Jens Hansen Lundager (4 May 1853 – 7 March 1930) was a Danish-born Australian photographer, newspaper editor and politician.
Lundager was born, along with a twin sister, in Vejlby, Denmark on 4 May 1853 to Hans Jensen Hansen and Else AndersDatte Hansen. [1] At birth, he was named Jens Larsen Hansen. It was not until after he emigrated to Australia that he changed his surname to Lundager, which is believed to have been the name of his mother's home village. [1]
He grew up in Bogense. Lundager's mother died when he was eleven, forcing him to find work as a servant before eventually relocating to Odense where he learnt pottery. [1]
Lundager contracted tuberculosis leaving him unable to work for two years. [1] When he was ready to work again, he had to find less physically challenging work, and therefore entered the field of photography, establishing his own photography business in Fredericia. [1] However, Lundager still struggled to recover, prompting his doctor to suggest that he consider seeking a warmer climate. Lundager decided to emigrate to Australia. [1]
Lundager made the journey from Hamburg to Rockhampton aboard the immigrant ship Charles Dickens, arriving in Keppel Bay on 26 February 1879. [2] Lundager was among 208 Danes who arrived in Rockhampton on the ship. [3] Seven people, including two children, had died during the journey and four babies were born between Hamburg and Rockhampton. [3]
It was claimed that a number of passengers had arrived in Rockhampton under the impression that they would be entitled to receive a land order, enabling them to settle on and cultivate a parcel of land. This was despite the land order system being abolished several years earlier. [4]
There was also criticism of the timing of Charles Dickens' arrival due to the fact that passengers aboard a previous immigrant ship, The Carnatic had "gutted" the local labour market, which many believed would make it particularly difficult for the immigrants from the Charles Dickens to find work. [5]
After his arrival in Rockhampton, Lundager undertook some photography work but briefly went to the goldfields at Temora in the Riverina district of New South Wales. [1] Upon his return to Rockhampton, he took over a photographic studio originally established by French photographer Louis Buderus. [1] who moved to Clermont, Queensland to open a photographic studio there in 1884. [6]
After settling in Rockhampton, Lundager married Mathilde Helene in 1882 and was naturalised as an Australian in 1883. [1] Lundager and his wife had seven children: Else Johanna, Marie Chrestine, Henry Walter, Hulda Hellene, Mary Christina, Alma May and Dagmar Mathilde. Two of their children, Marie and Henry, both died from diphtheria in 1890. [1]
Lundager soon became well known in the local area for his high quality photography. The Mount Morgan Mine commissioned Lundager to take portraits of mine owners, managers, guests, mine workers and of the actual mine operations at Mount Morgan. [1]
In 1885, the Queensland Government commissioned Lundager to create an album for the Colonial and Indian Exhibition of 1886 in London, for which he received praise and a bronze medal. [7] His work was praised in London's Photographic News magazine, which described a contemporaneous South Australian work as dull, with the "dullness" more noticeable against the works of Lundager. According to the magazine, Lundager had succeeded in his works of the Mount Morgan Mine, obtaining a quality inseparable from good landscape work. The publication pondered if Queensland was more suitable for photography than South Australia or whether the difference was due to the photographer who created the work. [8]
In 1889, the Rockhampton Reception Committee presented an album of Lundager's works were to visiting Irish MP and Home Rule advocate John Dillon. [9] Dillon was on an Australian fundraising tour for the Irish National Movement and gave lectures at the Hibernian Hall in Rockhampton [10] and at the Mount Morgan School of Arts. [11]
Throughout his busy public life, Lundager continued his passion for photography and in 1911, released Central Queensland Illustrated, a compilation of photos he had taken in Central Queensland as a tribute and record to commemorate the region's 50th anniversary. [12]
In early November 1889, Lundager's shop in Rockhampton's East Street was destroyed in an overnight blaze. Although some equipment including a camera and some photographs were saved, many valuable photos and negatives were destroyed in the fire. [13] [14] [15]
After the fire, Lundager made the decision to permanently take up residence in Mount Morgan, 25 miles from Rockhampton. [1]
After relocating to Mount Morgan, Lundager again established a photographic business. He also became a bookseller and stationery agent to supplement his income.[ citation needed ]
He was a foundation member of the Mount Morgan Masonic Lodge in 1888 and its long-term treasurer.[ citation needed ]
In 1905, Lundager was unanimously elected mayor at the Mount Morgan Town Council. [16] Before being officially elected as mayor, Lundager was already an alderman with the council and was serving as acting mayor. Lundager was again elected mayor of Mount Morgan Town Council in 1906. [17]
His interest in politics also extended to a Federal level. Lundager was a candidate for a seat in the Australian Senate at the 1906 Federal Election [18] winning over 47,000 votes. [19]
Throughout his time in Mount Morgan, Lundager was involved in the Mount Morgan Progress Association, the Mount Morgan School of Arts, the Mount Morgan Hospital Committee, the Mount Morgan Technical College, the Mount Morgan Boys' School Committee, the Mount Morgan Girls' School Committee, the Penny Savings Bank, the Gordon Club, the Mount Morgan Licensing Bench, the Mount Morgan Masonic Lodge, the Workers' Political Organisation and the Australian Workers' Association. [19]
Additionally, he was editor and part-proprietor of the local newspaper Mount Morgan Argus for six years [19] – a version of which is still being published today. [20] He was also vocal proponent for the Dawson Valley railway line. [19]
Following declining health including the re-emergence of tuberculosis, [1] Lundager began to withdraw from his various public and political interests in Mount Morgan in 1912, following advice from doctors. In an article published in The Morning Bulletin, the writer inferred that Lundager's health was inevitably going to suffer due to the strenuous life he had led for many years, without taking a break. [19]
In 1919, Lundager made the decision to leave Mount Morgan and relocate to Sydney [21] but not before his shop in Mount Morgan was ransacked in 1916 when thieves gained access to the premises through an unlocked window to steal various items, although they overlooked a number of valuable possessions during the break-in. [22]
Lundager died at his home in Chatswood, New South Wales on 7 March 1930 at the age of 76. [1] [23] He is buried at the Methodist Cemetery in North Sydney. [24]
Lundager's photographic work is still regularly used to illustrate the various developments, events and people of Central Queensland of the late 19th century and the early 20th century. [25] [26] [27] [28] [29]
Lundager was also the subject of a 1992 Journal Article by Grahame Griffin, entitled J. H. Lundager, Mount Morgan politician and photographer: company hack or subtle subversive? [30]
Lundager's daughter Hulda was among the casualties of the serious tourist coach accident on the Gillies Range near Gordonvale, Queensland in 1939. She was one of ten people injured when the vehicle plunged over an embankment on its way from Cairns to the Atherton Tableland, killing two tourists instantly. [31] [32]
Rockhampton is a city in the Rockhampton Region of Central Queensland, Australia. In the 2021 census, the population of Rockhampton was 79,293. A common nickname for Rockhampton is 'Rocky', and the demonym of Rockhampton is Rockhamptonite.
Mount Morgan is a rural town and locality in the Rockhampton Region, Queensland, Australia. The town was the administrative centre of the Mount Morgan Shire until March 2008, when it was amalgamated with neighbouring local government areas to form the Rockhampton Region.
The Shire of Banana is a local government area located in the Capricorn region of Queensland, Australia, inland from the regional city of Gladstone. The shire was named after the first township in the region (Banana), which in turn was named for the burial site of a huge dun coloured bullock named 'Banana'. The council sits in the town of Biloela, which is the largest town in the Shire.
The Shire of Mount Morgan was a local government area located in the Capricornia region of Central Queensland, Queensland, Australia, about 20 kilometres (12 mi) south of the regional city of Rockhampton. The shire, roughly the region surrounding the former gold mining town of Mount Morgan, covered an area of 492.0 square kilometres (190.0 sq mi), and existed as a local government entity from 1890 until 2008, when it amalgamated with several other councils to become the Rockhampton Region.
Kabra is a rural town and locality in the Rockhampton Region, Queensland, Australia. In the 2021 census, the locality of Kabra had a population of 430 people.
Stanwell is a rural town and locality in the Rockhampton Region, Queensland, Australia. In the 2021 census, the locality of Stanwell had a population of 301 people.
Bajool is a rural town and locality in the Rockhampton Region, Queensland, Australia. In the 2021 census, the locality of Bajool had a population of 447 people.
St Mary's Anglican Church is a State heritage-listed church at 11 Gordon Street, Mount Morgan, Rockhampton Region, Queensland, Australia. It was designed and built in 1888–1889 by Scottish-born Thomas Glen Cornes (1842–1903), superintendent of sawmills and carpenters at the Mount Morgan Gold Mining Company Limited. It was added to the Queensland Heritage Register on 25 August 2000.
John William Wilson was an architect and builder in Rockhampton, Queensland, Australia. A number of his buildings are now heritage-listed.
James Flint was a British and Australian architect. A number of his works are heritage-listed.
Walter Charles Ingram was a member of the Queensland Legislative Assembly.
John Theophilus Symons (JTS) Bird was an Australian journalist, historian, author and gold prospector.
James Grant Pattison was an Australian journalist and author, known for writing under the pseudonym of "Battler".
William Charles Crompton (1865–1911) was an Australian poet.
Joseph Shiel was a Roman Catholic priest in Australia. He was the Roman Catholic Bishop of Rockhampton from 26 January 1913 until his death on 7 April 1931.
George Anderson Richard, probably born George Anderson Richards was a mine engineer with Mount Morgan Mine, Queensland and general manager 1903–1912. He was almost invariably referred to as G. A. Richard, and from 1908 to his death customarily prefixed by "Captain".
On 22 March 1954, Andrew Dingwall, a 50-year-old newsagent was murdered by 19-year-old Patrick Joseph Platts who violently stabbed Dingwall 17 times and slashed his throat during a bungled robbery of Dingwall's newsagency in Mount Morgan, Queensland.
Thomas Joseph Lee was an Australian politician, best known for being the mayor of the City of Rockhampton between 14 April 1930 and 20 April 1936.
Thomas Alan Wyatt is an Australian horticulturalist best known for his 40-year association with the Australian Broadcasting Corporation in Queensland for which he hosted a weekly program called Gardening Talkback on the ABC Local Radio network.