " 136
+
+ Cambanora Gap, Head of Condamine, Killarney " " 140
+
+ Minto Crag, Dugandan, Fassifern District " " 140
+
+ Mount Morgan: Copper Works, looking North (_Mt. Morgan G.M. Co._) 144
+
+ Mount Morgan: General View of Works " " 144
+
+ Charters Towers: Plant's Day Dawn (_C. E. S. Fryer_) 148
+
+ Gympie: Scottish Gympie Gold Mine " " 152
+
+ Gympie: No. 1 North Oriental and Glanmire " " 152
+
+ Flowing Artesian Wells, Western Queensland:
+
+ 1. Beel's Bore, Cunnamulla (_Kerry_) 156
+
+ 2. Bore on Thurulgoona Station " " 156
+
+ 3. Charleville Bore (_C. E. S. Fryer_) 156
+
+ Aberdare Colliery, Ipswich District " " 160
+
+ Cocoa-Nut Palms, Johnstone River, North Queensland " " 164
+
+ Custom House and Petrie Bight, Brisbane " " 164
+
+ In the Scrub Country, Kin Kin, North Coast Railway " " 168
+
+ On the Blackall Range, North Coast Railway " " 168
+
+ Barron Gorge, Cairns Railway, North Queensland " " 176
+
+ Farm Scene, Blackall Range " " 184
+
+ Sisal Hemp, Childers, North Coast Railway " " 184
+
+ Wool Teams, Longreach, Central Queensland " " 184
+
+ View on Barron River, Cairns Railway " " 192
+
+ Hauling Timber, Barron River, North Queensland " " 200
+
+ Falls near Killarney " " 208
+
+ Aboriginal Tree Climbers " " 208
+
+ Scene on Logan River, South Queensland " " 216
+
+ Cooktown and Endeavour River, North Queensland " " 224
+
+ Pearling Fleets off Badu Island, Torres Strait 224
+
+ Government House, now Dedicated to University purposes
+ (_C. E. S. Fryer_) 238
+
+ View of Dedication Ceremony (_H.W. Mobsby_) 242
+
+ The Premier (Hon. W. Kidston) Opening the Proceedings " " 244
+
+ His Excellency Sir W. MacGregor Addressing the Audience " " 248
+
+ His Excellency Unveiling the Dedication Tablet " " 250
+
+ Lady MacGregor Planting the University Tree " " 256
+
+
+MAPS.
+
+ (_Prepared by Survey Office, Department of Public Lands._)
+
+ Subdivision of Australia xxii, xxiii
+
+ Australia before Captain Cook 96
+
+ Australia, Showing First Settlement 96
+
+ Queensland in 1859 96
+
+ Queensland in 1909 96
+
+ Australia in 1859, Showing Self-Governing Colonies 96
+
+ The World, Showing Relative Position of Australia 96
+
+ Queensland, with British Islands Superimposed 232
+
+
+
+
+[Illustration: Royal Coat of Arms]
+
+
+ QUEENSLAND
+
+
+ =Government Gazette.=
+
+
+ PUBLISHED BY AUTHORITY.
+
+ No. 1.] SATURDAY, 10 DECEMBER, 1859.
+
+
+
+
+PROCLAMATION
+
+ By His Excellency SIR GEORGE FERGUSON BOWEN, Knight Commander
+ of the Most Distinguished Order of St. Michael and St. George,
+ Captain-General and Governor-in-Chief of the Colony of
+ Queensland and its Dependencies, and Vice-Admiral of the same,
+ &c., &c., &c.
+
+WHEREAS by an Act passed in the Session of Parliament holden in the
+eighteenth and nineteenth years of the Reign of Her Majesty, entitled,
+"_An Act to enable Her Majesty to assent to a Bill as amended of the
+Legislature of New South Wales 'to confer a Constitution on New South
+Wales, and to grant 'a Civil List to Her Majesty,'_" it was amongst
+other things enacted that it should be lawful for Her Majesty, by
+Letters Patent, to be from time to time issued under the Great Seal
+of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland, to erect into a
+separate Colony or Colonies, any territories which might be separated
+from New South Wales by such alteration as therein was mentioned, of
+the northern boundary thereof; and in and by such Letters Patent, or
+by Order in Council, to make provision for the Government of any such
+Colony, and for the Establishment of a Legislature therein, in manner
+as nearly resembling the form of Government and Legislature which
+should be at such time established in New South Wales as the
+circumstances of such Colony will allow; and that full power should
+be given in and by such Letters Patent, or Order in Council, to the
+Legislature of the said Colony, to make further provision in that
+behalf. And whereas Her Majesty, in exercise of the powers so vested
+in Her Majesty, has by Her Commission under the Great Seal of the
+United Kingdom, bearing date the sixth day of June, in the year of Our
+Lord one thousand eight hundred and fifty-nine, appointed that from
+and after the publication of the said Letters Patent in the Colonies
+of New South Wales and Queensland, the Territory described in the said
+Letters Patent should be separated from the said Colony of New South
+Wales and be erected into the separate Colony of Queensland: Now,
+therefore, I, SIR GEORGE FERGUSON BOWEN, the Governor of Queensland,
+in pursuance of the authority invested in me by Her Majesty, do hereby
+proclaim and publish the said Letters Patent in the words and figures
+following, respectively.
+
+
+
+
+QUEENSLAND.
+
+ _LETTERS PATENT erecting Moreton Bay into a Colony, under
+ the name of_ QUEENSLAND, _and appointing_ SIR GEORGE FERGUSON
+ BOWEN, K.C.M.G., _to be Captain-General and Governor-in-Chief
+ of the same_.
+
+ VICTORIA, by the Grace of God, of the United Kingdom of Great
+ Britain and Ireland, Queen, Defender of the Faith, to Our
+ trusty and well-beloved SIR GEORGE FERGUSON BOWEN, Knight
+ Commander of Our most distinguished Order of St. Michael and
+ St. George,--
+
+ GREETING:
+
+ WHEREAS by a reserved Bill of the Legislature of New South
+ Wales, passed in the seventeenth year of our reign, as amended
+ by an Act passed in the Session of Parliament holden in the
+ eighteenth and nineteenth years of our reign, entitled, "An
+ Act to enable Her Majesty to assent to a Bill, as amended, of
+ the Legislature of New South Wales, to confer a Constitution
+ on New South Wales, and to grant a Civil List to Her Majesty,"
+ it was enacted that nothing therein contained should be deemed
+ to prevent us from altering the boundary of the Colony of New
+ South Wales on the north, in such a manner as to us might seem
+ fit; and it was further enacted by the said last recited Act,
+ that if We should at any time exercise the power given to Us
+ by the said reserved Bill of altering the northern boundary of
+ our said colony, it should be lawful for Us by any Letters
+ Patent, to be from time to time issued under the Great Seal of
+ our United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland, to erect into
+ a separate Colony or Colonies any territories which might be
+ separated from our said colony of New South Wales by such
+ alterations as aforesaid of the northern boundary thereof, and
+ in and by such Letters Patent, or by Order in Council, to make
+ provision for the Government of any such separate colony, and
+ for the establishment of a Legislature therein, in manner as
+ nearly resembling the form of Government and Legislature which
+ should be at such time established in New South Wales as the
+ circumstances of such separate Colony would allow, and that
+ full power should be given by such Letters Patent or Order in
+ Council to the Legislature of such separate Colony to make
+ further provision in that behalf. Now know you, that We have,
+ in pursuance of the powers vested in us by the said Bill and
+ Act, and of all other powers and authorities in Us in that
+ behalf vested separated from our colony of New South Wales,
+ and erected into a separate Colony, so much of the said colony
+ of New South Wales as lies northward of a line commencing on
+ the sea coast at Point Danger, in latitude about 28 degrees 8
+ minutes south, and following the range thence which divides
+ the waters of the Tweed, Richmond, and Clarence Rivers from
+ those of the Logan and Brisbane Rivers, westerly, to the great
+ dividing range between the waters falling to the east coast
+ and those of the River Murray; following the great dividing
+ range southerly to the range dividing the waters of
+ Tenterfield Creek from those of the main head of the Dumaresq
+ River; following that range westerly to the Dumaresq River;
+ and following that river (which is locally known as the
+ Severn) downward to its confluence with the Macintyre River;
+ thence following the Macintyre River, which lower down becomes
+ the Barwan, downward to the 29th parallel of south latitude,
+ and following that parallel westerly to the 141st meridian of
+ east longitude, which is the eastern boundary of South
+ Australia, together with all and every the adjacent Islands,
+ their members and appurtenances, in the Pacific Ocean: And do
+ by these presents separate from our said Colony of New South
+ Wales and erect the said territory so described into a
+ separate Colony to be called the Colony of Queensland.
+
+ And whereas We have by an Order made by Us in our Privy
+ Council, bearing even date herewith, made provision for the
+ government of our said Colony of Queensland, and we deem it
+ expedient to make more particular provision for the government
+ of our said Colony: Now know you, that We, reposing especial
+ trust and confidence in the prudence, courage, and loyalty
+ of you, the said Sir George Ferguson Bowen, of our especial
+ grace, certain knowledge, and mere motion, have thought fit
+ to constitute and appoint, and do by these presents constitute
+ and appoint you, the said Sir George Ferguson Bowen, to
+ be, during our will and pleasure, our Captain-General and
+ Governor-in-Chief in and over our said Colony of Queensland,
+ and of all forts and garrisons erected and established, or
+ which shall be erected and established within our said
+ Colony, or in its members and appurtenances; And we do hereby
+ authorise, empower, require, and command you, the said Sir
+ George Ferguson Bowen, in due manner, to do and execute all
+ things that shall belong to your said command and the trust
+ We have reposed in you, according to the several powers,
+ provisions, and directions granted or appointed you by virtue
+ of our present Commission, and of the said recited Bill, as
+ amended by the said recited Act; and according to our Order
+ in our Privy Council, bearing even date herewith, and to such
+ instructions as are herewith given to you, or which may from
+ time to time hereafter be given to you, under our Sign Manual
+ and Signet, or by our Order in our Privy Council, or by Us,
+ through one of our Principal Secretaries of State; and
+ according to such laws and ordinances as are now in force in
+ our said Colony of New South Wales and its dependencies,
+ and as shall hereafter be in force in our said Colony of
+ Queensland.
+
+ 2. And whereas it is ordered by our said Order, made by Us
+ in our Privy Council, bearing even date herewith, that there
+ shall be within our said Colony of Queensland a Legislative
+ Council and a Legislative Assembly, to be severally
+ constituted and composed in the manner in the said Order
+ prescribed; and that We shall have power, by and with the
+ advice and consent of the said Council and Assembly, to make
+ laws for the peace, welfare, and good government of our said
+ Colony in all cases whatever: And it is provided by the above
+ recited Act, that the provisions of the Act of the fourteenth
+ year of Her Majesty, chapter fifty-nine, and of the Act of the
+ sixth year of Her Majesty, chapter seventy-six, intituled,
+ "An Act for the Government of New South Wales and Van Diemen's
+ Land," which relate to the giving and withholding of Her
+ Majesty's assent to bills, and the reservation of bills for
+ the signification of Her Majesty's pleasure thereon, and the
+ instructions to be conveyed to Governors for their guidance
+ in relation to the matters aforesaid and the disallowance of
+ Bills by Her Majesty, shall apply to Bills to be passed by the
+ Legislative Council and Assembly constituted under the said
+ Reserved Bill and Act, and by any other Legislative body or
+ bodies which may at any time hereafter be substituted for
+ the present Council and Assembly: Now We do, by virtue of the
+ powers in Us vested, hereby require and command, that you do
+ take especial care that in making and passing such laws, with
+ the advice and consent of the said Legislative Council,
+ and Legislative Assembly, the provisions, regulations,
+ restrictions, and directions contained in the said Acts of
+ Parliament, and in Our said Order made in Our Privy Council,
+ bearing even date herewith, and in Our instructions under
+ Our Sign Manual, accompanying this Our Commission, or in such
+ future Orders as may be made by Us in Our Privy Council, or in
+ such further instructions under Our Sign Manual and Signet as
+ shall at any time hereafter be issued to you in that behalf,
+ be strictly complied with.
+
+ 3. And whereas it is expedient that an Executive Council
+ should be appointed to advise and assist you, the said Sir
+ George Ferguson Bowen, in the administration of the Government
+ of our said Colony: Now We do declare Our pleasure to be, that
+ there shall be an Executive Council for Our said Colony, and
+ that the said Council shall consist of such persons as you
+ shall, by instruments to be passed under the Great Seal of our
+ said Colony in Our name and on our behalf, from time to time,
+ nominate and appoint, to be members of the said Executive
+ Council, all which persons shall hold their places in the said
+ Council during Our pleasure: But We do expressly enjoin
+ and require that you do transmit to Us, through one of Our
+ principal Secretaries of State, exemplifications of all such
+ instruments as shall be by you so issued for appointing the
+ members of the said Council.
+
+ 4. And we do hereby authorise and empower you, the said Sir
+ George Ferguson Bowen, to keep and use the Great Seal of our
+ said colony for sealing all things whatsoever that shall pass
+ the Great Seal of our said colony.
+
+ 5. And we do hereby give and grant to you, the said Sir George
+ Ferguson Bowen, full power and authority, by and with the
+ advice of the said Executive Council, to grant in Our name
+ and on Our behalf, any waste or unsettled lands in Us vested
+ within Our said Colony, which said grants are to be passed
+ and sealed with the Great Seal of Our said colony, and being
+ entered upon record by such public officer or officers as
+ shall be appointed thereunto, shall be effectual in law
+ against Us, Our heirs or successors: provided nevertheless,
+ that in granting and disposing of such lands you do conform to
+ and observe the provisions in that behalf contained in any
+ law which is or shall be in force within our said colony, or
+ within any part of our said colony, for regulating the sale
+ and disposal of such lands.
+
+ 6. And we do hereby give and grant unto you, the said Sir
+ George Ferguson Bowen, full power and authority, as you shall
+ see occasion, in our name and on our behalf, to grant to any
+ offender convicted of any crime in any court, or before any
+ judge, justice, or magistrate within our said colony, a
+ pardon, either free or subject to lawful conditions or any
+ respite of the execution of the sentence of any such offender,
+ for such period as to you may seem fit, and to remit any
+ fines, penalties, or forfeitures which may become due and
+ payable to us, but subject to the regulations and directions
+ contained in the instructions under Our Royal Sign Manual
+ and Signet accompanying this our Commission, or in any future
+ instructions as aforesaid.
+
+ 7. And We do hereby give and grant unto you, the said
+ Sir George Ferguson Bowen, full power and authority, upon
+ sufficient cause to you appearing, to suspend from the
+ exercise of his office, within our said colony, any person
+ exercising any office or place under, or by virtue of, any
+ Commission or Warrant granted, or which may be granted by Us,
+ or in Our name, or under Our authority, which suspension shall
+ continue and have effect only until Our pleasure therein shall
+ be made known and signified to you: And We do hereby strictly
+ require and enjoin you in proceeding to any such suspension,
+ to observe the directions in that behalf given to you by Our
+ present or any future Instructions as aforesaid.
+
+ 8. And in the event of the death or absence of you, the
+ said Sir George Ferguson Bowen, out of Our said colony of
+ Queensland and its dependencies, We do hereby provide and
+ declare Our pleasure to be, that all and every the powers and
+ authorities herein granted to you shall be, and the same are
+ hereby vested in such person as may be appointed by Us,
+ by Warrant under Our Sign Manuel and Signet, to be Our
+ Lieutenant-Governor of our said colony, or in such person
+ or persons as may be appointed by Us, in like manner, to
+ administer the government in such contingency; or, in the
+ event of there being no person or persons within our said
+ colony so commissioned and appointed by Us as aforesaid, then
+ Our pleasure is, and We do hereby provide and declare, that in
+ any such contingency the powers and authorities herein granted
+ to you shall be, and the same are hereby granted to the
+ Colonial Secretary of our said colony for the time being,
+ and such Lieutenant-Governor, or such person or persons as
+ aforesaid, or such Colonial Secretary, as the case may be,
+ shall exercise all and every the powers and authorities
+ herein granted, until Our further pleasure shall be signified
+ therein.
+
+ 9. And We do hereby require and command all our officers and
+ ministers, civil, and military, and all other the inhabitants
+ of our said colony of Queensland, to be obedient, aiding and
+ assisting unto you, the said Sir George Ferguson Bowen, or, in
+ the event of your death or absence, to such person or persons,
+ as may, under the provisions of this our Commission assume
+ and exercise the functions of Captain-General and
+ Governor-in-Chief of our said colony.
+
+ 10. And We do declare that these presents shall take effect so
+ soon as the same shall be received and published in the said
+ colonies.
+
+ In Witness whereof we have caused these our Letters to be made
+ Patent. Witness Ourself at Westminster, the sixth day of June,
+ in the twenty-second year of Our Reign. By warrant under the
+ Queen's Sign Manual.
+
+ C. ROMILLY.
+
+
+ Given under my hand and Seal at Government House, Brisbane,
+ this tenth day of December, in the year of our Lord one
+ thousand eight hundred and fifty-nine, in the twenty-third
+ year of Her Majesty's Reign.
+
+ (L.s.) G. F. BOWEN.
+
+ _By His Excellency's Command_,
+
+ R. G. W. HERBERT.
+
+ GOD SAVE THE QUEEN!
+
+
+
+
+PROCLAMATION
+
+ By His Excellency SIR GEORGE FERGUSON BOWEN, Knight Commander
+ of the Most Distinguished Order of St. Michael and St.
+ George, Captain-General and Governor-in-Chief of the Colony of
+ Queensland and its Dependencies, and Vice-Admiral of the same,
+ &c., &c., &c.
+
+ WHEREAS Her Majesty has been graciously pleased, by Letters
+ Patent, under the Great Seal of the United Kingdom of Great
+ Britain and Ireland, bearing date at Westminster, the sixth
+ day of June, in the twenty-second year of Her Majesty's Reign,
+ to separate from the Colony of New South Wales the territory
+ described in the said Letters Patent, and to erect the same
+ into a separate Colony, to be called the Colony of Queensland,
+ and has further been pleased to constitute and appoint me,
+
+ SIR GEORGE FERGUSON BOWEN, _Knight Commander of the Most
+ Distinguished Order of St. Michael and St. George_,
+
+ to be Captain-General and Governor-in-Chief, in and over
+ the said Colony of Queensland and in Dependencies: Now,
+ therefore, I, the Captain-General and Governor-in-Chief,
+ aforesaid, do hereby proclaim and declare that I have
+ this day taken the prescribed oaths before His Honor,
+ Alfred James Peter Lutwyche, Esquire, Judge of the
+ Supreme Court, and that I have accordingly assumed the
+ said office of Captain-General and Governor-in-Chief.
+
+ Given under my hand and seal at the Government House,
+ Brisbane, this 10th day of December, in the Year of Our
+ Lord one thousand eight hundred and fifty-nine, and in
+ the twenty-third year of Her Majesty's Reign.
+
+
+ (L.s.) G. F. BOWEN.
+
+ _By His Excellency's Command_,
+
+ R. G. W. HERBERT.
+
+ GOD SAVE THE QUEEN!
+
+
+
+
+ _Government House,
+ Brisbane, 10th December, 1859._
+
+ HIS EXCELLENCY THE GOVERNOR will hold
+ a Levee at Government House, on
+ WEDNESDAY, December 14th, at 11 o'clock,
+ a.m.
+
+ _By Command_,
+ C. E. HARCOURT VERNON,
+ Commander, R.N., A.D.C.,
+
+ REGULATIONS FOR THE LEVEE.
+
+ All gentlemen attending the Levee, to be
+ dressed in uniform or evening costume.
+
+ Each gentleman to be provided with two
+ cards with his name legibly written thereon;
+ one card to be left in the Entrance Hall, and
+ the other to be given to the Aide-de-Camp.
+
+
+
+
+ _Colonial Secretary's Office,
+ Brisbane, 10th December, 1859._
+
+ HIS EXCELLENCY THE GOVERNOR has been
+ pleased to appoint
+
+ ROBERT GEORGE WYNDHAM HERBERT, ESQ.,
+
+ to be Colonial Secretary of Queensland.
+
+ _By His Excellency's Command_,
+ R. G. W. HERBERT.
+
+
+
+
+ _Colonial Secretary's Office,
+ Brisbane, 10th December, 1859._
+
+ HIS EXCELLENCY THE GOVERNOR has been
+ pleased to appoint
+
+
+ ABRAM ORPEN MORIARTY, ESQUIRE,
+
+ to be His Excellency's Acting Private Secretary.
+
+
+ _By His Excellency's Command_,
+ R. G. W. HERBERT.
+
+
+
+
+ _Colonial Secretary's Office,
+ Brisbane, 10th December, 1859._
+
+ HIS EXCELLENCY THE GOVERNOR has been
+ pleased to appoint
+
+ COMMANDER CHARLES EGERTON HARCOURT
+ VERNON, R. N.,
+
+ to be His Excellency's Acting Aide-de-Camp.
+
+ _By His Excellency's Command_,
+ ROBERT G. W. HERBERT.
+
+
+
+
+ _Colonial Secretary's Office,
+ Brisbane, December 10, 1859._
+
+ HIS EXCELLENCY THE GOVERNOR has been
+ pleased to appoint
+
+ RATCLIFFE PRING, ESQUIRE,
+
+ of the Inner Temple, Barrister-at-Law, to be
+ Attorney-General of Queensland.
+
+ _By His Excellency's Command_,
+ ROBERT G. W. HERBERT.
+
+
+ BRISBANE: By Command: T. P. PUGH, Printer,
+ George Street.
+
+
+
+
+INTRODUCTION.
+
+ Terra Australis: The Fifth Continent.--Dampier lands on
+ North-west Coast.--Cook lands at Botany Bay.--Annexes entire
+ Eastern Coast North of 38 deg. S.--Phillip annexes whole
+ of Eastern Coast and part of Southern Coast, including
+ Tasmania.--Fremantle annexes all the rest of the Continent.
+ --Erroneous Impressions of Early Explorers regarding
+ Australia.--Discovery of Bass Strait.--Completion of Coast Map
+ of Australia.--Six Colonies constituted.--Queensland's Natal
+ Day.--Proclamation of Commonwealth.--Inland Exploration.
+
+
+Without disparagement to the adventurous foreign navigators who
+for centuries earlier than the British occupation had suspected the
+existence of "Terra Australis," the "fifth continent" of the globe,
+and had done their best to discover it, it may be safely contended
+that the honour of the delineation of the coast-line belongs to
+Englishmen, the chief of whom were William Dampier and James Cook. In
+1688 Dampier, as super-cargo of the "Cygnet," a trading vessel
+whose crew had turned buccaneers, landed on the north-west coast of
+Australia in lat. 16 deg. 50 min. S. In the year 1699 he again visited
+the coast in charge of H.M.S. "Roebuck," landing at Shark Bay, and
+sailing thence northward to Roebuck Bay.[a] Afterwards Captain James
+Cook, in voyages which extended until 1777, delineated the eastern
+coast-line, and opened up the continent to European enterprise
+and settlement. On 29th April, 1770, Cook, in the little barque
+"Endeavour," 370 tons burthen, entered Sting-ray Harbour (Botany Bay),
+remaining there until 6th May, when he sailed northwards, and, not
+entering Port Jackson, named Port Stephens, "Morton Bay," Bustard
+Bay, and Keppel Islands, landing at several places for the purpose of
+obtaining fresh water and making observations. Thus, coasting along
+for nearly 1,300 miles, on 11th June he narrowly escaped the total
+loss of his vessel when north of Trinity Bay by striking a coral reef.
+After enduring great hardships, and jettisoning all surplus gear, the
+vessel was sailed into the mouth of the Endeavour River, and there
+careened. During the succeeding two months she was thoroughly
+repaired. In August the captain set his course again for the north;
+and on the 23rd of that month, after navigating among the dangerous
+rocks of the Barrier Reef Passage, he safely reached open water and
+landed on Possession Island, near Cape York. There he took formal
+possession, "in right of His Majesty King George III.," of the land he
+had discovered from lat. 38 deg. S. to lat. 10 deg. 30 min. S.
+Sailing through Torres Strait, Cook reached the English Channel in
+the "Endeavour" on 18th June, 1771[b]. It was not until 7th February,
+1788, however, that Captain Phillip, as Governor-General of the vast
+territory then called New South Wales, read to the people whom he had
+brought to Port Jackson in the first fleet his commission proclaiming
+British sovereignty over the whole of the eastern coast of Australia
+and Tasmania, and also over the then unknown southern coast as far
+west as the 135th degree of E. longitude.[c] On 2nd May, 1829, Captain
+Fremantle, hoisting the British flag on the south head of the Swan
+River, took possession of all those parts of Australia not included in
+the territory of New South Wales.
+
+Thus a new continent was added to the British Empire. It was occupied
+by only a few score thousand native blacks, and was believed to be
+uninhabitable by civilised people unless possibly along a strip of
+land south of the Tropic of Capricorn on the eastern, western, and
+southern shores of the continent. Of the north-west Dampier had
+written: "The land is of a dry, sandy soil, destitute of water,
+unless you make wells, yet producing divers sorts of trees." Cook
+occasionally found difficulty in getting water unless by sinking in
+the shore sand; he made no attempt to penetrate the fringe of coast
+or even to explore its inlets. It was not until 1798 that Flinders
+and Bass discovered the channel through Bass Strait, and the former's
+discoveries may be said to have completed the coast map of Australia.
+
+By successive proclamations six colonies were subsequently
+constituted, the last being that of Queensland on 10th December,
+1859. On 1st January, 1901, Queen Victoria's proclamation of the
+Commonwealth of Australia was formally made at Melbourne, the
+prescribed place for the sitting of the Parliament until the federal
+seat of government had been determined. This important step was
+taken 131 years after Captain Cook had annexed the eastern coast
+at Possession Island, and 72 years after Captain Fremantle made the
+possession of the continent as British territory complete by hoisting
+the flag at Swan River.
+
+The story of Australian land exploration is a long one, and it would,
+if complete, reveal many a startling tale of privation and death.
+The earliest exploring expeditions were those of Governor Phillip, in
+1789, when he set out from Sydney to discover Broken Bay first, and
+then explore the Hawkesbury River.[d] At that time the undertaking no
+doubt seemed great, but to-day Broken Bay may almost be regarded as a
+suburb of Sydney. In the same year Captain Tench discovered the Nepean
+River. By the end of the eighteenth century, despite many expeditions,
+the total of the discoveries were the rivers Hawkesbury, Nepean,
+Grose, and Hunter, and the fertile Illawarra district to the south of
+Sydney. In 1813 Blaxland, Lawson, and Wentworth discovered a pass over
+the Blue Mountains, and opened the way to the interior. Later in
+the same year, following in their footsteps, George William Evans
+discovered a river flowing inland, which he named the Macquarie, and
+that led to the discovery of the Bathurst Plains, and other country
+beyond the Blue Mountains. John Oxley, who in 1817 penetrated the
+country until he struck rivers flowing to the south-west, found
+himself in shallow stagnant swamps, with no indication that the rivers
+reached the sea. Oxley and Evans made further discoveries to the
+north-west of Sydney during the next seven years, the principal result
+being the finding of Liverpool Plains. Cunningham, the botanist,
+also was in the field of exploration in 1823. In the year 1824 Hume,
+accompanied by W. H. Hovell, crossed the Murrumbidgee River, and some
+time afterwards saw the snow-capped mountains of the Australian Alps.
+In their progress to Port Phillip they discovered the Murray River,
+and ultimately reached their destination, which proved to be the
+seashore near the site of Geelong.
+
+In 1828 Captain Charles Sturt discovered the Darling River. In the
+next year he reached the Murray near its confluence with the Darling;
+in 1830 he went down the stream by boat, and finally reached the sea
+at Encounter Bay, east of St. Vincent Gulf. In 1826 Major Lockyer
+founded King George Sound Settlement; in 1828 Captain Stirling
+examined the mouth of the Swan River, and was afterwards, in 1831,
+appointed Lieutenant-Governor at Perth, the settlement established in
+1829 by Captain Fremantle. Other explorers traced the country for some
+distance to the northward, and a settlement, called Port Essington,
+which had an ephemeral existence, was formed on the northern coast. In
+1831 Major Mitchell explored the country north-west from Sydney, and
+in 1845-6 he traversed the Darling Downs, afterwards penetrating as
+far north as the Drummond Range. Allan Cunningham had previously, in
+1827, discovered the Darling Downs, and in the next year, by locating
+Cunningham's Gap, he connected the Downs with the Moreton Bay
+Settlement. A year later he explored the source of the Brisbane River,
+that being his last expedition.
+
+In 1831 Major Bannister crossed from Perth to King George Sound.
+In 1836 John Batman landed at Port Phillip, and permanently settled
+there. The same year Adelaide was founded by Captain Sir John
+Hindmarsh, the first Governor of South Australia. In 1838 E. J.
+Eyre discovered Lake Hindmarsh on his journey from Port Phillip to
+Adelaide. Next year George Hamilton travelled overland from Sydney to
+Melbourne, and Eyre penetrated from the head of Spencer's Gulf to Lake
+Torrens.
+
+In 1840 Patrick Leslie settled on the Condamine; in the year following
+Stuart and Sydenham Russell formed Cecil Plains station. In 1842
+Stuart Russell discovered the Boyne River, travelling from Moreton
+Bay to Wide Bay in a boat. In 1844-5 Captain Sturt conducted his Great
+Central Desert expedition. In the same year Dr. Ludwig Leichhardt
+started on his first expedition from Jimbour station to Port
+Essington; and in the next year Sir Thomas Mitchell went on his Barcoo
+expedition. In 1846 A. C. Gregory entered upon his first expedition in
+Western Australia. In 1848 Leichhardt set out upon his last journey,
+from which he never returned. In the same year Kennedy made his fatal
+venture up the Cape York Peninsula, and A. C. Gregory explored the
+Gascoigne. Next year J. S. Roe, Surveyor-General of Western Australia,
+travelled from York to Esperance Bay. In 1852 Hovenden Hely, in charge
+of a Leichhardt search party, started from Darling Downs. In 1855
+Gregory and Baron von Mueller started on an expedition to North
+Australia in the same search, and discovered Sturt's Creek and the
+Elsey River.
+
+In 1858 Frank Gregory reached the Gascoigne River, Western Australia,
+and discovered Mount Augustus and Mount Gould. A. C. Gregory in the
+same year, when searching for Leichhardt, confirmed the identity of
+the Barcoo River with Cooper's Creek. In 1858 also McDouall Stuart
+started on his first expedition across the continent; in the following
+year he started again, and one of his party, Hergott, discovered and
+named Hergott Springs. In 1859 G. E. Dalrymple discovered the main
+tributaries of the Lower Burdekin, also the Bowen and the Bogie
+Rivers, and in the year following Edward Cunningham and party explored
+the Upper Burdekin.
+
+In 1860 the ill-fated Burke and Wills expedition left Melbourne, and
+reached the Gulf of Carpentaria, but their return journey resulted in
+the death of Burke, Wills, and Gray.
+
+In 1861 McDouall Stuart crossed the continent; Frank Gregory
+discovered the Hammersley Range, and the Fortescue, Ashburton, de
+Grey, and Oakover Rivers in Western Australia. In the same year
+William Landsborough left the Gulf of Carpentaria in search of Burke
+and Wills; and Alfred Howitt started from Victoria on the same errand.
+Edwin J. Welch, Howitt's second in command, found King, the only
+survivor of the expedition; and McKinlay, with W. O. Hodgkinson as
+lieutenant, started from Adelaide in the search, and crossed the
+continent, reaching the coast at Townsville. In 1863 John Jardine
+formed a settlement at Somerset, Cape York; and in the next year
+his adventurous brothers, Alexander and Frank, travelled overland to
+Somerset along the Peninsula, which Kennedy had failed to do.
+
+In 1864 Duncan McIntyre travelled from the Paroo to the Gulf of
+Carpentaria, and died there. Next year J. G. Macdonald visited the
+Plains of Promise, and Frederick Walker marked the telegraph line from
+Rockingham Bay to the Norman River. In 1869 Mr. (now Sir John) Forrest
+made his first expedition to Lake Barlee; in 1870 he travelled the
+Great Bight from Perth to Adelaide, and in 1871 took charge of a
+private expedition in search of pastoral country. In 1872 William
+Hann, a Northern squatter, led an expedition equipped by the
+Queensland Government, and discovered the Walsh, Palmer, and Upper
+Mitchell Rivers, and found prospects of gold which led to great
+mineral discoveries in North Queensland. Hann reached the coast at
+Princess Charlotte Bay. In the same year J. W. Lewis travelled round
+Lake Eyre to the Queensland border. Ernest Giles also made his first
+expedition in 1872, discovering Lake Amadeus, and on a second trip in
+1873 discovered and named Gibson's Desert, after one of his party who
+died there. In 1873 Major Warburton crossed from Alice Springs, on the
+overland telegraph line, to the Oakover River, Western Australia. In
+1875-6 Ernest Giles made a third and successful attempt from Adelaide
+to reach Western Australia. In the same year W. O. Hodgkinson started
+on a north-west expedition to the Diamantina and Mulligan Rivers, on
+which he officially reported.
+
+In 1878 Prout brothers, looking for country across the Queensland
+border, never returned. In 1878 N. Buchanan, on an excursion to
+the overland telegraph line from the Queensland border, discovered
+Buchanan's Creek. In 1878-9 Ernest Favenc, starting from Blackall
+in charge of the "Queenslander" transcontinental expedition, reached
+Powell's Creek station, on the overland telegraph line; four years
+later he explored the rivers flowing into the Gulf, particularly the
+Macarthur, and then crossed to the overland telegraph line. In 1878
+Winnecke and Barclay, surveyors, started to determine the border lines
+of Queensland and South Australia, returning in 1880 with their work
+done. In 1879 Alexander Forrest led an expedition from the de Grey
+River, Western Australia, to the overland telegraph line, discovering
+the Ord and Margaret Rivers.
+
+By this time there was little left of the continent, save Western
+Australia, to explore, though men in search of pastoral country still
+found occupation in expeditions to discover the unknown in Queensland
+and the Northern Territory. In 1896 Frank Hann, younger brother of the
+explorer, who had left Queensland, traversed the country to the
+north of King Leopold Range, discovering a river which he named
+the Phillips, but which was afterwards renamed the Hann by the
+Surveyor-General of Western Australia. Afterwards Hann travelled from
+Laverton, Western Australia, to Oodnadatta, in South Australia. F. S.
+Brockman is another explorer who was leader of a Kimberley expedition
+a few years ago, and discovered in North-west Australia 6 million
+acres of basaltic country clad with blue grass, Mitchell and kangaroo
+grasses, and other fodder vegetation. The Elder expedition, projected
+on an ambitious scale in 1891 to complete the exploration of the
+continent, started under David Lindsay, but the results were less
+valuable than its generous and enterprising originator anticipated.
+From a second Elder expedition under L. A. Wells no great results were
+recorded. The same may be said of the Carnegie expedition in Western
+Australia. Yet the sum total of the information obtained was valuable.
+Australia owes much to her adventurous explorers, as well as to
+the men who, following up their tracks, placed stock on much of the
+country that produced great wealth to the people, though as a rule
+neither explorers nor pastoral pioneers personally benefited much by
+their labours and privations.
+
+ [Footnote a: See Dampier's "Collection of Voyages, 1729."]
+
+ [Footnote b: See Cook's "Journal during his First Voyage Round
+ the World, 1768-71." W. J. L. Wharton, 1893.]
+
+ [Footnote c: Historical Records of New South Wales, vol. i.]
+
+ [Footnote d: See "History of Australian Exploration," 1888;
+ and "Explorers of Australia," 1908, both by Ernest Favenc.]
+
+
+[Illustration (hand-written letter):
+
+Victoria by the Grace of God of the United Kingdom of Great Britain
+and Ireland, Queen, Defender of the Faith, &c.
+
+In pursuance of Our Order made by and with the advice of our Privy
+Council on the 6th day of June in the year of Our Lord 1859, We do by
+these presents summon and call together a Legislative Assembly in and
+for Our Colony of Queensland to advise and give consent to the
+making of Laws for the peace, welfare and good Government of our said
+Colony.----
+
+And we do enjoin and require Our subjects, inhabitants of Our said
+Colony, and being duly qualified in that behalf, to proceed to the
+Election of Members to serve in the said Legislative Assembly in
+pursuance of Our Writs to be issued in Our name, in the first instance
+by Our Governor of Our Colony of New South Wales, and thereafter by
+Our Governor of Our said Colony of Queensland.----
+
+----And We do further enjoin and require the Members who shall be so
+elected, to assemble and meet together and to be and appear before Us
+for the purposes aforesaid at the Court House Buildings Brisbane on
+the 22nd day of May in the present year.
+
+----In testimony whereof we have caused the Great Seal of Our Colony
+of Queensland to be affixed to this Our Writ.----
+
+----Witness our trusty and well-beloved Sir William Thomas Denison,
+Knight Commander of the Most Honorable Order of the Bath, Governor
+General in and over all Her Majesty's Colonies of New South Wales,
+Tasmania, Victoria, South Australia, Western Australia and Queensland,
+and Captain General and Governor-in-chief of the Territory of New
+South Wales and Vice Admiral of the same &c. &c. &c. at Government
+House Sydney, in New South Wales aforesaid this twentieth day of March
+in the Twenty third year of Our reign, and the year of our Lord one
+thousand eight hundred and sixty--
+
+
+W. Denison
+
+By His Excellency's Command
+
+Robert G. W. Herbert
+
+God save the Queen!]
+
+
+
+
+THE SUBDIVISION OF AUSTRALIA.
+
+
+(MAPS 1 AND 2.)
+
+Since the issue of Captain Arthur Phillip's Commission as Governor
+in 1786 there have been no less than ten successive modifications in
+Australian boundaries, all internal save the first, which severed
+Van Diemen's Land from New South Wales. Map 1 represents Australia as
+depicted before the time of Captain Cook. Map 2 shows the territory as
+divided into two parts by Governor Phillip's Commission. The continent
+was severed by a north-and-south line along the 135th meridian of east
+longitude, and all the eastern part declared to be the territory of
+New South Wales.
+
+
+VAN DIEMEN'S LAND (MAP 3).
+
+Under an Imperial Act of 1823 a Royal Commission was issued to
+Governor Arthur on 14th June, 1825, erecting Van Diemen's Land into a
+separate colony, as shown in Map 3.
+
+
+NEW SOUTH WALES--ALTERED BOUNDARY (MAP 4).
+
+On 6th July, 1825, a Commission appointing Sir Ralph Darling Governor
+of New South Wales, after describing the boundary of the colony as
+then existing, declared that the western boundary should be extended
+6 degrees further west to the 129th meridian of east longitude,
+including all the adjacent islands in the Pacific Ocean.
+
+
+WESTERN AUSTRALIA (MAP 5).
+
+Although Western Australia had been occupied in 1826 by Major Lockyer,
+and a settlement had been established at Swan River in 1829, the
+boundaries of the colony were not definitely described until 1831,
+when Sir James Stirling's Commission of appointment as Governor gave
+him authority over all that part of the continent to the west of 129
+degrees east longitude. A supplementary Commission issued in 1873
+included all the adjacent islands in the Indian Ocean.
+
+
+SOUTH AUSTRALIA (MAP 6).
+
+South Australia was proclaimed a British Province by Letters Patent on
+the 28th December, 1836; bounded on the north by the 26th parallel of
+south latitude; on the south by the Southern Ocean; on the west by the
+132nd meridian of east longitude; on the east by the 141st meridian.
+
+
+VICTORIA (MAP 7).
+
+In 1851 the territory previously known as Port Phillip was separated
+from New South Wales. In July, 1851, the legal symbol of the fact was
+found in the issue of writs of election for members of the
+Legislative Council. This was done under an Act of the New South Wales
+Legislature, passed to give effect to the Act passed in 1850 "for the
+Better Government of Her Majesty's Australian Colonies." Boundaries:
+On the north and north-east by a straight line from Cape Howe to the
+nearest source of the River Murray; thence by the course of that river
+to the eastern boundary of South Australia; and on the south by the
+sea: the River Murray to remain within New South Wales.
+
+
+NEW SOUTH WALES--ALTERED BOUNDARY (MAP 8).
+
+By a later statute passed in 1855, the boundaries of New South Wales
+were defined as follows:--"All the territory lying between the 129th
+and 154th meridians of east longitude, and north of the 40th parallel
+of south latitude, including all islands and Lord Howe Island, except
+the territories comprised within the boundaries of the province of
+South Australia and the colony of Victoria as at present established."
+
+
+[Illustration: Map 1 (1770).]
+
+[Illustration: Map 2 (1786).]
+
+[Illustration: Map 3 (1825).]
+
+[Illustration: Map 4 (1825).]
+
+[Illustration: Map 5 (1831).]
+
+[Illustration: Map 6 (1836).]
+
+[Illustration: Map 7 (1851).]
+
+[Illustration: Map 8 (1855).]
+
+[Illustration: Map 9 (1859).]
+
+[Illustration: Map 10 (1862).]
+
+[Illustration: Map 11 (1861-3).]
+
+[Illustration: Map 12 (1863).]
+
+
+QUEENSLAND (MAP 9).
+
+In 1859 Queensland was severed from New South Wales by Letters
+Patent issued to Sir George Bowen, the boundaries being given as
+follows:--"So much of the said colony of New South Wales as lies
+northward of a line commencing on the sea coast at Point Danger, in
+latitude about 28 degrees 8 minutes south, and following the range
+thence which divides the waters of the Tweed, Richmond, and Clarence
+Rivers from those of the Logan and Brisbane Rivers, westerly, to the
+Great Dividing Range between the waters falling to the east coast
+and those of the River Murray; following the Great Dividing Range
+southerly to the range dividing the waters of Tenterfield Creek from
+those of the main head of the Dumaresq River; following that range
+westerly to the Dumaresq River; and following that river (which is
+locally known as the Severn) downward to its confluence with the
+Macintyre River; thence following the Macintyre River (which lower
+down becomes the Barwan) downward to the 29th parallel of south
+latitude; and following that parallel westerly to the 141st meridian
+of east longitude, which is the eastern boundary of South Australia;
+together with all and every the adjacent islands, their members and
+appurtenances, in the Pacific Ocean; and do by these presents separate
+from our said colony of New South Wales and erect the said territory
+so described into a separate colony to be called the 'Colony of
+Queensland.'"
+
+
+ANNEXATION TO QUEENSLAND, 1862 (MAP 10).
+
+On 12th April, 1862, the Duke of Newcastle advised Governor Bowen that
+Letters Patent, of which a copy was enclosed, had been issued annexing
+to Queensland the following territory--namely, "so much of our colony
+of New South Wales as lies to the northward of the 21st parallel of
+south latitude, and between the 141st and 138th meridians of east
+longitude, together with all and every the adjacent islands, their
+members and appurtenances in the Gulf of Carpentaria." The area thus
+annexed added to Queensland about 120,000 square miles of territory,
+which now comprises such centres as Birdsville, Boulia, Cloncurry,
+Camooweal, and Burketown.
+
+
+ANNEXATION TO SOUTH AUSTRALIA (MAP 11).
+
+An Imperial Act of 1861 enacted that "so much of the colony of New
+South Wales, being to the south of the 26th degree of south latitude,
+as lies between the western boundary of South Australia and 129
+degrees east longitude, shall be and the same is hereby detached
+from the colony of New South Wales and annexed to the colony of South
+Australia, and shall for all purposes whatever be deemed to be part of
+the last-mentioned colony from the day in which the Act of Parliament
+is proclaimed."
+
+
+THE NORTHERN TERRITORY ANNEXED TO SOUTH AUSTRALIA (MAP 12).
+
+There still remained, nominally belonging to New South Wales though
+detached from that colony, the country now known as the Northern
+Territory and forming part of South Australia, lying northward of
+the 26th parallel of south latitude, and between 129 degrees and 138
+degrees east longitude. That area was by Letters Patent, dated 6th
+July, 1863, issued under the Imperial Act of 1861, annexed to South
+Australia until it was "the Royal pleasure to make other disposition
+thereof."
+
+
+
+
+[Illustration]
+
+
+GOVERNORS OF QUEENSLAND.
+
+
+ (1) SIR GEORGE FERGUSON BOWEN, G.C.M.G.: Dec. 1859--Jan. 1868.
+
+ (2) COLONEL SAMUEL WENSLEY BLACKALL: Aug. 1868--Jan. 1871.
+
+ (3) MARQUIS OF NORMANBY: Aug. 1871--Nov. 1874.
+
+ (4) WILLIAM WELLINGTON CAIRNS, C.M.G.: Jan. 1875--Mar. 1877.
+
+ (5) SIR ARTHUR EDWARD KENNEDY, G.C.M.G., C.B.: April 1877--May 1883.
+
+ (6) SIR ANTHONY MUSGRAVE, G.C.M.G.: Nov. 1883--Oct. 1888.
+
+ (7) SIR HENRY WYLIE NORMAN, G.C.B., G.C.M.G., C.I.E.: May
+ 1889--Dec. 1895.
+
+ (8) LORD LAMINGTON, G.C.M.G.: April 1896--Dec. 1901.
+
+ (9) SIR HERBERT CHARLES CHERMSIDE, G.C.M.G., C.B.: Mar. 1902--Oct.
+ 1904.
+
+ (10) LORD CHELMSFORD, K.C.M.G.: Nov. 1905--May 1909.
+
+ (11) SIR WILLIAM MACGREGOR, G.C.M.G., C.B.: Dec. 1909--
+
+
+
+
+QUEEN OF THE NORTH.
+
+
+ESSEX EVANS.
+
+ Stand forth, O Daughter of the Sun,
+ Of all thy kin the fairest one,
+ It is thine hour of Jubilee.
+ Behold, the work our hands have done
+ Our hearts now offer unto thee.
+ Thy children call thee; O come forth,
+ Queen of the North!
+
+ Brow-bound with pearls and burnished gold
+ The East hath Queens of royal mould,
+ Sultanas, peerless in their pride,
+ Who rule wide realms of wealth untold,
+ But they wax wan and weary-eyed:
+ Thine eyes, O Northern Queen, are bright
+ With morning light.
+
+ Fear not thy Youth: It is thy crown--
+ The careless years before Renown
+ Shall load its tines with jewelled deeds
+ And press thy golden circlet down
+ With vaster toils and greater needs.
+ Fear not thy Youth: its splendid power
+ Awaits the hour.
+
+ Stand forth, O Daughter of the Sun,
+ Whose fires through all thine arteries run,
+ Whose kiss hath touched thy gleaming hair--
+ Come like a goddess, Radiant One,
+ Reign in our hearts who crown thee there,
+ With laughter like thy seas, and eyes
+ Blue as thy skies.
+
+ Ah, not in vain, O Pioneers,
+ The toil that breaks, the grief that sears,
+ The hands that forced back Nature's bars
+ To prove the blood of ancient years
+ And make a home 'neath alien stars!
+ O Victors over stress and pain
+ 'Twas not in vain!
+
+ Jungle and plain and pathless wood--
+ Depths of primeval solitude--
+ Gaunt wilderness and mountain stern--
+ Their secrets lay all unsubdued.
+ Life was the price: who dared might learn.
+ Ye read them all, Bold Pioneers,
+ In fifty years.
+
+ O True Romance, whose splendour gleams
+ Across the shadowy realm of dreams,
+ Whose starry wings can touch with light
+ The dull grey paths, the common themes:
+ Hast thou not thrilled with sovereign might
+ Our story, until Duty's name
+ Is one with Fame!
+
+ Queen of the North, thy heroes sleep
+ On sun-burnt plain and rocky steep.
+ Their work is done: their high emprise
+ Hath crowned thee, and the great stars keep
+ The secrets of their histories.
+ We reap the harvest they have sown
+ Who died unknown.
+
+ The seed they sowed with weary hands
+ Now bursts in bloom through all thy lands;
+ Dark hills their glittering secrets yield;
+ And for the camps of wand'ring bands--
+ The snowy flock, the fertile field.
+ Back, ever back new conquests press
+ The wilderness.
+
+ Below thy coast line's rugged height
+ Wide canefields glisten in the light,
+ And towns arise on hill and lea,
+ And one fair city where the bright
+ Broad winding river sweeps to sea.
+ Ah! could the hearts that cleared the way
+ Be here to-day!
+
+ A handful: yet they took their stand
+ Lost in the silence of the land.
+ They went their lonely ways unknown
+ And left their bones upon the sand.
+ E'en though we call this land our own
+ 'Tis but a handful holds it still
+ For good or ill.
+
+ What though thy sons be strong and tall,
+ Fearless of mood at danger's call;
+ And these, thy daughters, fair of face,
+ With hearts to dare whate'er befall--
+ Tall goddesses and queens of grace--
+ Fill up thy frontiers: man the gate
+ Before too late.
+
+ Sit thou no more inert of fame,
+ But let the wide world hear thy name.
+ See where thy realms spread line on line--
+ Thy empty realms that cry in shame
+ For hands to make them doubly thine!
+ Fill up thy frontiers: man the gate
+ Before too late!
+
+ Prepare, ere falls the hour of Fate
+ When death-shells rain their iron hate,
+ And all in vain thy blood is poured--
+ For dark aslant the Northern Gate
+ I see the Shadow of the Sword:
+ I hear the storm-clouds break in wrath--
+ Queen of the North!
+
+
+
+
+[Illustration]
+
+
+PREMIERS OF QUEENSLAND.
+
+
+ (1) SIR R. G. W. HERBERT: Dec. 1859--Feb. 1866; July 1866--Aug. 1866.
+
+ (2) HON. ARTHUR MACALISTER: Feb. 1866--July 1866; Aug. 1866--Aug.
+ 1867; Jan. 1874--June 1876.
+
+ (3) SIR R. R. MACKENZIE: Aug. 1867--Nov. 1868.
+
+ (4) SIR CHARLES LILLEY: Nov. 1868--May 1870.
+
+ (5) SIR A. H. PALMER: May 1870--Jan. 1874.
+
+ (6) HON. GEORGE THORN: June 1876--Mar. 1877.
+
+ (7) HON. JOHN DOUGLAS: Mar. 1877--Jan. 1879.
+
+ (8) SIR THOMAS MCILWRAITH: Jan. 1879--Nov. 1883; June 1888--Nov.
+ 1888; Mar. 1893--Oct. 1893.
+
+ (9) SIR S. W. GRIFFITH: Nov. 1883--June 1888; Aug. 1890--Mar. 1893.
+
+ (10) HON. D. B. MOREHEAD: Nov. 1888--Aug. 1890.
+
+ (11) SIR H. M. NELSON: Oct. 1893--April 1898.
+
+ (12) HON. T. J. BYRNES: April 1898--Sept. 1898.
+
+ (13) SIR J. R. DICKSON: Oct. 1898--Dec. 1899.
+
+ (14) HON. A. DAWSON: 1st Dec. 1899--7th Dec. 1899.
+
+ (15) HON. R. PHILP: Dec. 1899--Sept. 1903: Nov. 1907--Feb. 1908.
+
+ (16) SIR A. MORGAN: Sept. 1903--Jan. 1906.
+
+ (17) HON. W. KIDSTON: Jan. 1906--Nov. 1907: Feb. 1908 (still in
+ office).
+
+
+[Illustration]
+
+
+
+
+PART I.--OUR NATAL YEAR.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I.
+
+THE BIRTH OF QUEENSLAND.
+
+ Issue of Letters Patent and Order in Council.--Appointment of
+ Sir George Ferguson Bowen as First Governor.--Continuity of
+ Colonial Office Policy.--Instructions to Governor.--Munificent
+ Gift of all Waste Lands of the Crown.--Temporary Limitation
+ of Electoral Suffrage.--Responsible Government Unqualified by
+ Restrictions or Reservations.--Governor General of New South
+ Wales Initiates Elections.
+
+
+Fifty years ago an emphatic expression of confidence in the
+self-governing competence of the people of North-eastern Australia
+was given by the British Government of Lord Derby. On 6th June, 1859,
+Queen Victoria in Council adopted Letters Patent--which had been
+already approved in draft on 13th May--"erecting Moreton Bay into
+a colony under the name of Queensland," and appointing Sir George
+Ferguson Bowen to be "Captain-General and Governor-in-Chief of the
+same." On the same day an Order in Council was made "empowering the
+Governor of Queensland to make laws and provide for the administration
+of justice in the said colony"; also to constitute therein a
+Government and Legislature as nearly resembling the form of Government
+and Legislature established in New South Wales as the circumstances of
+the colony would allow. This meant that representative and responsible
+government had been granted to the people of the new colony to the
+full extent that it was enjoyed by the people of New South Wales under
+the epoch-making Constitution Act of 1855. It meant also that the
+whole of the unalienated Crown Lands of the colony were vested in the
+Legislature.
+
+Next day, the 7th June, the annual session of the Imperial Parliament
+was opened, and four days later an amendment upon the Address in Reply
+was carried in the House of Commons, whereupon Lord Derby and his
+Conservative colleagues forthwith resigned, and were succeeded by a
+Liberal (or Whig) Ministry under Lord Palmerston. The new Government
+included men of such distinction as Mr. W. E. Gladstone, Lord John
+Russell, and the Duke of Newcastle, the last-mentioned assuming the
+office of Colonial Secretary. The change of Ministry, however, caused
+no interruption in the continuity of Colonial Office policy; and no
+time was lost in despatching Sir George Bowen to discharge the highly
+responsible duties imposed upon him by the Queen's Commission.
+
+In notifying Sir George Bowen of his appointment, Sir Edward Bulwer
+Lytton tendered him some friendly advice. He said that Sir George
+would experience the greatest amount of difficulty in connection with
+the squatters, and he went on in these words:--"But in this, which is
+an irritating contest between rival interests, you will wisely abstain
+as much as possible from interference. Avoid taking part with one
+or the other.... The first care of a Governor in a free colony," he
+continued, "is to shun the reproach of being a party man. Give
+all parties and all Ministries formed the fairest play." In
+public addresses Sir George was advised to "appeal to the noblest
+idiosyncracies of the community--the noblest are generally the most
+universal and the most durable. They are peculiar to no party.
+Let your thoughts never be distracted from the paramount object of
+finance. All states thrive in proportion to the administration of
+revenue." A number of excellent maxims followed, among them--"The more
+you treat people as gentlemen the more 'they will behave as such.'"
+Again, "courtesy is a duty which public servants owe to the humblest
+member of the community." And, in a postscript, "Get all the details
+of the land question from the Colonial Office, and master them
+thoroughly. Convert the jealousies now existing between Moreton Bay
+and Sydney into emulation." All these generous didactics from the
+great novelist and Tory statesman, followed by congratulations and
+good wishes, must have been stimulative to the aspirations of the
+embryo Governor charged with the foundation of a new colony at the
+Antipodes.
+
+The value of autonomous government is generally appreciated; but
+the free gift of land made by the Imperial authority to the various
+self-governing colonies has no parallel in human history. In the case
+of Queensland the recipients were a mere handful of people, mostly
+settled at one end of a vast territory, at least half of which was
+unexplored. Plenary authority was in fact given to manage and control
+the waste lands belonging to the Crown, as well as to appropriate the
+gross proceeds of the sales of any such lands, and all other proceeds
+and revenues of the same from whatever source arising, including all
+royalties, mines, and minerals, all of which by the Letters Patent
+and the Order in Council were vested in the Legislature. This vesting,
+however, was subject to a proviso validating all contracts, promises,
+and engagements lawfully made on behalf of Her Majesty before the
+proclamation took effect. The proviso also stipulated that there
+should be no disturbance of any vested or other rights which had
+accrued or belonged to the licensed occupants or lessees of Crown
+Lands under any repealed Act, or under any Order in Council issued in
+pursuance thereof.[a] This reservation was really for the protection
+of a number of people in the colony, and not for the benefit of the
+Imperial Government. The licensed occupants would be subject to the
+mandates of the Legislature; while the reservation in favour of the
+owners of freehold lands was of a comparatively trivial nature, the
+total area alienated from the Crown a year after the establishment
+of the new colony amounting to only 108,870 acres, which had yielded
+L305,250 as purchase-money chiefly to the New South Wales Treasury.
+Taking the 670,500 square miles within the colony thus handed over to
+be worth five shillings per acre, or L160 the square mile, the total
+value of the Imperial gift to Queensland would be L107,280,000. Of
+course that price was not immediately realisable, and before much of
+the vast area could be utilised millions of capital must be expended
+in reclamation and development; but as some indication of ultimate
+value it may be pointed out that the land sold up to 31st December,
+1860, realised at the rate of nearly L3 per acre. That the "waste"
+land was not a dead asset was shown by the fact that the public
+revenue of the colony for the first year of its existence was
+L178,589, to which rents and sales of land contributed a substantial
+proportion. It was not surprising, therefore, that Sir George Bowen's
+early despatches to the Secretary of State testified to the grateful
+and enthusiastic loyalty of the people of the colony to the Queen and
+the mother country.
+
+When the previously established Australian colonies were severally
+constituted the people were kept for years in a state of tutelage, so
+to speak, power being exercised in each case by a Governor advised by
+Ministers appointed by and responsible only to the Crown. The single
+Chamber of the Legislature, if not wholly nominated, included a
+prescribed number of members appointed by the Governor, and was
+practically under his control. It had therefore been supposed by
+many colonists that separation having been hotly opposed by some
+influential residents of the territory concerned--and having been
+emphatically condemned by an official despatch received in England
+from Sir William Denison, then Governor-General of New South Wales,
+almost at the last moment--conditions in restraint of popular
+government would have been imposed on the establishment of Queensland.
+For the separation struggle had been long continued, and marked by
+much personal and party bitterness. The agitation had been originated
+and chiefly maintained by people on the seaboard led by ardent
+patriots introduced a few years previously under the auspices of Dr.
+John Dunmore Lang, who while undoubtedly a great Australian patriot
+was unhappily not a _persona grata_ with the controlling authority at
+the Colonial Office. The movement was from its initiation protested
+against by the enterprising Crown tenants who had driven their flocks
+and herds overland from New South Wales, and had, taking their
+lives in their hands, adventurously formed stations in the remote
+wilderness. They not unnaturally dreaded the effect of popular
+sovereignty upon what they deemed their vested interests. But British
+statesmen, whether Conservative or Liberal, appear to have felt that,
+responsible government having been granted to and enjoyed by the
+people of New South Wales--and consequently to the people of that part
+of its territory about to be separated--any Imperial limitation of
+popular rights already conferred would be regarded as an unjustifiable
+encroachment upon public liberty achieved after many years of ardent
+struggle in the parent colony. True, the language of the Letters
+Patent and Order in Council was afterwards construed to involve some
+temporary limitation of the manhood suffrage which had been affirmed
+by the Parliament of New South Wales; but whether this limitation
+was actual or inadvertent does not clearly appear. It was not of much
+practical consequence, perhaps, in a new country that was rapidly
+multiplying its scant population, whether or not the electors for
+the first Legislative Assembly were required to have some other
+qualification than adult age and six months' residence; but the
+incident operated prejudicially against the Government, and gave a
+rallying cry to Opposition politicians.
+
+A somewhat singular course adopted by the Home Government was the
+authorisation of the Governor-General of New South Wales to appoint
+the first members of the Queensland Legislative Council, with a term
+of five years, although subsequent appointments were to be made by the
+Governor of Queensland for the term of the members' natural lives.
+Sir William Denison was also empowered to summon and call together the
+first Legislative Assembly of Queensland; to fix by proclamation the
+number of members; to divide the colony into convenient electoral
+districts; to prepare the electoral rolls; to issue the writs of
+election; and to make all necessary provision for the conduct of the
+first elections. It was required, moreover, that the Parliament should
+be called together for a date not more than six months after the
+proclamation of the colony, and should remain in existence, unless
+previously dissolved by the Governor, for a period of five years. Yet
+there was practically no limitation of popular authority except
+in respect of the preliminary arrangements, for the Queensland
+consolidating and amending Constitution Act of 1867 reaffirmed all
+rights and privileges conferred by the New South Wales Constitution
+Act.
+
+ [Footnote a: These powers were given in the New South Wales
+ Constitution Act, 1855, Sect. 2.]
+
+[Illustration: HOUSES OF PARLIAMENT, BRISBANE]
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II.
+
+INITIATION OF RESPONSIBLE GOVERNMENT.
+
+ Arrival of Sir George Bowen in Brisbane.--The First
+ Responsible Ministry.--Injunctions to Governor by Secretary
+ of State in regard to choice of Ministers.--Ex-members of New
+ South Wales Legislature take Umbrage.--The Governor on the
+ Characteristics of Various Classes of Colonists.--The Governor
+ a Dictator.--The Microscopic Treasury Balance.--Gladstone as
+ Site of Capital.--Mr. Herbert as a Parliamentary Leader.
+
+
+When on 10th December, 1859, Governor Bowen, accompanied by Mr. Robert
+George Wyndham Herbert, his private secretary, had landed amidst great
+popular rejoicings at Brisbane, read the Queen's proclamation of the
+new colony, and been sworn in as Governor by Mr. Justice Lutwyche (the
+Resident Supreme Court Judge for Moreton Bay), he was compelled to
+choose Ministers and then govern the colony for nearly six months
+before they could be constitutionally approved by the representatives
+of the people in Parliament assembled. Sir George Bowen was faced by
+the dearth of seasoned public men, and by the dread of enlisting the
+services of strong partizans whose opinions and personal qualities
+were alike unknown to him. But as a constitutional Governor he could
+do no executive act until he had secured responsible advisers, and
+therefore the immediate appointment of Ministers was imperative. Hence
+on the day of the official landing a "Gazette" notice contained the
+proclamation of the Queen's Letters Patent, and notification of the
+appointment of Mr. Herbert as Colonial Secretary with Mr. Ratcliffe
+Pring as Attorney-General. Thus with the Governor and his two
+Ministers an Executive Council was at once formed; and five days later
+Mr. (afterwards Sir) Robert Ramsay Mackenzie was gazetted Colonial
+Treasurer.[a]
+
+These appointments gave umbrage to certain colonists, particularly to
+those who, having represented Moreton Bay constituencies in the New
+South Wales Assembly, were deemed in many respects most eligible as
+advisers of the Queen's representative. Mr. Herbert had come out from
+England with Sir George Bowen as private secretary at the moderate
+salary of L250 a year. He was a scholarly young man of 28 years, and
+among other advantages had enjoyed the privilege of holding for a
+time the post of private secretary to Mr. Gladstone. Indeed, both the
+Governor and his secretary, although the former had been selected
+by Sir E. B. Lytton, Colonial Secretary in the superseded Derby
+Administration, may be classed among the Gladstone school of
+politicians. Sir George Bowen probably recollected the injunction of
+Sir E. B. Lytton against partizanship, and the danger of identifying
+himself with the "squatters." For not only were they, speaking
+generally, partizans of a pronounced type, but the reservation of
+tenant rights made by the Order in Council of 6th June was calculated
+to taint them with a strong personal, or at least class, bias in land
+legislation and administration.
+
+In his official despatches to the Colonial Secretary Sir George Bowen
+did not mention at length these initial difficulties; but to Sir E.
+B. Lytton he wrote more fully. "I have often thought," he said, under
+date 6th March, 1860, "that the Queensland gentlemen-squatters bear a
+similar relation to the other Australians that the Virginian planters
+of 100 years back bore to the other Americans. But there is a
+perfectly different class of people in the towns. Brisbane, my present
+capital, must resemble what Boston and the other Puritan towns of
+New England were at the close of the last century. In a population
+of 7,000[b] we have 14 churches, 13 public-houses, 12 policemen. The
+leading inhabitants of Brisbane are a hard-headed set of English
+and Scotch merchants and mechanics; very orderly, industrious, and
+prosperous; proud of the mother country; loyal to the person of the
+Queen; and convinced that the true federation for these colonies is
+the maintenance of the integrity of the Empire, and that the true
+rallying-point for Australians is the Throne."
+
+To the Under Secretary for the Colonies (Mr. Chichester Fortescue)
+Sir George Bowen wrote on 6th June, 1860:--"At the first start of all
+other colonies the Governor has been assisted by a nominated Council
+of experienced officials; he has been supported by an armed force;
+and he has been authorised to draw, at least at the beginning, on the
+Imperial Treasury for the expenses of the public service. But I was an
+autocrat; the sole source of authority here, without a single soldier,
+and without a single shilling. There was no organised force of
+any kind on my arrival, though I have now, by dint of exertion and
+influence, got up a respectable police on the Irish model, and a very
+creditable corps of volunteers. And as to money wherewith to carry
+on the Government, I started with just 71/2d. in the Treasury. A
+thief--supposing, I fancy, that I should have been furnished with some
+funds for the outfit, so to speak, of the new State--broke into the
+Treasury a few nights after my arrival, and carried off the 71/2d.
+mentioned. However, I borrowed money from the banks until our revenue
+came in, and our estimates already show (after paying back the sums
+borrowed) a considerable balance in excess of the proposed expenditure
+for the year."
+
+Sir George Bowen's initial difficulties were not chiefly financial,
+however; neither was the lack of material force to give effect to the
+law a serious embarrassment. He was empowered practically to select
+the seat of government by determining where the Parliament should
+first assemble. Among the opponents of separation had been certain
+squatters who sought to place the capital of the new colony in some
+more geographically central place than Brisbane. Of these Mr. William
+Henry Walsh, of Degilbo, Wide Bay, one of the most able and virile of
+the Moreton Bay ex-members of the New South Wales Parliament, was very
+prominent. Offended by the Governor's selection of Mr. Herbert for
+the Premiership, Mr. Walsh refused a seat in either House of the new
+Parliament, and sought to create an agitation in the more northerly
+ports of Maryborough and Rockhampton, each containing about 500
+inhabitants, in favour of Gladstone as the capital--a place which
+Sydney political influence had always indicated as the future seat of
+government when a new northern colony came to be established. But
+each of the towns mentioned had ambitions of its own, and regarded
+Gladstone as a rival. The movement therefore failed; but the colony
+for years lost the benefit of Mr. Walsh's services at a time when
+every capable man was needed to assist in organising the government
+and directing the Parliament of political novices who took their
+seats a few months later. Mr. Arthur Macalister, solicitor, another
+ex-member of the New South Wales Parliament and an excellent debater,
+was perhaps equally disappointed, but he was at least more diplomatic.
+As member for Ipswich he took his seat on the Opposition benches, and
+after two years' service in the Assembly was invited by Mr. Herbert to
+join the Government. This invitation he accepted, and four years later
+he became the party leader. The sequel proved that the Governor had
+made no mistake in selecting Mr. Herbert for his Premier. He proved
+a first-rate parliamentary leader, and succeeded in giving the
+new colony the inestimable advantage of over six years of stable
+government at the outset of its career, in marked contrast to the
+kaleidoscopic Administrations which so greatly hindered political
+progress in more than one of the southern colonies.
+
+ [Footnote a: For personnel of first Ministry and Parliament,
+ see Appendix B, post.]
+
+ [Footnote b: The census of 1861 showed that then the
+ population was only a little over 6,000.]
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III.
+
+DIFFICULTIES OF EARLY ADMINISTRATIONS.
+
+ Meeting of First Parliament.--Amendment on Address in Reply
+ defeated by Speaker's Casting Vote.--Adoption of Address in
+ Reply.--Compromise between Parties Indispensable.--Successful
+ Inauguration of Responsible Government.--The Governor's
+ Egotism.--Mr. Herbert's Retirement.--Mr. Macalister
+ Succeeds.--Financial and Political Crisis.--Proposed
+ Inconvertible Paper Money.--Governor Undeservedly Blamed.
+
+
+On the 7th of May, 1860, the 26 members of the first Legislative
+Assembly--among them the three Ministers of the Crown--having been
+returned, Parliament was summoned to meet at Brisbane on the 22nd
+of that month, just a few days before the maximum limit of delay
+specified by the Queen's Order in Council. On 1st May Sir William
+Denison had appointed 11 members for a five years' term to the
+Legislative Council, and three weeks later Sir George Bowen,
+conceiving the number insufficient, appointed four members additional
+for a life term, raising the total number to 15. Thus the first
+Parliament of Queensland was at length fully constituted, and all
+preliminaries had been completed for entering upon the work of the
+first session.[a]
+
+On the 22nd of May the session opened, and after members had been
+sworn in Sir Charles Nicholson, for some years Speaker in the Sydney
+Parliament, was elected President of the Council, and Mr. Gilbert
+Eliott--formerly an officer of the Royal Artillery--the member for
+Wide Bay, Speaker of the Assembly. Both Houses then adjourned for a
+week.
+
+The Governor's Speech, which was of great length, having been
+delivered, the Address in Reply was moved in both Houses. In the
+Council the leadership had been entrusted to Captain Maurice Charles
+O'Connell, Minister without portfolio, who had long been in the
+Port Curtis district as a trusted official of the New South Wales
+Government, and in early life had served with great distinction as
+a British soldier in Spain. In the Council no difficulty arose in
+adopting the Address. But in the Assembly an amendment moved for the
+adjournment of the debate at an early stage was only defeated by the
+Speaker's casting-vote, one member being absent. It thus appeared that
+the Assembly was almost equally divided. This was a dangerous position
+to be faced by a new Premier without a day's previous experience in
+Parliament, and with the two most formidable debaters in the House,
+Mr. Macalister and Mr. (afterwards Sir) Charles Lilley, in active
+opposition. Mr. Herbert made a diplomatic speech, however, and the
+Address passed without much further contention. The division list
+showed that, despite the efforts of the Governor and his Premier to
+avoid identification with the squatters, the votes of the latter were
+essential to the existence of the Ministry, since the members of the
+Opposition consisted almost exclusively of town representatives. The
+following day (30th May) the Government nominee for the Chairmanship
+of Committees, Mr. C. W. Blakeney, was defeated by 15 votes to 7, and
+Mr. Macalister, who was nominated by the Opposition, was thereupon
+elected on the voices. The division of parties evidently made
+compromise indispensable to the passing of much-needed legislation.
+But much had been gained by the Government. All its members had
+been elected by the constituencies, and the Assembly had practically
+acknowledged that it was entitled to a fair trial. Seeing that
+for nearly six months Ministers had held their portfolios without
+parliamentary sanction, and had naturally made many executive mistakes
+during that time, it may be held that the first session of the first
+Parliament had been inaugurated successfully from the Ministerial
+standpoint. In his official despatches, as well as in private letters
+to friends in England, Sir George Bowen revealed himself as a genial
+though apparently unconscious egotist. His assumption of what must
+strike the discriminating reader as a dominating influence in the
+political and executive affairs of the colony was scarcely consistent
+with his position as a ruler representing the Queen, and competent
+to act only on constitutional advice. An impartial survey of Mr.
+Herbert's six years of office as Premier leads to the conclusion
+that chiefly to his judicious counsel and incomparable tact in the
+management of men the Governor owed the exemplary success attained in
+the organisation and government of the colony.
+
+[Illustration: VIEW FROM RIVER TERRACE, BRISBANE]
+
+The Governor's complete if rather florid reports to the Colonial
+Office, however, justly evoked cordial responses from the Secretary of
+State. Sir George Bowen was a most capable man, but sometimes betrayed
+want of both reticence and dignity. He was enthusiastic as well as
+optimistic, and his retention in Queensland for the unusually long
+period of eight years is an unanswerable certificate of his official
+merit. Yet it is undoubted that when bad times overtook the colony in
+1866 both the Governor and his Premier appeared to have outlived their
+popularity, though their combined action at that time for restoring
+the public credit was perhaps the most eminent service that either of
+them had ever rendered. Mr. Herbert had formed no ties in Australia;
+he had exercised supreme influence in the local Legislature; but
+now that there were several members with both natural capacity and
+parliamentary experience aspiring to the Premiership, believing that
+he had better prospects of preferment in the Imperial service, he
+determined to return to England. His subsequent long career at the
+Colonial Office justified his anticipations, and it may be safely
+said of his departure from Queensland that the colony's loss was the
+Empire's gain.
+
+The ex-Premier did not leave the colony abruptly, however, on handing
+over, on the 1st of February, 1866, all ministerial responsibilities
+to Mr. Arthur Macalister, his senior colleague in the Cabinet. He
+occupied his seat for nearly six months, in fact, and conducted
+himself with native dignity and becoming self-effacement as an
+unofficial member of the Assembly. Unhappily he was not to leave
+Australia without having a wholly unexpected shadow suddenly cast over
+his long administration of affairs. In mid-July the news reached the
+colony of the catastrophic failure of the Agra and Masterman's Bank,
+which had undertaken to finance the Queensland railway loan then being
+rapidly spent. The financial crisis of 1866 played havoc in London; it
+was of crushing effect in Queensland, for the Treasurer could not
+meet his obligations, and the railway workmen threatened a riot
+in consequence of non-payment of their hard-earned wages. In this
+emergency, Parliament being in session, the Treasurer, Mr. (afterwards
+Sir) Joshua Peter Bell desired to adopt the recent American expedient
+of issuing an inconvertible paper currency. The Cabinet approved, but
+on the Governor being consulted before the introduction of the bill he
+emphatically declined to promise the Royal assent to the measure, if
+passed. This he did for the all-sufficient reason that his Imperial
+instructions compelled him to reserve the assent to all measures
+affecting the currency. Ministers immediately resigned, and the
+Governor became the victim of irrational public obloquy for a time.[b]
+Mr. Herbert consented to lead a stop-gap Administration, and under his
+guidance a bill was at once passed empowering the Government to raise
+L300,000 by the issue of Treasury bills bearing not more than 10
+per cent. interest per annum. They were forthwith disposed of at a
+premium, and the credit of the Government was restored. The temporary
+Government then resigned, and Mr. Macalister resumed office. Thus
+Queensland was saved from the double peril of paralysed credit and a
+debased paper currency.
+
+ [Footnote a: The names of the first Ministers, and of members
+ of both Houses of the first Parliament, will be found in
+ Appendix B. It may be of interest to mention that of all these
+ representative men one, Mr. A. W. Compigne, who resigned his
+ seat in the Council in 1864, alone survived till the Jubilee
+ Year; and that he died at his residence, Brisbane, on Sunday,
+ 4th July, 1909, in the 92nd year of his age.]
+
+ [Footnote b: Sir George Bowen, writing to the Right Honourable
+ Robert Lowe, afterwards Lord Sherbrooke, said:--"Several
+ leading members of Parliament were ill-treated in the streets;
+ and threats were even uttered of burning down Government
+ House, and of treating me 'as Lord Elgin was treated at
+ Montreal in 1849.'"]
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV.
+
+THE FIRST SESSION OF PARLIAMENT.
+
+ Work of the First Session.--Four Land Acts Passed.--Summary
+ of Land "Code."--Pastoral Leases.--Upset Price of Land L1
+ per acre.--Agricultural Reserves.--Land Orders to Immigrants.
+ --Cotton Bonus.--Lands for Mining Purposes.--Renewal of
+ Existing Leases.--Governor's Laudation of "Code."--Praises
+ Parliament.--Abolition of State Aid to Religion.--Primary
+ and Secondary Education.--Wool Liens.--First Estimates and
+ Appropriation Act.
+
+
+The first session closed on the 18th of September, having extended
+over nearly four months. On the 28th of August, Sir Charles Nicholson
+having determined to retire and go to England, Captain O'Connell
+was appointed President of the Legislative Council by the Governor's
+Commission. Mr. John James Galloway at the same time accepted the
+appointment of Minister without portfolio, and held the leadership of
+the Council for the remainder of the session. Without other change in
+the personnel of the Cabinet the session was brought to a close with
+the position of the Government considerably improved. They had not
+carried all the measures promised in the Opening Speech, but the
+new Acts passed numbered sixteen, some of them important, and all
+necessary. Seeing that both Houses were new to their work, the result
+went to prove that the confidence of the Imperial Government in the
+self-governing competence of the colonists had not been misplaced.
+Even the "Moreton Bay Courier," then hostile to the Government,
+admitted that much good work had been done, the chief exception taken
+being to the Act authorising the granting of a five years' additional
+term for existing pastoral leases. The Act reserved power of
+resumption during the currency of the lease, but the Opposition
+contended that the power would never be exercised.
+
+No less than four Land Bills were passed during the session, and the
+Governor, writing to the Secretary of State, said, referring to them,
+that these Acts might be called "The Land Code of Queensland." The
+first of the "Code," which was entitled the Unoccupied Crown Lands
+Occupation Act, repealed the New South Wales pastoral leasing law of
+1858, and the Orders in Council then in force in Queensland in so far
+as they were repugnant to the new Act. Any person was to be permitted
+to apply for an occupation license for one year for a run of 100
+square miles, and if there were more than one applicant for the same
+run preference was to be given to any person who had occupied it for
+two months previously. Within nine months after the granting of the
+license application might be made by the occupier for a 14 years'
+lease conditionally on the run having been stocked to one-fourth its
+assumed carrying capacity of 100 sheep or 20 head of cattle per square
+mile. An absolute power of resumption at any time during the lease
+on 12 months' notice was given. The second was the Tenders for Crown
+Lands Act, authorising the issue of 14 years' leases to lessees of
+runs already liable for rent; also authorising the acceptance of
+tenders (which had been held over awaiting legislation) for runs
+occupied since 1st January, 1860, and the granting to the tenderers of
+14 years' leases.
+
+The third measure of the "Code" was the Alienation of Crown Lands Act,
+which fixed the minimum upset price at auction or otherwise at L1 per
+acre; and which provided for the setting apart, within six months from
+the bill becoming law, of not less than 100,000 acres on the shores
+or navigable waters of Moreton Bay, Wide Bay, Port Curtis, and Keppel
+Bay, and also within five miles of all towns with upwards of 500
+inhabitants, as agricultural reserves of not less than 10,000 acres
+each, which should not be for sale by auction, but surveyed and opened
+to selection as farms of not less than 40 nor more than 320 acres
+at the fixed price of L1 per acre; the purchase money to be paid in
+advance, and the Crown grant issued at the end of six months if the
+selector had occupied the land and commenced to improve it during
+that term. If a selector failed so to occupy and improve, the
+purchase-money was to be returned to him, less 10 per cent., and the
+land again opened for selection. A selector was also entitled to lease
+three times the area of his farm--but so that the whole should not
+exceed 320 acres--in one lot or conterminous lots within the same
+reserve, for a term of five years, at sixpence per acre rent, with
+right of purchase, if fenced in, at L1 per acre at any time during the
+currency of the lease. A further provision of importance in the
+same Act was the granting of a land order for L18 on arrival to each
+immigrant from Europe who paid his own passage, and a further land
+order for L12 at the end of two years' residence in the colony. It was
+also provided that two children between the ages of four and fourteen
+should be reckoned as one statute adult. Further provision was made
+by which a bonus in land was to be paid during the next three years of
+L10 per bale of good cleaned Sea Island cotton, and for the two years
+next following L5 per bale. And finally any person or company was
+empowered to purchase land not exceeding 640 acres in one block for
+mining purposes, other than for coal or gold, at the upset price of
+20s. per acre.
+
+The fourth measure of the "Code" was the Occupied Crown Lands Leasing
+Act, which enabled the lessee of any Crown land held under previously
+existing regulations, or under the Tenders for Crown Lands Act of the
+current session, to get a five years' renewal at the end of his term.
+The principle of compensation was recognised in these leasing Acts,
+but no provision was made for the continuance of the pre-emptive right
+of purchase, conferred by the old Orders in Council.
+
+[Illustration: BARRON FALLS, CAIRNS RAILWAY, NORTH QUEENSLAND]
+
+Sir George Bowen wrote to the Secretary of State in terms of exalted
+laudation of these four Acts. "I regard them," he said, "as a
+practical and satisfactory settlement of this much-vexed question,
+which is still embittering the social life and retarding the material
+advance of the neighbouring and elder colonies." To a friend in
+England he wrote,--"The legislation of our first Parliament has
+settled the long quarrel between the pastoral and agricultural
+interests which has raged in all new countries ever since the days of
+Abel, the 'keeper of sheep,' and Cain, the 'tiller of the ground!'" To
+the Secretary of State he added,--"This Parliament may fairly boast
+of having passed, with due caution and foresight, a greater number
+of really useful measures, and of having achieved a greater amount of
+really practical legislation, than any other Parliament in any of
+the Australian colonies since the introduction of parliamentary
+government." Sir George quotes a Sydney journal,[a] which before
+separation was antagonistic to that movement, as saying,--"The
+Government of Queensland has been either very fortunate or very
+judicious. The last to enter the race, Queensland has shot ahead, and
+taken the first place. While in Melbourne the popular rage has been
+worked up by its guardians into riot, and while in Sydney the tactics
+of the popular party have succeeded in placing the land question in a
+position of chronic blockade, in Queensland it has been settled on
+a moderate and reasonable basis, and without so much as a single
+ministerial crisis."
+
+In the prorogation speech Sir George Bowen reviewed at length the work
+of the session. From that and other sources it may be stated that
+the limitation of the number of salaried officials capable of being
+elected to the Legislative Assembly had been fixed so as not to
+exceed five; the collection of parliamentary electors' names had been
+discontinued, and facilities provided for self-registration; State
+aid to religion had been abolished, the rights of existing incumbents
+being preserved; the existing system of primary education had been
+abolished, and provision made for the appointment by the Governor in
+Council of a "Board of General Education," a body corporate authorised
+to expend such sums as Parliament might vote for primary education.
+The Board was empowered to assist any primary school that submitted
+to its supervision and inspection, and conformed to its rules and
+by-laws; but it was forbidden to contribute to the repair or building
+of any school unless the fee-simple thereof had been previously vested
+in the Board. And nothing in the Act could be held to authorise any
+inspection of or interference with the special religious instruction
+which might be given in such school during the hours set apart for
+such instruction. Not more than 5 per cent. of the Board's funds might
+be applied to granting exhibitions at any grammar school to primary
+scholars who had passed the competitive examination prescribed by the
+Board.
+
+The Board was also authorised to devote a portion of its funds to
+assist in the establishment of normal or training schools, or to
+industrial schools. The Grammar Schools Act of 1860, which with a few
+amendments is still in force, was passed. An Act for taking the
+census of the colony on 1st April, 1861, became law. An Act for the
+appointment of Commissioners to adjust accounts with New South Wales
+was another measure of the session. It may be remarked, however, that
+an adjustment was never reached, but the amount in dispute became
+so comparatively small when mutual credits had been allowed that the
+question was permitted to lapse. Another measure of some practical
+importance was the Liens on Wool Act, which extended also to mortgages
+on sheep, cattle, and horses; and the Scab in Sheep Act, the main
+provisions of which are still in force. The gold export duty was
+abolished by an Act which merely validated the then official practice
+of omitting to collect the duty imposed by a New South Wales Act
+passed seven years previously.
+
+It must be admitted that this record of work done by a new Parliament,
+in a colony that had no existence as a self-governing entity twelve
+months before, deserved much of the approbation expressed of its
+proceedings by the Governor. Indeed, the "Courier" of the day, in
+commenting upon the work of the session, gave honourable members
+of both Houses hearty credit for the assiduity with which they had
+attended to public duty, even to the neglect in many cases of their
+own personal and business affairs. There was then no payment of
+members in any form. And there were other matters than legislation
+which deserve notice. The Estimates had been passed, totalling
+L220,808 for the service of the year; and the Governor had
+congratulated the Assembly upon having appropriated one-fourth of the
+total estimated revenue to roads, bridges, and other public works,
+besides ample sums to hospitals, libraries, botanic gardens, and
+schools of arts. No less than L31,261 was voted for police, of which
+L13,516 was absorbed for the native troopers then necessary for the
+protection of the adventurous pioneers who were conducting what may be
+termed exploratory settlement in the remote interior.
+
+ [Footnote a: "Sydney Morning Herald," September, 1860.]
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V.
+
+QUEENSLAND IN 1860.
+
+ Rush of Population.--High Prices for Stock for occupying New
+ Country.--Sparse Population.--Rockhampton most Northerly Port
+ of Entry.--Navigation inside Barrier Reef unknown.--Tropical
+ Queensland Unexplored.--Ignorance of Climate, Resources, and
+ Conditions.--Primary Industries in 1860.--Primitive Means
+ of Communication.--Public Revenue, Bank Deposits, and
+ Institutions.
+
+
+Thus was Queensland fairly launched on her career as a self-governing
+state of the Empire. The very announcement of impending separation had
+caused a rush of population from the southern colonies; while even the
+Crown tenants, who had for years regarded the movement with aversion,
+found much compensation in their escape from the operation of the
+imminent Robertson land law which threatened free selection before
+survey throughout the entire area of New South Wales. The rush for new
+pastoral country not only attracted the most adventurous bushmen in
+Australia to the new colony, but also sent up the prices of sheep and
+cattle to fabulous rates, as country tendered for could not be held
+unless stocked to the prescribed minimum number. At the time a large
+area of coast country was occupied by sheep, and symptoms of disease
+were so menacing that the sales for stocking up new country proved the
+salvation of some of the "inside" squatters; although looked at in the
+light of experience it may be doubted whether the too rapid occupation
+of the wilderness country, then inhabited solely by the aborigines,
+was not partly accountable for disastrous results when the demand for
+stocking up ceased, and the natural water on most runs proved wholly
+insufficient to carry stock through the mildest drought. Still, at the
+time Queensland attracted a population of seasoned Australians whose
+colonising value was inestimable; and these in addition to many
+immigrants from the mother country. Consequently the colony made
+phenomenal progress.
+
+A glance at the official statistics for the year 1860--the earliest
+available--will illustrate the insignificance, compared with the
+vast area of the territory held, of the population, trade, and liquid
+capital of the community. The total population on 31st December,
+1860, was estimated at 28,056, most of these people being more or less
+concentrated in the towns. The rest were scattered sparsely over the
+country between the southern boundary and the tropic of Capricorn for
+a distance of about 250 miles back from the coast-line. Rockhampton
+was then the most northerly port of entry; the site of the present
+town of Bundaberg was virgin forest, the entrance to the Burnett
+River from Hervey Bay being as yet unknown; Mackay, Bowen, Townsville,
+Ingham, Geraldton, Cairns, Port Douglas, Cooktown, and the Thursday
+Island settlement were non-existent; and of the coast waters beyond
+Keppel Bay little more was known than the narratives of Captain
+Cook and Lieutenant Flinders at the close of the eighteenth century
+disclosed.
+
+The existence of the magnificent natural harbour of 1,000 miles in
+length formed by the Great Barrier Reef was undreamt of; the passage
+was regarded rather as one of Nature's traps for the unwary navigator
+than the future safe and easily traversed route of great steamship
+lines along a coast dotted with prosperous ports kept busy as the
+outlets of a richly productive hinterland.
+
+The tropical climate of the northern coast lands was then supposed to
+be deadly to members of the white races; the interior was declared to
+be almost entirely devoid of surface water--for the greater part of
+the year a fiery furnace, and at intervals of capricious periodicity
+ravaged by destructive floods. It was assumed to be a country where
+the white man would wither and the coloured man thrive--a land wholly
+unfit for the home of civilised peoples, and only adapted to the wants
+of the degraded aboriginal native. It was ignorantly affirmed that the
+sheep stations intended to be formed in the far western country must
+be failures, and English experts held that under the tropical sun the
+sheep, if it could live in Queensland at all, would soon carry
+hair instead of wool. Even in Southern Queensland the agricultural
+possibilities of the land were sadly unappreciated. True, in the
+population centres there were loud preachers of the gospel of
+reclamation of the wilderness so that it might bud and blossom as the
+rose; but their homilies for the most part fell upon deaf ears--the
+seasoned bushman, like the great squatter, tenaciously held that even
+the Darling Downs would not grow a cabbage.
+
+So backward was the farming industry that in 1860 the total area under
+cultivation was 3,353 acres in a country of greater extent than France
+and Germany combined. Of this trifling cultivated area only 196 acres
+were under wheat, and not an acre under sugar-cane. True, there were
+nearly three and a-half million sheep, half-a-million cattle, and
+24,000 horses finding subsistence on the limitless but ill-watered
+natural pastures. But at that time the annual clip from the sheep,
+though wool was the chief export of the colony, totalled only
+5,000,000 lb., or equal to about 11/2 lb. to each fleece. Mining,
+except for coal, of which 12,327 tons was raised in 1860, was almost
+non-existent, although 2,738 fine ounces of gold are shown by the
+statistics to have been won during the year.
+
+[Illustration: TREASURY BUILDINGS, BRISBANE]
+
+In 1860 there was not a mile of railway either open for traffic or
+under construction; not a mile of electric telegraph wire; nor, save
+between Brisbane and Ipswich, was there a formed or metalled road, the
+only avenues of transport being along the bridle path or the
+teamsters' track. The country was destitute of culverts and bridges
+over watercourses, and the so-called roads were impassable for days,
+weeks, or even months in succession after the seasonal rains. The
+northern shipping trade was limited to a small steamer running once a
+fortnight between Brisbane, Maryborough, and Rockhampton, but even
+that had been arranged after the proclamation of the colony, partly to
+meet administration exigencies, with the assistance of the new
+Government. A fortnightly steamer from Sydney ran direct to
+Maryborough, and another to Rockhampton, with the apparent object of
+discouraging mutual intercourse among the ports. A weekly steamer ran
+between Brisbane and Sydney, in addition to a few small sailing craft
+for cargo purposes.
+
+Although Sir George Bowen declared that on arrival he found nothing in
+the Treasury save a few coppers, the revenue for the first year
+reached L178,589. The expenditure for the year 1860 was L17,086 less
+than the revenue, yet, through the Government having to lean upon the
+banks in December, 1859, there was an overdraft of over L19,000 at the
+end of the first year. But the banks themselves had little money among
+them, the net assets slightly exceeding half a million sterling, and
+the aggregate deposits totalling less than a quarter of a million. At
+the end of 1860, out of the 28,000 people in the colony 163 were
+"small capitalists" with an aggregate of L7,545, or about L46 per
+depositor, in the Savings Bank. Yet there were six charitable
+institutions in which 397 persons found relief. Of subscribers to
+"public libraries" there were 538, and they had at their disposal
+5,000 volumes from which to select reading for the leisure hour. There
+were 41 schools, with a total of 1,890 pupils. The number of letters
+posted showed a low degree of cultivation, for the average number
+posted as well as received by each person was just seven a year, or
+slightly more than one every two months. Of newspapers a rather fewer
+number passed through the post office. Surely all these things were on
+a microscopic scale, recollecting that the people of Queensland had
+been endowed with autonomous government, and had unfettered control of
+more than one-fifth of the total area of Australia.
+
+Old Queenslanders who still survive, and can meditate retrospectively
+upon the past, will be impressed with the marvellous optimism of all
+classes of the population 50 years ago. The townspeople, enfranchised
+with most political power by reason of their numbers, knew little of
+the dormant resources of the inland country or its climatic vagaries.
+They could not realise the privations, the hard labour, and the deadly
+monotony of early settlement upon the land. The farmer had usually no
+market, and in raising his produce he had to contend against droughts,
+floods, pests, and isolation, and he was fortunate if his produce
+brought from the store-keeper the cost of rations on which his family
+could frugally subsist. The squatter, too, incurred enormous risks,
+though he had a market for his wool at all times; and, if there was no
+domestic consumption of sheep and cattle upon which he could rely, his
+surplus stock brought a fair return from the boiling-down pots. But he
+had to get his produce to port before a money return could be secured;
+and as pastoral settlement pushed further out transport obstacles were
+often crushing. It was no unusual occurrence for one wool clip to
+be detained on a remote station until the next year's shearing had
+commenced. A lien had therefore usually to be given on the clip, and
+the rate of interest, including agent's commission, was commonly
+12 per cent. per annum, while the high carriage rate made rations
+extremely costly; so that even with good seasons the margin of profit
+was small. In bad years ruin became well-nigh inevitable. The pioneer
+squatter spent most of his strenuous life in the saddle, alternately
+worried by bad seasons, low prices, and his bank overdraft. It is
+easy, therefore, to understand the temptation which assailed him to
+regard as his own the country which he had reclaimed at the expense of
+his vitality as well as his capital. When he visited town after a
+term of voluntary exile human nature often asserted itself, and
+the holiday-making squatter disbursed his hard-earned money with a
+prodigal hand, a fact not forgotten by his political opponents. The
+shepherd, too, yielded to temptation, and at the end of a year's
+solitary life in his bush hut longed for nothing so much as an
+alcoholic stimulant or a bottle of pickles and gay human society. Thus
+he prodigally knocked down his cheque in town, and in a week or two
+again abandoned civilisation at the call of the bush. Fifty years
+ago the urban people perhaps lived almost as comfortably as they
+do to-day, but the bushman, whether farmer, squatter, shepherd, or
+stockman, had usually a life of exhausting labour, bad food, dull
+surroundings, and often in consequence indifferent health. Still the
+landless colonist of 1860 had unbounded faith in his country; and if
+he fought earnestly, sometimes passionately, against what he termed
+squatting encroachment, it is now apparent that had not the pastoral
+tenure been jealously limited by Parliament insurmountable obstacles
+would have been placed in the path of progress. In future pages of
+this work it will be seen that the often too sanguine anticipations of
+individual colonists of Queensland's natal year were rudely shattered
+by stern experience; while, on the other hand, the opening up of
+unsuspected resources as often enriched the general community.
+
+
+
+
+PART II.--FROM NATAL YEAR TO JUBILEE.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I.
+
+THE LEGISLATURE.
+
+ The Governor.--His Functions: Political and Social.--His
+ Emoluments.--Administrations that have held Office.--Number
+ of Members of Council and Assembly.--Emoluments of Assembly
+ Members.--Good Results of Responsible Government in
+ Queensland.
+
+
+In a self-governing dependency of the Empire the King's
+representative, while competent to take official action only on
+constitutional advice, is not a mere figurehead in the Government.
+He is, so to speak, one of the three branches of the Legislature.
+No expenditure can be voted by Parliament except after receipt of a
+message of appropriation from the Governor; and no bill can become law
+without the Royal assent, which he, subject to certain reservations,
+is empowered to give. As President of the Executive Council, too,
+the Governor has a voice in administration, although the actual
+power vests in the Ministry so long as it commands the confidence of
+Parliament. But the Governor is in constant touch with his Premier,
+and therefore, apart from the official intercourse at meetings of the
+Executive Council, His Excellency exchanges ideas informally with the
+executive head of the Government. The Governor has social duties, too,
+and these are not unimportant as bringing the King's representative
+into personal contact with his Majesty's colonial subjects of both
+sexes and various classes. The Governor's attendance at public and
+social functions also furnishes a touch of sprightly colour to the
+drab shade which would otherwise often characterise public
+gatherings. He carries with him a distinctive atmosphere of Imperial
+comprehensiveness which usefully neutralises a narrow parochialism
+that might tend to induce men and women to forget that they, while a
+politically independent community, yet form an integral part of the
+great Empire of the Mistress of the Seas. Thus it is that our most
+experienced public men have emphasised the importance of maintaining
+direct communication with the Imperial authority through a Governor
+appointed by and responsible to the King.
+
+Pending the decision of Parliament, the Imperial Government
+provisionally fixed the salary of the first Governor at L2,500 a
+year. In the session of 1861, Parliament, representing a population
+of 34,000 persons, not only voted an increase to L4,000, but also by
+statute made the payment retrospective as from 1st January, 1860. At
+this sum the salary remained until 1874, when Mr. Oscar de Satge, a
+member of the Opposition, carried a motion affirming the principle of
+an increase. This motion the Government accepted, and the salary was
+increased to L5,000 a year, at which figure it remained from that
+time until 1904, when it was reduced to L3,000. Three Governors
+successively filled the office for the fifteen years ending with
+November, 1874; and six for the thirty years between 1874 and October,
+1904. In the latter year an amendment of the Constitution Act was made
+by a bill introduced by the Government, reducing the salary of future
+Governors to L3,000, for reasons exhaustively set forth by the Premier
+in moving the second reading. The chief grounds of reduction, it may
+be mentioned, were the altered situation created by the establishment
+of the Commonwealth, and the steps of a similar character already
+taken in the Southern States.
+
+Twenty-five Ministries have held office during the fifty-year period.
+On that led by the late Sir Robert Herbert comment has already been
+made. It ended a useful Queensland career in 1866, after more than
+six years of office. The succeeding Macalister Ministry, with an
+interruption of eighteen days by a second Herbert Ministry of an
+ephemeral nature, and with reconstructions, lasted until August, 1867,
+when it was displaced by the Mackenzie-Palmer Administration. Mr.
+Macalister was a clever politician; a concise and trenchant speaker;
+and a capital parliamentary leader in so far as the House work
+was concerned. But he was lacking in force, and his Ministry was,
+moreover, much in the nature of coalition representing both squatting
+and anti-squatting interests at a time when bitter controversy
+prevailed. Mr. (afterwards Sir) R. R. Mackenzie, who was held in
+general respect for his personal qualities, likewise lacked strength
+as a politician, and the real force behind him was Mr. (afterwards
+Sir) Arthur Hunter Palmer. His Ministry was at the time termed "pure
+merino," every member of it, save Mr. Pring, the Attorney-General,
+being identified with the pastoral industry.
+
+In November, 1868, the Lilley Ministry was formed. It lasted only till
+April, 1870, and was more than once reconstructed during its tenure of
+office. It included Mr. Macalister, between whom and the Premier
+there was inconvenient rivalry, but its members were all Liberals by
+reputation. The Premier, however, was Radical rather than Liberal
+in his opinions, and his abolition of primary school fees without
+parliamentary authority, and the ordering of the steamer "Governor
+Blackall" in Sydney, with the object of fighting the A.S.N. Company,
+without the consent even of his colleagues, brought about the downfall
+of the Ministry as soon as Parliament met in 1870, only one supporter,
+the late Mr. Henry Jordan, voting with them in a division on a want of
+confidence motion. Mr. (afterwards Sir) Charles Lilley was perhaps
+the most accomplished debater that ever spoke in the Queensland
+Parliament, and throughout most of his public career, as the member
+for Fortitude Valley, he was a popular hero. As an educationist he was
+undoubtedly both sincere and enthusiastic, but his colleagues found
+his imperious moods difficult to contend against.
+
+[Illustration: COAL WHARVES, SOUTH BRISBANE]
+
+The Palmer Ministry met Parliament in May, 1870, and held office for
+more than three and a-half years, although for a great part of the
+time the Government had no working majority. Indeed, for months it
+fought, with a majority of one in a full House of 32, a determined
+Opposition in the Assembly ably led by Mr. Lilley. All business was
+blocked for many weeks, and eventually 13 members of the Opposition,
+headed by Mr. Lilley, waited as a deputation upon the Governor
+(Colonel Blackall) requesting his intervention on the ground that
+Ministers did not possess their confidence or the confidence of the
+House. The Governor declined to interpose, and subtly remarked that he
+had known many Oppositions in Parliament, but never yet knew one that
+had confidence in the Government of the day. The interview did not
+assist the Opposition cause. A second session opened on 5th July,
+1870, and, being defeated two days later by 17 to 11, Mr. Palmer
+was granted a dissolution.[a] The Premier had proved himself an
+indomitable fighter, and his appeal to the constituencies was not
+wholly unsuccessful. Obstruction continuing in the new Parliament, Mr.
+Palmer was granted another dissolution in June, 1871, and from that
+time had a fairly effective majority at his back for two years, when
+being defeated he was granted another dissolution, from which his
+party came back unsuccessful. If the Opposition of those days did not
+obstruct by means of the "stonewall" to the same extent that has been
+the case of recent years, they attained their end in another way. In
+the session of 1871-2 for a period of five weeks the Government failed
+to obtain a quorum except on two occasions, on both of which there was
+a "count out." The Opposition were desirous of forcing the Government
+to pass a Redistribution of Seats Bill before Supply was granted, and
+by persisting in these tactics they compelled the Government to agree
+to a compromise.
+
+The Palmer Ministry on assuming office had found the public finances
+in a bad way, but partly through good management and partly with the
+help of good seasons and improving markets for exports, they retired
+in January, 1874, after a succession of surpluses, and with railway
+construction being vigorously pushed on both in Southern and Central
+districts.
+
+In January, 1874, when the new Parliament met after the general
+election, Mr. Palmer and his colleagues found themselves in so
+hopeless a minority that they resigned without awaiting a debate
+on the Address in Reply. Amidst great hilarity in the Assembly, and
+despite the vehement protests of the candidate, Mr. William Henry
+Walsh was elected Speaker, although a member of the Palmer party; and
+on his refusal to accept the office was humorously threatened with
+the penalty of disobedience to the order of the House. But after
+consideration he assumed the Speakership, and while in the chair
+discharged his duties with credit.
+
+The Macalister-Hemmant Ministry forthwith assumed office, Mr. Lilley,
+who made the announcement in the Assembly on their behalf, declining a
+portfolio. Shortly afterwards he was appointed a Judge of the
+Supreme Court. The Ministry was initiated with Mr. MacDevitt as
+Attorney-General, but in August following he retired, and Mr. S. W.
+Griffith, who had proved an inconvenient supporter of the Government
+as the leader of a subsection, accepted the portfolio. Mr. (afterwards
+Sir) Thomas McIlwraith was Mr. Macalister's Minister for Works, but
+at the close of the first session he differed from the Premier on the
+question of a great private railway scheme, and therefore resigned
+office. On the House reassembling in 1875 Mr. McIlwraith took the
+front cross-bench seat next the gangway on the Opposition side, and,
+while not approving of all the tactics of the party led by Mr. Palmer,
+gave it his general support. The first session of the Parliament had
+been distinguished by the passing of a Customs tariff incidentally
+protective, Mr. Hemmant, the Treasurer, showing uncommon qualities as
+a financial speaker. He closed his first year at the Treasury with
+an apparent deficit of L200,762. His predecessor, when making his
+Financial Statement in 1872, had anticipated a deficit. To prevent
+this he proposed--and Parliament agreed to the proposition--to
+transfer L350,000 from the Loan Fund to the Consolidated Revenue
+Fund to meet the Treasury bills floated or authorised to cover the
+accumulated deficits of earlier years. Mr. Hemmant disapproved of
+this method of financing, and rectified matters as far as possible by
+transferring to a Surplus Revenue Fund L240,000, which left him with a
+deficit of L200,762. This was equivalent to recouping the Loan Fund to
+the extent of L240,000, as the money was to be used for public works
+which would, under ordinary circumstances, have been constructed out
+of loan moneys. In the next year, 1876, soon after the opening of
+Parliament, the appointment of the Premier as Agent-General was
+announced. Ministers consequently resigned, and the Governor (Mr. W.
+W. Cairns) sent for Mr. George Thorn, who to the surprise of political
+circles succeeded in forming a Ministry including Mr. Griffith
+and most of the late Cabinet. Mr. Thorn was personally a general
+favourite, but not conspicuously fit for the position which he had
+fortuitously attained. Mr. Griffith became the actual leader, however,
+and the session was completed without disaster. During the recess Mr.
+Thorn retired, to visit England, and was replaced in the Cabinet
+by Mr. John Douglas, whose scholarly speeches had given him a high
+reputation in the House. As Premier, however, Mr. Douglas was less
+successful than had been anticipated. Conspicuously fair in debate, he
+appeared invariably to feel the force of his opponents' arguments more
+than those on his own side of the House, and therefore his leadership
+wanted decision; but the sessions of 1877 and 1878 were passed through
+without any defeat compelling a premature dissolution.
+
+The Liberal Ministries from 1874 to 1878 had been fertile in
+legislation, but after the retirement of Mr. Macalister they were
+badly led, Mr. Griffith, who attained the Attorney-Generalship at the
+age of twenty-nine, having been unwisely kept in the background on the
+plea of political immaturity. It was evident, however, that chiefly to
+him the passage of all important measures of legislation had been due.
+The colony suffered severely from drought during the years 1876-7-8;
+financial depression was the inevitable result, and, as usual under
+such circumstances, the Government lost popularity.
+
+In November, 1878, the general election resulted in the return of
+a House determined to effect a change of Administration. On the
+new Parliament assembling in January, 1879, Ministers were at once
+defeated, and Mr. McIlwraith was sent for by the Governor. He met
+Parliament a few days afterwards with colleagues representing all
+parts of the colony, and obtained a four months' recess in which to
+mature his policy. On Parliament reassembling in mid-May, however, the
+position of the Government was less strong than had been anticipated.
+During the recess they had been retrenching sharply, and a number
+of dismissals from the Ipswich railway workshops were declared to be
+tainted with partizanship. At no time in the first session, in a test
+division, did the Government sit with a majority of more than six, and
+usually they commanded only two or three. The Opposition, led by
+Mr. Griffith, were always at their posts, and the Government were
+frequently on the verge of defeat. The passing of a Three-million
+Loan Act and of the Divisional Boards Act, however, strengthened the
+Government's position, and in the following session the Torres Strait
+mail contract, making Brisbane the Australian terminus, though opposed
+by stonewalling measures for six consecutive weeks, added to their
+popularity.
+
+In the session of 1880 grave accusations were made against the Premier
+by Mr. Hemmant, who had taken up his residence in England. Mr.
+Hemmant presented a petition to Parliament charging the Premier with
+complicity in certain transactions connected with the purchase of a
+large quantity of steel rails for the Government which had involved
+Queensland in a heavy loss. The matter was referred to a select
+committee, on whose recommendation a Royal Commission was appointed
+to take evidence in England. Mr. Griffith visited London during the
+recess, and acted as honorary counsel for Mr. Hemmant. The Commission
+exonerated the Premier, but a great deal of party animosity was
+engendered, which did not die out for several years.
+
+In 1883 Sir Thomas McIlwraith ordered the British flag to be hoisted
+at Port Moresby, in Eastern New Guinea, annexing to the Empire that
+portion of Papua not already claimed by the Dutch, an act which showed
+true statesmanship and prophetic vision. Unfortunately, the Secretary
+of State for the Colonies, Earl Derby, repudiated the annexation on
+the ground that it was a usurpation of the sovereign rights of the
+Imperial authorities. At the same time he acknowledged the patriotic
+motives which had inspired the Premier of Queensland, and declared
+that the British Government would regard any attempt at annexation by
+a foreign Power as an unfriendly act. Whatever may have been the views
+of political parties at the time, matured judgment formed in the light
+of subsequent events endorses the action of Sir Thomas. The hoisting
+of the German flag on the northern portion of the territory annexed
+by Sir Thomas has brought a foreign Power almost to our doors, and too
+late the home Government endeavoured as far as possible to retrieve
+their blunder by annexing the south-eastern portion of Papua, which
+was handed over to the Commonwealth after federation.
+
+In the same year, the Premier, who had for many years been a strong
+advocate of railway construction by private enterprise on the
+land-grant principle, brought forward a bill authorising the
+construction of what was commonly called the Transcontinental Railway,
+from Charleville to Point Parker, on the Gulf of Carpentaria. Against
+this proposal great popular clamour arose; the majority of the
+squatting members of the Assembly combined with the Opposition, and
+the second reading of the bill was negatived by 27 votes to 16. Sir
+Thomas McIlwraith, rightly regarding the rejection of the measure as
+equivalent to a vote of want of confidence, advised the Administrator
+of the Government, Sir J. P. Bell, to dissolve the Assembly. His
+Excellency accepted the advice, and the Premier asked for five
+months' Supply. Mr. Griffith, the greatest constitutional authority
+in Queensland, approved of the decision of the Administrator of the
+Government, only objecting to Supply being given for such a length of
+time. However, the House, by 24 to 19, agreed to pass the Supply asked
+for, and the dissolution took place in the middle of July.
+
+[Illustration: EXECUTIVE BUILDINGS, BRISBANE]
+
+The Opposition, led by Mr. Griffith, were returned with a large
+majority. Being defeated on the election of a Speaker and in two
+subsequent divisions, the Government resigned. Mr. Griffith was sent
+for, and formed a strong Administration. Parliament adjourned from
+November to January, when some pressing legislation was passed at
+once, including the repeal of the Railway Companies Preliminary Act,
+under which proposals were made by railway syndicates. On 6th March
+Parliament was prorogued until 8th July.
+
+The Premier had chosen as his Lands Minister Mr. Charles Boydell
+Dutton, a Liberal Barcoo squatter, with no previous experience of
+parliamentary life, but a determined land reformer. With the Premier's
+aid Mr. Dutton got the Land Act of 1884 safely through, and the
+Government secured credit for passing a most important measure of
+reform, one important change being the introduction of grazing farm
+leases, and another the resumption of the halves of all runs included
+in a comprehensive schedule of the unsettled districts. But the
+historical measure of the session and the decade was the Ten-million
+Loan Bill, which embodied a grand scheme for providing the entire
+colony with railways. The Opposition protested against the loan as
+unconstitutional on the ground that it covered a programme of railway
+construction which could not be completed for several years, but they
+dared not oppose any specific railway, and the bill passed without
+amendment. Sir Thomas McIlwraith retired from the Assembly in 1886,
+and during the whole life of the Parliament the Opposition found
+themselves helpless to resist the domination of the Ministry. But as
+the Administration aged its political force waned, and in 1887
+the Treasurer, Mr. (afterwards Sir) J. R. Dickson, and Mr.
+Macdonald-Paterson retired from the Ministry because of their
+disagreement with a land tax proposed in Cabinet by the Premier.
+Despite the large loan expenditure, too, there was a portentous
+succession of deficits, due to unfavourable seasons, and Sir Samuel
+Griffith found in 1887 that his Government and party had outlived
+their popularity.
+
+Like his great rival, Sir Samuel gave abundant proof during his
+tenure of office of broad statesmanlike conceptions. No public man in
+Australia has done more to foster the federal spirit and bring about
+the union of the Australian colonies. He played a foremost part in
+creating the Federal Council, and to him is due the credit of drafting
+in 1887 the measure which was passed by all the colonial Parliaments
+granting a subsidy to an auxiliary Australasian naval squadron,
+although parliamentary vicissitudes robbed him of the honour of
+passing the bill in his own State until 1891. He is also entitled to
+the credit of making provision for the administration of British New
+Guinea by Queensland.
+
+In April, 1888, Parliament was dissolved, and when the new Parliament
+met in June the enfeebled Griffith Government were promptly ejected
+from office. Sir Thomas McIlwraith came in with a strong following,
+and he at once formed a Ministry which seemed likely to endure for
+several years. But at the close of the first session Sir Thomas
+retired from the Premiership with a view to visiting England on
+business. Mr. Boyd Dunlop Morehead then succeeded to the leadership.
+In September, 1889, Sir Thomas McIlwraith resigned his seat in the
+Ministry, and the following session he appeared in the Assembly as an
+open opponent of his late colleagues. To make provision for a revenue
+deficit, the Government brought down a proposal for a general property
+tax. This quickly brought Sir Thomas McIlwraith into concerted action
+with Sir Samuel Griffith, then leading the Opposition, and caused the
+resignation of the Ministry in August, 1890. Almost immediately the
+Griffith-McIlwraith Ministry was announced. A year or two earlier such
+a fusion of parties would have been deemed impossible, but the two
+leaders had fought away their mutual differences, and the financial
+outlook was so alarming that the coalition was generally admitted to
+be imperative. The new Government carried many important measures, and
+effected material improvement in the finances.
+
+In March, 1893, just before the banking catastrophe occurred, Sir
+Samuel Griffith accepted the Chief Justiceship, and Sir Thomas
+McIlwraith assumed the Premiership. A dissolution followed, the
+Government securing a commanding majority in the new Assembly. But
+the Premier's health failed, and in October following his Ministry
+was merged into that of Mr. (afterwards Sir) Hugh Nelson. Sir
+Thomas retained office without portfolio until March, 1895, when his
+connection with the Government ceased, though he retained his seat as
+a member of the House until the dissolution in 1896. After resigning
+office he left the colony, and died in England on 17th July, 1900.
+
+The new Premier proved a most capable financier, and although the
+depression in financial, commercial, and industrial affairs continued
+with great intensity he turned successive deficits into annual
+surpluses, and was soon enabled to negotiate loans in the London money
+market on unprecedently favourable terms. In April, 1898, Sir Hugh
+Nelson resigned Ministerial office and accepted the President's chair
+in the Legislative Council, that post having just become vacant by the
+death of Sir Arthur Palmer. Mr. Thomas Joseph Byrnes succeeded to the
+Premiership, and with Mr. Robert Philp as Treasurer it appeared as
+though the reconstructed Government had before it a life of several
+years. Five months afterwards, however, the young, brilliant, and
+much-esteemed Premier was removed by death, and Mr. Dickson was
+called to the Premiership. Fifteen months later the Dickson Government
+suffered defeat, and resigned office.
+
+Mr. Anderson Dawson, the Labour leader in the Assembly, being sent
+for, assumed the Premiership with six other Labour colleagues, but was
+defeated immediately he met Parliament a few days later, and resigned.
+
+He was succeeded by Mr. Philp, who assumed office on 7th December,
+1899. There had been a drought in most parts of the West for a year
+or two previously, but wool prices were high, and better seasons were
+anticipated. The country had almost recovered from the blow sustained
+in 1893. Federation threatened some loss of revenue, but compensation
+was looked for in the enhanced prosperity resulting from interstate
+free trade. But for the two first years of the twentieth century there
+was everywhere in the State a very deficient rainfall, and in most
+inland parts absolute droughts. The double loss to the Treasury
+through Federation and parsimonious Nature was very serious. Mr.
+Philp made reductions in public service expenditure, but kept loan
+expenditure at the normal level, sanguine that when the change
+came there would be a swift recovery, and hesitating to add to the
+depression by suspending the construction of railways and other
+public works. Though by the end of June, 1903, the accumulated deficit
+exceeded a million sterling, and the general election of 1902 had
+given the Government a rather diminished majority, there appeared to
+be no apprehension of a crisis even when Parliament met for its second
+session in July, 1903. But the weight of successive deficits and the
+protracted tenure of the "Continuous Ministry" inspired a general
+desire for change; and, in September, Mr. Philp suddenly found himself
+without adequate support as the result of a number of influential
+Government supporters joining forces with the members of the Labour
+party.
+
+A new Ministry was at once formed, the Speaker, Mr. Arthur Morgan,
+resigning the chair and assuming the Premiership, Mr. William Kidston
+joining him as Treasurer. With a policy of retrenchment and reform
+the new Administration entered upon its career sustained by a strong
+backing of public opinion. Retrenchment had already been initiated
+by the late Government, and it was continued by Mr. Morgan and his
+colleagues. The bottom of the depression having been touched with
+the break-up of the drought, the financial year 1903-4 closed with
+a merely nominal deficit. In the next session, which opened in May,
+1904, the Government encountered so much opposition that a dissolution
+was granted in July. So strongly were the constituencies in favour of
+the retention of office by Ministers that their party numbered 55 in
+a House of 72 when the new Parliament met in September, and the
+Government in that and the three following sessions were accordingly
+able to carry many of their measures of reform.
+
+In January, 1906, the death of Sir Hugh Nelson created a vacancy in
+the Presidency of the Legislative Council. The Premier, who had earned
+a reputation during his four years' occupancy of the Speaker's
+chair for an intimate and comprehensive knowledge of parliamentary
+procedure, was generally designated as peculiarly fitted to succeed to
+the position of President; and, having resigned both the Premiership
+and his seat as a member of the Assembly, he was translated to the
+Legislative Council.
+
+Mr. Kidston then became Premier. On the 11th of April, 1907, the
+Assembly's term having almost expired by effluxion of time, a
+dissolution took place, and a general election followed. The two chief
+objects for which the coalition between Liberals and Labour members
+had been brought about in 1903--sound financial administration and
+electoral reform--having been secured, disintegration had commenced to
+set in in the Government ranks. On the one hand some of the Liberals
+were desirous of reunion with their former associates led by Mr.
+Philp, and on the other the more extreme section of the Labour party
+adopted a socialistic platform, thereby causing their more moderate
+colleagues who followed Mr. Kidston to break with them before the
+election. The respective manifestoes of the Premier and the leader of
+the Opposition, issued some weeks before the dissolution, were found
+to embody practically the same policy in so far as vital measures of
+legislation were concerned. Both emphasised the necessity of having
+in office a Ministry possessing the steadfast support of a united
+following if full effect were to be given to their programme. The
+result was disappointing, for when the new House met in July the Philp
+party numbered 29, the Government party 25, and the Labour party
+18. After a fight over the choice of the Speaker and Chairman
+of Committees, the Labour members gave a general support to the
+Government, but comparatively little progress could be made in
+consequence of the uncertainty of that support. The Legislative
+Council rejected several measures which both the Government and the
+Labour party were very anxious to see placed on the Statute-book. With
+a view to taking concerted action to overcome the veto of the Council
+on democratic legislation, Mr. Kidston made overtures to the Labour
+party for an offensive and defensive alliance in Parliament and at
+the polls. The Labour party replied that they were unable to give any
+assurance on the subject. Mr. Kidston then advised His Excellency,
+Lord Chelmsford, to recognise the principle that there resided in the
+Crown the power to nominate to the Legislative Council such a number
+of new members as might be required to overcome obstruction, and that
+the power should be exercised if, in the opinion of His Excellency's
+responsible advisers, such a course became necessary. The Governor
+declined to accept this advice, and the Premier resigned on 12th
+November.
+
+[Illustration: ROCKHAMPTON 1. Quay Street, from the North Side.
+2. Custom House, Quay Street. 3. East Street.]
+
+Mr. Philp, being sent for by His Excellency, formed a Ministry,
+which was at once met in the Assembly by successive votes of want
+of confidence, the members of the Labour party uniting with the late
+Ministerialists in the divisions. A dissolution was granted, even
+though the House refused to vote Supply to the Government, and early
+in the new year (1908) a general election took place, Mr. Philp losing
+four seats, the Labour party gaining that number, while the Kidston
+party were again returned with the same following. The effect was that
+the Philp and Kidston parties each numbered 25 and the Labour members
+22. As the two latter parties had in most cases assisted one another
+at the elections, the Philp Government resigned, and Mr. Kidston being
+recalled found his position practically unchanged, so far as relative
+numbers were concerned, and yet greatly strengthened as regards the
+constitutional reform he desired to effect. A short session was at
+once held. A reform of the Constitution limiting the vetoing power of
+the Legislative Council by providing for a referendum on any measure
+which the Council rejected twice, and also a number of democratic
+measures rejected by the Council in the two preceding sessions, were
+passed with the aid of the Labour party. When, however, the Government
+turned to legislation affecting the material progress of the State,
+and introduced two bills to authorise the construction of railways to
+mineral fields (to Mount Elliott in the Cloncurry copper area and to
+Lawn Hills in the Gulf district) on agreements made with two private
+companies who undertook to provide in one case one-half and in the
+other case three-fourths of the capital required, despite the fact
+that the railways were to be constructed, worked, and managed by the
+Railway Commissioner, that the companies were to receive no interest
+on the money they advanced until the railways earned it, and that
+when at the end of fifteen years the Government repaid the advance the
+companies were only to receive a sum equal to what their investment
+was then earning capitalised at 31/2 per cent., the bills were
+obstructed by the Labour party, and were only passed with the
+assistance of the Philp party, under the closure, the Estimates being
+forced through by the same means at the close of the session. Before
+leaving on a mission to England, Mr. Kidston publicly intimated that
+he could no longer work with the Labour party. He returned in
+October, and the Philp party, recognising the mischievous futility of
+three-party government, agreed to accept the programme enunciated
+by Mr. Kidston at the election in 1907, and to join the Ministerial
+party, the Premier being granted a free hand, both by his colleagues
+and followers, in reconstructing the Government.
+
+The fusion of the two parties led to the immediate resignation of
+two Ministers and the formation of an Independent Opposition by
+these gentlemen and four more seceders from the Kidston party. A
+reconstruction of the Cabinet followed, three members of the Philp
+party taking office under Mr. Kidston. Mr. Philp declined to accept
+a portfolio, but undertook to give the new Government support as
+an unofficial member of the Assembly, an undertaking most loyally
+observed. Dissatisfaction was naturally felt by several members at the
+composition of the Cabinet, and when Parliament met on 17th November
+it was evident that the fusion had not had the desired effect of
+reducing the number of parties to two. On the Opposition side of the
+Chamber were the Labour party in direct opposition and the Independent
+Opposition of six sitting on the cross-benches, while on the
+Government back cross-benches were three or four members who joined
+forces with the Opposition in every division. The cohesive majority
+was still large enough to enable the Government to pass several
+railways, two or three bills, and the Estimates; but, unfortunately,
+it was found necessary to have recourse again to the closure to get
+the Estimates through the House before Christmas.
+
+Further defections took place during the recess. The sudden death of
+the Speaker, Mr. John Leahy, and the election for Bulloo of a Labour
+member in his stead, reduced the Government majority to two. Such a
+condition of affairs rendered it impossible for any party in the House
+to carry on public business. A trial of strength took place over the
+election of a Speaker when the House met on 29th June, the Government
+having a majority of two. Two days later Mr. Bowman, the leader of the
+Labour party, moved a want of confidence amendment on the Address in
+Reply. A very protracted and acrimonious debate took place, and
+the motion was only defeated by a majority of one in a full House.
+Arrangements had been made earlier in the year for the holding of a
+conference of Commonwealth and State Premiers and Treasurers with
+a view to making a final effort to arrive at a mutual understanding
+regarding the financial relations of the Commonwealth and the States
+after the expiry of the ten-year period provided for by section 87 of
+the Commonwealth Constitution. As it was considered highly important
+that Queensland should be represented at this Conference, which was
+to be held in mid-August, the Government secured an adjournment for a
+fortnight, but only by applying the closure.
+
+The Conference came to a unanimous agreement with regard to the future
+division of the surplus Customs and Excise revenue, justifying the
+determination of the Government of this State to be represented. But
+the efforts of the Opposition to defeat the proposal of the Government
+to adjourn furnished additional evidence, if any were needed, that no
+business could be done in a House so evenly divided. When the Premier
+returned from the Conference, which had been held in Melbourne, after
+consultation with his party, he advised the Lieutenant-Governor to
+dissolve the Assembly, provided it agreed to grant temporary Supply.
+His Excellency accepted Mr. Kidston's advice, but stipulated that the
+Supply must be for the shortest time in which it was possible to hold
+an election and summon the new Parliament. After another fight, the
+Government closured through an Appropriation Bill covering Supply for
+ten weeks, and the House was dissolved on 31st August, the election
+being fixed for 2nd October.
+
+The result of the appeal to the country has been to bring about a
+practical restoration of two-party government, an ideal for which the
+Ministerialists have been striving ever since the session of 1906.
+The Government have won 41 seats and the Labour party 27, while the
+Independent Opposition, which went out 12 strong, have been reduced
+to 4. The Government have thus a majority of ten over the combined
+Opposition parties, and should be able to carry to a successful
+issue their policy of railway construction, immigration, and land
+settlement, and to steer the State through the temporary difficulties
+arising from the pending rearrangement of the financial relations
+between the Commonwealth and the component States.
+
+It may be of interest to add that the last was the seventeenth
+Parliament of Queensland, which gives to each an average of about
+three years, the present maximum statutory term of the Legislative
+Assembly. The explanation is, of course, that in the earlier years
+of the colony the limit of the Assembly life-term was five years.
+As already stated, the Legislative Council when first constituted
+comprised 15 members. Since then the number has been periodically
+increased to correspond with the enlargement of the other Chamber. The
+present number of members of the Council is 44. Until 1865 the number
+of members of the Assembly was 26; thence till 1873 it was 32;
+thence till 1875 it was 42, increased in 1875 by the creation of the
+electorate of Cook to 43, at which number it remained until 1879, when
+there were 55 members. In 1886 the number was increased to 59, and
+in 1887 to 72, at which it still remains. Payment of members of the
+Assembly was first sanctioned in 1886 by an allowance of two guineas
+a day for attendance, and 1s. 6d. a mile for travelling expenses, the
+total in any one year for attendance not to exceed L200. In 1889 the
+payment was fixed at L300 a year, with a mileage allowance for one
+journey to and fro each session, unless where an adjournment exceeded
+thirty days, when mileage was again payable. In 1892 the salary was
+reduced to L150 a year. In 1896 it was again raised to L300, at
+which amount it still remains. The members of the Legislative Council
+receive no payment.
+
+In the foregoing sketch of the Legislature of Queensland many
+omissions will probably be detected by the careful reader. But as
+a rule mention of the names of public men has had to be confined to
+Premiers and such other Ministers or members to whom for some
+usually apparent reason it is necessary to give prominence. Had space
+permitted, many interesting character sketches of prominent men of the
+past, as well as of the present, might have been written; and it must
+not be forgotten that some of the services most worth recording have
+been rendered by men whose names have not become household words, and
+whose reward has been found in the lifelong consciousness that they
+have unobtrusively done their duty to the State. Enough has probably
+been said to prove that responsible government in Queensland,
+initiated among a mere handful of people fifty years ago, and carried
+on amidst discouraging difficulties until to-day, has been attended by
+results of which no patriotic subject of the King need feel ashamed.
+
+ [Footnote a: An interesting incident occurred at the opening
+ of the second session. The Speaker announced the receipt of a
+ writ of election endorsing the return of the Right Honourable
+ John Bright as member for Kennedy. As Mr. Bright had not been
+ present during the preceding session--which had only lasted
+ from 26th April till 4th May--the seat was declared vacant.
+ This was not the first instance of an Australian constituency
+ voluntarily disfranchising itself by electing a prominent
+ British statesman by way of protest against some real or
+ fancied injustice.]
+
+[Illustration: TOWNSVILLE: FLINDERS STREET, LOOKING WEST]
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II.
+
+PUBLIC FINANCE (1859-1884).
+
+ Importance of Sound Finance.--A Great Colony Starts upon
+ a Bank Overdraft.--First Year's Revenue.--Land Sales as
+ Revenue.--Deficits in First Decade.--Transfer of Loan
+ Moneys to Revenue to Balance Accounts.--Heavy Public Works
+ Expenditure.--Crisis of 1866.--Inconvertible Paper Currency
+ Proposals.--Flotation of Treasury Bills.--Higher Customs
+ Duties.--Wiping Out a Deficit by Issue of Debentures.
+ --Transfer of Surplus to Surplus Revenue Account to Recoup
+ Loan Fund.--Incidental Protection.--Railway Land Reserves.
+ --Proceeds Used as Ordinary Revenue.--Three-million Loan.
+ --Condition of Affairs at Close of First Quarter-Century.
+ --Phenomenal Progress; Prospects Bright.
+
+
+Sound finance is the sheet anchor of any Government, whether despotic
+or democratic. Without a prudent guiding hand at the Treasury the ship
+of State might as well be rudderless. In the fifty years of Queensland
+history financial mistakes have been made, from which much public loss
+as well as individual suffering has resulted. If those mistakes, or
+some of them, are laid bare in this book, the object is not to reflect
+upon Governments or individual Ministers, but to treasure the lessons
+thus taught for future use.
+
+Queensland began its career with a bank overdraft, for with "71/2d.
+in the Treasury" on the date of the Queen's proclamation of the
+colony it was necessary to provide funds in anticipation of revenue
+collections. But at the outset borrowing was indulged in on a modest
+scale. For 1860 the revenue was L178,589, and the deficit only L1,514.
+For the second year there was a revenue surplus of L2,442 over the
+expenditure of L235,796. But there had been during the period an
+outlay of L63,210 on loan account. Besides this, of the total revenue
+for the two-year period--including the twenty-one days of 1859--the
+cash receipts from land sales, which strict political economists
+hold to be capital, were L114,803, equal to 27 per cent. of the total
+revenue. It may be assumed that the loan expenditure was entirely for
+permanent or reproductive works; but only 73 per cent. of the money
+spent for the service of the year was strictly revenue, the remainder
+arising from land sales. Yet as New South Wales practice had lent
+sanction to the use of land sales receipts as revenue, the Treasurer
+(Mr. R. R. Mackenzie) may be admitted to have managed well, since at
+the outset the estimates of revenue and expenditure were both wholly
+conjectural. Mr. Mackenzie's successors were less fortunate; for
+during the first decade, although the annual revenue had quadrupled,
+there were only two years with surpluses.
+
+There was another scarcely defensible transaction during the first ten
+years' term. In 1864 the Treasurer, finding he would otherwise have
+a relatively heavy deficit, balanced his budget by transferring from
+Loan Fund to Revenue the total expenditure incurred upon immigration
+since the foundation of the colony. In that year the loan outlay was
+L401,421, including the transfer to revenue, an increase of L337,950
+in a single year. Thus the loan expenditure was at the rate of about
+L5 10s. per head of the population as ascertained by the census of the
+year. The deficit of 1864 seems less excusable because the revenue had
+increased by over 25 per cent. for the year. The incident illustrates
+the danger of suddenly increasing loan expenditure, which produces
+industrial and commercial activity, but at once adds to the cost of
+public administration in various ways. Loan money spent on the same
+scale per capita in Queensland to-day as in 1864 would mean a total
+sum of about L3,000,000 a year, whereas, even with the numerous
+railways lately started, the loan disbursements for 1908-9 did not
+quite reach 11/4 millions. Another consideration is that up to 1865 none
+of the loan works had become reproductive, and the 211/4 miles of
+railway then open for traffic did not earn working expenses. Further,
+the Government had been borrowing at 6 per cent. interest, which meant
+that the 11/4 millions of loan indebtedness at the end of 1865 imposed a
+burden upon the taxpayers of about L75,000 a year, or not far from L1
+per head of the population.
+
+In 1866, the time of the great crisis, the revenue expenditure
+increased by L241,690, creating a deficit of L200,653 for the year.
+The loan expenditure for the year was L965,346, bringing the total
+debt up to L2,214,123, equal to over L23 per head of the population.
+The total expenditure for the year, including loan, reached nearly L17
+per head. It is not surprising that a mere handful of people,
+plunging into debt at that reckless speed, found their credit suddenly
+shattered. In 1869, the last year of the decade, though the revenue
+had advanced to nearly three-quarters of a million, there was a
+deficit for the year of L37,217. For the ten years the net accumulated
+revenue deficit was L386,527, and the aggregate indebtedness nearly
+31/4 millions. The interest charge was then about L225,000 per annum,
+and the entire weight of it fell upon consolidated revenue. The
+population being 109,897, the interest burden was at the rate of over
+L2 per head. It may here be remarked that in 1907-8 it was only
+L2 16s. 9d. per head, less railway net earnings of about L1 12s.,
+reducing the net burden to about L1 5s. per head. Recurring to the
+debacle of 1866, it should be mentioned that the catastrophe was
+largely due to the failure of the Agra Bank, when all railway works
+were suddenly suspended, and the colony was plunged into the depths
+of extreme depression. During the two preceding years the loan
+expenditure had been largely in excess of revenue disbursements, no
+less than L685,246 of borrowed money having been spent in 1865. This
+was at the rate of nearly L8 per head of the total population, and its
+sudden cessation threatened thousands of the people of the colony with
+ruin. For not only had their sources of income been suddenly cut off,
+and landed property become almost valueless, but increased taxation
+had to be imposed.
+
+Yet the catastrophe was not wholly the fault of the Government. It was
+the consequence of the monetary and commercial crisis in the mother
+country in 1866. The Sydney branch of the Agra and Masterman's Bank
+had engaged to furnish L50,000 monthly to the Queensland Government
+for the prosecution of railways and other reproductive works pending
+the negotiation of the loan authorised by Parliament. The bank was of
+good standing, and under ordinary conditions its contract would have
+amply secured the position of the Treasury. Its failure could not have
+been foreseen; but the incident proves the unwisdom of a Government
+leaning upon any banking institution for heavy advances which can
+only be made on the assumption that normal deposits are maintained.
+In Queensland the position was intensified by the proposal of the
+Macalister Government to issue inconvertible legal tender notes,
+because it gave countenance to the economic fallacy that any
+Government can make money to an indefinable amount with the aid of the
+printing press. The resignation of Ministers because their advice had
+been refused by the Governor shook for the moment the very foundations
+of authority; and had not Mr. Herbert's services been available on
+the eve of his departure for England the consequences might have been
+grave indeed. But he consented to take office without portfolio for
+a few days with several other members, and, by getting authority
+from Parliament to issue Treasury bills, he saved the country from
+financial chaos. As it was, the ordeal proved a severe test of the
+loyalty of the people of the colony.
+
+On the establishment of Queensland a Customs tariff imposing light
+revenue duties was inherited from New South Wales. Under it spirits
+bore a duty of only 7s. per gallon. In 1865 the Treasurer, Mr.
+(afterwards Sir) Joshua Peter Bell, introduced a bill to raise the
+spirit duties by 3s. per gallon, and the duty on other intoxicants in
+proportion. The bill passed the second reading without debate, for it
+must have been felt that with the rapidly increasing interest charge
+further taxation ought years before to have been imposed. After the
+crisis of 1866 had subsided, further increased duties for temporary
+purposes were passed, as were also stamp duties, so that the revenue
+for the following year, despite the depression, showed the important
+increment of about L120,000. Happily the Crocodile goldfield, near
+Rockhampton, was discovered towards the close of 1866, and the Gympie
+goldfield during the next succeeding year. Hence for the remainder
+of the decade revenue, despite prolonged stagnation in business,
+steadily, if not rapidly, increased.
+
+In 1869 authority had been obtained from Parliament to liquidate the
+accumulated deficits by the issue of Treasury bills for the sum
+of L350,000, the increased duties of Customs imposed for temporary
+purposes in 1866 being at the same time continued for twelve months.
+In January, 1872, the Treasurer (Mr. Bell) referred in committee of
+the Assembly to the accumulated deficit, stating that the Treasury
+bills which had temporarily provided for it were falling due, and that
+there was no hope of paying the amount out of revenue. He therefore
+announced the intention of the Government to retire the bills and fund
+the debt by issuing long-dated debentures. That having been done, the
+effect was to produce a surplus for the year 1872 of L487,333. This
+indicated that had the Government exhibited a little more confidence
+the whole amount of the deficit might have been paid off out of
+revenue; for in the next year, shortly before the Palmer Government
+went out of office, a further surplus of L158,874 was realised. This
+sum, with the excess surplus of L137,333 for the preceding year,
+totalled L296,207, leaving only L53,793 short of the entire amount of
+the Treasury bills. In the next year there would have been a surplus,
+but the Macalister Ministry, which assumed office early in January,
+1874--Mr. William Hemmant being Treasurer--carried L240,000 to a
+surplus revenue account, and ended the year with a revenue deficit of
+L200,762. While the revenue of that year only increased by L40,913,
+the expenditure, in addition to the surplus revenue item, increased by
+L160,550. The Macalister Ministry could not keep down expenditure,
+and in 1875-6--the end of the financial year having been changed from
+December to June--with a revenue slightly exceeding 11/4 millions, they
+had a further deficit of L51,663. The same party continued in power
+for a further two years under the leadership successively of Mr.
+George Thorn and Mr. John Douglas. Revenue continued fairly elastic,
+and the deficit period was followed by two years showing small
+surpluses.
+
+[Illustration: HINCHINBROOK CHANNEL, NORTH QUEENSLAND]
+
+[Illustration: THE NARROWS AND MOUNT LARCOMBE, NEAR GLADSTONE]
+
+Early in 1879 the McIlwraith Ministry assumed office, at a time when,
+as the Premier himself admitted in his Budget speech of 1880, the
+colony was "emerging from a state of depression induced by three bad
+seasons of an extraordinary character," so that the year 1878-9
+closed with the considerable deficit of L216,808. This was partly due,
+however, to the operation of the Western Railway Act and the Railway
+Reserves Act, by which the most saleable land in the colony had been
+included in railway reserves, and the proceeds of sales, instead of as
+previously going into consolidated revenue, were placed to the credit
+of a special fund. Mr. (afterwards Sir Thomas) McIlwraith while in
+opposition had predicted that this course would produce a revenue
+deficit; consequently on attaining office he induced Parliament
+to sanction the transfer of all these sums, totalling L382,346,
+to consolidated revenue. Mr. McIlwraith argued that it would be
+impossible to construct a tithe of the railways needed in different
+parts of the colony out of the proceeds of land sales, and that it
+would be sufficient if the interest on railways, until they became
+fully reproductive, were defrayed from that source. Parliament
+accepted that view, and forthwith authorised a loan of 3 millions for
+a comprehensive schedule of railways proposed by the Government in
+1879-80. Between August, 1879, and May, 1883, loans amounting
+to L5,553,000 were floated and a further sum of L1,233,000 was
+authorised, but not placed on the market. During the McIlwraith
+Administration of 1879-83 the revenue increased from rather less than
+11/2 millions to 21/2 millions. The period was characterised by
+two deficits and three surpluses, showing accumulated surpluses of
+L272,412, without taking into account the sum of L382,346 transferred
+to revenue. During these years the colony was prosperous, the
+fair seasons, large loan expenditure, the establishment of the
+British-India service _via_ Torres Strait, and the free introduction
+of immigrants, all combining to push the country along the path
+of progress; but prosperity had compelled a _pro rata_ increase of
+expenditure.
+
+At the end of the quarter-century in 1884 the public debt was
+L16,570,850, on which the interest charge was L701,565. Of this amount
+L9,417,318 expended on railways was earning L2 18s. per cent. The
+length of lines open for traffic totalled 1,207 miles. The population
+was 309,913. About L2,350,000 had been spent on immigration, of which
+nearly a third of a million had come from revenue, L1,778,000 from
+loan, and the rest from "special receipts"--partly contributions
+from immigrants. The year's imports were of the declared value of
+L6,381,976, and the exports L4,673,864. Joint stock bank assets
+exceeded 11 millions, liabilities were nearly 73/4 millions, deposits
+exceeded 6 millions, and savings bank deposits were over 1 million. Of
+cattle there were 41/4 millions, of sheep less than 91/2 millions, while
+horses numbered 253,116. There were 6,979 miles of telegraph line
+constructed. There were over 7 million acres of land alienated, which
+had produced over 43/4 millions sterling of revenue. The value of
+minerals won for the year was L1,325,624. There were 528 schools with
+60,701 scholars, 5,185 subscribers to public libraries, and 60,257
+volumes. Comparing these figures with those of 1860 it will be seen
+that, despite droughts, floods, and financial crises, the progress
+attained had been phenomenal.
+
+Thus in a financial aspect the first quarter-century closed glowingly,
+despite a severe Western drought in 1883. There had been rapid and
+apparently solid progression, and the disasters of 1866, which seemed
+at the time to threaten the solvency of Government and people alike,
+had become an unpleasant memory--a catastrophe very unlikely to recur
+for various reasons, among them being that the railways were beginning
+greatly to facilitate transport, as well as to show considerable net
+earnings; while instead of the Government borrowing at 6 per cent., as
+formerly, money in abundance could be got at 31/2 per cent. Moreover,
+mortgage loans and bank overdrafts bore a greatly reduced rate of
+interest.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III.
+
+PUBLIC FINANCE (1884-1893).
+
+ The Ten-million Loan.--Ministers Practically Granted Control
+ of Five Years' Loan Money.--Vigorous Railway Policy.--Effect
+ of Over-spending.--Inflation of Values.--Increased Taxation.
+ --Succession of Deficits.--Second McIlwraith Ministry.
+ --A Protectionist Tariff.--Temporary Increase of Revenue.
+ --Heavy Contraction in 1890.--Another Big Loan; Failure of
+ Flotation.--The First Underwritten Australian Loan.
+ --Amended Audit Act Limiting Spending Power of Government.
+
+
+At the end of 1883 the Griffith Ministry succeeded to office with a
+strong following. It was early in March, 1884, that the Appropriation
+and Loan Acts for 1883-4 became law, but the regular session of the
+year did not begin until 7th July. It was in this session that the
+Government introduced their colossal railway extension scheme, and
+their famous "Ten-million Loan Act"--actually, however, the amount was
+L9,980,000. This sum was to be spent during the following five years,
+which meant that the members of the Assembly voted in a lump sum, and
+on an unprecedented scale, the loan expenditure for the maximum term
+of the Parliament. The effect was also to ensure the life of the
+Ministry for the same term, as it was intended to expend about 2
+millions sterling a year, or about L6 10s. per annum per head of
+the population. This was equal to about three-fourths of the total
+consolidated revenue for 1884.
+
+The Ministry no doubt meant well, and their preparation of a schedule
+of works to extend over five years was in the abstract commendable.
+But the expenditure of so much loan money provoked inflation in
+values, and led to unhealthy speculation in land. Although Ministers
+did not in any one year quite reach their 2-million conventional
+limit of loan outlay, the 10 millions were exhausted soon after their
+retirement from office, and a further loan had to be authorised to
+finish their uncompleted works. While such railways as the "Via Recta"
+(Ipswich to Warwick) and the Cloncurry to the Gulf lines were both
+on the 1884 loan schedule--the amount set down for each being
+L500,000--they have never been even commenced to this day, a quarter
+of a century since they were passed by the Assembly. Other lines then
+authorised absorbed more than the amount voted, and necessarily had
+afterwards to be completed to make them reproductive.
+
+The revenue not proving as expansive as the necessities of the
+Treasury required, an Act passed in 1885 imposed 5 per cent. ad
+valorem duties upon most kinds of industrial machinery, increased the
+spirit duties to 12s. per gallon, and levied upon log and undressed
+timber a duty of 1s. per 100 feet superficial and upon dressed timber
+of 1s. 6d. per 100 feet. In the following year the ad valorem duties
+were increased to 71/2 per cent., except as to machinery, which
+remained at 5 per cent.; but small levies like these were as drops in
+the bucket by comparison with the constantly expanding needs of the
+Treasurer.
+
+The 10-million loan schedule did not exhaust the list of what were
+deemed necessary works. In 1886 a special Act was passed appropriating
+L123,000, to be raised by Treasury bills having a term of five
+years, for the duplication of the Brisbane-Ipswich railway, and the
+completion of the lines from Mackay to Eton and Hamilton, and from
+Ravenswood Junction to Ravenswood, respectively. In the year following
+an Act was passed authorising the issue of further Treasury bills
+amounting to L349,834 for the construction of eight small lines, and
+the extension of the Brisbane and Southport line, with a branch to
+Beaudesert, thus bringing the railways and works loan schedule of the
+Griffith Ministry up to L10,452,834.
+
+By the advent of the financial year 1888-9, most intelligent public
+men felt gravely disturbed. The bank deposits, which had been trebled
+in a decade, had to earn interest on the additional 7 millions of
+money held and advanced. When the Griffith Ministry retired from
+office in June, 1888, they had recorded four successive annual
+deficits aggregating L968,313, although between 1884-5 and 1887-8 the
+revenue had increased by L456,861, and there had been spent over 13/4
+millions of loan money per annum in addition. During the year 1888-9,
+after Sir Thomas McIlwraith assumed office, the expenditure increased
+by L128,922, but he obtained a revenue increase of about L437,000.
+This increase chiefly arose from the heavier duties levied under the
+protectionist Customs tariff of 1888; but in 1889-90 there was an
+almost equivalent shrinkage in both Customs and total revenue. Bad
+times partly accounted for the subsequent inelasticity of Customs
+receipts, for not until 1895-6 were the total revenue figures of
+1888-9 again touched.
+
+The year 1889-90 was characterised by a deficit of L483,979, for the
+drop of L402,857 in revenue and the increase of L197,969 in
+expenditure dislocated the finances, and caused the retirement of the
+Morehead Government after an ineffectual attempt to impose a general
+tax of 5 per cent. on all property, both real and personal. The
+coalition Griffith-McIlwraith Administration followed, but could not
+in such a time of value shrinkages materially increase revenue, while
+expenditure was thought to be irreducible. Despite a Loan Act for 11/2
+millions passed in 1888-9, to provide for works temporarily met by
+floating Treasury bills during the two preceding years, another large
+loan was authorised in 1890, its total being nearly 33/4 millions
+sterling. This money was needed to retire debentures maturing on 1st
+July, 1891, amounting to L1,170,950, and no less than L422,850
+deficiency loss on the loans of 1882, 1884, and 1889, thus leaving
+little more than 2 millions for railway and harbour works. This 33/4
+million Loan Act did not receive the Royal assent until December,
+1890, and the stock was issued a few months later at a most
+unfortunate time. The monetary tension which culminated in 1893 was
+already felt in the London market, and the credit of Queensland had
+become much impaired by the fact that during the preceding decade
+(1880-81 to 1889-90) the colony's obligations had increased by
+L16,706,834, bringing the funded public debt up to L28,105,684--nearly
+L70 per head of the population--while railway net earnings were
+steadily dwindling.
+
+[Illustration: BARRON GORGE, BELOW THE FALLS, CAIRNS RAILWAY]
+
+The cable soon flashed the unwelcome news that only L1,554,834 was
+subscribed. After some difficulty a Stock Exchange syndicate was
+formed to underwrite L1,182,400 of the balance, the price realised for
+the whole amount taken up averaging L87 6s. 1d. per L100 of 31/2 per
+cent. stock. Thus the net proceeds of the loan of L3,704,800 were only
+L3,234,376, a depreciation loss of L470,424. The interest charge on
+this new loan was L129,668; so that the interest, while nominally
+31/2 per cent., was really just 4 per cent. on the money received,
+and, in addition, at due date (1930), L470,424 depreciation will have
+to be made good. But the tragedy did not end there, for the money
+borrowed, or the greater part of it, had not reached the Treasury
+in 1893, but ranked among the "suspended bank deposits" which then
+paralysed both Government and private depositors.
+
+That the time chosen for going on the money market was not opportune
+may be gathered from the fact that in 1889 Queensland 31/2 per cent.
+stock had brought L96 0s. 11d. per L100, and in 1894--three years
+after the forced sale at L87 6s. 1d. in 1891--an issue of our stock
+of the same denomination brought L98 14s. 01/4d. per L100. It may be
+noted that the Queensland loan of 1890-91 was the first underwritten
+Government loan issued by an Australian colony, though since that time
+all Government loans have been underwritten. Heavy as our sacrifice
+in 1891 may have been, it was infinitely less disastrous than making
+default must have proved; and perhaps after all the experience gained
+was worth its cost, for, although the colony staggered under the blow,
+its progress was checked only for the time.
+
+In 1890 an amending Audit Act was passed--Sir Thomas McIlwraith being
+then Treasurer--section 4 of which made the important provision that
+it should not be lawful for the Colonial Treasurer to expend any
+moneys standing to the credit of the Loan Fund Account except under
+the authority of an annual or special Appropriation Act, in like
+manner as moneys were expended out of the Consolidated Revenue Fund
+for the current expenses of government. By section 6 it was provided
+that, when it was necessary to expend for any work money in excess
+of the appropriation, then, if such sum were included in any
+Appropriation Act, the Governor in Council might authorise the
+additional expenditure from the Loan Fund. By section 8, annual Loan
+Estimates, specifying the nature of the work proposed, were to be
+submitted, as in the case of the Estimates of ordinary expenditure.
+This Act was passed to avoid the evil of placing large amounts of
+borrowed money at the uncontrolled disposal of the Ministry of the
+day.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV.
+
+PUBLIC FINANCE (1893-1898).
+
+ Sir Hugh Nelson at the Treasury.--Credit of Colony Restored.
+ --Assistance to Financial Institutions and Primary Industries.
+ --Savings Bank Stock Act.--Public Debt Reduction Fund.
+ --Treasurer's Cautious and Prudent Administration.--Money
+ Obtained in London at a Record Price.
+
+
+When the banking crisis occurred in 1893, Mr. (afterwards Sir) Hugh
+Nelson, who had previously held office with distinction as Railway
+Minister for about two years, reluctantly took charge of the
+embarrassed Treasury. Entering Parliament after the general election
+in 1883, he had from the first given evidence of more than common
+knowledge of public finance. Mr. Nelson was an exceedingly modest man,
+and an indifferent public speaker at best; but he possessed courage,
+thoroughness, and scholarly knowledge. In public matters he always
+aimed at taking the line of least resistance; but knowing what he knew
+in March, 1893, his assumption of office as Treasurer must be regarded
+as an act of heroism dictated by regard for the public welfare.
+Quietly and unobtrusively he worked, refusing all invitations
+to appear on public platforms, and while affecting contempt for
+politicians who constantly apostrophised "the people," he determined
+to set the affairs of the colony straight. Revenue at that time had
+almost touched bottom, and was very inelastic; and Mr. Nelson followed
+the example of his immediate predecessor in keeping a tight hand upon
+expenditure. For 1892-3 there had been a reduction of outlay of about
+L70,000 only, as compared with the preceding year, the June deficit
+having been reduced to L111,676; but in the next year he realised
+rather less revenue, yet reduced expenditure by L206,000, closing the
+year with a small deficit of L8,467. As this was the time in which
+most commercial and financial disaster was suffered from the crisis,
+this economy was a feat worth accomplishing, although the drastic
+reduction of expenditure tended to aggravate the crisis by delaying
+the restoration of confidence. After 1893-4 followed six surpluses.
+
+In the midst of the bank reconstructions of 1893 there had been a
+general election, and Parliament met on 25th May. Between then
+and 18th October, 1893, Mr. Nelson, as Treasurer in the McIlwraith
+Ministry, passed those financial measures which were the greatest
+achievements of his career. An unpopular measure was his Civil Service
+Special Retrenchment Act, but it was imperative, and civil servants
+were indeed fortunate, when so large a number of their friends
+in private life were left destitute, in being able to draw their
+diminished salaries month by month. The Queensland National Bank
+Limited Agreement Act enabled that institution to resume business,
+though the public sacrifice was great. Acts were also passed for
+encouraging meat and dairy works; for advancing guaranteed loans by
+the Treasury to sugar works companies; for Treasury advances upon the
+notes of suspended joint stock banks; for the issue of Treasury notes,
+made legal tender throughout the colony save by the Treasury; and
+for the imposition of a yearly tax of 10 per cent. on notes issued
+by banks. In the same session was passed an Act for giving relief to
+public depositors, such as treasurers of hospitals and other public
+institutions, by making Treasury advances upon the amount of their
+locked-up deposits.
+
+Another important measure of this period was the Government Savings
+Bank Stock Act of 1894, under which any savings bank depositor may
+exchange his deposit for L10, or any multiple thereof, of Government
+stock redeemable in 1945, and bearing not more than 31/2 per cent.
+interest. In 1897 the amount of such stock issuable was increased
+from L1,000,000 to L2,000,000. The object of this measure was to give
+depositors the opportunity of making investments in small amounts of
+Government stock, for which there would always be a buoyant market in
+the event of cash being required; and also to safeguard the Treasury
+by reducing the amount of money held on account of savings bank
+deposits repayable at call. In 1897 the total deposits did not exceed
+21/2 millions; to-day they total over 5 millions. It is therefore
+satisfactory to note that the Treasurer (Mr. Hawthorn) early in the
+current year made arrangements for enlarging the sale of savings bank
+stock in the manner intended by the author of the Act.
+
+In 1895 Mr. Nelson passed the amended Audit Act under which, if it
+appears by the Treasurer's annual statement that there is a surplus of
+receipts for any financial year, the money shall, before the 31st
+day of December following, be paid to the trustees of the Public Debt
+Reduction Fund created by the Act, and by them applied, first to the
+purchase of Treasury bills, and then to the purchase of inscribed
+stock at the current market price, stock so purchased to be cancelled.
+As a Treasurer with a deficit is bound to make provision for its
+liquidation at the end of a financial year, the effect of the Act
+has been to start every year with a clean sheet. By this practice an
+ingenious Treasurer is deprived of the opportunity of juggling with
+accumulated surpluses.
+
+[Illustration: ON THE ROAD TO MARKET, CENTRAL QUEENSLAND]
+
+[Illustration: FAT CATTLE, CENTRAL QUEENSLAND]
+
+In April, 1898, when Sir Hugh Nelson retired from active politics, he
+had just completed five years' service as Treasurer. During that time
+he had gone to the London money market only twice, and had issued
+stock to the amount of only 33/4 millions. Of that sum, moreover, the
+2 millions asked for in 1894 was for retiring Treasury bills, and for
+the liquidation of the deficit on account of previously issued loans.
+In 1896 the Loan Act totalled L2,324,480, though it was not all placed
+by Sir Hugh Nelson. It provided for further railway extensions, and
+included half a million sterling for loans in terms of the Local Works
+Loans Act under the Sugar Works Guarantee Act; L600,000 was applied to
+the purchase at par of savings bank stock for cancellation, only 11/2
+millions being placed on the London market. Of these two loans issued
+subsequent to the 1893 crisis, the first, bearing 31/2 per cent.
+interest, realised L98 14s. 01/4d. net per L100 of stock, and the other,
+floated in 1897, bearing 3 per cent., brought L95 15s. 103/4d., the
+record price for money obtained by the issue of Queensland Government
+stock in London.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V.
+
+PUBLIC FINANCE (1898-1903).
+
+ The Philp Ministry.--Large Surplus.--Loan Acts for Seven and
+ a-half Millions Sterling.--Drought Disasters and Sacrifices
+ for Federation.--Accumulated Revenue Deficits of over
+ L1,000,000.--Rebuff on London Stock Exchange.--Resignation of
+ Philp Ministry.
+
+
+When Mr. Philp took charge of the Treasury in March, 1898, the credit
+of the colony appeared to have been fully restored. True, the funded
+public debt had grown to 331/2 millions, but the population had also
+increased to 484,700, so that the public debt proper was slightly more
+than L69 per head. The year 1897-8 closed with the small surplus of
+L20,724 at the Treasury, and revenue was steadily improving. In June,
+1899, Mr. Philp had the largest surplus realised for seventeen years,
+nearly L150,000, but then an era of drought began. Still revenue
+continued to advance until the establishment of federation in 1901,
+when financial trouble was accentuated. The year 1899-1900 had shown a
+small surplus of L47,789, to be followed by three successive deficits
+aggregating L1,151,469. Mr. Philp, an old colonist, an experienced
+business man, and with a full knowledge of its varied resources, had
+unbounded confidence in the future of the State. Soon after he became
+Premier at the close of 1899, he essayed a bold public works policy,
+and during his first three years of office he induced Parliament to
+sanction the borrowing of nearly 71/2 millions sterling. But he did not
+issue the whole of the last 21/4 millions. Owing principally to the
+South African war, colonial stocks were not high in favour in 1900,
+and the Queensland Government, acting on the best advice, decided to
+call for tenders for the L1,400,000 of 3 per cent. stock placed on
+the English money market in July of that year. The loan only realised
+L91 5s. 11/2d. per cent., about the same price that was obtained by New
+South Wales and West Australia in the same year. Of the balance of
+the loan, L900,000 was taken up in Queensland by the trustees of the
+Government Savings Bank at L97 per cent., and L46,600, sold locally
+and bearing 31/2 per cent. interest, realised L99 10s. 81/4d. net, the
+local market not being affected by the adverse influences and the
+choice of investments which operated in London. In October, 1901,
+for L1,374,213 offered in London at 3 per cent., the extremely low
+price of L88 12s. 4d. was obtained; and in 1903, when the then
+Treasurer (Mr. T. B. Cribb) again sought to enter the London market
+with 31/2 per cent. stock, he could only place L750,000 worth at the
+low rate of L92 19s. 113/4d. Times had indeed changed, and for the
+moment the State was practically excluded from the London money
+market. The balance of the loan has been, and is being, issued in
+Queensland, about L456,000 being still unsold.
+
+The year 1899-1900, from the revenue standpoint, was the record year
+of the century. Wool brought extremely high prices in London, and loan
+expenditure had been maintained during the previous two years at an
+average of a little over L1,000,000 per annum. For the next year,
+one-half of which was subsequent to the proclamation of the
+Commonwealth, revenue showed a decline of nearly half a million
+sterling, although loan outlay had been increased rather than
+lessened. Two reasons could be assigned for this shrinkage--a bad
+season in the West, and the dislocation of accounts resulting from
+federation. Still, in 1899-1900, the expenditure from revenue was
+fully maintained, with the result that on 30th June, 1901, the deficit
+exceeded half a million.
+
+In the next year, 1901-2, there was a further decline of about half a
+million in revenue, arising (1) from one-fourth of the State's Customs
+revenue and the whole of its postal revenue being retained by the
+Commonwealth, and (2) from the sparse rainfall and the heavy drop in
+London wool prices. Thus, although the apparent expenditure showed a
+decline of about L650,000 due to the cost of the transferred
+departments being defrayed by the Commonwealth, the financial year
+ended with a deficit of L431,940. The year 1902 was the most
+disastrous with respect to rainfall that Australia ever experienced,
+and the drought struck Queensland with cruel intensity. The revenue of
+1902-3 was maintained at nearly the level of the previous year, good
+rains having fallen early in 1903, while the expenditure was cut down
+by about a quarter of a million; yet there was a further deficit of
+L191,341, despite the fact that an income tax had been imposed and a
+Public Service Special Retrenchment Act passed which resulted in a
+saving of L87,000.
+
+The Philp regime practically ended with an accumulated deficit, as
+above mentioned, of L1,151,469; for, about two months after the close
+of the financial year 1902-3, the Ministry were compelled by a schism
+in their party to resign office. They had been long popularly
+stigmatised as the "Continuous Government." The work of the coalition
+of 1890 having been accomplished, Ministers had exhausted their
+popularity; yet the probability is that but for the financial debacle
+the end would not have come quite so soon. The drought having by this
+time broken, a return of prosperity was naturally expected; but on the
+one hand Ministers had made enemies by severe retrenchment, and on the
+other hand they were blamed for having failed to balance their budget.
+
+When Parliament met on 21st July, 1903, Mr. Philp appeared still to
+command a working majority--though somewhat diminished by the general
+election of 1902-3 compared with that which had followed him for three
+years previously. But on the 8th of September the Treasurer, Mr. T.
+B. Cribb, carried his taxation resolutions in Committee of Ways and
+Means, after an acrimonious debate, by a majority of only two votes in
+a House of sixty-five, several prominent Government supporters voting
+with the Noes. Mr. Philp then moved the adjournment of the House, and
+next day announced the resignation of his Ministry.
+
+[Illustration: MAROOCHY RIVER AND NINDERRY MOUNTAIN, NORTH COAST
+RAILWAY]
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI.
+
+PUBLIC FINANCE (1903-1909).
+
+ The Morgan-Kidston Ministry.--Economy in Revenue
+ Expenditure.--Great Reduction in Loan Outlay.--Equilibrium
+ Established at the Treasury.--Retrenchment and Taxation.
+ --Improvement of Finances.--A Record Surplus for Queensland.
+ --Land Sales Proceeds Act.--Abstention from Borrowing.
+ --First Loan Floated since 1903.--Sound Position of
+ Queensland.--Value of State Securities.--Reproductiveness of
+ Railways Built out of Loan Money.--Public Estate Improvement
+ Fund.--How Recourse to Money Market has been Avoided.
+
+
+On the 15th September, 1903, the Speaker's resignation was announced,
+and on the 17th Mr. (now Sir) Arthur Morgan announced the formation of
+a new Ministry with himself as Premier, his colleagues including the
+leader, (the late Mr. W. H. Browne) and another prominent member of
+the Labour party (Mr. W. Kidston). The new Ministry came in expressly
+to restore the financial equilibrium, the Treasurer being Mr. Kidston.
+Retrenchment became the order of the day, although the Estimates of
+the late Government were adopted, having regard to the fact that
+the first quarter of the financial year had practically expired. The
+pruning-knife was applied with vigour, and loan expenditure rapidly
+lessened, although existing railway contracts had of course to be
+completed.
+
+On 30th June following, revenue showed an increase of L69,000, while
+expenditure had been reduced by L110,000, the financial year ending
+with a deficit of only L12,424. Loan expenditure had been brought down
+to L603,805, a reduction of no less than L418,600 compared with
+the previous year. In the middle of the session of 1904 the Premier
+advised a dissolution, which was granted; and after the general
+election the Ministry returned in such strength as to warrant
+Parliament in treating their policy, especially the financial part of
+it, as practically a mandate from the constituencies.
+
+In 1904-5 the revenue being within L41 of the amount of the preceding
+year, while the expenditure was about L26,000 less, a surplus, the
+first for five years, was recorded for the nominal sum of L13,995.
+Seeing that loan expenditure had been reduced to less than a quarter
+of a million, that general retrenchment had been carried out, and that
+a recovery of trade and industry was not yet clearly apparent,
+the result must be deemed highly satisfactory; also, the Treasurer
+refused, after his first year of office, to continue the practice of
+charging to loan fund the amount spent by the Commonwealth Government
+on new works and buildings. The amount was not large, but even the
+L20,000 to L30,000 per annum so expended would, if transferred to
+loan, have improved the appearance of the State revenue account.
+
+In 1904 the obnoxious but necessary Special Retrenchment Act was
+re-enacted for the nine months of the financial year still remaining,
+the rate of deduction being diminished by one-half, while provision
+was made that any surplus revenue for the financial year should
+be paid to the public servants. The year closed with a surplus of
+L13,995, which was at once distributed _pro rata_ among the retrenched
+officers. The continuation of the Act was not popular among public
+servants, but it was deemed necessary in the interests of the wider
+community; and, as the net result was that a public officer only lost
+7s. 6d. for every L1 deducted from his salary during the two previous
+years, it can hardly be considered unfair, having regard to the
+losses sustained by the general public during the same period. Another
+unpopular measure was the Income Tax Amending Act, which exempted
+from taxation incomes of L100 and under, but in regard to the larger
+incomes somewhat increased the taxation then levied. In 1906 a further
+Income Tax Amending Act was passed, adding to the taxation in some
+cases, but raising the exemption to L160 and granting an exemption of
+L120 on incomes between L160 and L200. In 1907 another amendment of
+the Act increased the exemption to L200 on all incomes, and reduced
+certain imposts, which had the effect of relinquishing revenue to
+the extent of L40,000 to L50,000 for the year. But times had then
+improved, and the Treasurer could afford this grateful relief to the
+poorer classes of the community.
+
+Early in 1906, owing to the death of Sir Hugh Nelson, Mr. Morgan
+retired from the Ministry, Mr. Kidston becoming Chief Secretary in
+his stead, while still retaining the Treasurership. Mr. Morgan then
+accepted the Presidency of the Legislative Council. In the year
+1905-6 the revenue had become buoyant, the increase for the year being
+L258,124. The expenditure had also increased by over one-half that
+amount, the year closing with the surplus of L127,811. Loan outlay
+also showed an increase, totalling nearly L300,000. In 1906-7 there
+was a revenue jump of L454,389, with an increase in expenditure
+of L186,085, the record Queensland surplus of L396,115 being
+realised.[a] For 1907-8 the revenue increase was L180,486, while the
+expenditure increase was L461,299, and the surplus only L115,302.
+Loan outlay also advanced to L1,033,676. Including the Commonwealth
+collections the total revenue for 1907-8 approached 51/2 millions,
+or nearly 1 million in excess of the most fruitful year before
+federation.
+
+In November, 1906, a brief but important Act was passed providing that
+all moneys received in payment for auction sales of town, suburban,
+and country lands, or of such lands if subsequently purchased by
+selection, should hereafter be paid into the Loan Fund Account. But
+proceeds of the land sold under the Special Sales of Land Act of 1901
+were not included, those moneys having been already appropriated to
+the repayment of sums borrowed upon certain Treasury bills issued
+in aid of revenue in former years. It is the policy of the Kidston
+Government, however, not to alienate lands under the Special Sales
+Act; therefore the deficits of former years which had been liquidated
+with the proceeds of Treasury bills, and practically formed a floating
+debt, are being gradually compensated for by the transfer of annual
+surpluses to the Public Debt Reduction Fund, the total amount of stock
+thus cancelled having on 30th June, 1908, reached the respectable
+amount of L942,641 since the inception of the fund.
+
+One of the wise determinations of Mr. Kidston as Treasurer was to
+keep off the London money market for several years at least after the
+rebuff received by his predecessor in 1903. Consequently he abstained
+from making any attempt to float a loan till March, 1909, when
+L2,000,000 worth of 31/2 per cent. stock was disposed of. The net
+proceeds were equal to L94 9s. 61/2d. per cent., a price about
+equivalent to that obtained by New South Wales a little earlier in
+the year. This, although dearer money than was obtained by issues of
+Queensland stock in the closing decade of the last century, compares
+not unfavourably with the prices obtained earlier in the financial
+year for other gilt-edged securities on the London market.
+
+The net average rate of interest payable on the public debt of
+Queensland on 30th June, 1908, was L3 14s. 1d. per cent., but this
+rather high rate arose from the fact that more than a moiety of the
+total debt was incurred many years ago, when all Australian stocks
+bore 4 per cent. interest. The lowest average rate now paid by any
+Australian State is L3 8s. 9d. by Western Australia, most of whose
+stock was issued during the closing decade of the 19th century, and
+bears from 31/4 to 31/2 per cent.
+
+Speaking generally, Queensland stands well on the London money market
+at present, as, according to the "Commonwealth Year Book" quotations
+from the "Economist" newspaper, the "middle price" of her 31/2 per
+cents. quoted on 'Change on the 25th September of last year was L100,
+a figure only equalled at the time by Victoria among the Australian
+States; and in December following L99, which was on a par with New
+South Wales stock on the same date, and only 10s. per cent. below the
+quotation for Victorian stock. These prices, however, for comparative
+purposes seem to need slight adjustment on account of the interest
+respectively due at date of quotation.
+
+Having regard to the fact that the public debt of Queensland is higher
+than that of any other Australian State per head of the population,
+the policy of abstention from further borrowing from 1903 until 1909
+has been vindicated in a most gratifying manner. A pregnant fact is
+that more than one-half the entire public debt has been invested in
+railways which in 1908-9 returned L883,610[b] in net earnings, all
+available for the payment of interest on capital, or equal to about L3
+7s. 6d. per cent. per annum, which meant that our railway system was
+almost self-supporting, besides being the source of a large indirect
+gain to the Treasury by providing facilities for transport over 3,498
+miles of line. It is no exaggeration to assert that directly and
+indirectly the railways assist the Treasury to the amount of the
+annual interest charge on the entire public debt of the State. Instead
+of the railways being a burden upon the taxpayer, as in former years,
+they have undoubtedly now become the backbone of the public credit.
+Seven years ago the interest charge on railway capital falling on the
+taxpayer amounted to L513,128. To-day, as shown by official figures,
+there is practically no such burden, and the existing state of the
+investment not only forms a complete justification for the railway
+policy of the past, but also for the vigorous way in which the
+construction of new lines is being pushed forward. With a continuance
+of good management it is apparent that the time is within measurable
+distance when the Railway Commissioner will, unless rates be reduced,
+hand to the State Treasurer a large annual surplus which will be
+available for lightening the public burdens.
+
+Among other minor financial reforms for which the Morgan and Kidston
+Governments have earned credit is the creation of the Public Estate
+Improvement Trust Account, to which is charged the cost of roads,
+water supply, and other improvements made to Crown lands about to be
+thrown open for settlement, such cost being afterwards added to the
+selling price of those lands. Up to 30th June, 1908, 11/2 million
+acres of Crown land had thus been made available for selection by
+a total expenditure of L85,784, the value of which has thus been
+enhanced, it is estimated, by more than half a million sterling. This
+amount will ultimately find its way into consolidated revenue. And all
+this with a debtor balance of the account on 30th June, 1908, of
+only L58,287. Allowing that the profit is shown in figures yet to be
+realised, the estimated margin is so large that the result cannot be
+doubtful.
+
+[Illustration: SCENE ON BARCALDINE DOWNS, CENTRAL QUEENSLAND]
+
+[Illustration: BARCALDINE DOWNS HOMESTEAD, CENTRAL QUEENSLAND]
+
+Loan expenditure on public works, though greatly reduced, was never
+entirely stopped by the Morgan and Kidston Governments. In 1903
+they inherited from their predecessors a loan cash balance of
+11/4 millions. By compelling the local bodies to pay up arrears of
+redemption on local loans, by investing about L603,000 of revenue
+surpluses in unissued stock, with the help of interest accruing on
+public loan cash balances, and the annual instalments paid by the
+Queensland National Bank in liquidation of its extended deposit debt,
+nearly 31/2 millions sterling was spent on loan account during the
+five years ended 30th June, 1909, without placing on the money market
+any part of the then unissued balance of the 1902 loan.
+
+ [Footnote a: The so-called surplus of L487,333 in 1872
+ was obtained by the transfer of L350,000 from loan fund to
+ revenue.]
+
+ [Footnote b: These net earnings are Treasury cash figures.
+ They differ somewhat from the departmental figures, which do
+ not deal with cash, but with book receipts and expenditure.]
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII.
+
+THE BOOM DECADE (1880-1890).
+
+ A Great Boom Decade.--Causes of Inflation of Values.
+ --Excessive Rating Valuations.--False Basis of Assessing
+ Capital Value.--Prodigality Succeeded by Financial
+ Stringency and Collapse of Boom.--Difficulty in
+ Determining Real Values.--Sir Hugh Nelson's Legislation.
+ --Sound Finance.--Stability of State.--Prospects Good
+ To-day.
+
+
+The prospects of Queensland had seldom been brighter than they were at
+the opening of the 1880-90 decade. The seasons were good, the outlook
+was regarded as brilliant, and a general air of confidence reigned.
+The Government were spending loan money lavishly, and large amounts
+were being spent in introducing a stream of immigrants from Europe.
+These and other causes contributed to the prevailing over-confidence
+and the consequent excessive values put upon fixed property. One
+was the influx of capital for investment on private account, for the
+confidence felt in Queensland mortgage securities not only extended
+to the other colonies of Australia, but also to the mother country.
+Another was the discovery of subterranean water in Western Queensland,
+and the opinion expressed by geologists that more than one-half the
+total area of the colony, and that in the driest parts of the far
+West, was artesian water-bearing country. The discovery, it was
+argued, had added a new province to Queensland, and one whose
+fertility, water once provided, would not be excelled, despite a
+normally light rainfall, by any other part of the continent. One
+consequence was the sale of Western stations at high prices, and
+the investment by their late owners of the proceeds in city and town
+properties. They had experienced the risks of the far inland climate,
+and they wanted to invest in land in the seaport towns, which must
+quickly become centres of extensive trade.
+
+Another cause was the raising of rating values by the local
+authorities, of whom those having jurisdiction in suburban or country
+areas were endowed with L2 from the Treasury for every L1 raised by
+rates. To augment the claims for endowment, although the rate levies
+were in a few cases raised to the maximum legal limit, in most the
+valuations alone were raised, and the rate levy left untouched. It was
+held that it paid the property owner to contribute a high rate when
+with the endowment it meant three times that sum, most of which would
+be spent in improving his land by making roads and carrying on other
+local works calculated to enhance property values. A further cause
+of inflation was the cutting up of suburban land into 16-perch
+allotments, and selling them on long terms to working men and to
+speculators. A still further cause was, as already mentioned, the
+influx of external money at reduced rates of interest through the
+financial institutions. At first rents were so high as apparently to
+justify an advance on true values; but as the expanding process went
+on vendors ridiculed a capital value based on income-earning capacity.
+"What is the use of talking nonsense!" the agent would exclaim; "it is
+not what this property will bring in annually now, but what it will be
+worth in twenty years' time."
+
+Even conservative loan institutions accepted valuations based on
+actual sales. Prices in many cases doubled and quadrupled in a few
+months without much regard to the income-earning power. Then people
+were told that Brisbane would by and by, with an immense railway
+mileage finding its terminus at the wharves, be as big as Sydney or
+Melbourne; that land in George-street and Collins-street was realising
+L2,000 per foot frontage, bare; and that therefore choice sites in
+Queen-street could not be worth less than L1,000 per foot frontage.
+Thus prices advanced until the second half of 1888, when the demand
+for real property almost ceased. From that time until 1893 values were
+as far as possible upheld by the mortgagees, for they believed that
+the stagnation must be but temporary. Then came the crisis in the
+world's money markets, and it smote Queensland with prostrating force.
+The gradual reduction of local authority endowments, followed by their
+abolition in the year 1902-3, and the consequent increase of rate
+burdens, had a depressing effect upon property values, so that even
+to-day, more than sixteen years after the collapse of the boom, city
+lands do not realise more than one-half the prices demanded and often
+obtained in 1888.
+
+It is easy to blame the leading parliamentarians of the time for their
+prodigality in expenditure; but, when the most experienced bankers of
+the time threw prudence to the winds under pressure of a flooded money
+market, we may at this distance of time judge public men less harshly
+than they were judged in 1893. Confidence was universal, and the
+man who raised a warning voice found himself figuratively "sent
+to coventry." An epidemic of swollen values pervaded the entire
+continent. Even so late as 1893, two skilled and disinterested
+Ministers of the Crown, and both possessed of banking experience, who
+were commissioned by the Government to report confidentially on the
+securities of the Queensland National Bank soon after its suspension,
+failed to realise the full extent of the inflation of past years,
+or the depreciation in land values that had taken place despite the
+efforts made to maintain them. For they gave such a report of the
+values of the bank's securities as induced the Legislature to sanction
+an abortive scheme of reconstruction and the retention of Government
+moneys. It is, however, to Sir Hugh Nelson's credit that, three years
+later, he passed through Parliament an amending Act, embodying the
+scheme which has since restored the bank to the status of a "national"
+institution.
+
+Nineteen years have elapsed since the close of this period of
+extravagant borrowing and reckless expenditure, both public and
+private. For some years past Queensland has been enjoying almost
+unexampled prosperity, and the question naturally arises whether
+that prosperity may not be followed by another crisis. On this point
+examination of fixed property values, which are a good index, leads to
+a favourable conclusion. Of city or town lands there has of late years
+certainly been no inflation. Farming and dairying land values have no
+doubt risen rapidly, but not more, perhaps, than in proportion to the
+enhanced stable income-earning value arising from the success of the
+sugar and dairying industries and the enlarged markets available since
+federation to farmers all over Australia. In pastoral country there
+has certainly been no such inflation as occurred in the 1880-90
+decade. Buyers discounted the future when, to justify their
+anticipations, the 372,105 square miles of artesian water-bearing
+country should have been already opened up and the country made
+increasingly productive by the streams from thousands of bores.
+To-day, as shown elsewhere in this book, artesian water is flowing
+to such an extent in Queensland that it would, with complete
+reticulation, supply 12,000,000 people with 40 gallons a day each.
+This in a country, too, which formerly was almost destitute of surface
+water. More bores are every year being put down, while geological
+research has lately added considerably to the area of artesian
+water-bearing country in Queensland. Generally trade is sound to-day,
+while banking deposits have made but gradual progression in volume
+during the last twenty years. Close settlement is rapidly going on,
+and the pastoral industry, which furnishes about 50 per cent. of our
+exports, is in a most prosperous condition after several good seasons
+capped by recently advancing prices. Wool alone, whose producers are
+realising highly satisfactory profits, formed 28.55 per cent. of our
+exports in 1907. Over gold mining there may be a fleeting cloud, but
+every year's laboratory research extends the area of remunerative ore
+deposits by reducing the cost of treatment. The cost of production and
+transport in all the primary industries is being gradually lessened.
+Happily there is no boom, present or prospective, to disturb the
+steady progress of the country; and it is reassuring to learn from
+recent public speeches by eminent Australian bankers that they are
+refusing to make advances for other than legitimate development.
+
+[Illustration: SWAN CREEK VALLEY, NEAR YANGAN, WARWICK DISTRICT]
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII.
+
+CROWN LANDS LEGISLATION.
+
+ The Code of 1860.--Crown Lands Alienation Act of 1868.
+ --Pastoral Leases Act of 1869.--Homestead Areas Act of 1872.
+ --Crown Lands Alienation Act and Settled Districts Pastoral
+ Leases Act of 1876.--The Griffith-Dutton Land Act of 1884.
+ --Co-operative Communities Land Settlement Act.--Land Act
+ of 1897.--Forms of Selection.--Act to Assist Persons to Settle
+ on Land by Advances from the Treasury.--Extension of Pastoral
+ Leases.--Closer Settlement Act.--Land Orders.
+
+
+The land code of the session of 1860, so enthusiastically eulogised
+by Sir George Bowen in his despatch to the Secretary of State,
+unfortunately by no means settled the complex questions involved in
+the management of public lands extending over 15 degrees of longitude
+and 18 degrees of latitude. Indeed, to-day the land laws are probably
+as complicated as ever they were in the history of Queensland,
+notwithstanding the desire of the Legislature to make them as simple
+as possible, and to meet the wants of every description of settler,
+whether he be a homestead selector with his 320 acres, a grazing
+farmer with his 20,000 acres, or a pastoral lessee with his 1,000
+square miles.
+
+During the first decade several Land Acts, amending the Acts of 1860,
+were passed; but by the advent of the year 1867 it was found that
+the facilities offered for settlement were inadequate, and that new
+methods, especially in the direction of mixed farming adapted to the
+country and climate, and demanding holdings of increased area, were
+indispensable if there was to be close settlement on a more extensive
+scale than that contemplated by the pastoralist. Among the members of
+the Assembly in 1867-8 was Mr. Archibald Archer, of Gracemere, then
+member for Rockhampton, who earnestly voiced the popular contention
+that the upset price of L1 per acre was excessive, and that the
+holdings permitted to the settler by law were too restricted in
+area. In October, 1867, the Minister for Lands was Mr. E. W. Lamb, an
+old-time New South Wales land office official, and then a Peak Downs
+squatter. He introduced a Crown Lands Alienation Bill, which,
+after discussions showing its futility, was, on the motion of Mr.
+Macalister, then in opposition, referred to a Select Committee
+comprising the Minister and Messrs. Archer and Fitzgerald, the latter
+member for Kennedy. In the next session a new bill was introduced,
+giving effect to the recommendations of the Select Committee, which
+provided for the resumption of the halves of all runs within the
+Settled Districts, and for making available such resumed areas
+wherever required for settlement. The bill also provided for the
+opening of these areas to free selection before other than a
+feature survey had been made. This land was to be classified as (1)
+agricultural, in areas not exceeding 640 acres and at 15s. per acre;
+(2) first-class pastoral, in areas not exceeding 2,560 acres, at 10s.
+per acre; and (3) second-class pastoral, in areas not exceeding 7,680
+acres, at 5s. per acre. The purchase was to be conditional upon actual
+occupation and improvement, the payment being spread over ten
+annual instalments, called rents, of 1s. 6d., 1s., and 6d. per acre
+respectively. Provision was also made for homestead selections not to
+exceed 80 acres of agricultural land or 160 acres of pastoral land,
+at a yearly rental for five years of 9d. an acre in the case of
+agricultural land and 6d. an acre for pastoral country. This measure,
+having become law, caused a tremendous rush for land, and in some
+cases, no doubt, too large areas were taken up, regarded from the
+standpoint of the public interest, the abuse partly arising from
+faulty classification by the Government Commissioners. By at least one
+of these officers it was held, for example, that land, no matter how
+accessible or good its quality, was only second-class pastoral if
+destitute of surface water. But, whatever abuses crept in, there can
+be no doubt that the Act of 1868 was the first legislation to place
+the people on the land in areas of such extent, of such quality,
+and at such prices as were then deemed requisite for successful
+occupation. Many of the most prosperous farmers of to-day, or their
+parents, settled under the 1868 Act, and now form most valuable
+members of the community.
+
+In 1869 the Pastoral Leases Act was passed by the Lilley Government,
+and gave the lessees in the unsettled districts a better tenure
+than they had before enjoyed--21 years in respect of new country and
+renewed leases, and 14 years in the case of existing leases, with
+septennial automatic reappraisements of rent in all instances. The
+Liberal members of the Assembly assented to a pre-emptive purchase
+clause in this Act by which a lessee was empowered to purchase on his
+run without competition an area of 2,560 acres, containing permanent
+improvements made by him, at the price of 10s. per acre. But it was
+only discovered by many members after the Act had become law that a
+run might mean a block of 25 square miles, and that a lessee with a
+dozen blocks could secure strategic freeholds in as many different
+parts of his holding. However, the provision remained unaltered until
+in 1884 the Minister for Lands in the Griffith Ministry (Mr. Charles
+Boydell Dutton) refused to sanction further purchases of the kind, and
+during the same year endeavoured to sweep away the privilege by new
+legislation. Parliament, however, refused to repeal the provision, and
+would only consent to withhold the privilege of pre-emption in
+respect of leases acquired after the passage of the Land Act of 1884.
+Altogether 363 pre-emptive selections in respect of as many runs were
+made. By the Act of 1868 the pastoral lessees in the settled districts
+had also been granted ten years' leases for the unresumed halves of
+their runs; but in both cases the Minister was empowered to resume
+part of any run on giving six months' notice.
+
+The Homestead Areas Act of 1872 provided for the setting apart of
+special areas as "homestead areas," to be exclusively settled as
+homestead selections, or selections taken up by virtue of land
+orders issued under the Immigration Act of 1869. A departure from the
+generally accepted principle of "homestead" settlement--that the
+land is granted at a nominal price in consideration of the selector
+personally residing on it--was made in providing for increased areas
+up to 320 acres at conditional purchase prices. This anomaly was
+corrected by the Act of 1876, which styled such larger homesteads
+"Conditional purchases in homestead areas."
+
+In 1876 Mr. Douglas, as Mr. Thorn's Minister for Lands, introduced
+an amending and consolidating Land Bill, repealing all existing
+alienation Acts. Extended powers were given to Land Commissioners to
+expedite settlement. Monthly Commissioners' Courts were provided
+for, but no decision of a Commissioner's Court, except in case of
+certificates of performance of conditions, was to be final until
+confirmed by the Minister. The most noteworthy provision reduced the
+maximum area that one person might select. The area conditionally
+selectable by one person was made not less than 40 acres nor more than
+5,120 acres. The Act declared all leased land reverting to the
+Crown on the Darling Downs to be homestead areas, and empowered the
+Government to establish such areas elsewhere. Within these areas
+conditional purchase selections were restricted to 1,280 acres and
+homesteads to 80 acres. Personal and continuous residence by the
+selector was made compulsory, and, before the fee-simple could be
+acquired, permanent improvements to the value of 10s. per acre were
+required to be made. A homestead was protected against claims for
+debt. A Settled Districts Pastoral Leases Bill also became law this
+year, providing that on the expiration of the ten years' leases then
+held runs should be offered at auction on a five years' lease at a
+rental of not less than L2 per square mile, an outgoing lessee being
+allowed six months' grace in which to remove his stock. In 1882 the
+Act of 1876 was amended so as to abolish the sale of runs by auction
+unless when there was no application for re-lease by the existing
+lessee, and lessees under the Act of 1876 were given the right to an
+extension of their leases for a period of ten years instead of five
+years. The rent, however, was to be subject to appraisement.
+
+The next great land measure was the Griffith-Dutton Act of 1884. Its
+main features were the abolition of the pre-emptive rights of pastoral
+lessees; the creation of a Land Board consisting of two members--an
+independent tribunal acting like Judges of the Supreme Court, and,
+like the Judges, holding office during good behaviour; and the
+introduction of the leasehold tenure in connection with grazing and
+agricultural farms. The object of the Government was to bring about
+close settlement. As it was recognised that it was not feasible at
+that time to devote the lands of Western Queensland to agriculture,
+provision was made for the gradual substitution of a smaller class of
+graziers for the pastoral lessees with their many hundreds of square
+miles of territory. Accordingly inducements, by way of fixity of
+tenure and compensation for improvements, were offered to pastoral
+tenants to surrender their existing leases and bring their holdings
+under the Act. The Crown was thereupon entitled to resume one-half,
+one-third, or one-fourth of such holdings, the proportion varying
+inversely with the length of time the leases had to run. These resumed
+areas were then divided into smaller holdings called "grazing farms,"
+the maximum area being 20,000 acres, which were to be opened to
+selection on a thirty years' lease, with periodical reappraisements
+of rent by the Land Board. It was believed that the lessees of these
+smaller holdings would so improve the country that its carrying
+capacity would be greatly increased, and the Crown would derive a
+larger revenue from its pastoral lands, whilst at the expiration of
+the leases agricultural settlement might be possible. The success of
+the grazing farm system has amply justified the expectations of
+the framers of the Act. The leasehold principle was also applied
+to agricultural farms, the maximum area of which was fixed at 1,280
+acres, with a fifty years' tenure, but the selector was given the
+right to acquire a freehold after ten years' (later reduced to five
+years) personal occupation. Although dropping the name of "homestead,"
+the Act maintained the homestead principle by providing for the
+freeholding of agricultural farms not exceeding 160 acres in area at
+2s. 6d. per acre after five years' personal residence by the selector.
+The Act, which practically superseded the Pastoral Leases Act of 1869,
+continued the right of pastoral lessees to depasture their stock on
+the resumed areas until they were required for closer settlement.
+It also repealed existing alienation Acts, and provided for all the
+contingencies which might be expected to arise. Among the repealed
+Acts were two which had given rise to much party contention in
+previous Parliaments--the Western Railway Act and the Railway Reserves
+Act, to which allusion is made in the parts of this work dealing with
+"Public Finance" and "Fifty Years of Legislation."
+
+[Illustration: SURPRISE CREEK FALLS, CAIRNS RAILWAY]
+
+Amending Acts were passed in 1885, 1886, 1889, 1891, 1892, 1894, and
+1895, but these do not call for mention except to say that the Act
+of 1891 introduced a new mode of selection called "unconditional,"
+providing for selections up to 1,280 acres at prices one-third greater
+than those for agricultural farms, and payable in twenty annual
+instalments.
+
+In 1890 an Act was passed providing for a five years' extension of
+leases held under the 1869 Act and not affected by the Act of 1884. In
+1892 an Act (extended in 1894, 1895, 1897, and 1898) was passed giving
+a seven years' extension of term to pastoral lessees, and an extension
+of five years (afterwards increased to seven years) to the lessees
+of grazing farms selected before the introduction of the bill and
+situated in the southern part of the State, who should enclose their
+holdings with rabbit-proof fences.
+
+In 1893 the Co-operative Communities Land Settlement Act was passed
+at a time of stress, with a view to enabling men of good character
+but without capital to settle on the land with the aid of Government
+advances. In all, twelve "self-governing communities" were formed with
+a total adult male membership of 485. In no case did the venture
+prove successful, and by an amending Act passed in 1895 the several
+communities were dissolved, the members thereof were absolved from all
+liability to the Government for advances made, and the land and assets
+were suitably apportioned among the remaining members of the dissolved
+groups, to the number of 88. They were assigned an area aggregating
+13,491 acres to be held on a five years' tenure at a rental of 3/4d.
+per acre per annum, subject to a condition of personal residence and
+to the purchase of the land during the fifth year at 2s. 6d. an acre.
+Only three-fourths of these 88 settlers brought their selections to
+freehold, and the last transaction was not closed till ten years
+had elapsed, instead of five, from the dissolution of the groups.
+Consequent on another period of depression, Parliament in 1905
+authorised another experiment by way of Government assistance to
+would-be settlers without means, but the communal element is not so
+prominent in the new measure, and the "self-government" principle is
+excluded. Only one settlement has been formed under the Act of 1905,
+and it is under Government control. While holding out some promises of
+success, these are not so tangible as to lead to further ventures of
+the sort. Indeed, the need for them has disappeared with the return of
+prosperity.
+
+The last comprehensive Act, extending over 101 pages of the
+Statute-book, was passed in 1897, and it still remains the principal
+Land Act, upon which all subsequent amending measures have been
+grafted.
+
+It is fitting to set out briefly what are the modes by which it is
+sought to secure settlement on the public lands of the State after
+half a century of legislation.[a] There is, first, the agricultural
+farm, in areas up to 1,280 acres on a tenure of twenty years and
+paying an annual rental of one-fortieth part of the purchasing price,
+such rentals being actually instalments of the price, and leaving only
+one-half of the price to be paid at the end of the term. The price
+cannot be lower than 10s. per acre, and there are conditions of
+occupation and improvement to be performed. There is the agricultural
+homestead in areas ranging up to 640 acres, the area varying inversely
+with the quality of the land. This form of settlement is subject to
+conditions of personal residence and improvement. The homesteads are
+capable of being converted into freeholds after five years and up to
+ten years for a total price of 2s. 6d. per acre, payable at the rate
+of 3d. per acre per annum. There is the unconditional selection in
+areas up to 1,280 acres, with no conditions to perform but the
+payment of rent during twenty years at the rate of 5 per cent. of
+the purchasing price each year, the purchasing price being one-third
+higher than that at which the land was available for agricultural farm
+selection. There are the grazing selections in the remoter districts
+in areas up to 60,000 acres. These selections are not capable of being
+made freehold, but are held on leasehold tenures of 14, 21, or 28
+years, at rentals ranging from 1/2d. to 6d. per acre per annum, and
+subject to conditions of occupation and fencing. There are the scrub
+selections not exceeding 10,000 acres each, intended to secure
+the destruction of useless scrub in the remoter districts and the
+conversion of the land into good pasture. The tenure is purely
+leasehold, with a term of thirty years and at a peppercorn rental
+for a period having relation to the extent of scrub to be destroyed.
+Leasehold tenures are preferred for the remoter lands, and they
+have the advantage of leaving the settler's capital free for the
+development of his land. In case any should prefer a leasehold tenure
+in the more closely settled districts, the law now provides for the
+substitution of "perpetual leases" for the agricultural farm tenure.
+
+The rapid spread of the prickly pear in some parts of the State has
+been a peremptory call for the occupation of the threatened country
+on any terms. Provision has accordingly been made for prickly pear
+selections under conditions of eradicating the pest, the value of the
+land being assessed at rates ranging from a sum paid by the Government
+to the settler in addition to a free gift of the land, to a sum
+perhaps as high as L1 per acre to be paid by the settler to the Crown,
+such payments being in annual instalments of one-fifth or one-tenth,
+and commencing ten or five years respectively after the commencement
+of the lease, the period of exemption from payment having to be
+devoted to the task of eradication.
+
+Until 1901 the competitive principle was general in the selection of
+Crown lands, but in that year provision was made by a special Act to
+allot land non-competitively to bodies of settlers coming from abroad,
+who naturally desired to be assured of obtaining land in proximity
+to each other before pulling up their stakes and migrating to a new
+sphere of activity. Successive amendments have been made in this law,
+and, while in its inception it had application only to agricultural
+homestead selection, it has since been extended to all forms of
+selection tenure.
+
+The great drought, which ended in 1902, has stamped its mark indelibly
+upon the land legislation of the State. The earliest cry for relief
+came from the far West, where the remaining tenancies under the
+Pastoral Leases Act of 1869 chiefly lay. Large tracts of country had
+become forfeited, and the Crown tenants, unable to hold on to the
+remnants of their runs at the rents chargeable under their leases,
+applied for relief. To meet their case, the Pastoral Leases Act of
+1900 was passed, which required the reoccupation of the abandoned
+country at nominal rents, and reduced the rents of the retained
+country to an extent that secured the reoccupation of 13,000 square
+miles. In the following year the Pastoral Holdings New Leases Act
+promised the relief of extended leases to the holders of pastoral
+country in the rest of the State, where the Act of 1884 operated; but
+the drought still continuing, a further appeal was made to Parliament,
+and in the Pastoral Leases Act of 1902 opportunity was given to
+lessees to secure extensions of leases up to forty-two years according
+to situation, subject to reappraisement of rent and to certain rights
+of resumption reserved to the Crown. The chief desideratum of the
+lessees was extended tenures to enable them to finance on more
+favourable terms and recover from their immense drought losses. In
+consideration of this concession and the surrender of resumption
+rights which it involved, the State had to look for increased rentals.
+The reassessments of the rentals under the new leases, however,
+have not compensated the State for the large concessions made to its
+tenants.
+
+The Closer Settlement Act of 1906 superseded the Agricultural
+Lands Purchase Acts, 1894 to 1901. These statutes provide for the
+acquisition by the Government of private estates for the purpose of
+subdivision and sale in areas adapted for closer settlement, payments
+being extended over twenty-five years. The principle is not quite
+impervious to criticism, for unless great prudence is exercised the
+acquisition of these large estates has a tendency to raise the value
+of agricultural land; but a few figures showing the settlement which
+has taken place furnish convincing proof that the primary object of
+the Legislature has been achieved, and that rich arable lands, which
+previously produced nothing but natural grasses for the sustenance of
+sheep and cattle, have become the homes of many hundreds of thriving
+yeomen farmers and the support of numerous rising townships. Since the
+passage of the first of these Acts in 1894, a total area of 537,449
+acres has been repurchased at a cost of L1,490,489. Of this area
+456,742 acres had been surrendered by the former owners at the close
+of 1908. By the same date 364,334 acres had been selected at an
+aggregate price of L1,050,864, and 10,677 acres, with the improvements
+thereon, had realised L70,727 at auction, the purchasing price of the
+whole area disposed of amounting to L1,144,081. The area remaining in
+the hands of the Government, after deducting roads and reserves, was
+78,781 acres, valued at L264,200, almost entirely consisting of land
+only recently acquired and not yet offered for settlement. On 31st
+December last, no less than 1,654 agricultural selectors, the majority
+with families, and holding among them 1,909 selections, were settled
+upon what but a few years ago were twenty-six sheep and cattle
+stations, with a mere handful of employees.
+
+It has been mentioned that the Alienation of Crown Lands Act of 1860
+provided for granting to any immigrant who had paid his passage-money,
+or to any other person by whom it had been paid, an L18 land order
+on arrival, and a further land order for L12 after he had resided two
+years in the colony. These land orders were made receivable as cash at
+any Crown land sale, and they led to a large traffic, as the fact that
+land orders could be bought from immigrants at a discount stimulated
+the demand for land, especially for town lots. At first these
+instruments could be bought at very low prices, but after a time the
+L18 land order had become of the recognised market value of L15 to L16
+cash, and could be readily purchased at those prices from agents in
+Queen-street, Brisbane. But the effect upon land sales revenue alarmed
+the Government, and after a time they refused to receive land orders
+as payment in lieu of cash at sales of other than country land. In
+1864 an Immigration Act was passed providing for the appointment of
+an Agent-General for Emigration in London, and for the repeal of the
+land-order sections of the 1860 Land Act. A new provision was made
+by which the Agent-General was empowered to issue to an approved
+passenger in London who had paid his passage-money a land-order
+warrant for L30. On arrival in the colony the passenger was granted in
+exchange for the warrant a non-transferable land order receivable as
+cash at face value at sales of suburban and country lands only. These
+restrictions lowered the market price of the instrument, although by
+means of a power of attorney the non-transferable provision was for a
+time evaded. Eventually, however, the restrictions were made so
+severe that for market purposes the land order was worth little, and
+immigrants who had come out and failed to settle on the land found
+themselves in possession of a document of no practicable value. The
+extent to which the land-order traffic prevailed will be understood
+when it is mentioned that, in 1865, of L218,431, the total revenue
+from land sales, only L59,461 was cash, the remainder being
+represented by land orders. By 1875 the system had become discredited,
+and was abolished by legislation, but outstanding land orders were
+still used. In 1883-4 the amount so received had fallen to L16, while
+the cash receipts for sales were L378,637. The total value of land
+orders received as cash between 1861 and 1883-4 was L853,583. Some
+public men have contended that, if the initial practice of receiving
+the land order at face value in payment for any Crown land sold at
+auction had been continued, the Treasury would have been recouped by
+the larger demand and higher prices realised, but obviously a system
+which stimulated speculation in land was not good for the country,
+besides which it encouraged dummying. In 1886 the Griffith Government
+determined to give the system a further trial, and in the Crown Lands
+Act Amendment Act of that year power was given to the Agent-General
+to issue land-order warrants to persons paying their own passages to
+Queensland. Each member of a family of twelve years of age and upwards
+was entitled to a L20 land order, and each child between the ages of
+one and twelve entitled the parent to a land order for L10. The land
+orders were not transferable, except in case of death, and were
+available for ten years for the payment of rent of Crown lands
+acquired by the immigrant. The Act authorising the issue of these land
+orders was repealed in 1894. The value of land orders issued under the
+Act amounted to L62,140, and of this sum only L8,956 was utilised. The
+great majority of the immigrants who received the orders had no desire
+to go on the land, and as the orders were not transferable they lapsed
+at the expiration of their currency to the extent of 85 per cent. of
+the whole.
+
+ [Footnote a: For fuller details regarding various forms of
+ land selection, see Appendix E, post.]
+
+[Illustration: FOREST SCENE NEAR WOOMBYE, NORTH COAST RAILWAY]
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX.
+
+APPROPRIATION OF LAND REVENUE.
+
+ Land Sales Receipts; not Consolidated Revenue.--Arguments used
+ in favour of Treating Proceeds as Ordinary Revenue.--Auction
+ Sales have now Practically Ceased.--Certain Proceeds Payable
+ into Loan Fund.--Special Sales of Land Act; Appropriation of
+ Receipts.
+
+
+The revenue from sales of land for the first quarter-century was
+L4,672,659, besides L853,583 representing grants made in consideration
+of land orders issued to immigrants but not included in the revenue
+and expenditure returns. Nor does it include the sum of L382,346
+received in cash for land sold within railway reserves and afterwards
+transferred to revenue. The latter amount must, however, be added to
+the cash receipts for land sold, which therefore totalled L5,055,005.
+
+The practice of treating proceeds of land sales as ordinary revenue
+has already been incidentally alluded to, but it may be well to refer
+more fully to the subject. It is held that the taxpayer ought annually
+to provide for current expenditure, and that if land is alienated
+from the Crown at all the net proceeds, after defraying the cost of
+administration, should be applied to the construction of public works
+that would otherwise be of a character to justify charging their cost
+to the Loan Fund.
+
+This principle in the abstract is unexceptionable; but in a new
+country much work is expected to be done by the Government for
+posterity in the nature of "invisible improvements"; in fact, it is
+so done, and cannot well be provided for by loan. Roads have to be
+cleared and formed, and buildings erected for the benefit of posterity
+as well as of those who so invest their money.
+
+Moreover, the advent of population enhances the value of both public
+and private estates, while the maintenance of great public works like
+railways involves in most cases a heavy revenue loss for years after
+the lines are open for traffic. Only in very recent times have our
+railway earnings approximated, after payment of working charges and
+maintenance, to the amount of the interest charge upon the capital
+invested in them; but they have immensely benefited the country by
+providing facilities for internal transport, and by enhancing the
+value of the land, Crown and other, which they intersect and make
+accessible. Years ago, when the railway debt of Queensland stood at
+about 17 millions, an official estimate showed that, in making good
+the annual deficiency of interest and working expenses on the various
+open lines, at least as much had been spent by the Treasury as
+the entire first cost of their construction. So that contemporary
+colonists have still a charge against posterity for public works to
+be handed down, even though the first cost remains a liability in the
+form of interest upon inscribed stock held by the public creditor.
+
+Further, it has to be said that, since the railways have begun nearly
+to defray interest upon capital, the auction sale of Crown land,
+except in small areas, has practically ceased. The receipts from
+auction sales in 1907-8 totalled only L33,391, and much of that
+sum would be absorbed were it charged with its share of the cost of
+administration. By the Land Sales Proceeds Act of 1906, all moneys
+received in payment for land sold under the authority of Part VI. of
+the Land Act of 1897--by auction sales of town, suburban, and country
+lands, or of such lands sold by selection after having been so
+offered--must be paid into the Loan Fund Account, and be applied to
+defraying the cost of such works as Parliament may from time to time
+determine shall be executed out of moneys standing to the credit of
+that fund. True, receipts for lands sold under the Special Sales of
+Land Act of 1901, being applied to the special purpose of retiring
+Treasury bills issued to make good revenue deficits, are excluded from
+the general law in this respect. But it is satisfactory that, even
+though the recognition of the principle that land is capital and not
+revenue has been tardy, it has now in Queensland the full force of
+statute law.
+
+As to the past, it has been argued with much reason that small areas
+alienated were for farming purposes, and soon became far more valuable
+than when held for grazing purposes by tenants of the Crown. As to
+the future, what Parliament seems determined to guard against by every
+possible means is the alienation of large areas of the public domain
+to persons who will use the land for speculative purposes, or who by
+locking it up will seek to check the wave of closer settlement which
+it is obviously in the best interests of the State to foster and
+stimulate.
+
+As the Special Sales of Land Act of 1901 still remains upon the
+Statute-book a few words in explanation of its provisions and objects
+may be useful. The first Act of this kind was passed in 1891--(1) to
+provide for maturing Treasury bills for L500,000 authorised but not
+issued in 1887; (2) to make provision for meeting Treasury bills for
+L500,000 floated to cover a revenue deficit in 1890; (3) to make good
+an anticipated deficit of L300,000 for the financial year 1891-2; and
+(4) to retire L120,945 worth of Brisbane Bridge debentures--a total
+of L1,420,945. Despite any statute to the contrary, country lands, not
+within twenty miles of a railway or the permanent survey of one, or of
+any navigable stream, were authorised to be sold by auction in areas
+of 320 acres to 5,120 acres, at the upset price of 10s. an acre.
+Payments might be extended over three years, but the unpaid
+instalments must bear 5 per cent. interest. Any land so offered and
+unsold would remain open for six months for purchase at the same price
+and on the same terms.
+
+The proceeds of these sales were to be applied (1) to payment of the
+sums appropriated by Parliament for the service of the financial years
+1891-2 and 1892-3 respectively, and (2) to the payment of interest
+upon and retirement of the Treasury bills before mentioned. In 1901
+the Philp Government were in financial trouble through federal charges
+and the unexampled drought, and they passed a Treasury Bills Act and a
+Special Sales of Land Act, the former for the sum of L530,000; and the
+proceeds of the latter to be applied (1) to making good any revenue
+deficiency during the years 1901-2 and 1902-3, and (2) to the payment
+of interest upon and retirement of the bills issued under the Treasury
+Bills Act. In 1902 another Treasury Bills Act covering L600,000 was
+passed by the same Government. The Auditor-General in his report for
+1907-8 showed that there were still outstanding L1,130,000 in Treasury
+bills issued under the 1901 and 1902 Acts, and maturing in 1912 and
+1913 respectively. In the same report the Auditor-General refers to
+the sum of L8,148 received from special sales of land during the year,
+and appropriated to the payment of interest on Treasury bills. For
+some years past these special sales of land have been stopped,
+but instalments of payments were received annually until last year
+(1907-8), when they amounted to L3,279; but none are now outstanding,
+and the Act is practically a dead letter.
+
+[Illustration: HAULING TIMBER, NORTH COAST RAILWAY]
+
+[Illustration: STONY CREEK BRIDGE AND FALLS, CAIRNS RAILWAY]
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X.
+
+LOCAL GOVERNMENT IN QUEENSLAND.
+
+ First Municipality Established.--Brisbane Bridge Lands.--Grant
+ for Town Hall.--Consolidating Municipalities Act.--Provincial
+ Councils Act.--Government Buildings not Rateable.--Brisbane
+ Bridge Debentures and Waterway Acts.--Municipal Endowment.
+ --Local Government Act of 1878.--Divisional Boards Act of
+ 1879; Success of the Act.--Local Works Loans Act.--Two Pounds
+ for One Pound Endowment Repealed.--Rating Powers Extended by
+ Local Authorities Act of 1902.--Cessation of Endowment.
+ --Valuation and Rating Act.--Decline in Land Values.
+ --Unequal Incidence of Rates Levied.--Efficiency of Local
+ Authorities.
+
+
+When Sir George Bowen proclaimed the establishment of Queensland there
+was only one municipality within the boundaries of the new colony.
+Brisbane had been incorporated just three months earlier, probably
+with the view of having the Mayor of a local authority to take his
+part in the inaugural celebrations. At that time the New South Wales
+Municipal Institutions Act of 1858 was in force, but it was quite
+inadequate to the needs of the country. Sir George Bowen, coming from
+residence among the crowded populations of Great Britain and several
+European countries, and recognising what powerful safeguards to
+public liberty municipal corporations had proved, publicly urged the
+establishment of local government in Queensland on every favourable
+opportunity.
+
+In 1861 two Municipalities Acts were passed, one empowering the
+Brisbane City Council to build a bridge across the river, and
+providing for endowment in the form of grants of Crown land not
+exceeding two-thirds of the unsold town and suburban allotments of
+Brisbane; also empowering the council to borrow for the purpose
+of erecting the structure. The other Act gave extended powers to
+municipal councils generally. It defined the rateable value of
+unoccupied lands to be 8 per cent. of their actual capital value, but
+the minimum rate of any allotment was not to be less than 10s. per
+annum. It also provided that unoccupied land might be leased for
+fourteen years by a council when rates had been permitted to fall into
+arrear for a term of four years. It further empowered a council to
+borrow on mortgage a sum not exceeding the estimated revenue for the
+ensuing three years. As additional endowment, it was provided that
+the Governor in Council might pay to a municipal council every year
+one-third of the proceeds of land sold within its jurisdiction; and
+where one-half of the land in a municipality had been sold the council
+were to be entitled to one-half of the proceeds of future sales.
+
+In 1863 an Act was passed giving the Brisbane Council power to erect a
+town hall on allotment 4 and part of allotment 3 of section 12, with a
+frontage to Queen street and Burnett lane respectively of 99 ft., and
+a depth of 138 ft., to be granted by the Government on the passing of
+the Act. The council were empowered to borrow L20,000 for the purposes
+of the hall. The Brisbane Waterworks Act empowered the Government to
+grant a site for the proposed works on the heads of Enoggera Creek,
+but the Government were to borrow the sum necessary for construction,
+and to hand over the money to the council as it might be required.
+
+In 1864 an amending and consolidating Municipal Institutions Act was
+passed giving larger and more specific powers to municipal bodies.
+In the same year a Provincial Councils Act was passed, empowering
+the Government to appoint such councils in the country districts, and
+place at their disposal money from time to time voted by Parliament
+for roads and bridges within their jurisdiction. But the members, not
+being elective, had no power to levy rates, so that the councils would
+at best have been no more than bodies delegated with power by the
+Works Department to carry out works with which the Government could
+not conveniently grapple. The only provincial council established
+under the Act, however, was one for the Peak Downs district, of which
+all the members were Crown lessees. That council had its place of
+meeting at Clermont, and on first assembling it resolved not to admit
+the Press to its meetings. This exclusive policy, combined with the
+class character of its members, made the council at once unpopular,
+and after spending L2,000 which had been placed to its credit by the
+Government it ingloriously collapsed.
+
+In 1865 an Act was passed dividing the Brisbane Municipality into six
+wards, each returning two members. In 1868 an amendment of the 1864
+and 1865 Acts was passed enabling councils to forbid the erection of
+inflammable buildings. In the following year an Act was passed which
+forbade the levy of rates upon Government buildings. An Act of the
+same year enabled the Governor in Council to rescind any proclamation
+of town or suburban lands.
+
+In 1870 the Brisbane Bridge Debentures Act and the Brisbane Waterway
+Act were passed. By the former the council were empowered to issue
+debentures, bearing 5 per cent. interest and covering L121,250, for
+the payment of its bridge liabilities. The preamble recited that
+a contract had been entered into with Mr. John Bourne for the
+construction of the bridge; that owing to alterations in the plan
+assented to by the Government the cost had been largely increased, and
+the work had in fact been suspended; that the bank overdraft, secured
+upon all the bridge lands and the rates, exceeded L100,000; and
+that Thomas Brassey, having supplied the ironwork of the bridge, had
+undertaken to complete the structure on certain conditions involved
+in the issue of the debenture loan above mentioned. The Waterway
+Act provided for the repayment to the council of the cost of certain
+waterways by the sale of lands specified in the schedule.
+
+In 1875 another Act was passed providing for the payment to the
+Brisbane Council of the cost of certain drainage works by the sale of
+city lands specified in its schedule. In the same year the Rockhampton
+Waterworks Act, being the first for a provincial body, was passed. In
+1876 an Act was passed for endowing municipalities to the extent of
+L2 for L1 on the rates collected for the first five years after
+incorporation and L1 for L1 in subsequent years.
+
+In 1878 was passed the ponderous Local Government Act, adapted from
+the recent Victorian legislation, but denounced by the Opposition
+in the Assembly at the time as far too cumbrous save for town
+municipalities. It formed, however, one of the bases of the Local
+Authorities Act of 1902. In 1879 a new departure was made by the first
+McIlwraith Government by passing a rudimentary measure--the Divisional
+Boards Act--in which the Government took power to apply the Act
+simultaneously to all parts of the colony. It gave power to levy
+rates, and therefore excited popular anti-tax demonstrations. But
+much that was said against the bill proved on investigation to be
+inaccurate, and the endowment it provided of L2 for L1 collected in
+rates for the term of five years ultimately went far to neutralise the
+hostility expressed towards the measure. Also the bill provided that
+to give the boards a start an additional L100,000 should be divisible
+among them as soon as their respective valuations had been made and
+a certified copy of each had been forwarded to the Treasury. After a
+stern and protracted struggle in the Assembly the bill was passed, and
+immediately the Colonial Secretary of the time (Mr. A. H. Palmer) cut
+into "divisions" the entire area of the colony outside the boundaries
+of existing municipalities, and proclaimed seventy-four local
+governing areas under that name, each in three subdivisions with nine
+members for each body. Then every division was invited to elect its
+first members, and rather more than one-half of them did so.
+Within four months from the passing of the Act--on 13th February,
+1880[a]--the whole of the members were gazetted, the Government having
+taken advantage of the power given to the Governor in Council to
+appoint the first members where no action had been initiated to elect
+them within ninety days after the passing of the Act. Thus the names
+of between 600 and 700 members were proclaimed on one day, and the
+new boards forthwith proceeded to put the Act into execution. In a
+comparatively short time valuations were made, and on receipt of a
+copy the Treasurer placed to the credit of the board, in the branch of
+the Queensland National Bank nearest to the division, an amount equal
+to 1s. in the pound of the valuation. This done, works were forthwith
+commenced in all parts of the country, and a few years later visitors
+from the South were wont to compliment the people of Queensland on the
+vast improvement made in their bush roads.
+
+In the following year (1880) the Local Works Loans Act was passed,
+and attracted attention in different parts of the Empire as the first
+measure that provided for advancing local loans by a Government on the
+scientific basis of a term measured by the life of each work, and in
+accordance with an actuarial scale set out in a table in the schedule.
+The longest term was forty years, that being given for the most
+durable works, the rate charged being 5 per cent. interest, with
+16s. 8d. per annum redemption money. Thus a council could borrow for
+waterworks on a forty years' loan, and redeem the principal as well
+as defray the interest charge, by payment of regular half-yearly
+instalments of L2 18s. 4d. per cent. during the term. This Act
+soon became very popular, and with slight amendments--one being the
+reduction of the interest charge to 4 per cent., and the half-yearly
+instalment in the case of a forty years' loan to L2 10s. 01/2d.
+per cent.--it still remains on the Statute-book as part of the Local
+Authorities Act of 1902. Several millions sterling have since been
+lent by the Government under this Act, and scarcely a local authority
+has defaulted except for a short period. The principle has also been
+extended to sugar works and other loans not contemplated originally;
+yet with firm administration, such as the Government for several years
+past have insisted upon, the future losses, if any, will be slight,
+and the benefit of the Act continue to be great.
+
+[Illustration: TIMBER GETTING, NORTH COAST DISTRICT]
+
+In 1887 Sir S. W. Griffith passed an amending and consolidating
+Divisional Boards Act in which many defects of the original measure
+were corrected. About the same time he passed an Act to relieve the
+Treasury from the excessive burden of the L2 for L1 endowment, which
+had been extended in 1884 for a second five-year period. Under the
+amended law only such sum as Parliament might vote in each year was to
+be rateably divided among all local authorities. After that time
+the endowment diminished until in 1893 it reached a very small sum.
+Afterwards the amount remained at about 6s. in the pound until 1902,
+when, in passing the new amending and consolidating Local Authorities
+Act of that year, the Philp Government made no provision for
+continuance of the endowment. In 1903, therefore, owing to the
+embarrassment of the Treasury in consequence of heavy deficits for
+several years in succession, the endowment altogether ceased, and
+since that time the Government have steadfastly refused to listen to
+proposals for renewing the payment, on the ground that each governing
+authority should raise its own revenue by taxation or otherwise, and
+not depend upon endowments collected by any other governing authority.
+The stoppage of the endowment was in some degree compensated for by
+the extension of the rating powers of the local authorities, but the
+exercise of these has no doubt accentuated the drop which occurred
+in assessment values after the crisis of 1893. Some councils,
+through failure to make use of their powers of rating, have had an
+insufficient income, so that in parts of the country the roads are now
+in a less traffickable condition than they were a quarter of a century
+ago. In other cases, however, the local bodies have so used the
+powers conferred upon them that they make no complaint of insufficient
+income.
+
+From the day of the presentation to Parliament of the Divisional
+Boards Bill there had always been an outcry, among the farming
+ratepayers chiefly, against the taxation of improvements. In 1890,
+therefore, after ten years' experience, the Government of the
+coalition, whose leaders had long been severed by difference of
+opinion on the subject of land taxation, perceived in a universal levy
+on the unimproved value, so called, a method of mutual reconciliation
+which would meet the demands of many true exponents of local
+government principles, and they agreed to introduce the new system.
+The "unimproved value" is by no means an accurate definition of what
+either the taxpayers or the Legislature at the time desired. But no
+one has yet discovered a more satisfactory definition, and therefore
+it stands.
+
+Up to 1890 the assessment had been on the net rent a property might
+be reasonably expected to yield after deducting the cost of rates
+and insurance and the amount necessary to maintain the property in a
+condition to command such rent. This was, in short, the old basis of
+assessment in the mother country; but to meet the objection to the
+assessment of improvements the Government, in introducing the first
+Divisional Boards Bill, had modified the valuation clause by the
+proviso that the improvements on land should be assessed at one-half
+their value. This was a modification of the New Zealand assessment
+method, and it gave fair satisfaction for a time.
+
+Country ratepayers for the most part approved the change to the
+unimproved value assessment; but speculators in unoccupied city,
+town, and suburban lands regarded it as a gross injustice. They not
+unnaturally complained that an allotment bare, or with a mere hut upon
+it, would pay as much in rates under the new system as the adjoining
+allotment which might be the site of spacious business premises or
+of a palatial dwelling. To this the reply was that the speculative
+holding of city and suburban lands inflicted gross injustice upon the
+man who wanted at existing value an allotment for his own use.
+
+The Valuation and Rating Act of 1890 passed, however; and the law as
+it stands has the undoubted merit of simplicity in valuations. On the
+other hand, the rate levied under the unimproved value assessment upon
+vacant lands is sometimes oppressive, and appreciably reduces their
+capital value. Another unforeseen effect has also been realised. The
+value of a highly improved allotment tends to become depressed to
+the value of the unproductive and unoccupied allotment contiguous or
+adjacent to it. Hence an intending buyer is apt to ascertain the local
+authority valuation of any land he needs, and to regulate his price
+accordingly. In a buoyant land market this might not much affect the
+selling value, but for twenty years past the land market for city or
+suburban properties has been the reverse of buoyant. So the unimproved
+value mode of assessment has apparently assisted to make a substantial
+reduction in the market value of city and suburban properties. But
+that is perhaps a less evil than may at first sight appear. The
+speculative inflation of land values is simply a tax upon the user
+for all time; and the moment the income-earning value is exceeded the
+excess must be regarded as an unjust charge upon posterity.
+
+Of course land values will eventually find their true level, whatever
+law of rating may be in force. It may be conceded that the unimproved
+assessment has caused distress among landowners who had no means of
+improving their properties, and could only find a market for them at
+a heavy sacrifice. Still there is no disposition on the part of the
+majority of ratepayers to revert to the old annual value system, and
+there is not likely to be any alteration in the law in this respect
+unless for the removal of some obvious administrative anomaly. For,
+as the coalition leaders agreed nineteen years ago, the local rate has
+become a land tax pure and simple, and if it be held that more money
+is wanted for development the simpler course is to allow the local
+authorities to give another twist to the rating screw. This, as a
+matter of fact, most of them have of late years done, and in many
+local jurisdictions the rate is now 3d. in the pound, when twenty
+years ago only 1d. or 11/2d. was levied. In 1884 the total local
+rates levied were L120,479; in 1908 the total was L452,052 for, it
+must be remembered, an identical aggregate area. A local authorities'
+rate has the distinct advantage in a young State like Queensland that,
+whereas a Treasury land tax would reach only the freeholders of
+less than 20,000,000 acres, the local government rate is levied upon
+460,000 square miles.
+
+The subjoined table is compiled from Statistics of Queensland for 1884
+and 1908 respectively:--
+
+
+AMOUNT LEVIED BY LOCAL AUTHORITIES.
+
+ ------------------------+-------------------------+------------------------
+ Year 1884. | Year 1908. | Increases, 1908.
+ ------------------------+-------------------------+------------------------
+ CITIES AND TOWNS-- L | CITIES AND TOWNS-- L | CITIES AND TOWNS-- L
+ General Rates 46,208 | General Rates 150,744 | General Rates 104,536
+ | |
+ Separate 4,845 | Separate} | Separate or
+ | } 87,155 |
+ Special 7,583 | Special } | Special 74,727
+ ------- | -------- | --------
+ Total L58,636 | Total L237,899 | Total L179,263
+ | |
+ DIVISIONS-- | SHIRES-- | SHIRES--
+ Total L61,843 | Total L214,153 | Total L152,310
+ ------- | -------- | --------
+ Grand Total L120,479 | Grand Total L452,052 | Grand Total L331,573
+ ------------------------+-------------------------+------------------------
+
+Thus, since the unimproved value system came into force, the levies
+of the local authority rates have multiplied about three and a-half
+times. In 1884, when the first quarter-century closed, the divisional
+boards drew L2 for L1 as Treasury endowment, which, assuming the
+rates were all collected, made their incomes from the combined sources
+L185,529 for the year. In 1908, without a penny of endowment, their
+successors'--the shire councils--rate levy totalled L214,153, or
+L28,624 in excess of both rates and endowment in 1884. In 1884 the
+city and town councils levied rates amounting to L58,636, which with
+endowment added should have given them L117,272. In 1908 the cities
+and towns levied an aggregate of L237,899, an increase upon 1884 of
+L120,627, despite the loss of the L1 for L1 endowment.
+
+These figures are interesting in view of the agitation for a Treasury
+land tax. They show that in 1908, with a total of 53,948 city and town
+ratepayers, their rate contribution was on the average L4 8s. 2d. per
+ratepayer. At the same time 97,553 shire ratepayers contributed the
+average of only L2 3s. 11d. each. The wide discrepancy between the
+payments of town and country ratepayers seems anomalous, but when
+it is recollected that the urban councils, of which there are only
+thirty-five, undertake many public services, and that the entire area
+of incorporated cities and towns is only about 354 square miles, it
+will be realised that the circumstances widely differ from those of
+the shires, whose various jurisdictions embrace almost the entire area
+of the State, the official estimate being 669,901 square miles. This
+area includes 210,359 square miles of unoccupied country, much of
+which is traversed by roads, but which presumably yields no rate
+revenue. Hence no useful comparison can be made between the rate
+levies of town and country local authorities respectively. At the same
+time a local "land" tax--which ranges from the general-rate of 1/2d.
+in the pound in the case of shires, to 3d. in the pound, besides
+special and separate rates, in cities and towns, and which makes the
+average total contribution of town ratepayers more than twice the
+amount levied upon country ratepayers--may at no distant time call
+for rectification, especially if a so-called bursting-up tax should be
+deemed necessary to meet the wants of close settlement.
+
+Meanwhile there is room for congratulation in the fact that every
+square mile of the vast area of the State--coastal islands alone
+excepted--is incorporated, and that 160 local authorities with 1,310
+members carry on the entire local government work of the country.
+These men, unlike members of Parliament, are unremunerated by the
+State, even free railway passes not being conceded to enable them to
+attend the periodical meetings. The alderman or shire councillor gives
+purely honorary service, and relieves the State Government of a vast
+amount of worry and expense.
+
+[Illustration: CAIRNS RANGE AND ROBB'S MONUMENT, NORTH QUEENSLAND]
+
+One good effect of local self-government is the exclusion from
+Parliament of the pestilent road-and-bridge member who in former
+years made himself so troublesome to Ministers and so often twisted
+the decision of the Assembly on important questions.
+
+It would be a bad thing indeed for Queensland if the local
+authorities, or any substantial percentage of them, became
+inefficient. There may be room for anxiety at evidences of decadence
+which at times come to the surface; but that local government in
+Queensland is a vigorous and living entity is fairly evident from
+the fact that with very few exceptions the 160 city, town, and shire
+councils are members of the Local Authorities' Association which
+annually makes itself heard in conference in Brisbane. Manifestly the
+spirit of decentralisation is not dead in Queensland. The manner in
+which the various bodies have survived the stoppage of the Treasury
+endowment, simultaneously with the thrusting upon them of many new
+responsibilities by the Act of 1902, must be regarded as a clear
+indication that local government in Queensland retains undiminished
+vitality.
+
+ [Footnote a: See "Queensland Government Gazette" of date
+ mentioned.]
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XI.
+
+PUBLIC INSTRUCTION.
+
+ Primary Education: Board of National Education; Education Act
+ of 1860; Board of General Education; Education Act of 1875;
+ Department of Public Instruction; Higher Education in Primary
+ Schools; Itinerant Teachers; Status of Teachers; Statistics.
+ --Private Schools.--Secondary Education: Grammar Schools Act;
+ Endowments, Scholarships, and Bursaries; Success of Grammar
+ Schools; Exhibitions to Universities; Expenditure.--Technical
+ Education: Beginning of System; Board of Technical Instruction;
+ Transfer of Control to Department of Public Instruction;
+ Statistics; Technical Instruction Act; Continuation Classes;
+ Schools of Arts and Reading Rooms.--University: Royal
+ Commissions; University Bill; Standardised System of Education.
+
+
+From 10th December, 1859, the date of the founding of Queensland, to
+30th September, 1860, primary education was under the control of a
+Board of National Education appointed by the Governor in Council. That
+board consisted of Sir Charles Nicholson (chairman), Messrs. R. R.
+Mackenzie, William Thornton, George Raff, and D. R. Somerset; the
+secretary was William Henry Day. There were then only two national
+schools in the whole of Queensland--namely, one in Drayton and one in
+Warwick. The system of primary education obtaining in New South Wales
+was continued, but the subject of education was one of the earliest
+matters which received the consideration of the first Parliament of
+Queensland, and in 1860 an Act to provide for primary education was
+passed. The Bill was initiated in the Legislative Council by Captain
+O'Connell, and Mr. R. G. W. Herbert had charge of the measure in the
+Legislative Assembly. The object of the Bill was to provide primary
+education under one general and comprehensive system, and to afford
+facilities to persons of all denominations for the education of their
+children in the same school without prejudice to their religious
+beliefs.
+
+
+PRIMARY EDUCATION.
+
+The Act provided for the appointment of a Board of General Education
+to consist of five members, together with a Minister of the Crown who
+would, _ex officio_, act as chairman. The members of the first Board
+were:--Mr. R. R. Mackenzie (chairman), Dr. W. Hobbs (vice-chairman),
+and Messrs. W. H. Day, J. F. McDougall, W. J. Munce, and George Raff.
+
+The scheme of primary education which the board framed was based
+generally upon the national system in operation in Ireland. Schools
+were divided into two classes--vested and non-vested. The vested
+schools were unsectarian in character. The aid granted by the board
+towards the establishment, equipment, and up-keep of schools varied
+from time to time, and ranged from one-half to two-thirds. The board
+appointed the teachers. The salaries of teachers were supplemented
+by school fees, ranging from 3d. to 1s. 6d. per week for each scholar
+according to his standard in the school work. When the board took
+office there were 10 teachers, 493 pupils, and 4 schools--Drayton,
+Warwick, Brisbane (boys), and Brisbane (girls). The total expenditure
+in 1860 was L1,615 2s. 3d. School fees were abolished by the Premier,
+Mr. Lilley, from the 1st of January, 1870, and since that date primary
+State education has been free, Queensland being the first of the
+Australian colonies to adopt the principle of free public education.
+
+The Education Act of 1860 was superseded by the State Education Act of
+1875, which came into operation on 1st January, 1876, and is still
+in force. When passed it was regarded as the most progressive Act
+in Australia. Its author was Mr. S. W. Griffith, the present Chief
+Justice of the Commonwealth, and he was the first Minister for Public
+Instruction. The first Under Secretary was Mr. C. J. Graham. On 31st
+December, 1875, there were 230 schools in operation, the aggregate
+enrolment for the year being 33,643, and the average attendance
+16,887. The number of teachers employed was 595, and the total
+expenditure for the year was L83,219 14s. 9d.
+
+The new Act provided that the whole system of public instruction in
+Queensland, formerly administered by the Board of General Education,
+should be transferred to a department of the public service, to be
+called the Department of Public Instruction.
+
+The Act provided that one-fifth of the cost must be contributed
+locally in the first instance towards the purchase of a school
+site, the erection of the necessary buildings, and the providing of
+furniture; thereafter the State bore the whole expenditure. Thus the
+State defrayed the total cost of repairs and maintenance, renewals,
+additions, and the like. State aid to non-vested schools was withdrawn
+as from 31st December, 1880.
+
+In 1895 a resolution was agreed to by the Legislative Assembly in
+favour of the establishment of superior State schools with a view to
+providing higher education for children in towns and populous centres
+where grammar schools did not exist. The ultimate result of this
+action was the passing of the State Education Act Amendment Act of
+1897, which gave the Governor in Council power to prescribe that any
+subjects of secular instruction might be subjects of instruction in
+primary schools. The department immediately took advantage of this
+amending Act, and provided for the teaching of mathematics, higher
+English, and science in the fifth and sixth classes.
+
+So far as the resources at its disposal have permitted, the Department
+of Public Instruction has done what it could to bring primary
+education within the reach of all the children of the State, and it
+may be safely claimed that wherever twelve children can be gathered
+together there exists a school. But where the children cannot be
+gathered into groups the department goes to the homes of the pupils.
+Itinerant teachers, fully equipped with buggies, camping outfits,
+school requisites, and other necessaries, traverse the sparsely
+settled districts in the far West and North where the establishment of
+schools is not possible. The travelling teachers look for the homes
+of the pupils, be those homes rude wayside inns, log cabins, or even
+tents, and an effort is made to visit each home not less than four
+times a year. Under this system the little ones are at least taught
+to read, to write, and to count. The itinerant teacher system was
+initiated in 1901, when one teacher was appointed. There are now
+twelve of these teachers, and the expenditure in this direction has
+risen from L411 per annum to L5,129 per annum.
+
+In 1906 the department began to appoint trained teachers to the charge
+of all schools where the attendance exceeded twelve. By this process
+properly qualified teachers will soon be in charge of 90 per cent. of
+the schools of the State. One of the most difficult problems which
+has to be faced in England, Scotland, America, and also in some of our
+sister States, is the adequate staffing of small country schools by
+efficient teachers. Queensland has solved that problem, and it is
+doubtful if any country has done better in that respect.
+
+Primary school teachers are officers of the State, and are not
+subject to the caprices of boards or local committees; they enjoy the
+protection and privileges of the Public Service Act, and the interests
+of no branch of the public service are more zealously protected by
+Parliament. They stand high in public estimation in Queensland,
+and that estimation is steadily rising. The pay on the whole is
+good--particularly that of head teachers, and the conditions of
+service are by no means unattractive.
+
+In 1908 the total expenditure on education (including school
+buildings) was L393,378 1s. 8d.; the total number of departmental
+schools open during that year was 1,141, the net enrolment of pupils
+being 94,193, and the average daily attendance 67,309.
+
+[Illustration: VIEW OF GYMPIE FROM NASHVILLE RAILWAY STATION]
+
+[Illustration: COKE OVENS, IPSWICH DISTRICT]
+
+
+PRIVATE SCHOOLS.
+
+The number of private schools in operation in Queensland during 1908
+was 157, namely:--Church of England, 8; Roman Catholic, 61; Lutheran,
+2; undenominational, 86. These schools are not subsidised by the
+State. The number of teachers employed in them during the year
+totalled 665. The total enrolment of scholars was 14,098--males,
+5,934; females, 8,164. The total average number of scholars attending
+the schools was 11,928--males, 5,114; females, 6,814.
+
+
+SECONDARY EDUCATION.
+
+In 1860, that is within one year of the founding of Queensland as a
+separate State, an Act was passed to provide for the establishment
+of grammar schools, in which was to be given an education higher than
+that which could be given in the elementary schools. The following
+remarks made by Mr. R. G. W. Herbert, who introduced the bill in the
+Legislative Assembly, are very interesting. He said: "The question of
+education might be considered under three heads as primary, grammar
+school, and collegiate. The bill introduced into the other branch
+of the Legislature was intended to provide for primary education,
+principally under the national system, and would make adequate
+provision for imparting fundamental instruction at a cheap rate to all
+classes of youth without distinction of creed or religious profession.
+The bill he now introduced was intended to provide for a higher order
+of instruction of a useful and thoroughly practical character by
+establishing grammar schools easily accessible to the colonial youth
+of all denominations throughout the colony.... It was desirable
+that the instruction to be afforded in the grammar schools should
+be afforded at a cheap rate, so that as many as possible might avail
+themselves of it, and that it should be such as would best qualify the
+youth of the colony for discharging the duties that would devolve upon
+them in after life."
+
+Captain O'Connell, who had charge of the measure in the Legislative
+Council, said: "It was merely a sequel to the Primary Education Bill,
+and was designed to give those who might desire it a higher education
+than could be afforded by the primary schools. It was a matter of the
+greatest importance that a system of this kind should be established
+on a broad and permanent foundation, and therefore it was not
+difficult to perceive that the creation of primary schools such as
+were contemplated under the other bill would be found extremely useful
+in carrying out the great objects now proposed to be accomplished."
+
+Under the provisions of the Grammar Schools Act a school may be
+established in any locality where a sum of not less than L1,000 has
+been raised locally, and the Governor in Council may grant towards
+the erection of school buildings and a residence for the principal a
+subsidy equal to twice the amount raised locally. An amending Act
+was passed in 1864 providing that when certain conditions had been
+complied with an annual endowment of L1,000 might be granted to each
+grammar school. Each school is governed by a board of seven trustees;
+of these, four are appointed by the Government, and three are
+nominated by the subscribers to the building fund; they hold office
+for three years.
+
+There are ten grammar schools in the State--seven in Southern, two
+in Central, and one in Northern Queensland. The Ipswich Boys' Grammar
+School was the first to be established; it was erected in 1863. The
+last established was the school for girls in Rockhampton, which was
+founded in 1892.
+
+Each of the schools has qualified for the annual endowment of L1,000;
+of this amount the State pays L750 a year unconditionally, and L250
+on the understanding that the school will receive a certain number of
+State scholars per annum, the scholarships held by these pupils being
+known as district scholarships. Queensland has always been liberal
+in the granting of scholarships, and at the present time no less than
+102, including the district scholarships, are granted every year; of
+these, 70 are available for boys, and 32 for girls. Each scholarship
+has a currency of three years. The State also grants seven bursaries
+to boys and three to girls. A bursary entitles the holder to free
+education at an approved secondary school for three years, together
+with a cash allowance of L30 per annum. The trustees of the various
+grammar schools also grant scholarships in addition to those provided
+by the State. In 1908 the aggregate enrolment of pupils in attendance
+at the grammar schools was 1,101, with an average daily attendance
+of 970; and of these pupils fully one-third were the holders of
+scholarships. Free railway passes to the nearest grammar school are
+granted to the holders of scholarships.
+
+To assist the children of poor parents to avail themselves of the
+scholarships which they may win, the Government grant a living
+allowance of L12 per annum to the winners of scholarships, provided
+that the income of the parents does not exceed L3 per week, or L30
+per annum for each bona fide member of the family. This rule came into
+operation on the 1st of January, 1909.
+
+It is generally recognised that the Queensland grammar schools do
+good work; the success of their students in the junior and senior
+examinations of the Sydney University abundantly justifies this
+conclusion. Each school constructs its own programme, but, broadly
+speaking, the curriculum of the several schools is designed to lead
+up to the Sydney University. As each school practically shapes its own
+course, the success of the institution depends very largely upon the
+personality, efficiency, and vigour of the principal. In addition to
+the State-endowed grammar schools there are several other secondary
+schools. Some of these are denominational, and others are conducted by
+private persons. Schools of this class are not endowed by the State,
+but the winners of State scholarships or bursaries may attend these
+institutions if the Governor in Council is satisfied that they are of
+a sufficiently high standard.
+
+Queensland has not so far placed the coping-stone on her educational
+system by establishing a University, but each year she grants three
+exhibitions to Universities outside the State. The exhibitions
+are open to competition, and the test examination is the senior
+examination of the Sydney University. Each exhibition has a currency
+of three years, and is worth L100 a year. The winners may attend any
+University approved by the Governor in Council.
+
+It will thus be seen that Queensland has been fairly liberal in
+providing the means of higher education for her children. A comparison
+with her sister States of New South Wales and Victoria emphasises this
+fact. During the year 1906-7 New South Wales, with a population of
+1,528,697, and a revenue of L13,392,435, granted L12,945 towards
+secondary education; Victoria, with a population of 1,231,940, and a
+revenue of L8,345,534, granted L5,874; Queensland, with a population
+of 535,113, and a revenue of L4,307,912, granted L12,909, this
+amount being exclusive of the L900 per annum granted on account of
+exhibitions to Universities. In 1908 the amount granted by the State
+towards secondary education in Queensland was L14,272 11s. 11d.
+
+
+TECHNICAL EDUCATION.
+
+The system of technical education in Queensland is in its infancy, but
+no branch is likely to make more rapid and lusty growth or to have a
+more important bearing upon the industrial and commercial development
+of the State.
+
+The Brisbane Technical College has been in existence as a distinct
+institution since 1882. It is only since July, 1905, that the
+Education Department has been closely associated with the
+administration of technical education. Previous to 1902 technical
+colleges, with the exception of the Brisbane College, were carried on
+in connection with schools of arts under the control of local
+committees, the State subsidising the colleges to the extent of L1 for
+each L1 paid in fees or subscribed for technical college purposes.
+
+In 1902 a Board of Technical Education was created; the board held
+office until 1905, when this branch of education was placed under
+the control of the department, and a special officer was appointed to
+supervise the work. Endowment is now paid upon a differential scale,
+the distribution being based on the general and practical utility of
+the subjects taught, the subsidy ranging from 10s. to L3 for every L1
+collected in fees. There were seventeen colleges in operation during
+1908. The progress which has been made during the past five years is
+shown in the following table:--
+
+ ---------------------+---------------------+----------------
+ Year. | Number of | Endowment.
+ |Individual Students. |
+ ---------------------+---------------------+----------------
+ 1904 | 3,600 | L4,732 4 6
+ 1905 | 3,892 | 5,460 4 11
+ 1906 | 4,321 | 7,930 13 5
+ 1907 | 4,702 | 9,610 4 2
+ 1908 | 5,187 | 10,719 12 7
+ ---------------------+---------------------+----------------
+
+The importance of a highly developed system of technical education has
+been fully realised in this State, and in 1908 a Technical Instruction
+Act was passed. It provides for the establishment of a central
+technical college in Brisbane which shall be maintained by, and be
+under the direct control of, the State. It is intended that this
+college shall be the recognised technical institute of Queensland,
+and it is hoped that it may ultimately be one of the most important
+institutions of the kind in Australia. The colleges outside the
+metropolis will be affiliated with the central college, but will
+remain under local control.
+
+In addition to liberal assistance to technical education, provision
+has been made for evening continuation classes. These classes are to
+enable pupils who have left school before completing their primary
+education to continue their education; to assist persons to obtain
+instruction in special subjects relating to their employment; and to
+prepare students for the technical colleges. The classes are liberally
+endowed by the State, and very comprehensive regulations have been
+framed for their administration, the system being probably the best of
+its kind in the Commonwealth.
+
+[Illustration: GULF CATTLE READY FOR MARKET]
+
+[Illustration: BRIGALOW COUNTRY, WARRA, DARLING DOWNS]
+
+[Illustration: HEREFORD COWS, DARLING DOWNS]
+
+Schools of arts and reading rooms are also fostered by the State. A
+grant of 10s. is made for each L1 of subscriptions or donations, but
+the grant to any one institution cannot exceed L150 per annum.
+
+The State subsidises reading rooms at shearing sheds, sugar mills,
+and meat works to the extent of L1 for L1, with a view to assisting
+to provide reading matter, and such suitable recreation games as
+draughts, chess, &c., for the workers in those industries.
+
+The amount contributed by the State towards schools of arts and
+reading rooms is L5,000 per annum, and in 1908 there were 181 of these
+institutions.
+
+
+UNIVERSITY.
+
+The question of establishing a University has been under consideration
+from time to time for the past thirty-five years, and more than one
+Royal Commission has been appointed to inquire into and report upon
+the subject. In 1874 a commission recommended the immediate foundation
+of a University. In 1891 another commission was appointed, and made a
+similar recommendation. For various reasons, however, but principally
+financial stringency, no action was taken until September, 1899,
+when the Government introduced a bill for the establishment of a
+University. Unfortunately the bill did not become law, and Queensland
+remained without a University for another decade.
+
+The Government programme for the first session of 1909 included a
+University Bill, but owing to the untimely dissolution of the Assembly
+nothing was done in the matter. When Parliament met again on 2nd
+November, the bill was the first measure proceeded with. Both Houses
+being unanimously in favour of establishing a University on modern,
+democratic lines, it was speedily passed, and on 10th December,
+the jubilee of the foundation of Queensland, Government House was
+dedicated to the purposes of the University by His Excellency the
+Governor, Sir William MacGregor, in the presence of a large and
+representative gathering of citizens. With the State system of primary
+education established on a sound basis; technical education placed on
+a firm foundation and progressing steadily; secondary education
+linked to the other branches, and all leading towards the University,
+Queensland will have a system of education which will place her on a
+level with the most progressive of the nations.
+
+
+
+
+PART III.--OUR JUBILEE YEAR.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I.
+
+GENERAL REVIEW.
+
+ Good Seasons and General Prosperity.--Land Settlement
+ and Immigration.--The Sugar Crop.--Gold and Other
+ Minerals.--Reduction in Cost of Mining and Treatment
+ of Ores.--Vigorous Railway Extension.--Mileage Open for
+ Traffic.--Efficiency of 3 ft. 6 in. Gauge.--Our Railway
+ Investment.--The National Association Jubilee Show.
+ --The General Election.--The Mandate of the Constituencies.
+ --Government Majority.--Practical Extinction of Third
+ Party.--Labour a Constitutional Opposition.--Federal
+ Agreement with States.--Federal Union Vindicated.
+
+
+During the half-century of Queensland's existence she has never
+experienced a more prosperous year than that of her Jubilee. Not only
+have the seasons been good, the rains well distributed though in
+some parts light, but prices of staple products have been high in the
+world's markets. The increase of sheep, cattle, and horses has
+been unusually large this year; the clip of wool has been highly
+satisfactory both in respect of quality and market value; the yield of
+butter and cheese has been above the average; and crops generally
+have been remunerative to the farmer. The wheat crop at the time
+this chapter is being written promises well, the area showing a
+considerable increase upon last year, while prices are certainly
+above the average. Trade and commerce have consequently been brisk and
+sound, and nearly all classes of the community have participated
+in the prosperity that has prevailed. Settlement upon the land has
+progressed by leaps and bounds; immigrants have begun to flow into
+the country in encouraging numbers, and, with few exceptions, the new
+arrivals have found a market for their labour at wages contrasting
+favourably with their earnings in the mother land.
+
+Of all staple products sugar alone shows declension in yield this
+year, but that arises, not from the season of 1909, but from the
+unprecedentedly severe frosts of the previous year. Yet, despite
+the lessened yield of cane, the sugar-growers do not complain of bad
+times, nor is their outlook discouraging.
+
+The gold yield has continued to fall off, but that is partly due to
+the prosperity of the pastoral and agricultural industries, which have
+attracted both capital and labour that under other circumstances would
+have been employed in prospecting for the precious metal. Silver and
+the baser metals have also exhibited a shrinkage in output, but that
+is explained by the low prices which have ruled since the American
+crisis of two years ago. Two of the great mining companies in Central
+Queensland--the Mount Morgan Gold Mining Company and the Great Fitzroy
+Copper Mining Company--have both had a prosperous year, having
+found in simultaneous mining for gold and copper abundant scope for
+enterprise and energy; and improved methods of raising ore, as well as
+constantly lessened expense of treatment, have made the prospect for
+the future reassuring. Large profits are being made to-day in the
+treatment of the less rich but more abundant ores, which could not
+have been utilised even ten years ago except at ruinous loss. It is
+now recognised that a well-organised laboratory is as essential in the
+equipment of a great mine as a corps of skilled miners or a range of
+smelting furnaces. Hence it is that the mining outlook is encouraging,
+and that in the opinion of scientific experts the industry in
+Queensland has scarcely yet passed the infantile stage.
+
+It is natural that in accordance with the progressive spirit of the
+times the Government should have induced Parliament to authorise the
+expenditure of much more than the recent average amount of loan money
+in the construction of railways and other public works. No less than
+eleven railways, as stated in the Commissioner's report recently
+published, have been under construction this year. These lines are
+expected to be completed within a few months, so that nearly 4,000
+miles will be open for traffic before the close of the financial year.
+Besides this large mileage for a population of 568,000 persons, 446
+miles of other railways and tramways, more or less under the control
+of the State, are available for public traffic. Being of the same
+gauge as the State railways, they have been the means of developing
+large areas and materially improving the position of the Government
+lines. Thus the length of railway which will be open for traffic
+before 30th June, 1910, will amount to 4,320 miles of the standard 3
+ft. 6 in. gauge, which will be equal to the traffic of a comparatively
+dense population. The increased breadth of rolling-stock has been
+found to conduce to comfort without imperilling the safety of
+passengers, and by the use of heavier rails and more powerful engines
+the carrying capacity of the narrow-gauge lines has of late years been
+greatly increased.[a]
+
+The Commissioner puts the total cost of our railway system on 30th
+June last, including L1,139,405 spent on lines not yet open, at
+L24,534,727. The total authorised outlay is, however, given as
+L27,221,805, so that at the rate of expenditure of last year the
+balance unexpended will enable construction to be continued for over
+two years. The net revenue available for the defraying of interest
+accruing on capital for the financial year 1908-9 was L883,610,[b]
+equal to L3 7s. 6d. per cent. The mean rate of interest payable on
+the total public debt of Queensland, which includes much stock bearing
+more than 31/2 per cent., is L3 14s. 1d. per cent., so that our
+railways may be deemed almost directly reproductive; and, what is
+still more satisfactory, they are rapidly improving in net earning
+capacity. As every extension adds to the volume of traffic, apart
+altogether from the added value given to Crown lands by providing them
+with railway communication, every inducement is held out to maintain a
+vigorous policy of construction. There is every reason to believe that
+in a few years our railway system will be the greatest and most
+stable of all contributors to the Consolidated Revenue; and when it is
+recollected that forty-five years ago there was not a mile of railway
+or tramway open for traffic in Queensland, the progress made in
+providing transport facilities is brought out in bold relief.
+
+One of the most noteworthy events of the Jubilee Year was the
+thirty-fourth exhibition of the National Agricultural and Industrial
+Association. This exhibition is the occasion of the most generally
+observed holiday of the year in the metropolis, and attracts thousands
+of visitors from all parts of Queensland, and many from the Southern
+States. It has come to be regarded as the annual meeting-ground of
+friends from widely separated localities. Year by year the attendance
+of visitors has grown, and the interest taken in the display has
+increased. This year special efforts were put forth by the council
+of the Association; and, fearing that their own resources would prove
+unequal to the strain, they applied to the Government for a jubilee
+grant. But the Government refused to do more than provide jubilee
+medals for certain classes of successful exhibitors, and enter some
+splendid exhibits from the State farms and others illustrative of the
+mineral wealth of Queensland. They held that to accede to the request
+would be to supply a precedent for similar applications from kindred
+associations in provincial towns, and that one of the glories of the
+metropolitan exhibition is that it is a self-supporting, self-reliant
+institution. The sequel proved the correctness of this view, for the
+exhibition far exceeded all predecessors in magnitude, and gave a
+handsome profit to the National Association, which richly deserved
+such a reward for months of self-sacrificing work.
+
+[Illustration: ABOVE STONY CREEK FALLS, CAIRNS RAILWAY]
+
+The official opening was attended by unusual pomp and ceremony, the
+Governor-General of the Commonwealth, the Earl of Dudley, performing
+the task of declaring the exhibition open. His Excellency took
+advantage of the opportunity to impress upon the people of Queensland
+the urgent need for a vigorous immigration policy if the country is to
+be successfully developed and its well-being maintained.
+
+To attempt a detailed description of what was not inappropriately
+termed "Our Jubilee Carnival" would be beyond the province and the
+scope of this volume. When it is mentioned that the exhibits numbered
+over 8,000, the magnitude of the undertaking will be realised. It will
+be sufficient to mention a few salient points. For example, there
+were no less than 1,580 exhibits of live stock; and as, in the case of
+sheep and cattle, an entry often included pens and not single animals,
+the provision made for this attractive and paramount feature of
+the show was taxed to its utmost capacity. These pastoral exhibits
+represented stock yielding more than a moiety of the L14,000,000 worth
+of annual exports; and the industry connected with grazing stock on
+the natural pastures of the country not only employs much labour and
+contributes largely to the revenue of the State directly in the shape
+of Crown rents and railway freights, but it assists the Treasury
+indirectly in many other ways. The magnificent display of stud and
+pedigree stock and their products spoke volumes for the value of
+the indigenous grass crop which costs nothing to raise and only wire
+fencing to protect.
+
+Among the exhibits was a trophy of that world-commanding product,
+wool, of which the value exported from Australia in 1908 is given
+in the Federal Treasurer's Budget delivered in August last as
+L22,914,236. The Commonwealth returns do not differentiate between the
+various States, but, assuming the average value of the fleece to be
+the same throughout Australia, the value of Queensland's share of the
+clip was about L5,000,000. Another product which has the world for
+its market is cotton. Of this article there were three splendid
+exhibits--one from West Moreton, in Southern Queensland; another from
+Rockhampton, in Central Queensland; and the third from Cairns, in
+Northern Queensland. Nothing save the cost of labour in picking
+prevents cotton being classed among the staple products of our State,
+and it is hoped by experts that as families upon the farms increase
+this difficulty will be removed. The Cairns exhibit was of Caravonica
+cotton, a variety of the valuable Sea Island species, concerning the
+extensive cultivation of which the most sanguine anticipations are
+expressed. In agricultural products emulation was greatly stimulated
+by the district exhibits, of which there were five, and on the
+whole they were superior to any that had ever before been shown in
+Queensland. Almost every product of the temperate and torrid zones
+appeared among the exhibits, though, of course, many of them are not
+yet being cultivated on a commercial scale. Among the most prominent
+of those of commercial value may be mentioned sugar, butter, cheese,
+hams, bacon, wheat, maize, fodder crops, potatoes, pineapples, and
+citrus and deciduous fruits, in all of which the displays were a
+revelation, not only to visitors from other parts of the continent and
+oversea, but also to many of our own people. The same may be remarked
+of the magnificent exhibits of gold, copper, tin, coal, and other
+minerals, which form so large a proportion of our wealth-producing
+exports. Statistics relating to the production and export of these
+commodities will be found in the appendices to this volume, and need
+not be further referred to here. Another attraction meriting special
+notice was the collection of gems and precious stones, the industry
+represented by which is at present struggling against the want of
+access to profitable markets; but the great interest aroused at the
+Franco-British Exhibition of last year by the magnificent display of
+Queensland gems is calculated to remove this disability, and to place
+the industry on a prosperous and permanent footing. The great variety
+of foods manufactured in Australia was another feature of the display,
+while in the machinery section the entries surpassed any previous
+exhibition in Queensland. Consequent upon the removal of border duties
+and the adoption of a uniform tariff, Queensland has suffered keenly
+from the competition of the Southern States. Statistics abundantly
+prove that some of our nascent manufactures have been checked
+seriously by such competition, although these losses are being
+gradually compensated for by gains in the form of enlarged free
+markets for products in which Queensland is safeguarded by natural
+conditions; but even freetraders must admit that our protective
+Customs duties are stimulating what are called native manufactures
+in a surprising degree, and that year by year Queensland and the
+Commonwealth at large are becoming less dependent upon the outside
+world for the products and manufactures which are essential to the
+existence of a civilised nation.
+
+Politically, 1909 has been rather a trying year, but the result of the
+general election on 2nd October seems to give promise of better things
+in Parliament. Both the Premier and the Leader of the Opposition agree
+that the practical extinction of the third party by the appeal to
+the electorate will be beneficial to the country. The election also
+ratifies the fusion of parties carried out towards the end of last
+year, with the consequential placing of the Labour party in the
+position of a constitutional Opposition. These salutary changes are
+held to be equivalent to a restoration of responsible government,
+which had been practically suspended by the impossibility of any party
+carrying on the work of legislation without making humiliating terms
+with an irresponsible section. It was contended that there were three
+parties in the country, and that the existence of the same phenomenon
+in the Assembly proved it to be a true reflex of the electorate at
+large; but the late general election has dispelled that illusion, for
+on no occasion since the splitting up of parties had the issue been
+put in so clear-cut a form to the country. Another result of the
+election has been to add somewhat to the strength of the Labour
+members, who are now sufficiently numerous in the Assembly to give
+them a reasonable expectation of being called upon in due time to
+assume the responsibilities of government. The State must gain from
+the resolution of the House into two parties, for the purity and
+effectiveness of party government demand that His Majesty's Ministers
+shall always be faced by an Opposition fitted and prepared to become
+the advisers of the King's representative whenever the existing
+Administration loses the confidence of the Parliament and the country.
+
+As mentioned elsewhere, a most satisfactory event of the year is
+the prospect of a settlement of the financial relations between
+Commonwealth and States on a durable and mutually acceptable basis.
+Public opinion throughout the continent is so clearly in favour of
+the agreement that its ratification seems certain during the present
+financial year, and it seems also certain that it will come into force
+on 1st July next. From that date there is reason to hope that the
+benefits of federal union will become so conspicuous as to silence
+cavilling opponents and justify the aspirations of its advocates. The
+general opinion throughout the Commonwealth with respect to the vital
+question of national defence has undergone a marvellous change for
+the better during the past twelve months, the unanimity displayed
+justifying the most sanguine anticipations of future unbroken concert
+between Great Britain and her self-governing dominions, and the
+supremacy of the British Empire on the ocean, a supremacy which means
+the protection of the world's trade routes and unimpeded maritime
+commerce.
+
+ [Footnote a: As indicative of the progress made in the local
+ manufacture of railway stock, it may be mentioned, on the
+ authority of the Commissioner, that one Brisbane engineering firm
+ has this year completed its 100th locomotive for the Department.]
+
+ [Footnote b: Treasury figures. The Commissioner's figures differ
+ somewhat from those of the Treasury. In estimating the percentage
+ return the Railway Department takes into account only the
+ expenditure on open lines, whilst the Treasury bases its
+ calculations upon the expenditure on all lines, and charges the
+ Railway Department with its proportion of loan deficiencies and
+ flotation charges.]
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II.
+
+THE FEDERAL OUTLOOK.
+
+ Proclamation of the Commonwealth.--The Referendum
+ Vote.--Queensland's Small Majority in the Affirmative.
+ --Representation in Federal Parliament.--The White
+ Australia Policy.--Temporary Effect on Queensland.
+ --An Embarrassed State Treasury.--Assistance to Sugar
+ Industry.--Continued Protection Necessary.--Unequal
+ Distribution of Federal Surplus Revenue.--The Transferred
+ Properties.--Effect of Uniform Tariff.--Good Times Lessen
+ Federal Burden on State.--The Agreement between Prime
+ Minister and Premiers.--Better Feeling Towards Federation.
+ --National Measures of Deakin Government.
+
+
+After several vain attempts on the part of Australian statesmen to
+bring about federation, the Commonwealth Constitution Act was adopted
+by the several States in 1899 and ratified by the Imperial Parliament
+in 1900; and Her Majesty Queen Victoria issued a proclamation,
+declaring that on and after 1st January, 1901, the colonies of New
+South Wales, Victoria, South Australia, Queensland, Tasmania,
+and Western Australia should be federated under the name of the
+Commonwealth of Australia, the several colonies being thereafter known
+as "States." The union took place by the freewill of all the colonies,
+a popular vote being taken in each. The poll was small, only 583,865
+electors recording their votes, of which number 422,788 voted for
+federation and 161,077 against, the majority in favour being 261,711.
+In Queensland 38,488 voted in the affirmative and 30,996 in the
+negative, giving the narrow majority of 7,492, equal to only 10.78
+per cent. of the total votes polled. That majority was obtained by an
+almost block pro-federation vote throughout the Centre and North of
+the colony, the majority in the Southern district, which contained
+about two-thirds of the population, being adverse to union. There was
+no objection to the abstract principle or to the wisdom of a federal
+union--rather the reverse; but Queensland had not been represented at
+any of the Conventions at which the Constitution was drafted, and no
+provision was made, such as was made in the case of West Australia,
+to meet the peculiar geographical, industrial, and financial
+circumstances of this State. In the absence of legislative safeguards
+and guarantees, the unsatisfactory experience of New South Wales
+administration in pre-separation days led the people of Southern
+Queensland to doubt whether the vaunted fraternal spirit would
+withstand the actual attrition of business competition. They feared
+that the great urban populations of Sydney and Melbourne would,
+under the proposed democratic Constitution, secure for themselves
+industrial, commercial, and administrative advantages at the expense
+of their brethren, but none the less rivals, in the more remote
+parts of the continent. Believing that, though their occupations
+and products were the same as those of the Southern States, their
+interests were conflicting, the majority in Southern Queensland cast
+their votes against the union. Finding themselves in a minority, many
+of the opponents of federation deliberately refused to exercise the
+franchise in the first election, held in 1901. Instead of taking steps
+to secure the return to the Commonwealth Parliament of men who would
+try to avert any evil consequences arising from non-representation at
+the Conventions and who would oppose any unfair discrimination, the
+short-sighted abstention of these people from voting enabled the
+Labour party, who certainly did not comprise a majority of the
+electors, to return nine out of our fifteen representatives in the two
+Houses.
+
+[Illustration: MOUNT MORGAN: OPEN CUT AND DUMPS]
+
+[Illustration: MOUNT MORGAN: MUNDIC AND COPPER WORKS.]
+
+One of the first results of this predominance of Labour representation
+was the early passage of legislation abolishing Pacific Island
+labour in the sugar industry--which is almost exclusively confined
+to Queensland--and requiring all the islanders to leave Australia for
+their native homes not later than 31st December, 1906. With a view
+to compensating the cane-growers for the added cost of labour, and to
+induce them to abandon all forms of coloured labour, a bounty, ranging
+at the present time from 7s. 6d. per ton of cane in the extreme North
+to 6s. per ton in Southern Queensland and on the Northern Rivers of
+New South Wales, was offered upon all cane grown exclusively with
+white labour; while to provide funds for payment of the bounty an
+excise duty, first of L3 and then L4 per ton, was imposed. These
+radical changes occurred at a time, unfortunately, when the State
+was suffering from severe depression resulting from an unprecedented
+succession of adverse seasons and the substitution of a uniform
+protective Customs tariff for the State tariff, which had for years
+previously yielded a large revenue per head while affording protection
+to many native industries. The abolition of interstate Customs
+duties caused a further loss to the Queensland Treasury; so that the
+Government felt compelled to ask Parliament to impose new taxation as
+well as sanction severe retrenchment in order to check the alarming
+series of revenue deficits which, despite large loan expenditure,
+marked the stressful period. All this tended to make federation
+unpopular, and obscure the benefits the union under the Commonwealth
+Constitution was calculated to confer eventually.
+
+The popular sentiment was, however, overwhelmingly in favour of the
+White Australia policy; and even most of its opponents took exception
+to the hasty methods of enforcement rather than to the principle
+itself. Much difficulty was at first experienced in securing reliable
+white workers, but the remuneration year by year attracted, in
+increasing numbers, men accustomed to farm work, until, in 1908-9, the
+owners of about 90 per cent. of the cane grown found themselves in a
+position to claim the bounty. Pacific Island labour is now almost a
+thing of the past, though a few islanders who were not repatriated
+still engage in field work. In the more severely tropical of the sugar
+districts some Asiatic labour is also employed, the planters alleging
+that white men will not, unless at prohibitory wages, face the muggy
+heat of the cane-brake. The bounty, together with the L6 import duty,
+appears at length to have re-established the industry on a durable
+basis; but many growers look forward with some apprehension to the
+gradual extinction of the bounty and the possibility of a reduction
+in the import duty, holding that without the protection at present
+afforded Australian cane sugar cannot compete against the product of
+the cheap coloured labour of Java, Fiji, and Mauritius, or the beet
+sugar of Europe.
+
+A further objection to federation was found in the mode adopted of
+distributing the Federal surplus revenue among the States. The 87th
+section of the Constitution required that for ten years the Federal
+Government should not expend on its own purposes more than one-fourth
+of the net Customs and Excise revenue of the Commonwealth, and that
+the balance of such revenue should be returned to the States. Prior
+to federation this had been interpreted to mean that each State would
+receive back not less than three-fourths of the net Customs and Excise
+revenue collected within its jurisdiction. But the Commonwealth Crown
+law officers placed a different construction on the section, and held
+that, so long as at least three-fourths of the net Customs revenue was
+distributed collectively, the Commonwealth had no obligation to
+return that proportion to any individual State. This has caused great
+uncertainty and embarrassment to the Queensland Treasurer, and has
+impelled many public men to stigmatise the union as a curse instead of
+a blessing.
+
+In illustration of the unequal division of the surplus Federal revenue
+among the States, it may be mentioned that, according to a table
+published by the Commonwealth Auditor-General, while the aggregate sum
+beyond the three-fourths of Customs and Excise revenue returned to the
+States amounted to L6,059,087, Queensland actually received L44,951
+less than her three-fourths during the eight and a-half years ended
+30th June, 1909; and her Treasurer was much embarrassed by the
+uncertainty of the return owing to tariff alterations and the
+determination of the Federal Government to defray from revenue
+otherwise accruing to the State under the Constitution Act the cost of
+permanent buildings, which the State had formerly provided for out of
+loan moneys.
+
+Another grievance of the States--especially of Queensland, which
+borrowed largely to construct its 10,253 miles of telegraph lines,
+and incurred a heavy annual charge upon revenue in providing postal
+communication throughout its vast and scantily populated territory--is
+that the Commonwealth Government treat section 85 of the Constitution
+as a dead letter. This provision expressly enacts that "the
+Commonwealth shall compensate the State for the value of any property
+passing to the Commonwealth under this section"; but not a penny of
+compensation has ever been paid, although there is a considerable
+interest charge to be met annually by the State Treasuries on account
+of money borrowed for the purposes of these transferred properties.
+
+The chief revenue loss suffered by the Queensland Treasury under
+federation arose from the passing of the uniform tariff, which drew
+considerably less than the former State tariff from the pockets of the
+taxpayers. Of course the remedy had to be sought in other taxation,
+and it could only be found in direct levies much more objectionable
+than the indirect charge imposed by Customs duties. However, the feat
+was ultimately accomplished, despite the depressed condition of the
+State through years of scanty rainfall and the enormous losses of live
+stock consequent thereon; but successive State Governments have had to
+bear much unmerited odium and have suffered in popularity on account
+of their efforts to restore financial equilibrium when the principal
+disturbing element was the advent of federation and not State
+mismanagement.
+
+Since times began to improve throughout Australia, the Federal burden
+has been less in evidence; and at the late Melbourne Conference, held
+to confer with the Commonwealth Government with the view to adjust
+mutual relations, no State Premier recognised more frankly than did
+Mr. Kidston the claims of the Federal Government to increased revenue
+to defray the cost of old-age pensions, naval and military defence,
+and other great national objects. The provisional agreement entered
+into by the Conference was recognised by all the Premiers as less
+advantageous than they had desired, but they were unanimous in
+admitting that under the altered conditions it was the best they could
+now hope for. On the Commonwealth side it was recognised that the
+States had made a large voluntary surrender, and that the position of
+the Federal Treasury would be greatly strengthened under the operation
+of the agreement. The apparent dread of diminishing Customs revenue
+in after years was clearly not well founded, because the Commonwealth
+Parliament can easily, by readjustment of duties, make up any
+deficiency. On the other hand, an immense advantage will be gained by
+both parties to the agreement from the separation of Federal and State
+finances except in respect of the liability of the Commonwealth to
+hand over, and the right of the States to receive, a fixed annual
+contribution of 25s. per head of the population. The representatives
+of the States granted a further concession to the Commonwealth by
+permitting the retention of an additional L600,000 of the Customs
+revenue for the current year to reimburse the cost of old-age pensions
+not already provided for by the Commonwealth Trust Fund created by the
+Surplus Revenue Act of 1908. The bill embodying the agreement received
+the approval of the statutory majority in both Houses of Parliament.
+It now rests with the electors of the Commonwealth to accept or reject
+the necessary amendment of the Constitution; and there is every reason
+to hope that the compact will be made as permanent as any other part
+of the Constitution. In that event, the relations between Commonwealth
+and States will undoubtedly improve, and harmonious co-operation for
+the public welfare may be safely anticipated from the Parliaments.
+The Federal session of 1909 has been distinguished by the passage
+of epoch-making bills for the appointment of a High Commissioner
+in London and for naval and military defence, measures which are
+calculated to raise the Commonwealth to an exalted position in the
+scale of young nations.
+
+[Illustration: QUEENSLAND 1859]
+
+[Illustration: QUEENSLAND 1909]
+
+[Illustration: AUSTRALIA 1859 SHOWING SELF-GOVERNING COLONIES]
+
+[Illustration: THE WORLD Showing relative position of AUSTRALIA.]
+
+
+
+
+PART IV.--THE PRIMARY INDUSTRIES.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I.
+
+THE PASTORAL INDUSTRY.
+
+ Importance of Industry.--Small Beginnings in New South
+ Wales.--Extension of Industry.--Stocking of Darling Downs and
+ Western Queensland.--Rush for Pastoral Lands.--Difficulties
+ of Early Squatters.--Influx of Victorian Capital.--Changes
+ in Method of Working Stations.--Boom in Pastoral Properties.
+ --Checks from Drought.--Discovery of Artesian Water.
+ --Conservation of Surface Water.--Introduction of Grazing
+ Farm System.--Closer Settlement of Darling Downs.
+ --Cattle-Rearing.--Meat-Freezing Works.--Overstocking.
+ --Dairying.--Station Routine.--Charm of Pastoral Life.
+ --Shearing.--Hospitality of Squatters.--Attraction of
+ Industry as Investment and Occupation.
+
+
+The pastoral industry in Queensland is, in point of duration, well
+within the compass of a single life. In about seventy years it has
+attained its present dimensions, and, as progress in the early years
+was very slow, its magnitude to-day supplies striking testimony to
+the energy and enterprise of two generations. The description
+of Queensland as a huge sheep and cattle farm with contributive
+industries, which without very great extravagance might have been
+offered forty years ago, has long ceased to be applicable. But
+though other industries have grown into importance, reducing its
+pre-eminence, the pastoral still retains its unquestioned lead and is
+deservedly regarded as the main source of the State's wealth. Bearing
+in mind that the total exports from Queensland for 1907 were rather
+over fourteen and a-half millions sterling, of which pastoral produce
+claimed more than half, it will be seen that this title to
+precedence cannot be challenged. With an abatement of L529,000 for
+butter--dairying being associated with agriculture--this imposing
+sum is the direct product of the natural grasses. It can hardly
+be surprising then, after realising the potential wealth of
+these pastures, that visitors should be struck with the fact that
+rainfall--past, present, and prospective--is a constant and very
+prominent topic in all grades of social intercourse.
+
+That a continent so suited to the abundant propagation of animal life
+should have been so poorly equipped by Nature with an indigenous fauna
+can only be accounted for by Australia's primeval isolation. Similar
+vast prairie lands, which in America sustained countless herds of
+bison and in Africa literally swarmed with antelope and many species
+of game, were in Australia almost uninhabited. The absence of large
+rivers and a general scarcity of water had doubtless much to do with
+this destitute condition of the great pasture lands of the interior,
+but still the wonder remains that a continent which now carries more
+sheep than any other country in the world should have been in its
+original state, except along its coastal belt, almost tenantless. The
+fierce carnivora of the older world were entirely unrepresented, the
+principal denizen of the lonely land being the timid kangaroo; but the
+curious problems presented by the Australian fauna have compensated
+the naturalist for its modest numbers.
+
+In Queensland what is recognised as the Western Interior occupies
+about half the area of the State and is distinct in its geological
+formation from the coastal belt, the waters of which run into the
+ocean to the east and north. The region of these watersheds, with the
+exception of some comparatively limited areas of downs country on the
+heads of the rivers, is regarded as unsuitable for sheep, the rainfall
+being more abundant than on the Western waters and the grass coarser,
+so that cattle are almost exclusively run there. In the Western
+Interior are the true sheep pastures. The farther one goes west the
+more treeless the country becomes. Here undulating downs for the most
+part stretch to the horizon, intersected by watercourses fringed with
+timber, and although in summer many of these creeks shrink to a chain
+of disconnected waterholes, few of which are permanent, they offer
+abundant opportunities for water conservation. In the last few years
+many for several miles of their course have been converted into
+running streams by artesian bores.
+
+Before, however, dwelling on the present position, we must briefly
+glance at the origin of pastoral enterprise in Australia and its tardy
+extension to Queensland.
+
+As soon as settlement was established, the new land had to be stocked
+with the domesticated animals of the old. Captain Phillip, the first
+Governor, in 1788 made a very modest start. He brought with him from
+England 7 horses, 7 cattle, and 29 sheep, besides pigs, rabbits, and
+poultry. Remembering that in those days England was from six to nine
+months distant from the new settlement, it is not perhaps surprising
+that pastoral progress was slow. In 1800 there were only 6,124 sheep
+and 1,044 cattle in Australia. But five years prior to this the seed
+destined to produce a giant growth was already germinating. A shrewd
+young soldier had detected the germ of Australia's future wealth.
+With a strange prescience, unaided by experience, Captain Macarthur
+recognised that the dry climate of Australia was peculiarly adapted to
+the growth of a fine type of wool. Starting from most unpromising ewes
+from India, he gradually improved the strain by the introduction of
+Spanish blood. He was fortunate at the start in getting three rams
+from the Cape, part of a gift from the King of Spain to the Dutch
+Government, and by sedulous culling with a bold disregard for
+carcass, although fat wethers at the time sold for L5, he succeeded
+in establishing a good merino flock the wool from which created
+an excellent impression in England. English manufacturers, who had
+hitherto drawn their limited stocks of clothing wool from Spain,
+welcomed the promise of a new source of supply.
+
+Macarthur had taken some wool with him to England, when deported in
+consequence of a fatal duel in 1803, and its fine quality was at once
+recognised and appreciated. He was fortunate in being still there in
+the following year, when George the Third, in the hope of encouraging
+the production of fine wool, sold a portion of his Kew stud flock, the
+progeny of Negretti sheep, another gift of the Spanish King, so that
+they might be distributed amongst his subjects. Macarthur was the
+principal buyer, securing seven rams and a ewe at very moderate
+prices, the highest being under L30. He was an enthusiast, and could
+see the enormous possibilities of the virgin continent he had left,
+with its mild dry climate and almost limitless pasture lands, for the
+maintenance of great flocks, the wool of which could be improved to
+the finest type. He asked the British Government for a grant of land
+to feed his flocks, assuring them that he was "so convinced of the
+practicability of supplying this country with any quantity of fine
+wool that it may require that I am earnestly solicitous to prosecute
+this important object, and on my return to New South Wales will devote
+my whole attention to accelerating its complete attainment." This
+request--in spite of the adverse opinion of Sir Joseph Banks as to the
+suitability of the new land for wool-growing--was granted, Lord Camden
+instructing the Governor of New South Wales to grant Macarthur such
+lands "as would enable him to extend his flocks in such a degree as
+may promise to supply a sufficiency of animal food for the colony
+as well as a lucrative article of export for the support of our
+manufactures at home." Macarthur selected near Mount Taurus, and the
+Camden estate, long famous as the source from which many studs were
+either formed or replenished, was established. How limited at this
+time was the world's production of this superfine wool--suited to the
+manufacture of the finest fabrics--may be gathered from the fact of
+one bale of Macarthur's being sold at Garraway's Coffee House in 1807
+at 10s. 6d. per lb., the cloth from which provided England's Farmer
+King with a coat.
+
+But not till the merino had passed beyond coastal influences was
+the improvement of growth due to an eminently suitable habitat fully
+realised. Wentworth and others had in 1813 pushed across the Blue
+Mountains, and the occupation of the interior began. In the Mudgee
+district, which was stocked with sheep about 1824, the clip improved
+so distinctly on the original Spanish stock as to form almost a new
+type. Increasing in length and gaining in softness and elasticity, it
+has commanded ever-increasing attention from manufacturers, and has
+long been recognised as the premier fine wool of the world.
+
+Tasmania, starting with Macarthur's stock, and following on his
+breeding lines, had proved peculiarly adapted for the growth of a
+dense fleece of fine wool. As numbers rapidly increased in this small
+island, flockmasters had to look about for an outlet. This was easily
+found on the mainland, and sheep were soon pouring across the narrow
+strait into the district of Port Phillip, which in 1851 was proclaimed
+the colony of Victoria.
+
+After Macarthur's death in 1834, his system of breeding was carefully
+followed by his widow, and when in 1858 the flock was dispersed the
+stud ewes numbered about 1,000. These, passing into the hands of
+flockmasters of New South Wales and Victoria, were the foundation of
+many of the noted studs of to-day. The Victorian flocks, starting
+from the Tasmanian, early competed with the island of their origin in
+excellence, and, though Tasmania still maintains its reputation as
+the home from which the studs of the other States are constantly
+replenished, it has of late years gone largely into crossbreds. The
+most noted studs, however, are still maintained undefiled, except that
+the introduction of the American Vermont blood has been in some cases
+cautiously tried, with results that have provoked much controversy.
+
+Other pioneers of the industry, the Rev. Samuel Marsden for one,
+started with the same Spanish blood, crossed with the hardy and
+prolific Indian ewe, but unlike Macarthur they found the temptations
+of the fat stock market irresistible. Remembering the great price fat
+wethers commanded in those early days, it must be admitted that the
+temptation was considerable. Macarthur, however, by steadily rejecting
+all mutton breeds and making a fine description of fleece his one
+object, deserves grateful recognition as the founder of the Australian
+merino.
+
+[Illustration: FAT CATTLE, CENTRAL QUEENSLAND]
+
+[Illustration: CATTLE COUNTRY, WEST MORETON]
+
+Although the settlement of Moreton Bay was started in 1824, it was
+long before the pastoral industry made any progress in the territory
+which is now Queensland. In that year Governor Brisbane sent Oxley
+to explore Moreton Bay and report on its suitability for a convict
+out-station. From information given by two white castaways living with
+the blacks, he found the river which Cook in 1770 and Flinders ten
+years later had failed to discover--though both, confident of its
+existence, had spent days in the Bay searching for its embouchure.
+Sheep and cattle were sent as supplies. But in a few years the
+settlement was abandoned, the officials and prisoners returning to
+New South Wales; and in 1842, when Moreton Bay was proclaimed a free
+settlement, the Government live stock were dispersed by sale amongst
+the settlers. Blacks were numerous and very hostile, and, though
+cattle throve well, the country was found unsuitable for sheep, so
+that expansion from the Moreton district was very slow.
+
+But already in 1827 one man had been favoured with a glimpse of what
+is still regarded as the garden of Queensland. Allan Cunningham,
+starting from the Hunter, had pushed steadily North for 500 miles till
+he emerged from the broken highlands of New England on to the famous
+Downs which he named after Sir Charles Darling. He was enraptured with
+the country, which he described as clothed "with grasses and herbage
+exhibiting an extraordinary luxuriance of growth." Yet it was thirteen
+years before anyone took advantage of his discovery. To a later
+generation acquainted with the great value of the lands, which as a
+distinguished botanist Cunningham could not have failed to recognise,
+this appears one of the most astounding facts in the history of
+exploration. Many a time he must have discoursed to his friend Patrick
+Leslie on the rich vision he had been privileged to look on, yet it
+was not till 1840 that the latter with a small flock followed in his
+footsteps. What increases the surprise at this apparently strange lack
+of enterprise is that the year after Cunningham had found the Darling
+Downs he visited Moreton Bay, and succeeded in crossing the range from
+the coast by a gap since known by his name and reached the vicinity
+of his old camp, thus demonstrating that the natural port of this rich
+region was little over a hundred miles distant. Leslie, who settled in
+the neighbourhood of where the flourishing town of Warwick now stands,
+was rapidly followed by others who established the fine squattages
+that have since become famous. Although a few sheep had previously
+been introduced in the Moreton district, Leslie and his confreres must
+be regarded as the fathers of sheep-farming in Queensland.
+
+Difficulties of carriage long retarded any attempt to occupy the
+splendid territory farther West which Sir James Mitchell had explored
+in 1846 and Kennedy had farther penetrated a year later, crossing
+the Barcoo and discovering the Thomson River. Though the existence of
+these vast rolling plains was known, the presumption that no industry
+requiring a fair amount of labour could pay, handicapped with five
+to six hundred miles of land carriage, checked any attempt to occupy
+them. Nor was this unreasonable. The difficulties and uncertainties of
+such an undertaking might well prompt hesitation. Yet, in view of
+the rich returns from flocks elsewhere, it was impossible that
+these solitudes should for very long await easier conditions. A few
+adventurous spirits pushed out to these great undulating plains. Their
+example was quickly followed. In the early sixties a general migration
+westward began, and wherever water was met with the country was taken
+up. In 1869 an Act was passed granting 21-year leases to applicants
+who had taken up areas and stocked them to the extent of twenty-five
+sheep or five cattle to the square mile. It was found that on these
+Western pastures, rich with succulent grasses and saline shrubs
+all the year round, and in winter abounding in herbage of many
+descriptions, all stock grew and fattened amazingly. The climate, too,
+falsified all predictions, and instead of converting the wool to hair,
+which experts had prognosticated as the inevitable result of an ardent
+summer, grew an excellent fleece of fine lustrous combing wool. A
+frantic rush for country set in. Flocks and herds were hurried out by
+jealous owners anxious to forestall one another in the scramble for
+leases. In a few years the whole territory, except where absence of
+water forbade settlement, was parcelled out in sheep and cattle runs.
+It had not yet been recognised how country destitute of surface water
+could be utilised. On these neglected areas are now many prosperous
+sheep-runs, the pioneers little suspecting the inexhaustible supplies
+awaiting the magic touch of the boring-rod to provide the abundant
+streams they longed for.
+
+With such easy conditions of tenure and lands of unsurpassable quality
+for grazing, it might naturally be expected that these pioneers
+amassed easy fortunes. The falsification of such expectation is a
+melancholy story. Though the cattle-men in many cases managed
+to struggle on, the majority of the sheep-owners went under. The
+difficulties were enormous. Railways had not yet penetrated the
+country, though a small start had been made. Wool took from six to
+nine months reaching the coast by bullock dray, and the carriage
+of supplies to the station cost more than the goods themselves.
+Frequently the next clip was awaiting carriage ere the previous one
+had left the station. Wages were high, and all forms of labour scarce.
+The quality of sheep, too, was poor, many of them being the culls from
+Southern flocks, bought at high prices. The depression in the wool
+market, with high rates of interest on borrowed money, strained the
+pioneer's resources to breaking point, and in too many cases years of
+strenuous endeavour and hardship ended in ruin.
+
+But brighter days were in store. As railways pushed out, the attention
+of Victorian capitalists was attracted by the potentialities of
+Western Queensland. The phenomenal gold production of Victoria had
+produced a plethora of money seeking investment, which constituted
+Melbourne the financial capital of Australia. This accumulated wealth,
+after fructifying New South Wales, flowed into Queensland. A Victorian
+invasion began. The knell of the shepherd had sounded, wire fences
+taking his place. Sheep that had hitherto been run in flocks of 1,500
+to 2,000, tended during the day by a man and a dog and yarded at
+night, were now turned into large paddocks by tens of thousands with
+only a boundary rider to look to the fences. It was found by this
+method that the carrying capacity of country was enormously increased.
+Yarded sheep, driven to and fro twice daily, destroy more grass than
+they can eat, whereas when left to themselves it is all utilised. The
+smaller the paddocks, the less the sheep wander and the larger the
+number that can be carried on a given area. It was found, too, that
+stocking greatly improved the water. On the spongy surface of virgin
+country, untrodden by any hoof, there was little "run" off the
+surface after rain, but when hardened by the tread of stock the creeks
+received a fairer share of the downpour. The best rams procurable
+from the Darling Downs and noted Southern studs rapidly improved the
+flocks. In 1873 wool rose to a price not touched for many years; a
+boom in Queensland stations set in, and the remnant of the pioneers
+who elected to do so sold out at prices that gave a rich though tardy
+reward for long and toilsome enterprise.
+
+Although the general course of the industry has been one of great
+prosperity, it has not been without its serious checks. A severe
+drought throughout nearly the whole of Australia, culminating in
+1902, inflicted terrible losses of both sheep and cattle. Waterholes
+supposed to be permanent dried up; and pastures within reach of those
+which proved permanent were trodden into a desert condition till the
+stock were too weak to travel back to the surviving pasturage. The
+outlook was so gloomy that almost universal ruin seemed impending.
+It is sad to think that whilst stock were perishing in multitudes
+abundant subterranean streams, flowing southward to discharge
+uselessly in the Great Australian Bight, might have been available to
+avert this national calamity. The uses of adversity have never been
+more strikingly exemplified than by the number of artesian bores
+put down since that hard experience. These, as the cost of sinking
+decreases, are multiplying yearly. The artesian basin exists
+throughout nearly three-fifths of Queensland, and whilst the origin
+of these subterranean stores is still somewhat of a mystery they are
+apparently inexhaustible. The supply and the depth at which water
+is obtained vary considerably; the former runs as high as 3,000,000
+gallons per diem, and the latter averages about 1,600 feet.
+
+Whilst artesian boring has been prosecuted with commendable
+enterprise, the storage of surface water on an extensive scale has not
+yet received the attention it deserves. Many schemes have been mooted
+for conserving a portion of the huge volume of water that in the rainy
+season flows through regions which would gladly retain a share, to
+waste itself in the Southern Ocean. Doubtless in the future a problem
+of such fascination will attract the best engineering skill, and a
+number of inland lakes will result. But that day may yet be distant.
+One such scheme only need be noticed. The Diamantina River, which
+in time of flood stretches out to many miles in breadth, flows
+south-westward through several degrees of Western Queensland. At a
+point known as Diamantina Gates it finds an exit through a narrow
+gorge in a low range. Although never yet tested by accurate survey,
+competent judges have surmised that a substantial dam at this spot
+would throw back an amount of water which would constitute a veritable
+inland sea. Other large rivers--the Thomson, Barcoo, Hamilton,
+Georgina--also offer to the hydraulic engineer splendid opportunities
+of winning distinction.
+
+In 1884 a notable change of land policy was adopted. The 1869 leases
+were expiring, and it was recognised that the big squattages could
+not longer be allowed to monopolise the country. Room was required for
+smaller holdings. All available country was already occupied under
+the 1869 leases, and, although under another Act 5,120 acres could be
+acquired with conditions of improvement and residence, there was no
+way of getting an area capable of carrying 10,000 sheep. There did
+not exist a small squatting class. The Minister for Lands, Mr. C.
+B. Dutton--himself a large squatter--recognised the desirability of
+creating such a class, which would stand in the same relation to the
+"squattocracy" that the yeomen of Britain do to the large landowners.
+In granting a new lease to the original lessee, Dutton's Act required
+him to surrender a portion of his run, from a half to a quarter
+according to the length of time his lease had been running. A Land
+Board independent of Ministerial control was appointed to arrange an
+equitable division of the runs and to fix the rent of the new lease,
+which was for fifteen years. Two years later this was increased to
+twenty-one years, on condition of the lessee surrendering another
+quarter of his area at the end of the fifteenth year. The portions
+resumed from the old squattages were surveyed into areas up to 20,000
+acres and thrown open to selection. The old lessee--who regarded any
+area under 400 square miles as a paltry holding and counted his crop
+of calves by thousands and his yearly lambing increase by tens of
+thousands--ridiculed the new departure, maintaining that any man must
+starve on such an absurdly inadequate area as 20,000 acres. But
+these sinister predictions did not deter selectors from testing the
+question. At first grazing farms were only very gradually applied for,
+but a few years' experience justified Mr. Dutton's expectations, and
+a great demand set in, till now, as soon as opened to selection, there
+is a keen competition for them. The difficulty is to survey them fast
+enough to provide for requirements. The maximum area has since been
+increased so that now as much as 60,000 acres can be held by an
+individual, provided the total rent does not exceed L200. It is not
+unusual for three or four grazing farmers to combine and manage the
+combined leasehold as a co-partnership, which, although not provided
+for in the Act, is sanctioned by the Land Court.
+
+[Illustration: HORSES AT GOWRIE, DARLING DOWNS]
+
+[Illustration: SHEEP AT GOWRIE, DARLING DOWNS]
+
+[Illustration: HORSES, WESTERN QUEENSLAND]
+
+[Illustration: FAT CATTLE, BURRANDILLA, CHARLEVILLE]
+
+A new Act in 1902 offered those who elected to take advantage of it
+a fresh lease, at the expiration of the current one, of from ten to
+forty-two years, according to classification; and farther resumptions
+were made for closer settlement. The classification, which was decided
+by the Land Court, was governed by the degree of remoteness from
+railway and the demand for land in the neighbourhood.
+
+The low range of hills surrounding the Darling Downs encloses over
+2,000,000 acres of land of a quality that invites the plough to
+convert it into the granary of the State. As the railway to the New
+South Wales border takes its rather serpentine course southwards,
+coasting round many of the undulations to avoid cutting through them,
+the traveller looks upon a land which he must recognise as capable
+of maintaining a large farming population. What he actually saw till
+quite recently was paddock after paddock of sheep on each side, then
+a paddock of cattle and horses, and again more sheep. It was palpable
+that this could not continue indefinitely. The railway built at the
+cost of the general taxpayers had greatly increased the value of these
+estates and rendered their working more profitable. The owners
+of these flocks and herds had done good service to the State, and
+deserved the most generous treatment. Successors of the original
+pioneers, they had bred the stock that helped to occupy the West, and
+had founded studs that enabled others to replenish their flocks and
+herds from the purest sources. It was important above all things that
+no legislative interference should harass men who deserved so well of
+Queensland, and that no step should be taken to dispossess them which
+could be suspected of any taint of harshness. In time, doubtless, they
+would themselves have parcelled out their estates for tillage, but the
+process would have been slow, the easy terms of payment possible to
+a Government borrowing money at a low rate of interest not being
+generally convenient to an individual, and time in the development of
+a young country is important. Parliament therefore took the matter
+in hand and decided that where possible these landholders should be
+bought out on a valuation made by an independent tribunal. A number
+of properties have been bought by the Government, cut up into farms of
+from 80 acres upwards, and sold to farmers on liberal terms, payment
+extending over twenty-five years. Mixed farming and dairying are the
+chief purposes to which the land has been put, and busy townships
+have sprung up at the railway stations where a few years ago the
+stationmaster, his family, and an assistant porter formed the bulk of
+the resident population. Breeding lambs for export is found to be
+a profitable branch of the pastoral business on the Downs, and the
+breeding of crossbreds is consequently increasing, the Lincoln or
+Leicester being mated with the merino. Southdown and Romney rams have
+also been tried, but the Lincoln cross has been generally preferred.
+Crossbred lambs three to four months old bring 10s. in Brisbane, the
+railage costing from 1s. to 1s. 3d.
+
+So far little mention has been made of cattle. It may be generally
+stated that where country is suitable for sheep, or, more accurately
+speaking, where they can be profitably run, cattle are only depastured
+in very small herds. The coastal belt and the Northern Gulf region are
+exclusively cattle country, and in the extreme West, although sheep
+thrive excellently, the long carriage causes cattle to be preferred,
+the expense of cattle management being much below that of sheep. The
+product of these distant pastures travels on the hoof to market, the
+Western cattle being noted for their great weight of flesh and the
+distance they carry it without great waste. Most of the herds have
+been improved to a high degree of excellence by importation of some
+of the best blood in England, and high-class stud herds have been long
+established in the different States from which drafts of herd bulls
+are drawn as required at from about 10 to 15 guineas per head.
+
+With a population of little over half a million occupying a territory
+of 670,500 square miles, it will be realised that the yearly cast of
+"fats" greatly exceeds local requirements. The Southern States take a
+large number. New South Wales and Victoria are the best customers, as,
+with a combined population of roughly five times that of Queensland,
+the total of their cattle is only slightly in excess of the Queensland
+herd. South Australia is also a regular buyer of "fats." The "stores"
+that go South to be fattened beyond the State are almost exclusively
+bullocks of three to four years. Amongst the "fats" of ripe ages is
+a proportion of dry cows, and a limited number of breeders and mixed
+cattle also find sale with Southern buyers. But these outlets would
+have been quite inadequate for the absorption of the Queensland annual
+surplus had not meat-preserving come to the rescue of the stock-owner.
+Before freezing works were established, boiling down was the one
+resource, the tallow, hides, and sheepskins giving a meagre return,
+whilst the valuable carcass went to the pigs. The late Sir Arthur
+Hodgson, a leading pastoralist, used to relate with humorous comments
+his experiences with a first draft of sheep from his Darling Downs
+station (Eton Vale), brought to Brisbane to be boiled down at the
+Kangaroo Point works. During the process the owner--educated at Eton,
+and subsequently a Minister of the Crown in Queensland--went round
+daily with a handcart selling the legs of mutton at sixpence apiece.
+Such commercial enterprise has long fallen into desuetude.
+
+To bring the surplus meat of Australia within reach of the eager
+millions of Europe has not been an easy problem, but it has at length
+been fairly solved by freezing the carcass, though much has yet to be
+done in discovering the best method of distribution of so perishable
+an article and its proper treatment from the freezing chamber to the
+spit. The various works buy cattle at about 18s. to 20s. per 100 lb.,
+the weight of bullocks averaging about 750 lb., though many mobs,
+notably the huge beasts from the West, go as much as 200 lb. beyond
+this. The works are also buyers of fat sheep, a 50-lb. wether two or
+three months after shearing bringing from 9s. to 10s. In the six years
+1901-6 the exports of frozen meat from Australia totalled 353,514,135
+lb. of beef and 371,692,090 lb. of mutton.
+
+An occupation the profits of which are capable of such large additions
+by increasing numbers is apt to foster a spirit of gambling. In a
+season of bountiful rainfall it is almost impossible to over-stock
+country, and owners too often take the risk of availing themselves
+to the full of Nature's prodigality. Such a policy is most dangerous.
+When the time of more limited rainfall comes the owner of over-stocked
+pastures pays a heavy toll for his improvidence, whereas he who has
+regulated his numbers on the assumption of fair average seasons comes
+scathless through the time of trial.
+
+Dairying comes more within the department of agriculture, as crops
+must be grown for feed, the dairy-farmer being necessarily the
+occupant of a very limited area. The benefit dairying has been to the
+small stock-owner can hardly be exaggerated. In old days the owner of
+a herd of 50 to 100 head could look only for a poor living, working
+for wages for part of the year whilst his family looked after the
+herd. Now he is a rich man. The monthly cheque from the creamery for
+a man milking 25 cows easily reaches an average of L20. Except in
+the few cases where the business has been conducted in a large way
+by capitalists, it is mostly an enterprise for small men. The work is
+unremitting, the herd having to be milked twice a day, but the rewards
+are sure and ample. Butter and cheese factories have sprung up like
+mushrooms in the last few years, there being now 79 in the State. The
+yield of butter for 1907 totalled 22,789,158 lb. As returns depend on
+the amount of butter-fat produced, owners have converted the ordinary
+breeds of cattle to good dairy herds by plentiful introductions of
+the true milking strains--Jersey, Alderney, Ayrshire, Holstein, and
+milking Shorthorn.
+
+Many will probably wonder how cattle grazed over an area of many
+hundred square miles of country, which in the outside districts is
+probably unfenced, can be mustered or even kept on the run. Cattle
+are docilely subservient to custom, and once broken into "camps" will
+voluntarily seek repose in these shelters. On a well-managed station
+the crack of a whip will start any mob within hearing trotting for
+their camp, formed in a clump of shade on the creek, or, if shade is
+available, on some better galloping ground. Others, seeing them on the
+move, head towards the same well-known resort, there to pass the day
+till the shadows lengthen, only moving off in the cool of the evening
+to feed. If they are being mustered for branding, the cows with calves
+are "cut out" and brought to the stockyard to be dealt with; if for a
+butcher to select a draft of fats, these only are taken and delivered
+either on the spot or where arranged. At the general muster, which is
+only made every few years, as the cattle are brought in they are put
+through a lane in the yard, the long lock at the tip of the tail being
+cut short; they are thus easily distinguished on the run, so that
+only long-tails are brought in subsequently. A "bang-tail" muster is
+recorded in the station books, and, as all sales and other disposals
+are carefully noted and an allowance made of from 3 to 5 per cent. for
+deaths, it is not necessary to repeat an operation taxing horseflesh
+so severely at nearer intervals than three to five years. Stock-horses
+become very clever, and will turn and twist with a beast through the
+mob, the rider's whip playing on either side till the animal is run
+out. Large tailing yards are maintained in different parts of the run
+to avoid much driving, and at weaning time the weaners are herded for
+a month or six weeks and yarded at night, which has a quieting
+effect they never forget. A well-managed herd is noted for absence of
+rowdyism amongst its members. On a well-improved station the bullocks,
+heifers, and weaners will be in separate paddocks, and at a certain
+season the bulls are taken out of the herd and put in a paddock by
+themselves.
+
+[Illustration: WOOL TEAMS, WYANDRA, WARREGO DISTRICT]
+
+[Illustration: HAULING CEDAR, ATHERTON, NORTH QUEENSLAND]
+
+Much has been written of the Australian squatter's life, both in fact
+and in fiction; yet the charm it exercises remains unexplained. The
+invigorating influence of perfect health doubtless has something to
+do with it, as well as the utter freedom and escape from all
+conventionality. Much of the bushman's time is passed in the saddle,
+and his dress consists of moleskin trousers, the sleeves of his shirt
+rolled up to the elbow, and a soft shady hat. He rises at daybreak and
+after an early breakfast starts his day's work. As frequently he
+will not return to the homestead till nightfall, his lunch is in his
+saddle-pouch, to be enjoyed in the shade by some waterhole, where he
+boils the quart "billy" that dangles all day from a dee on his saddle,
+and makes the inevitable brew of tea. Probably he has companions and
+is mustering a paddock half the size of an English county; bringing
+the sheep to the drafting yards, it may be to draft out the fats from
+a mob of several thousand wethers, or perhaps to take lambs from
+their mothers for weaning, or to separate the sexes in a mob of mixed
+weaners, or to bring sheep to the shed for shearing.
+
+Shearing is of all times the busiest. At this season men, each usually
+riding one horse and leading another packed with his swag, roam the
+country in gangs and undertake the work at contract rates, which of
+late have been raised from 20s. per 100 to 24s. There will be from
+ten to forty men on the shearing board, according to the size of the
+flock; and in most of the large sheds men write beforehand to bespeak
+a stand. Shearers earn great wages; a good man will do from 100 to
+200 per day, though the latter number is of course exceptional. The
+introduction of shearing machines has helped to increase the shearer's
+daily tally. A host of other men are employed in the shed. Boys gather
+the fleeces which they throw on a table where they are skirted, the
+trimmings being divided into "locks and pieces" and "bellies," and
+the rolled fleece is thrown on another long table at which the
+wool-classer presides. He is an expert, and orders each to its
+respective bin, according to quality--judged by condition, length of
+staple, and brightness. From the various bins so graded men feed the
+wool-press worked by two wool-pressers, who turn out, sew, and brand
+the bales, of an average weight of from 3 to 4 cwt. Wagons are waiting
+to convey these to the railway, horse and bullock teams being almost
+equally used. A whip cracks like a pistol shot, and with lowered
+heads, the bullocks straining at the yoke, the first team draws slowly
+off to the incomprehensible objurgations of the driver, an incredible
+number of bales in three tiers piled on the wagon and securely roped.
+
+But this bustling activity is not confined to the shed. Shorn sheep
+have to be returned to their paddocks, fresh mobs brought in, and the
+morrow's shearing housed in the shed to escape the night's dew or a
+chance shower. From daylight to dark during this harvest time everyone
+is at full stretch. The shearers have their own cook and "find"
+themselves, sharing together in a general mess; and as they earn good
+money they "do themselves" really well, denying themselves no delicacy
+obtainable at the station store. The whistle sounds at 6 p.m.; the
+last fleece has been gathered, and the men stroll to their camp to
+discard sodden shirts and moleskins and clean up generally before
+supper. The twilight is short, night chasing it swiftly from the
+world. The weird charm of a Queensland night in the bush penetrates
+with a calm satisfaction difficult to analyse. It is, let us suppose,
+spring or summer, and the stars appear to hang low from the deep clear
+indigo vault. The silence is unbroken, appealing to some indefinable
+emotion. No cry of beast or bird ruffles the stillness, save perhaps
+the faint tinkle of the bell-bird or the solemn plaint of the mopoke
+from some distant scrub. The men are sitting outside their hut
+smoking, or with tired limbs stretched on the short dry grass lying
+full length drawing the quiet night into their blood, its cool
+soft breath soothing the fatigue of the arduous day's toil. Very
+entertaining to a listener would be the symposium of experiences
+and amazing political theories of these rough good-humoured toilers,
+whilst in the pauses one might perhaps enjoy the fantasia executed by
+the musician of the party on his concertina.
+
+Life at the homestead of many of the old-established stations differs
+little from that of a wealthy country home in other parts of the
+world. Froude in his "Oceana" draws a diverting picture of his
+anticipations of a bush home and its reality. He had pictured a
+log-hut in the wilderness, and was taken to Ercildoune, where he was
+amazed to find a mansion amidst splendid gardens, with conservatories,
+elaborate drawing-rooms, well-dressed ladies, and all the
+appurtenances and customs of refined life. Expecting chops, damper,
+and tea, the culinary triumphs of a skilful _chef_ would strike an
+author in quest of the barbaric life with a keen reproach. Had Mr.
+Froude visited Queensland, he might have found something more suitable
+for literary treatment. Although in the older settled districts,
+especially on the Darling Downs, the lessees live in comfortable,
+well-furnished homes, many bush homesteads are still very primitive.
+The farther a station is from the railway the more the owner is
+inclined to dispense with the superfluous, till in many cases he
+restricts himself to the absolutely necessary. But every year sees
+an improvement in this respect. Hospitality is unlimited, any visitor
+being sure of a welcome and a night's lodging; he turns his horses
+into his host's paddock, and, if there are ladies of the household,
+his evening is enlivened with music and cultured talk.
+
+Some of the more gigantic enterprises are conducted by squatting
+companies, the sheep numbering several hundred thousand and the cattle
+up to thirty or forty thousand. But these stupendous figures need not
+deter small investors. In the purchase of a station the goodwill is
+an asset to be paid for, and in many cases this is valued at a high
+figure. The selector who takes up a grazing farm pays nothing for
+goodwill, and gets into what is possibly a going concern from the
+outset with no other payment than the year's rent and the value of the
+existing improvements erected by the former lessee before the area was
+resumed from his holding. It may happen that the country is bare of
+all improvements, in which case he has to fence it before he gets a
+lease, his neighbours being liable for half the cost of this work,
+which forms their common boundary. He pays a higher rent than the
+representative of the pioneer who created the goodwill which has
+descended by purchase. What more desirable opening can be found for a
+young man of limited capital than a farm that will carry 10,000 sheep
+or 1,500 cattle? He leads the healthiest life in the world, and,
+although it is full of hard work and includes what would be thought
+hardships in the home he comes from, a manly youth takes the latter
+with a frolic welcome, and if he works hard he also plays hard when
+the occasional races, cricket carnival, and festivities in the nearest
+township or perhaps at some neighbouring station give the occasion.
+But above all things it is important that he should not invest till
+he has gained experience. There is no difficulty in acquiring this, as
+stockowners are without exception glad of the assistance of a willing
+young fellow who accepts the knowledge acquired and perhaps a trifling
+salary as an equivalent for his time and work. After a couple of years
+of this novitiate as a "Jackeroo," he will be equipped for facing the
+future on his own account, which with ordinary steadfastness, energy,
+and forethought he may regard with confidence.
+
+[Illustration: DAIRY CATTLE ON DARLING DOWNS]
+
+[Illustration: SHEEP, JIMBOUR, DARLING DOWNS]
+
+[Illustration: HORSES, IVANHOE STATION, WARREGO]
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II.
+
+AGRICULTURE IN QUEENSLAND.
+
+ Tripartite Division of Queensland.--Climate.--Development of
+ Agriculture in Queensland.--Wide Range of Products.--Early
+ History.--Exclusion of Farmers from Richest Lands.--Origin of
+ Mixed Farming.--Extension of Industry Westward.--Inexperience
+ of Early Settlers.--Cotton-growing.--Chief Crops.--Dairying.
+ --Cereal-growing.--Farming in the Tropics.--Farming on the
+ Downs.--Farming in the West.--Irrigation.--Conservation of
+ Water.--Timber Industry.--Land Selection.--Assistance Given by
+ the Government.--Immigration.--Attractions of Queensland.
+ --Defenders of Hearth and Home.
+
+
+Situated between 101/2 degrees and 29 degrees South latitude and 138
+degrees and 1531/2 degrees East longitude, Queensland covers 670,500
+square miles, or 429,120,000 acres--greater than the combined areas
+of France, Germany, and Austro-Hungary. Of this immense territory 53.5
+per cent. lies within the Tropics, and 46.5 per cent. within the South
+Temperate Zone.
+
+The State may be divided into three belts--the tropical, stretching
+from Cape York to the 21st parallel in the neighbourhood of Mackay;
+the sub-tropical, between Mackay and Gladstone, about 24 degrees
+South; and the temperate, from Gladstone to the 29th parallel on the
+border of New South Wales.
+
+These three zones lend themselves, in turn, to a tripartite
+subdivision of littoral, tableland, and Western plain. Running
+generally in a North and South direction, and distant from the Eastern
+coast 30 to 100 miles, the Great Dividing Range separates the littoral
+from a series of tablelands having an altitude of 3,000 ft. at the two
+extremes, with a lesser elevation between Herberton in the North and
+the Darling Downs in the South. Almost imperceptibly the intermediate
+plateau sinks into a vast plain, which extends westward for hundreds
+of miles and into South Australia.
+
+The mountain barrier between coast and tableland, though rarely
+exceeding 4,000 ft. in height, is still sufficiently lofty to cause
+the clouds of the Pacific to deposit most of their moisture on the
+Eastern slopes. The precipitation in this coastal belt ranges from
+a yearly average of 135 in. at Geraldton (at the foot of the
+Bellenden-Ker Mountains, in the North) to 40 in. between the Tropic of
+Capricorn and Brisbane, with a heavier fall wherever the mountains
+are in close proximity to the ocean. On the Western side of the Great
+Divide the rainfall decreases from 40 in. to about 30 in. at the
+Western limit of the tableland, and, gradually diminishing with
+increasing distance from the seaboard, averages only about 10 in. in
+the extreme South-west.
+
+Temperature, rainfall, and soil necessary for the successful
+cultivation of almost every known crop are to be found in Queensland.
+Pastoral pursuits and mining have been the principal wealth-producers
+in the past; but steadily agriculture is coming to the front, and,
+long before the present generation has passed away, will occupy first
+place among the primary industries. That it has not done so already
+is due partly to the comparative youth of the country and its small
+population, and partly to its rich natural pastures and vast mineral
+resources. For many years the fascination of a pastoral life and
+the search for gold, with the hope of winning fortunes in those
+avocations, proved more attractive than the regular, uneventful life
+of the farmer, with its prospect of a competence; but the old-time
+glamour of grazing and mining is passing away, and the independence
+of the farmer is now preferred to the lot of station hand or working
+miner.
+
+On the inestimable value of a rural population to the permanent
+well-being of a nation Mr. Roosevelt, the late President of the United
+States, lays stress in these pregnant words:--
+
+ "I warn my countrymen that the great recent progress made in
+ city life is not a full measure of our civilisation; for
+ our civilisation rests at bottom on the wholesomeness,
+ the attractiveness, and the completeness, as well as the
+ prosperity, of life in the country. The men and women on the
+ farms stand for what is fundamentally best and most needed in
+ our national life. Upon the development of country life rests
+ ultimately our ability, by methods of farming requiring the
+ highest intelligence, to continue to feed and clothe the
+ hungry nations; to supply the city with fresh blood, clean
+ bodies, and clear brains that can endure the terrific strain
+ of modern life; we need the development of men in the open
+ country, who will be in the future, as in the past, the stay
+ and strength of the nation in time of war, and its guiding and
+ controlling spirit in time of peace."
+
+Too large a proportion of the people of Australia is already
+congregated in the capital cities on the seaboard, and this
+centripetal tendency constitutes one of the problems most difficult
+of solution in our young communities, as it is proving in the older
+countries of the world. Here, however, we are not confronted with the
+obstacle of high-priced land, and no effort is being spared to turn
+the tide of settlement to the true source of national virility and
+prosperity--the land.
+
+The suitability of the State for agriculture is amply demonstrated
+by the condition of those engaged in that industry, for there is no
+considerable class in the community so prosperous. Comfortable homes,
+well-stocked farms, overflowing barns, and other evidence of labour
+richly rewarded, bear witness to this fact. The abundance of a series
+of fat years more than compensates for the loss of crops and stock
+in occasional years of drought, and these losses it is possible to
+minimise by devoting attention to afforestation, the conservation of
+water, irrigation, and the storage of fodder.
+
+Diversity of products is to be expected in a country stretching
+through 181/2 degrees of latitude, possessing an infinite variety
+of soils, and divided into a hot and humid coastal belt, an elevated
+tableland with cool climate and moderate rainfall, and a huge plain
+with light rainfall and dry, invigorating atmosphere. There is
+probably no country in the world with so wide an agricultural range.
+To mention crops which can be, and are being, grown with gratifying
+results would be to set forth in detail nearly every crop of economic
+value found in the torrid or the temperate zone. Wherever Nature is
+so generous with her gifts there must be accompanying drawbacks in
+the shape of vegetable and insect pests, but, by the application
+of intelligence and industry, the farmers of Queensland are able to
+combat these petty foes.
+
+Some of the principal objects of culture have a remarkably extensive
+distribution. Citrus fruits, fodder crops and artificial grasses,
+pumpkins and melons, flourish in every part of the State. Maize is
+very prolific throughout the littoral and on the tableland. Sugar-cane
+and tropical fruits grow luxuriantly on all the coastal lands. Most
+of the fruits of the British Isles and Continental Europe are at home
+everywhere except on the coast north of the Tropic of Capricorn, and
+reach perfection on the elevated lands of the Darling Downs. Cereals
+and root crops are produced in the Southern and Central West districts
+equal in quality and yield to the crops in the Southern States and
+oversea countries.
+
+"Agriculture," says Professor Robert Wallace, of Edinburgh University,
+"is one of the oldest of human arts, dating from long before the dawn
+of history. The savage who lives on the roots and fruits he finds
+ready to his hand stands lower in the scale than the huntsman living
+by the chase. The herdsman leading a nomadic life belongs to a higher
+stage of human culture; but civilisation in any full sense only begins
+amongst men with settled habitations, who till the soil for their
+sustenance." Judged by this standard, Queensland has passed through
+the evolutionary stages. Eighty-five years ago, when the first British
+settlers landed on the shores of Moreton Bay, the country was sparsely
+inhabited by savages of the lowest type, dependent upon native
+roots and fruits and the chase for a subsistence. For a quarter of a
+century, settlement on the coast was confined to a few convicts and
+military guards stationed at Brisbane and Ipswich, and a handful of
+free settlers. In the year 1840 some adventurous spirits, searching
+for sheep country west of the Main Range, found themselves on the
+magnificent tableland which Allan Cunningham had discovered in 1827,
+and which, during the intervening years, had remained untrodden by the
+foot of a white man. Soon the whole of the Darling Downs was parcelled
+out into large sheep stations. Agriculture, until the advent of small
+selectors many years later, was only represented by garden patches
+of cereals, vegetables, and fruit trees, grown for the use of the
+station-owners and their employees.
+
+On the Eastern side of the Range the industry was in almost as
+backward a state before the arrival of the first shipment of
+agriculturists in the ship "Fortitude" in January, 1849. Gangs of
+convicts felled the scrub on the banks of the Brisbane River adjacent
+to the barracks; with the hoe they planted maize among the stumps and
+tree-trunks under the constant surveillance of armed guards, and,
+when the corn was ripe, dragged it in carts to the windmill on
+Wickham terrace, still a conspicuous landmark, though now used as an
+observatory. There the maize was ground into "hominy," an important
+item in the menu of those days.
+
+A band of Moravian missionaries settled at what is now known as
+Nundah, and they and the majority of the "Fortitude" immigrants were
+the real pioneers of agriculture in the infant settlement.
+
+Land orders, free immigration, and the discovery of gold were all
+factors in the development of the country, and the demand for farm
+lands led to the unlocking of areas previously given over to grazing.
+The pastoralists regarded agriculturists with disfavour, and in some
+cases with open antagonism. By the exercise of "pre-emptive rights,"
+which their influence in the Legislature secured for them, they
+converted into freehold large blocks of the best land, as well as
+strategic areas by the possession of which they were able to close
+against settlement immense tracts preeminently suitable for farming.
+This was particularly the case in the settled districts of Moreton,
+Darling Downs, Wide Bay, and Burnett, and to a lesser degree in
+Maranoa. To such an extent was the right of preemption used that many
+squatters seriously crippled themselves, the price paid being too high
+for grazing to be remunerative on their freehold lands.
+
+[Illustration: HARVESTING WHEAT, EMU VALE, NEAR WARWICK]
+
+When, in after years, it would have been to their advantage to
+subdivide and sell to farmers, it was not in their power to give
+titles. In the course of time railways were built through some of
+these large estates, but their earning power was seriously hampered
+by country capable of supporting a very large agricultural population
+being devoted to pasturing sheep and cattle. As the most satisfactory
+solution of the difficulty, successive Governments have repurchased
+a number of properties at a cost exceeding a million sterling, and
+resold them in small areas to farmers, with highly gratifying results
+both to the settlers and to the State.
+
+The immediate effect of the exclusive policy adopted by the
+pastoralists, however, was to force many selectors to take up land in
+dense scrubs on steep mountain slopes and in river pockets which were
+useless to stockowners. They had literally to hew their homes out
+of the jungle. Having no roads, they were thrown upon their own
+resources, and were obliged to live very largely upon the produce of
+their farms. Erecting a rude makeshift fence around a clearing of a
+few acres, the "cocky" or "cockatoo farmer," as he was contemptuously
+styled by those who regarded him as an interloper, planted maize and
+pumpkins among the remains of the scrub. Despite the ravages of bird
+and beast, he persevered, until at last success began to crown his
+efforts. A cow or two provided him with milk and butter, any surplus
+butter being sold to the storekeepers in the towns which quickly
+followed in the wake of settlement. Lucerne, sorghum, and other fodder
+crops formed part of his husbandry, live stock multiplied, and thus
+commenced that system of mixed farming to which thousands of the
+farmers of Queensland owe their prosperity. The coming of neighbours
+and the making of roads rendered life less lonely. With increasing
+prosperity, improved implements and methods were adopted. The plough
+succeeded the hoe; the harvester or the reaper and binder took the
+place of sickle and scythe; and the slab humpy or bark hut gave way to
+the comfortable farmhouse.
+
+Though these early selectors were driven into almost inaccessible
+scrub, they were at least within the region of heavy rainfall, and,
+even where some distance from permanent streams, suffered little from
+drought. Settlers who went over the Range, profiting by the experience
+of the pastoral pioneers regarding the vicissitudes of climate,
+avoided the mistake of relying upon a single crop, or, to use a
+homely phrase, of putting all their eggs in one basket--an error which
+brought ruin to thousands upon thousands of the people who, between
+thirty and forty years ago, flocked from the Atlantic seaboard to the
+arid regions of America, west of the Mississippi. Mixed farming became
+the general rule on the further side of the Main Range, so that, if
+wheat and maize failed, the farmers had their flocks and herds
+and their shearing cheques as a standby until the next harvest was
+garnered.
+
+It is sometimes said with scorn that there is comparatively little
+real farming in Queensland; but the conditions peculiar to
+settlement in the State are responsible for the trend of agricultural
+development. In the United States and Canada, the flood of immigration
+and the part played by the great railway companies as land-owners and
+promoters of settlement to provide traffic for their railways led
+to the creation of small holdings, which, in turn, led to intense
+cultivation of field and orchard crops. In Queensland, immigration has
+never been conducted on an extensive scale, and, indeed, for over a
+decade almost ceased. There was no great demand for land, and, as the
+mistaken belief long prevailed that the quantity of arable land was
+small, the area of so-called agricultural farms was made sufficiently
+large to enable a man to make a living from stock-raising, dairying,
+and pig-breeding. Field labourers being scarce and stock cheap, the
+farmer's aim has rather been to grow feed for his stock than crops for
+human consumption. He has followed the line of least resistance, so
+using his land as to carry on his operations with family labour and a
+little casual assistance during the busy seasons.
+
+Events have justified this mixed farming from the point of view of
+the farmer, and doubtless the monthly returns from dairying will cause
+most of the farmers of Southern and Central Queensland to rely chiefly
+upon that industry so long as high prices continue, and to look to
+pig-breeding and lamb-fattening as subsidiary branches. But for the
+swelling tide of newcomers the supplies of rich scrub, alluvial flat,
+and volcanic downs country must sooner or later prove inadequate.
+Indeed, within the last few years settlers have been turning their
+attention to land which was once regarded as inferior. From the
+lighter soils of plain and upland larger and more certain crops of
+grain are being won, and on these lands dairying will take second
+place to cereal production.
+
+Since an enlightened Legislature has resumed many millions of acres
+previously held under pastoral lease, and repurchased large estates in
+districts enjoying the advantages of railway communication, there
+has been no need to go far afield, and settlement has been chiefly
+confined to the lands adjacent to the rivers and railways in the
+coastal belt, on the Darling Downs, and, of recent years, in the
+Burnett district.
+
+Still, within the last thirty years, from one cause or another, groups
+of settlers have made their homes far beyond those limits. Thus the
+wheat lands of Maranoa were settled when there was no farming more
+than a few miles to the west of Toowoomba. Over eighteen hundred years
+ago Tacitus wrote of our Saxon forefathers: "They live apart, each by
+himself, as woodside, plain, or fresh spring attracts him." And
+this racial characteristic is strong in many of their descendants in
+Queensland. Better results and greater profits might have accrued from
+concentration, but the wonderful development of the British
+Empire owes much to this centrifugal impulse and to the spirit of
+independence and self-reliance which it has fostered; and as the flag
+has followed the adventurer in so many parts of the globe, so are the
+scattered pioneers of our Western lands nuclei around whom settlement
+is gradually gathering.
+
+To people coming for the most part from the mother country, experience
+constituted no safe guide to the agricultural possibilities of their
+new home in the South. Naturally, mistakes were made and time
+and money lost before they discovered which crops were the most
+profitable, and on what kind of land those crops could be grown with
+greatest certainty of success.
+
+When Dr. Lang induced the "Fortitude" immigrants to cast in their lot
+with the Moreton Bay settlement, in whose welfare he took so deep an
+interest, his desire was to establish the cultivation of cotton, to
+which he believed the climate and soil were specially adapted. But,
+despite the heavy crops produced on the river flats, cotton did not
+prove remunerative until, after the outbreak of the American Civil
+War in 1861, the Lancashire spinners were reduced to such straits
+that they gladly paid high prices for all that could be obtained from
+Queensland. The product was of excellent quality, but the cost of
+picking precluded competition with countries where cheap labour was
+plentiful, and, with the return to normal conditions in the United
+States after the termination of the war, cotton passed almost out
+of cultivation, and has never since become a crop of commercial
+importance. An effort was made some years back to resuscitate the
+industry by the offer of a Government bonus upon manufactured piece
+goods. The bounty was earned by a mill at Ipswich, but the industry
+did not long survive the stoppage of the bonus. Since the drought
+of 1902 cotton has again been grown, principally in West Moreton
+and North Queensland, as a subsidiary crop, and farmers have been
+encouraged to extend their operations by the recent offer of a
+bounty by the Commonwealth; but, until machinery takes the place of
+hand-picking, farmers are likely to prefer crops which are not subject
+to competition with the cheap labour of other lands.
+
+The first European colonists in America found there two valuable
+native products--maize and tobacco. Australia, on the other hand,
+presented a virgin field to the agriculturist. Like the rest of the
+Commonwealth, Queensland, blessed with the richest natural pastures,
+possesses no indigenous food plants of proved economic value. The
+early settlers naturally availed themselves of the wealth of native
+grasses and edible shrubs, and became graziers. When a commencement
+was made with agriculture, farmers sowed the crops to which they had
+been accustomed in Great Britain. Though these grew well, it was soon
+found that they were, on the whole, better adapted to the elevated
+downs than to the forcing climate on the coast. Maize, sugar-cane, and
+the fruits of the tropics, on the other hand, revelled in the sunshine
+and moist atmosphere of the seaboard.
+
+The farmer's first consideration is how he may utilise his land to the
+best advantage. The most profitable crops are those for which there
+is a world-wide demand but only a limited area of production, and
+therefore little competition for the grower; or, alternatively, crops
+which, by reason of natural advantages, he can produce more abundantly
+and at less cost than his competitors. Next in value are crops for
+which he has a monopoly in a limited but protected market, or enjoys
+natural advantages which give him a partial monopoly in such a market.
+Of less value, but still profitable, are crops which he can place on
+the market as cheaply as his rivals.
+
+In the first-mentioned category the Queensland farmer has butter,
+cheese, hams, and bacon. With good stock, cheap land, unrivalled
+pastures, and a climate which permits production to go on
+uninterruptedly from January to December, Queensland is most
+favourably situated, and farmers have not been slow to profit by their
+natural advantages.
+
+Large as are the present dimensions of the dairying industry, they are
+small compared with the possibilities of expansion. Already the value
+of butter, cheese, and milk is well over L1,000,000 per annum, the
+butter export alone being worth considerably more than half that
+sum. The export has multiplied tenfold in the last six years; and, as
+Queensland is the leading cattle State, there is every justification
+for believing that in dairy produce she will soon become one of the
+principal exporting States of the Commonwealth.
+
+[Illustration: SURPRISE CREEK CASCADE, CAIRNS RAILWAY]
+
+So late as twenty years ago, much of the butter consumed in Queensland
+came from the Southern States. The local product was inferior in
+quality, although an agreeable change from the imported salted butter.
+The passage of the protective tariff of 1888 gave a great impetus
+to the production of butter and cheese. A heavy impost was placed on
+dairy produce, and the Government lent further aid to the industry by
+sending experts through the farming districts in charge of travelling
+dairies. Valuable instruction was given; the cream separator came
+into general use, and there was soon a noticeable improvement in
+both butter and cheese. Factories sprang into existence in every
+agricultural centre, and by degrees the farmers became suppliers of
+cream instead of manufacturers of butter. Speedily production overtook
+the local consumption, importations ceased, and manufacturers began
+to look oversea for a market for their surplus stocks. Difficulties
+at once arose in connection with refrigerated space and freight rates.
+Regular shipments and rapid transport involved transhipment at
+Sydney from the coastal steamers, increased expense, and risk of
+deterioration. A State subsidy induced first one and then another
+shipping company to make Brisbane its terminal port in Australia, and
+to provide refrigerated chambers for butter at reduced freights; and
+now Queensland, in respect of these matters, is on precisely the same
+footing as the other States.
+
+On the first appearance of Queensland butter in London, lower prices
+were obtainable than were paid for other brands with an established
+reputation, and some dissatisfaction was expressed by buyers on
+account of variations in quality. To remedy this, legislation was
+passed providing for Government inspection and grading of all butter
+intended for export. Whether grading and price do or do not stand in
+the relations of cause and effect, it is beyond dispute that it is
+only since the initiation of the system that Queensland butter has
+been on a parity with the butter of the Southern States and New
+Zealand, and the general standard is undoubtedly higher than in
+pre-grading days.
+
+Coincident with the improvement in the quality of the butter, a great
+change for the better has taken place in the dairy herds. Good milking
+strains have been introduced, and more attention is paid to the
+feeding of the cows, with the result that it is by no means uncommon
+for the milk from one cow to bring as much as L8 or L9 a year.
+
+The tariff of 1888 and the educative policy of successive Governments
+have also been largely responsible for the establishment of the allied
+industry of bacon and ham curing on a firm basis, and local brands are
+favourably known in many parts of the world.
+
+Under the heading of crops for which our farmers enjoy a monopoly in
+a limited but protected market--or natural advantages which are
+equivalent to a partial monopoly--are sugar, maize, tomatoes, tropical
+and citrus fruits, and cigar tobacco. The Commonwealth tariff gives
+Queensland a practical monopoly in Australia for sugar. She has a
+virtual monopoly for tropical fruits, being the only State in which
+these are produced in excess of local requirements. The warmer climate
+and earlier crop give her temporary command of the Southern markets
+for citrus fruits, tomatoes, maize, and a number of minor products,
+before they mature in the cooler South, an advantage that will extend
+in time to many other crops, with the increasing interchange arising
+from interstate free trade.
+
+Chief among products which can be placed as cheaply on the market as
+in other countries are the cereals. Queensland has all the essentials
+of a great grain-producing country. Her name does not yet figure
+among the list of exporters of foodstuffs, but the reasons for her
+backwardness are not far to seek.
+
+At the close of 1908 the number of people in the State, scattered over
+its 670,500 square miles of territory, was only 558,000--little more
+than the population of Sydney or Melbourne, and less than that of
+several second-class cities in the mother country. Probably not more
+than ten per cent. of the people are engaged in farming, but, acre for
+acre and man for man, Queensland compares favourably with countries
+that are regarded as primarily agricultural. The lands most sought
+after have been scrub, deep alluvial flats, and black and chocolate
+loams; and, until recently, it was on land of this kind that most of
+the wheat and barley was grown. Heavy crops were harvested, as a
+rule, but the results were not uniformly satisfactory, and it is now
+recognised that these highly fertile lands are better suited for other
+forms of cultivation than the growth of cereals. For several years,
+incoming selectors--many Southern wheat farmers from preference--have
+been settling to the west of the heavy Downs country on the lighter
+soils of ridge and plain. From these lands, of which Queensland has a
+practically unlimited supply, but which the settlers of twenty or even
+ten years ago regarded as poor, more and more of the wheat crop is now
+coming. With less labour and at less expense than on the heavy soils,
+the farmer has greater certainty of a payable yield.
+
+Sugar has first place among agricultural products from Port Douglas
+to the Mary River, followed by maize and the luscious fruits of the
+tropics. From Maryborough to the Tweed, maize takes precedence of
+sugar. Crops of less importance are potatoes, pumpkins, citrus fruits,
+pineapples, and bananas. In the Central and Southern divisions of the
+coastal belt, where dairying is the chief industry, large areas are
+under fodder crops and permanent grasses. From the Northern section
+of the littoral, thousands of bunches of bananas are shipped weekly
+to the South. Mangoes and pineapples are also sent South in very
+considerable quantities. Citrus fruits and tomatoes ripen at least
+two months earlier in North Queensland than in New South Wales and
+Victoria, and this fact has led to an important and profitable trade
+in these commodities being opened up with Sydney and Melbourne. The
+spices and food and other economic plants of the tropics grow to
+perfection north of Mackay. Cigar tobacco of good quality is being
+grown in small quantities in several parts of the North, and the
+Commonwealth bounty and the willingness of manufacturers to take
+the leaf should lead in time to the bulk of the cigars consumed
+in Australia being made from Queensland leaf. Despite the heat and
+humidity of the climate, dairying is being carried on with success as
+far north as Cairns, and at Atherton on the hinterland it promises to
+become an important industry.
+
+Except on the Darling Downs, progress on the tableland has been
+retarded until a comparatively recent date through the land being
+locked up in pastoral leaseholds. At Atherton in the North and on
+the Burnett lands in the South, however, agricultural settlement is
+proceeding by leaps and bounds. Following the usual practice on scrub
+land, maize and grasses are the principal objects of culture, as they
+can be planted among the fallen timber and converted into milk long
+before the land can be put under the plough.
+
+The Darling Downs, famous for their beauty and fertility, well deserve
+their title of "Garden of Queensland." Other districts, notably
+Atherton and the Burnett, have as good land, and the latter may
+have an equal area; but nowhere can there be seen 4,000,000 acres of
+splendid agricultural country requiring so little labour to bring it
+under cultivation. Far beyond the horizon stretch these fine lands,
+formerly clothed with nutritious natural grasses, but now passing into
+cultivation and dotted over with prosperous homesteads. More than 70
+per cent. of the wheat, oats, and barley of Queensland comes from the
+Downs, which are capable of supporting a population far larger than
+the whole State now contains. Shipments of malting barley grown on
+the Downs attracted such favourable notice in England a few years
+back that offers were made to buy large quantities, and modern and
+well-equipped malting houses have since been built at Toowoomba and
+Warwick by a leading firm of English maltsters. Oats are grown for
+hay, no grain being ground into meal. There is an increasing tendency,
+founded on experience, to look to the lighter soils for cereal
+production, and to put the heavier volcanic soils of the Eastern Downs
+to uses for which they are better adapted. To dairying much of the
+prosperity of the Downs farmers is due. Butter and cheese factories
+have been erected every few miles along the railway line, and the
+number of cream-cans awaiting transport on every platform bear
+striking testimony to the importance of the industry. Most of the
+fruits of Northern and Southern Europe flourish, and the many fine
+orchards between Stanthorpe and the New South Wales border are giving
+handsome returns to their fortunate owners. In the neighbourhood of
+Texas, to the west of Warwick, pipe tobacco of fine flavour is being
+cultivated. The extension of the railway from Warwick to Goondiwindi
+has rendered available additional areas suitable for this crop, and
+circumstances favour the creation of a great industry.
+
+The boundless plains of the West, where the annual rainfall varies
+from 30 inches to 10 inches, are the seat of the pastoral industry,
+and agriculture is still in its infancy. In the vicinity of Roma, on
+the Southern and Western Railway, wheat is the staple crop. Further
+West, on river banks and adjacent to artesian bores, vegetables,
+grapes, and oranges are grown. The oranges at Barcaldine, in the
+Central West, have been pronounced by the Government Fruit Expert
+to be the finest he has seen. In the same locality areas of grain,
+lucerne, and other hay crops show the capabilities of the plain lands
+when irrigated; but these small patches do not constitute an
+industry. The soil has in it all the elements of fertility, and is
+of inexhaustible depth; but, unhappily, the rainy season does not
+coincide with the period of growth of the cereals for which these
+lands seem otherwise intended by Nature; and until science becomes
+the handmaid of husbandry, and irrigation is demonstrated to be both
+practicable and remunerative, agriculture is likely to make little
+headway in the West.
+
+[Illustration: PINEAPPLE FARM, WOOMBYE, NORTH COAST RAILWAY]
+
+[Illustration: SUGAR-MILL, HUXLEY, ISIS RAILWAY]
+
+[Illustration: A FIELD OF MAIZE, EEL CREEK, GYMPIE]
+
+The farmers of Queensland may well lay to heart the experience
+of America. Forty years ago disaster overtook every attempt at
+cultivation west of the Mississippi basin until the aid of irrigation
+was invoked. The response to the application of water was immediate,
+and millions of acres are now under intense cultivation in the dry
+belt, and supporting a population far outnumbering that of Australia.
+
+These are the words in which an American writer graphically describes
+the wonderful work that has been done on lands that bear a striking
+resemblance to those of Western Queensland both in regard to climate
+and soil:--
+
+ The actual amount of land that may be reclaimed and cultivated
+ in the semi-arid region furnishes no measure of the value of
+ irrigation in this vast district. By enabling thousands to
+ engage in farming, irrigation has made it possible to use the
+ surrounding plains as the pasture for great numbers of beef
+ cattle. In many instances small herds are owned by the farmers
+ themselves, but to a large extent their crops are bought by
+ those whose sole business is cattle-raising. Thus all the
+ resources of the region are brought into use, and a wonderful
+ prosperity has followed as the logical result.
+
+ From Canada to Mexico the revolution of the Great Plain is now
+ in full tide. It is the most democratic page in the history
+ of American irrigation. It has saved an enormous district from
+ lapsing into a condition of semi-barbarism. It has not only
+ made human life secure, but revolutionised the industrial and
+ social economy of the locality.
+
+ To a considerable extent it has replaced the quarter-lot
+ with the small farm, and the single crop with diversified
+ cultivation. It has transformed the speculative instincts of
+ the people into a spirit of sober industrialism. It has raised
+ the standard of living and improved the character of the
+ homes. It has planted the rose bush and the pansy where only
+ the sunflower cast its shadow, and it has twined the ivy and
+ the honeysuckle over doors which formerly knew not the touch
+ of beauty. It has made neighbours and society where once there
+ were loneliness and heart-hunger. It has broken the chains of
+ hopeless mortgages and crowned industry with independence.
+
+The history of irrigation in the United States reads like a romance.
+Competent authorities have expressed the opinion that truly scientific
+farming is only possible where irrigation takes the place of rain,
+and where the elements of fertility are retained in the soil. American
+experience supports this view. Farms of from ten to forty acres
+support whole families in comfort, if not in affluence, and one acre
+yields as much as five of the best land in the rainfall belt. Whether
+land is used for mixed farming or crop cultivation, the best results
+are achieved when moisture can be applied or withheld according to the
+needs of the crop. Without irrigation, crops may be more certain
+in the coastal belt and on the intermediate tableland, but with
+irrigation the advantage will undoubtedly lie with our Western lands.
+A downpour may do irremediable harm to a ripening crop or at harvest
+time, and to that danger the plain lands of the interior are less
+liable than those in the region of heavier rainfall.
+
+In some parts of Queensland, principally near the coast, irrigation
+has already attained some prominence. In 1907 water was applied
+artificially to 9,612 acres. Of this area, 4,492 acres were in the
+Burdekin Delta, the water being drawn from the Burdekin, from lagoons,
+and from wells. The rainfall is comparatively light, and the marked
+increase in the cane crop on the irrigated lands is apparent to the
+most casual observer. In the Bundaberg district 2,350 acres were
+irrigated from the Burnett River and from wells; the vegetable and
+fruit growers of Bowen irrigated 356 acres; and water was applied
+to 482 acres in the neighbourhood of Rockhampton. Artesian water was
+supplied to 100 acres at Barcaldine and 240 acres at Hungerford far
+out on the New South Wales border.
+
+In the Western States of America, where water is measured out
+with mathematical accuracy and applied with clockwork regularity,
+agriculture has been raised almost to the rank of an exact science.
+The soil of Western Queensland is quite equal to that of the States
+in fertility, and similar methods should here produce similar results.
+When even the sterile Sahara is gradually disappearing before the
+irrigation works of French engineers, there is no need to despond
+regarding the future of the very driest parts of Queensland.
+
+In Egypt and Spain and in several of the American States, the water
+for irrigation is obtained from perennial streams drawing their
+supplies from distant snow-clad mountains. Kansas differs in this
+respect from other States. The description of the rivers of Western
+Kansas by an American humorist might have been penned with equal
+appositeness of the rivers of Western Queensland: "They are a mile
+wide, and an inch thick; they have a large circulation, but very
+little influence." Fortunately for Kansas, water is everywhere
+procurable by sinking shallow wells. In Dakota and Texas, thousands of
+millions of gallons are poured on to the land daily from thousands of
+artesian wells. Though lofty mountain chains are lacking, with summits
+high above the line of perpetual snow and giving birth to rivers
+rivalling Nile and Mississippi in volume, both of these latter sources
+of supply are available in Queensland. East and west of the Great
+Divide, abundance of water has been obtained from wells. Our western
+rivers may flow intermittently on the surface, but sub-artesian water
+is plentiful in many localities, and the great artesian basin, with
+its area of no less than 372,000 square miles, coincides generally
+with that part of the State which has a rainfall of 20 inches or less,
+a wise Providence having apparently created this huge subterranean
+reservoir to guard against excessive evaporation and to compensate for
+the light rains.
+
+There is still another supply open. Allowing for a very large
+percentage of the water that finds its way into the watercourses of
+the West sinking into the earth or being lost through evaporation, a
+tremendous quantity that now runs to waste could be conserved by works
+such as the Government of New South Wales are constructing in the
+Murrumbidgee basin. Irrigation on a large scale is beyond the means of
+individuals--it must be undertaken either by private co-operation
+or by State enterprise; and preferably the latter. Irrigation and
+afforestation are both necessary for the successful development of
+the West. If water can be supplied to settlers at a cost which is
+not prohibitive, whether it be drawn from storage reservoirs or from
+subterranean sources, the face of the country will quickly be changed.
+Instead of a handful of pastoral lessees controlling in some instances
+areas of hundreds of thousands of acres, a much larger population of
+grazier farmers will be settled on much smaller holdings, enjoying
+all the benefits--educational, social, and civic--which result from
+concentrated settlement.
+
+A product of the land which is intimately connected with settlement,
+if somewhat outside the scope of this chapter, is timber. The forests
+of Queensland are very extensive, and contain numerous timbers of
+great value for building and cabinet-making. Chief among the former
+are several species of pine, hardwood, beech, and ash. The most
+beautiful and valuable of the ornamental woods are red cedar, silky
+oak, bean-tree, and maple. In the earliest settled districts in
+the South most of these have become comparatively scarce. The
+timber-getter has been through the scrubs and forests, and much that
+could not be converted into lumber has been destroyed by fire, to make
+the ground ready for the plough. In North Queensland there are immense
+quantities available, especially of the ornamental varieties, and
+a profitable trade has been opened up with the southern part of the
+State and with Sydney and Melbourne. Formerly the timber became the
+property of the selector, but now a royalty is charged, which yields
+the Crown a considerable revenue, and selection is deferred until the
+marketable trees have been removed. To prevent the exhaustion of the
+supplies, and as a preliminary to reafforestation, reserves have been
+proclaimed in several parts of the State to act as nurseries.
+
+Of the 429,120,000 acres contained in Queensland, at the close of 1908
+some 21,500,000 acres--or just one-twentieth of the total area--had
+been selected as agricultural farms and homesteads; 31,000,000 acres
+were held as grazing and scrub selections, 56,000,000 acres were under
+occupation license or depasturing right, and 186,000,000 acres under
+pastoral lease, the remainder consisting either of reserves, mineral
+lands, or unoccupied land in remote localities.
+
+From every district where land is open to agricultural selection,
+however, comes the report that the demand is keen. No sooner is an
+area thrown open to selection than it is eagerly applied for, and the
+number of those who signify their desire to become personal residents
+in order to obtain priority is fast increasing. The Australian States,
+New Zealand, the British Isles, and Germany are all furnishing their
+quota of seekers after the cheap and excellent lands Queensland has to
+offer.
+
+Provision has been made by the Legislature for all kinds of
+settlement--purely agricultural, mixed farming, and grazing. The
+areas vary, being governed by the quality of the land, rainfall, the
+presence or absence of permanent water, and proximity to a market or a
+railway--in other words, by the amount required to provide the settler
+with a comfortable income. The State is a generous landlord, and every
+allowance is made for the difficulties of selectors in the earlier
+stages of their occupancy. The man who wishes to acquire a freehold
+has the opportunity of gratifying his desire. The man who objects to
+that tenure has it in his power to obtain a lease in perpetuity. The
+best settler being generally the man who intends to earn his living
+entirely from the soil, and is prepared to reside continuously upon
+the land, men of that class are very properly accorded priority over
+those who do not intend to reside in person. Particulars regarding the
+different tenures and the conditions upon which land may be obtained
+from the Crown will be found in Appendix E.
+
+The State assists the agriculturist in many ways. The Agricultural
+College at Gatton is doing valuable service in training young men and
+in carrying on experimental work. Six State farms, at two of which
+apprentices are taken, have been established in as many widely
+separated districts to ascertain by experiment the crops and methods
+of cultivation most suited to local conditions, and impart the results
+of their labours to the neighbouring farmers. Some of these farms have
+valuable stud flocks and dairy herds, from which settlers can obtain
+high-class stock. At Cairns tropical products are being tested and
+propagated at a State nursery. Useful educational work is also being
+done at the Sugar Experiment Station at Mackay. These institutions are
+under the direct supervision of the Department of Agriculture, which
+also employs experts in dairying, fruit culture, and tobacco growing
+and curing. A botanist, an entomologist, and an agricultural chemist
+are highly necessary and valuable members of the departmental staff,
+and much useful information is disseminated through the medium of the
+"Agricultural Journal," published by the Department.
+
+[Illustration: THRESHING WHEAT, EMU VALE, KILLARNEY RAILWAY]
+
+[Illustration: COFFEE PLANTATION, KURANDA, CAIRNS RAILWAY]
+
+In addition to giving instruction, the Government have built sheds in
+the principal farming centres on the Darling Downs for the storage of
+wheat and other grain until the farmers can dispose of their crops
+to advantage. Cheap money is supplied through the medium of the
+Agricultural Bank. There are trust funds from which advances are made
+to those who desire to build co-operative flour or sugar mills, butter
+and cheese factories, or meat-preserving works. Railways have been
+constructed in the older farming districts, produce is carried at
+moderate rates, and subsidies are given to steamship companies for the
+carriage of produce to oversea markets.
+
+All this has been done for the man already on the land. Much is
+likewise being done to help the man who wishes to become a settler.
+Railways are being built into districts in which the Crown owns large
+areas fit for close settlement. In other localities roads are made,
+land is cleared, and wells and bores are sunk. Money is advanced on
+liberal terms and at a low rate of interest by the Agricultural Bank
+for the making of improvements and the purchase of stock, implements,
+and machinery. Land is cheap, and special concessions are given by
+the Railway Department to new settlers when taking up their land. The
+annual rent forms an instalment of the purchase money, and payments
+may be deferred during the initial years of occupancy, when the
+selector is under heavy expense and is getting little or no return
+from his land.
+
+North and south along the coast, and west to the setting sun, long
+stretches of thick wood or grassy plain present themselves to the eye,
+solitary as in the dawn of creation, only awaiting the advent of the
+settler to be transformed into a scene of bustling activity.
+
+Endowed with a sunny and salubrious climate, a fruitful soil, an
+immense territory, Queensland has room for many millions of people;
+but those people must be of European birth or descent. For many
+years the settled policy of the country in regard to immigration was
+conservative. Now, however, all political parties are agreed upon the
+need for a larger population--but primarily an agrarian population.
+The great obstacles to immigration from Europe on any considerable
+scale are distance and expense. America is distant but a few days'
+sail, and the cost of a passage is correspondingly low. To place
+Queensland on an equally favourable footing, the Government have
+arranged with the British-India Steam Navigation Company to bring
+adult males from the United Kingdom to the State upon payment by the
+immigrants of L4 each. The rate for adult females is L2 per head,
+and L8 for males and females over 40 and under 55 years of age. Free
+passages may be granted to agricultural labourers introduced under
+contract if the employer pays a fee of L5 and guarantees a year's
+employment at approved wages. The balance of the passage-money in
+every case is paid by the State. Female domestic servants, and the
+wives and children of contract or part-paying immigrants, are carried
+free. Immigrants may select land before leaving the old country, with
+the option of getting a refund if not satisfied with their choice
+after their arrival in Queensland. Full particulars of the various
+forms of immigration will be found in Appendix F.
+
+In 1908 the number of those who came from the British Isles was only
+2,584, but the numbers are increasing since the inauguration of the
+B.I.S.N. service _via_ Torres Strait, 2,737 immigrants having arrived
+during the first nine months of this year. Hundreds of desirable
+settlers and their families are coming every year from the Southern
+States and New Zealand, attracted by the cheaper land and brighter
+prospects. The stream of newcomers is now but a tiny rivulet; but,
+when each proclaims to his friends his success in the land of his
+adoption, that rivulet will swell to a mighty river.
+
+Cheap passages and the cheap land across the Atlantic have till now
+turned westward the eyes of the millions of Europe anxious to become
+their own masters and to live a wider, freer life than is possible
+in their native lands. Queensland is taking steps to bring her
+attractions more prominently under the notice of the British and
+European public in order to secure a share of the rural populations
+of the Old World for herself. She has advantages--natural, material,
+social, and political--in no way inferior to those presented by other
+countries. Life and liberty are nowhere more secure. A wide expanse of
+sea divides us from the nearest foreign Power. Living is cheaper and
+existence easier than in those lands to which the people of Europe are
+flocking. The sun is always shining, and winter, instead of being a
+period of enforced idleness, is a season when labour is greatly in
+demand. Crop succeeds crop without pause, and seed-time and harvest
+follow each other in quick procession. Stock feed in the open
+throughout the year, and winter brings little diminution in the yield
+of dairy produce.
+
+With free institutions, individual liberty, and great natural
+resources, Queensland is destined to become the home of a numerous and
+prosperous people. It is our manifest duty to see that it forms part
+of a strong, self-reliant, British nation beneath the Southern Cross,
+linked in the bonds of affection with the Motherland and our brethren
+across the seas, with arms open in welcome to our kin and colour, but
+ready to defend ourselves against aggression. In the great work, the
+men who are subduing the wilderness and converting it into a smiling
+garden can be relied upon to play their part. Nature is a tender
+foster-mother; freedom is in the air. Stalwart in frame, courageous
+in heart, true scions of the race from which they spring, rejoicing in
+their manhood, grateful for their heritage, the yeomen of Queensland
+are the pride of their country.
+
+ "Not without envy Wealth at times must look
+ On their brown strength who wield the reaping-hook
+ And scythe, or at the forge-fire shape the plough
+ Or the steel harness of the steeds of steam;
+ All who, by skill and patience, anyhow
+ Make service noble, and the earth redeem
+ From savageness. By kingly accolade
+ Than theirs was never worthier knighthood made."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III.
+
+THE SUGAR INDUSTRY.
+
+ Sugar-cane in the Northern Hemisphere.--The Rise of the
+ Beet Industry.--Abolition of Slave Labour in West Indies.
+ --Reorganisation of Industry on Scientific Basis.
+ --Establishment of Industry in Queensland.--Difficulties
+ of Early Planters.--Stoppage of Pacific Island Labour.
+ --Evolution of Small Holdings and Erection of Central
+ Mills.--Reintroduction of Pacific Islanders.--Stoppage of
+ Pacific Island Labour by Commonwealth Legislation.--Bonus
+ on White-grown Sugar.--Benefits Arising from Separating
+ Cultivation and Manufacture.--Contrast between Past and
+ Present Methods.--Scientific Cultivation.--Recent Statistics.
+ --The Future of the Industry.--Queensland Leading the Van in
+ Establishing White Agriculturists in Tropics.
+
+
+Long before the Christian era classical and sacred writers made
+mention of that "sweet cane" whose product plays so important a part
+in the everyday requirements of modern life.
+
+Sugar-cane was introduced into Spain by the Moors early in the eighth
+century. The Moorish empire sank before the combined might of Spain
+in 1492, and in that year Columbus added a new world to the realm of
+Castile. Within a few years the sugar industry had taken firm root
+in the West Indies, and on every isle dotting the Spanish Main waved
+countless fields of cane, yielding crops beside which the production
+of Andalusia, already waning under the dead hand of Spain, paled into
+insignificance.
+
+To the first Spanish planters is due the system upon which the sugar
+industry was conducted in the tropics for more than three hundred
+years. The haughty hidalgo, scorning to labour with his own hands,
+forced into his service the unresisting natives of the West. Unused
+to strenuous toil, they sank beneath the burden. Touched with pity for
+their sad lot, and anxious to save them from extirpation, Las Casas,
+"the Apostle of the Indians," urged the substitution of the children
+of Ham, whom he and all good Christians believed to have been doomed
+to perpetual bondage; and African slavery thus became an established
+institution in the West.
+
+Whether under Spanish or British rule, the sugar industry of the West
+Indies, and of all other tropical countries to which it was extended,
+was carried on under a system of large plantations, owned as a rule
+by men of good family, who, deeming personal control beneath their
+dignity, deputed to overseers of meaner rank the supervision of their
+servile labourers. The profusion of Nature, coupled with vicarious
+management and the absence of competition, engendered extravagance,
+improvident husbandry, and wasteful and unscientific manufacture, the
+while there rose to Heaven--
+
+ "Steaming up, a lamentation and an ancient tale of wrong,
+ Like a tale of little-meaning, tho' the words are strong;
+ Chanted from an ill-used race of men that cleave the soil,
+ Sow the seed, and reap the harvest with enduring toil."
+
+[Illustration: SUGAR-MILL, CHILDERS, NORTH COAST RAILWAY]
+
+Until well on in the nineteenth century little progress was made
+either in cultivation or manufacture. For more than three hundred
+years the history of the industry was one of slave labour, crude
+methods, and planters to whom life in the tropics meant exile from
+Europe, and whose sole object was to amass wealth to be spent in the
+pleasures of the courts of St. James, Versailles, or Madrid.
+
+The first blow struck at the old-time theory that the tropics were
+created solely to supply the needs of dwellers in temperate climes
+was dealt by Napoleon when he took steps to establish the beet-sugar
+industry in France. His object was twofold--to render Continental
+Europe, which was then lying at his mercy, independent of Britain and
+the British colonies; and to cripple the trade of the only Power which
+had never stooped to his sway. Unconsciously, at the same time he laid
+the foundation of a tropical Britain peopled by the British race.
+
+The successful establishment of the beet-sugar industry called for the
+application of industrial, scientific, and organising capacity of
+the highest order, and the Governments of France and other European
+countries fostered its development by heavy bounties.
+
+The abolition of slavery in the British West Indies in 1834 and the
+later emancipation of the negroes in the United States so disorganised
+the sugar industry of the West that those engaged in it were too
+engrossed with their own affairs to heed the progress of the beet
+industry of Europe. The output of beet sugar steadily forged ahead
+until, in the early eighties, it was almost equal to the output of
+cane sugar. Tropical planters and manufacturers then found themselves
+engaged in a life-and-death struggle for which they were ill-equipped.
+Forced by inexorable necessity to face the situation, they realised
+that only by following the example of their rivals--by calling in the
+aid of science both in cultivation and in manufacture, and by
+paying the strictest attention to the financial side of their
+enterprise--could they hope to hold their own.
+
+Just at the time that the Southern States of America were fighting
+desperately in defence of the slave system, the foundations of the
+Queensland sugar industry were being laid. Despite the high prices
+then ruling for sugar, the profits were not large, owing to the
+primitive methods of cultivation and manufacture adopted on the
+plantations. In time, even in this remote quarter of the globe the
+growth of the beet industry compelled the planters to make radical
+changes. Antiquated husbandry, crude processes, and wasteful
+management were superseded by modern scientific methods. The
+subdivision of large estates, the substitution of small white growers
+for gangs of unskilled coloured labourers, and the establishment of
+co-operative central factories were Queensland's contribution to the
+solution of the problem of Beet _versus_ Cane.
+
+As Napoleon in his wildest dreams had no conception that his
+anti-British policy would ultimately lead to the expansion and
+evolution of the sugar industry of the tropics, so the Queenslander
+who first planted a few sticks of sugar-cane on the shores of Moreton
+Bay half a century ago little foresaw that from that humble beginning
+would develop the greatest agricultural industry of this State--an
+industry which, if treated with continued consideration and sympathy
+by the Commonwealth, bids fair to revolutionise the hitherto accepted
+view of the relations of the white races to the tropics. Yet, if we
+read aright the brief history of the Queensland sugar industry, and
+appreciate its present position, that first planter commenced a work
+which is likely to lead to permanent settlement in the tropics by men
+of European descent.
+
+There was little to distinguish the establishment of our sugar
+industry from similar ventures in other parts of the tropics where
+the supply of cheap coloured native labour was insufficient for
+the requirements of the planters. The men who opened up the first
+plantations in Queensland were not Australians, except by adoption.
+Their experience had been gained in Java, Mauritius, the West Indies,
+and elsewhere. They came to this country imbued with the old notion
+that the best and most economical means of carrying on tropical
+agriculture was to cultivate large estates by the aid of gangs of
+coloured labourers; and it is a moot point whether, fifty years ago,
+any other method of establishing tropical industries in Queensland
+was possible. Certain land concessions were given to encourage the
+newcomers, and they were permitted to import Pacific Islanders, under
+Government supervision, as contract labourers for work in the fields.
+
+Not all the early planters had been sugar-growers previously. In the
+Mackay district, which has always been one of the chief sugar centres,
+the first settlers grew cotton, tobacco, and arrowroot. But early in
+the sixties it was recognised that the production of sugar offered
+the most satisfactory and profitable field for their enterprise.
+Generally, they were representatives of that class of whom Benjamin
+Kidd, in his "Control of the Tropics," says: "The more advanced
+peoples, driven to seek new outlooks for their activities, will be
+subject to a gradually increasing pressure to turn their attention
+to the great natural field of enterprise which still remains in the
+development of the tropics."
+
+It was not sufficient for these early planters to take up land and
+plant their crops; they had to erect mills, where the cane could be
+converted into sugar, and this required capital. The cost of labour,
+provisions, and supplies was enormous. Communication along the coast
+was such that goods were taken North in small sailing vessels, and the
+pioneers were quite accustomed to travelling in a small steamer which
+anchored under the lee of a convenient island during the darkness
+of the night. Those who see the condition of the industry which has
+evolved from these first efforts must, in justice to the pioneers,
+recall the difficulties and risks which were faced by them.
+
+Forty years ago the industry was an infant struggling with its
+teething troubles, still liable to premature death. In 1871 there were
+only 9,581 acres under sugar-cane in the whole of Queensland, and the
+production of sugar was only 3,762 tons, not equal to half the output
+of one of our large modern factories. The industry was then chiefly
+confined to the South, but it soon made its way northwards, and
+expanded so rapidly that, in 1881, the area under cane had increased
+to 28,026 acres, and there were no less than 103 mills in operation.
+
+The industry then entered upon the first of its great reverses. Owing
+to the enormous increase in the output of beet sugar in Europe, prices
+fell rapidly. The first of the larger class of factories, conducted on
+modern lines, with improved appliances, came into existence, and small
+mills, unable to compete successfully, began to close. Labour supplies
+from the South Sea Islands became more expensive, and a class of white
+men, originally labourers who had saved money, took up selections
+as sugar farms, and sought to dispose of their crops of cane to the
+planter-proprietors of existing mills. The latter, alarmed by the
+passage of legislation decreeing an end to the employment of coloured
+labour, planted larger areas with the object of taking off as much
+cane as possible before they were deprived of the services of the
+Polynesian labourers then under contract. The immediate result was
+that the small farmers were unable to sell their crops at reasonable
+rates; and to help them the Government of the day, whose avowed policy
+it was to have the industry carried on by white labour, decided to
+advance money to groups of these farmers to enable them to erect
+co-operative factories for the treatment of their cane. As an
+experiment, two such factories were built in the Mackay district,
+where the need was most clamant; and thus was laid the foundation of
+the central mill system, which has given such an impetus to the growth
+of the industry, conducted on the basis of white labour. Tentative
+though the experiment was, and though for many years not a complete
+financial success from the point of view of the mills, the erection of
+these mills at least showed that the interests of the farmer and the
+factory were mutually interdependent.
+
+It was seen almost at once by the large planter that the farmer,
+working in the field beside his employees, was more eager for success
+than when he worked as labourer or overseer for another. The control
+of the factories, under directorates of farmers, was found to be more
+satisfactory and more economical than when in the hands of planters
+or managers with old-fashioned ideas of organisation--with managers,
+sub-managers, and large administrative staffs. Five years after the
+first loan was granted by the Government, and barely three after the
+rollers were started in the first of the two pioneer mills, these
+facts had become manifest. It says much for the sense and courage
+of the planters that this revolution in established methods did
+not dismay them, and their wisdom was shown in setting to work
+energetically to put the new methods into practice in the conduct of
+their own business.
+
+In 1891 the Colonial Sugar Refining Company set the example by cutting
+up one of its large estates into farms of moderate size. Ten years
+earlier that estate was a cattle station, employing a couple of white
+men and a few aboriginals. Before the first six months of 1891 had
+passed, it was the home of fifty or sixty settlers, a number trebled
+within the next few years.
+
+The new departure largely overcame the labour difficulty; in addition
+to that, it went far to meet the low prices for sugar. Many of the
+factories still continued to make sugar for sale in the open market,
+and a considerable quantity found its way, profitably, to London.
+
+In 1892 a special Commissioner of the London "Times" (Miss Flora Shaw,
+now Lady Lugard) travelled through the sugar districts, and noted the
+evolution which was taking place. She seemed to foresee the future
+more clearly than many of those actually engaged in the industry.
+"Even the sugar industry," she wrote, "appears as a whole to be
+half-unconscious of the results of the reorganisation through which it
+has passed, and lies, as it were, still asleep in the dawn of its own
+prosperity."
+
+[Illustration: SISAL HEMP AND CANEFIELDS, SOUTH ISIS]
+
+[Illustration: CANEFIELDS, ISIS RAILWAY]
+
+[Illustration: SUGAR CANE AND MILL, HUXLEY, ISIS RAILWAY]
+
+The middle nineties saw the fuller development of the central mill
+system. More groups of farmers were formed, loans were obtained
+from the Government, and further factories, mostly large and all
+well-equipped with the most modern machinery, were erected. A sudden
+demand arose in all parts of the coastal belt for sugar lands. The
+wiser of the planters subdivided their estates; owners of lands
+hitherto unutilised cut them up, and sold them to the inrush of
+farmers. The financial crisis of the early nineties and the action
+of Parliament in removing the embargo on the introduction of Pacific
+Islanders were no doubt contributing factors to the rapid increase in
+the number of would-be sugar-growers; but, whatever the cause, certain
+it is that at this time the spurt in cane cultivation and white
+settlement was greater than at any other period in the history of the
+industry in Queensland.
+
+The year 1898 saw no less than 111,012 acres under cane, with a sugar
+production of 163,734 tons. The factories employed 3,709 men, nearly
+all Europeans, and the declared value of the sugar sent away
+from Queensland exceeded L1,300,000. The actual number of farmers
+cultivating cane in that year is not ascertainable, but it
+approximated 2,500.
+
+It may fairly be claimed that Queensland has conquered her tropical
+littoral. Between Nerang in the South and Port Douglas in the North
+stretches a coastline of nearly 1,000 miles. At intervals along this
+great distance are large areas under cane and a number of considerable
+towns almost entirely dependent upon the sugar industry--including
+important centres like Bundaberg, with over 10,000 inhabitants, and
+Mackay and Cairns, each containing over 5,000 souls. Uninhabited
+swamps and forests and mountain lands--covered with rank tropical
+grasses or dense growths of trees and creepers--have given place
+to cultivated fields, in which stand thousands of comfortable homes
+rendered accessible by well-made roads, while many districts are
+provided with most of the adjuncts to modern civilisation. In fact,
+the white settler and worker live under conditions in no way inferior
+to those prevailing in agricultural centres in other parts of the
+world. European brains and European labour have brought into being
+a flourishing industry, and converted into one of the healthiest
+portions of Australia, fitted to become the permanent home of millions
+of our own race, a malarial belt where it had for long been thought
+none but coloured people would ever be able to labour and live.
+
+The latter end of the nineties and the opening years of the present
+decade saw a further development of the principle of white settlement
+in our tropics. The federation of the Australian States offered the
+sugar-producer some escape from the keen competition of the world's
+markets through its fiscal policy of unhampered interstate freetrade,
+with protection against the world.
+
+The Commonwealth Parliament, in its first session (1901), decided that
+the eight or nine thousand Pacific Islanders employed in cultivation
+should be returned to their islands, granting, by way of compensation
+for the increased cost of production, a bounty upon all white-grown
+sugar. As was the case under somewhat similar circumstances nearly
+twenty years before, this withdrawal of coloured labour gave a great
+impetus to planting. There was naturally some anxiety as to whether
+the supply of white labour in the future would be sufficient; but the
+profits made in the industry enabled the farmers to pay high wages at
+harvest time, and men flocked to the sugar districts from all parts of
+Australia.
+
+One result of the labour legislation has been that many of the growers
+on large areas have considered it to their interest still further
+to subdivide their holdings, and their action has had the effect of
+increasing largely the number of farmers. It was estimated that last
+year the registered white growers of sugar-cane in Queensland numbered
+no less than 4,425. In addition to these, there is still a small
+number employing casual coloured labour. Of the whole output of
+151,000 tons of sugar, fully 93 per cent. was produced without the aid
+of any coloured labour. In other words, white men almost exclusively,
+whether as employers or as workers, are now engaged in developing
+our tropical resources, and peopling with our own race solitudes
+previously untrodden save by a few aboriginal natives.
+
+Less than thirty years ago it was the belief of most of those engaged
+in sugar production that the work of the mills was one of extreme
+complexity, and that success depended upon the possession of some
+special secret in the working. At that time the planter was also the
+miller. Now the work of cultivation is generally dissociated from the
+manufacture of sugar. Principally owing to the proprietary interest of
+the farmers in the various central mills, every stage of the work
+is openly and intelligently discussed, results are compared, and an
+efficiency attained which in many respects is equal to any in the
+sugar world. The factories no longer make sugar for the open market,
+but sell to the refiners. Analytical chemists check the work at every
+stage in the factory, and labour-saving appliances are the rule and
+not the exception. A modern factory is a wonderful illustration of
+the application of science, mechanical invention, and organisation to
+human industry.
+
+Nothing can better indicate the evolution of the Queensland sugar
+industry during the past forty years than a comparison between one of
+the first mills established in the State and one of the most modern.
+
+Forty years ago the sugar-cane was drawn in a cart close to the single
+set of crushing rollers, flung on the ground, and then fed, stick by
+stick, through the rollers, emerging with less than half the juice
+extracted. The crushed sticks were taken out and spread on the ground
+in the open, until dry enough to be collected and brought to the
+furnaces for use as fuel. In the modern factory the cane arrives by
+tram or train, is mechanically placed on a long endless carrier, and
+passes, at the rate of twenty tons or more per hour, through several
+sets of rollers, the refuse, caught by strainers, returning to the
+rollers, while the megass, or exhausted fibre, goes direct to the
+furnaces.
+
+The old mill crushed enough cane during six months to make two or
+three hundred tons of sugar. The modern factory deals with sufficient
+to produce anything from six to ten thousand tons, and in some cases
+more.
+
+Steam has taken the place of fires at the boiling stations, and
+boiling _in vacuo_ has been as fully adopted in Queensland as in other
+parts of the sugar-producing world. In the old mill the _masse cuite_,
+the last stage of the product before the sugar is dried off, had to
+be dug out from tanks, men standing up to their knees in the sticky
+substance, and handling it in buckets. Now, the _masse cuite_ goes
+direct from the vacuum pans to the receivers, and thence into the
+centrifugals. There the molasses is separated, and the sugar is
+carried automatically to the bags standing on weighing machines only a
+few feet from the railway trucks which are waiting to take the product
+to the ship's hold.
+
+The old-style factory carried on its operations solely by day. The
+present-day factory is lit throughout with electric light, and works
+day and night (Sunday excepted) for five or six months, employing,
+according to its capacity, from 100 to 150 men. Around each factory
+has sprung up a small settlement of artisans, storekeepers, and
+others, while, under a statute passed by the Queensland Parliament,
+the employees are decently housed, fed, and assured of good
+sanitation, their mental, moral, and financial welfare being provided
+for by the institution of reading and recreation rooms, and the
+establishment of branches of the Government Savings Bank.
+
+Turning to the agricultural operations, similar evidence of the
+evolution of the industry is to be found. Time was when a visitor
+could stand on some slight eminence and look over vast areas of cane,
+the vista unbroken save for a few trees, or the plantation roads
+running like ribbons through a sea of waving green. Now the prospect
+discloses the homes of farmers standing out amongst the cane, with all
+the evidences of a closely settled and thriving population. The large
+gangs of labourers tending the cultivation have for the most part
+disappeared. Instead, the farmer and his sons, with possibly one or
+two labourers, work side by side in the fields.
+
+At harvest time long lines of carts drawing cane to the mills no
+longer make a picturesque feature in the landscape; locomotives now
+haul cane-trains over the hundreds of miles of narrow-gauge tramline
+which radiate from the factories to all points from which supplies of
+cane are drawn. Where but a few years back was naught but the lonely
+bush, its silence broken only by the lowing of a few cattle, the
+occasional passing of an aboriginal stockman or a party of drovers,
+carriers, or a chance swagman--birds of passage between the inland
+stations and the ports on the coast--townships have sprung into being,
+and every half-mile reveals the home of the farmer nestling among his
+fields of emerald green.
+
+During the past few years, mainly owing to the satisfactory prices
+received for their cane, the farmers have been profitably employed.
+They have learned in the school of experience that cane cultivation
+requires practical knowledge, and that in many cases their land needs
+special treatment, which they must study for themselves. Nothing has
+brought this fact home to the farmers more thoroughly than the work
+of the Sugar Experiment Station at Mackay, and the valuable reports
+published by the late Director, Dr. W. Maxwell.
+
+In the early seventies the sugar-planters of Mackay awoke one morning
+to discover the whole of their crops destroyed, as if a fire had
+passed over them. They then grew only one variety of cane, which had
+become diseased. Fresh varieties had to be introduced from abroad,
+with all the risk of introducing canes that were worthless, or,
+worse still, of bringing in pests or diseases. So far, sugar-cane
+in Queensland has been singularly and fortunately free from
+natural enemies. Thanks to the work of Mr. H. Tryon, the Government
+Entomologist, the grower readily recognises the presence of insect
+pests, and knows how to deal promptly with them on their first
+appearance.
+
+The farmer is learning to know his cane; he studies its habits, and
+is quick to appreciate the good and bad effects of his operations. The
+analyses at the mills have directed his attention to the importance
+of cane being a good sugar-producer, and, as he is in many cases a
+shareholder in a factory, he is alive to the fact that weight of cane
+is not the only essential to success. For many years the need for
+securing canes richer in sugar was largely neglected all over the
+world, but recently efforts have been made to repeat in the case of
+cane the splendid results won by such men as the late Sir J. B.
+Lawes and the French chemist, Vilmorin, in connection with the
+sugar-producing qualities of the beet. The officials at the Queensland
+Sugar Experiment Stations have tested fully sixty varieties of cane,
+including some from Papua, to discover the agricultural and milling
+value of each.
+
+[Illustration: CAMBANORA GAP, HEAD OF CONDAMINE, KILLARNEY]
+
+[Illustration: MINTO CRAG, DUGANDAN, FASSIFERN DISTRICT]
+
+It is only natural that in an industry whose operations extend over so
+many degrees of latitude conditions must greatly vary. Irrigation is
+necessary in some districts, notably in the Burdekin Delta, which
+lies in a dry belt. Drainage is the prime requisite in other places.
+Fertilisation varies with the soils, and information as to the latter
+has been compiled in a series of exhaustive analyses made by Dr. W.
+Maxwell at the laboratory in Bundaberg. In South Queensland the cane
+frequently takes two years to mature, while in the extreme North
+fifteen months after planting it is fit for the rollers.
+
+According to the official estimate of the Commonwealth Treasurer for
+1908, 4,825 farmers were then engaged in the industry in Queensland,
+91.7 per cent. of whom employed white labour only, the number of
+employees being in round figures 30,000. In 1902 the number of farmers
+was only 2,496, showing the rapidity with which closer settlement is
+taking place. It is true that of late there has been a reduction in
+the area under cultivation, but this is probably attributable to the
+tendency to make "intense cultivation" a feature of the industry in
+order to solve the labour problem. Some of the larger areas under crop
+have been curtailed, and the reduction has not been made good by the
+increased settlement; but, as in the eighties those engaged in the
+industry found, possibly unconsciously, a remedy for the dearth of
+labour, so we may reasonably expect that the present difficulty in
+obtaining men for the ordinary work of cultivation will be met by new
+developments.
+
+What does the future hold for us? Can we continue the work of building
+up a white nation beneath a tropical sun--a task which in many parts
+of the world is considered quixotic? The areas available for cane
+cultivation are still enormous, and, though hesitancy and doubt may
+for a time join hands in checking expansion, the main facts remain
+that there is room for the people and that there is a demand for the
+product. Australia, in her fiscal policy, has recognised that the
+sugar industry is a national industry, and our statesmen realise that
+it is doing for the Australian tropics what no other industry on the
+coastal lands has yet seriously attempted--what, indeed, no other
+country in the world is as yet prepared to try.
+
+Assuming, as we have a right to assume, a sympathetic Australian
+Government, we can turn to the future with eyes full of hope. There
+are many directions in which we may look for the expansion of the
+industry. The increasing population of the Commonwealth involves
+an added capacity to consume the product. The field of invention
+in regard to the harvesting of the cane has yet to be explored and
+exploited. At present the cost of cutting and loading a field of cane
+is from eight to ten times that of harvesting an equal amount of
+sugar beets. Experiments are constantly being made with mechanical
+appliances for cutting and loading and unloading cane, and this is
+one direction in which Queenslanders may look forward hopefully to the
+time when they will not only lessen the volume of labour required, but
+when they will reduce the burdensome nature of the work, and place
+the cane-sugar industry in a position to compete successfully with the
+great beet-sugar industry of Europe.
+
+Some 250,000 gallons of rum are distilled annually at Bundaberg, but
+we are told officially that 4,000,000 gallons of molasses go to waste
+every year. The conversion of this product into foodstuffs for live
+stock as an adjunct to the main industry would add materially to the
+profits.
+
+In some sugar districts, dairying is finding a footing, and possibly
+the time is not far distant when a form of mixed farming will enable
+the cane-grower to utilise more of the by-products of his industry,
+at the same time rendering him more independent of unfavourable
+meteorological conditions. Generally speaking, improvement in
+the quality and quantity of the cane, intense culture, mechanical
+inventions, and the use of by-products are all within the bounds of
+possibility, and will make for further progress.
+
+But all these things are of secondary importance compared with the
+need of a settled working population. Back from the coast lies a range
+of mountains, rising often 3,000 feet above the level of the sea.
+Along and behind these mountains are excellent lands, well suited for
+close settlement and for the production of cereals, and the fruits and
+vegetables so greatly needed in the more humid areas of the littoral
+belt. The climate of this elevated hinterland is excellent, and the
+close settlement of these lands will furnish one of the safeguards
+of the sugar industry, seeing that a permanent population within easy
+reach will always be available for employment in the canefields and
+sugar-mills. To a large extent, the populations of the lowlands and
+the highlands will be mutually dependent upon each other.
+
+In the early days of settlement in East and West Moreton and on the
+Darling Downs, the small selector, with no capital in many cases save
+a pair of strong hands, a courageous heart, and a tireless energy,
+made his way every year to the squatter's shearing shed. No thought
+had he of "knocking down" his hard-earned cheque. Labour disputes
+never entered his mind. With his earnings he paid his rent and
+improved his land. It was men of this stamp who built up the great
+agricultural industry of Southern Queensland, and they and their
+descendants of the second and third generations are the very cream
+of the farmers of to-day. It is to a similar class of settlers in
+the sugar districts and their hinterland that we look for the
+proper settlement and development of our tropical lands. And in our
+aspirations for a great white agricultural population we are entitled
+to expect the sympathetic assistance of our kinsmen in the South and
+of the Empire at large. For not only are we doing what we can to make
+a prosperous and contented people, but we are doing a great work for
+the whole of the white races. We are proving that the tropics can
+be conquered and permanently settled by people of our own race and
+colour; we are holding one of the gateways of the East; and we are
+garrisoning an important outpost of the Empire. Kipling's stirring
+words, written of Queensland, find an echo in the hearts of
+Queenslanders--
+
+ The northern stirp beneath the southern skies--
+ I build a Nation for an Empire's need,
+ Suffer a little, and my land shall rise,
+ Queen over lands indeed!
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV.
+
+A HALF-CENTURY OF MINING.
+
+ The Quest for Gold a Colonising Agency.--Earliest
+ Discoveries of the Precious Metal in Queensland.
+ --Port Curtis.--Rockhampton District.--Peak Downs.
+ --Gympie.--Ravenswood.--Charters Towers.--Palmer.--Mount
+ Morgan.--Croydon.--Later Discoveries.--Yield at Charters
+ Towers and Mount Morgan.--Copper Mining.--Tin.--Silver.
+ --Queensland the Home of All Kinds of Minerals and Precious
+ Stones.--Mineral Wealth in Cairns Hinterland.--Copper
+ Deposits in Cloncurry District.--The Etheridge.--Anakie Gem
+ Field.--Opal Fields.--Extensive Coal Measures.--Railway
+ Communication with Mining Fields.--Value of Queensland
+ Mineral Output.--Prospects of Industry.
+
+
+The quest for gold, to say nothing of other minerals, has had much to
+do with the settlement and development of Queensland, apart from the
+direct advantages conferred on the State by her mining industry.
+It has brought to our shores many thousands of people who would not
+otherwise have come here; it has helped to open up for occupations
+other than mining previously unknown and unexplored regions that, but
+for the prospector, might have lain dormant for many more years;
+while the successful development of the territory's rich and almost
+unlimited mineral wealth has aided in making our State known in other
+parts of the world, and thus assisted in attracting hither the people
+and capital that have been the chief contributing factors to our
+wonderful progress.
+
+Fifty years ago, when what is now Queensland, casting itself free
+from the parental skirts of New South Wales, began to walk alone, its
+mining industry did not exist. It would not be correct to say that
+gold--here, as elsewhere in Australia, the first to be sought and
+found of the numerous minerals that have since proved a source of
+so much wealth to the State--had not been then discovered upon
+our shores. Fifteen years before, men attached to an official
+establishment at Gladstone, Port Curtis, found "colours" of the yellow
+metal; and in 1858, the year preceding "Separation," occurred the
+Canoona "rush," which proved so disastrous to the 15,000 or 20,000
+adventurers who then swarmed to the Rockhampton district in search
+of the "saint-seducing gold." But the so-called "colours" detected at
+picturesque Gladstone were nothing more than can to this day be traced
+in scores of places in Queensland; while the find at Canoona proved a
+fiasco so great as to spread abroad the impression that this part
+of Australia, as a prospective field for mining enterprise, was a
+delusion. But was it? Within a dozen miles or so of the scene of the
+Canoona disappointment was situated the "mountain of gold" that has
+since earned world-wide fame under the name of Mount Morgan; and
+by the end of Queensland's first half-century the Rockhampton (or
+Central) district has turned out gold to the sum of nearly 3,500,000
+fine ounces, representing a money value of over L14,500,000--the bulk
+of it won within the last moiety of the half-century.
+
+[Illustration: MOUNT MORGAN: COPPER WORKS, LOOKING NORTH]
+
+[Illustration: MOUNT MORGAN: GENERAL VIEW OF WORKS]
+
+Three years after the foundation of the colony of Queensland gold
+in payable quantities was discovered on the Peak Downs, inland from
+Rockhampton; but it was not till the finding of the Gympie field
+late in 1867--eight years after severance from New South Wales--that
+Queensland first definitely took rank as a gold producer. Within six
+months from the time when the wandering digger Nash, fossicking in
+the gullies running into the upper Mary River, found the promising
+specimens in his dish which made him hasten to Maryborough to report
+his discovery, 15,000 men had flocked to the spot from all parts of
+Australia. The place had hardly been heard of before. Pressmen in
+Brisbane did not even know how to spell the name "Gympie" when first
+the news arrived; but within a very few weeks its fame spread far
+and wide. The gullies in the vicinity of Nash's claim were rich
+and numerous. One nugget brought to light weighed nearly a thousand
+ounces, and was worth L3,675. Soon alluvial gave place to quartz
+mining, and within five years gold to the value of more than
+L1,500,000 had been won. Up to the end of 1908--that is, in forty-one
+years--the field had produced gold worth L10,350,000, and is still
+"going strong." Like all other fields, it has of course had its
+ups and downs, and just now is recovering its feet after one of
+its "downs." Last year Gympie produced gold to the value of nearly
+L270,000; the grade of its ore is improving, and its monthly yields
+are now showing comparative increases.
+
+Since the discovery of the Gympie goldfield there has been no
+cessation in the progress of mining in Queensland. From one end of the
+territory to another the existence of gold and other minerals has from
+time to time been disclosed. For many years--
+
+ "Gold! Gold! Gold! Gold!
+ Bright and yellow, hard and cold--"
+
+but still much to be desired--was the magnet which attracted the
+peripatetic prospector away from the comforts of civilisation into
+the rugged wilds of the coastal ranges and the gullies and stony
+stream-beds of the eastern watershed; and for a long while it was only
+the gold discoveries that attracted much attention. A year or so after
+the Gympie find, the Ravenswood goldfield, south-west from Townsville,
+"broke out," to use the phrase of the old-time digger. In 1869 the
+precious metal was found on the Gilbert River, and the Gilbert,
+Etheridge, and Woolgar fields were proclaimed. Then came Charters
+Towers, our premier goldfield, in 1872; the Palmer, inland from
+Cooktown (then the very far North), in 1873; the Hodgkinson, a little
+more to the south, in 1875; the great Mount Morgan in 1882; Croydon in
+1886; and other discoveries, until Dickie, a veteran prospector, found
+the Hamilton and Alice River fields in the Peninsula--the former in
+1899 and the latter as late as 1904.
+
+In its thirty-six years of existence Charters Towers has turned out
+over 5,800,000 ounces--more than L24,600,000 worth of gold; last
+year's output was of the value of L700,000; and to-day the indications
+in the deeper ground of the field are such that there is reason to
+expect that both the term of its existence and the volume of its
+output will be greatly extended. At Mount Morgan--the show mine of
+Queensland, and one of the greatest in the world--there has been
+quarried out of the hill and dug from the depths beneath stone that,
+under treatment by works in every way worthy of such a mine, has, in
+a little over twenty-two years, yielded gold to the value of over
+L13,760,000; has paid in wages and other expenditure about L7,000,000;
+and has given to the fortunate holders of its 1,000,000 shares some
+L7,230,000 in dividends. That is what the big mine has done. What is
+it doing now? True, the phenomenal yields of gold and the high grade
+of its auriferous ores that characterised the earlier years of its
+history showed signs of diminishing as time went on; but diminishing
+yields were counterbalanced by improved methods of mining and
+treatment, with consequent reduction of costs; and a few years since
+copper as well as gold was found in the lower levels, with the result
+that the mine has become at once the most productive copper and the
+most productive gold mine of the State. It has already turned out
+copper to the value of about L1,500,000, which has to be added to the
+gold yield, given above, to arrive at its total product; while the
+value of the mine's aggregate output for 1908 (over L1,017,000) was
+greater, with perhaps one exception, than that of any previous year in
+its history.
+
+Though for some years gold was the only string to the bow of
+Queensland's mining industry, that state of things has long since
+changed. In the early sixties copper was mined in the State, but then
+and for many years afterwards only to a limited extent. Tin came
+on the scene in 1872. During the first forty years of Queensland's
+existence the gold won within her borders was four times the worth
+of all other minerals and coal produced; but so rapid has been the
+increase during the past ten years in the production of the industrial
+metals--or "other minerals," as they are officially termed, to
+distinguish them from gold--that in 1907 their value exceeded that of
+the gold yield by over L170,000. Indeed, during the five years ending
+with that year there was an almost phenomenal expansion. The output
+of 1902 was of the value of only L589,960. In the following year it
+increased to L846,280, and then for four years jumped up by leaps and
+bounds, until in 1907 the yield was worth no less than L2,153,226.
+
+The known mineral-producing country of Queensland extends over an
+immense area. It begins on the southern border, where the Silver Spur
+mine maintains a constant output of silver and other mineral products,
+and where the Stanthorpe district, our first stanniferous field, still
+materially assists, with the aid of dredges, in the tin production of
+the State; and extends northerly a hundred miles beyond the goldfield
+of Coen, in the Cape York Peninsula. Over this immense distance of
+some 1,300 miles from south to north, and extending inland from 50
+to 200 miles from the eastern coast, are located at varying intervals
+fields producing gold, silver, copper, tin, coal, lead, sapphires,
+manganese, wolfram, molybdenite, bismuth, and graphite; while further
+to the west are the opal fields of Jundah, Opalton, and Kynuna, the
+copper deposits of the vast Cloncurry district, the silver-lead mines
+of Lawn Hills in the Burketown district, and the Croydon goldfield,
+also on the Gulf waters. Queensland, with a huge area of 670,500
+square miles and a scant population of little more than half a million
+of people, has a hundred proclaimed gold, mineral, and coal fields,
+having a combined area of about 50,000,000 acres.
+
+Apart from goldfields, by far the most important and productive of
+these areas is the tract of country which forms the hinterland of
+the port of Cairns--a tract which includes the tin-mining centres of
+Herberton, Stannary Hills, Irvinebank, Nymbool, and Reid's Creek;
+the copper and silver-lead mines of Chillagoe and Mungana; the copper
+mines of Mount Molloy and O.K.; the wolfram, molybdenite, and bismuth
+mines of Wolfram Camp, Bamford, and Mount Carbine; and the antimony
+deposits of the Mitchell River. The two large mineral fields into
+which this portion of the State is now officially divided--Chillagoe
+and Herberton--have together an area of over 8,500,000 acres. The port
+of Cairns was not established till 1876--seventeen years after the
+foundation of the State. Now there yearly pass through it from the
+area mentioned minerals worth from L600,000 to L800,000, exclusive of
+the mineral product from the Etheridge and Croydon fields, which also,
+for the most part, finds an outlet through the same channel. Copper
+and tin are responsible for more than half the amount named, but the
+potentialities of the district as far as other minerals are concerned
+are almost unlimited. Of wolfram--taking only one example--this part
+of the State alone can supply the world's demand, and have a good deal
+to spare afterwards. The Queensland Government Geologist has estimated
+that the wolfram-bearing country in this portion of Queensland extends
+over an area of 3,500 square miles. Given anything like a permanent
+demand and a fair and steady market, wolfram production would soon
+take a prominent position in our mining industry. The historical tin
+mine of the district is the Vulcan, at Irvinebank, which has attained
+the greatest depth (1,450 feet) reached by any tin mine in Queensland,
+and where the appliances for recovering the metal are more up-to-date
+than at Dolcoath, the most famous tin mine of Cornwall. During the
+twenty-five years of its existence, the Vulcan Mine has from 106,000
+tons of tin ore produced over 9,790 tons of concentrates, worth
+something approaching L500,000, and has paid its lucky shareholders
+dividends to the extent of L160,000. The opening up of this large and
+prolific district is largely due to the enterprise of the Chillagoe
+Company, which not only has developed extensively its several mines
+and erected large ore-treatment works, but has built the railway--in
+length 93 miles--which connects those mines and numerous others with
+the Government railway at the top of the Coastal Range at Mareeba,
+and is building a further extension to the Etheridge field, nearly 150
+miles further inland.
+
+Queensland is known as a country of magnificent distances, and one
+example of its vast expanse is the extent of the copper area of the
+Cloncurry district, which is tapped by the Great Northern Railway 480
+miles westward from the port of Townsville. This district is by far
+the largest tract of copper-bearing country in Australia, and one
+of the largest in the world. As the crow flies, it extends north and
+south for more than 150 miles, and east and west some 80 or 100 miles.
+Over this large area, covering at least 15,000 square miles, copper
+has been proved to exist. At the close of 1907 there were on the
+Warden's books over 800 mineral leases, besides some hundreds of
+claims and several freeholds. The outcrops throughout the district
+have been described by one of the Government Geologists as innumerable
+and phenomenally rich. But the district is still in the prospecting
+stage, and it is yet too soon to pronounce an opinion as to whether
+the deposits generally will live at depth, or of what value they will
+be if they do, although it may safely be said that the developments
+in the more important mines during the past twelve months have been
+distinctly encouraging. Smelting operations are already in progress
+at two, if not three, of the principal mining centres of the district,
+and a railway extension from Cloncurry 74 miles southward is now
+in course of construction. Another Queensland mineral field of
+vast extent is the Etheridge. It has an area equal to half that
+of Scotland, and the Warden for the field, when he undertakes his
+periodical patrol, has an itinerary of about 400 miles.
+
+[Illustration: CHARTERS TOWERS: PLANT'S DAY DAWN]
+
+Passing reference has been made to the sapphire field of Anakie, in
+Central Queensland, and to the opal to be found in her trackless West.
+As a matter of fact, isolated finds of many kinds of gems besides
+these two have been made in widely separated parts of the State, but
+as a recognised branch of the mining industry opal and sapphire mining
+has for years occupied an important place. In the Anakie field, 190
+miles from Rockhampton, on the Central Railway, the existence of
+gem-stones was officially reported as early as 1892. Ten years later
+the Government Geologist, reporting on these sapphire fields, stated
+that "the total distance along which deposits are found ... is
+altogether about fifteen miles. Of an area of 400 square miles
+examined, fifty square miles contain deposits carrying sapphires of
+more or less value." In 1905, another member of the Geological staff
+reported that the most important recent development had been the
+opening up of a second bed of the sapphire wash at a depth of 25 feet,
+and that excellent stones, freer from flaws than those nearer the
+surface, were being obtained from the lower deposit. Mining for these
+precious stones, many of which are of the most beautiful description,
+has been to a considerable extent detrimentally affected by the
+difficulty experienced in getting a regular market and what is
+considered a fair price for the gems; but, notwithstanding this
+drawback, there was a large expansion in the industry during the four
+years preceding 1907--the annual production having increased in that
+period from L7,000 to L35,000 in value. In 1908, however, there was
+a considerable falling off, mainly because miners were not satisfied
+with the prices obtainable; but, with an improvement in this respect,
+renewed activity on the field, which even now supports a population of
+over 1,000 persons, may be looked for.
+
+The opal-bearing country extends over a much wider area than
+sapphires. The width of this country is, roughly, about 250 miles,
+while in length it extends right from the New South Wales border
+half-way up the State in a curve bending towards the South Australian
+border. The chief centres of production have been Kynuna (near
+Winton), Opalton and Fermoy (in the Longreach district), Eromanga, and
+Yowah (near Thargomindah). The Queensland opal is recognised as being
+unsurpassed for its brilliance and iridescence, and there is reason to
+believe that much more will be found than has yet been unearthed; but
+the quest for it is difficult owing to the arid nature and vast extent
+of the western plains where it occurs. In good seasons men in those
+regions find ready employment on the pastoral stations; in very dry
+ones, they cannot prospect for the precious stone, and the result has
+been that the industry has fluctuated even more than that of sapphire
+mining. The highest point was attained in 1895, when the value of the
+opal product reached nearly L33,000. Of late years Queensland has been
+blessed with good seasons, and the uncertain occupation of opal
+mining has, with many men, given place to the more regular and more
+comfortable station life. While the opal, the sapphire, and other
+precious stones have been dug from Queensland's earth, her Northern
+waters have for years yielded the lustrous pearl, and in 1908
+pearl-shell to the value of L71,000 was exported.
+
+Sir William Ramsay, speaking as a scientific authority, lately stated
+that the day will come when Great Britain, if she continue to be
+dependent on her own coal supplies, will find it difficult not only to
+carry on her manufactures but to provide fuel for household purposes.
+Well, when that day does come, she can send to Queensland for what
+coal she wants. Here there are coal measures in abundance--in the
+South, Central, and Northern divisions of the State, and on the
+Darling Downs. True, we have not yet done much in the way of
+production, but all that is wanted is a market, and coal, both
+bituminous and anthracitic, can be dug out of the earth and sent away
+in practically unlimited quantities. Of ironstone, also, there is an
+abundance, and that, too, in such close proximity to the coal supplies
+that when the time arrives for Australia to enter earnestly into the
+enterprise of iron and steel manufacture Queensland should play an
+important part both in producing the raw material and in preparing the
+product for the market.
+
+With only one or two exceptions, all the important mining centres of
+Queensland are now connected with the eastern coast by rail, and
+those that are not are being rapidly linked up. During the year 1908
+thirteen new railways were authorised by Parliament, five of them
+to serve mineral districts. Four of these lines are now under
+construction; and in addition the railway to the Etheridge field is
+completed for two-thirds of its length.
+
+To sum up: Queensland during the half-century of her existence has
+produced gold to the value, in round numbers, of over L69,000,000,
+and other minerals, coal, and precious stones worth more than
+L21,000,000--or an aggregate of L90,000,000. Last year's mineral
+production was worth L3,844,000, so that, even at the same rate
+of output, in less than three years we shall have topped the
+L100,000,000. The number of men obtaining employment in connection
+with the industry during 1908 was just upon 21,000--only 4,000 less
+than Queensland's total population in 1859. The value of machinery and
+plant used for mining and ore reduction purposes throughout the State
+is over L2,000,000. The worth of the coal output of the West Moreton
+district alone last year (L193,000) was more than the total revenue of
+Queensland during the first year of her existence; while the mineral
+product of the Herberton district during the same period was nearly
+four times as great.
+
+In the space available for this article it has been possible to take
+but a cursory view of the mineral progress which has characterised the
+first half-century of Queensland's life, but enough has been written
+to show that that progress has been remarkable, if not phenomenal. And
+who shall say what strides will be made during the next fifty years,
+or venture to predict what will be the value of our mineral wealth in
+the year 1959? It is a safe rule "not to prophesy till you know," but
+even the most timid prophet could hardly hesitate to predict expansion
+for Queensland's mining industry. Where there has been so much growth
+in the past, and where there is such an unlimited field for greater
+growth in the years to come, it would be absurd to suppose that there
+will be no further advance. As a matter of fact, many well qualified
+to judge do not hesitate to say that the industry is as yet in its
+infancy. It has been truly said of gold that "what it is, there
+it is"; and what you have to do is to find where it is. When it is
+remembered, however, that the prominent hill known as Mount Morgan,
+with its millions' worth of golden ore, was within a day's journey
+of the populous town of Rockhampton, and remained undiscovered until
+1882, although alluvial gold had been found at its base for years
+previously and the disappointed miners from Canoona had twenty-three
+years before swarmed in its vicinity; when we recollect that only
+quite recently nuggets have been found in the streets of some of the
+oldest of Victorian mining townships, who shall say what has yet to be
+unearthed in the wide expanses of Queensland's bush, a great deal of
+which is already known to be "rich with the spoils of Nature"?
+
+ "Full many a gem of purest ray serene,
+ The dark unfathom'd caves of ocean bear;"
+
+and the experience of the last half-century amply justifies the belief
+that untold millions lie hidden in the earthen depths of Queensland.
+
+[Illustration: GYMPIE: SCOTTISH GYMPIE GOLD MINE]
+
+[Illustration: GYMPIE: No. 1 NORTH ORIENTAL AND GLANMIRE]
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V.
+
+OUR ASSET IN ARTESIAN WATER.
+
+ Erroneous Judgment of Western Queensland.--Scarcity of Surface
+ Water.--Water Supply Department.--Discovery of Artesian Water
+ in New South Wales.--Prospecting in Queensland.--Difficulties
+ Experienced by Early Borers.--First Artesian Flowing Bore.
+ --Dr. Jack's First Estimate of Artesian Area.--Revised Figures.
+ --Number of Bores and Estimated Flow.--Area Capable of being
+ Irrigated with Artesian Water.--Cost of Boring.--Value of
+ Artesian Water.--Extent of Intake Beds.--Waste of Water.
+ --Necessity for Government Control of Wells.--Value of Water
+ for Irrigation, Consumption, and Motive Power.--Artesian Water
+ a Great National Asset.
+
+
+Fifty years ago the white population of Australia, including Tasmania,
+scarcely exceeded a million persons. At that time the theory was
+generally accepted that only a fringe of the coast south of the
+tropic of Capricorn would be found habitable by a British or European
+population. The reports of explorers led to the conclusion that the
+vast inland area of our continent was an irreclaimable arid desert,
+save when, at long and uncertain intervals, it was ravaged by
+destructive floods, the water from which, licked up by a fiery sun
+or absorbed by a porous subsoil, disappeared from the surface with
+marvellous rapidity. A little more than forty years ago squatting
+occupation had been pushed towards the interior of the continent
+with not only rapid strides, but it was held by many explorers with
+a presumptuous boldness that could only be followed by disaster. So
+deeply had this conviction been driven into the minds of experienced
+men that a distinguished Australian explorer, the late Sir A. C.
+Gregory, declared in his late maturity, little more than ten years
+ago, that on what is now some of the richest and most productive
+country in Western Queensland a bandicoot could not live; and on the
+statement being challenged he said he spoke from personal experience
+as an explorer after two visits separated by an interval of nine
+years. The country more particularly so condemned was the well-known
+pastoral run, Wellshot, a little to the south of Longreach, and one of
+the largest and finest wool-growing properties in Australia.
+
+It must be frankly conceded that the occupation by flocks and herds
+nearly forty years ago of what was then known as the Barcoo and
+Thomson country was venturesome to the point of recklessness. Except
+in the sandy beds of these rivers there was practically no surface
+water of a permanent nature; and the average rainfall was so
+inadequate, not to mention its capriciousness, and the ground in many
+places so porous, that any attempt to provide artificial water by the
+construction of dams or tanks seemed almost tempting Providence. Yet
+there arose a persistent belief, afterwards more than justified, that
+underneath the arid surface was flowing water in great abundance. The
+rainfall, however copious in exceptional seasons, certainly did not
+reach the sea, and the hypothesis that great subterranean rivers would
+disclose themselves to a systematic search attracted much notice. In
+the dry year of 1883 the necessity of an improved water supply if
+the country was not to be denuded of stock forced itself upon the
+attention of our leading public men. The Premier, the late Sir Thomas
+McIlwraith, decided to constitute a Government Hydraulic Department
+with a competent engineer at its head. There had previously been
+so-called hydraulic engineers, but their work was chiefly confined to
+the water supply of a few towns and of the more settled districts on
+the coast. But Sir Thomas McIlwraith, as a runholder in the Far West,
+realised that nothing but heroic efforts, assisted by the Government,
+would save the country from desertion, with appalling loss to its
+adventurous occupiers and their flocks and herds. Mr. J. Baillie
+Henderson was at the time in the Queensland public service, and the
+Premier knew that he had served with distinction as an engineer in
+the Water Supply Department of Victoria. That gentleman was therefore
+selected to organise a Water Supply Department in Queensland, and on
+1st February, 1883, he was gazetted Hydraulic Engineer, an appointment
+which he has ever since held with credit to himself and advantage to
+the country.[a]
+
+At that time the existence of artesian water in Queensland was no more
+than suspected. It had been tapped four years previously in New South
+Wales, but the boring appliances were so inadequate as to make the
+process tedious and of questionable practicability on an extensive
+scale. In Queensland some prospecting work had been done, and in some
+places fair supplies of water obtained by sinking ordinary wells.
+But in the Far West there was little scope for enterprise in
+that direction. Hence some extensive dams were constructed across
+watercourses ordinarily dry, but without conspicuous success. For
+often the rush of flood waters either carried away the embankments,
+or the reservoirs they created quickly silted up, or the porousness of
+the subsoil could not be entirely combated by "puddling." Then streams
+at times complaisantly abandoned their old channels and formed new
+ones, leaving the intended reservoirs high and dry after the most
+deluging rains. After a time it was found that better sites than
+the beds of main watercourses could be found for dams, and that
+the construction of tanks would suffice in many places to provide
+sufficient water for a scattered population and the increasing numbers
+of live stock, although the expense of this mode of conservation was
+great for the limited supply obtained. Evidently, if the Far West
+was ever to be completely utilised, its almost illimitable areas of
+splendid pastures must be watered by some more effective means.
+
+Attention was at this time attracted to the success of the few
+artesian bores in New South Wales, and to the vast scale on which
+water had been tapped by that means in the United States of America.
+The chief obstacles, however, were the great depth at which artesian
+water might be expected to be found, and the utter inadequacy of the
+boring machinery then in use in Australia; moreover, the search was
+most needed in the areas practically inaccessible by reason of the
+absence of surface water. For a considerable time, as is disclosed in
+the digest of the Hydraulic Engineer's annual reports reproduced in
+Appendix H, little progress could be made.
+
+It was not until October, 1884, in fact--just twenty-five years
+ago--that information was obtained of the striking of sub-artesian[b]
+water by the Messrs. Bignell at Widgeegoara Station, close to the New
+South Wales border. The place was visited by Mr. Henderson, and by him
+reported upon encouragingly. In the same month the Treasurer received
+a letter from the late Hon. George King, of Gowrie Station, Darling
+Downs, directing attention to the "Walking Beam Rig" machine, an
+American well-boring apparatus, by the use of which it had been
+ascertained that his firm might have saved L4,500 out of the L6,000
+spent by it in well-sinking in the Warrego district. The letter being
+referred to the Hydraulic Engineer, that officer recommended the
+introduction of American bore-sinking machinery, and the engagement of
+American skilled drillers who would undertake to give instruction in
+the use of the machinery as well as engage in drilling work for the
+Government of Queensland. Delays occurred, however, apparently through
+the unwillingness of the Government to adopt the advice tendered. It
+was not until December, 1885, that Mr. Arnold, an American well-borer,
+was despatched to Blackall to sink a bore there. The first attempt
+failed, but afterwards water was struck in abundance, though not by
+him, or until after the first Queensland flowing well had been sunk by
+the Government at Barcaldine in December, 1887.
+
+In April, 1887, the Hydraulic Engineer had visited Thurulgoona
+Station, and there found that Mr. Loughead, with the "Canadian Pole
+Tool" boring apparatus, had obtained a supply of excellent fresh
+artesian water from a depth of 1,009 feet, the flow rising 20 inches
+above ground. From that date boring went on apace, and the exploratory
+success of the Government encouraged private persons to follow their
+lead. There were failures to strike artesian water, of course, both on
+the part of the Government and private persons, but on the whole the
+results have been such as to add to Queensland occupiable country
+equivalent to a great new province in the Far West.
+
+[Illustration]
+
+The map presented herewith shows the area of artesian water-bearing
+country in Australia as estimated by Dr. R. L. Jack, formerly
+Government Geologist. Since 1893 Queensland has been credited with the
+area of 376,832 square miles, this being equal to 56 per cent. of
+the estimated total. But that total has since been reduced to 569,000
+square miles, and late information shows that the approximate area of
+the Queensland artesian basin, as ascertained by scaling off the
+most recent map issued by the Hydraulic Engineer, is 372,105 square
+miles--4,727 square miles less than the area given in his report for
+1893. Yet the revised figures bring the Queensland artesian area up to
+65 per cent. of the Australian total. The difference is accounted
+for by later information acquired in the field. Of the 372,105 square
+miles mentioned the area of 146,430 square miles has been tested and
+found to be less or more artesian or sub-artesian. Mr. Henderson
+says: "The flows from many of the artesian bores which at one time
+or another yielded artesian water have failed, but owing to the
+suspension of the hydraulic survey the available data are quite
+insufficient to admit of a trustworthy estimate being made of the area
+so affected."
+
+[Illustration: FLOWING ARTESIAN WELLS, WESTERN QUEENSLAND]
+
+The total supply of bore water has not been ascertained by actual
+measurement except from Government bores. But all possible reports of
+reputed flows have been obtained from the owners of private bores, and
+the figures cut down to 47 per cent. of the furnished estimates. This
+reduction is not an arbitrary one, however, but is the equivalent of
+the difference found to exist between the average estimate and the
+measured flow of such bores as the Hydraulic Department has been
+enabled to test.
+
+Information from the Hydraulic Engineer's office shows that up to the
+end of May last there were 716 flowing bores in Queensland, pouring
+forth an enormous supply of sparkling water estimated at slightly over
+4791/4 million gallons a day, equal to a discharge of 175,000 million
+gallons per annum.[c] This flow, if conserved in tanks and pipes,
+would furnish a population of nearly 12 millions with 40 gallons of
+water per capita a day. It would irrigate 644,366 acres of cultivated
+land with 12 inches of water per annum.[d] An area so irrigated,
+utilised solely for wheat-growing, would produce, at 20 bushels per
+acre, nearly 13 million bushels of grain, which is equal to 28.87 per
+cent. of the entire Commonwealth wheat crop for the year 1907-8.
+The average Commonwealth yield for the last five years, however, was
+611/2 million bushels. The average area under wheat for the same
+period was 5,864,114 acres, the average yield for the Commonwealth
+therefore being slightly over 101/2 bushels to the acre. As much
+wheat is cut for fodder, and as irrigated land should produce a
+largely increased crop, 20 bushels per acre for such land seems a
+moderate estimate. Moreover, in 1902-3, the Commonwealth crop was
+under 121/2 million bushels, or less than one-fifth of the mean
+average for the succeeding five years. At the same time the area
+of land under crop was in 1902-3 but little below the succeeding
+five-year average on an acre of land.[e]
+
+The presumably perpetual daily flow of 4791/4 million gallons of
+artesian water--the quantity named being equal to only 47 per cent. of
+the reputed flow in the case of unmeasured wells--has cost, so far as
+an estimate can be made, L1,873,515. This works out at the average of
+L2,616 per flowing bore, supplying 669,369 gallons a day. Calculating
+on the basis of 5 per cent., including interest and redemption
+payments, the annual charge for this money is equal to L131 per
+well, spread over a forty-one years' term, the average cost to each
+well-owner being thus L1 for 1,865,000 gallons of water a year. Thus,
+although much money has been lost in sinking unsuccessful bores, the
+investment has on the whole been amazingly profitable, even allowing
+that a further annual charge for maintenance must be added.
+
+It need hardly be said, however, that in practice this enormous
+flow of artesian water could not be utilised solely either for human
+consumption or for irrigation. Under existing conditions the first
+claim upon it may be said to be for the sustenance of live stock, as
+the domestic consumption in the region of the flow is comparatively
+trifling. And here arises a problem of vast importance. Will this flow
+be perpetual, or will it gradually decline until exhaustion of the
+sources of supply ultimately takes place? The latter contingency there
+seems to be little reason to fear, for the area of the intake beds,
+estimated by Dr. R. L. Jack at 5,000 square miles, affords the
+assurance that our artesian springs will be constantly replenished by
+the rainfall over that large extent of country. Yet, when the existing
+number of artesian wells has been doubled or trebled, it seems not
+improbable that many of them will become sub-artesian, and only
+yield their fertilising streams in response to pumping-power. On this
+question, however, expert opinions widely differ. But, taking the
+experience of America and other countries in which artesian springs
+have been tapped, it may be said that the flow steadily decreases as
+the number of bores multiplies.
+
+The Hydraulic Engineer estimates that about two-thirds of the artesian
+water at present tapped flows to waste. As to the definition of
+"waste," however, there is sharp conflict of opinion. A pastoralist
+who distributes a supply of a million gallons of bore water a day
+by replenishing dry creeks or constructing artificial channels may
+contend that in his case the loss by evaporation or soakage is not
+waste, but an expenditure of water necessary to make his artesian
+well serve its desired purposes. To control and distribute by means of
+reticulating pipes the product of all Queensland's flowing bores would
+involve a heavy investment of capital, and one not warranted by
+the existing population in the artesian area--a population mainly
+dependent upon sheep-raising and wool-growing for subsistence. But the
+time may come when it will be deemed indispensable that flowing
+wells should be brought under Government control, or their product
+be subject, as in the case of surface water, to riparian rights.
+The pastoralist who has spent several thousand pounds in sinking a
+successful bore not unnaturally claims the water issuing from it as
+his own property; but public policy may require that after diverting
+so much as may be requisite for his reasonable individual uses the
+remainder shall be made available for the occupiers of neighbouring
+lands.
+
+The information that little more than one-half the area of the
+artesian basin in Queensland has yet been explored is in some respects
+disappointing, but it is reassuring in others. For if the unexplored
+country yields as much water per square mile of surface as is now
+pouring forth from the wells on the tested area--which is not yet
+fully developed--the total daily yield will ultimately approach 1,000
+millions of gallons. Never, according to official information, was
+bore-sinking more active than it is during the current year, and
+the thoughtful reader will sympathise with Mr. Henderson's repeated
+expression of regret that want of money some years ago compelled the
+department to discontinue both exploration on scientific lines and the
+periodical measurement of all artesian flows. For with careful surveys
+of the entire water-bearing area much capital might be saved by
+teaching where copious springs might or might not be expected to be
+met with; while with measurement and registration of all flows the
+question as to the perpetuity or the contrary of the supply would be
+placed beyond controversy. In that case legislation could be initiated
+with confidence, and the public interest safeguarded with the least
+possible disturbance of private interests.
+
+An important consideration in connection with the artesian area
+is that the land watered by bores is as a rule more than commonly
+fertile. Its pastures produce some of the most nutritious natural
+grasses and herbage found on the face of the earth; and, what is of
+immense significance, they are grasses and herbage that either would
+not live or would deteriorate under a tropical sun, with a rainfall
+equal to the coastal average. Thus it may be argued that artesian bore
+water--at any rate, when so free from mineral impregnation as to be
+unquestionably potable--is more valuable, gallon for gallon, than the
+supply direct from the clouds.
+
+In several of his numerous reports the Hydraulic Engineer makes
+reference to the subject of irrigation by means of artesian water.
+It is certain that the water from some bores, while useful for live
+stock, is not fit for either domestic use or for irrigation. The
+Hydraulic Department many years ago began what was intended to be
+a systematic analysis of bore water with the view to providing an
+official record that would be highly useful for public purposes. But
+in one case at least water pronounced by the Government Analyst as
+useless even for stock was highly esteemed on the run whence it was
+obtained; and evidently much has yet to be learned as to the value of
+subterranean waters not regarded as potable by scientific standards.
+
+Some of the most copiously flowing bores, however, discharge water
+of unexceptional quality, whether for domestic use, manufacturing
+purposes, or irrigation. The Hydraulic Engineer doubts, having regard
+to the immense quantity of water required for irrigation, whether it
+will ever be found useful for that purpose in so far as the greater
+agricultural industries are concerned; but for intense cultivation
+around the homestead he thinks bore water might well be utilised. In
+some cases it would be in sufficiently large supply for the raising of
+green fodder for stud stock--perhaps even for protection against minor
+local droughts. An irrigated crop needs three or four waterings of
+3 inches each, and as each inch means 22,614 gallons, the quantity
+required for a crop, with four waterings, would be 271,368 gallons per
+acre; so that a cultivation plot of 20 or 30 acres would absorb from
+5 to 8 million gallons a year, according to the seasons, the nature of
+the soil, or the soakage.
+
+While doubtful as to the suitability of bore water for irrigation on
+a large scale, Mr. Henderson strongly advocates its being applied to
+machinery of small power. Many years ago he directed attention in
+one of his annual reports to the extensive use of water power
+in competition with steam in certain parts of America; and it is
+satisfactory to note that in some inland towns of Queensland the
+American example has been followed. In quite a number of towns the
+public water service is artesian, and in a few it is the motive power
+of electric lighting systems. The information that the flowing wells
+of Queensland are discharging daily 320 million gallons of water "to
+waste" indicates that when population in the artesian area becomes
+more dense bore power will become an invaluable aid in economic
+manufacture. The water so harnessed would not be wasted, as every
+gallon would still be available for human or animal consumption.
+
+[Illustration: ABERDARE COLLIERY, IPSWICH DISTRICT]
+
+The money value of the water annually discharged from the flowing
+bores of Queensland runs into stupendous figures, even at the rate
+of 6d. per 1,000 gallons. At that rate its annual value would exceed
+41/4 millions sterling. Capitalise this sum at 4 per cent., and the
+artesian water flow of Queensland becomes worth upwards of 1091/4
+millions sterling, less, of course, the cost of maintenance and
+supervision similarly capitalised. And this colossal endowment is the
+result during the last quarter of a century of a total expenditure of
+less than 2 millions sterling. Granting that to utilise all this water
+already under pressure would mean a very large additional expenditure
+in tanks, aqueducts, and pipes, that expenditure may be calculated in
+advance to a minute fraction in every case, and it would of course
+be disbursed gradually as the demand for the delivery of water
+under pressure developed with the increase of population and the
+multiplication of industries. It must be apparent, therefore, that any
+needful public expenditure to ascertain whether the flow diminishes or
+increases as the years go on, and to prevent waste if waste there
+be, is more than justified. Indeed, should any great public loss be
+suffered for want of State control of this life-giving national asset,
+it might be difficult for Parliament entirely to clear itself from
+blame if charged with neglecting the reiterated advice of its own
+responsible officer in this respect.
+
+ [Footnote a: For digest of Hydraulic Engineer's reports, 1883 to
+ 1908 inclusive, see Appendix H, post.]
+
+ [Footnote b: "Sub-artesian" is a term applied when the water in
+ a bore rises to or near the surface, but does not automatically
+ flow along it.]
+
+ [Footnote c: It will be seen on reference to Appendix H that
+ since the Hydraulic Engineer supplied his figures a number of
+ additional flowing bores have been sunk, and have substantially
+ increased the aggregate flow, although, the figures not having
+ been officially verified, the aggregate flow remains in the
+ text as from the 716 bores recognised by the Hydraulic Engineer.]
+
+ [Footnote d: The quantity of water deposited on an acre of land
+ by an inch of rain is 22,614 gallons.]
+
+ [Footnote e: See "Commonwealth Year Book," 1909, page 382.]
+
+
+
+
+APPENDICES.
+
+
+
+
+APPENDIX A.
+
+READJUSTMENT OF WESTERN BOUNDARY.
+
+
+The following summary of correspondence between Governor Bowen and the
+Secretary of State for the Colonies gives information in addition to
+that furnished in "The Subdivision of Australia," page xiv., relating
+to the readjustment of the Queensland western boundary:--
+
+On 30th September, 1860, Sir George Bowen--in transmitting an Address
+passed by the Queensland Legislature asking that "the western boundary
+of Queensland should be declared to extend at least so far as to
+include the Gulf of Carpentaria, without which declaration the
+Legislature would not feel authorised in taking steps towards the
+development of the colony in that direction"--referred to the opinion
+of Mr. A. C. Gregory, then Surveyor-General, that "a boundary at the
+141st meridian would just cut off from Queensland the greater portion
+of the only territory available for settlement, _i.e._, the Plains of
+Promise, and the only safe harbour, _i.e._, Investigator Road, in the
+Gulf of Carpentaria." The Governor added that until receipt of the
+Duke of Newcastle's despatch of 21st October, 1859, enclosing the
+opinion of the Law Officers of the Crown, the general belief here was
+that the western boundary of Queensland was identical with the eastern
+boundary of Western Australia, that is, with the 129th degree of east
+longitude. But now the Law Officers had declared expressly that the
+141st meridian was the western boundary, he urged that the prayer
+of the local Legislature should be complied with by extending the
+boundary to the 138th meridian of east longitude.
+
+On 8th December, 1860, Governor Bowen again wrote to the Colonial
+Office urging that the boundary should be extended, and contending
+that the question was of Imperial as well as colonial importance.
+Replying on 26th February, 1861, the Duke of Newcastle said that South
+Australia had asked for the territory desired by Queensland, and that
+certain gentlemen in Victoria were desirous of forming a settlement
+on the northern coast of Australia. His Grace added that there were
+doubts whether the Government had the power to annex the territory as
+desired, and if these doubts had any foundation he would submit a Bill
+to the Imperial Parliament to remove them. In September, 1861, Sir
+George Bowen again urged the annexation of the territory, remarking
+that "Queensland can gain little but trouble and expense from
+undertaking the management and protection of any future settlement on
+the Gulf of Carpentaria; for it is certain that so soon as it becomes
+self-supporting it will demand to be erected into a separate colony."
+On 14th December following the Duke of Newcastle wrote to the Governor
+stating that he had "no objection to the proposal that this territory
+should be temporarily annexed to the colony of Queensland, and
+accordingly that Letters Patent would be issued for giving effect to
+this arrangement under 24 and 25 Vict., cap. 44." But his Grace warned
+the Governor that the annexation would probably be revoked when
+the growth of population or other circumstances rendered separation
+desirable in the interests of the new territory. He closed with these
+words--"I am not prepared to abandon definitely, on the part of
+Her Majesty's Government, the power to deal with districts not yet
+settled, as the wishes or convenience of the future settlers may
+hereafter require."
+
+
+
+
+APPENDIX B.
+
+THE FIRST PARLIAMENT.
+
+(First Session, 1860.)
+
+
+THE GOVERNOR:
+
+ His Excellency Sir George Ferguson Bowen, K.C.M.G.
+
+
+THE MINISTRY:
+
+_With Seats in the Legislative Assembly._
+
+ Colonial Secretary--The Honourable Robert George Wyndham Herbert.
+ Attorney-General--The Honourable Ratcliffe Pring.
+ Colonial Treasurer--The Honourable Robert Ramsay Mackenzie.
+
+_With Seats in the Legislative Council._
+
+ Minister without Portfolio--The Honourable Maurice Charles O'Connell.[a]
+ Minister without Portfolio--The Honourable John James Galloway.[b]
+
+
+MEMBERS OF THE LEGISLATIVE COUNCIL (15).
+
+ President--The Honourable Sir Charles Nicholson.[c]
+ Chairman of Committees--The Honourable Daniel Foley Roberts.[d]
+
+ [c] Balfour, Hon. John.
+ [c] Bigge, Hon. Francis Edward.
+ [c] Compigne, Hon. Alfred William.
+ [d] Fitz, Hon. Henry Bates.
+ [c] Fullarton, Hon. George.
+ [c] Galloway, Hon. John James.
+ [d] Harris, Hon. George.
+ [c] Laidley, Hon. James.
+ [c] Massie, Hon. Robert George.
+ [c] McDougall, Hon. John Frederick.
+ [c] O'Connell, Hon. Maurice Charles.
+ [d] Simpson, Hon. Stephen.
+ [c] Yaldwyn, Hon. William Henry.
+
+
+MEMBERS OF THE LEGISLATIVE ASSEMBLY (26).
+
+ Speaker--The Honourable Gilbert Eliott (_Wide Bay_).
+ Chairman of Committees--Arthur Macalister (_Ipswich_).
+
+ Blakeney, Charles William (_Brisbane_).
+ Broughton, Alfred Delves (_West Moreton_).
+ Buckley, Henry (_East Moreton_).
+ Coxen, Charles (_Northern Downs_).
+ Edmondstone, George (_East Moreton_).
+ Ferrett, John (_Maranoa_).
+ Fitzsimmons, Charles (_Port Curtis_).
+ Forbes, Frederick Augustus (_Ipswich_).
+ Gore, St. George Richard (_Warwick_).
+ Haly, Charles Robert (_Burnett_).
+ Herbert, Robert George Wyndham (_Leichhardt_).
+ Jordan, Henry (_Brisbane_).
+ Lilley, Charles (_Fortitude Valley_).
+ Mackenzie, Robert Ramsay (_Burnett_).
+ Moffatt, Thomas de Lacy (_Western Downs_).
+ [e] Nelson, William Lambie (_West Moreton_).
+ O'Sullivan, Patrick (_Ipswich_).
+ Pring, Ratcliffe (_Eastern Downs_).
+ Raff, George (_Brisbane_).
+ Richards, Henry (_Brisbane South_).
+ Royds, Charles James (_Leichhardt_).
+ Taylor, James (_Western Downs_).
+ Thorn, George, sen. (_West Moreton_).
+ Watts, John (_Drayton and Toowoomba_).
+
+ [Footnote a: Captain O'Connell resigned on 28th August, and
+ became President of Legislative Council.]
+
+ [Footnote b: Appointed 28th August, 1860; resigned 10th
+ November, 1860.]
+
+ [Footnote c: Appointed for five years by Sir William Denison.]
+
+ [Footnote d: Appointed for life by Sir G. F. Bowen.]
+
+ [Footnote e: Unseated on petition in June, 1860--disqualified,
+ being a minister of religion; succeeded by Joseph Fleming.]
+
+[Illustration: COCOA-NUT PALMS, JOHNSTONE RIVER, NORTH QUEENSLAND]
+
+[Illustration: CUSTOM HOUSE AND PETRIE BIGHT, BRISBANE]
+
+
+
+
+APPENDIX C.
+
+
+THE EIGHTEENTH PARLIAMENT.
+
+(1909.--Second Session.)
+
+
+THE GOVERNOR:
+
+ His Excellency Sir William MacGregor, G.C.M.G., C.B.
+
+
+THE LIEUTENANT-GOVERNOR:
+
+ The Honourable Sir Arthur Morgan.
+
+
+THE MINISTRY:
+
+_With Seats in the Legislative Assembly._
+
+ Vice-President of Executive Council and Chief Secretary
+ --The Honourable William Kidston.
+ Secretary for Public Lands
+ --The Honourable Digby Frank Denham.
+ Treasurer
+ --The Honourable Arthur George Clarence Hawthorn.
+ Secretary for Public Instruction and Secretary for Public Works
+ --The Honourable Walter Henry Barnes.
+ Home Secretary and Secretary for Mines
+ --The Honourable John George Appel.
+ Secretary for Railways and Secretary for Agriculture
+ --The Honourable Walter Trueman Paget.
+
+_With Seats in the Legislative Council._
+
+ Minister without Portfolio--The Honourable Andrew Henry Barlow.
+
+ Attorney-General--The Honourable Thomas O'Sullivan.
+
+
+MEMBERS OF THE LEGISLATIVE COUNCIL (44).
+
+ President--The Honourable Sir Arthur Morgan.
+ Chairman of Committees--The Honourable Peter MacPherson.
+
+ Annear, Hon. John Thomas.[a]
+ Barlow, Hon. Andrew Henry.
+ Beirne, Hon. Thomas Charles.
+ Brentnall, Hon. Frederick Thomas.
+ Brown, Hon. William Villiers.
+ Callan, Hon. Albert James.
+ Campbell, Hon. William Henry.
+ Carter, Hon. Arthur John.
+ Clewett, Hon. Felix.
+ Cowlishaw, Hon. James.
+ Davey, Hon. Alfred Allen.
+ Deane, Hon. John.
+ Fahey, Hon. Bartley.
+ Gibson, Hon. Angus.
+ Gray, Hon. George Wilkie.
+ Groom, Hon. Henry Littleton.
+ Hall, Hon. Thomas Murray.
+ Hart, Hon. Frederick Hamilton.
+ Hinchcliffe, Hon. Albert.
+ Jensen, Hon. Magnus.
+ Johnson, Hon. Thomas Alexander.
+ Lalor, Hon. James.
+ Marks, Hon. Charles Ferdinand, M.D.
+ McDonnell, Hon. Frank.
+ McGhie, Hon. Charles Stewart.
+ Miles, Hon. Edward David.
+ Moreton, Hon. Berkeley Basil.
+ Murphy, Hon. Peter.
+ Nielson, Hon. Charles Frederick.
+ Norton, Hon. Albert.
+ O'Sullivan, Hon. Thomas.
+ Parnell, Hon. Arthur Horatio.
+ Plant, Hon. Edmund Harris Thornburgh.
+ Power, Hon. Francis Isidore.
+ Raff, Hon. Alexander.
+ Smith, Hon. Robert Harrison.
+ Smyth, Hon. Joseph Capel.
+ Stevens, Hon. Ernest James.
+ Taylor, Hon. William Frederick, M.D.
+ Thomas, Hon. Lewis.
+ Thynne, Hon. Andrew Joseph.
+ Turner, Hon. Henry.
+
+
+MEMBERS OF THE LEGISLATIVE ASSEMBLY (72).
+
+ Speaker--The Honourable Joshua Thomas Bell (_Dalby_).
+ Chairman of Committees--William Drayton Armstrong (_Lockyer_).
+
+ Allan, James (_Brisbane South_).
+ Allen, Barnett Francis Samuel (_Bulloo_).
+ Appel, Hon. John George (_Albert_).
+ Barber, George Phillips (_Bundaberg_).
+ Barnes, George Powell (_Warwick_).
+ Barnes, Hon. Walter Henry (_Bulimba_).
+ Blair, James William (_Ipswich_).
+ Booker, Charles Joseph (_Maryborough_).
+ Bouchard, Thomas William (_Brisbane South_).
+ Bowman, David (_Fortitude Valley_).
+ Brennan, James (_Rockhampton North_).
+ Breslin, Edward Denis Joseph (_Port Curtis_).
+ Bridges, Thomas (_Nundah_).
+ Collins, Charles (_Burke_).
+ Corser, Edward Bernard Cresset (_Maryborough_).
+ Cottell, Richard John (_Toowong_).
+ Coyne, John Harry (_Warrego_).
+ Crawford, James (_Fitzroy_).
+ Cribb, James Clarke (_Bundanba_).
+ Denham, Hon. Digby Frank (_Oxley_).
+ Douglas, Henry Alexander Cecil (_Cook_).
+ Ferricks, Miles Aloysius (_Bowen_).
+ Foley, Thomas (_Townsville_).
+ Forrest, Hon. Edward Barrow (_Brisbane North_).
+ Forsyth, James (_Moreton_).
+ Fox, George (_Normanby_).
+ Grant, Kenneth McDonald (_Rockhampton_).
+ Grayson, Francis (_Cunningham_).
+ Gunn, Donald (_Carnarvon_).
+ Hamilton, William (_Gregory_).
+ Hardacre, Herbert Freemont (_Leichhardt_).
+ Hawthorn, Hon. Arthur George Clarence (_Enoggera_).
+ Hodge, Robert Samuel (_Burnett_).
+ Hunter, David (_Woolloongabba_).
+ Hunter, John McEwan (_Maranoa_).
+ Keogh, Denis Thomas (_Rosewood_).
+ Kidston, Hon. William (_Rockhampton_).
+ Land, Edward Martin (_Balonne_).
+ Lennon, William (_Herbert_).
+ Lesina, Vincent Bernard Joseph (_Clermont_).
+ Macartney, Edward Henry (_Brisbane North_).
+ Mackintosh, Donald (_Cambooya_).
+ McLachlan, Peter Alfred (_Fortitude Valley_).
+ Mann, John (_Cairns_).
+ Maughan, William John Ryott (_Ipswich_).
+ May, John (_Flinders_).
+ Morgan, Godfrey (_Murilla_).
+ Mulcahy, Daniel (_Gympie_).
+ Mullan, John (_Charters Towers_).
+ Murphy, William Sidney (_Croydon_).
+ Nevitt, Thomas (_Carpentaria_).
+ O'Sullivan, James (_Kennedy_).
+ Paget, Hon. Walter Trueman (_Mackay_).
+ Payne, John (_Mitchell_).
+ Petrie, Andrew Lang (_Toombul_).
+ Philp, Hon. Robert (_Townsville_).
+ Rankin, Colin Dunlop Wilson (_Burrum_).
+ Roberts, Thomas Robert (_Drayton and Toowoomba_).
+ Ryan, Thomas Joseph (_Barcoo_).
+ Ryland, George (_Gympie_).
+ Somerset, Henry Plantagenet (_Stanley_).
+ Stodart, James (_Logan_).
+ Swayne, Edward Bowdick (_Mackay_).
+ Theodore, Edward (_Woothakata_).
+ Thorn, William (_Aubigny_).
+ Tolmie, James (_Drayton and Toowoomba_).
+ Walker, Harry Frederick (_Wide Bay_).
+ White, John (_Musgrave_).
+ Wienholt, Arnold (_Fassifern_).
+ Winstanley, Vernon (_Charters Towers_).
+
+ [Footnote a: Acting Chairman of Committees.]
+
+
+
+
+APPENDIX D.
+
+FIFTY YEARS OF LEGISLATION.
+
+
+In the following epitome of Queensland legislation during the last
+half-century no mention is made of Land Acts, Local Government Acts,
+Revenue or Loan Acts, or Education Acts, those subjects being dealt
+with in the text of the book. The rule has been to notice in this
+appendix the first legislation of the Parliament on each subject
+exclusive of those above mentioned, and only to refer to amending Acts
+of a consolidating and extending character. Nor is any attempt made to
+furnish a digest of the Acts mentioned, but only to direct attention
+to what are deemed the salient points of each.
+
+The first session of the first Parliament has been specially dealt
+with in "Our Natal Year."
+
+
+THE FIRST PARLIAMENT: 29th May, 1860-22nd May, 1863.
+
+It may not be generally known that in 1861, before Government railways
+were authorised in Queensland, an Act was passed incorporating the
+Moreton Bay Tramway Company, formed to construct a railway "from
+Ipswich to the interior of the colony." The company failed to raise
+the capital required, however, and the project fell through. In the
+same year a Loan Act was passed, but it made no provision for railway
+construction. In 1861 an Act was passed giving facilities for the
+naturalisation of aliens. A Fencing Act, a Carriers Act, and a Masters
+and Servants Act also found a place on the Statute-book. There were
+also passed a Savings Bank Act, a Supreme Court Act, and, among
+several others, twenty-two in all, the Real Property Act of 1861,
+which adopted the Torrens system of registration of titles, and may be
+regarded as one of the most useful reforms of the fifty-year period.
+An Act to facilitate the incorporation of religious and charitable
+institutions also became law. In 1862 an Act to provide for the
+appointment of a second Supreme Court Judge, at a salary of L1,500 a
+year, was passed, the result being the introduction of the late Chief
+Justice Cockle, much to the dissatisfaction of the late Mr. Justice
+Lutwyche, who, having been sole Judge before separation, preferred a
+prior claim to the appointment. Interference with political and party
+affairs was the alleged cause of this non-recognition of seniority;
+and the charge had some justification, as his Honour once issued an
+address to the electors through the Press urging them to vote for a
+Liberal candidate. Another noticeable measure was an Act to provide
+for the introduction of labourers from British India. In all
+thirteen measures were passed in this session, the last of the first
+Parliament.
+
+
+THE SECOND PARLIAMENT: 22nd July, 1863-29th May, 1867.
+
+In 1863 the second Parliament passed twenty-seven Acts, among them
+one empowering the Government to construct a railway from Ipswich to
+Toowoomba, "and such other lines as may hereafter be specified," and
+providing generally for the management of railways. The Inquests on
+Fires Act, the Liens on Crops Act, the Trading Companies Act,
+the Queensland Bank Act, the Civil Service Act--providing liberal
+allowances for retiring public officers--Police, Publicans, and
+Quarantine Acts, and other measures, made this a very fertile session.
+In 1864 no less than thirty Acts became law, including the Gold Export
+Duty Act, imposing a duty of 1s. 6d. per ounce on the precious metal.
+The Immigration Act of 1864, providing for the issue of land-order
+warrants by the Agent-General, instead of land orders, and generally
+restricting the traffic in these instruments, was passed. The Marriage
+Laws Act, the Military Contribution Act, appropriating L3,640 towards
+the cost of Her Majesty's troops in the colony, the Volunteer Corps
+Act, the Small Debts Act, the Roads Closing Act, the Bank of New South
+Wales Act, and the Brisbane Gas Company Act, with several others,
+became law. The publication of "Hansard" was begun in this year.
+
+Twenty-two Acts were passed in 1865, among them one for the Prevention
+of the Careless Use of Fire, a Selectors Relief Act, the Industrial
+and Reformatory Schools Act, and eight measures amending the Criminal
+law. In 1866 twenty-six measures were passed, including the Friendly
+Societies Enabling Act, the Inquests of Deaths Act, abolishing
+coroners' juries and providing for magisterial inquiries at a cost
+of two guineas each as a fee to the presiding justice. The Standard
+Weight for Agricultural Produce Act and an Act declaring Port Albany,
+Cape York, a free port also became law, as well as a number of legal
+statutes.
+
+
+THE THIRD PARLIAMENT: 6th August, 1867-27th August, 1868.
+
+The third Parliament commenced its career in 1867 with a list of
+forty-eight Acts. The Constitution Act of 1867 and the Legislative
+Assembly Act of the same year laid the foundation of the Queensland
+Legislature, while the basis of our judiciary is the Supreme Court
+Act, the District Court Act, the Small Debts Act, and the Jury Act,
+all passed in the same session. Other important measures which
+were passed were Probate Act, Succession Act, Statute of Frauds and
+Limitations, Equity Act, Trustees and Incapacitated Persons Act, and
+the Polynesian Labourers Act, the latter the first of a long series
+of statutes legalising and regulating Polynesian labour. Most of the
+others were amendments of Acts passed in previous sessions. In August,
+1868, the Parliament was prematurely dissolved.
+
+
+THE FOURTH PARLIAMENT: 18th November, 1868-13th July, 1870.
+
+The fourth Parliament opened in November, 1868, and the first session
+lasted till April, 1869. Only nineteen Acts were passed in the two
+sessions of 1868 and 1869. In the latter year two measures were passed
+to encourage the establishment of industries, one by means of grants
+of land, while the other authorised bonuses for the manufacture of
+woollen and cotton goods--the growth of cotton having attained some
+prominence during the American Civil War in the early sixties.
+The principal work of the session, however, was the passage of the
+Pastoral Leases Act, and an Act to repeal the Civil Service Act of
+1863, on the ground that it was imposing undue liabilities on
+the Treasury. The session of 1870 only lasted for a week, and was
+consequently barren.
+
+[Illustration: IN THE SCRUB COUNTRY, KIN KIN, NORTH COAST RAILWAY]
+
+[Illustration: ON THE BLACKALL RANGE, NORTH COAST RAILWAY]
+
+
+THE FIFTH PARLIAMENT: 16th November, 1870-21st June, 1871.
+
+The fifth Parliament lived only seven months. It met in November,
+1870, and passed twenty-two Acts, among them being the University
+Act of 1870, giving the Governor in Council power to establish local
+examinations for degrees in connection with universities in Great
+Britain and Ireland. In this year an Act legalising the collection
+of border duties was passed. An Act providing for a pension of L400
+a year to the Assembly's first Speaker also became law, but has not
+since been used as a precedent. By the Country Publicans Act a license
+for a house not within five miles of any town in which the Towns
+Police Act was in force was reduced to L15. The Gold Fields Homestead
+Act authorised the granting of agricultural leaseholds not exceeding
+forty acres on any proclaimed goldfield. A Wages Act enabled an
+employee to claim six months' pay from a mortgagee on taking over
+a property. In the session of 1871 only six Acts were passed, one
+repealing the proviso to section 10 of the Constitution Act of 1867
+which required a two-thirds majority of both Houses to a bill altering
+the number or apportionment of members of the Assembly. The other
+measures of this session demand no notice here.
+
+
+THE SIXTH PARLIAMENT: 8th November, 1871-1st September, 1873.
+
+The sixth Parliament met in November, 1871, and passed six measures in
+its first session, none of them of more than temporary importance save
+the comprehensive Brands Act, which received the Governor's assent in
+the following year. The main session of 1872 was fertile in practical
+legislation, the Health Act and a Railway Act--providing for the
+fixing of compensation for land resumptions by a railway arbitrator,
+and empowering the Governor in Council to accept proposals for railway
+construction from private individuals or corporations--becoming law
+with twenty-four other measures. An Act of this year provided for the
+gradual abolition of the export duty on gold; another provided for
+homestead areas on liberal terms; and another for the sale of mineral
+lands. A number of legal measures, all of an amending character, also
+became law. And finally, a Loan Act, authorising the Government
+to raise L1,466,499 for railways from Ipswich to Brisbane and from
+Westwood to Comet River on the Central Railway, and other public
+works, gave a new impetus to development. In 1873 the Parliament met
+at the end of May, and after the session had lasted two months the
+Houses were prorogued for the purpose of a dissolution. Only six Acts
+were passed during the session, and those of no permanent significance
+except, perhaps, an equally elaborate and Algerine Customs Act.
+
+
+THE SEVENTH PARLIAMENT: 7th January, 1874-2nd October, 1878.
+
+The seventh Parliament opened on 7th January, 1874, and the Palmer
+Government, being defeated on the election for the Speakership, at
+once retired. After nearly three months' adjournment to enable the new
+Ministry to formulate its policy, the session was resumed at the end
+of March, and eighteen public and six private Acts were passed. Among
+the most important was the Audit Act, which, among other provisions,
+altered the opening date of the financial year to 1st July, instead of
+1st January, with the object of getting the work done during the cool
+weather. But the Act failed in this respect, for Governments seldom
+care to call Parliament together much before mid-July, in time to
+provide for the first Treasury payments of the new financial year.
+On the other hand, the Assembly members usually protract the sittings
+until close to Christmas week, at whatever date the session opens.
+Among the other measures passed in 1874 were the Insolvency Act,
+of which Mr. S. W. Griffith was the author; the Crown Remedies Act,
+providing for the conduct of suits on behalf of the Crown; a Supreme
+Court Act, making provision for the appointment of a third Judge to be
+stationed at Bowen, and fixing the salaries and pensions of the Judges
+at the amounts still payable; a comprehensive Goldfields Act; an
+Act for the protection of oysters and the establishment of oyster
+fisheries; and an Act to encourage the manufacture of sugar. In 1875
+sixteen Acts were passed, one of the two most important being the
+Western Railway Act, providing for the reservation of the land for
+fifty miles on either side of a straight line drawn from Dalby to
+Roma, and the sale of such lands to pay for the construction of a
+railway to connect the two towns. The other and great measure of the
+session, however, was the State Education Act, the scope of which is
+elsewhere explained.
+
+In 1876 twenty-three Acts were passed, two of them being temporary
+Supply Acts, measures which first became necessary with the alteration
+of the date of the financial year. A Crown Lands Alienation Act,
+passed this year, is noticed elsewhere, as is also the Customs
+Duties Act, introducing a tariff incidentally protective. Mr.
+Groom's Friendly Societies Act became law, as also did Mr. Griffith's
+Judicature Act, and the Fire Brigades Act. A Municipality Endowments
+Act provided a L2 for L1 endowment for municipalities during the
+first five years after their establishment, and then L1 for L1. The
+Department of Justice was provided for, enabling a layman to hold
+the portfolio of Minister for Justice in a Ministry, and, so far as
+official practice was concerned, to qualify such Minister to discharge
+the duties of the Attorney-General.
+
+In 1877, twenty-eight measures were placed on the Statute-book,
+including the Navigation Act, Bank Holidays Act, Chinese Immigration
+Regulation Act, an Act to punish disorderly conduct in places of
+religious worship, the Victoria Bridge Act, and the first of a series
+of enactments for the destruction of marsupials and the protection
+of native birds. But the most important piece of legislation was the
+Railway Reserves Act, which, before it was finally repealed, caused
+considerable trouble in regard to the disposal of the moneys received
+from the sale of land within the reserves which were set apart in the
+various districts to provide funds for the construction of railways in
+the several reserves.
+
+In 1878, the last session of the seventh Parliament, only a few
+measures were passed, among them, however, being the Deceased
+Wife's Sister Marriage Act, the Intestacy Act, a comprehensive Local
+Government Act, and a Volunteer Act. An Electoral Districts Act
+redistributed the electorates of the colony, and increased the number
+of members of the Assembly from 43 to 55.
+
+
+THE EIGHTH PARLIAMENT: 15th January, 1879-26th July, 1883.
+
+In January, 1879, a new Parliament opened, and the ensuing five years
+contributed but a moderate number of Acts to the Statute-book. First
+in political importance was the Divisional Boards Act of 1879; then
+the Licensing Boards Act; the Orphanages Act; the Bills of Exchange
+Act; and the Life Insurance Act, providing among other things
+that after an insured person had held a policy for life assurance,
+endowment, or annuity for three years his age, unless in the case of
+fraud, should be deemed to have been admitted by the company, and also
+protecting the interest of the assured in the event of his insolvency.
+A short Act was passed requiring all moneys received under the
+Western Railway Act and the Railway Reserves Act to be paid into the
+consolidated revenue fund; and a Loan Act for L3,053,000 was also
+placed on the Statute-book. The Local Works Loans Act, referred to
+elsewhere, was also passed. The Rabbit Act, passed on the initiative
+of a private member, Mr. E. J. Stevens, was the forerunner of several
+measures having for their object the extermination of this national
+pest. In 1880, out of the twenty-four Acts passed, four were for
+appropriations, and four for private purposes. A new Pacific Island
+Labourers Act became law, providing for the engagement of all
+islanders under the inspection of a Government agent travelling in
+the recruiting vessel, restricting the employment of the islanders to
+tropical and semi-tropical agriculture, and making provision for their
+payment and treatment. The Post Card and Postal Notes Act provided for
+the issue of those instruments. The greatest political measure was the
+Railway Companies Preliminary Act, passed with the view of inducing
+capitalists to undertake railway construction in consideration of land
+grants.
+
+In 1881 fifteen Acts, exclusive of appropriations, were passed, among
+which were the Macalister Pension Act, authorising the payment to
+the ex-Agent-General of a pension of L500 a year; the Pearl-shell
+and Beche-de-mer Fishery Act; the Sale of Food and Drugs Act, and the
+United Municipalities Act. In 1882, with the exception of the Tramways
+Act, nearly all the measures passed were amending Acts.
+
+In 1883 only two measures were passed--the Queensland Stock
+Inscription Act and an Appropriation Act--dissolution following
+upon the defeat of the Government on the second reading of the
+Transcontinental Railway Bill, which was introduced to ratify an
+agreement made with a company, represented by General Feilding, under
+the provisions of the Railway Companies Preliminary Act of 1880, for
+the construction of a railway from Charleville to Point Parker on the
+Gulf of Carpentaria.
+
+
+THE NINTH PARLIAMENT: 7th November, 1883-4th April, 1888.
+
+The ninth Parliament opened on 7th November, 1883, and the Government
+resigned after being thrice defeated. Mr. Griffith became Premier, and
+he at once set to work to reverse the policy of his rival in several
+respects. The Assembly passed a bill to repeal the Labourers from
+British India Acts of 1862 and 1882, but the Council rejected it. The
+passage of the Chinese Immigrants Regulation Act (introduced by Mr.
+Macrossan as a private Opposition member), which restricted the number
+of Chinese passengers arriving by any vessel to one to every fifty
+tons register, and imposed a landing fee of L30 per head on such
+passengers, had a salutary effect in limiting this form of Asiatic
+immigration. The Pacific Island Labourers Act Amendment Act further
+safeguarded the interests of white workers in Queensland. The Railway
+Companies Preliminary Act was repealed, and its repeal put a stop
+to the negotiations which had been going on in connection with the
+Transcontinental Railway under the previous Government.
+
+The chief measure passed in the regular session of 1884 was the
+Crown Lands Act, which has been dealt with elsewhere. A comprehensive
+Defence Act established the principle of compulsory service in time
+of war. Among other measures passed were a comprehensive Health Act,
+a Bills of Exchange Act, a Wages Act, a Pharmacy Act, and the Native
+Birds Protection Act; also the Patents, Designs, and Trade Marks Act.
+Many of the other Acts were legal measures, but one may be mentioned
+as of interest--the New Guinea and Pacific Jurisdiction Contribution
+Act, which provided for the amount of annual contribution by
+Queensland in the event of a British Protectorate being established
+over Eastern New Guinea and other islands in the Western Pacific. An
+Act of interest to civil servants was that which required all fees
+thereafter received by them to be paid into the Treasury. The Acts of
+this single session--the first of Mr. Griffith's Premiership--extended
+over 405 pages of the then quarto Statute-book.
+
+The Officials in Parliament Act--passed to create an additional
+Minister, to readjust the division of portfolios between the two
+Houses, and to render officers in the Imperial and Queensland military
+and naval forces eligible to sit in the Legislative Assembly--had the
+effect of bringing about an innovation not intended at the time the
+Act was passed, and which had no parallel in parliamentary government
+in the Empire. The passage of section 3 involved the repeal of
+sections 5 and 6 of the Legislative Assembly Act of 1867, the latter
+of which made it obligatory for members of the Assembly to submit
+themselves for re-election upon taking office as Ministers. Curiously
+enough, the effect of this repeal was not discovered until certain
+Ministerial changes were made in 1893. The members of the McIlwraith
+Government in 1888 and the members of the Griffith-McIlwraith
+Coalition in 1890 went before their constituents for re-election; but
+since the latter year the practice has ceased, and the electors have
+now no opportunity of showing by their votes whether they approve or
+disapprove of Cabinet changes.
+
+The session of 1885 was also productive of much legislation. There
+were a new Licensing Act containing local option provisions, a Federal
+Council (Adopting) Act, and an Undue Subdivision of Land Prevention
+Act, making the minimum width of new streets 66 feet, and of lanes
+22 feet, and buildings were not to be erected within 33 feet of the
+middle line of a lane; while suburban or country lands could not be
+sold in areas of less than 16 perches. This measure put a stop to
+subdivisions which could only be regarded as a grave abuse. The law
+relating to parliamentary elections was consolidated and amended.
+Another Act prohibited the introduction of Pacific Islanders after
+31st December, 1890. Altogether eighteen measures, irrespective of
+appropriations, were passed. During this and the following session a
+series of conflicts arose over the power of the Legislative Council
+to amend bills dealing with appropriation and taxation. In 1884 a bill
+was introduced which made provision for granting to members of the
+Assembly payment of expenses at the rate of L2 2s. per sitting day,
+with a maximum amount of L200 per annum, and in addition payment of
+travelling expenses to and from electorates once a year at the rate
+of 1s. 6d. per mile. The bill was laid aside by the Council. It
+was reintroduced in 1885, and again laid aside by the Council.
+The Government thereupon included a sum of L7,000 in the annual
+Appropriation Bill for the payment of members' expenses, and the
+Council took the extreme step of amending the Appropriation Bill by
+omitting this vote. After communications had passed between the two
+Chambers, it was agreed to submit to the Imperial Crown Law Officers
+two questions to settle whether the Council possessed co-ordinate
+powers with the Assembly in the amendment of all bills, including
+money bills, and the Judicial Committee of the Privy Council decided
+against the Council. The following year, the Members' Expenses Bill
+was passed by the Council without any attempt at amendment. The
+Council having also amended the rating clauses of a Local Government
+Bill in 1885, the bill was laid aside by the Assembly. It was
+reintroduced next year, and again amended by the Council. Warned by
+the fact that a Divisional Boards Bill had been laid aside by the
+Council because the Assembly claimed that the Upper House had no
+power to amend rating clauses, the Assembly accepted the Council's
+amendments, but at the same time asserted their sole power of altering
+taxation provisions.
+
+In the year 1886 no less than thirty-two Acts, exclusive of
+appropriations and private measures, were passed. Among them was the
+Elections Tribunal Act, which gave to a Supreme Court Judge, assisted
+by a panel of members of the Assembly acting as assessors, the
+decision of election petitions, as the trying of such petitions before
+an Elections and Qualifications Committee consisting of members of
+the Assembly had proved unsatisfactory. The Members' Expenses Bill was
+also passed. The important Justices Act was a measure of this session.
+The Labourers from British India Acts were repealed, the repealing
+measure having been rejected by the Council in the 1883-4 session,
+thus closing the door to the long-desired importation of coolie labour
+for pastoral holdings. Two measures of great importance to workers
+which were placed on the Statute-book in this session were the
+Employers Liability Act and the Trade Unions Act. The Offenders
+Probation Act embodied a new departure in the treatment of first
+offenders, which has since been copied by many other countries.
+Another Act which proved of material assistance to the working
+classes was the Building Societies Act. Several of the measures were
+amendments of the work of former Parliaments.
+
+The session of 1887, though less fruitful than the three preceding
+sessions, was by no means barren. Twenty-one bills were passed, one
+of which made provision for a contribution to the British New Guinea
+civil list. The Divisional Boards Bill, which had been laid aside by
+the Council in 1886, was reintroduced. The taxation clauses were
+this year embodied in a separate bill--the Valuation Bill--and both
+measures became law. An Electoral Districts Bill was also passed,
+increasing the number of members of the Assembly to 72. No change has
+since been made in the representation of the State. The passage of
+this bill was urged as a reason for not passing the Australasian Naval
+Force Bill, the Opposition contending that no important legislation
+should be attempted after Parliament had agreed to a redistribution
+of seats, and Sir S. W. Griffith was in this way prevented from giving
+legislative force to the agreement which he had drafted, and which was
+passed into law in all the other colonies before its author finally
+succeeded in securing its passage in Queensland in the year 1891. The
+session closed in December, 1887, but the Assembly was not dissolved
+until four months later.
+
+
+THE TENTH PARLIAMENT: 12th June, 1888-5th April, 1893.
+
+The tenth Parliament opened on 12th June, 1888, and the Griffith
+Ministry gave place to that of Sir Thomas McIlwraith. Only ten public
+measures were passed, however, exclusive of appropriations.
+The struggle of the session arose on the Customs Bill, imposing
+protectionist duties, and increasing the complexity of the tariff. On
+entering Parliament in 1874, Mr. Macrossan had earnestly demanded, on
+behalf of the Northern miners, effectual anti-Chinese legislation,
+but the attitude of the Imperial Government compelled the Queensland
+Parliament to proceed warily. In 1877 an Act was passed requiring the
+master of any ship to pay L10 for each Chinese passenger landed, and
+forbidding more than one to every 10 tons burthen, a penalty of
+L10 being imposed in each case of breach. In 1884 the number to be
+introduced was further restricted to one Chinese for each 50 tons,
+with a landing payment of L30, and L30 penalty for each landed in
+excess of the prescribed number. In 1888 the representatives of the
+various Australasian Governments met at Sydney, as, owing to the
+unwillingness of the Imperial Government to give the Royal assent
+to the legislation desired, there was doubt as to whether a measure
+passed by an individual colony would be assented to. The conference
+agreed to a bill, and the Queensland Parliament passed it in 1888, but
+it did not become law until February, 1890. It placed the limitation
+at one Chinese passenger to every 500 tons registered, made the
+penalty on the master L500 for every Chinese landed in excess of the
+number, and, in default of payment, twelve months' imprisonment, and
+L100 for a master failing to report at the Customs. For failure
+to supply a correct list of Chinese passengers the master rendered
+himself liable to a penalty of L200 for each act of default, and L30
+for permitting Chinese to land without payment of the landing tax. A
+Chinaman landing illegally, either overland or by ship, was himself
+liable to a penalty of L50, and, in default of payment, to six months'
+imprisonment. A comprehensive Railways Act was passed, its main object
+being to entrust the control of the railways to three Commissioners.
+The other measures were not of permanent interest.
+
+The session of 1889, under the Morehead Administration, was more
+productive. The Totalisator Restriction Act was among the measures
+passed, as was also the Trustees Act. The Civil Service Act, which
+embodied superannuation provisions on the basis of a 4 per cent.
+contribution from salary, was passed, but the superannuation sections
+were repealed in 1894 chiefly because of the representations of
+junior officers who alleged that the system was unjust. The Payment of
+Members Act repealed the Members' Expenses Act of 1886, and under
+it members were paid an annual salary of L300. The session was also
+notable by reason of the passage of the Defamation Act, introduced
+by Sir S. W. Griffith as a private member, by which journalists
+were relieved of the Algerine law under which their profession had
+previously been carried on.
+
+The session of 1890 was marked by the formation of the
+Griffith-McIlwraith Ministry, and the passing of twenty-seven Acts,
+many of importance, one of them being the Married Women's Property
+Act. The dividend duty was first imposed in this session, and
+sketching fortifications was made a penal offence; but the more
+important measures of this year are elsewhere noticed.
+
+In the session of 1891 a comprehensive Water Authorities Act, which
+is still in force, became law. An Act permitting solicitors to do work
+for their clients by agreement was passed, as was also an Act for the
+better protection of women and girls. In all thirty-eight measures,
+many of them of a legal character, became law in this session. The one
+of greatest importance was the Australasian Naval Force Act, to which
+allusion has already been made.
+
+In 1892 thirty-nine Acts were passed, among which was one for the
+treatment and isolation of lepers; others provided for strengthening
+the law penalising bakers for selling bread under weight; for
+subsidising railway construction by grants of land; for the
+establishment of harbour boards, and the levy of harbour dues; for
+penalising the publication of indecent advertisements; for making a
+person accused of an indictable offence and the wife or husband of
+such accused person a competent but not a compellable witness for the
+defence; for raising the Chief Justice's salary to L3,500 with a
+view to securing the services of Sir S. W. Griffith; for reducing the
+payment of members of the Assembly to L150 per annum; and for taxing
+the receipts of totalisators on racecourses, a duty being imposed of
+sixpence in the pound of money passed through the totalisators. A new
+principle in rabbit legislation was introduced by an Act encouraging
+pastoral lessees to destroy the pest by granting them an extension
+of their leases as compensation for their outlay. The Pacific Island
+Labourers (Extension) Act reversed the decision of Parliament in 1885,
+and permitted the reintroduction of islanders for work in the sugar
+industry. The recruiting continued from this date until terminated by
+the Commonwealth legislation of 1901. This session proved a very long
+one, the Houses sitting from March till November.
+
+
+THE ELEVENTH PARLIAMENT: 26th May, 1893-22nd February, 1896.
+
+The eleventh Parliament was opened on 26th May, 1893, Sir Thomas
+McIlwraith being then Premier. A Ministerial crisis was produced on
+the Railway Border Tax Bill, which imposed a duty of L2 10s. per ton
+on every bale of Queensland wool taken across the border. Ministers
+tendered their resignations, but the Governor, Sir Henry Norman,
+declined to accept them. In a minute read in the Assembly, His
+Excellency expressed the opinion that the vote in question did not
+constitute a vote of want of confidence in Ministers, and he gave it
+as his belief that on most questions of importance likely to arise
+they would have the support of a substantial majority of members of
+the Assembly. Consequently Sir Thomas McIlwraith continued in office,
+and both Houses passed the bill. It was a retaliatory measure against
+the New South Wales Railway Commissioners because of the preferential
+rates conceded by them to draw traffic to Sydney that legitimately
+belonged to Brisbane. The Meat and Dairy Produce Act became law in
+this year; also the Sugar Works Guarantee Act, and the Co-operative
+Communities Land Settlement Act, which proved an utter failure in
+spite of the passing of amending Acts in the two succeeding years.
+Various financial measures noticed elsewhere were also passed, these
+last being rendered imperative by the banking crisis which then
+paralysed industry and commerce. At the end of the session, Sir Thomas
+McIlwraith's health failing him, he retired from the Premiership,
+which was taken by Sir Hugh Muir Nelson.
+
+In 1894 the session opened on 17th July, and one of the most hotly
+contested measures was the Peace Preservation Bill, introduced in
+consequence of the disturbances connected with the shearers' strike
+in the West in 1891, and the apprehension that they would be repeated
+unless drastic legislation was enacted. Its passage was strenuously
+opposed by the Labour Opposition, and it was only forced through the
+Assembly by the application of the closure. Violent scenes culminated
+in the suspension of eight Labour members, the suspension being
+followed by an appeal by the ejected members to the Supreme Court,
+when that court decided that Parliament was the only tribunal for
+determining matters affecting its own jurisdiction. In all thirty-six
+measures were passed, but the majority were either financial
+or designed to amend existing statutes which caused friction in
+operation. The effort at this time seemed to be rather to pass
+practicable laws than enact measures embodying so-called advanced
+principles. The most noteworthy of these laws was the Agricultural
+Lands Purchase Act, which authorised the purchase by the Government
+of large estates at a cost not exceeding L100,000 in any one year, and
+the subdivision of the land into farms.
+
+In 1895 thirty-five Acts were the product of the session, and they
+were generally characterised by the same adaptation of means to ends
+that was noticeable in the preceding year. In fact, during these two
+years the colonies were all suffering a recovery which did not incite
+to heroic legislation for securing the rights of man, including woman.
+Deserving of special mention are the Suppression of Gambling Act, and
+the Railways Guarantee Act which made provision for local authorities
+guaranteeing the State against loss in connection with the
+construction and working of railways built under the Act. In
+consequence of friction between the three Railway Commissioners, an
+Act was passed in this year reducing the number of Commissioners to
+one, Mr. Mathieson, the Chief Commissioner, being retained. A short
+measure of considerable value was the Standard Time Act, the object
+of which was to place Queensland in line with New South Wales and
+Victoria by adopting the time of the 150th meridian of east longitude
+as the standard time for the three colonies.
+
+[Illustration: BARRON GORGE, CAIRNS RAILWAY, NORTH QUEENSLAND]
+
+
+THE TWELFTH PARLIAMENT: 17th June, 1896-15th February, 1899.
+
+In 1896 there was a general election, and the new Parliament opened
+on 17th June. Public confidence had been fairly restored after the
+financial crisis of 1893, and thirty-five Acts were passed, not one of
+which was of a highly contentious political nature. Even the Factories
+and Shops Act, introduced by the Government, was supported by the
+Labour party; indeed, no party or section opposed it, although the
+compulsory closing of shops at 1 p.m. on Saturdays throughout an area
+within the radius of ten miles of the General Post Office excited much
+individual opposition. Mr. Mathieson having accepted the position of
+Chief Commissioner of the Victorian railways, an amending Railways
+Act was passed empowering the Governor in Council to appoint a
+Commissioner for three years, reducing the salary from L3,000 to
+L1,500, and providing for the appointment of a Deputy Commissioner.
+Mr. R. J. Gray, one of the three original Commissioners, was appointed
+Commissioner, and Mr. Thallon, the present Commissioner, became his
+deputy. A measure of some importance repealed the existing Payment
+of Members Act, and made the new Act an integral part of the
+Constitution, the salary being fixed at L300 a year. The object, as
+stated by the Government, was to stop the incessant agitation that was
+carried on in political circles on the one hand for an increase, and
+on the other for a reduction of the salary.
+
+In the session of 1897, Sir Hugh Nelson being still Premier, thirty
+Acts were passed. There was again a remarkable absence of measures of
+a party character, most of them being useful amendments of existing
+laws. Of these the Elections Consolidating Act was important. The Home
+Secretary, Mr. J. F. G. Foxton, deserves credit for introducing this
+session the Aboriginals Protection and Restriction of the Sale of
+Opium Act, the first measure for the preservation and care of our
+fast-disappearing aboriginal blacks. It must be recorded with shame
+that the Government of Queensland should have allowed so many years to
+pass before taking steps to protect the race who had been dispossessed
+of their heritage from some of the curses attendant on our
+civilisation. Since 1897 the stigma no longer rests on our fair
+fame, everything possible being done now to save the natives from
+extinction. In this year, too, the Mareeba to Chillagoe Railway Act,
+which has proved very beneficial to the Cairns hinterland, became law.
+A comprehensive Land Act, occupying 110 pages of the Statute-book, was
+passed, and also an amending and consolidating Trustees and Executors
+Act.
+
+The session of 1898--the last of the Parliament--opened on 26th July,
+and closed on 30th December. The principal work of this session was
+the passage of an amending Mining Act which greatly improved the
+condition of the working miners. Other measures were an Act to
+incorporate the Brisbane Technical College, and the Game and Fishes
+Acclimatisation Act, providing for the proclamation of districts, for
+an open season, for the issue of game licenses, and the appointment of
+guardians. Sir Hugh Nelson, in consequence of the death of Sir A.
+H. Palmer, had been translated to the Presidency of the Legislative
+Council, and the Premiership was assumed by Mr. T. J. Byrnes on 13th
+April. Mr. Byrnes died in the following September, and was succeeded
+by Mr. (afterwards Sir) J. R. Dickson.
+
+On 1st December, 1899, Mr. Dickson and his colleagues resigned in
+consequence of a vote of the Assembly, and for seven days the Dawson
+Labour Ministry held office, but they were defeated immediately on the
+reassembling of the House. In the meantime Mr. Philp had been chosen
+leader of the Opposition, and on 7th December he returned to power as
+Premier with most of his old colleagues.
+
+
+THE THIRTEENTH PARLIAMENT: 16th May, 1899-4th February, 1902.
+
+The year 1899 was remarkable for the passage of two great
+measures--the Australasian Federation Enabling Act, passed in a
+session specially summoned for the purpose, which authorised a
+referendum to be taken on the new Constitution; and the invaluable and
+monumental Criminal Code Act, extending with its four schedules over
+270 pages of the Statute-book. The Code was compiled by Sir S. W.
+Griffith, and was afterwards submitted to the whole of the Judges of
+the Supreme and District Courts before being presented to Parliament.
+A bill was also passed legitimising children born before marriage on
+the subsequent marriage of their parents. The other public measures of
+the session were for amending purposes.
+
+The session of 1900 was a fairly active one, thirty-four measures
+being passed. A short Act of far-reaching importance empowered the
+Government to enter into arrangements with the Governments of the
+United Kingdom, Canada, Victoria, New South Wales, and New Zealand,
+for laying a Pacific cable. By a short measure the Government were
+empowered to prohibit the exportation of arms or naval stores. A great
+consolidating and amending Health Act was passed; also a measure, in
+connection with the appointment of Dr. Maxwell, of Honolulu, for the
+establishment of sugar experiment stations. In this year the Railway
+Commissioner was reappointed for three years at a salary of L2,000 per
+annum, being an increase of L500. The Factories and Shops Act of 1896
+was repealed, and a more comprehensive measure passed. An amending
+Defence Act was passed providing, among other things, for the military
+training of boys between twelve and eighteen years. An Act also became
+law providing for the inspection of grammar schools by a graduate of
+a British or Australian University. Another measure provided for the
+holding of the first Commonwealth elections, and for the temporary
+division of the State into nine electorates for the House of
+Representatives election. Several bills authorising the construction
+of railways to mineral fields by private companies evoked the bitter
+opposition of the Labour party. To force them through the popular
+House the Government were obliged to introduce an amendment of the
+Standing Orders, colloquially known as the "guillotine," and to
+closure the bills through the House.
+
+In the session of 1901 twenty-seven Acts were passed. The Chief
+Justice's salary, on the retirement of Sir S. W. Griffith to accept
+the Federal Chief Justiceship, was reduced to its former amount of
+L2,500 a year. The first legislation to eradicate the prickly pear
+took place in this year. The bill was introduced by a private member,
+Mr. Bell, who has always taken a keen interest in the destruction of
+this pest. It was based on the principle that close settlement is the
+only effective remedy, and offered inducements to settlers to select
+infested lands. The Public Service Act was so amended as to constitute
+the members of the Ministry for the time being the members of the
+board. A measure was passed requiring every life assurance company
+carrying on business in Queensland to hold L10,000 in Queensland
+securities, and otherwise protecting policy-holders. An Agricultural
+Bank Act was passed authorising the Government to advance to settlers
+on the land loans for carrying out improvements. An Animals Protection
+Act was also passed for the more effectual prevention of cruelty to
+animals.
+
+
+THE FOURTEENTH PARLIAMENT: 8th July, 1902-21st July, 1904.
+
+The fourteenth Parliament opened on 8th July, 1902, twenty-seven
+public measures becoming law in the first session. An amending
+Aboriginals Protection Act, chiefly dealing with the sale of opium,
+was passed. The sum to be paid as duty on totalisator stakes or bets
+was increased to one shilling in the pound from the sixpence provided
+by the Act of 1892. A Railway Act amending measure was passed
+authorising the appointment of a Commissioner for a term of seven
+years, and making other changes to facilitate the working of the
+department. In consequence of the drought and Federal embarrassments,
+the Public Service Special Retrenchment Act was passed, reducing the
+salaries of public servants on a sliding scale; and an Income Tax
+Bill became law, imposing a tax of sixpence in the pound upon incomes
+derived from personal exertion, and one shilling in the pound when
+derived from property, incomes under L100 being mulcted in 10s.,
+and when not exceeding L150 L1 a year. Provision was made for the
+appointment of a Government department for collecting the tax, and the
+last section enacted that the tax should cease on 1st January, 1905.
+The monumental Local Government Act of 1902 also became law in this
+year.
+
+The next session opened in July, and closed in December, 1903, but
+in mid-September progress was suspended by a change of Ministry, the
+Morgan-Kidston Government assuming office. Among the measures passed
+after the change of Ministry was an Act providing that the senior
+puisne Judge resident in Brisbane should be the senior puisne Judge of
+the Supreme Court, and discretionary power was given to the Governor
+in Council with regard to filling the vacancy created on the Supreme
+Court bench through the acceptance by Sir S. W. Griffith of the
+more dignified position of Chief Justice of the High Court of the
+Commonwealth. The Government were subjected to severe criticism for
+making no appointment, but the number of Judges was allowed to remain
+at four until the appointment of Mr. Justice Shand in November, 1908.
+
+Parliament reassembled in May following, and sat two months, when a
+dissolution was granted on 21st July, in consequence of the Government
+being left without a working majority.
+
+
+THE FIFTEENTH PARLIAMENT: 20th September, 1904-11th April, 1907.
+
+The fifteenth Parliament opened on 20th September following, and sat
+until Christmas. Among the measures passed was a comprehensive
+Dairy Produce Act providing for the appointment of inspectors; the
+registration of premises, a fee being charged proportioned to the
+number of cows kept; for compulsory grading of butter for export; and
+for the general regulation of dairies. The Income Tax was continued,
+but gave relief to persons with small incomes, though on the whole
+it yielded more revenue. Owing to the exigencies of the Treasury, the
+Public Service Special Retrenchment Act was continued for a further
+period of nine months, but the rate of retrenchment was reduced by
+one-half, and provision was made for devoting any surplus revenue
+at the close of the year to the repayment to public servants of the
+amounts so deducted from their salaries, and in this way they received
+a return equal to 8s. in the pound.[a] A Registration of Clubs Act and
+fourteen other measures were also passed.
+
+An extraordinary session of twenty days was held in January, 1905, to
+reconsider the Elections Bill, rejected by the Legislative Council
+in December previously. This having been done, and the Council having
+agreed to the bill, Parliament was prorogued, and met for the regular
+session of the year in July following, the sittings being continued
+till the Christmas holidays.
+
+The ordinary session of 1905 was a busy one, though the measures
+generally were short and of a practical nature. A distinguishing
+feature of the work of this Parliament was the humanitarian and social
+legislation which was placed on the Statute-book. The interests of
+workers generally were conserved by the Workers' Compensation Act,
+which made injuries or fatal accidents met with by employees a charge
+upon the industry in which they were engaged. The comfort of a very
+large number of workers in the pastoral and sugar industries was
+provided for by the Shearers and Sugar Workers Accommodation Act. A
+most valuable piece of legislation was the Infant Life Protection Act,
+the object of which was to prevent the alarming sacrifice of infant
+life in nursing homes from neglect, all such homes having to be
+registered and made subject to Government inspection. An Act imposing
+a penalty of L10 upon any person selling or giving tobacco or cigars
+to a young person under the age of sixteen years was passed, as was
+also an Act forbidding the sale or supply of firearms to a young
+person under fourteen years, and also forbidding such young person to
+use or carry firearms, the penalty for a breach of the Act being
+L20. Another measure of interest, which was passed in response to the
+request of a large number of workers, was an Act providing for railway
+employees a Board of Appeal against disciplinary decisions of
+superior officers. A short Act became law giving the right to women
+to admission and practice as barristers, solicitors, or conveyancers.
+Quite a number of other small Acts was passed, among them being a
+Fertilisers Act, the object of which was to prevent loss to farmers by
+the sale of fraudulent fertilisers.
+
+The most contentious measure of the session of 1906, which opened, as
+usual, in July, was the Railways Act, its principal object being to
+hold the ratepayers of a benefited area responsible for all losses in
+working a newly-constructed railway. It empowers the local authority
+to levy a railway rate to make good the deficiency, if any, after
+providing for working expenses and interest at the rate of three per
+cent. on capital expended on the line. If the local authority fails to
+levy and collect the railway rate, the Commissioner is empowered to
+do so. An important principle of the Act requires, when lands in
+a benefited area are being valued for rating purposes, that to the
+capital value shall be added the enhancement through the railway
+facilities provided. The object of the Act is undoubtedly good, in so
+far as it discourages landowners from agitating and bringing political
+pressure upon the Government in favour of railway undertakings not
+justified by the prospective traffic. It was supposed that persons
+desiring a new railway would hesitate to guarantee the Government
+against loss through its construction, but the applications for new
+lines have not been less numerous since the passing of the Act than
+when the burden fell entirely upon the general taxpayer. Yet there can
+be no doubt that many unwarranted undertakings have been quashed by
+the liability imposed upon local landowners.
+
+During the session there were thirty-four Acts passed, among them one
+for the protection of opossums, native bears, and other wild animals
+specified in the schedule, by the proclamation of a close season, and
+the prohibition of the use of cyanide as poison by collectors of skins
+for export. The Mining Machinery Advances Act empowered the Minister
+to advance loans from moneys appropriated by Parliament to persons
+or companies erecting machinery for carrying on mining operations or
+treating metalliferous ores, such loans to be made on the basis of L1
+for L1 of money expended by the applicant. A comprehensive Weights and
+Measures Act also became law. Another useful measure was the amending
+Public Works Land Resumption Act, the compensation provisions being
+greatly improved. The Etheridge Railway Act also passed in this
+session despite the objection of several members of the Labour party
+to "syndicate" lines. The opposition of these members, however, was
+not characterised by the obstructive tactics adopted in regard to
+similar measures in 1908.
+
+ [Footnote a: See page 50, ante.]
+
+
+THE SIXTEENTH PARLIAMENT: 23rd July to 31st December, 1907.
+
+The sixteenth Parliament was elected in May, 1907, but none of the
+three parties, into which the Assembly was divided by the cleavage
+between the moderate and the extreme sections of the Labour party
+consequent upon the adoption by the latter of the socialistic
+objective at the Convention held earlier in the year at Rockhampton,
+came back with a majority, and little legislation was found possible,
+the only public Acts passed relating to Appropriations, Children's
+Courts, Poor Prisoners' Defence, and an amending Income Tax measure
+raising the exemption to L200, and giving other relief to taxpayers.
+Towards the end of November the Government, failing to pass several
+democratic measures through the Council and to obtain adequate support
+from the Labour party, resigned, and Parliament was dissolved on 31st
+December on the advice of Mr. Philp, who had been called on to form a
+new Government from the Opposition party, and had failed to secure a
+parliamentary majority.
+
+
+THE SEVENTEENTH PARLIAMENT: 3rd March, 1908-31st August, 1909.
+
+The result of the appeal to the constituencies was to leave parties
+much as before, the Kidston and Labour parties being slightly
+strengthened numerically, and the Philp party--the Government at the
+moment--weakened correspondingly, they and the Kidston party numbering
+25 each, while the Labour party were 22 strong. Mr. Philp's appeal
+having thus failed, he retired, and Mr. Kidston, being recalled,
+sought to secure for his Government more than casual support from the
+Labour party. The House met on 3rd March, 1908. The session lasted
+barely seven weeks, and among the fifteen measures which became law
+were the following:--An amending Constitution Bill repealing the
+provisoes to section 9 of the principal Act, the first of which
+required a two-thirds vote of both Houses to any amendment for varying
+the mode of appointment or number of members of the Legislative
+Council; and the second, that any such amending bill should not
+receive the Royal assent until it had lain thirty days on the table
+of both Houses of the Imperial Parliament. Another Constitution Bill
+provided for a referendum to the electors when a bill passed by the
+Assembly had been twice rejected by the Council. The first of the
+above-mentioned bills received the Governor's assent forthwith, but
+as to the second such assent was reserved, and the bill transmitted
+to England. On 19th August, however, the King's assent was
+proclaimed, and the incompatibilities between the two Houses were thus
+satisfactorily adjusted by a comparatively simple process. A measure
+which aroused strong party feeling was a bill to amend the Elections
+Act by repealing the postal voting sections, substituting provisions
+to enable absent voters to vote at any polling place in the State, and
+also ensuring greater secrecy by having the ballot papers from places
+where a small number of votes are recorded counted in some larger
+centre. A useful Land Surveyors Act was passed, requiring registration
+after approval of candidates by a board to be constituted under the
+Act, and prescribing a variety of other regulations for the purposes
+of securing the competence and protecting the interests of surveyors
+generally. Other measures placed on the Statute-book included an Old
+Age Pensions Act, which has now lapsed in consequence of the passing
+of a Commonwealth pensions law; an Act for the Inspection of Machinery
+and Scaffolding; an amending Factories and Shops Act containing many
+democratic provisions; a Wages Boards Act, which has been kindly taken
+to by both employers and employed, and promises to adjust most of the
+differences between masters and men; a Religious Instruction in State
+Schools Referendum Act, the poll to be taken on the same day as the
+polling for the first Federal election after the passing of the Act;
+and an amending Technical College Act dissolving the councils of both
+metropolitan technical colleges, and vesting the property and future
+management in the Government. Two bills were also passed authorising
+the construction of railways to the Mount Elliott and Lawn Hills
+mineral fields. These bills directly led to the Labour party assuming
+an attitude of open hostility to the Government, and brought the
+latter and the Opposition, led by Mr. Philp, together, as the policy
+put before the electors by these two parties was identical in almost
+every respect.
+
+Before the opening of the second session on 17th November, 1908, the
+Kidston and Philp parties were fused into one on the common basis
+of the policy enunciated by Mr. Kidston in 1907 at Rockhampton. A
+reconstruction of the Cabinet preceded the meeting of Parliament. When
+the session closed on 22nd December very little legislative work
+had been done, most of the Government time being occupied with
+consideration of the Estimates, the Labour party, which had then
+become the Opposition proper, again offering obstruction to Government
+measures, and again compelling resort to the closure. An important
+measure of a non-party character was passed, however, for a revision
+of the statute law in many important details. The most significant
+measure of the session was the Loan Act of 1908, authorising the
+borrowing of L3,208,000, the vote affording proof of the determination
+of the Government and Parliament to enter upon a vigorous policy of
+railway and public works extension.
+
+The third session of the seventeenth Parliament opened on 29th June,
+1909. The two sides of the House were so evenly balanced, owing to
+several supporters of the Government having crossed to the Opposition
+benches, that the majority of the Government was reduced to one.
+Finding themselves impotent to transact public business, the
+Government advised the Lieutenant-Governor to grant a dissolution,
+provided the House would grant Supply. This was done, and His
+Excellency accordingly dissolved the Assembly on 31st August.
+
+
+THE EIGHTEENTH PARLIAMENT: 2nd November, 1909.
+
+The eighteenth Parliament met on 2nd November. The Address in Reply
+was adopted without division on the 5th, and Parliament at once
+proceeded to the business outlined in the Opening Speech of His
+Excellency the Lieutenant-Governor, a laudable desire to transact
+business without unnecessary discussion being evinced. The most
+important measure was the University of Queensland Act, which was
+passed in time to enable the dedication ceremony to take place on 10th
+December, Queensland's jubilee day. Of vital importance to Brisbane
+and its suburbs was the Metropolitan Water and Sewerage Act. An
+amendment of the Workers' Compensation Act and a Workers' Dwellings
+Act also became law. Resolutions were also passed approving of the
+construction of railways in various parts of the State.
+
+
+
+
+APPENDIX E.
+
+LAND SELECTION IN QUEENSLAND.
+
+[OFFICIAL COMPILATION.]
+
+
+The State is divided into Land Agents' Districts, in the principal
+town of each of which there is a Government Land Office and Land
+Agent. Plans and information respecting the quality, rents, and
+prices of lands available for selection may be obtained on personal
+or written application to the Land Agent of the District in which
+the land is situated, or to the Officer in Charge, Inquiry Office,
+Department of Public Lands, Brisbane.
+
+Land is opened or made available for Selection by proclamation in the
+_Government Gazette_. The proclamation, which is made not less than
+four weeks before the time appointed for the opening, specifies the
+modes in which the land may be selected, the area, rent, price, &c.
+
+The several modes of Selection for which the law provides are--(1)
+Agricultural Selections, _i.e._, Agricultural Farms, Perpetual Leases,
+Agricultural Homesteads, and Free Homesteads; (2) Grazing Selections,
+_i.e._, Grazing Farms and Grazing Homesteads; (3) Scrub Selections;
+(4) Unconditional Selections; and (5) Prickly Pear Selections. The
+more accessible lands are usually set apart for agricultural selection
+in areas up to 1,280 acres, or, if pear infested, as Prickly Pear
+Selections in areas up to 5,000 acres; while opportunities of
+acquiring Grazing Selections in areas up to 60,000 acres are given
+over a great extent of Queensland territory.
+
+Except in the case of Scrub Selections, Unconditional Selections, and
+Prickly Pear Selections, no person who is under the age of sixteen
+years, or who seeks to acquire the land as the agent or servant or
+trustee of another, will be allowed to select. A single girl under
+the age of twenty-one years is debarred from selecting an Agricultural
+Homestead, Free Homestead, or Grazing Homestead. A married woman is
+not competent to select a Homestead unless she has obtained an order
+for judicial separation or an order protecting her separate property,
+or is living apart from her husband and has been specially empowered
+by the Land Court to select a Homestead. A married woman may, however,
+acquire a Grazing Homestead by transfer after the expiry of five years
+of the term of lease. An alien may, under certain conditions, acquire
+a selection, but, unless he becomes a naturalised British subject
+within three years thereafter, all his right, title, and interest in
+the land will become forfeited.
+
+Applications for selections must be made in the prescribed form, in
+triplicate, and be lodged with the Land Agent for the District in
+which the land is situated.
+
+[Illustration: FARM SCENE, BLACKALL RANGE]
+
+[Illustration: SISAL HEMP, CHILDERS, NORTH COAST RAILWAY]
+
+[Illustration: WOOL TEAMS, LONGREACH, CENTRAL QUEENSLAND]
+
+They must be signed by the applicant, but may be lodged in the Land
+Office by his duly constituted attorney, and must be accompanied by
+the prescribed deposit. In the case of a Prickly Pear Selection the
+deposit must be the full amount of the prescribed survey fee, and in
+other cases, except Free Homesteads, a year's rent and one-fifth of
+the survey fee. In the case of a Free Homestead application the
+deposit consists of an application fee of L1 and one-fifth of the
+survey fee. Ordinarily, applications take priority in the order of
+their being lodged with the Land Agent, but applications lodged
+_prior_ to the time proclaimed as that at which land is to be open
+for selection are regarded as simultaneous with those lodged at that
+time.
+
+If land is open for Selection in two or more modes alternatively,
+and there are simultaneous applications to select it under different
+modes, priority among such applications is given to an application for
+the land as an Agricultural Homestead as against an application for it
+as an Agricultural Farm; to an application for it as an Agricultural
+Farm as against an application for it as an Unconditional Selection;
+and, if the land is open for Grazing Selection, to an application
+for it as a Grazing Homestead as against an application for it as a
+Grazing Farm.
+
+In the case of simultaneous applications for the same land, as an
+Agricultural Farm, priority is secured by an applicant, other than
+a married woman or a single girl under twenty-one years of age, who,
+when making application, undertakes to personally reside on the
+land during the first five years of the term. In other cases of
+simultaneous applications for the same land by the same mode of
+selection, priority is determined by lot, unless in the case of
+simultaneous applications for the same land as a Grazing Selection,
+Unconditional Selection, or Prickly Pear Selection, a higher rental
+is tendered than that proclaimed. In that event the tender most
+favourable to the Crown secures priority.
+
+Under the Special Selections Act land may be set apart for any body of
+settlers who, having some measure of common interest or capacity for
+mutual help, are desirous of acquiring land in the same locality. The
+procedure to be followed is for a request to be made to the Minister
+by the members of the body, explaining the grounds on which they are
+co-operating and setting out the land they desire to acquire. Should
+the request be acceded to, the land will be opened for selection in
+the usual way, but for a period to be set out in the proclamation it
+will only be available for the members of the body of settlers for
+whom it has been set apart.
+
+When an application has been accepted by the Land Commissioner
+and approved by the Land Court, and the applicant has paid for any
+improvements there may be on the land, he becomes entitled to receive
+a license to occupy the land in the case of an Agricultural Selection
+or a Grazing Selection, or a lease in the case of a Scrub Selection,
+Unconditional Selection, or Prickly Pear Selection. Within six months
+after the issue of a license, the selector must commence to occupy
+the land, and must thereafter continue to occupy it in the manner
+prescribed.
+
+
+AGRICULTURAL SELECTIONS.
+
+AGRICULTURAL FARMS.
+
+The largest area that may be acquired by any one person as an
+Agricultural Farm is 1,280 acres. If the same person is the selector
+of both an Agricultural Farm and an Agricultural Homestead, the joint
+areas must not exceed 1,280 acres. The purchasing price may range from
+10s. an acre upwards, as may be declared by proclamation. The term is
+twenty years. The annual rent is one-fortieth of the purchasing price,
+and the payments are credited as part of the price.
+
+The land must be continuously occupied by the selector residing
+personally on it or by his manager or agent doing so. Within five
+years from the issue of the license to occupy, or such extended time
+as the Court may allow, the selector must enclose the land with a good
+and substantial fence, or make substantial and permanent improvements
+on it equal in value to such a fence. On the completion of the
+improvements the selector becomes entitled to a lease of the farm, and
+may thereafter mortgage it; or, with the permission of the Minister,
+may subdivide or transfer it; or, with the approval of the Court, may
+underlet it.
+
+The selector of an Agricultural Farm, who has obtained priority by
+undertaking to reside personally thereon during the first five years
+of the lease, must comply strictly with that undertaking, and is
+not allowed during such period to mortgage, transfer, or assign the
+holding.
+
+After five years of the term have elapsed, the prescribed conditions
+of occupation and improvement having been duly performed, a deed of
+grant may be obtained on payment of the balance of the purchasing
+price and deed fees.
+
+
+PERPETUAL LEASE SELECTIONS.
+
+Land proclaimed to be open for Agricultural Farm Selection may also
+be opened for Perpetual Lease Selection, and the latter mode may be
+conceded priority of application over the former. The rent for the
+first period of ten years of the lease is 11/2 per cent. on the
+proclaimed purchasing price of the land for Agricultural Farm
+Selection. The rent for each succeeding period of ten years shall be
+determined by the Land Court. The same conditions of occupation and
+improvement as are prescribed for Agricultural Farms are attached to
+Perpetual Lease Selections, and, except as specially prescribed, the
+provisions relating to Agricultural Farms apply to them also. As the
+name implies, the selections are leases in perpetuity, and are not
+capable of being converted to freeholds.
+
+
+AGRICULTURAL HOMESTEADS.
+
+Land open for selection as Agricultural Farms is not available for
+Agricultural Homesteads unless so proclaimed. The area allowed to be
+selected as an Agricultural Homestead varies with the value of the
+land, and is fixed by proclamation within the following limits,
+viz.:--160 acres in the case of land valued for Agricultural Farm
+Selection at not less than L1 an acre; 320 acres in the case of land
+valued at less than L1 but not less than 15s. an acre; and 640 acres
+in the case of land valued at less than 15s. an acre. The price for
+an Agricultural Homestead is 2s. 6d. an acre, the annual rent 3d. an
+acre, and the term ten years.
+
+The land must be continuously occupied by the selector residing
+personally thereon.
+
+Within five years from the issue of the license to occupy, or such
+extended time as the Land Court may allow, the selector must enclose
+the land with a good and substantial fence, or make substantial and
+permanent improvements on it equal in value to such fence. On the
+completion of the improvements the selector becomes entitled to a
+lease, which, however, is not negotiable in any way.
+
+At any time after five years from the commencement of the term, on the
+selector proving that the conditions have been duly performed and that
+the sum expended in improvements on the land has been at the rate of
+10s., 5s., or 2s. 6d. an acre respectively according to the value of
+the land, he may pay up the remaining rents so as to make his total
+payments equal to 2s. 6d. an acre, and obtain a deed of grant of the
+land in fee-simple. A deed fee must be paid.
+
+
+FREE HOMESTEADS.
+
+Land is not available for Free Homestead Selection unless specially
+so proclaimed, and the area of no selection must exceed 160 acres. The
+term is five years, and during that period the selector must occupy
+the land by personally residing on it, and must effect improvements to
+the total value of 10s. per acre. A Free Homestead cannot be sold or
+mortgaged until a deed of grant is obtained.
+
+
+GRAZING SELECTIONS.
+
+GRAZING FARMS.
+
+The greatest area which may be applied for as a Grazing Farm under any
+circumstances is 60,000 acres, but, as in the case of other modes
+of selection, each proclamation opening land for grazing selection
+declares the maximum area which may be selected in the area to which
+it applies. In the event of lands open under different proclamations
+and of a total area exceeding 20,000 acres being applied for by the
+same person, a rental limitation of L200 per annum must be observed as
+well as the maximum areas declared by the several proclamations. Thus,
+of lands open at 2d. an acre, the greatest area obtainable would be
+24,000 acres; at 11/2d. an acre, 32,000 acres, and so on. The term
+may be fourteen, twenty-one, or twenty-eight years, as the opening
+proclamation may declare. The annual rent for the first period of
+seven years may range from 1/2d. an acre upwards, as may be proclaimed
+or tendered. The rent for each subsequent period of seven years will
+be determined by the Land Court.
+
+A Grazing Farm must be continuously occupied by the selector residing
+personally on it, or by his manager or agent doing so.
+
+Within three years from the issue of the license to occupy, or such
+extended time as the Land Court may allow, the selector must enclose
+the land with a good and substantial fence, and must keep it so fenced
+during the whole of the term. In the case of two or more contiguous
+farms, not exceeding in the aggregate 20,000 acres, the Court may
+by Special License permit the selectors to fence only the outside
+boundaries of the whole area. If the proclamation declaring the land
+open for selection so prescribed, the enclosing fence must be of such
+character as to prevent the passage of rabbits. In the case of a group
+of contiguous Grazing Farms not exceeding eight in number, or 200
+square miles in total area, and which are situated within a District
+constituted under "_The Rabbit Boards Act, 1896_," the Court may by
+Special License permit the enclosure of the whole area with a fence
+of such character as to prevent the passage of rabbits, instead of
+requiring each farm to be separately enclosed.
+
+The selectors of a group of two or more Grazing Farms, the area of
+none of which exceeds 4,000 acres, may associate together for mutual
+assistance, and on making proof of _bona fides_ to the Commissioner
+may receive from him a Special License enabling not less than one-half
+of the whole number by their personal residence on some one or more of
+the farms to perform the condition of occupation in respect of all the
+farms.
+
+When a Grazing Farm is enclosed in the manner required, the selector
+becomes entitled to a lease of it, and may thereafter mortgage it; or,
+with the permission of the Minister, may subdivide or transfer it; or,
+with the approval of the Court, may underlet it.
+
+
+GRAZING HOMESTEADS.
+
+Land open for selection as Grazing Farms must also be open for
+selection as Grazing Homesteads, and at the same rental and for the
+same term of lease. As already stated, an application to select as a
+Grazing Homestead takes precedence of a simultaneous application to
+select the same land as a Grazing Farm. The requirements of the law
+as regards Grazing Homesteads are the same as in the case of Grazing
+Farms, except in the following respects:--
+
+ (1.) During the first five years of the term of a Grazing
+ Homestead the condition of occupation must be performed by the
+ continuous personal residence of the selector on the land.
+
+ (2.) Before the expiration of five years from the commencement
+ of the term, or the death of the original lessee, whichever
+ first happens, a Grazing Homestead is not capable of being
+ assigned or transferred. Unless with the special permission of
+ the Minister, a Grazing Homestead may not be mortgaged.
+
+
+SCRUB SELECTIONS.
+
+Lands entirely or extensively overgrown by scrub may be opened for
+selection as Scrub Selections up to 10,000 acres in area and with a
+term of thirty years. These are classed according to the proportion
+covered by scrub, and for periods varying from five to twenty years,
+according to the classification, no rent is chargeable. During the
+first period the selector must clear the whole of the scrub in equal
+proportions each year, and must keep it cleared, and must enclose the
+selection with a good and substantial fence. The annual rent payable
+for the subsequent periods ranges from 1/2d. to 1d. an acre. A
+negotiable lease is issued to the selector when his application has
+been approved by the Court.
+
+
+UNCONDITIONAL SELECTIONS.
+
+The greatest area allowed to be acquired by any one person as an
+Unconditional Selection in one district is 1,280 acres; the price per
+acre ranges from 13s. 4d. upwards, and is payable in twenty annual
+instalments. As the term implies, no other condition than the payment
+of the purchase money is attached to this mode of selection. A
+negotiable lease for the term of twenty years is issued to the
+selector when his application to select has been approved by the
+Court. A deed of grant may be obtained at any time on payment of the
+balance of the purchasing price and the deed fee.
+
+
+PRICKLY PEAR SELECTIONS.
+
+PRICKLY PEAR INFESTED SELECTIONS.
+
+Prickly Pear Infested Selections comprise lands heavily infested with
+prickly pear. The area must not exceed 5,000 acres.
+
+The term is fifteen years, with a peppercorn rental for the first ten
+years and an annual rent of one-fifth of the purchasing price for the
+remaining five years. During the first ten years of the term the land
+must be absolutely cleared of prickly pear--one-tenth of the pear
+being eradicated during each year--and must be kept clear for the
+remainder of the term. The freehold may be obtained prior to the
+expiry of the term on proof being made that the land has been
+maintained free from prickly pear for three years consequent on the
+eradication having been completed in advance of the prescribed period.
+
+
+PRICKLY PEAR FRONTAGE SELECTIONS.
+
+Prickly Pear Frontage Selections are confined to proclaimed prickly
+pear frontage areas, comprising lands free from or only lightly
+infested with prickly pear, but which adjoin and do not extend for
+more than seven miles from lands heavily infested. The greatest area
+allowed is 5,000 acres.
+
+The term is fifteen years, with a peppercorn rental for the first five
+years and an annual rent of one-tenth of the purchasing price during
+the remaining ten years. During the first five years of the term the
+land must be absolutely cleared of prickly pear, one-fifth of the pear
+being eradicated during each year, and must be kept clear during the
+balance of the term. The freehold may be obtained prior to the expiry
+of the term on proof being made that the land has been maintained free
+from prickly pear for three years consequent on the eradication having
+been completed in advance of the prescribed period.
+
+PRICKLY PEAR (BONUS) SELECTIONS.
+
+In the case of Prickly Pear (Bonus) Selections, the freehold of the
+land, and a bonus in addition, are granted in return for the complete
+eradication of the pear. The maximum amount per acre payable as bonus
+is stated in the opening proclamation, but each applicant must lodge a
+tender specifying a bonus per acre not in excess of that mentioned
+in the proclamation. In the case of simultaneous applications for the
+same land, priority attaches to the lowest tender. The size of the
+portions opened must not exceed 2,560 acres. The term of lease is ten
+years, at a peppercorn rental throughout. The land must be absolutely
+cleared of prickly pear during the first seven years--one-seventh
+each year--and the clearing must be maintained until the expiry of the
+lease. One-seventh of the bonus payable may be claimed at the end
+of each of the first seven years of the term, on proof to the
+satisfaction of the Commissioner that the condition of eradication has
+been complied with. If the eradication is completed at an earlier date
+than is required by the conditions of the lease, the balance of the
+bonus will then become payable. The freehold may be obtained prior
+to the expiry of the term on proof being made that the land has been
+maintained free from prickly pear for three years consequent on the
+eradication having been completed in advance of the prescribed period.
+
+
+OTHER MODES OF ACQUISITION.
+
+Crown lands may be acquired in fee-simple by auction purchase in areas
+up to 5,120 acres. There is no limitation to the area of freehold land
+which may be held by any one person. The minimum purchasing price for
+agricultural land bought at auction is L1 an acre, and for other land
+10s. an acre. Terms up to ten years may be allowed, with interest at 5
+per cent. per annum on instalments paid after six months from the time
+of sale, or the purchaser may elect to hold the land as a lease in
+perpetuity at a rental, for the first ten years, equal to 3 per cent.
+of the purchasing price, and for such rent for each succeeding period
+of ten years as the Land Court may determine.
+
+Opportunity is also afforded for the occupation of Crown lands for
+pastoral purposes from year to year under an occupation license, or
+for a fixed term not exceeding forty-two years under pastoral lease.
+There is no limitation to the area which may be held by one person
+under either of these tenures.
+
+
+TERMS AND CONDITIONS OF SELECTION ON REPURCHASED ESTATES.
+
+"THE CLOSER SETTLEMENT ACT OF 1906."
+
+AGRICULTURAL FARMS.
+
+1. An application to select must be made in the prescribed form, in
+triplicate, and be lodged with the Land Agent for the district in
+which the land is situated. It must be signed by the applicant, but
+may be lodged in the District Land Office by his duly constituted
+attorney, and must be accompanied by a deposit of one-tenth of the
+purchasing price of the land and one-fifth of the prescribed survey
+fee.
+
+2. In the case of simultaneous applications for the same land,
+priority is secured by an applicant, other than a married woman or
+a single girl under twenty-one years of age, who, when making
+application, undertakes to reside personally on the land during the
+first five years of the term of lease. In other cases of simultaneous
+applications for the same land priority is determined by lot.
+
+3. Land cannot be acquired in the interest of another person, and an
+applicant is required to declare that he requires the land for his own
+exclusive benefit, and not as the agent, servant, or trustee of any
+other person. An alien may, on passing a reading and writing test,
+acquire a selection; but unless he becomes a naturalised subject of
+the King within three years thereafter, all his right, title, and
+interest in the land will become forfeited.
+
+4. The term of the lease of a selection is twenty-five years,
+dating from the 1st January or 1st July nearest to the date of the
+Commissioner's license to occupy the land.
+
+5. No rent will be payable during the second, third, or fourth years
+of the term. The rent payable during the remainder of the term will
+be at the rate of L8 2s. 7d. for every L100 of the purchasing price of
+the land, and will be allocated to principal and interest according to
+the table appended hereto.
+
+6. Within two years of the issue of a license to occupy, the selector
+must enclose the land with a good and substantial fence, or make
+substantial and permanent improvements on it of a value equal to the
+cost of such a fence, and must within such period make application
+to the Commissioner for a certificate that he has performed this
+condition.
+
+7. When the prescribed improvements are made, a lease will be issued
+to the selector, and the selection may then be mortgaged, or, with the
+permission of the Minister, may be subdivided or transferred, or, with
+the approval of the Land Court, may be sublet, except in the case of
+a selection on which the selector has undertaken to reside personally
+during the first five years of the term, in which case neither the
+lease nor the selector's right, title, or interest thereunder can be
+mortgaged, except to the trustees of the Agricultural Bank, assigned,
+or transferred during such period.
+
+8. A selection must be occupied by the residence thereon of the
+selector in person, or by his duly appointed agent, as the case may
+require or permit, during the whole term or until the leasehold tenure
+is determined by freehold.
+
+9. At any time after five years' occupation the leasehold tenure may
+be converted into freehold by payment of the unpaid balance of the
+purchasing price. The amount payable in any year, after payment of the
+rent for that year, shall be at the rate specified in the last column
+of the appended table for every L100 of the purchasing price.
+
+TABLE OF THE ANNUAL PAYMENTS TO BE MADE AS INSTALMENTS OF PURCHASE
+MONEY (SHOWING PRINCIPAL AND INTEREST SEPARATELY), AND THE PAYMENT,
+EXCLUSIVE OF RENT, TO BE MADE IN ANY YEAR AFTER THE FIFTH TO ACQUIRE
+THE FREEHOLD OF ANY SELECTION UNDER "THE CLOSER SETTLEMENT ACT OF
+1906."
+
+ ----------+-----------------+----------------+-----------------+---------------
+ | ANNUAL PAYMENT. | Payment to be
+ | | made in any
+ +-----------------+----------------+-----------------+ Year after the
+ | | | | Fifth to
+ | Principle. | Interest. | Total. | acquire
+ | | | | Freehold.
+ ----------+-----------------+----------------+-----------------+--------------
+ | L _s._ _d._ | L _s._ _d._ | L _s._ _d._ | L _s._ _d._
+ | | | |
+ 1st year | 10 0 0 | ... | 10 0 0 | ...
+ 2nd " | ... | ... | ... | ...
+ 3rd " | ... | ... | ... | ...
+ 4th " | ... | ... | ... | ...
+ 5th " | ... | 8 2 7 | 8 2 7 | ...
+ 6th " | ... | 8 2 7 | 8 2 7 | 98 4 2
+ 7th " | ... | 8 2 7 | 8 2 7 | 94 19 10
+ 8th " | ... | 8 2 7 | 8 2 7 | 91 12 3
+ 9th " | 1 18 7 | 6 4 0 | 8 2 7 | 88 1 6
+ 10th " | 3 14 6 | 4 8 2 | 8 2 7 | 84 7 0
+ 11th " | 3 18 2 | 4 4 5 | 8 2 7 | 80 8 10
+ 12th " | 4 2 1 | 4 0 6 | 8 2 7 | 76 6 9
+ 13th " | 4 6 3 | 3 16 4 | 8 2 7 | 72 0 6
+ 14th " | 4 10 6 | 3 12 1 | 8 2 7 | 67 10 0
+ 15th " | 4 15 1 | 3 7 6 | 8 2 7 | 62 14 11
+ 16th " | 4 19 10 | 3 2 9 | 8 2 7 | 57 15 1
+ 17th " | 5 4 10 | 2 17 9 | 8 2 7 | 52 10 3
+ 18th " | 5 10 0 | 2 12 7 | 8 2 7 | 47 0 3
+ 19th " | 5 15 6 | 2 7 1 | 8 2 7 | 41 4 9
+ 20th " | 6 1 4 | 2 1 3 | 8 2 7 | 35 3 5
+ 21st " | 6 7 4 | 1 15 3 | 8 2 7 | 28 16 1
+ 22nd " | 6 13 7 | 1 9 0 | 8 2 7 | 22 2 6
+ 23rd " | 7 0 4 | 1 2 3 | 8 2 7 | 15 2 2
+ 24th " | 7 7 4 | 0 15 3 | 8 2 7 | 7 14 10
+ 25th " | 7 14 10 | 0 7 9 | 8 2 7 |
+ +-----------------+----------------+-----------------+-------------
+ | L100 0 0 | L80 14 3 | L180 14 3 |
+ ----------+-----------------+----------------+-----------------+-------------
+
+
+[Illustration: VIEW ON BARRON RIVER, CAIRNS RAILWAY]
+
+
+AN ACT TO FACILITATE THE ACQUIREMENT OF SELECTIONS BY CERTAIN BODIES
+OF SETTLERS.
+
+"THE SPECIAL SELECTIONS ACT OF 1901."
+
+PREAMBLE.
+
+Whereas it is desirable to promote closer settlement upon the
+agricultural lands of Queensland by affording to bodies of settlers
+special facilities for the acquirement of Agricultural Selections
+to be held in conjunction with portions in adjacent Agricultural
+Townships: Be it therefore enacted by the King's Most Excellent
+Majesty, by and with the advice and consent of the Legislative Council
+and Legislative Assembly of Queensland in Parliament assembled, and by
+the authority of the same, as follows:--
+
+SHORT TITLE AND CONSTRUCTION OF ACT.
+
+1. This Act may be cited as "_The Special Selections Act of 1901_,"
+and shall be read and construed with and as an amendment of "_The Land
+Act, 1897_," hereinafter called the Principal Act.
+
+
+PROCLAMATION OF LANDS TO WHICH THIS ACT APPLIES.
+
+2. (1.) The Governor in Council may from time to time, by
+proclamation, declare any unoccupied country lands to be open for
+selection as Agricultural Homesteads, or as Agricultural Farms, or
+as Prickly Pear Selections, or as Perpetual Lease Selections, or as
+Grazing Selections, or as Agricultural Farms to be held in conjunction
+with Grazing Farms under the provisions of this Act by members of the
+body of settlers in the proclamation specified.
+
+Notwithstanding the provisions of section eighty-three of the
+Principal Act, such proclamation declaring the lands mentioned therein
+open for selection as Agricultural Homesteads need not also declare
+such lands to be also open for selection as Agricultural Farms.
+
+No Agricultural Homestead to be selected under the provisions of this
+Act shall exceed three hundred and twenty acres.
+
+No Prickly Pear Selection to be selected under the provisions of this
+Act shall exceed two thousand five hundred and sixty acres.
+
+No Grazing Farm to be held in conjunction with an Agricultural Farm
+selected under the provisions of this Act shall exceed two thousand
+acres, and the total aggregate area of the Agricultural Farm and the
+Grazing Farm held in conjunction therewith shall not exceed three
+thousand two hundred and eighty acres.
+
+No other Grazing Selection to be selected under the provisions of this
+Act shall exceed three thousand acres.
+
+Such lands shall remain open for selection under the provisions of
+this Act for such time as may be declared by Proclamation.
+
+During such time such lands shall be open to be selected only by
+persons who shall, at the time and in the manner prescribed, furnish
+to the Commissioner for the District in which the lands are situated
+proof that they are members of the body of settlers for whom such
+lands have been set apart.
+
+
+MAXIMUM AREA.
+
+(2.) No person shall at the same time apply for or hold two or more
+Homesteads under the provisions of this Act the aggregate area of
+which is greater than three hundred and twenty acres, or two or more
+Prickly Pear Selections under the provisions of this Act the aggregate
+area of which is greater than two thousand five hundred acres, or
+two or more Grazing Selections under the provisions of this Act the
+aggregate area of which is greater than three thousand acres.
+
+
+AGRICULTURAL TOWNSHIPS.
+
+(3.) The Governor in Council may by proclamation set apart any Crown
+lands in the said District as Agricultural Townships, and may cause
+the whole or any part of such lands to be subdivided into portions
+for purposes of residence. Such lands shall be in the vicinity of the
+lands open for selection under the foregoing provisions.
+
+The area of any portion shall not exceed ten acres.
+
+Any selector of a selection under the provisions of this Act shall
+also be entitled to one of the portions in an Agricultural Township,
+which portion shall, for the purposes of this Act, be deemed to be
+a part of the Selection, so that the condition of occupation may be
+performed by the residence of the selector either upon the Selection
+or upon the portion in the Township.
+
+The area of the portion in the Township shall not, however, be taken
+into consideration in estimating the maximum area which a selector may
+apply for or hold.
+
+
+IMPROVEMENTS.
+
+(4.) In order that the selector may become the purchaser of an
+Agricultural Selection under this Act, the certificate of the
+Commissioner given under section one hundred and thirty-four or one
+hundred and thirty-eight, as the case may be, of the Principal Act
+must show that a sum at the rate of ten shillings per acre has been
+expended in substantial and permanent improvements on the land.
+
+The value of any improvements made upon the portion in the Township
+shall be reckoned as part of the improvements required to be made upon
+the Selection.
+
+The provisions of this subsection do not apply to Prickly Pear
+Selections or to Perpetual Lease Selections or Grazing Selections.
+
+
+CONDITION OF OCCUPATION.
+
+(5.) During the first five years of the term of the lease of an
+Agricultural Farm (including an Agricultural Farm held in conjunction
+with a Grazing Farm) selected under this Act, the condition of
+occupation shall be performed by the continuous and _bona fide_
+personal residence of the lessee on the Selection; and subsection
+5A of section one hundred and thirty-two of the Principal Act shall
+accordingly be applicable.[a]
+
+(6.) During the first five years of the term of the lease of a Prickly
+Pear Selection selected under this Act, the lessee shall occupy
+the land; such condition of occupation shall be performed by the
+continuous and _bona fide_ personal residence of the lessee on the
+Selection; and during such period subsection 5A of section one
+hundred and thirty-two of the Principal Act, except the last paragraph
+thereof, shall be applicable to every such Prickly Pear Selection.
+
+(7.) Notwithstanding anything in the Principal Act, or any Act
+amending the same, when the proclamation opening the land for
+selection so declares, lots which are not contiguous may be applied
+for and held as one selection under this Act.
+
+
+REGULATIONS.
+
+3. The Governor in Council may make Regulations prescribing the manner
+in which applicants for selections under the provisions of this Act
+shall give proof of their qualification to become selectors, and
+prescribing such other matters and things as may be necessary to give
+effect to the provisions of this Act.
+
+ [Footnote a: Inter alia the subsection referred to provides
+ that the lessee shall not, during the first five years of the
+ term of the lease, mortgage, assign, or transfer the lease.]
+
+
+
+
+APPENDIX F.
+
+IMMIGRATION TO QUEENSLAND.
+
+[OFFICIAL COMPILATION.]
+
+ASSISTED IMMIGRANTS.
+
+1. Immigrants approved by the Agent-General, who deposit with him
+the sum of L50, shall be provided with passages by a steamer from the
+United Kingdom to any port in Queensland for L5, the L50 deposit to be
+returned to them on their arrival in Queensland.
+
+
+NOMINATED IMMIGRANTS.
+
+2. Persons resident in Queensland wishing to obtain passages for their
+friends or relatives in the United Kingdom, or on the Continent of
+Europe, may do so under the provisions of the 9th section of "_The
+Immigration Act of 1882_," at the following rates:--
+
+ L _s._ _d._
+ Males between 18 and 40 years 4 0 0
+ Females between 18 and 40 years 2 0 0
+ Males and Females over 40 and under 55 years 8 0 0
+
+A full description of the nominee must appear on the application form
+supplied by the Immigration Department of Queensland. The application
+must be signed by the nominor, who must be of full age.
+
+The Immigration Agent or Clerk of Petty Sessions must satisfy himself
+by personal inquiry that the person for whose passage application is
+made is a relative or personal friend of the applicant.
+
+Passage warrants shall be made out in duplicate. One copy, to be
+marked "provisional," will be issued to the applicant and the other
+copy, to be marked "final," will be sent to the Agent-General,
+who will cause inquiries to be made through his agents as to the
+eligibility of the persons named therein to be nominated under the
+provisions of this Order.
+
+If the Agent-General is satisfied that all the conditions of
+this Order have been complied with he will, upon surrender of the
+provisional warrant, issue the final warrant to the person nominated,
+which will entitle him to a passage contract ticket.
+
+A memorandum shall be printed on the provisional warrant stating that
+it must be surrendered and exchanged for a final warrant at the office
+of the Agent-General before a passage can be obtained.
+
+The Agent-General will refuse to issue a final warrant to any person
+named in a provisional warrant if he finds that such person is not
+eligible to be nominated under the provisions of this Order, or
+that the description in the application is incorrect in any material
+particular, or that the nominee is otherwise undesirable.
+
+
+CONTRACT IMMIGRANTS.
+
+3. Free passages may be granted from the United Kingdom to any part of
+Queensland to agricultural labourers introduced under contract if the
+employer pays a fee of L5 for each labourer introduced, provides him
+with suitable accommodation, and guarantees him a year's employment at
+wages approved by the Chief Secretary. The choosing of such labourers
+to be left to the Agent-General, unless they are known to the
+applicant, in which case the Agent-General's duty is restricted to
+passing or rejecting them.
+
+
+FREE IMMIGRANTS.
+
+4. The Agent-General may grant free passages to the wives and children
+(under the age of 18 years) of assisted, nominated, and contract
+immigrants and to female domestic servants who are desirous of
+emigrating to Queensland.
+
+5. The Chief Secretary may direct that a passage warrant be not issued
+in respect of any person nominated or proposed to be indented.
+
+6. The Order in Council of the fourth day of June, 1891, published in
+the _Government Gazette_ of the 5th June, 1891, shall be and is hereby
+rescinded.
+
+And the Honourable the Chief Secretary is to give the necessary
+directions herein accordingly.
+
+
+
+
+APPENDIX G.
+
+SOME STATISTICS AND THEIR STORY.
+
+
+The figures contained in this Appendix, save those for 1908, and in
+relation to certain financial matters for 1908-9, are drawn from the
+Statistics for 1908 laid before Parliament this year, but all are
+official.
+
+GROWTH OF POPULATION.
+
+The population of Queensland, estimated at 28,056 on 31st December,
+1860, a little more than a year after separation from New South Wales,
+more than doubled during the succeeding three years. Thence it again
+more than doubled in the next eight years, the census of April, 1871,
+providing a basis for the estimate of 125,146 at the end of that year.
+Thence to 1882, two years before the close of the quarter-century,
+the figures had again nearly doubled, the population on 31st December,
+1884, reaching 309,913.
+
+Of the number of arrivals in excess of departures there is no record
+for 1860 or 1861, but of the total increase, 51,509, for the four
+years ended 1865 the recorded arrivals in excess of departures
+aggregated 46,422, leaving only 5,087 for excess of births over deaths
+for the period. In 1866, in spite of the crisis resulting from the
+Agra and Masterman's Bank failure, there was still an excess of 6,632;
+but by the next following year the number of such excess had fallen to
+917, while the net increase of population in that year was only 3,648.
+
+The census of 1886, the second year of the new quarter-century, showed
+a total population of 342,614, and the next census five years later
+410,330. This marked the end of the "boom" period, and the amount
+spent on immigration, as compared with 1883 and 1884, was cut down in
+the next year by nearly three-fourths, or from the maximum of L361,632
+in 1883-4 to L91,143 in 1889-90. In 1891 there was severe commercial
+depression, and by that time arrivals had annually decreased, and
+departures came very near in numbers to the arrivals. During the next
+ten years the increase in population, as shown by the census, was
+95,614, bringing the total up to 505,944.
+
+Here it may be explained that the intercensus estimates between 1891
+and 1901 proved fallacious, for the total number in the latter year
+was 6,660 less than the estimate had been for two years previously,
+although the arrivals for the intervening period recorded an excess
+over departures of 6,389. So that adding to that number the 17,350
+increase by excess of births over deaths the population in 1901 would
+have been shown as 536,343 had the estimates between the censuses been
+continued on similar lines. The error would therefore have been 30,399
+had not the census figures in 1901 enabled an adjustment to be made.
+Similar over-estimating had occurred previously, it is understood,
+through many oversea departures not being recorded by those who
+supplied information to the department. Of late years allowances have
+been made for unrecorded arrivals and departures in preparing
+the intercensus returns, and it may be hoped that in future the
+discrepancies will be less disconcerting than in the past.
+
+The population at the end of the first quarter-century having been
+309,913, and on 31st December last year (1908) 558,237, the increase
+for the period was 248,324. But the second quarter-century does not
+actually close until 31st December next, when the total population
+should be approximately 570,000 souls. During the half-century,
+therefore, the number of people in Queensland as compared with the
+population in 1859 may be taken to have multiplied by twenty-two.
+In other words, at the time of separation, a year earlier than the
+official record begins, the total population was scarcely greater than
+it now is in several of our provincial cities.
+
+
+PUBLIC FINANCE.
+
+Public revenue, which began in 1860 with a total of L178,589, reached
+L2,720,656 in 1884-5, the figures of the natal year being multiplied
+nearly fifteen times at the close of the quarter-century. The second
+quarter-century showed continued increase until 1888-9, but the
+figures of that year were not again reached until 1895-6. They
+progressed until in 1899-1900, the last year before federation, they
+reached over 41/2 millions sterling, an amount not again realised till
+1908-9. In 1901 the State figures were considerably disturbed by the
+proclamation of the Commonwealth on 1st January. In 1901-2 there was
+a large apparent decline of L1,053,145, the Commonwealth having
+taken over the whole of the postal and telegraph revenue and about
+one-fourth of the Customs. There was also a considerable loss by the
+discontinuance of State border duties, as well as by the Commonwealth
+tariff, which took effect in the second quarter of 1901-2, many
+revenue duties being either sacrificed or lowered in favour of
+protectionist imposts which only yielded revenue until they excluded
+imports. By 1908-9, despite the loss of post-telegraph and Customs
+revenue, the total receipts at the State Treasury formed the
+half-century record of L4,766,244.
+
+The expenditure on loan account began with the foundation of the
+colony. At the end of the first quarter-century the public debt
+amounted to L16,570,850, exclusive of Government Savings Bank and
+Treasury bills obligations. In the first decade of the second quarter
+it had almost doubled, standing at the end of 1894 at L30,639,534.
+By the end of 1900 there had been a further increase of nearly 5
+millions, and on 30th June, 1909, it stood at L41,568,827, or at the
+rate of L74 per head of the estimated population. But the railway net
+earnings alone of the last two financial years (1907-8 and 1908-9)
+have provided a mean sum of L884,616 per annum towards the interest
+charge.
+
+
+LAND STATISTICS.
+
+In 1860 there were 108,870 acres of land alienated in Queensland.
+In 1872 the area exceeded 1 million acres, the first quarter-century
+closing in 1884 with over 7 million acres. The 10-million-acre limit
+was passed in 1890, and the 15-million-acre limit in 1908, when the
+total area alienated was 15,108,439 acres.
+
+The cash received at the Treasury from land sales up to the close
+of 1884 was over 43/4 millions, and at the close of 1908 exceeded 81/2
+millions sterling. In process of alienation there were then over
+6 million acres. For the last ten years the total area leased or
+otherwise in occupation has been recorded. In 1899 the area thus
+occupied was 2961/2 million acres, and in 1906 only 247 million
+acres. Since then there has been some recovery in this respect, the
+total occupied area of Crown lands being now 273,180,864 acres. The
+unoccupied area in 1899 was over 1311/4 million acres, and in 1902
+only 1211/2 million acres. Since then there has been both an increase
+and a decrease, the area unoccupied in 1908 being almost 135 million
+acres, equal to nearly one-third of the total area of the State. This
+unoccupied land consists largely of rangy and waterless country, but
+a not inconsiderable area would be occupiable were water and transport
+facilities provided, and much of it is in what the geologists have
+delimited as the artesian area.
+
+
+LIVE STOCK.
+
+In 1860 the number of live stock in Queensland totalled--Horses,
+23,504; cattle, 432,890; sheep, 3,449,350; pigs, 7,147. There was an
+almost continual yearly increase in horses until 1902, when drought
+reduced the number by 62,997, or at the rate of about 14 per cent. Not
+until 1907 was this loss recovered, when the total number of horses
+stood at 488,486, the number being still further increased in 1908 to
+519,969. There was an almost uninterrupted increase of cattle until
+1882, when the total exceeded 41/4 millions. At the close of the
+quarter-century the number was 4,266,172. In 1885 and 1886, owing to
+a drought, there was again a small decline in cattle numbers, but from
+that time there was a continued increase until 1894, when the total of
+7 millions was recorded. But droughts and the tick pest had cut them
+down to less than 21/2 millions in 1903. In 1908 the number had
+recovered to 4,321,600. The enlarged Australian consumption has been
+a factor in the shrinkage of numbers, but the large increase in prices
+fully compensated the owners for the diminished numbers of their
+herds. The increased price of wool during recent years renders the
+same remark applicable to the sheep-owners of the State; and it may
+be said generally that the pastoral industry was never in a more
+flourishing condition.
+
+Sheep, which totalled fewer than 31/2 millions in 1860, reached 71/4
+millions in 1866, and 9 millions two years later. Thence till 1878
+there was a series of fluctuations which brought the total in that
+year below 6 millions. But in 1882 the number had vaulted to over 12
+millions, after which there was a descent to a little more than 91/4
+millions at the close of the quarter-century. The year 1885 closed
+with a further decrease, but by 1887 the number had increased to
+nearly 13 millions. Three years later it reached 18 millions, and in
+1892 it touched the record of nearly 213/4 millions. By 1900, which
+had been preceded by bad seasons, the number of sheep had dropped to
+10-1/3 millions, and in the second year of the twentieth century the
+low-water mark of less than 71/4 millions was touched. Since then
+there has been a rapid increase, and the numbers in 1908 had recovered
+to 18,348,851, or within 3,359,459 of the record number of seventeen
+years ago. It must be mentioned that, while scanty rainfall on the
+Western pastures was accountable for much of the depletion in stock
+numbers, overstocking and absence of possible provision for bad
+seasons had much to do with the losses incurred. However, the second
+quarter-century will close with flocks in number almost equal to those
+of 1892, and with fleeces immensely more valuable than the pastures
+then carried, and the stock-carrying capacity of the country has
+also been much increased by fencing, water conservation, and artesian
+wells.
+
+Pigs are also becoming a valuable asset of the Queensland
+dairy farmer. In 1860 they numbered 7,147; at the close of the
+quarter-century, 51,796; and in December, 1908, 124,749.
+
+[Illustration: HAULING TIMBER, BARRON RIVER, NORTH QUEENSLAND]
+
+
+DAIRYING.
+
+The phenomenal growth of the dairying industry is shown by the table
+headed "Dairying." It shows that, whereas in 1860 10,400 lb. butter
+were imported and 450 lb. exported, in 1908 there were 23,838,357 lb.
+made, 13,752,118 lb. exported, and only 201,924 lb. imported. Even in
+1896 Queensland could hardly be accounted a butter-exporting country,
+when the shipments were only 13,942 lb., the imports 1,003,680 lb.,
+and the quantity made 6,164,240 lb., for in that year the excess
+of imports was 989,738 lb.; while in 1908 the excess of exports was
+13,550,194 lb., or more than a moiety of the amount manufactured. Of
+cheese, in 1896 the quantity made was 1,921,404 lb., whereas in 1908
+it had increased to 3,199,510 lb., and the amount exported was 732,090
+lb., the excess of exports over imports being 685,629 lb. Twenty-five
+years ago the excess of imports over exports was 1,068,033 lb., which
+meant that there were practically no exports. Even in 1896 the cheese
+exported totalled only 8,505 lb. It is evident that the dairying
+industry in Queensland is yet only in its youth, and that in another
+quarter of a century the exports of both cheese and butter will have
+increased enormously.
+
+
+SUGAR PRODUCTION.
+
+Sugar first appears as a Queensland export in 1870, the quantity
+being, however, only 26 cwt. By 1879 the quantity had reached 206,269
+cwt., the quarter-century closing in 1884 with 368,626 cwt., valued
+at L454,759. But these figures do not represent the quantity of sugar
+manufactured, the total in 1884 being given at 33,361 tons, the export
+being 18,431 tons. In 1885 the export, as compared with the previous
+year, increased by 581/2 per cent. in value. In 1888 the value
+declined to L384,375, or by more than one-half as compared with
+1886. Thence for many years there was a fluctuating export, a drop to
+L681,038 in 1897 being followed by a jump to L1,329,876 in 1898. Two
+years later there was a heavy fall to L669,389 worth; then two years'
+progression followed by a fall to L646,875 in 1903. In 1904, owing
+to the Commonwealth bounty and good seasons, there was a recovery to
+L1,257,815, followed by substantial progression each following year,
+till 1907, when the record export of L1,779,624 was made. In 1908,
+owing to abnormal frosts, there was a decline to L1,482,320.
+
+The quantity of sugar made of course showed corresponding
+fluctuations. In 1896 the 100,000-ton limit of manufacture was for the
+first time passed. It was followed by a slight drop in the following
+year, but in 1898 the record to that date in manufacture, as well as
+in export, was made, the product of the mills reaching the high figure
+of 163,734 tons. After that year there was a fluctuating decline in
+manufacture to the minimum of 76,626 tons in 1902, the great drought
+year; but there was an improvement in 1903, and in 1905 152,722 tons
+were manufactured, the two following years being very close together
+with a mean production of 186,342 tons. In 1908 the sugar manufactured
+was 151,098 tons, a decrease, through frost, of 37,209 tons for the
+year. In glancing through the figures not only will the effects of
+good and bad seasons be recognised, but also of the suspension of
+kanaka labour importation in 1888, its revival in 1890, and the
+payment of the Commonwealth bounty during the last five years.
+
+
+MINERAL PRODUCTION.
+
+When in 1866 railway construction suddenly ceased, both on the
+Southern and Central (then called the Northern) lines, there was
+general distress, mitigated shortly afterwards by the discovery of
+gold at the Crocodile Field, near Rockhampton; and in 1867 by the
+opening up of the Gympie Goldfield. The first important discovery of
+gold, however, had been on the Peak Downs in 1862, after which the
+production of that metal advanced from 2,783 oz. in 1863 to 15,660 oz.
+in 1864, slightly in excess of which level it remained for the next
+two years. The gold raised then jumped to 35,581 oz. in 1867, and to
+111,589 oz. in 1868. During the next two years the production dropped
+by about 19,000 oz., but it recovered to 115,986 oz. in 1871. In 1874
+it made another big jump to 254,959 oz., owing to the discoveries at
+the Palmer, Charters Towers, and elsewhere in the North. This volume
+of production was rather more than maintained during the next two
+years, after which there was a fluctuating annual diminution until
+1887, when there was a recovery to 348,890 oz. For seven years of
+the first quarter-century the value of gold won exceeded a million
+sterling per annum, high-water mark being touched in 1875--a year of
+heavy rainfall and abundant water--with a gold yield of L1,196,583.
+
+In gold production the second quarter-century opened well with a total
+of 250,137 oz., and this yield for 1885 was followed by continuous
+progression until 1889, when the total of 634,605 oz., valued
+at L2,695,629, was reached. Thence for seven years there was a
+fluctuating decline, the minimum of 477,976 oz. being touched in 1891.
+From that year there was a gradual recovery until in 1898 647,487 oz.
+was reached, the record being made with 676,027 oz. in the last year
+of the century. Since then there has been a continuous annual decline
+until the total gold raised in 1908 had fallen to 465,085 oz., which
+is rather less than half the quantity declared to be exported in 1898
+and 1903. But the export and production figures of course differ, the
+former being the actual weight exported in the year, which may be
+less or more than the production. Moreover, the production figures
+are stated in fine ounces, so that the difference between gold won and
+exported is considerably less than the figures would at first sight
+indicate.
+
+Of copper the recorded quantity produced in 1860 was only one ton,
+valued at L50; but two years later the value reached L10,332 through
+the discovery of the Peak Downs mines. The two following years showed
+an almost entire cessation of export, although some L90,000 worth had
+been won. In 1865 the value of copper produced was L58,440. Thence
+there was fluctuating progression until 1871, when the value rose to
+L174,300, with a further rise to L196,000 in 1872. Declension
+followed until in 1882 the production had dropped to L14,982, the
+quarter-century closing in 1884 with a total of L30,872 worth. The
+explanation is that during the period there was practically only one
+copper mine at work in Queensland, and that in 1871 the policy was
+commenced of smelting all the richer ores and paying the highest
+possible dividends. In one year an amount of about L300,000, equal
+to the total capital of the company, was distributed, and shortly
+afterwards the mine was closed for want of remunerative ore. Had money
+been freely spent in exploration, as at the Mount Morgan Gold Mine,
+and only moderate dividends paid to the shareholders, it is
+believed that the life of the Peak Downs Copper Mine would have been
+indefinitely prolonged.
+
+During sixteen years of the second quarter-century copper mining
+languished, the highest production in any one year being valued at
+L20,340, while in 1891 the lowest descended to L865. In 1901, however,
+through the opening of the Chillagoe mine, the production rose to
+L194,227 worth; by 1906 it had continuously ascended to L916,546,
+and in 1907 to L1,028,179. In 1908 there was a phenomenal decline in
+production value, owing to the low price obtainable for copper, the
+total being stated at L882,901.
+
+The first production of tin is recorded in 1872, when the yield was
+valued at L109,816, through the discovery of stream tin in the Severn
+River district of Queensland. The record year for tin production of
+the half-century was in 1873, when the value raised was L606,184.
+Thence there was a fluctuating decline in output till 1884, which
+closed with L130,460 worth for the year.
+
+In the second quarter-century there was a fluctuating diminution of
+production, till in 1898 it was only worth L36,502. After that date
+there was a continuous improvement, the figures reached in 1907 being
+L496,766. The tin won in 1908 was declared to be of the value of only
+L342,191, the reduction arising chiefly from lowered market prices.
+
+The coal raised in Queensland in 1860 was only 12,327 tons; in 1884
+120,727 tons were raised; and in 1908 the production was 696,332 tons,
+valued at L244,922.
+
+
+IMPORTS AND EXPORTS.
+
+The imports into Queensland in 1860 were of the declared value of
+L742,023; at the close of the first quarter-century they exceeded
+61/4 millions a year; in 1900 they exceeded 7 millions; in 1908 they
+totalled nearly 91/2 millions.
+
+The declared value of exports totalled a little more than half a
+million in 1860; the first quarter-century closed in 1884 with a total
+of under 43/4 millions. In 1889 the value was slightly under 73/4
+millions, and in 1908 it reached over 14 millions. During the last
+quarter-century the exports have trebled in value, while the imports
+have increased by only about 48.4 per cent. These figures indicate
+that the State is rapidly liquidating its external indebtedness
+on private account, whatever may be the increase in public loan
+obligations.
+
+
+RAILWAYS.
+
+Railways form a very gratifying asset. In 1865 there were only
+twenty-one miles open for traffic, and they yielded no net revenue.
+In 1884 there were 1,207 miles open, of which the net earnings were
+L273,096. In 1898 2,742 miles open had L534,992 of net earnings. In
+1901 there were 2,801 miles open, with net earnings of L223,853 only,
+the cause being the historic drought of the period. Since then there
+has been a rapid increase in both traffic and profit, the net earnings
+of 3,498 miles in 1908-9 having been L885,622. These figures afford
+complete justification for a policy of vigorous construction, for they
+show that the capital invested in our railways, L25,183,529, earned
+L3 10s. 4d. per cent. in 1907-8. In 1908-9 the net earnings were
+L883,610, the return on capital invested being L3 7s. 6d. per cent.
+
+With the object of supplying the latest official data, the Government
+Statistician, Mr. Thornhill Weedon, has compiled the following tables,
+which practically divide the half-century into four equal periods. It
+must be borne in mind that, except under the heading "Finance," the
+statistics are for the calendar year and not for the financial year,
+which closes on 30th June:--
+
+COMPARATIVE STATISTICS.
+
+VITAL STATISTICS.
+
+ -----------------------+-------------------------------------------------
+ | CALENDAR YEAR.
+ +---------+---------+---------+---------+---------
+ | 1860. | 1872. | 1884. | 1896. | 1908.
+ -----------------------+---------+---------+---------+---------+---------
+ Births No. | 1,236 | 5,265 | 10,679 | 14,017 | 14,828
+ | | | | |
+ Marriages No. | 278 | 1,125 | 2,661 | 2,823 | 4,009
+ | | | | |
+ Deaths No. | 478 | 1,936 | 6,861 | 5,645 | 5,680
+ | | | | |
+ Population, State No. | 28,056 | 133,553 | 309,913 | 472,179 | 558,237
+ | | | | |
+ " Brisbane [a] No. | 6,051 | 15,002 | 23,001 | 110,554 | 137,670
+ -----------------------+---------+---------+---------+---------+---------
+
+ [Footnote a: The area in 1860, 1872, and 1884 is not quite the
+ same as that in 1896 and 1908, but the population quoted is
+ fairly representative.]
+
+
+FINANCE.
+
+ ----------------------+----------------------------------------------------
+ | FINANCIAL YEAR.
+ +---------+---------+----------+----------+----------
+ | 1860. | 1872. | 1883-4. | 1895-6. | 1907-8.[b]
+ ----------------------+---------+---------+----------+----------+----------
+ REVENUE-- | | | | |
+ | | | | |
+ From Customs and | | | | |
+ Excise L| 59,210 | 419,853 | 900,916 | 1,361,212| 1,498,131
+ | | | | |
+ From other sources L| 119,379 | 576,471 | 1,665,442| 2,280,371| 3,953,501
+ | | | | |
+ Total Revenue L| 178,589 | 996,324 | 2,566,358| 3,641,583| 5,451,632
+ | | | | |
+ EXPENDITURE-- | | | | |
+ | | | | |
+ From Revenue L| 161,503 | 865,743 | 2,532,045| 3,567,947| 5,336,330
+ | | | | |
+ From Loan ... ... L| 19,384 | 156,424 | 1,665,823| 592,158| 1,033,676
+ | | | | |
+ ----------------------+---------+---------+----------+----------+----------
+
+ [Footnote b: The figures for 1907-8 include both Federal and
+ State collections and disbursements on Queensland account.]
+
+
+BANKING.
+
+ ----------------+-----------------------------------------------------------
+ | CALENDAR YEAR.
+ +---------+-----------+------------+------------+-----------
+ | 1860. | 1872. | 1884. | 1896. | 1908.
+ ----------------+---------+-----------+------------+------------+-----------
+ BANKING | | | | |
+ COMPANIES-- | | | | |
+ | | | | |
+ Assets L| 574,661 | 2,200,346 | 11,155,423 | 18,850,945 | 19,122,646
+ | | | | |
+ Advances L| 490,861 | 1,489,515 | 9,338,716 | 15,481,960 | 14,698,195
+ | | | | |
+ Liabilities L| 332,173 | 1,842,848 | 7,662,543 | 11,346,303 | 16,072,757
+ | | | | |
+ Deposits L| 286,917 | 1,590,283 | 6,322,025 | 10,879,640 | 15,440,427
+ | | | | |
+ SAVINGS BANK-- | | | | |
+ | | | | |
+ Depositors No.| 163 | 8,121 | 33,067 | 58,226 | 100,324
+ | | | | |
+ Amount to credit| | | | |
+ at end of year L| 7,545 | 466,754 | 1,220,614 | 2,329,381 | 4,921,881
+ ----------------+---------+-----------+------------+------------+-----------
+
+
+CROWN LANDS.
+
+ -----------+---------------------------------------------------------------
+ | CALENDAR YEAR.
+ +-----------+------------+------------+------------+------------
+ | 1860. | 1872. | 1884. | 1896. | 1908.
+ -----------+-----------+------------+------------+------------+------------
+ Area | | | | |
+ Alienated | | | | |
+ Acres | 108,870| 1,069,208| 7,099,275| 12,850,843| 15,108,439
+ | | | | |
+ In Process | | | | |
+ of | | | | |
+ Alienation | | | | |
+ Acres | ... | ... | ... | 1,776,034| 6,200,930
+ | | | | |
+ Leased or | | | | |
+ otherwise | | | | |
+ occupied | | | | |
+ Acres | 41,027,200| 123,737,093| 316,113,760| 254,787,200| 273,180,864
+ | | | | |
+ Not | | | | |
+ occupied | | | | |
+ Acres |387,983,930| 304,313,699| 105,906,965| 159,705,923| 134,629,767
+ -----------+-----------+------------+------------+------------+------------
+
+
+LIVE STOCK.
+
+ -------------+------------------------------------------------------------
+ | CALENDAR YEAR.
+ +-----------+-----------+-----------+------------+-----------
+ | 1860. | 1872. | 1884. | 1896. | 1908.
+ -------------+-----------+-----------+-----------+------------+-----------
+ Horses | 23,504 | 92,798 | 253,116 | 452,207 | 519,969
+ | | | | |
+ Cattle | 432,890 | 1,200,992 | 4,266,172 | 6,507,377 | 4,321,600
+ | | | | |
+ Sheep | 3,449,350 | 6,687,907 | 9,308,911 | 19,593,696 | 18,348,851
+ | | | | |
+ Pigs | 7,147 | 35,732 | 51,796 | 97,434 | 124,749
+ -------------+-----------+-----------+-----------+------------+-----------
+
+
+DAIRYING.
+
+ ------------------+------------------------------------------------------------
+ | CALENDAR YEAR.
+ +-----------+------------+-----------+-----------+-----------
+ | 1860. | 1872. | 1884. | 1896. | 1908.
+ ------------------+-----------+------------+-----------+-----------+-----------
+ | | | | |
+ BUTTER-- | | | | |
+ Made Lb.| ... | ... | ... | 6,164,240 | 23,838,357
+ | | | | |
+ Imported Lb.| 10,400 | 454,698 | 1,271,964 | 1,003,680 | 201,924
+ | | | | |
+ Exported Lb.| 450 | 1,310 | 12,724 | 13,942 | 13,752,118
+ | | | | |
+ Excess of | | | | |
+ Imports Lb.| 9,950 | 453,388 | 1,259,240 | 989,738 | ...
+ | | | | |
+ Excess of | | | | |
+ Exports Lb.| ... | ... | ... | ... | 13,550,194
+ | | | | |
+ Estimated | | | | |
+ Wholesale | | | | |
+ Price of | | | | |
+ Butter Per Lb.| 1s. 111/4d. | 91/2d. | 11d. | 10d. | 103/4d.
+ | | | | |
+ | | | | |
+ CHEESE-- | | | | |
+ Made Lb.| ... | ... | ... | 1,921,404 | 3,199,510
+ | | | | |
+ Imported L| 1,559 |lb. 186,916 | 1,069,620 | 77,275 | 46,464
+ | | | | |
+ Exported L| 247 |lb. 20 | 1,587 | 8,505 | 732,093
+ | | | | |
+ Excess of | | | | |
+ Imports L| 1,312 |lb. 186,896 | 1,068,033 | 68,770 | ...
+ | | | | |
+ Excess of | | | | |
+ Exports L| ... | ... | ... | ... | 685,629
+ ------------------+-----------+------------+-----------+-----------+-----------
+
+
+AGRICULTURE.
+
+ -----------------------+----------------------------------------------------
+ | CALENDAR YEAR.
+ +-------+--------+------------+-----------+----------
+ | 1860. | 1872. | 1884. | 1896. | 1908.
+ -----------------------+-------+--------+------------+-----------+----------
+ | | | | |
+ Total Area Cropped | | | | |
+ Acres| 3,838 | 62,491 | 187,381 | 322,678 | 535,900
+ | | | | |
+ Wheat, Area for Grain | | | | |
+ Acres| 196 | 3,661 | 11,389 | 34,670 | 80,898
+ | | | | |
+ " Result of Crop | | | | |
+ Bushels| ... | 78,734 | 195,727 | 601,254 | 1,202,799
+ | | | | |
+ Maize, Area for Grain | | | | |
+ Acres| 1,526 | 21,143 | 61,064 | 115,715 | 127,655
+ | | | | |
+ " Result of Crop | | | | |
+ Bushels| ... | ... | 1,312,939 | 3,065,333 | 2,767,600
+ | | | | |
+ English Potatoes, area | | | | |
+ Acres| 333 | 2,837 | 3,775 | 7,672 | 6,227
+ | | | | |
+ " Result of Crop | | | | |
+ Tons| ... | ... | 6,834 | 18,451 | 11,550
+ | | | | |
+ Sugar-cane, Area Cut | | | | |
+ Acres| ... | 5,018 | 29,930 | 66,640 | 92,219
+ | | | | |
+ " Result of Crop, | | | | |
+ Cane Tons| ... | ... | ... | ... | 1,433,315
+ | | | | |
+ " Result of Crop, | | | | |
+ Sugar Made Tons| ... | 6,266 | 33,361 | 100,774 | 151,098
+ -----------------------+-------+--------+------------+-----------+----------
+
+
+MINING.
+
+ -------------------+-----------------------------------------------------
+ | CALENDAR YEAR.
+ +--------+---------+-----------+-----------+----------
+ | 1860. | 1872. | 1884. | 1896. | 1908.
+ -------------------+--------+---------+-----------+-----------+----------
+ Gold raised in | | | | |
+ Queensland Oz.| 2,738 | 124,163 | 250,127 | 502,146| 465,085
+ L| 11,631 | 537,365 | 1,062,471 | 2,132,979| 1,975,554
+ | | | | |
+ Silver raised in | | | | |
+ Queensland L| | | 35,327 | 32,162 | 117,889
+ | | | | |
+ Copper raised in | | | | |
+ Queensland Tons| 1 | 2,448 | 1,653 | 580 | 14,698
+ L| 50 | 196,000 | 30,872 | 21,042 | 882,901
+ | | | | |
+ Tin raised in | | | | |
+ Queensland Tons| | 1,407 | 3,383 | 1,554 | 4,826
+ L| | 109,816 | 130,460 | 49,018 | 342,191
+ | | | | |
+ Coal raised in | | | | |
+ Queensland Tons| 12,327 | 27,727 | 120,727 | 371,390 | 696,332
+ L| 9,244 | 16,120 | 60,025 | 154,987 | 244,922
+ | | | | |
+ All other in | | | | |
+ Queensland L| | | 6,469 | 30,440 | 281,030
+ | | | | |
+ Total L| 20,925 | 849,301 | 1,325,624 | 2,420,628 | 3,844,487
+ -------------------+--------+---------+-----------+-----------+----------
+
+
+SECONDARY PRODUCTION.
+
+ -------------------------------------------------------------------------
+ CALENDAR YEAR.
+ -----------------+-------+---------+-----------+------------+------------
+ | 1860. | 1872. | 1884. | 1906. | 1908.
+ -----------------+-------+---------+-----------+------------+------------
+ FACTORIES No.| 13 | 593 | 955 | 1,332 | 1,481
+ Hands | | | | |
+ Employed No.| | | | 19,733 | 29,510
+ Plant and | | | | |
+ Machinery L| | | | 6,145,548 | 4,484,340
+ Output L| | | | 6,482,824 | 11,242,437
+ Leather Lb.| | 427,168 | 2,221,856 | 3,324,832 | (c)152,611
+ Butter Lb.| | | | 6,164,240 | 23,838,357
+ Cheese Lb.| | | | 1,921,404 | 3,199,510
+ Bacon and | | | | |
+ Hams Lb.| | | | 5,108,726 | 11,324,323
+ Meat, | | | | |
+ Cured Lb.| | | 4,283,024 | 69,442,447 | 50,418,522
+ Timber, Sawn | | | | |
+ Super. Ft.| | | | 22,309,900 | 100,759,016
+ -----------------+-------+---------+-----------+------------+------------
+ [Footnote c: Now collected on sides.]
+
+
+IMPORTS.
+
+ ---------------------+-----------------------------------------------------
+ | CALENDAR YEAR.
+ +---------+----------+----------+-----------+---------
+ | 1860. | 1872. | 1884. | 1896. | 1908.
+ ---------------------+---------+----------+----------+-----------+---------
+ Apparel, including | | | | |
+ Boots and Shoes L| 32,701 | 113,371 | 318,910 | 232,077 | 552,071
+ Linen, Drapery, and | | | | |
+ Haberdashery L| 154,454 | 293,155 | 742,357 | 806,638 |1,233,776
+ Wine, Beer, and | | | | |
+ Spirits L| 66,909 | 177,601 | 394,764 | 247,259 | 325,484
+ Tobacco, Cigar, &c. L| 17,727 | 30,659 | 78,093 | 74,501 | 204,131
+ Wheat, Flour, | | | | |
+ Biscuits, &c. L| 95,318 | 208,447 | 383,504 | 555,460 | 483,794
+ Other Grain and | | | | |
+ Products thereof L| 4,867 | 42,991 | 197,929 | 118,968 | 202,549
+ Potatoes and Onions L| 3,410 | 15,789 | 77,897 | 104,233 | 147,584
+ Green Fruit, Jams, | | | | |
+ and Jellies L| 3,487 | 27,755 | 118,309 | 73,184 | 175,967
+ Hardware, Machinery, | | | | |
+ Metals, and Metal | | | | |
+ Goods L| 63,622 | 217,659 |1,019,374 | 766,217 |1,661,999
+ Stationery, Books, | | | | |
+ Paper, &c. L| 16,482 | 26,528 | 148,682 | 135,127 | 220,746
+ Kerosene and other | | | | |
+ Oils L| 3,916 | 32,580 | 69,202 | 94,048 | 156,460
+ | | | | |
+ Total all imports L| 742,023 |2,218,717 |6,381,976 |5,433,271 |9,471,166
+ ---------------------+---------+----------+----------+-----------+---------
+
+
+EXPORTS--HOME PRODUCTION.
+
+ ----------------------+-------------------------------------------------------
+ | CALENDAR YEAR.
+ +-----------+----------+----------+----------+----------
+ | 1860. | 1872. | 1884. | 1896. | 1908.
+ ----------------------+-----------+----------+----------+----------+----------
+ Wool--Clean Lb.|}5,007,167{|12,622,067| 9,030,701|24,479,769|23,459,014
+ Greasy Lb.|} {| 5,171,245|26,495,276|64,012,465|66,802,873
+ | | | | |
+ Clean L|} 444,188{| 952,450| 682,774| 1,130,170| 1,670,664
+ Greasy L|} {| 217,362| 1,206,730| 1,846,814| 2,459,190
+ Total Value L| 444,188 | 1,169,812| 1,889,504| 2,976,984| 4,129,854
+ Tallow--Quantity Tons| 640 | 2,890| 2,623| 18,554| 7,292
+ Value L| 25,628 | 100,201| 76,019| 337,967| 197,229
+ Gold--Value L| 14,565 | 660,396| 923,010| 2,089,166| 1,941,229
+ Copper--Value L| 50 | 257,723| 3,014| 32,401| 831,699
+ Tin--Value L| ... | 108,310| 228,457| 46,779| 290,389
+ Live Stock (Horses, | | | | |
+ Cattle, Sheep) L| 510 | 366,003| 572,010| 859,367| 1,699,381
+ Meat (all kinds, | | | | |
+ including extract) L| 5,356 | 67,579| 70,833| 898,545| 850,772
+ Sugar--Quantity Cwt.| ... | 23,959| 368,626| 1,507,503| 2,645,333
+ Value L| ... | 36,833| 454,759| 863,080| 1,482,320
+ Hides and Skins L| 14,030 | 93,218| 109,291| 449,265| 421,987
+ Pearlshell L| ... | ... | 94,021| 94,865| 49,898
+ +-----------+----------+----------+----------+----------
+ Total all Exports L| 523,477 | 2,998,934| 4,673,864| 9,163,726|14,194,977
+ ----------------------+-----------+----------+----------+----------+----------
+
+[Illustration: FALLS NEAR KILLARNEY]
+
+[Illustration: ABORIGINAL TREE CLIMBERS]
+
+
+INTERCOMMUNICATION.
+
+ -----------------+---------------------------------------------------------
+ | CALENDAR YEAR.
+ +--------+-----------+-----------+------------+-----------
+ | 1860. | 1872. | 1884. | 1896. | 1908.
+ -----------------+--------+-----------+-----------+------------+-----------
+ RAILWAYS-- | | | | |
+ | | | | |
+ Miles Open | ... | 218 | 1,207 | 2,430 | 3,498
+ Passengers No.| ... | 40,539 | 1,025,552 | 2,462,020 | 6,538,411
+ Cost of | | | | |
+ Construction L| ... | 2,345,385 | 8,631,835 | 17,248,678 | 23,102,158
+ Net Revenue L| ... | 18,213 | 273,096 | 424,862 | 806,797
+ | | | | |
+ SHIPPING-- | | | | |
+ | | | | |
+ Inward Vessels | | | | |
+ No.| 210 | 522 | 1,042 | 649 | 881
+ Tonnage| 45,736 | 148,630 | 572,124 | 562,759 | 1,601,107
+ | | | | |
+ Outward Vessels| | | | |
+ No.| 183 | 507 | 1,061 | 645 | 847
+ Tonnage | 39,503 | 143,380 | 579,988 | 531,289 | 1,563,911
+ -----------------+--------+-----------+-----------+------------+-----------
+
+
+CHARITABLE INSTITUTIONS, EDUCATION, AND PUBLIC LIBRARIES.
+
+ --------------------------+---------------------------------------------
+ | CALENDAR YEAR.
+ +-------+--------+--------+---------+---------
+ | 1860. | 1872. | 1884. | 1896. | 1908.
+ --------------------------+-------+--------+--------+---------+---------
+ | | | | |
+ CHARITABLE INSTITUTIONS-- | | | | |
+ | | | | |
+ Number | 6 | 21 | 46 | 77 | 107
+ Persons Relieved | 397 | 2,796 | 11,614 | 19,917 | 28,310
+ | | | | |
+ EDUCATION-- | | | | |
+ | | | | |
+ Number of Schools | 41 | 210 | 528 | 957 | 1,104
+ Scholars on Rolls | 1,890 | 23,728 | 60,701 | 103,733 | 105,436
+ Average Attendance | ... | ... | ... | ... | 67,309
+ | | | | |
+ PUBLIC LIBRARIES-- | | | | |
+ | | | | |
+ Number of Subscribers | 538 | 1,711 | 5,185 | 6,904 | 12,770
+ Volumes in Libraries | 4,945 | 20,890 | 60,257 | 129,883 | 249,257
+ --------------------------+-------+--------+--------+---------+---------
+
+
+
+
+APPENDIX H.
+
+DIGEST OF HYDRAULIC ENGINEER'S REPORTS.
+
+OUR ARTESIAN WATER SYSTEM.
+
+
+The water supply problem is of importance so momentous, and the
+official information collected by the Hydraulic Engineer being
+scattered through reports covering about twenty-five years--from 1883
+until 1908--it is thought desirable to present the main official facts
+in a convenient digest for the general reader.
+
+
+SUB-ARTESIAN WATER IN 1884.
+
+Up to 1883, when the McIlwraith Government created the Hydraulic
+Engineer's Department by appointing Mr. J. B. Henderson to organise
+it, little had been done by the State for the improvement of the water
+supply of the country except in cities and towns. At that time no
+artesian water was known to exist in Queensland, but there was a
+popular belief that there were great underground supplies, especially
+in Western Queensland. Many station-owners had been active, and the
+diamond drill had been brought into use, but deep drilling had
+not then been undertaken. In October, 1884, the Hydraulic Engineer
+reported that he had just visited Widgeegoara Station, where the
+owners, Messrs. E. and J. Bignell, partly by sinking shafts and partly
+by boring, had obtained an underground pumped supply aggregating
+94,000 gallons every twenty-four hours. This resulted from sinking
+four 5 ft. x 21/2 ft. shafts an average depth of 102 ft. each, and
+thence boring and tubing below the bottom of each shaft to the average
+depth of 161 ft. Of the total quantity 20,000 gallons a day was
+obtained from the Four-mile well, a shaft sunk to a depth of 150 ft.
+below the natural surface. Besides this there was a homestead well
+33 ft. deep. Analyses of the water showed that, in the opinion of the
+Government Analyst, only in one bore was it useful for watering sheep,
+it being brackish; but according to the station reports the supply
+from the Four-mile well and Nos. 1 and 2 shaft-bores was good
+stock water. Mr. Henderson warmly commended the Messrs. Bignell's
+enterprise.
+
+
+IMPROVED BORING MACHINERY.
+
+During the same month the late Hon. George King, of Gowrie, brought
+under the notice of the department a report by Mr. Darley, C.E.,
+to the Government of New South Wales respecting certain American
+well-boring machinery by the use of which in Mr. King's opinion
+three-fourths of the cost of L6,000 incurred by his firm in sinking
+shafts in the Warrego district might have been saved. Besides which
+much greater depths could be reached, a machine costing L600 in
+America being capable of boring 2,000 ft. The matter being referred to
+the Hydraulic Engineer, that officer made inquiries which induced him
+heartily to endorse Mr. King's suggestion that the Government should
+secure from America a machine with two men experienced in working it
+and capable of themselves making any ordinary repairs. Mr. Henderson
+also recommended that a staff should be trained by the Americans after
+arrival, and expressed the opinion that this course would save both
+money and time, and prove a large gain to the colony. But he reminded
+the Minister that until there had been an abundant rainfall extensive
+operations in bore-sinking in the West could not be carried on, though
+he advised the introduction of a sufficient number of machines and
+enough tubing in order that during the next season, if rain fell, work
+should be vigorously commenced.
+
+On 4th September, 1885, the Hydraulic Engineer replied in unequivocal
+terms to a minute of his Minister requesting him to comply with the
+wish expressed that he should purchase a Victorian diamond drill, then
+under offer, for coal-prospecting purposes. Mr. Henderson strongly
+recommended that no drill be purchased unless capable of boring holes
+at least from 5 in. to 2 in. in diameter. He also pointed out that
+where drifts and loose gravels were met with, and tubed, a deep bore
+must be commenced of large diameter to ensure success. Although the
+proposed drills were not ostensibly to be used for water-finding, it
+is evident that the Hydraulic Engineer, in reporting upon them, had
+that kind of work in view.
+
+
+GOVERNMENT URGED TO IMPORT PLANT AND MEN.
+
+On 2nd December following the Hydraulic Engineer addressed the
+Minister touching water-boring operations, and pointed out that, while
+there would be no difficulty in importing the machinery and appliances
+requisite for deep bores, he was convinced that men must be introduced
+from America to start and teach others here to work them. He
+recommended that an efficient plant should be ordered capable of
+boring up to 12 in. in diameter to a depth of 2,500 ft., for (say)
+L1,000, delivery at the works, and four good drillers under a two
+years' engagement brought out to work them at 21s. to 23s. per day,
+apparently of twelve hours; board, lodging, and travelling expenses to
+be defrayed by the Government.
+
+
+OBSTACLES FROM DROUGHT.
+
+On 20th February, 1886, the Hydraulic Engineer wrote that,
+understanding from conversations with the Minister that "the policy of
+the Government is to carry on water conservation works and boring for
+underground water with increased energy, he recommends the purchase of
+three Wright and Edwards' boring machines, capable of reaching a depth
+of 1,000 ft., for delivery within four months from the date of order."
+Three days later Mr. Henderson wrote:--"Unfortunately it can be said
+with much truth that, ever since the department's existence, the
+seasons have been unfavourable in the extreme for carrying out its
+plans." After mentioning the specific difficulties encountered, he
+added:--"I do not share in the idea that the late rains broke up the
+drought, as I cannot disguise from myself the fact that they have not
+been general, or even yet of sufficient quantity."
+
+
+FIRST BORING STARTED AT BLACKALL.
+
+Although the Hydraulic Engineer, so long before as December, 1884, had
+recommended the Minister to import American boring machinery with men
+trained to work it, it was not until 19th October, 1886, nearly two
+years later, that he was able to announce that his advice had been
+so far followed that Mr. Arnold, an American borer from Honolulu,
+had gone to Blackall with a Pennsylvania Walking Beam Oil Rig boring
+machine which had been constructed in Brisbane. It seems that so long
+previously as July, 1885, two tenders for boring by Americans--one
+being from Mr. Arnold--were submitted by the Hydraulic Engineer to
+the Minister, with the intimation that they were both too vague for
+acceptance, and expressing the hope that Mr. Arnold, "who seemed a man
+of considerable experience, would submit a more liberal and definite
+offer." The same report mentions that on the 30th June previously the
+Blackall bore had been carried to a depth of 775 ft., and that at 127
+ft. good water had been struck that rose to a height of 60 ft. below
+the surface, but was deemed insufficient for the requirements of the
+town. Up to that time nine bores had been completed, chiefly by the
+ineffective Tiffin auger, but not one had reached artesian water, the
+deepest being that at Blackall, and the average depth 371 ft.
+
+
+ARTESIAN WATER STRUCK AT THURULGOONA.
+
+In his report of 12th November, 1887, the Hydraulic Engineer states
+that it is essential that only the best quality of tubing, or
+"casing," should be used in bores. In April he had visited, by
+direction of the Treasurer, Thurulgoona Station, on the New South
+Wales border, and there carefully inspected boring operations. He
+found that one bore had, by means of the Canadian Pole Tool boring
+machine, been sunk to 1,079 ft., a supply of excellent water having
+been struck at a depth of 1,009 ft., "the water overflowing in my
+presence to a height of about 20 in. above the surface of the ground."
+This was apparently the first artesian water Mr. Henderson had seen in
+Queensland, though he had years previously seen the artesian well at
+Sale, in Victoria; and he naturally pronounced the opinion that the
+result at Thurulgoona was "very satisfactory." During this year
+boring had been carried on in Queensland without success so far as the
+formation of flowing wells was concerned. Mr. Arnold, having sunk
+to 1,039 ft. at Blackall, resigned, but it was decided to continue
+sinking, all the tubing being recovered with the exception of a few
+feet, and being capable of use several times over if need be. During
+this year also tenders had been received from Mr. Loughead, of
+Thurulgoona, to put down three bores of 2,500 ft. in Queensland, and
+Mr. Henderson reported that there was every prospect of a tender being
+received from a company recently formed in Brisbane at a slightly
+lower price than Mr. Loughead had named.
+
+
+GOVERNMENT'S FIRST FLOWING WELL.
+
+It was at this time, after three years' fighting with difficulties
+arising from drought, the want of knowledge of deep-boring machinery,
+and the indisposition of the Government to spend much money in so
+speculative an undertaking, that the first gleam of daylight appeared.
+On 6th October, 1888, the Hydraulic Engineer reported that four
+contracts had been entered into for deep boring, with as many
+different persons or companies, in the aggregate over 20,000 ft.
+Included among these was the contract with the Canadian Pole Tool
+Company (of which the late Mr. Percy Ricardo was then the financial
+head, and Mr. William Woodley, who had been induced to come over from
+Canada, was the head driller) for completing the Blackall bore to a
+depth of 2,000 ft. if necessary. In this bore, on 26th April, 1888,
+after many vexatious stoppages, "an abundant supply of overflowing,
+sparkling, fresh artesian water, excellently adapted for domestic
+purposes, was tapped at a depth of 1,645 ft." The rate of flow, as
+measured from 3 in. piping attached to a screw plug and valve to
+control the flow, was found to be 210,000 gallons per diem, with a
+temperature of 119 degrees. This had been an expensive bore, for it
+cost L5,748. It was not the first artesian water officially utilised
+in Queensland, for four months earlier than water rose to the surface
+in the Blackall bore the Barcaldine bore was yielding 175,416 gallons
+of water a day, at a temperature of 101 degrees, obtained from a depth
+of 691 ft., and at a cost of only L1,220.
+
+
+THIRTEEN ADDITIONAL BORES.
+
+These results were so encouraging that the Hydraulic Engineer
+recommended the sinking of thirteen additional bores, and the
+recommendation was approved. As early as possible tenders were
+advertised, and there then seemed some difficulty in getting eligible
+applications, partly, it may be assumed, because of the activity
+of private enterprise in bore-sinking. To those engaged in this
+undertaking Mr. Henderson in his 1889 report pays a graceful tribute,
+congratulating them on their successes, and expressing regret at their
+failures, in which they only met the same luck as the Government had
+encountered. It was in this report also that the Hydraulic Engineer
+suggested that a map be prepared showing the position, altitude, and
+other useful particulars of all Government and private bores and wells
+in Queensland, and he invited information from all persons capable
+of giving it. Mr. Henderson mentioned the successful sinking of
+the Cunnamulla bore, having a flow of 22,500 gallons per hour of
+"excellent fresh water," with a pressure of 186 lb. to the square
+inch, a temperature of 106 degrees, and a depth of 1,402 ft. The total
+cost of this bore was L1,928. The success of the Tambo bore was also
+reported at the same time, 8,333 gallons per hour having been obtained
+at a depth of 1,002 ft., with a temperature of 98 degrees, and for a
+cost of L1,515.
+
+
+THE CHARLEVILLE BORE.
+
+The Hydraulic Engineer's report dated 11th September, 1890, supplies
+evidence of the importance of the discoveries made up to that date of
+artesian water in Queensland. The striking of a supply of 3,000,000
+gallons a day of "water clear, colourless, soft, and potable" in the
+Charleville bore is noted with satisfaction. In the text of the report
+this was said to be, so far as the writer knew, the "best well in
+Australia," but a footnote added that soon afterwards a bore in the
+Cunnamulla district was reported to have been tapped with a daily
+supply of 31/2 million gallons. The depth of the Charleville bore
+was only 1,370 ft., and its cost L2,389. The striking of a supply of
+1,095,000,000 gallons per annum at so small a cost was naturally a
+subject for both official and general congratulation.
+
+
+INFORMATION SOUGHT AS TO PRIVATE BORES.
+
+In the same year is reported the striking of water in the Muckadilla
+bore, which yielded about 10,000 gallons a day from a depth of over
+3,000 ft., and was then believed to be the deepest bore in Australia.
+The cost was L2,673. A somewhat better supply was afterwards struck at
+3,262 ft. In this report the Hydraulic Engineer expresses regret that
+through the absence of barometrical measurements, owing to scarcity of
+money, the height above sea level of proposed sites for bores was
+not known, but sites were selected from surface indications and the
+results achieved by sinking in the neighbourhood. The wells sunk by
+the Government had been of much use in assisting private enterprise
+to select likely sites, but it would have been more satisfactory
+had better information been obtained by the use of the spirit level.
+Acknowledgments were made to those who had responded to the circular
+invitation sent out for information, and regret was expressed that in
+some cases there had been no response. The effort made, however, had
+enabled several new features to be embodied in the report, among which
+was a table containing a list of both public and private bores, and a
+large map locating, so far as possible, the position of each. Another
+map showed the rainfall in different parts of the colony, while a
+handsome diagram of the Brisbane rainfall was furnished for the first
+time. Both of these remained features of the Hydraulic Engineer's
+annual reports until 1901, when revenue considerations compelled their
+suspension.
+
+
+HINDRANCES FROM FLOODS.
+
+During 1890 excessive rains and bad roads hindered work in
+bore-sinking, instead of the dry periods which had been the cause of
+embarrassment for the preceding seven years. The only newly completed
+bore during this year was that at McKinlay, which at 1,002 ft. gave a
+supply of 224,000 gallons a day. Water was struck in two other bores,
+but of insufficient quantity, and work was still proceeding. The
+obstacles encountered in boring, often from the breaking of machinery,
+but more frequently from the want of thoroughly skilled drillers, must
+have been disheartening, especially in cases where the sinking was
+done without useful scientific information, and bores had to be
+abandoned after months--even years in cases--of labour and worry.
+
+In his report of 20th January, 1893, the Hydraulic Engineer discusses
+at length the question of artesian water supply. The country is, he
+holds, now in a much improved position to encounter long droughts.
+Valuable information has been and is still being obtained by
+exploration as to the prospects of artesian water being found, and
+also as to the conservation of surface water by artificial means. He
+says that fifteen bores, averaging 1,571 ft. each, have been sunk by
+the department, and that although the work has been of a pioneering
+character only one sunk to the contract depth has proved a failure. He
+estimates that about 88,000 square miles in the western country have
+been proved to be water-bearing, and he urges that as large areas
+still remain to be explored the present is a favourable time for
+inviting tenders for the work.
+
+
+STREAM-GAUGING RECOMMENDED.
+
+In this report the Hydraulic Engineer directs attention to
+the necessity of acquiring information as to the extent of our
+surface-water resources. In three of the southern colonies, he
+mentions, a systematic practice of gauging streams has for some time
+been in force. The work will be useless unless it is carried on for
+a number of years. The essential thing to be ascertained is not the
+maximum flow of a stream, but the minimum; or rather, perhaps, the
+maximum that can be expected from a stream in a season of maximum
+aridity. "Without such data," he continues, "no fair distribution of
+water, no scheme of water supply, or irrigation, or drainage can be
+well considered; nor can storage and distribution or drainage works be
+economically designed, or their permanency and efficiency ensured."
+He therefore urges the matter of stream-gauging upon the favourable
+consideration of the Government, adding that the paramount necessity
+of active administration in respect of water conservation generally
+has been recognised by Parliament by legislation already placed upon
+the Statute-book.
+
+
+WASTE OF ARTESIAN WATER.
+
+Two official pages of the 1893 report are devoted to the "misuse
+of water," a member of Parliament having already objected to the
+application of the word "waste" to water allowed to flow unchecked
+from bores. The aggregate capacity of the ten Government bores then
+flowing was 5,000,000 gallons daily, all measured; while of the 137
+private wells the flow was estimated at 100,000,000 gallons daily.
+This total of 105,000,000 gallons would be equivalent to a rainfall
+of 29 in. on 91 square miles of country. This was the rate of average
+rainfall on the assumed outcrop of water-bearing country that supplied
+the artesian area. And it had to be remembered that a part of this
+rainfall of 29 in. had to be carried off by streams as well as by
+evaporation, and therefore did not sink into the water-bearing strata
+of the arid west. As to the extent of the outcrop, it was estimated
+not to exceed one-eighth of a mile, with a total length of 1,600
+miles, which meant a total supply of 200 square miles of water-bearing
+outcrop area.[a] Arguing on these and other grounds, the report
+contends that the falling off of the yield of many bores affords proof
+that, wherever the supply comes from, the outflow already exceeds the
+inflow. The Engineer can only regard as wasted two-thirds of the water
+that now flows from the artesian bores in Queensland; indeed, adopting
+the language of an American, "the waste is a crime against the
+well-owner and against the State."
+
+ [Footnote a: For fuller particulars see Hydraulic Engineer's
+ Report for 1893, pages 5 and 6.]
+
+
+CONTROL OF FLOW NECESSARY.
+
+The Hydraulic Engineer adds that while he cannot assert that the
+artesian flow is being exhausted, he yet holds that the flow ought to
+be controlled by legislative action.[b]
+
+ [Footnote b: On this passage the Hydraulic Engineer notes
+ that, in 1891, a bill was introduced into Parliament by Sir
+ Thomas McIlwraith for controlling the artesian water supply,
+ and passed through the Assembly, but was rejected by the
+ Council. Since then no action in that direction has been
+ taken.]
+
+
+IRRIGATION BY BORES.
+
+The same report contains an interesting article on irrigation.
+It points out that at the beginning of 1892 there were only 200
+irrigators among the land cultivators of the colony, and that the area
+irrigated was only 5,000 acres. It was believed that in the last year
+the amount of land so fertilised had largely increased. Many of the
+plants and distributing apparatus were of a most primitive kind.
+"Some are expensive, others badly erected, and not a few are of a type
+ill-adapted to the object in view."
+
+The report goes on to discuss the probability or otherwise of water in
+sufficient quantities for irrigation being obtainable by conservation.
+In summarising his argument the Hydraulic Engineer says, "Looking at
+the question broadly, I am much disposed to regard the possibilities
+of a sufficiently abundant supply of water being obtained for
+irrigation, especially for land in small areas devoted to intense
+culture, as of considerable promise." He then urges the inadequacy of
+artesian wells for the irrigation of large areas, pointing out, among
+other things, that the entire discharge of the wells then flowing in
+Queensland would suffice to irrigate only 219 square miles to a depth
+of 1 ft. He thinks that in Queensland we shall have to depend upon
+"natural" water for irrigation purposes.
+
+
+A VALUABLE MAP--376,832 SQUARE MILES IN ARTESIA.
+
+A new feature in the 1893 report was the map giving information as to
+(1) artesian bores applied for, (2) under contract, (3) in progress,
+and (4) completed. It showed that out of a total of 668,497 square
+miles of the "Rolling Downs Formation" (Lower Cretaceous) no less
+than 376,832 square miles, chiefly in the arid west, was likely to be
+water-bearing. This estimate, it may be noted, has been very slightly
+reduced of late, but the scope for exploration in water-finding seems
+still great in Western Queensland. The report alludes to the success
+attained in the Queensland manufacture of well-boring machinery. All
+the plant used, the wire rope alone excepted, was manufactured in the
+colony, where improvements had been made in the originally imported
+article. Yet it is admitted that the apparatus used was "not a
+perfectly scientific one, because it does not produce a core by means
+of which the nature of the strata and the angle and direction of the
+dip can be fully ascertained." Queensland yellow-wood (_Flindersia
+Oxleyana_) had quite replaced American timber in the manufacture of
+drilling poles.
+
+[Illustration: SCENE ON LOGAN RIVER, SOUTH QUEENSLAND]
+
+
+EFFECT OF GOOD SEASONS.
+
+In closing, the Hydraulic Engineer reports that the succession of good
+seasons experienced (years 1890-93), and the abundance of water
+and grass resulting, has occasioned much inattention to water
+conservation, and he also expresses regret that financial exigencies
+have compelled the dispensing with some valued members of his staff.
+The article is illustrated by diagrams, and the studious reader will
+peruse it with profit.
+
+
+THE SOURCE OF ARTESIAN WATER.
+
+In his report for 1st November, 1894, the Hydraulic Engineer recurs to
+the source of artesian water. He regrets that very little can be added
+to the previous assumption that it lies in the outcrops of the porous
+beds of the Lower Cretaceous formation on the western slope of the
+coast range; and he urges the necessity of accumulating facts relating
+to the bores already sunk, and complains that some owners neglect to
+give the department the information sought. He urges that legislation
+should make the furnishing of statistical matter of this kind
+compulsory. He doubts whether, in the absence of information as to the
+precise geological conditions subsisting beneath the surface, a map of
+Queensland can ever be prepared showing with certainty where artesian
+water can be found; but much may be done by accumulating accurate
+information with respect to the sinking of bores, nature of strata
+passed through, amount and pressure of flow, temperature of water, and
+depth beneath the surface whence obtained in each case. The map issued
+by the Geological Department would show the water-bearing areas, which
+means the formation in which water may be expected to be found; but
+bores can only be put down with reasonable certainty when the entire
+western country has been prospected.
+
+
+THE LIFE OF ARTESIAN WELLS.
+
+The life of an artesian well with a permanent spring, says the report,
+is limited by the durability of the casing. The corrosive action
+of some water is much greater than others; but there should be no
+difficulty in renewing the casing when necessary. It has often
+been discovered that an interruption of the flow, or its serious
+diminution, is the result of worn-out casing. So much is this the case
+that there is still controversy as to whether there is any general
+diminution in the supply consequent upon continuous waste.
+
+
+ARTESIAN WATER POWER.
+
+The report then discusses the question of using artesian water for
+power in the industries. The Hydraulic Engineer points out that of the
+total horse-power used in the United States at that time about 39.5
+per cent. was hydrodynamic. Artesian water, he says, can be applied
+to driving all kinds of machinery, "from a sewing machine or a cream
+separator to a saw or flour mill; and for fire-extinguishing it is
+most excellent." He therefore recommends the employment in Western
+Queensland of turbines and Pelton wheel motors for sheep-shearing,
+electric lighting, and other kinds of machinery used there, pointing
+out that the horse-power available was--At Blackall, 8.04; at
+Cunnamulla, 41.53; at Charleville, 123.41; and at Thargomindah,
+63.51.[c] He further recommends the utilisation of the artesian supply
+for street mains, a suggestion since carried out with great public
+advantage in several western towns. While Mr. Henderson doubts the
+utility of artesian water for irrigation, he says that, generally
+speaking, it is quite as valuable as that from town mains, rivers,
+and falls for developing power. The aggregate area to date in which
+precious artesian water has been found in Queensland is 117,000
+square miles, and he feels that this area would be rapidly enlarged
+by exploration by both Government and private borings. The shallowest
+completed flowing well in Queensland at that date was 60 ft., and the
+deepest 3,630 ft.; the average depth so far as known to the department
+was 1,289 ft.
+
+ [Footnote c: Mr. Henderson notes that these horse-powers have
+ since been very much reduced.]
+
+
+STATIC PRESSURE AND HYDRAULIC PRESSURE.
+
+Explaining why the volume flowing from a well does not depend upon
+the diameter of the "static" pressure of the water, Mr. Henderson says
+that the flow depends principally upon the relative altitudes of the
+outcrops of the water-bearing beds, and of the mouth of the bore or
+well, and upon the character and texture of the porous beds from which
+the well derives its supply. The static pressure is ascertained by
+stopping the flow by artificial means, when the pressure generally
+rises, sometimes quickly, at other times slowly, until it reaches a
+maximum. But when the well is again opened it will be found that
+the static pressure has been more or less reduced by friction. This
+reduced pressure is called the "hydraulic." The hydraulic pressure can
+never exceed the static pressure; nor can the volume of water flowing
+from an artesian well be ascertained by its pressure, or the height to
+which the water may rise over the top of the casing, any more than the
+pressure can be ascertained by knowing its volume.[d]
+
+In the same report is announced the striking at Winton, at a depth
+of 3,235 ft. of a supply amounting to 100,000 gallons a day, at a
+temperature of 140 degrees. It was determined to continue sinking
+under a new contract.
+
+ [Footnote d: See Votes and Proceedings, 1894-5, for Hydraulic
+ Engineer's Report, 1st November, 1894, page 5.]
+
+
+SUBTERRANEAN WATER BELONGS TO THE STATE.
+
+Mr. Henderson again returns to the misuse of water, suggesting that
+the utility of the artesian supply can easily be tested by intense
+cultivation of a small area at each bore. He complains that one of
+Queensland's most valuable assets is not as carefully guarded as it
+should be. He estimates that the quantity allowed to run uncontrolled
+and generally misused amounts to 66,000,000 gallons per diem, or
+66 per cent. of the estimated total flow in Queensland. He invites
+attention to a recommendation in a previous report that all
+underground or artesian water should be declared State property.
+This would not prevent owners of artesian water taking and using a
+reasonable supply of water, but all consumption beyond what might be
+called a "liberal" amount should be paid for, the State receiving the
+water rate. The experience of America in this matter proved that in
+some States control by the Government was enforced, while in others
+the greatest care was exercised to prevent any further granting of
+subterranean water franchises unless the absolute right of the State
+was reserved to regulate the consumption. Appended to the report is a
+copy of a recommendation by a Commission in the State of Colorado for
+regulating, distributing, and using water. Mr. Henderson thinks the
+recommendation too severe, but insists that some State control should
+be exercised.
+
+The same report contains an interesting review of the condition of
+irrigation enterprise in Queensland, and again insists that scientific
+stream-gauging is indispensable if surface water is to be made
+generally available for irrigation purposes.
+
+
+EXTENT OF ARTESIAN SUPPLY.
+
+The report dated 5th October, 1895, recurs to the Hydraulic Engineer's
+previous estimate that the outcrops of the water-bearing beds of the
+country covered an area of about 200 square miles. He is glad to learn
+that Mr. R. L. Jack, Government Geologist, had since worked the matter
+out, and, while approving of Mr. Henderson's suggestion as to the
+source of artesian supplies in Queensland, estimated the area as
+5,000 square miles, or twenty-five times the Engineer's estimate.
+This information seems to have allayed Mr. Henderson's dread of the
+exhaustion of the supply, for he says that the Geologist's figures
+indicate that "the gathering-ground is larger than can possibly be
+required for years to come if there is no extensive leakage, of
+which as yet there is no evidence that I am aware of." He next writes
+strongly in favour of a comprehensive search for artesian water by
+the Government, and of Government aid being offered by loan to persons
+willing to sink bores on Crown lands or even on private property.
+Such assistance would encourage settlement by leaving the settler in
+possession for other purposes of money which would otherwise be spent
+on water provision on his holding, and prove an incalculable benefit
+to the State by mitigating periodical droughts.
+
+
+PROGRESS TO 1895.
+
+The report then gives statistics relative to artesian bores as
+follows:--Number of bores, 397; average depth, 1,195 ft. Of these
+286 overflow with a total output of 2131/2 million gallons per diem.
+Total cost of boring and casing, L860,321, as nearly as could be
+estimated, "remarkable results for eight years' work, as in 1887
+boring in Queensland was in its infancy." With a view to greater
+accuracy provision for the salaries of two inspectors had been made
+on the Estimates for the year, in order that uniform records might
+be secured as to the strata pierced, the flow, the pressure and
+temperature of the water, amount of rainfall at the outcrop of
+water-bearing beds, and the alleged diminution of artesian streams.
+The suggestion is then made that land, the leases carrying water
+rights, might be made available for settlement in small areas around
+tanks and bores.
+
+
+THE WINTON BORE.
+
+In this report the Hydraulic Engineer is able to announce the success
+of the Winton bore. At about 3,555 ft. a daily supply of 720,000
+gallons of excellent artesian water was struck, and boring being
+continued to 4,010 ft. without increasing the supply work ceased,
+the total cost of the bore having been about L7,000. An article on
+irrigation shows a total irrigated area of 7,641 acres, an increase
+for the year of 2,240 acres. Included in the area are 2,000 acres of
+natural grass land and 2,000 acres sown with artificial grasses; also
+111/2 acres irrigated from artesian wells in the Warrego district.
+Flood mitigation is also dealt with at length, and a system of flood
+warnings on the various streams recommended.
+
+
+DR. R. L. JACK'S OPINION.
+
+The report for 2nd October, 1896, brings records up to date. By map it
+is shown that not only does the water-bearing country extend over 56
+per cent. of the area of Queensland, but also continues into New South
+Wales and South Australia, and enters Western Australia. It "marks
+the position of the ancient Cretaceous sea which connected the Gulf
+of Carpentaria with the Great Australian Bight," and "divided the
+continent into two islands." "They were," wrote Dr. R. L. Jack, "laid
+down by this sea; their present position is due to subsequent general
+upheaval, and they lie directly and unconformably on schists and
+slates of undetermined age, or on granite or gneiss. Except in
+Queensland, where they are overlaid here and there by the remains of
+the Upper Cretaceous or Desert Sandstone formations which have not
+been removed by denudation, they seem to be covered to a considerable
+extent by Tertiary rocks. The Desert Sandstone beds lie horizontally
+but unconformably on those of the Rolling Downs, which dip to the
+south." [e]
+
+ [Footnote e: See "Geology and Palaeontology of Queensland and
+ New Guinea," by R. L. Jack, F.G.S., Government Geologist,
+ and R. Etheridge, jun,. Government Palaeontologist, New South
+ Wales, page 390.]
+
+
+IMPROVED DRILLING MACHINERY.
+
+In the same report the improvement in drilling machinery is discussed,
+and Queensland manufacturers are congratulated on making American
+and Canadian machines with improvements which greatly add to their
+efficiency. Bores in Queensland are generally begun with 10-in.
+casing, and carried to not lower than 500 ft. Then 8-in., 6-in.,
+and 5-in. casings are used. The necessity of these casings being as
+perfect as possible is emphasised by the Engineer. The cost of sinking
+bores by contract, which is almost the universal method, depends
+upon the facilities offered by the site for the transport of wood and
+water, but the range then was from 17s. to 24s. per foot for the first
+500 ft., and increased with depth until, at 4,000 ft. odd, sinking
+had cost 55s. per foot. The inspectors appointed the previous year had
+done good work, though the wet season delayed travelling. Sectional
+diagrams compiled from the inspectors' reports appear among the
+appendices.
+
+Then follows an interesting description of surface artesian water
+known as Elizabeth Springs, in latitude half a degree south of the
+tropic, and in 1403/4 degrees west longitude. The account of these
+remarkable springs is well worth reading.[f]
+
+ [Footnote f: See Votes and Proceedings for 1897 for Hydraulic
+ Engineer's Report, 2nd October, 1896, page 5.]
+
+
+PROGRESS TO 1896.
+
+Number of bores in Western Queensland to October, 1896, 454; average
+depth, 1,168 ft.; feet bored, 530,332 (nearly 100 miles); overflow,
+193,000,000 gallons per diem. There were also nineteen deep bores on
+the coast. The total cost had been L928,081.
+
+
+BORES IN THE GULF TOWNS.
+
+Reporting on 2nd August, 1897, the Hydraulic Engineer mentions that
+the Burketown bore has been carried to a depth of 2,304 ft., with a
+supply of 155,560 gallons of good water at a pressure of 60 lb. per
+square inch, and a temperature of 155 degrees, the cost being L4,155.
+A few months earlier the Normanton bore had struck water at 2,330 ft.,
+for 293,000 gallons a day, with a temperature of 151 degrees, at a
+total cost of L3,803.
+
+
+PROGRESS COMPARED WITH SOUTHERN COLONIES.
+
+The same report glances at the progress made in artesian water
+discovery in the southern colonies. Queensland aggregate flows on
+30th June, 1897, were estimated at 140,000,000 gallons daily, or
+51,135,000,000 gallons annually. This would suffice to cover 294
+square miles with water 1 ft. deep, or 100 square miles 35-1/3 in.
+deep. In New South Wales, in 1897, there were thirty-four flowing and
+twelve pumping bores, yielding 221/2 million gallons of water per diem.
+In Victoria only one or two flowing bores had been put down, the
+country being generally unfavourable for artesian water. In South
+Australia there were in all sixty-two bores, seven being still in
+progress, but of the total only nineteen wells gave good fresh
+water, and twenty-two wells salt water. Seeing that artesian water
+exploration began in the three colonies named before any steps were
+taken in Queensland, the success here may be regarded as phenomenal,
+although of course a very considerable amount of capital was lost in
+sinking abortive bores.
+
+
+GRAZING FARM SELECTORS' BORE.
+
+The report dated 15th September, 1898, mentions that the Bando bore
+sunk for the Lands Department for the accommodation of grazing farm
+selectors was completed during the year at a depth of 2,081 ft.,
+giving a supply of 2,000,000 gallons daily, and at a cost of L3,289.
+It was estimated to water 146,000 acres. The Roma bore for the town
+supply had also been completed at a depth of 1,678 ft., and yielded
+a controlled supply of 111,000 gallons daily, which sufficed for the
+wants of the town.
+
+
+STATISTICS TO DATE.--THARGOMINDAH ILLUMINATED.
+
+Particulars of thirty-seven bores sunk in the colony to a depth of
+3,000 ft. and over are given. Of these eleven had reported flows,
+either large or small, during the year, three had been abandoned, and
+nine were still in progress. The yield of 376 bores in the colony was
+estimated at 214,000,000 gallons a day, the average per bore being
+over half a million gallons. Besides these, fifty-five sub-artesian
+wells--those whose water did not rise above the surface--yielded
+21/2 million gallons a day; and perennial springs gave an ascertained
+continuous flow of nearly 4,000,000 gallons a day. The report calls
+attention to a serious diminution in the yield of certain wells, and
+says that it has been ascertained in some cases that the loss was due
+to loss of head, and not to any leakage or obstruction in the casing.
+The Hydraulic Engineer therefore again urges legislation to give the
+Government control of bore water. As to power, it is mentioned that a
+small electrical installation had been set up at Thargomindah by
+the Bulloo Divisional Board, and that the number of lamps of sixteen
+candle-power that would exhaust the bore power was 150 to 200.
+
+
+THE DROUGHT OF 1899.
+
+When the report dated 30th August, 1899, was prepared the country was
+held in the throes of a protracted drought, and the Hydraulic Engineer
+speaks of compression in his report on the ground of economy.
+For years past the reports had been becoming increasingly bulky,
+appendices and maps being supplied on a generous scale. Government
+expenditure in bore-sinking had now nearly ceased, presumably because
+private enterprise had already benefited greatly by Government
+prospecting for water, and the same necessity did not exist for State
+action as in previous years. The new feature of the departmental
+year's work is stated to have been the comparative analysis of the
+height of bore sites and the water potentials thereat, upon which the
+iso-potential map, with the full description given in page 56 of the
+report, is based. By this time the number of bores sunk to a depth of
+3,000 ft. and over was fifty, an increase for the year of thirteen,
+which shows that private enterprise was still active in the search for
+artesian water. The total number of flowing bores in the colony was
+given as 440, with a yield of water of nearly 2661/2 million gallons
+a day.
+
+The report dated 25th August, 1900, mentions that during the year in
+the Adavale bore 9,000 gallons of water a day had been struck at 1,494
+ft., and although further sinking had been carried to 2,930 ft. there
+was no increase in the supply. By this time the number of bores sunk
+to 3,000 ft. and over had increased by nine, or to fifty-nine, while
+the aggregate flow of artesian water was put at over 3211/2 million
+gallons per day.
+
+
+REGRETTABLE ECONOMIES.
+
+The report dated 31st August, 1901, was the last to supply the very
+full information customarily given annually by the department. There
+was almost universal drought and difficulty. In some parts of the
+State, however, the drought had broken, so that needful works could be
+again pushed on. But this was by no means the end of the great drought
+of 1898-1903, and the appendices and valuable maps which added so
+greatly to the permanent value of the reports of the department were
+discontinued, and only a brief report was presented. This is much to
+be regretted, but retrenchment was enforced by revenue shrinkages and
+the dislocation temporarily caused by federal union. Happily, however,
+the information has since been carefully collected, and is now
+available to complete this sketch of the work done and results
+achieved since the year 1883, when the department was created under
+Mr. Henderson's direction. In the 1901 report the success of the
+Adavale bore is recorded, the depth being 3,398 ft., with a flow of
+990,890 gallons per day, and at a total cost of L5,369. The striking
+of a supply of water in the Dalby bore to the amount of 46,470 gallons
+an hour at a depth of 1,841 ft. is also mentioned in this report.
+This success is interesting on account of the site being the furthest
+easterly where artesian water has been found.
+
+The report for 1902 was cut down to the minimum limit. It was prepared
+while the country was in the grip of the worst drought ever known,
+and yet private enterprise was active as ever in bore-sinking, no less
+than thirty-six flowing wells having been completed during the year.
+The total number in the State was thus brought up to 563, yielding
+375,000,000 gallons a day, the average flow per bore being 666,231
+gallons.
+
+
+ADDITIONAL FLOWING BORES IN 1903.
+
+The report for 1903 was brief. During the year the number of flowing
+bores had increased by thirteen, and the aggregate flow by 10,000,000
+gallons. The average flow was 669,279 gallons, or 3,048 gallons
+increase upon the flow for the preceding year. This in the face of
+the diminution of the flow in many bores cannot be considered
+unsatisfactory. The entire cost of well-boring in the State to 1903 is
+set down at L1,463,326, including abortive bores, and heavy sums for
+carriage of boring plant in the earlier days. It is mentioned in this
+report that the Whitewood bore, Bimerah, yielding only 70,000
+gallons a day, at 5,045 ft., is still the deepest in Queensland. The
+shallowest is given as at Manfred Downs, at 10 ft., yielding 2,000
+gallons a day; and the hottest water at Elderslie No. 2, where from a
+depth of 4,523 ft. emerge more than 11/2 million gallons per diem at
+a temperature only 10 degrees below boiling point. The greatest static
+pressure is at the Thargomindah bore, where it is nearly 240 lb. to
+the square inch.
+
+
+LATER INFORMATION.
+
+Since 1902 until this year annual reports at length have not been
+furnished by the Hydraulic Engineer; but this year the work has been
+resumed, and advance information supplied in a condensed form.
+
+In the foregoing epitome of the Hydraulic Engineer's reports extending
+over twenty-five years, no particular mention has been made of the
+failures inevitable when either the Government or private persons
+were engaged in deep boring for water exploration. The following
+particulars show some of the obstacles encountered in tapping the
+subterranean springs of our arid western country:--
+
+In his report for 1902 the Hydraulic Engineer mentioned that a
+contract had been entered into with Mr. W. Woodley for the sinking of
+a bore at Eromanga to a depth of 2,000 ft. for the sum of L1,438, but
+that work could not be prosecuted in consequence of the prevailing
+drought in the West. The contract depth was reached on 29th August,
+1903, without finding water. A further contract to carry the bore to
+3,000 ft. was subsequently entered into, and on 30th June, 1904, at
+a depth of 2,612 ft., the work was suspended until the arrival of
+casing, which was delayed by rain. It was not until November, 1904,
+that the casings reached the bore site, and that work could be
+resumed. A suspension of work occurred on 4th March following for want
+of a competent driller. Boring was resumed in August and continued
+till March, 1906, without success. The only water tapped up to that
+time was a supply of 10,000 gallons per diem at a depth of 1,640 ft.
+The casings were allowed to remain in the bore, the gross cost of
+which had been L4,480. In May, 1906, a new contract with Mr. Woodley,
+for sinking another bore to a depth of 3,000 ft., was entered into. At
+1,660 ft. a supply of 12,000 gallons a day was tapped; but, this being
+considered insufficient, another contract for deepening the bore to
+3,500 ft. was entered into with Mr. Woodley, the additional cost being
+L1,000. On 9th March, 1908, the depth of 3,500 ft. was reached without
+any additional supply. Then a contract for sinking a further 500 ft.
+was entered into. At 3,980 ft. a small flow was tapped which dribbled
+over the surface, and the 4,000 ft. depth being reached arrangements
+were made for sinking another 100 ft. At 4,050 ft. a small flow of 110
+gallons per hour was struck. At 4,135 ft. the flow increased to 250
+gallons per hour. Delays occurred after this, until January, 1909,
+when boring was resumed, and at 4,270 ft. a flow of 306,234 gallons
+per diem was struck. The water was then brought under control,
+and found to have a pressure of 219 lb. per square inch, with a
+temperature of 198 degrees F. The water was fresh and drinkable,
+though having a slightly gaseous taste; but this was not noticeable
+after it had stood exposed to the air for a little time. On completion
+of the surface fittings the discharge was measured, and the flow
+ascertained to be 256,825 gallons per diem. The cost had not been
+adjusted at the date of our information, but it will be understood
+that a work extending over five years, and then yielding a
+comparatively small supply, makes bore-sinking a highly speculative
+industry, even in what the geologists declare to be artesian
+water-bearing country.
+
+[Illustration: COOKTOWN AND ENDEAVOUR RIVER, NORTH QUEENSLAND]
+
+[Illustration: PEARLING FLEETS OFF BADU ISLAND, TORRES STRAIT]
+
+At the Kynuna bore, work had been suspended at the time of the last
+annual report at a depth of 2,221 ft., the flow being 807,608 gallons
+a day. When cased to the bottom the flow was 880,154 gallons per day.
+It was handed over to the Winton Shire Council, the total cost having
+been L2,610, half of which was granted as a loan to the council by the
+Government, and the other half as a free gift.
+
+Another unsuccessful bore was at Windorah, where, under contract, a
+depth of 4,000 ft. was reached, with no water save an insignificant
+spring touched at 103 ft. below the surface. The total cost, including
+casing and supervision, was L7,508.
+
+A bore at the joint expense of the Booringa Shire Council and the
+Government was started at Mitchell in January, 1908, and on 18th May,
+at a depth of 1,405 ft., the work was stopped, the supply, equal to
+205,000 gallons a day, being considered sufficient. The cost of the
+bore was L1,935.
+
+
+SUMMARY BY THE HYDRAULIC ENGINEER.
+
+Summarising the information supplied in the accompanying tables, Mr.
+Henderson writes:--"The total continuous yield from 716 bores--the
+flows from which have been estimated by various persons, not connected
+with the department, and communicated to me either directly or through
+the public prints, for the accuracy of which I cannot vouch, and
+measured under the hydraulic survey which was suspended in 1899 and
+not yet resumed--is now estimated at 479,268,000 gallons per diem;
+hence the average flow per bore is 669,369 gallons in the same time.
+
+"These figures do not include the flows from nine sub-artesian wells
+the flow from which is artificially produced by cutting down the
+outlet, but which it is understood have since ceased to flow, nor do
+they include the yield from 215 sub-artesian wells which are pumped
+more or less regularly during periods of drought, and which are
+estimated to yield 8,600,000 gallons per day, or an average of 40,000
+gallons per well if pumped continuously night and day; but as it is
+impossible to form a trustworthy estimate of the daily volume raised
+I have put it down at what I think is approximately true--namely,
+1,720,000 gallons.
+
+"I may also mention that owing to the suspension of the departmental
+hydraulic survey previously mentioned, I have obtained no official
+data relating to perennial springs. The last data to hand are given in
+my summarised report for the year 1902."
+
+
+WELLS SUCCESSFUL AND ABANDONED.
+
+The following table shows the progress of boring and artesian supplies
+to end of 1908 [but it must be stated that only part of the data for
+the years 1907 and 1908 is to hand]:--
+
+ ----------------------------+----------+-----------+--------------+--------
+ | Artesian | Pumped | Progress |
+ Sunk by | Flows. | Supplies. | Abandoned or | Total.
+ | | | Uncertain. |
+ ----------------------------+----------+-----------+--------------+--------
+ [g] Government | 32 | 10 | 76 | 118
+ Local Governing Authorities | 16 | 0 | 24 | 40
+ Private Owners | 668 | 205 | 315 | 1,188
+ +----------+-----------+--------------+--------
+ Total to end of 1908 | 716 | 215 | 415 | 1,346
+ ----------------------------+----------+-----------+--------------+--------
+
+ [Footnote g: Pioneering bores sunk to explore and ascertain
+ the artesian possibilities of new country.]
+
+
+AGGREGATE MILEAGE BORED, AND AVERAGE FOR EACH WELL.
+
+For comparison with former years I may mention (writes Mr. Henderson)
+that the total aggregate number of feet bored in search of artesian
+water in Queensland up to end of 1908 is estimated, from the best
+information at hand, at 1,498,700 ft., equal to 283.84 miles. The
+average depth per bore is 1,113 ft. The total aggregate depth bored is
+as follows:--
+
+ -------------------------------+-----------+--------------------------------
+ Date | Miles. | Increase in Each Year.
+ -------------------------------+-----------+--------------------------------
+ Up to the end of October, 1894 | 82.75 |
+ " " " 1895 | 92.21 | 9.46 miles in twelve months
+ " " September, 1896 | 102.43 | 10.22 miles in eleven months
+ " " June, 1897 | 111.02 | 8.59 miles in nine months
+ " " " 1898 | [h]135.85 | [h]24.83 miles in twelve months
+ " " " 1899 | 159.61 | 23.76 miles in twelve months
+ " " " 1900 | [i]184.98 | [i]25.37 miles in twelve months
+ " " " 1901 | 202.01 | 17.03 miles in twelve months
+ " " " 1902 | 215.04 | 13.03 miles in twelve months
+ " " " 1903 | 221.87 | 6.83 miles in twelve months
+ " " " 1904 | 225.04 | 3.17 miles in twelve months
+ " " " 1905 | 229.53 | 4.49 miles in twelve months
+ " " " 1906 | 236.41 | 6.88 miles in twelve months
+ " " " 1907 | [j]273.66 | [j]37.25 miles in twelve months
+ " " December, 1907 | [k]276.50 | [k] 2.84 miles in six months
+ " " " 1908 | [k]283.84 | [k] 7.34 miles in twelve months
+ -------------------------------+-----------+--------------------------------
+
+ [Footnote h: This includes a considerable number of old bores
+ discovered and added to the 1898 year's list.]
+
+ [Footnote i: This includes thirty-four sub-artesian wells
+ and bores in the Dalby district, representing an aggregate of
+ 3,500 ft.]
+
+ [Footnote j: Data collected by Police Department at the
+ beginning of 1907, which include a number of old bores not
+ previously heard of.]
+
+ [Footnote k: Only a small part of data to hand, which was
+ chiefly compiled from newspaper reports. It is a fact well
+ known to this Department that never before was there in any
+ year so much boring done as during the years 1907 and 1908.]
+
+
+FLOWING ARTESIAN BORES--1908.
+
+ Number of artesian flows of various magnitudes to end of 1908:--
+
+ Under 10,000 gallons per day 49
+ From 10,001 to 150,000 gallons per day 151
+ " 150,001 to 750,000 " " " 296
+ " 750,001 to 1,500,000 " " " 129
+ " 1,500,001 to 2,500,000 " " " 57
+ Exceptional flows of over 2,500,000 gallons per day 34
+ ----
+ Total flowing bores 716
+
+The continuous yield of water is estimated at 479,268,000 gallons per
+diem, equal to 1,763.22 acre feet, or 2.755 square miles of water 1
+ft. deep, in the same time.
+
+The average flow of the 716 bores is thus 669,369 gallons per day, and
+their average depth is 1,575 ft.
+
+The estimated value of 1,346 borings is L1,873,375.
+
+
+ARTESIAN WELLS OVER 3,000 FEET DEEP.
+
+The following is a list, compiled from the latest available
+information, of the Artesian Wells of the State over 3,000 ft. deep,
+in order of their depth:--
+
+ ---------------------------+------------------+-------+---------------
+ Name of Bore. | Date of | Depth.| Date of
+ | | | Completion or
+ | Commencement. | | Suspension.
+ ---------------------------+------------------+-------+---------------
+ | | Feet. |
+ 1. Bimerah Run, No. 3, | 11 Aug, 1898 | 5,045 | June, 1900
+ Whitewood | | |
+ 2. Bimerah Run, No. 1, | May, 1895 | 4,860 | July, 1897
+ Bothwell | | |
+ 3. Elderslie Run, No. 2, | April, 1900 | 4,523 | Sept., 1902
+ Cathedral | | |
+ 4. Ruthven Run, No. 1 | 1 Aug., 1905 | 4,515 | April, 1908
+ 5. Ayrshire Downs Run, | Jan., 1895 | 4,438 | Sept., 1897
+ No. 1 | | |
+ 6. Warbreccan Run | Jan., 1894 | 4,333 | 22 April, 1898
+ 7. Manuka Run, No. 1 | Aug., 1896 | 4,310 | April, 1898
+ 8. Bimerah Run, No. 2, | Oct., 1897 | 4,310 | Jan., 1900
+ Munjerie | | |
+ 9. Eromanga (Government) | 16 July, 1906 | 4,270 | Jan., 1909
+ 10. Rockwood Run, No. 1, | 15 Dec., 1891 | 4,220 | 15 July, 1897
+ Glenariffe | | |
+ 11. Albilbah Run, No. 1, | 1 July, 1889 | 4,205 | Sept., 1902
+ Cable End | | |
+ 12. Ruthven Run, No. 1 | 1 Aug., 1903 | 4,105 | 22 June, 1905
+ 13. Lorne, No. 1 | ... | 4,057 | In Progress
+ 14. Minnie Downs Run | 11 May, 1899 | 4,040 | 30 April, 1902
+ 15. Malboona, Manuka | 18 Feb., 1899 | 4,032 | 7 June, 1900
+ Resumption | | |
+ 16. Winton (Government) | 16 July, 1889 | 4,010 | 25 June, 1895
+ 17. Darr River Downs Run, | | |
+ No. 4, Overnewton | Feb., 1892 | 4,006 | 28 Mar., 1894
+ 18. Thornleigh (Kargoolnah | May, 1901 | 4,003 | 15 Sept., 1902
+ Shire) | | |
+ 19. Windorah (Government) | 1 July, 1902[l]| 4,001 | 24 May, 1905
+ 20. Vindex Run, No. 2 | Oct., 1898 | 4,000 | June, 1900
+ 21. Ayrshire Downs Run, | Sept., 1899 | 3,983 | Sept., 1902
+ No. 3 | | |
+ 22. Katandra and | | |
+ Stamfordham Runs, No. 1 | 8 Oct., 1892 | 3,980 | -- 1896
+ 23. Evesham, No. 1 | ... | 3,970 | In Progress
+ 24. Malvern Hills Run, | 1 July, 1890[m]| 3,942 | 10 May, 1894
+ Gowan | | |
+ 25. Darr River Downs Run, | | |
+ No. 2, Fairlie | 1 Nov., 1899 | 3,890 | May, 1891
+ 26. Talleyrand, Camoola | ... | 3,870 | -- 1898
+ District | | |
+ 27. Burenda Run, No. 3, | | |
+ Gidyea Creek | 16 Oct., 1895 | 3,840 | Sept., 1898
+ 28. Oondooroo Run | Jan., 1900 | 3,800 | 1 April, 1901
+ 29. Mount Abundance, No. 2 | -- 1907 | ... | -- 1908
+ 30. Albilbah Run, No. 2, | 21 Dec., 1889 | 3,800 | -- 1893
+ Jackson's | | |
+ 31. Greendale, No. 1 | ... [n] | 3,799 | In Progress
+ 32. Vindex Run, No. 3 | 24 July, 1901 | 3,795 | 6 Sept., 1902
+ 33. Muckadilla (Government)| 21 Oct., 1889 | 3,762 | 24 Dec., 1898
+ 34. Redcliffe Run, | Jan., 1893 | 3,750 | 20 Mar., 1895
+ Redcliffe | | |
+ 35. Clio G. F., Ayrshire | | |
+ Downs Resumption | -- 1901 | 3,745 | April, 1902
+ 36. Katandra and | | |
+ Stamfordham Runs, No. 2 | ... | 3,723 | -- 1896
+ 37. Ayrshire Downs Run, | 11 April, 1898 | 3,721 | Sept., 1899
+ No. 2 | | |
+ 38. Roma Town, No. 2 | 28 June, 1899 | 3,710 | 17 Oct., 1900
+ 39. Nive Downs Run, No. 2, | | |
+ The Ironbarks | 1 Jan., 1893 | 3,710 | 5 Sept., 1894
+ 40. Roma Mineral Oil | -- 1907[o]| 3,702 | Dec., 1908
+ Company | | |
+ 41. Wellshot Run, No. 4 | Sept., 1901 | 3,698 | -- 1902
+ 42. Elderslie Run, No. 3 | Mar., 1900 | 3,680 | 18 May, 1901
+ 43. Kensington Downs Run | -- 1897 | 3,650 | June, 1898
+ 44. Wyora, Winton District | 23 May, 1899 | 3,650 | 12 Mar., 1900
+ 45. Darr River Downs Run, | Jan., 1890 | 3,650 | Aug., 1891
+ No. 3 | | |
+ 46. Darr River Downs Run, | | |
+ No. 1, Nine-mile | 23 Dec., 1888 | 3,600 | Mar., 1899
+ 47. Longreach Town, Aramac | April, 1897 | 3,590 | 10 Dec., 1897
+ Shire | | |
+ 48. Noondoo Run, No. 2, | Nov., 1897 | 3,586 | July, 1899
+ Dareel | | |
+ 49. Manuka Run, No. 2 | Feb., 1899 | 3,581 | June, 1901
+ 50. Fairbairn, Dagworth | -- 1900 | 3,579 | Sept., 1900
+ Resumption | | |
+ 51. Wellshot Run, No. 3, | 27 Oct., 1894 | 3,561 | 17 June, 1895
+ Totness | | |
+ 52. Barcaldine Downs Run, | | |
+ No. 1, Twenty-mil e| -- 1889 | 3,533 | 21 Jan., 1896
+ 53. Lansdowne Run, No. 3, | Oct., 1894 | 3,529 | Jan., 1896
+ Downfall | | |
+ 54. Jericho (Government) | Mar., 1902 | 3,518 | 15 June, 1903
+ 55. Lerida Run, No. 1 | Sept., 1897 |?3,511 | 16 July, 1898
+ 56. Katandra and | | |
+ Stamfordham Runs, No. 4 | ... [p]| 3,510 | -- 1907
+ 57. Wellshot Run, No. 1, | 16 Nov., 1892 | 3,504 | 2 Nov., 1893
+ Bradnich | | |
+ 58. Elderslie Run, No. 1, | Oct., 1896 | 3,500 | July, 1898
+ Farewell | | |
+ 59. Lerida Run, No. 2, | 12 July, 1898 | 3,500 | 3 Mar., 1900
+ Glenullen | | |
+ 60. Westlands Run, No. 2, | 18 April, 1893 | 3,480 | 13 May, 1896
+ Buffalo | | |
+ 61. Acacia Downs G. F., | Feb., 1897 | 3,480 | 20 July, 1897
+ Bowen Downs | | |
+ 62. Hamilton Downs Run, | | |
+ No. 2, Campsie | July, 1898 | 3,457 | Jan., 1900
+ 63. Tintinchilla Run, Milo | Before 1895 | 3,411 | Mar., 1895
+ 64. Dagworth Run, No. 2, | April, 1898 | 3,400 | Dec., 1898
+ Pinnacle | | |
+ 65. Adavale Town | 27 Dec., 1899 | 3,398 | 8 Nov., 1900
+ (Government) | | |
+ 66. Westbury, Camoola | ... | 3,340 | -- 1900
+ District | | |
+ 67. Dagworth Run, No. 1, | | |
+ Crescent Creek | April, 1892 | 3,335 | July, 1893
+ 68. Arabella Run | 13 April, 1896 | 3,335 | 16 May, 1897
+ 69. Jacondol G. F., , | | |
+ Campbell's Barcaldine | Mar., 1895 | 3,333 | -- 1905
+ 70. Thomson Watershed | Aug., 1891 | 3,319 | July, 1893
+ (Government) | | |
+ 71. Burenda Run, No. 2, | Nov., 1894 | 3,315 | 14 Sept., 1895
+ Burenda | | |
+ 72. Bowen Downs Run, | | |
+ No. 4, Muttaburra road | Aug., 1891 | 3,308 | Oct., 1894
+ 73. Hamilton Downs Run, | ... | 3,301 | April, 1895
+ No. 1, Clio | | |
+ 74. Noorindoo Run, No. 1 | Mar., 1901 | 3,300 | -- 1904
+ 75. Cooinda, Winton North | 7 June, 1898 | 3,298 | 20 Jan., 1899
+ District | | |
+ 76. Portland Downs Run | 14 Aug., 1897 | 3,280 | 14 June, 1899
+ 77. Chatsworth Run, No. 1 | ? 1894 | 3,266 | 5 Feb., 1895
+ 78. Sesbania Run, No. 2 | May, 1898 | 3,252 | 19 Sept., 1898
+ 79. Alice Downs Run, |11 April, 1898 | 3,248 | Dec., 1898
+ No. 2, Norwood | | |
+ 80. Mount Cornish Run, | ... | 3,219 | 4 June, 1907
+ No. 2 | | |
+ 81. Sesbania Run, No. 5 | 5 June, 1901 | 3,186 | Mar., 1902
+ 82. Sesbania Run, No. 6 | ... | 3,179 | -- Aug., 1909
+ 83. Terrick Terrick Run, | -- 1907[q]| 3,140 | -- 1908
+ Lorne | | |
+ 84. Sesbania Run, No. 4 | Feb., 1899 | 3,103 | Jan., 1900
+ 85. Noorindoo Run, No. 2 | Feb., 1903 | 3,103 | 2 April, 1904
+ 86. Noondoo Run, Narine | -- 1896 | 3,098 | Nov., 1897
+ 87. Birkhead Run, No. 1, | 29 June, 1898 | 3,095 | -- 1906
+ Macfarlane | | |
+ 88. Authoringa and | 1 Jan., 1896 | 3,086 | June, 1898
+ Riversleigh Runs, | | |
+ No. 2, Rocky | | |
+ 89. Llanrheidol Run, No. 2,| June, 1896 | 3,085 | 3 April, 1897
+ Acacia | | |
+ 90. Hughenden M. C. | 3 Jan., 1894 | 3,069 | July, 1898
+ Town Bore | | |
+ 91. Muttaburra District, | ? 1895 | 3,065 | April, 1895
+ Brookwood | | |
+ 92. Authoringa, No. 3, | Aug., 1898 | 3,060 | -- 1899
+ Spinifex | | |
+ 93. Muttaburra District, | | |
+ Weewondilla | ... | 3,060 | Dec., 1903
+ 94. Albion Downs Run | Oct., 1897 | 3,033 | Sept., 1899
+ 95. Muttaburra District, | -- 1906 | 3,030 | 27 July, 1908
+ Crossmoor | | |
+ 96. Barcaldine North | | |
+ District, Fairview | ... | 3,028 | 20 July, 1907
+ 97. Myall Plains, Boombah | Feb., 1907 | 3,024 | Dec., 1908
+ 98. Lansdowne, No. 2, | Nov., 1889 | 3,005 | Feb., 1892
+ Narambla | | |
+ 99. Yarrawonga Run, Ada | ... | 3,000 | June, 1898
+ 100. Tarra Grazing Farm, | ... | 3,000 | -- 1906
+ No. 4 | | |
+ ---------------------------+------------------+-------+---------------
+
+ [Footnote l: Abandoned or suspended at 4,001 feet.]
+
+ [Footnote m: Abandoned at 3,942 feet.]
+
+ [Footnote n: In progress at 3,799 feet.]
+
+ [Footnote o: In progress at 3,702 feet.]
+
+ [Footnote p: Abandoned or suspended at 3,510 feet.]
+
+ [Footnote q: In progress at 3,140 feet.]
+
+The hydraulic survey, suspended some years ago, has not yet been
+resumed; therefore the foregoing return, furnished by the Hydraulic
+Engineer in advance of his report, has been compiled from unofficial
+documents which have not yet been verified, and is given for what it
+is worth.
+
+
+STATISTICS SUPPLIED BY WELL-BORING COMPANIES.
+
+In order to make the record of artesian boring in Queensland as
+complete as possible, the following information has been obtained from
+the two principal drilling firms at present engaged in the State.
+It will be noticed that the list of the Intercolonial Boring Company
+includes three bores in South Australia:--
+
+LIST OF BORES OVER 3,000 FEET IN DEPTH PUT DOWN BY INTERCOLONIAL
+BORING COMPANY, LIMITED.
+
+ Depth.
+ Name of Bore. Feet. Date Completed.
+
+ Ayrshire Downs, No. 3 3,983 September, 1902
+ Brookwood, No. 1 3,065 May, 1895
+ Boombah, No. 1 3,024 December, 1908
+ Chatsworth, No. 1 3,266 February, 1895
+ Cooindah, No. 1 3,289 January, 1899
+ Dagworth, No. 1 3,335 July, 1893
+ Dagworth, No. 2 3,400 December, 1898
+ Dareel, No. 1 3,586 July, 1899
+ Elderslie, No. 3 3,626 May, 1901
+ Evesham, No. 1 3,970 In progress
+ Fairview, No. 2 3,028 July, 1907
+ Greendale, No. 1 3,799 In progress
+ Goyder's Lagoon, S.A. 4,850 March, 1905
+ Hamilton Downs, No. 1 3,301 April, 1895
+ Hamilton Downs, No. 2 3,457 January, 1900
+ Kynuna, No. 7 3,226 December, 1908
+ Lerida, No. 1 3,511 July, 1898
+ Lerida, No. 2 3,500 March, 1900
+ Llanrheidol, No. 2 3,085 April, 1897
+ Lorne, No. 1 4,057 In progress
+ Manuka, No. 2 3,581 June, 1901
+ Mungeranie, S.A. 3,360 February, 1900
+ Mulka, S.A. 3,445 December, 1906
+ Mount Cornish, Tablederry 3,219 June, 1907
+ Mount Cornish, No. 3 3,015 June, 1909
+ Narine, No. 1 3,098 November, 1897
+ Ruthven, No. 1 4,105 June, 1905
+ Ruthven, No. 2 4,515 April, 1908
+ Roma Mineral Oil 3,715 In progress
+ Sesbania, No. 2 3,252 September, 1898
+ Sesbania, No. 4 3,103 January, 1900
+ Sesbania, No. 5 3,186 March, 1902
+ Sesbania, No. 6 3,179 August, 1909
+ Vindex, No. 2 4,000 June, 1900
+ Vindex, No. 3 3,795 September, 1902
+ Warbreccan, No. 1 4,333 June, 1898
+ Winton (deepened) 4,010 June, 1895
+ Wyora, No. 1 3,600 March, 1900
+
+Note.--Bores marked S.A. are in South Australia.
+
+Brisbane, 1st October, 1909.
+
+
+BORES COMPLETED AND IN PROGRESS BY WOODLEY LIMITED, BRISBANE, SINCE
+31ST MARCH, 1909.
+
+ 1. Bore at Millie Station, near Charleville, D. McNeill owner.
+ Depth, 1,732 ft.; water 8 in. over casing; flow 3/4-million
+ gallons per diem.
+
+ 2. At Claverton Downs, near Wyandra, Mrs. Whitney owner.
+ Depth, 1,955 ft.; water 22 in. over casing; flow about 11/2
+ million gallons.
+
+ 3. At Bendena Station, Burgess and Co. owners. Depth, 2,232
+ ft.; water 4 ft. 6 in. over casing; flow about 31/2 million
+ gallons.
+
+ 4. At Bonus Downs Station, Mitchell, Sir S. McCaughey owner.
+ Depth, 3,424 ft. 6 in.; water rising to 60 ft. below surface;
+ boring ceased in slate formation.
+
+ 5. At Eurella Station, Donald Fletcher owner. Depth at end
+ of September, 2,124 ft., still in progress; water rising to
+ within 150 ft. of the surface.
+
+ 6. At Clifton Station, C. H. T. Schmidt owner. Depth, 26th
+ June, 225 ft.; in progress.
+
+ 7. At Koreelah Station, Charleville. Depth at end of June, 400
+ ft.; in progress.
+
+ 8. At Comongin Station, Bulloo, McLean, Barker, and Co.
+ owners. Depth on 30th June, 600 ft.; in progress.
+
+ 9. At Aberglassie Station, J. R. and H. C. Loughran owners.
+ Starting.
+
+ 10. At Cytherea Station, R. T. Winter owner. Starting.
+
+ 11. At Airlie Downs, A. Leeds owner. Starting.
+
+
+
+
+APPENDIX J.
+
+CLIMATIC CONTRASTS.
+
+COMPARATIVE VITAL STATISTICS.
+
+
+Vital statistics are set forth by the various Government Statists
+of Australia with extreme particularity. But it is not easy to make
+comparative analyses for the purpose of ascertaining the birth rates,
+marriage rates, or death rates in the different States of Australia.
+The birth rates per 1,000 of the population give no accurate bases for
+comparison. They supply only what the statists call the crude birth
+rate. The information necessary to ascertain true comparative birth
+rates involves knowledge of the number of women of the different
+child-bearing ages in the several States; the proportion of marriages
+at different ages in each; the number of married women, their ages,
+and also the number of spinsters. Married women in their teens are
+more fertile than in their twenties, in their twenties than in
+their thirties, in their thirties than in their forties. So that to
+ascertain the true birth rate the comparative number of married or
+marriageable women in the contrasted countries must be ascertained.
+For example, if there were 20,000 married women in Queensland between
+twenty and thirty; and 60,000 married women of the same age in New
+South Wales; and if the number of births among those 20,000 and 60,000
+respectively were ascertained, the true birth rate among women of that
+age would be obtained. Similar remarks apply to the death rate. The
+comparison must be made between a given number of men or women of the
+same ages, and then the true comparative death rate per 1,000 of such
+persons will be ascertainable, but not otherwise.
+
+It is supposed in many parts of Australia that North Queensland is
+less salubrious than South Queensland, and that the Southern States
+are healthier than Queensland as a whole. The crude death rate does
+not give a basis for this assumption, because there are fewer old
+people and fewer young children per 1,000 of the population in
+sparsely peopled areas than in settled districts. The lightest average
+mortality is among persons between the ages of two and eighteen years;
+the greatest mortality among children under two years. Information
+is not procurable showing the number of persons in Queensland in age
+groups, this information being only obtainable in census years.
+
+The Queensland Government Statistician has furnished the accompanying
+table, based on the results of the censuses of 1891 and 1901, showing
+the relative salubrity of different parts of the Commonwealth in those
+two years for all the States save Western Australia; and it will be
+noticed that it differentiates also between children north and south
+of the Tropic of Capricorn in Queensland. These figures are valuable
+for comparative purposes.
+
+It will be noticed that among children under two years the rate of
+mortality north of the Tropic of Capricorn in 1891 was 74.85
+per 1,000, and in 1901 73.42 per 1,000. South of the tropic the
+corresponding figures were 70.33 and 64.97 per 1,000 respectively, the
+difference in favour of the south being 4.52 and 8.45 per 1,000. Of
+children under five years in the north the mortality was 39.44 and
+32.80 respectively; while south of the tropic it was 33.54 and 29.72
+respectively. Thus the difference in favour of the south was 5.90 and
+3.08 respectively. Above the age of five years the difference between
+north and south is rather more marked, but the comparison of
+these, for reasons analogous to those stated above with respect to
+comparative birth or death rates, is valueless.
+
+If we take the New South Wales figures, we find that as to children
+under two years the mortality in 1891 was 85.12, and in 1901 72.42 per
+1,000. Thus North Queensland compares very favourably with the parent
+State by 10.27 in 1891, and unfavourably in 1901 by only 1 per 1,000.
+With South Queensland the comparison shows a difference against New
+South Wales in 1891 of 14.79 per 1,000, and of 7.45 per 1,000 in 1901.
+As to children under five years the difference in favour of New South
+Wales in 1891, as against North Queensland, was only 0.16 per cent.,
+and in 1901 0.43 per 1,000; and as against South Queensland it was
+5.74 on the wrong side in 1891, and 2.65 in 1901. It is needless
+further to analyse the figures, but evidently the only States
+whose mortality among young children is more favourable than South
+Queensland are South Australia and Tasmania.
+
+Although these figures are official it may be wise to use them with
+reservation. The comparatively high mortality north of the Tropic of
+Capricorn is fully accounted for by the absence of the comforts of
+life in that newly settled area. In 1901 the mortality beyond the
+tropic was, for children under five years, almost the same as in
+New South Wales and Victoria. So that, so far as young children are
+concerned, we need not fear that the climate of Tropical Queensland
+will be found unfavourable to the British race.
+
+The death ratio of the population is somewhat higher in the tropics
+than in the South for each age group mentioned, and consequently of
+course for persons of all ages; this applies to both the years cited,
+1891 and 1901. These years have been selected as, being "Census"
+years, the numbers at each age can then be definitely determined. The
+mortality rate for 1901 showed a distinct improvement on that for 1891
+in all instances except with persons over five years of age in the
+South; as regards these the experience for 1901 was fractionally less
+satisfactory than in 1891.
+
+[Illustration: "QUEENSLAND and Territory of PAPUA 1909"]
+
+
+RETURN SHOWING THE POPULATION, NUMBER OF DEATHS, AND THE RATE OF
+MORTALITY AT CERTAIN AGES FOR THE YEARS 1891 AND 1901.
+
+ ----------------------------+----------------------------------------++
+ | 1891. ||
+ +--------------+-----------+-------------++
+ | Census | Number of | Ratio ||
+ ------ | Population. | Deaths. | per 1,000 ||
+ | | | of the ||
+ | | | Population. ||
+ ----------------------------+--------------+-----------+-------------++
+ QUEENSLAND-- | | | ||
+ | | | ||
+ NORTH OF THE TROPIC OF | | | ||
+ CAPRICORN-- | | | ||
+ | | | ||
+ Under 2 years | 6,426 | 481 | 74.85 ||
+ +--------------+-----------+-------------++
+ Under 5 years | 15,061 | 594 | 39.44 ||
+ Over 5 years | 93,925 | 1,088 | 11.58 ||
+ +--------------+-----------+-------------++
+ All ages | 108,986 | 1,682 | 15.43 ||
+ |==============|===========|=============||
+ | | | ||
+ SOUTH OF THE TROPIC OF | | | ||
+ CAPRICORN-- | | | ||
+ | | | ||
+ Under 2 years | 18,598 | 1,308 | 70.33 ||
+ +--------------+-----------+-------------++
+ Under 5 years | 45,264 | 1,518 | 33.54 ||
+ Over 5 years | 239,468 | 1,970 | 8.23 ||
+ +--------------+-----------+-------------++
+ All Ages | 284,732 | 3,488 | 12.25 ||
+ |==============|===========|=============||
+ | | | ||
+ WHOLE STATE-- | | | ||
+ | | | ||
+ Under 2 years | 25,024 | 1,789 | 71.49 ||
+ +--------------+-----------+-------------++
+ Under 5 years | 60,325 | 2,112 | 35.01 ||
+ Over 5 years | 333,393 | 3,058 | 9.17 ||
+ +--------------+-----------+-------------++
+ All Ages | 393,718 | 5,170 | 13.13 ||
+ ----------------------------+--------------+-----------+-------------++
+
+[cont.]
+ ----------------------------++----------------------------------------
+ || 1901.
+ ++--------------+-----------+-------------
+ || Census | Number of | Ratio
+ ------ || Population. | Deaths. | per 1,000
+ || | | of the
+ || | | Population.
+ ----------------------------++--------------+-----------+-------------
+ QUEENSLAND-- || | |
+ || | |
+ NORTH OF THE TROPIC OF || | |
+ CAPRICORN-- || | |
+ || | |
+ Under 2 years || 6,933 | 509 | 73.42
+ ++--------------+-----------+-------------
+ Under 5 years || 17,166 | 563 | 32.80
+ Over 5 years || 132,466 | 1,448 | 10.93
+ ++--------------+-----------+-------------
+ All ages || 149,632 | 2,011 | 13.44
+ ||==============|===========|=============
+ || | |
+ SOUTH OF THE TROPIC OF || | |
+ CAPRICORN-- || | |
+ || | |
+ Under 2 years || 18,454 | 1,199 | 64.97
+ ++--------------+-----------+-------------
+ Under 5 years || 45,460 | 1,351 | 29.72
+ Over 5 years || 308,174 | 2,645 | 8.58
+ ++--------------+-----------+-------------
+ All Ages || 353,634 | 3,996 | 11.30
+ ||==============|===========|=============
+ || | |
+ WHOLE STATE-- || | |
+ || | |
+ Under 2 years || 25,387 | 1,708 | 67.28
+ ++--------------+-----------+-------------
+ Under 5 years || 62,626 | 1,914 | 30.56
+ Over 5 years || 440,640 | 4,093 | 9.29
+ ++--------------+-----------+-------------
+ All Ages || 503,266 | 6,007 | 11.94
+ ----------------------------++--------------+-----------+-------------
+
+
+NOTE.--Death rates calculated on the estimated mean population of
+the two years mentioned above and published in the Reports on Vital
+Statistics were--
+
+ 1891 12.77
+ 1901 11.88
+
+The utilisation of Census figures in order to quote the age condition
+at the time is accountable for the slight difference in the total
+ratio.
+
+RETURN SHOWING THE POPULATION, NUMBER OF DEATHS, AND THE RATE OF
+MORTALITY AT CERTAIN AGES FOR THE YEARS 1891 AND 1901.--_continued:_
+
+ ----------------------------+----------------------------------------++
+ | 1891. ||
+ +--------------+-----------+-------------++
+ | Census | Number of | Ratio ||
+ ------ | Population. | Deaths. | per 1,000 ||
+ | | | of the ||
+ | | | Population. ||
+ ----------------------------+--------------+-----------+-------------++
+ NEW SOUTH WALES-- | | | ||
+ | | | ||
+ Under 2 years | 66,719 | 5,679 | 85.12 ||
+ +--------------+-----------+-------------++
+ Under 5 years | 165,750 | 6,510 | 39.28 ||
+ Over 5 years | 966,484 | 9,776 | 10.12 ||
+ +--------------+-----------+-------------++
+ All ages | 1,132,234 | 16,286 | 14.38 ||
+ |==============|===========|=============||
+ | | | ||
+ VICTORIA-- | | | ||
+ | | | ||
+ Under 2 years | 62,102 | 5,822 | 93.75 ||
+ +--------------+-----------+-------------++
+ Under 5 years | 148,359 | 6,518 | 43.93 ||
+ Over 5 years | 982,104 | 12,113 | 12.33 ||
+ +--------------+-----------+-------------++
+ All ages | 1,130,463 | 18,631 | 16.48 ||
+ |==============|===========|=============||
+ | | | ||
+ SOUTH AUSTRALIA-- | | | ||
+ | | | ||
+ Under 2 years | 17,875 | 1,180 | 66.01 ||
+ +--------------+-----------+-------------++
+ Under 5 years | 45,166 | 1,407 | 31.15 ||
+ Over 5 years | 270,367 | 2,804 | 10.37 ||
+ +--------------+-----------+-------------++
+ All ages | 315,533 | 4,211 | 13.35 ||
+ |==============|===========|=============||
+ | | | ||
+ TASMANIA-- | | | ||
+ | | | ||
+ Under 2 years | 8,414 | 524 | 62.28 ||
+ +--------------+-----------+-------------++
+ Under 5 years | 21,466 | 599 | 27.90 ||
+ Over 5 years | 125,201 | 1,635 | 13.06 ||
+ +--------------+-----------+-------------++
+ All ages | 146,667 | 2,234 | 15.23 ||
+ |==============|===========|=============||
+ | | | ||
+ WESTERN AUSTRALIA-- | | | ||
+ | | | ||
+ Under 2 years | ... | ... | ... ||
+ +--------------+-----------+-------------++
+ Under 5 years | 6,835 | 293 | 42.87 ||
+ Over 5 years | 42,947 | 576 | 13.41 ||
+ +--------------+-----------+-------------++
+ All ages | 49,782 | 869 | 17.46 ||
+ ----------------------------+--------------+-----------+-------------++
+
+ [cont.]
+ ----------------------------++---------------------------------------
+ || 1901.
+ ++--------------+-----------+------------
+ || Census | Number of | Ratio
+ ------ || Population. | Deaths. | per 1,000
+ || | | of the
+ || | | Population.
+ ----------------------------++--------------+-----------+------------
+ NEW SOUTH WALES-- || | |
+ || | |
+ Under 2 years || 64,376 | 4,662 | 72.42
+ ++--------------+-----------+------------
+ Under 5 years || 159,146 | 5,151 | 32.37
+ Over 5 years || 1,199,987 | 10,870 | 9.06
+ ++--------------+-----------+------------
+ All ages || 1,359,133 | 16,021 | 11.79
+ ||==============|===========|============
+ || | |
+ VICTORIA-- || | |
+ || | |
+ Under 2 years || 54,669 | 3,817 | 69.82
+ ++--------------+-----------+------------
+ Under 5 years || 131,986 | 4,251 | 32.21
+ Over 5 years || 1,069,355 | 11,653 | 10.90
+ ++--------------+-----------+------------
+ All ages || 1,201,341 | 15,904 | 13.24
+ ||==============|===========|============
+ || | |
+ SOUTH AUSTRALIA-- || | |
+ || | |
+ Under 2 years || 15,988 | 1,059 | 66.24
+ ++--------------+-----------+------------
+ Under 5 years || 39,940 | 1,166 | 29.19
+ Over 5 years || 318,568 | 2,808 | 8.81
+ ++--------------+-----------+------------
+ All ages || 358,508 | 3,974 | 11.08
+ ||==============|===========|============
+ || | |
+ TASMANIA-- || | |
+ || | |
+ Under 2 years || 8,484 | 492 | 57.99
+ ++--------------+-----------+------------
+ Under 5 years || 20,865 | 531 | 25.45
+ Over 5 years || 151,610 | 1,283 | 8.46
+ ++--------------+-----------+------------
+ All ages || 172,475 | 1,814 | 10.52
+ ||==============|===========|============
+ || | |
+ WESTERN AUSTRALIA-- || | |
+ || | |
+ Under 2 years || 9,303 | 882 | 94.81
+ ++--------------+-----------+------------
+ Under 5 years || 20,675 | 957 | 46.29
+ Over 5 years || 163,449 | 1,562 | 9.56
+ ++--------------+-----------+------------
+ All ages || 184,124 | 2,519 | 13.68
+ ----------------------------++--------------+-----------+------------
+
+
+RAINFALL AND TEMPERATURE.
+
+The subjoined map shows the curves of equal mean annual rainfall
+for every 10.0 inches for Australia, compiled from the most recent
+information:--
+
+[Illustration: DISTRIBUTION OF THE RAINFALL OF THE COMMONWEALTH OF
+AUSTRALIA]
+
+The following table shows the relative rainfalls at the six Australian
+capital cities for the periods set severally against them; also for
+the ten-year period subsequent to 1896, during which the average
+precipitation was much below that of the total number of years over
+which the records extend:--
+
+ -----------------------------------------------------------------------
+ Ten Years'
+ Total Average Ten Years' Difference Difference Percentage
+ Place. Number Rainfall Average between for per Annum
+ of for all Rainfall. the Two. Ten Years. above or
+ Years. Years. below
+ True Mean.
+ -----------------------------------------------------------------------
+ Inches. Inches. Inches. Inches.
+
+ Brisbane 57 47.47 39.16 -8.31 83.10 -18
+ Sydney 67 48.80 44.28 -4.52 45.20 -9
+ Melbourne 63 26.35 25.50 -0.85 8.50 -3
+ Perth 31 33.03 32.54 -0.49 4.90 -1
+ Hobart 66 23.38 22.98 -0.40 4.00 -2
+ Adelaide 67 20.89 20.53 -0.36 3.60 -2
+ -----------------------------------------------------------------------
+
+The following table supplies similar information with respect to
+seventeen representative Queensland stations, from which it will be
+seen that the mean annual rainfall at Geraldton for twenty-one years
+was 145.27 inches, and for the ten years subsequent to 1896 135.81
+inches. Thus Geraldton is by far the wettest place in the State.
+The lightest mean rainfall for the same period was at Boulia, which
+recorded 11.45 inches; and for the ten years, 8.72 inches. The last
+column of the table shows that the fall for the ten years was under
+the average at every station mentioned, the shortage at Cooktown
+having been 28 per cent. each year of the ten. The number of wet days
+is not supplied, except for the capital cities. The driest part
+of Australia--that which receives a rainfall of 10.0 inches
+and under--comprises an area equalling nearly one-third of the
+Commonwealth, and includes the central Territory of South Australia,
+the extreme western parts of New South Wales, the south-western
+parts of Queensland, and the south-eastern, central, and part of the
+north-western portions of Western Australia. The limits of this dry
+area are shown by the 10.0-inch isohyetal line:--
+
+ ------------+------+----------+----------+----------+----------+----------
+ | | | | | |Ten Years'
+ |Total | Average |Ten Years'|Difference|Difference|Percentage
+ |Number| Rainfall | Average | between | for |per Annum
+ Place. |of | for | Rainfall.| the Two. |Ten Years.|above or
+ |Years.|all Years.| | | | below
+ | | | | | |True Mean.
+ ------------+------+----------+----------+----------+----------+----------
+ | | Inches. | Inches. | Inches. | Inches. |
+ | | | | | |
+ Cooktown | 29 | 68.96 | 49.91 | -19.05 | 190.50 | -28
+ | | | | | |
+ Geraldton | 21 | 145.27 | 135.81 | -9.46 | 94.60 | -7
+ | | | | | |
+ Brisbane | 57 | 47.47 | 39.16 | -8.31 | 83.10 | -18
+ | | | | | |
+ Mackay | 36 | 69.42 | 61.73 | -7.69 | 76.90 | -11
+ | | | | | |
+ Maryborough | 36 | 46.58 | 39.49 | -7.09 | 70.90 | -15
+ | | | | | |
+ Goondiwindi | 28 | 29.27 | 22.99 | -6.28 | 62.80 | -21
+ | | | | | |
+ Tambo | 21 | 22.87 | 18.08 | -4.79 | 47.90 | -21
+ | | | | | |
+ Bowen | 36 | 40.40 | 35.62 | -4.78 | 47.80 | -12
+ | | | | | |
+ Blackall | 27 | 22.59 | 17.92 | -4.67 | 46.70 | -21
+ | | | | | |
+ Charleville | 34 | 19.71 | 15.30 | -4.41 | 44.10 | -22
+ | | | | | |
+ Hughenden | 22 | 19.12 | 14.92 | -4.20 | 42.00 | -22
+ | | | | | |
+ Thursday | | | | | |
+ Island | 16 | 68.11 | 63.99 | -4.12 | 41.20 | -6
+ | | | | | |
+ Springsure | 30 | 26.25 | 22.54 | -3.71 | 37.10 | -14
+ | | | | | |
+ Boulia | 21 | 11.45 | 8.72 | -2.73 | 27.30 | -24
+ | | | | | |
+ Thargomindah| 25 | 12.53 | 10.03 | -2.50 | 25.00 | -20
+ | | | | | |
+ Cloncurry | 23 | 19.35 | 17.02 | -2.33 | 23.30 | -12
+ | | | | | |
+ Normanton | 35 | 37.11 | 35.26 | -1.85 | 18.50 | -5
+ ------------+------+----------+----------+----------+----------+----------
+
+The following table shows the distribution of the average rainfall
+from 10.0 inches and under to over 40.0 inches:--
+
+ -----------------+-----------+-----------+-----------+-----------+
+ Average Annual | | | | |
+ Rainfall. | N.S.W. | Victoria. |Queensland.| South |
+ | | | | Australia.|
+ -----------------+-----------+-----------+-----------+-----------+
+ | sqr. mls. | sqr. mls. | sqr. mls. | sqr. mls. |
+ | | | | |
+ Under 10 inches | 81,144 | nil | 135,600 | 306,663 |
+ 10-20 " | 116,363 | 36,300 | 255,300 | 57,935 |
+ 20-30 " | 77,910 | 27,900 | 173,400 | 13,908 |
+ 30-40 " | 20,414 | 18,770 | 58,700 | 1,198 |
+ Over 40 " | 14,541 | 4,914 | 47,500 | 366 |
+ +-----------+-----------+-----------+-----------+
+ Total Area | 310,372 | 87,884 | 670,500 | 380,070 |
+ -----------------+-----------+-----------+-----------+-----------+
+
+ [cont.]
+ -----------------+-----------+-----------+-----------+--------------
+ Average Annual | | | |
+ Rainfall. | Northern | Western | Tasmania.| Commonwealth.
+ | Territory.| Australia.| |
+ -----------------+-----------+-----------+-----------+--------------
+ | sqr. mls. | sqr. mls. | sqr. mls. | sqr. mls.
+ | | | |
+ Under 10 inches | 6,300 | 408,300 | nil | 938,007
+ 10-20 " | 213,430 | 400,720 | nil | 1,080,048
+ 20-30 " | 96,790 | 113,700 | 11,395 | 515,003
+ 30-40 " | 120,600 | 39,100 | 5,396 | 264,178
+ Over 40 " | 86,500 | 14,100 | 9,424 | 177,345
+ +-----------+-----------+-----------+--------------
+ Total Area | 523,620 | 975,920 | 26,215 | 2,974,581
+ -----------------+-----------+-----------+-----------+--------------
+
+
+The comparative rainfalls and temperatures at the respective State
+capitals, and at Canberra, the embryo Federal capital, are shown in
+the following table:--
+
+ ------------+-------+--------------------------------+
+ | | ANNUAL RAINFALL. |
+ Place. | Height+----------+----------+----------+
+ | above | | | |
+ | M.S.L.| | | |
+ | | Average. | Highest. | Lowest. |
+ ------------+-------+----------+----------+----------+
+ | Ft. | Ins. | Ins. | Ins. |
+ | | | | |
+ Perth | 197 | 33.05 | 46.73 | 20.48 |
+ Adelaide | 141 | 20.38 | 30.87 | 13.43 |
+ Brisbane | 137 | 50.00 | 88.23 | 24.11 |
+ Sydney | 144 | 49.35 | 82.81 | 23.01 |
+ Melbourne | 91 | 25.62 | 44.25 | 15.61 |
+ Hobart | 160 | 23.40 | 40.67 | 13.43 |
+ Canberra {| 2,000 |} | | |
+ (District) {| to |} 23.00 | 50.69 | 16.56 |
+ {| 2,900 |} | | |
+ ------------+-------+----------+----------+----------+
+
+ [cont.]
+ ------------+-------+-----------------------------------------------------
+ | | TEMPERATURE.
+ Place. | Height+--------+--------+--------+--------+--------+--------
+ | above | Mean | Mean |Highest | Lowest | Average| Average
+ | M.S.L.| Summer.| Winter.| on | on | Hottest| Coldest
+ | | | | Record.| Record.| Month. | Month.
+ ------------+-------+--------+--------+--------+--------+--------+--------
+ | Ft. | Fahr. | Fahr. | Fahr. | Fahr. | Fahr. | Fahr.
+ | | | | | | |
+ Perth | 197 | 73.9 | 55.6 | 112.0 | 33.6 | 75.1 | 54.6
+ Adelaide | 141 | 72.3 | 52.0 | 116.3 | 32.2 | 73.3 | 52.5
+ Brisbane | 137 | 76.0 | 60.0 | 108.9 | 36.1 | 77.3 | 58.0
+ Sydney | 144 | 70.8 | 53.9 | 108.5 | 35.9 | 71.5 | 52.3
+ Melbourne | 91 | 64.9 | 49.2 | 111.2 | 27.0 | 66.3 | 47.7
+ Hobart | 160 | 61.4 | 47.0 | 105.0 | 27.7 | 62.1 | 45.7
+ Canberra {| 2,000 |} | | | | |
+ (District) {| to |} 69.7 | 45.0 | 109.0 | 16.0 | 72.0 | 42.0
+ {| 2,900 |} | | | | |
+ ------------+-------+--------+--------+--------+--------+--------+--------
+
+The mean humidity at the several capitals is as follows:--Brisbane
+mean averages, 68.1; highest, 85; lowest, 47. Sydney mean averages,
+73, 90, 55. Melbourne mean averages, 72, 76, 67. Adelaide mean
+averages, 56, 84, 33. Perth mean averages, 63, 83, 45. Hobart mean
+averages, 72, 76, 67.
+
+
+
+
+APPENDIX K.--EDUCATION STATISTICS.
+
+
+I.--STATE PRIMARY EDUCATION (1907).
+
+ ----------------------------+------------+-----------------+-----------+
+ | Queensland.| New South Wales.| Victoria. |
+ ----------------------------+------------+-----------------+-----------+
+ | L s. d. | L s. d. | L s. d.|
+ Amount per head of estimated| | | |
+ population | 0 10 11 | 0 10 6 | 0 9 6 |
+ Amount per district scholar | 3 3 2 | 3 9 2 | 2 18 7 |
+ ----------------------------+------------+-----------------+-----------+
+
+
+II.--PRIVATE SCHOOLS (1908).
+
+ ------------------------+---------+---------+---------+---------+-------+
+ |Undenomi-|Church of| Roman |Lutheran.| Total.|
+ |national.| England.|Catholic.| | |
+ ------------------------+---------+---------+---------+---------+-------+
+ Number of schools | 86 | 8 | 61 | 2 | 157 |
+ Teachers--Male | 26 | 6 | 57 | 2 | 91 |
+ Female | 170 | 32 | 372 | | 574 |
+ Gross enrolment--Male | 786 | 236 | 4,883 | 29 | 5,934 |
+ Female | 1,386 | 344 | 6,400 | 34 | 8,164 |
+ Average daily attendance| | | | | |
+ --Male | 654 | 216 | 4,220 | 24 | 5,114 |
+ Female| 1,289 | 297 | 5,200 | 28 | 6,814 |
+ ------------------------+---------+---------+---------+---------+-------+
+
+CHURCH OF ENGLAND SCHOOLS (1909).[a]
+
+ -------------------------+------------+--------------+----------------+
+ Schools. | On Roll. | Average | Teachers. |
+ | | Attendance. | |
+ -------------------------+------------+--------------+----------------+
+ St. John's Day School, | 44 boys, | 33 boys, | 6, and 1 music |
+ Brisbane | 134 girls | 107 girls | and 1 drawing |
+ | | | |
+ Holy Trinity Day School, | 33 boys, | 30 boys, | 3 |
+ Woolloongabba | 42 girls | 37.6 girls | |
+ | | | |
+ St. Paul's Day School, | 35 | 29 | 2 |
+ Maryborough | | | |
+ | | | |
+ High School for Boys, | 112 | 112 | 9 |
+ Southport | | | |
+ | | | |
+ Glennie Memorial School | 50 | Very good | 6 |
+ for Girls, Toowoomba | | | |
+ | | | |
+ Eton High School for | 50 | 97 per cent. | 9 |
+ Girls, Toorak, Hamilton | | | |
+ | | | |
+ St. Paul's Day School, | 35 boys, | 25.3 boys, | 4 |
+ Ipswich | 62 girls | 47 girls | |
+ | | | |
+ Theological College, | 14 students| ... | 3 |
+ Nundah | | | |
+ | | | |
+ Tufnell Orphanage, | 70 children| ... | 5 workers |
+ Nundah | | | |
+ | | | |
+ Industrial Home, | 21 inmates | ... | 2 instructors |
+ Clayfield | | | |
+ | | | |
+ High School for Girls, | ... | ... | ... |
+ Stanthorpe | | | |
+ -------------------------+------------+--------------+----------------+
+
+[Footnote a: Furnished by Mr. A. A. Orme, Diocesan Registry, Brisbane.]
+
+
+ROMAN CATHOLIC SCHOOLS (1909).[b]
+
+ -------------------------------------------------------+---------+
+ SCHOOLS TAUGHT BY SISTERS-- | On Roll.|
+ | |
+ _Archdiocese of Brisbane_-- | |
+ | |
+ Brisbane (High School), All Hallows; (Primary) | |
+ --Elizabeth street, Ivory street, South | |
+ Brisbane, Kangaroo Point, Red Hill, Wooloowin, | |
+ Toowong, Rosalie; Sandgate; Ipswich; | |
+ Helidon; Toowoomba (2); Dalby; Roma; Warwick; | |
+ Stanthorpe; Gympie (2); Maryborough; | |
+ Bundaberg; Beaudesert; Southport; | |
+ (Orphanage), Nudgee | 6,226 |
+ | |
+ _Diocese of Rockhampton_-- | |
+ | |
+ (High School), Rockhampton; Townsville; | |
+ Charters Towers; (Primary), Rockhampton; | |
+ Townsville; Charters Towers; Mount Morgan; | |
+ Hughenden; Gladstone; Longreach; | |
+ Winton; Mackay; Ravenswood; Clermont; | |
+ Emerald; (Orphanage), Neerkol | 4,228 |
+ | |
+ _Diocese of Cooktown_-- | |
+ | |
+ (High School), Cooktown; (Primary), | |
+ Cooktown; Cairns; Geraldton; Mareeba | 572 |
+ | |
+ SCHOOLS TAUGHT BY CHRISTIAN BROTHERS-- | |
+ | |
+ _Archdiocese of Brisbane_-- | |
+ | |
+ (College), Nudgee; (High School and Primary), | |
+ Brisbane; Ipswich; Toowoomba; Gympie; | |
+ Maryborough | 1,880 |
+ | |
+ _Diocese of Rockhampton_-- | |
+ (High School and Primary), Rockhampton; | |
+ Charters Towers | 740 |
+ |-------- |
+ Total | 13,646 |
+ -------------------------------------------------------+---------+
+
+[Footnote b: Supplied by the Church authorities.]
+
+[Illustration: GOVERNMENT HOUSE, NOW DEDICATED TO UNIVERSITY PURPOSES]
+
+
+
+
+APPENDIX L.
+
+INAUGURATION OF THE UNIVERSITY OF QUEENSLAND.
+
+
+In older lands Time seems to move with so deliberate a step that his
+march is scarcely noticed, and the passing of fifty years is but a
+small matter, though within the past half-century discovery after
+discovery, advance after advance, has been made. Still these things
+have come gradually, and, like all the great triumphs of peace, have
+been achieved calmly, orderly, and almost imperceptibly. It has been
+different in these new countries, whose practical history comprehends
+scarcely more than the span of one man's life. Queensland has grown
+out of nothing (from the point of view of civilisation) to a fair
+stature of importance. Fifty years is the sum of its existence as a
+self-governing State, but within that brief period the country has
+been reclaimed from the wilderness, and made the home of a happy,
+progressive, and enlightened people. Bearing in mind what Queensland
+was fifty years ago, and what it is to-day, it will be admitted that
+its jubilee was eminently worth celebrating, not in a mere spirit of
+festivity, but in the spirit of a people conscious of what has been
+done, and full of enthusiasm for continued development. No better
+evidence of that could have been afforded than by the particular
+method of celebration decided upon--the dedication of the most
+historic building in Queensland to the purposes of a University.
+It would have been easy to have devised a more showy plan, to have
+arranged for festivities that would have given greater immediate
+pleasure, but it would not have been possible to have marked the
+jubilee day with anything so admirably calculated to promote the best
+interests of the people, or so likely to abide in the public memory.
+That was the view of Mr. Kidston and his Government, to whom belong
+the honour of having given effect to the long-cherished aspirations of
+that numerous body who desire to see Queenslanders an educated as well
+as a prosperous people. For many years there had been a movement afoot
+for the establishment of a University. As far back as 1891, a Royal
+Commission, under the presidency of the late Sir Charles Lilley,
+had inquired into the matter and reported strongly in favour of the
+project. Premiers who were themselves graduates of universities and
+cultured, far-seeing men had recognised the need for a University, but
+the matter obstinately remained in the air. For some sixteen years,
+largely supported by the Sydney University, a Council had carried on
+University Extension Lectures, educating not only the students, but
+the public. Finally, the present Premier, realising that the time was
+ripe for a definite forward move, placed educational reform in the
+forefront of his policy, and succeeded in getting legislation passed
+for the establishment of the institution and in securing a liberal
+provision for maintaining it. This much achieved, everything was
+sufficiently far advanced for an impressive dedicatory ceremony on
+the day chosen for celebrating the jubilee of Queensland--Friday, 10th
+December, 1909. It was not possible, of course, for the University to
+be actually in operation by that date, but it was possible to take
+the first step by solemnly setting apart for its uses the building in
+which it is proposed to conduct it. That was precisely what was done
+on this occasion, and with a simple dignity and an earnestness of
+purpose that could not well have been surpassed. Everything combined
+to make the day and the event memorable, to lift it out of the
+commonplace of public occasions, in a word to make it historic--the
+most historic event since the promulgation of Queensland's free
+Constitution. The building itself had been the honoured home of every
+Governor since 1861. As was happily phrased in one of the speeches,
+it had been the centre of social and political life. What more
+appropriate than that it should be invested with a new function--be
+given, as it were, a new lease of life in the great cause of
+citizen-making? What more interesting than that the chief figure
+in the ceremonial should be Sir William MacGregor, himself a great
+witness to the value of university training, a distinguished servant
+of the Empire, one of the select band of Empire builders who have
+united ripe scholarship with tireless energy and firm grasp of
+national business and the ways of the world? It was a singularly happy
+circumstance that this was his first important public act as Governor
+of Queensland. But a few days before he had taken over the reins
+of government from the hands of the Lieutenant-Governor, Sir Arthur
+Morgan. As befitted the occasion and the interest which they had taken
+in the matter of the University, Sir Arthur and Mr. Kidston also took
+a prominent part in the ceremony. The presence of Professor David, of
+the Sydney University, who was a prominent member of the Shackleton
+Expedition to the Antarctic regions, and of Professor Stirling, of the
+Adelaide University, lent additional distinction to the event, visibly
+representing, as it did, the cordiality with which those important
+institutions regarded the advent of Queensland into the sisterhood of
+Australian University-States.
+
+Never before in its history had Government House been the scene of
+a gathering so unique. The Premier struck the keynote of the whole
+proceedings, when he said that they were met "to erect this white
+stone, as it were, to mark this point in our national progress." He
+was alluding to the marble tablet, which had been affixed to the wall
+near the main entrance, recording the dedication of the building to
+its new purposes. Also, he declared the democratic foundation of the
+institution in the significant sentence: "In very truth it may be said
+that the Queensland University is of the people, and I trust that the
+Senate, when they start to manage this institution, will remember that
+it is also to be for the people."
+
+To the ceremony were bidden all who could lend to it distinction and
+interest. It was no mere official or exclusive gathering, but one
+which represented in full measure the democratic character of the
+Queensland people. Those high in place were there; those who in
+university life had won honour; those who had laboured to lay
+the foundations of the educational system of which this was the
+culmination; the people for whose children this was to be in a real
+and practical sense the great training school and character-building
+institution; the children from whose ranks were to be drawn the
+earliest students. The scene was one which will live in memory long
+after the University has begun its work, and will be recalled when in
+their gladsome, perhaps boisterous, fashion the students hold their
+commemoration days, or when in more thoughtful times the men and women
+who have gone forth from it girded for the battle of life revisit
+its shady walks and studious halls. The building and its charming
+environments lent themselves to an impressive spectacle. In the
+bright summer day, the well-kept grounds and the rich foliage of the
+neighbouring gardens presented a picture of rare colour and beauty.
+Beyond lay the broad river glistening in the sunlight. Above arched
+the ineffable azure scarcely flecked by clouds. In the distance lay
+the far spreading city, with its pulsating life and varied activities.
+Under the shadow of the graceful building and in a sweeping
+semi-circle were massed the spectators, with eyes concentrated on
+the main portico, which had been converted into a stage for the
+interesting drama of the afternoon. A curved structure had been thrown
+out from the masonry, and decorated and canopied with maroon and
+white. Grouped around this were arranged the chairs provided for the
+seven hundred invited guests. Among these were many wearing their
+university costumes, which vied in colour and variety with the dresses
+of the ladies. Beyond this enclosure were drawn up, rank behind rank,
+250 boys and 550 girls chosen from the fifth and sixth classes of the
+metropolitan schools, each wearing Queensland's colours, maroon and
+white, and 200 State school cadets in uniform. All had been assembled
+in Alice street, and marched in procession to the space allotted to
+them. They were there for the double purpose of supplying a choir and
+adding to the representative character of the assembly. Beyond
+their lines were gathered the members of the general public. The
+arrangements entailed a good deal of planning and forethought, but
+every part of the ordered and dignified ceremony was smoothly carried
+out. The military element, drawn from the 9th Australian Infantry
+Regiment, was lined up along the whole front of Government House, the
+scarlet coats and white helmets supplying a fringe of colour to that
+part of the picture.
+
+The time fixed for the ceremony was half-past 3 o'clock. The reserved
+enclosure was then filled, the intermediate space was thronged with
+school children and cadets, and the outer circle was made up of those
+whom interest or curiosity had drawn to the spot. It was no small
+evidence of the genuineness of that interest that, though hundreds
+were too far away to hear the speeches, they remained during the whole
+proceedings. They took their cue from those who were nearer, and
+when they saw or heard them applauding they joined in and swelled the
+volume of enthusiasm. One of the first to take his place on the dais
+was Mr. W. H. Barnes, to whom it had fallen, as Secretary for Public
+Instruction, to pilot the University Bill through the Legislative
+Assembly. Not long afterwards there came Mr. A. H. Barlow, M.L.C., the
+veteran Minister, who had had much to do with the preparation of the
+measure, and who had charge of it during its progress through
+the Upper House. Among early arrivals were Miss MacGregor, His
+Excellency's daughter, and Mrs. Kidston. Punctually at half-past 3 His
+Excellency the Governor, Sir William MacGregor, arrived, dressed in
+his Windsor uniform and wearing the long flowing blue silk cloak
+and decorations of the Grand Cross of St. Michael and St. George,
+accompanied by Lady MacGregor and Mr. Kidston, Premier of Queensland.
+Mrs. Kidston presented Lady MacGregor with a beautiful bouquet, and
+almost at the same time the band of the 9th Regiment struck up "The
+National Anthem," the whole assemblage rising as the patriotic strains
+were heard. The duties usually devolving upon a chairman fell to
+the Premier, who occupied a chair on one side of a small flag-draped
+table, while His Excellency sat on the other side. Near by were the
+Lieutenant-Governor, Sir Arthur Morgan, wearing his robes of office,
+the Chief Justice (Sir Pope A. Cooper) in court dress, the Speaker
+of the Legislative Assembly (Mr. J. T. Bell) in his flowing robes,
+Professor David (representative of the Sydney University) in
+his official robe, Professor Stirling (the representative of the
+University of Adelaide) wearing the scarlet robe of an M.D. of
+Cambridge, and His Grace Archbishop Donaldson in the scarlet and
+ermine of a D.D. Central Queensland had a venerable representative in
+the person of the Right Rev. Dr. Hay, Moderator of the Presbyterian
+General Assembly. The Roman Catholic Archbishop, the Right Rev. Dr.
+Dunne, had as his representative Rev. Father Byrne, the Administrator
+of his diocese. The distinguished company included also Mr. Justice
+Real and Mrs. Real, Mr. Justice Chubb and Mrs. Chubb, Mr. Justice
+Shand, Mr. D. F. Denham (Minister for Lands) and Mrs. Denham, Mr. T.
+O'Sullivan, M.L.C. (Attorney-General) and Mrs. O'Sullivan, Mr. W. T.
+Paget (Minister for Agriculture and Railways) and Miss Paget, Mr. J.
+G. Appel (Home Secretary) and Miss Appel, Mrs. Barnes, Mr. A. G. C.
+Hawthorn (Treasurer) and Mrs. Hawthorn, Mr. W. Lennon, M.L.A. (Acting
+Leader of the Opposition) and Mrs. Lennon, Miss Celia Cooper, Mr.
+C. W. Costin (Clerk of Parliaments), Mr. Anthony Musgrave, (Private
+Secretary to His Excellency), Captain Scarlett, A.D.C., and Captains
+Newton and Claude Foxton, honorary AA.D.C. Members of both Houses
+of Parliament, prominent public servants, the mayors and aldermen of
+Brisbane and South Brisbane, representatives of other metropolitan
+civic bodies, leading citizens, and consular representatives had their
+seats in the enclosure fronting the official dais.
+
+By a happy arrangement the ceremony was inaugurated by the assembled
+children singing "The National Anthem," to which were added three
+of the patriotic verses of "The Australian Anthem" composed by
+Queensland's sweet singer, the late J. Brunton Stephens. The fresh
+musical voices rang out true and clear, carrying far through the
+still, scented air the simple words of devotion and patriotism--
+
+ What can Thy children bring?
+ What save the voice to sing
+ "All things are Thine"?--
+ What to Thy throne convey?
+ What save the voice to pray
+ "God bless our land alway,
+ This land of Thine"?
+
+ Oh, with Thy mighty hand
+ Guard Thou the Motherland;
+ She, too, is Thine.
+ Lead her where honour lies,
+ We beneath other skies
+ Still clinging daughterwise,
+ Hers, yet all Thine.
+
+ Britons of ev'ry creed,
+ Teuton and Celt agreed,
+ Let us be Thine.
+ One in all noble fame,
+ Still be our path the same,
+ Onward in Freedom's name,
+ Upward in Thine!
+
+
+[Illustration: VIEW OF DEDICATION CEREMONY]
+
+The last notes had scarcely died away, when the Premier rose to
+invite His Excellency to assent to the University Bill of 1909, and to
+dedicate the building to the University. He prefaced that proceeding
+by a speech, which summarised the course of progress in Queensland,
+touched upon the difficulties it had been necessary to overcome, and
+the achievements in settlement and development which had made this
+ceremony possible. More than that, it focussed as it were in a few
+sentences the destined scope of the University, and the liberal
+provisions by which it was to be made accessible to "all our young
+people without regard to class, or creed, or sex." Twenty foundation
+scholarships were the generous birthday gift to the University. There
+was a great outburst of enthusiasm at this announcement, and the
+applause rang out again with renewed strength when His Excellency
+stepped forward, and read a congratulatory message from His Majesty
+the King. This was a fitting prelude to the able and statesmanlike
+speech which His Excellency made. This over, Mr. Costin presented the
+University Bill for His Excellency to sign. His Excellency dipped his
+pen in the ink held by a handsome silver inkstand, and affixed his
+signature to the charter of the University. Then, pressing an electric
+button, he revealed to view a marble tablet--the white stone of
+which the Premier spoke--designed "to mark this point in our national
+progress."
+
+The building had now been dedicated, but it yet remained symbolically
+to hand it over to the people. This was done by His Excellency's
+presentation to Mr. J. T. Bell of the University Act, and Mr. Bell's
+acceptance of it on behalf of the people of Queensland. Eloquent
+speeches from Mr. Bell, Professor David, and Professor Stirling
+followed, each in his turn drawing from the assemblage the endorsement
+of enthusiastic applause. Once more the aid of the children was
+invoked, and, under the direction of Mr. George Sampson, F.R.C.O.,
+they sang to the music of "The Old Hundredth" "The Children's Ode,"
+specially written for the occasion by Mr. W. J. Byram--
+
+ Dear land, the queen of all fair climes!
+ To jewels of thy diadem
+ We add to-day its brightest gem,
+ A guiding star for after-times.
+
+ Thy sons shall grow in wisdom's power,
+ Thy daughters win an ampler grace,
+ And both shall mould that higher race
+ Gifted with learning's priceless dower.
+
+ Here as the seasons wax and wane
+ May Science still increase her store,
+ And Truth be reverenced more and more,
+ And Tolerance and Justice reign.
+
+ Father of all, our effort bless!
+ Without thy aid we are as nought,
+ We are but children to be taught
+ Thy way that leads to perfectness.
+
+
+One graceful ceremony remained, and that typical of beauty, life, and
+growth--the planting of a tree to be known as "The University Tree,"
+its destiny to grow with the University, and afford grateful shade
+to those brought within its wholesome influence. The pleasant duty of
+planting devolved upon Lady MacGregor, and it was carried out by means
+of a silver trowel presented to her by the Premier. The business
+of the afternoon had now concluded; the first step toward the
+establishment of the University had been taken: its future home had
+been dedicated.
+
+
+THE DEDICATION SPEECHES.
+
+The PREMIER (Hon. W. Kidston), in rising to ask His Excellency to
+dedicate Government House to the purposes of the University, said:
+Your Excellency and Ladies and Gentlemen,--To-day Queensland completes
+her first half-century as a self-governing community; and we are met
+to honour the occasion--to erect a white stone, as it were, to mark
+this point in our national progress. Fifty years ago a handful of
+settlers, not quite 24,000 in number, claimed and obtained the right
+to manage their own affairs; and the British Government, in granting
+that right, virtually handed over to those few pioneers the ownership
+of this vast territory now called Queensland--a territory exceeding
+in area the combined areas of England, Scotland, Ireland, France,
+Portugal, Spain, and Italy. If we consider how few they were and the
+way in which they undertook the work of opening up and civilising this
+vast territory, we must recognise that our first pioneers were men
+of enterprise, of self-reliance, and of high courage. (Hear, hear.)
+Although our population has increased twenty-four times since then, we
+are still but a handful in this vast land. When we try to compare the
+Queensland of to-day with the Queensland of fifty years ago--the
+cities and towns that have been built where then was the untrodden
+bush; the thousands of miles of railways and the many thousands of
+miles of roads, like a network all over this great area; the rivers
+that have been spanned by bridges; the harbours that have been made;
+the endless miles of telegraph lines that give rapid communication
+between the townships scattered all over the State--all the things
+that go to mark a civilised people--when we consider to what extent
+that work has been carried out by such a mere handful of people, we
+may well commend the men who have preceded us. (Hear, hear.) And it
+was not only in the matter of material development that these men did
+good work. Many years ago they established an educational system which
+still obtains--a system so effective and comprehensive that all over
+this vast territory of Queensland wherever ten or a dozen children can
+be brought together there you will find a State school. (Hear, hear.)
+And even beyond that, by means of the itinerant teachers, the
+scattered children of the bush are sought out and have at least the
+rudiments of education brought to their isolated homes. (Hear, hear.)
+To-day we seek to commemorate our establishment as a self-governing
+community, and at the same time to show our appreciation of the
+excellent work done by our predecessors in opening up this new land
+and in promoting the civilising and humanising agencies that have made
+Queensland what she is; and I hold that we can show our appreciation
+of the good work our predecessors did in no better way than by
+imitating and continuing that good work. We who have eaten of the
+fruit of the trees which our predecessors planted; we, the men of
+to-day, may also seek to plant so that the children of to-morrow may
+gather the fruit. (Hear, hear.)
+
+[Illustration: THE PREMIER (HON. W. KIDSTON) OPENING THE PROCEEDINGS]
+
+Perhaps, Your Excellency, I am not just the person to discuss
+educational methods, or to seek here to give instructions to the
+Senate who will manage this University; but I may express the hope
+that the University of Queensland will provide for the youth of
+Queensland the highest culture and the best university training that
+can be got, at any rate, this side of the line. (Hear, hear.) At the
+same time I would not have it forgotten that Queensland is a hive of
+working bees; and all our educational institutions, from Kindergarten
+to University, should keep that fact in view. There is this difference
+between the youngest University in the Empire and the oldest: Oxford
+was established by a King; the University of Queensland is established
+by the People. (Hear, hear.) Queensland is democratic not only in her
+political institutions: she is democratic in heart and sentiment; and
+the desire of our people for a University is simply the desire that
+Queensland may be an educated democracy--the safest, the strongest,
+and the happiest community in which men can live. (Hear, hear.) I
+would have the Senate always remember that it was the desire of our
+people that inspired the crowning of our educational system by the
+establishment of a University, that in very truth the Queensland
+University is "of the people," and I trust that the Senate will never
+forget that it should be "for the people." (Hear, hear.) It is not all
+of us who can go to a University or directly share in its advantages;
+yet the whole community should, and I hope will, receive a general
+benefit. I hope that its influence will radiate downwards through all
+the ranks of our social organism; that those who have the advantage
+and the privilege of the more liberal education which our University
+will give will be like the leaven which the woman put in three
+measures of meal, and will leaven the whole community. (Hear, hear.)
+
+Parliament has made what I think is fairly adequate financial
+provision for our University. A sum of L50,000 is being set aside from
+this year's revenue for meeting what may be called the initial cost.
+(Hear, hear.) And, besides that, a sum of L10,000 a year is being
+provided for what may be called the annual working charges. (Hear,
+hear.) I may also announce to-day that the Cabinet, subject of course
+to the approval of Parliament, has resolved to institute a certain
+number of foundation scholarships as a step towards equalising
+educational opportunities for our young people and by way of opening
+the door to ability and special merit. (Applause.) It has been decided
+to establish twenty foundation scholarships--(applause)--tenable for
+three years, each of which will carry free entrance to the University
+and L26 per year, or, in cases where students, to attend the
+University, must live away from home, L52 a year. These scholarships
+will be equally open to all our young people without regard to class,
+or creed, or sex. (Applause.) There will also be a foundation gold
+medal, carrying a prize of L100 a year for two years, for the purpose
+of encouraging original chemical research--(applause)--a similar
+medal and prize of a similar amount, tenable for two years, for
+engineering--(applause)--and a foundation travelling scholarship of
+L200 a year, tenable for two years. (Applause.) The scholarships will
+of course be competed for annually, so that in the third and each
+succeeding year there will be sixty of these scholarship students at
+our University. (Applause.)
+
+I now ask Your Excellency, as representing His Majesty, to assent to
+the Bill, which has been approved by both Houses of Parliament, for
+the establishment and endowment of the University of Queensland, and
+on behalf of our people to dedicate this building, now your home, to
+the purposes of the University. (Loud applause.)
+
+
+HIS EXCELLENCY SIR WILLIAM MacGREGOR said: Mr. Kidston, Ladies and
+Gentlemen,--The first duty I have to perform here to-day is to read
+to you a telegram which I received this forenoon from the Right
+Honourable the Secretary of State for the Colonies. This telegram
+is dated London, 9th December, at 1.45 p.m., and is addressed "The
+Governor, Brisbane." The Secretary of State says:--
+
+"I am commanded by His Majesty the King to convey to you the following
+message:--
+
+ "His Majesty the King heartily congratulates the people of
+ Queensland on the completion of fifty years of responsible
+ government. It is the earnest hope of His Majesty the King
+ that the enterprise and loyalty which have marked the first
+ half-century of the State of Queensland may be its abiding
+ heritage and that the prosperity which is evident at the close
+ of this period may be multiplied abundantly in the years to
+ come." "CREWE."
+
+For two reasons I have put in writing what I have to say on the
+important subject that has brought us here to-day. The first is that
+I cannot make myself heard by a large audience. The second is that we
+are assembled here on the occasion of the Jubilee of Queensland, and
+that fifty years hence the Jubilee of the University of this
+State will also be celebrated, and it is desirable that those who
+participate in that ceremony should know in what spirit the
+University is being founded: what are our hopes, our aspirations, what
+appreciation we have of our duty towards our posterity and the future
+of the great country we and they have to develop. I trust that for
+this reason all speeches made here to-day may be carefully recorded,
+as we now enter upon a new phase of the intellectual life of
+Queensland, a matter that cannot but be of far-reaching importance to
+the next and succeeding generations of this State.
+
+I deem it a fortunate circumstance that, a few days after my arrival
+in Brisbane, I should have the privilege of participating in a
+ceremonial for the establishment of "The University of Queensland," of
+taking part in a State function of historical and of great social and
+economic importance.
+
+We live in an age of more rapid progress than any that has ever
+preceded our own day: and for my part I am prepared to believe that
+we owe to education the enormous advances in recent years in health,
+wealth, and in the amenities and comforts of life. It is now well
+known to us all that the nation that is backward in education is, or
+soon will be, behind in all that makes a people great and prosperous.
+
+I am aware that these facts were fully recognised by many men in
+Queensland long years ago, for I well remember the former efforts
+that were made to found a University here--efforts that failed through
+causes that happily no longer exist. One of the most noticeable facts
+in the social and economic life of English-speaking people in recent
+years is the great impulse that has been given to the development and
+extension of university teaching. It may with a good show of reason be
+said that Australasia led up to the great educational revival of
+the last quarter of a century, by the opening of the now famous
+Universities, of Sydney in 1852, of Melbourne in 1855, and of Adelaide
+in 1876. Then followed the University of Tasmania in 1889. The wave of
+university education has left the United States with 40 universities,
+16 of which are very great, and 415 colleges. The movement has been
+as pronounced in Canada, where higher education is receiving great
+attention, due in a large measure to the splendid liberality of
+wealthy and patriotic citizens. The same influence has been profoundly
+felt in the United Kingdom. The Victoria University was founded in
+1880, and the London University was reconstituted in 1900. Birmingham
+University dates from 1900, Liverpool University from 1903, the
+University of Wales from 1903, Leeds University from 1904, Sheffield
+University from 1905, and the two national Universities of Ireland
+from 1908. To come nearer home, New Zealand has her University and
+affiliated colleges; and West Australia is at this moment taking
+active steps for the establishment of her own State University,
+so that it remains at present doubtful whether Queensland or West
+Australia is to play the part of the most retiring of this pleiad of
+Australasian Universities. Hitherto the youth of Queensland has had
+to go elsewhere for residential university education. Fortunately
+for Queensland, she has had an active and influential committee for
+university extension lectures, the members of which have patriotically
+performed good service to the State by arranging for lectures that
+have helped to procure from beyond the State university certificates
+of competence by a considerable number of the youth of this country.
+This committee has fortunately been able to do enough to demonstrate
+how much we need a University of our own. They are entitled to the
+warm thanks of the community for what they have done. I have had an
+opportunity of knowing from the admirable lectures of Professor David,
+on the 4th and 8th of this month, how interesting, instructive, and
+valuable those lectures can be. I have said enough to show you that
+if Queensland did not now, without any further delay, proceed to
+found her University, this, one of the greatest, most promising, and
+wealthiest provinces in the Empire, would, as far as education is
+concerned, occupy a very conspicuous and unenviable position among
+the great countries of the world; especially would this be the case in
+regard to the sister States and Dominions.
+
+What is a University? I have seen a University defined as a place at
+which students from any quarter of the universe could be received
+to study, irrespective of nationality. What we understand here by a
+University, and what we aim at, is an institution where any person
+can find the fullest and best instruction of the day in any branch of
+knowledge. It will be the head corner-stone of the system of
+education that has been legalised in this State, a school that will be
+accessible to all, and will afford equal chances and opportunities
+to rich and poor alike, without reference to sex or religious
+denomination. I know of no institution in modern social life that
+equals the University in giving a fair chance in life to the youth
+that is capable and is able and willing to work; although, for my
+part, I can only regard schools of all grades as only preparatory for
+the studies that have to be incessantly pursued after one ceases to
+attend classes, if one does not resign oneself to falling behind; thus
+the primary school prepares for the secondary school, and that school
+leads to the university, which last furnishes the highest and best
+intellectual equipment for one's life work, an equipment of such
+character that it can be obtained and be certified to by the
+university, and by that alone. It supplies to the bearer the hall-mark
+of the State that the man or woman that bears it has had the best
+instruction that the country can supply.
+
+[Illustration: HIS EXCELLENCY SIR W. MACGREGOR ADDRESSING THE
+AUDIENCE]
+
+What is to be taught in the University? You will find that the
+University Act makes provision for the establishment of certain
+faculties in which instruction shall be given; the preamble shows that
+the University is to provide "a liberal and practical education in the
+several pursuits and professions of life in Queensland." In no other
+country can the pursuits and professions of social and economic life
+be greater than they are, or will be, in Queensland, having regard to
+the extraordinary multiplicity of its resources. Such a broad purpose
+as that set out in the University Act leaves little option to the
+ruling power of the University as to what subjects are to be taught.
+That question is determined in a large measure by the work of other
+universities, for it is a foregone conclusion that the University
+of Queensland is not to occupy a position in the educational world
+inferior to that of any sister university in Australasia. We are well
+aware that their standard is high; and we recognise that we start
+late, and are therefore behind, and that we have a hard task before us
+to overtake the other universities; but this has to be done, and will
+be done. I dwell on this because there should exist no misconception
+as to the scope of the Queensland University, especially in regard to
+what is called the classical side of instruction, in contradistinction
+to the scientific or practical. We recognise that the literary records
+of the world have, in the main, been successively committed to
+the languages of the Chaldeans, the Greeks, the Romans, and the
+Anglo-Saxons. If those languages are dead, their remains are so
+constantly brought before us every hour of our lives that acquaintance
+with those of them that are usually taught in what is called the
+faculty of arts forms a necessary and indispensable part of the
+education of every accomplished or finished scholar, and of most
+professional men or women. At the same time, therefore, that this
+University will provide the best tuition in the classical languages
+of the past, we cannot but see that times have changed; that, for
+example, in no country in Europe or America could the Prime Minister
+now conduct official business in Latin with King or Governor, as was
+the case in England not very long ago. No Prime Minister could now
+electrify a drooping Parliament with a Latin quotation, as Pitt did.
+So far as I know, the last Parliament in Europe to use Latin as its
+language ceased to do so some three-score of years ago. The classics
+have come into disfavour owing in a large measure to the fact
+that they were overdone, that time was wasted on utterly valueless
+subtleties in learning them. They were associated with too much
+book and too little practical work. Here we shall have a course of
+classics, an arts faculty, equal to that of other universities,
+but without unduly encroaching on other faculties of more modern
+development and of more direct utility in the evolution of modern
+economic life. It would, however, be unreasonable to expect that the
+University of Queensland could be brought into the world full-grown at
+its birth. The University of Sydney began with four professors. I am
+informed by the very distinguished gentleman who is Chancellor of
+the University of Adelaide that the now great University of that city
+entered on its career, in rented premises, thirty-four years ago, with
+three chairs--classics, mathematics, and natural science. Now it has
+faculties of arts, science, law, medicine, electrical, mining, civil
+engineering, commerce, and music; and it has ranked, by letters
+patent, for the last twenty-eight years, with the old universities of
+the United Kingdom. The Adelaide University now has eleven professors
+and twenty-six lecturers. It supplies to us a splendid example of
+courage, of energy, and of perseverance, and that example we mean to
+follow. (Applause.) Our late start is not without some compensation,
+for not only are we able to profit from the experience of others, but,
+what is equally important, we can adapt our University courses to
+the needs of the country untrammelled by the vested interests and the
+threadbare traditions that make it so difficult for old universities
+to adapt themselves to the exigencies of modern educational
+requirements. If one thinks of Queensland as she was this day fifty
+years ago, and as she is to-day, it can be seen that he would be
+a bold man that would predict what faculties, what tuition, may
+be required, and may be given, in the Queensland University half a
+century from now. The moral to be drawn from this is, to make a start
+on an elastic plan that may admit of indefinite expansion. We
+require a broad and strong foundation, able to carry a great edifice,
+sufficient to provide the most comprehensive tuition, not only in what
+is known, but also to facilitate and encourage original research and
+invention, as set out in the Act. Even sport will not be forgotten,
+for it is an important consideration, in a non-residential university,
+to foster that feeling and regard for a bountiful mother that
+should animate the students of every great University. One thing is
+abundantly clear: that because we are determined to have a university
+equal to the needs of this great State, a university that shall
+stimulate those of the sister States, and because we start at so
+late a date, we must begin with the very best teachers that can be
+procured, the most learned and enthusiastic men in their several
+departments. On those men will in a large measure depend the future
+character and standing of our University. The best men will be the
+cheapest. Queensland can afford to employ them, and we know they will
+be a profitable investment. (Applause.) A university costs money, much
+money, especially in the technical departments, such as engineering,
+mining, and agriculture. The endowment of universities has been
+recognised in recent years as having such strong claims on public
+funds that they cannot be overlooked. That principle is accepted here.
+Our nearest neighbours have conferred valuable land areas on their
+universities; and they have been very liberal to them in money grants.
+In this respect the oldest of our Universities, that of Sydney, led
+the way with wisdom and a liberal hand, and to-day New South Wales
+reaps her reward. It may safely be assumed that the Parliament and
+Government of Queensland will be equally liberal and far-seeing.
+But the different Universities have in recent years profited in an
+extraordinary manner from the munificence of private citizens. In ten
+years the technical schools, colleges, and universities of the United
+States received in that way L23,000,000. Perhaps the largest amount of
+such gifts in any one year was in 1903, when they received L3,350,000.
+It appears that in 1907 nearly L300,000 was bequeathed to universities
+and colleges in the United Kingdom. It has become a common practice
+for private citizens to found a university chair to bear the name of
+a person whose memory it is desired to preserve and to honour. Others
+that are not in a position to do so much as that have very frequently
+established a bursary or scholarship, sometimes sufficiently large
+to maintain a student at the university, or to partly do so. The
+bursaries that produce the best results are those that are given by
+open competition. But others that are limited to a specified name or
+locality, according to the desire of the donors, are very useful. Some
+men of good will are not permitted by their means to do more than to
+found a prize for proficiency in some branch taught in the university.
+This State possesses an enormous area; the productions are varied in
+a very unusual degree, and they are of enormous value present and
+prospective; and there can be no reason to suppose that Queenslanders
+are to be less generous and patriotic towards their University than
+our neighbours have been towards theirs. I shall be satisfied if we
+have citizens here as generous as Russell in Sydney, as Ormond in
+Melbourne, and Elder and Hughes in Adelaide. I think that no more
+patriotic nor useful disposition of one's money could be made. We
+start under the best auspices, for we have before us now a most
+gracious message of congratulation and good wishes from His Majesty
+the King, whose life is devoted to the welfare of his subjects, and
+there are with us to-day representatives from the great Universities
+of Sydney and Adelaide. Each of these Universities has sent us a man
+of world-wide reputation. I know well what I am saying when I tell you
+that the names of Professors David and Stirling are as well known,
+and are as highly honoured, by the learned men and women of Europe
+and America as by the people of Australia. (Applause.) It is a great
+honour to us to have such representatives here to-day, and for their
+presence we owe hearty thanks to their respective Universities, and
+I bid them a hearty and appreciative welcome to Brisbane, for I feel
+sure that they and the Universities they represent will always extend
+to us sympathy, good advice, and an excellent example; and I am
+certain that they will be delighted to see us here in a position to
+offer them that healthful emulation that cannot but be advantageous to
+all concerned. I now, ladies and gentlemen, take the first practical
+step towards the founding of the University of Queensland by complying
+with the request of the Hon. William Kidston, Premier of the State, to
+assent to the University Bill of 1909; and I shall thereafter, in your
+presence, deliver this copy of the Act to the Hon. Joshua Thomas Bell,
+who will receive it on behalf of the people of Queensland; and, this
+done, I shall, by unveiling a commemorative tablet, dedicate this
+building to the purposes of the University of Queensland. (Loud
+applause.)
+
+[Illustration: HIS EXCELLENCY UNVEILING THE DEDICATION TABLET]
+
+
+HIS EXCELLENCY, having signed the University Bill, and assented to it
+on behalf of His Majesty the King, handed a copy to Mr. Bell, Speaker
+of the Legislative Assembly, saying: It is with profound pleasure and
+great hope that I present this Act to you on behalf of the people of
+Queensland. (Applause.)
+
+
+HIS EXCELLENCY: I now proceed to unveil the commemorative tablet which
+dedicates this house to the University of Queensland.
+
+
+By pressing a button, His Excellency unveiled a tablet bearing the
+following inscription:--
+
+ DEDICATED
+ TO THE UNIVERSITY OF QUEENSLAND
+ BY HIS EXCELLENCY THE GOVERNOR,
+ SIR WILLIAM MACGREGOR, G.C.M.G.,
+ ON BEHALF OF THE PEOPLE OF QUEENSLAND,
+ ON 10TH DECEMBER, 1909,
+ THE FIFTIETH ANNIVERSARY
+ OF THE
+ ESTABLISHMENT OF RESPONSIBLE GOVERNMENT
+ IN QUEENSLAND.
+
+ W. KIDSTON,
+
+ CHIEF SECRETARY.
+
+
+The HON. J. T. BELL (_Speaker of the Legislative Assembly_) said: Your
+Excellency, Mr. Kidston, Your Grace, Ladies and Gentlemen,--If I
+may for a second, before uttering the few sentences I propose to do,
+mention a personal matter in regard to His Excellency, I should like
+to do it, and that is to express the consternation I felt at the
+announcement which His Excellency made that in his opinion all the
+speeches that are delivered upon this occasion should be of such a
+character that they may be perused with pleasure and with instruction
+by those who are celebrating the jubilee of this institution fifty
+years hence. May I say that I find it sufficiently difficult to cope
+with my contemporaries without having to make in addition provision
+for posterity? I listened to His Excellency's address with the
+greatest satisfaction, as everyone did who heard it, because it was
+felt to be a fitting deliverance for such an occasion as this. Whether
+now, or five years hence, or ten years hence, or when the jubilee of
+this institution is celebrated--as it will be celebrated--anyone
+who wants authoritative information concerning the present education
+systems of the world, of the Empire, and particularly of Australia and
+in regard to this University, can turn to His Excellency's deliverance
+with the knowledge that he can get all the information there. (Hear,
+hear.) I at least feel--and so does everyone who has any acquaintance
+with the fact--sympathy with the allusion which His Excellency made
+during his remarks to that body of men who are known as the University
+Extension Council. I do not know how far back their labours began--it
+was certainly more than ten years--but these men, free from any
+instinct of self-advertisement, and prompted only by influences that
+were unselfish, did their very best in our small community years ago,
+and year after year, to lay the foundations of a university. (Hear,
+hear.) I am of opinion, although these things are difficult to trace,
+that it was the labour of these men of the University Extension
+Council, and their influence upon the public and upon the men in
+public life, which really laid the foundations of this gathering, and
+caused the Government of the day to institute the University. I
+say all honour to those men, and I hope that their names will be
+perpetuated somewhere or other. (Hear, hear.) I should like to say
+that in dedicating this building to the purposes of a University,
+those of us who are Queenslanders born and bred, not of the first
+but even of the second generation, must feel some interest in the
+transformation that such an edifice undergoes. I can only hope that
+it will play its part as well as a University edifice as it did as a
+Government House. Ever since, I suppose, 1861 or 1862, it has been the
+home of Her Majesty's or His Majesty's representative in this State.
+It was the headquarters of the social and political life of the State,
+and it has, through its various inhabitants, performed its duties
+well. There is this to be said, that it has housed in the past men
+of the character that it will house in the future--men who possessed
+qualifications that equally adapted them to live in this building in
+the future, and within its new surroundings, as they were qualified to
+inhabit it in the past. Let us think for a moment of some of the men
+who have made this building historical. Let us think of Sir George
+Bowen, our first Governor, a man who, before he became private
+secretary to Mr. Gladstone, was the representative of the Crown in the
+Ionian Isles, was an Oxford don, a fellow of his college, and a man
+with an academic reputation. He came out here and lived with us, and
+in one way at least his classical impulses have left their impression
+on the community in the nomenclature of a number of creeks and hills
+in Southern Queensland. (Hear, hear.) Then we had Lord Lamington,
+a man of some academic pretensions; but, greatest of all from a
+university standpoint, we had Lord Chelmsford, a man who was an honour
+to his college, his university, and to the State which he governed.
+(Hear, hear.) He was one of the very few men in the public service of
+Great Britain who had ever come south of the line who were able to
+say they were fellows of All Souls--(applause)--which represents in
+university distinction what the V.C. means in the military field.
+(Applause.) He was a man of qualifications that we were proud to have
+in our Governor, and I know that when the proposal was made to him
+that this building which he inhabited should be converted into a
+university he was one of the first and most enthusiastic advocates of
+the proposal. (Applause.) Lastly, we come to the last occupant of the
+building, our present Governor, Sir William MacGregor, and no happier
+instance can be found of what a university education can do to produce
+an Empire builder and a stern man of the world than is to be found in
+the person of His Excellency. Whatever may be the class of inhabitants
+who are going to labour within these walls in the future, they have
+had forerunners of whom they have no reason to be ashamed. Just let me
+add a few sentences more. This building has some distinct advantages
+from a university point of view. The sole object of a university is
+not to instruct men to pass examinations; it has a wider sphere than
+that. There was a time--it existed through ages--when the conception
+of a university was an institution that turned out scholars. To-day, I
+venture to say, it has become recognised that the duty and the object
+of a university is the production of citizens. (Applause.) And you
+will not produce citizens merely by making them go to lectures and
+periodically answer questions in an examination. In the university
+life one of the chief and most valuable features is the comradeship,
+the common citizenship with the other members of the university, the
+participation in athletic sports, the _esprit de corps_ that comes
+from belonging to such an institution. And from that aspect I look
+with pleasure upon the Brisbane River, only a few yards away, where we
+shall find in the future, I hope, a university boat club, which club
+has always been a prominent feature of universities in Great Britain,
+as it is now becoming in Germany. And in connection with athletics,
+and especially aquatic athletics, you will find the students of this
+University will uphold the reputation of British students. (Applause.)
+I do not propose to speak at any greater length. I am convinced that
+after the liberal and, as far as we can see at the present time,
+adequate provision that has been made by the Government of the day for
+the management of this University, you will see men attending it who
+will make their mark upon the community. (Hear, hear.) I repeat that
+I hope that the test of the success of this University is not going to
+be purely a literary test, though let it be tested in that way too.
+I am convinced that those who look at the University from the broader
+standpoint feel confident that this University is not going to turn
+out merely scholars--merely men who can pass examinations--but is
+going to turn out men of the world, and is going to have a striking
+effect upon the tone of our citizenship. (Hear, hear.) I hope that
+not merely morals, but, in some degree at all events, manners, will be
+cultivated in this University; and we, a handful of people, who
+spend comparatively enormous sums every year on primary and secondary
+education, shall have additional reason to be proud when we see the
+effects of the University now inaugurating being spread throughout the
+land. (Applause.) I thank Your Excellency for dedicating this building
+to the purposes of a University, and I rejoice that we have a man of
+your character performing such a ceremony. (Applause.)
+
+
+THE HON. W. KIDSTON: I have here apologies from the Chancellors of the
+Universities of Melbourne and Tasmania, regretting their inability
+to be present with us to-day. One of the pleasing features of this
+celebration is the kindly and friendly way in which the Universities
+of sister States have received the advent of their younger sister, the
+University of Queensland. (Hear, hear.) But the Universities of
+Sydney and Adelaide have done more: they have sent Professor David
+and Professor Stirling respectively to say a few words to us on this
+occasion and to wish us Godspeed. I now ask Professor David to speak.
+(Applause.)
+
+
+PROFESSOR DAVID (_Sydney University_) said: Your Excellency, Mr.
+Kidston, Your Grace, and Ladies and Gentlemen,--It is a great honour
+for me, as representing the elder sister amongst the Universities of
+Australia, to bring a message of goodwill to our young University--the
+University of Queensland. (Applause.) It is under happy auspices that
+this young University is having this grand building, with such fine
+memories of the past, dedicated to its uses. We have in our present
+representative of His Majesty a gentleman of ripe scholarship and
+learning, one who has been throughout his whole life, as he is now and
+as he long will be too, a great power for good, a great power for all
+that is uplifting and ennobling to the British Empire--Sir William
+MacGregor. (Applause.) We have, too, this dedication ceremony
+performed in the presence of a representative of the Government who
+has shown that he has the greatest possible grip of all that is
+needed to make a university such as this young University a People's
+University; one, too, who has at heart, I know, the good and
+prosperity of his country--the Honourable the Premier, Mr. Kidston.
+(Applause.) The present Ministry, with great foresight, have resolved
+to make this University not merely a University of Brisbane, but the
+University of Queensland. (Hear, hear.) And it seems to me, as one who
+has studied university matters for some years in the past, that it is
+an act of great wisdom on the part of those who have controlled the
+inception of this movement that they have decided to associate here
+together the Technical College and the University. (Applause.) I
+feel sure that the association will make for the good of both these
+institutions, which never should be divorced from one another, and
+between which there should be nothing more than friendly rivalry, and
+always an interchange of courtesy, of hospitality, and of confidence.
+(Applause.) Another point, and a very important one, which I
+was delighted to hear from the lips of Mr. Kidston, is that this
+University is to be able to appeal to the farthest boundaries of this
+great State, by virtue of these sixty splendid scholarships which the
+Government have decided to endow--(applause)--that will bring in many
+boys and girls who otherwise, through remoteness or want of means,
+would have been unable to avail themselves of this University
+education. Thus I am sure that, although this University will start,
+no doubt, with but a small number of students, even amongst the small
+group of students who may come first to this University the nation
+will reap no less rich reward than did the University of Sydney when
+it started with a mere handful of students. That University celebrated
+its Jubilee only in 1902, and amongst its first handful of students
+was no less a man than he who was the honoured Chancellor of our
+University, Sir William Windeyer; than he who did so much not only
+for New South Wales but Australian science, our late Government
+Astronomer, Mr. H. C. Russell; than he who is now an ornament to the
+Bar, an honour to his University, and a great honour to this State and
+to the whole of this Commonwealth, Sir Samuel Griffith. (Applause.)
+Certainly it will not be for want of plenty of good material that this
+University will not flourish, for we in Sydney know of what splendid
+materials your grammar schools, both for boys and girls, are made, as
+well as many of your other schools. We know it right well in Sydney,
+for there, many a time and oft, your boys and girls take prizes over
+the heads of our own. (Applause.) Then a word in conclusion, and that
+is this, Your Excellency, and ladies and gentlemen: That, just as in
+medieval times when the universities were started, Feudalism, which
+made for isolation and all that was selfish, was broken down chiefly
+by the University influence, which gathered the people and drew them
+together in that great bond of brotherhood and learning, so in these
+troublous times, when class is ranged against class, and when Labour
+is pitted against Capital, surely we need the levelling influence of
+a University--not an influence to level down but an influence to level
+up in a noble, common brotherhood. (Applause.) We need universities as
+well as we need "Dreadnoughts" and Kitcheners--as we do need them to
+keep our country foremost in the arts, not only of war--even in war a
+university may do much; we have a Director of Military Studies at our
+University at Sydney, and I trust you will have one here--but to keep
+us foremost in the arts of peace. In the matter of the foundation
+of the universities of the Old World, you will remember that it was
+through the Crusaders that those universities were founded. It was the
+fiery zeal for Faith that started those universities. The Crusaders
+were brought into contact with the learning of the Eastern World,
+and so Learning and Faith were brought together in the foundations of
+those old Universities of Paris and Oxford. Sometimes Learning only
+flourished: sometimes only Faith: sometimes Reverence only, sometimes
+Faith. May it be our fervent prayer that in this noble hall both
+Reverence and Learning shall for ever dwell together in sweet harmony.
+(Applause.) As representing the older sister University of Sydney,
+from the bottom of my heart I wish to our young sister University on
+this historic occasion all goodwill--a message of goodwill, a message
+of Godspeed. (Applause.)
+
+
+PROFESSOR STIRLING (_Adelaide University_) said: Your Excellency, Mr.
+Premier, and Ladies and Gentlemen,--My first duty is to present to the
+Government of Queensland, on behalf of the University of Adelaide, its
+very cordial thanks for the invitation so courteously extended to it
+that it should be represented on an occasion which will assuredly be
+a memorable episode in the annals of this great and prospering State.
+And in this connection I am desired by our Chancellor, Sir Samuel Way,
+to convey to this gathering his great regret that his judicial duties,
+now of a very exacting kind, have prevented his acceptance of the
+invitation extended to him in the first place as our chief official,
+and of doing honour to the event that is being celebrated. My second
+and principal duty is to offer the cordial congratulations of the
+University I represent to the Government of Queensland, and through it
+to its whole people, that now at last, after many years, the keystone
+is being placed upon the arch of the educational edifice of this
+State. (Hear, hear, and applause.) I have had the honour of being
+connected with the University of Adelaide ever since its foundation,
+now thirty-four years ago. I can well remember its early struggles,
+its efforts to take a fitting place in our national life, and I
+am glad to have lived long enough to see many of its aspirations
+fulfilled--(hear, hear)--aspirations that have been fulfilled in spite
+of what has not always been a very whole-hearted support either on the
+parts of successive Governments or of the people for whose benefit
+it was intended. But I think it is now well recognised that the
+University is playing a useful and essential part in the intellectual
+life of the community, and that any arrest to its progress would be
+nothing short of national disaster. These recollections of our early
+struggles lead me to say that it will now be very interesting to us,
+as onlookers, to see whether this last-born of the great educational
+centres of Australia--founded as it has been by a Government that
+claims to be at least as democratic as the Governments of its sister
+States--will escape the criticisms, sometimes quite undeserved, that
+have at one time or another been directed, certainly against my
+own University, and, as I think I may say also, against its sister
+institutions. Then, too, in the adjustment of the work of the
+University there will no doubt recur the perennial discussion--indeed
+it has already been initiated to-day by His Excellency--as to the
+relative importance in an educational system of culture as opposed to
+material science. I am glad that I am not called upon to enter into
+that question to-day. But, speaking now from a point of view which
+concerns literature no less than science, I may be permitted to say
+that it is gratifying to hear the announcement of the Honourable the
+Premier that the claims of original research will be brought
+within the scope of the institution which takes its origin to-day.
+(Applause.) Surely it is a desirable, even a necessary, function of
+the chief seat of learning of a State that its professors and teachers
+should not only teach that which is known, but that they should
+themselves be contributors to the sum of human knowledge. There can be
+no doubt that the prestige of a university depends far more upon the
+extent to which its teachers are known as originators of knowledge
+than upon their daily routine lectures, however honestly or however
+ably these may be delivered.
+
+[Illustration: LADY MacGREGOR PLANTING THE UNIVERSITY TREE]
+
+Every professor worthy the name will admit that the burden of
+teaching, unrelieved and uninspired by the stimulus of independent
+work and thought, may indeed become destructive of the intellectual
+energies. This infant University, launched as it is upon its career
+with the goodwill of a prudent Government and with, I believe, to an
+unusual degree the good wishes and support of the people, has the
+great advantage that it may profit by the example of the institutions
+that have preceded it; and fortunate will be the University of
+Queensland if, by adopting the good that may be discerned in its
+sister institutions, and by avoiding their mistakes, if such have
+been made, it shall enter upon and pursue a blameless career of which
+all men shall speak well. Even in their relatively short careers, as
+time goes for States and institutions, it can be perceived that the
+Australian Universities have to some extent developed individualities
+of their own, and this is just what is to be desired. A Minister of
+France under the Third Empire once made it his boast that on the same
+day and at the same hour every corresponding class in every Lycee
+throughout the length and breadth of the land was performing the same
+allotted task. That boast bespoke an undesirable uniformity which is
+not likely to find favour in British communities, least of all in
+these States, where we have become accustomed to strike out new lines
+in education for ourselves. Therefore, it is to be desired that the
+University of Queensland will in its turn, evolve an individuality of
+its own, that it will be inspired by the particular requirements of
+the State whose interests it serves; and, further, may I express the
+hope that the fact will become recognised, which has not easily
+gained recognition in the Australian communities--namely, that a
+well-founded and well-equipped university may be one of the best
+assets, material as well as intellectual, that can be possessed by
+any State or Nation. Your Excellency, I have been ordered to be brief
+in my remarks, and, interesting as are many of the thoughts that
+arise on such an exceptional occasion, I must conclude by expressing
+once more, on behalf of the University I have the honour to represent,
+and with all earnestness and sincerity, our fervent hope that this
+University of Queensland, so auspiciously inaugurated, will prosper
+to the uttermost, and that it will grow in usefulness and dignity as
+it grows in years, and that at length it will stand forth as a noble
+monument to the great State whose far-seeing Government and whose
+public-spirited citizens have this day launched it on its career of
+promise. (Applause.)
+
+
+THE HON. W. KIDSTON: I have now to invite Her Excellency, Lady
+MacGregor, to plant a "University tree," which I hope will grow and
+flourish as we expect the University to do, and that in the years to
+come, when many who are here to-day have passed away, the tree will be
+known as "Lady MacGregor's tree."
+
+
+On a spot in front of the dais, Her Excellency planted a tree with
+a silver trowel on which was inscribed: "To Lady MacGregor, from the
+Chief Secretary of Queensland, Hon. W. Kidston, 10th December, 1909."
+Lady MacGregor then declared the tree well and truly planted.
+
+
+
+
+ BRISBANE:
+
+ ANTHONY JAMES CUMMING, GOVERNMENT PRINTER.
+
+ 1909.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+ Transcriber's Note:
+
+
+ Missing or damaged punctuation has been repaired.
+
+ The mid-dot, usual for the period, was used for decimals, and
+ where used, has been retained.
+
+ L.s., _locus sigilli_ ( = the place of the seal).
+
+ Part of the text of Map 8 was on the next page after 2 pages
+ of maps, and has been moved to join the beginning of the map 8
+ text, for better flow.
+
+ The Barwan River, described in the Proclamation in the Government
+ Gazette, and under Queensland (Map 9) is now known as the Barwon
+ River.
+
+ Illustrations (photographs) through the book appear facing
+ every 4th or 8th page. Where a photograph intersects a
+ paragraph of text, it has been moved to the end of the
+ paragraph.
+
+ Page 27: 'freetrade' corrected to 'free trade' "... the
+ enhanced prosperity resulting from interstate free trade."
+
+ Page 69: 'arrear', archaic, but probably correct in 1909.
+ "... unoccupied land might be leased for fourteen years by a
+ council when rates had been permitted to fall into arrear for
+ a term of four years." (Webster's Dictionary, 1913 Edition).
+
+ Page 207: Mining: 1872: Gold raised in Queensland: L537,365.
+ The first '3' could be '2'. The scan is smudged and unclear.
+
+ Page 229: 'Mount Cornish, No. 3'.
+ The '3' may be a '5'. The scan is unclear, even at different
+ magnifications.
+
+ Page 237: Brisbane, mean summer temperature, '76.0' could be
+ '73.0' or '75.0'. This is a 'best guess'; the scan is smudged
+ and unclear, and part of the number is missing. '76.0' has
+ been selected after a careful comparison of the '6' with nearby
+ numbers. 76.0 deg.F is also closest to the current Brisbane mean
+ summer temperature of 24.8 deg.C, or 76.6 deg.F, and in the same chart,
+ the current Brisbane mean winter temperature of 15.6 deg.C, or 60 deg.F
+ is the same as that given in this 1909 book (60 deg.F).
+
+ Page 243: 'acessible' corrected to 'accessible'.
+ "... by which it was to be made accessible to all our young
+ people without regard to...."
+
+
+
+
+
+
+End of Project Gutenberg's Our First Half-Century, by Government of Queensland
+
+*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK OUR FIRST HALF-CENTURY ***
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