William Thorne was a printer, newspaper owner and politician in Brisbane, Queensland, Australia. He was Mayor of Brisbane in 1898. [1]
Thorne was a prominent member of the Wharf Street Congregational Church. [1]
Thorne died on 11 October 1915 at the Central Mission Hall, Adelaide, South Australia. He was visiting Adelaide to attend the centenary of the Bible Christian Society, being the grandson of the society's founder. He was giving a speech when he suddenly said "Excuse me, friends" and then collapsed and died; his wife and brother-in-law Rev. O. Lake were present. [1]
Digby Frank Denham was politician and businessman in Queensland, Australia. He was a Premier of Queensland and Member of the Queensland Legislative Assembly. He was the first of only two Queensland Premiers to lose their own seat at a general election.
Sir Augustus Charles Gregory was an English-born Australian explorer and surveyor. Between 1846 and 1858 he undertook four major expeditions. He was the first Surveyor-General of Queensland. He was appointed a lifetime Member of the Queensland Legislative Council.
Frederick Manson Bailey was a botanist active in Australia, who made valuable contributions to the characterisation of the flora of Queensland.
Adelaide Street is a major street in Brisbane, Queensland, Australia. It runs between and parallel to Queen Street and Ann Street.
The Town of Ithaca is a former local government area of Queensland, Australia, located in inner western Brisbane.
Arthur Wellington Ware CMG was a brewer and Mayor of Adelaide from 1898 to 1901 and a publican in both South Australia and Queensland.
Cyril Tenison ("C.T.") White was an Australian botanist.
The Wharf Street Congregational Church was a Congregational church built in 1860 on the corner of Wharf Street and Adelaide Street, Brisbane, Queensland, Australia. The church was demolished in 1928. It was the first Congregational church in Brisbane.
Leonard and Kathleen Shillam were Australian sculptors.
In 1976 they were awarded life membership of the Society of Sculptors, Queensland.
On 26 January 1986 they were appointed Members of the Order of Australia.
In December 2000 they were awarded Honorary Doctorates of Philosophy for services to the arts, notably sculpture, from the University of Queensland.
John George Appel (1859–1929) was an Australian politician, lawyer, and farmer. He served from 1908-1929 as a delegate for the electoral district of Albert and from 1909-1915 as the Secretary of Mine and Public Works and Home Secretary of Queensland.
Thomas Goode was a pastoralist in the Colony of South Australia.
The Bush Brotherhood was a group of Anglican religious orders providing itinerant priests to minister to sparsely-settled rural districts in Australia. They were described as a "band of men" who could "preach like Apostles" and "ride like cowboys".
David John Garland (1864–1939) was an Anglican clergyman and a military chaplain in Queensland, Australia. As senior army camp chaplain in Queensland from 1914 to 1917, Garland experienced the World War I both at home and at the front. He was one of the originators of the now annual Anzac Day ceremonies. Described as "overpoweringly energetic with a distinctive flair, if not genius, for organisation", he played a pivotal role in the Queensland experience of the war, and was a central figure in a variety of committees and organisations established to aid the war effort and support or commemorate serving or returned soldiers.
Albert Edward Victor Whitford was a tailor and member of the Queensland Legislative Assembly. He was shot dead in Brisbane in 1924.
William Field Lloyd was a school teacher and member of the Queensland Legislative Assembly.
George Cuthbert Taylor was a Shearer and member of the Queensland Legislative Assembly.
Hedley Allen Dunn was a South Australian architect, a member of the prominent Dunn family of Mount Barker. His work included the flour mill at Port Adelaide for his father and grandfather in 1886, and the Stock Exchange Building on McHenry Street, off Grenfell Street, Adelaide, in 1900.
Thomas "Tom" Rees Thomas MBE (1910–1993), generally referred to as T. Rees Thomas, often Rees-Thomas, was an Australian Congregationalist minister.
Lewis Jarvis Harvey (1871–1949) was an artist and teacher in Brisbane, Queensland, Australia. He was an important practitioner and teacher in the arts and crafts movement in Queensland and a figure of national significance. He was an accomplished artist, carver, ceramist and sculptor, as well as the inspiration of the largest school of Art Pottery in Australia. His work appears in many churches and public buildings.
Henry Lewis Conran, generally known as H. L. Conran but Harry to his friends, was an Australian pastoralist and stockbroker.