Buried beneath Brisbane's premiere sporty place thing, is a once large cemetery that held up to ten thousand bodies. #walkaboutwithrob #brisbanehistory #suncorpstadium
What a great historian you are.. this is a very interesting and substantial piece of information . We need more people like you telling Brisbane historical tales like these. Thank you Rob!
My first job working for Brisbane City Council at Toowong Cemetary was painting this church, the Sexton at the time gave myself and Don the job of painting the church as it took a few months to finish the job, the paint was supplied by the church we did it with ladders and a trestle, what you have said in your video is what i was told while painting the church, i was told a few bodies or remains were buried at the church not sure if this is correct as it was in early 70's when i was there and pleased to see the headstones are still there as the grounds are now smaller than i remember. I was employed as a Grave Digger at Toowong Cemetary i also worked at Lutwyche, Dutton Park or South Brisbane Cemetary, also dug graves at Nundah Cemetary.
Thank you for such an informative talk on the history of the cemetries and burials that were once around Brisbane before a lot were exhumed and moved. So sad learning about the 3 little children.
Nearly 7000 are still there only a around 300 were exhumed and reburied . There were 4 little children but one got washed away in the floods before 1881 and the other 3 with their headstones are now in Toowong Cemetery
I've known this for a while and done my own research on it in the past. As a footy fan and Brisbane Broncos tragic, I've always found it facinating I attend games over the top of a cemetary. Great to see a video on it!
thumbs up number 1k or something 👍🏻 great video 🙏 thank goodness we don’t live back then☝️ i appreciate a guy that can do his own research 👉 seems to be getting harder and harder to find.. these days .. when it should be getting easier and easier 😳 they had it tough back then .. it’s where a lot of the local queensland spirits comes from , not to mention the xxxx brewery just up the road .. God bless you 🙏
That first burial ground probably explains why I’ve picked up many people from the hostel (ex service station) opposite that plot of land that describe the hostel as haunted… people seeing shadow figures and furniture move
My daughter has handled, lace from dresses that others' were buried in from this massive North Brisbane burial ground. Please - as I have seen on other social media, I hope Paranormal Investigators and associated, leave this area of Christchurch and the surrounding burial ground alone and not make a mockery of this historic place. Brilliant doco, as always, Rob!
Interesting chat. As always thanks for taking the time to put it all together. There may be some future stories from historic cemeteries about the place, Bald Hills/Bracken Ridge, Nundah and no doubt others looking back at the early settlers and settlement of these places.
Poltergiest the Movie comes to mind.... I visited the milton Church with its small Graveyard before the Stadium was Built.. Lots of very Old Graves were there from the 1865s backwards
I have always found the cemetery on Cemetery Road Upper Kedron to be the most fascinating. So tiny and many were killed in the famous train crash that happened between ferny grove and samford.
Was it difficult to refrain from saying how the grounds ended up being the 'dead centre of Brisbane'? I'm both sad it wasn't used but also happy that the seriousness of the documentary was preserved.
Actually I wasn't aware that it was the dead centre of Brisbane. I'm glad the tone of the show came across - I wanted to keep the humour down for this one and really just cover the story. Thanks!
One person who was moved from there to South Brisbane cemetery is Thomas Mowbray, He would of been in the Presbetaryian section as he was known as the father of Presbetaryian in Brisbane. He was reinterred at South Brisbane with his wife after she passed away As mentioned in this video: ruclips.net/video/vB_c2NzRDi0/видео.htmlsi=MvfEG_KiJN3PTiuA
Thanks Robert - its was a great story - I knew a bit about subject too + PDT Architects were part of LANG PARK -STADIUM DEVELOPMENT WITH HOK ARCHITECTS (now POPUOLOS)
Rob you always provide very informative and interesting historical content of the city and the area surrounding the city we love and live in good job and keep it up
This video would have to be my favourite so far, very interesting history and I particularly enjoyed seeing inside the beautiful Anglican memorial church, which is a very fine building (thanks to Lars Anderson!)
Thanks Rob for following up on my suggestion, so much more than the tales from my construction work colleagues and the security guy told me, obviously hearsay is not always reliable, again thanks for enlightening me.
Been following since you had like 1k subs, mate you've only gotten better each video. Great to see this one revisiting some old spots pun unintended) and some new ones too, with additional research! Only comment is it would be great to see you collaborate more with the local historian you had on for the walk through Queen St, she was an absolute gem - maybe a sit down interview, or longer form content idea ;)
Great work as always, Rob. There's also talk that many of the gravestones from this site were also used to pave an early iteration of Hale Street. Do you happen to know any truth to this? Looking forward to what you have to offer for "Twisted Visions"!
No 505 perfect headstones were removed and broken up in 1930 by orders of William Jolly and secretly buried in Toowong Cemetery. We have found their location and have been unearthing them since 2013.
I grew up not far from Lang Park, had interschool sports days there, tennis round the corner, school books, ice & swimming across the road, as was my kindy and the boot factory. It might have been not much known about elsewhere but us kids from Paddington, Milton, Bardon, Red Hill, The Gap etc knew the story of the grave yard & the many generations on rather non pc stories and jokes (goats came into a few of them...) Enjoyed seeing what some of the quieter corners look like now.
What interesting history about different sites for different religions and sad that they moved them but progress happens. Shame they never thought of a cemetery for the future and a little further out. I suppose it was just tough and rough in those early days. Great video again. Thank you.
Great documentary. Well done. In my view the whole concept of redeveloping a site for sport on top of Brisbane’s early pioneers final resting places is an absolute travesty. My G-G-G-Grandfather is one of these victims among the many thousands of others 😔
Hi, what was your ggg grandfather's name as I would like to compare it with the database I have of all who were buried in the 7 NOrth Brisbane Burial Grounds to give it it's proper name.
The gatekeeper and security officer that inducted my employees and myself told me there were ghost pictures, and he had more tales but he didn’t get time to tell me more , but apparently he had a few, he was a Pom from memory, nice guy
Thankyou Rob thanks for showing us the meaning when they say Suncorp Stadium or Lang Park Stadium is a Cemetary its not because of State of Origin and Qld win most years ts because literally the area is a former burial ground, and It be assumed that when they mean relocations back then 100 years ago I would assume that the head stones the things you see up top are relocated not the coffins, I too would gather there be hundreds if not 1000s of coffins and bodies in that area that weren't properly excume and relocated making the area a spirit filled experience. cheers for the history mate.
Really interesting, and adds colour to the family history. One day I will write it down, whether it’s ever read is another thing! RIP Kate Spilsbury who was exhumed from the Baptist portion to Toowong.
SPILSBURY Kate 21.4.1862 22y B 13.5.1913 Toowong 13.23.2 M Demolished Qld 1862/ B000775 George Reed Leonora On the 21st inst. At her residence, George street, the wife of Mr Thomas Spilsbury aged 23 years. (The Brisbane Courier 22.4.1862)
It was in investigating Paddington cemetery I came across an article from the Truth on Sunday the 29th of December, 1907 where the author goes through a number of those interred in the cemetery, who they were and their connections. In this article the author tells a very interesting tale about the murder of Robert Cox and its true perpetrator/s that I still have never heard repeated in any other discussion of the matter. The author claims it was relayed to them by the son of a man present that night (and a co-conspirator). It explains the holes in the prosecution of Fyfe and makes far more sense than the Mayne Inheritance, though Patrick Mayne was involved
@@Lisa-x3n5x Look on the website Trove. To find it again I searched Paddington Cemetery Barrett. It was part of a series over a number of weeks in the Truth as part of the 'Bygone Brisbane' section
It was not a murder rather an accidental death. Two men named Cox and playing cards at the Bush Inn with Patrick and a pollie whose name was not revealed but my research suggest a man named Sutton. Robert Cox accused the other chap of cheating at cards and the accused picked up a brass candle snuffer and threw it at Robert. Sadly it had a brass wick pricker on the end and it entered Robert's head and killed him. Aghast and very afraid of the police at that time the Pollie suggested they put the blame on Will Fyfe. Patrick being a butcher by trade was given the job of dismembering Robert. Fyfe got hung. Some months later the other Cox was on his way to the gallows at Darlinghurst for a completely different offence when he opened up about what really happened. The hanging of Fyfe was what weighed on Patrick's mind the rest of his life.
Great video!..... got to meet Darren lockyer drunk one night top of Caxton St at a take away.... he signed my shirt haha. State of origin 2006!, will never forget it
Was there on Friday to watch the reds game. Wish I knew all this information before I went. Love finding out history in areas you’ve been millions of times. And my company also maintains Toowong cemetery so tell your mate to stop doing ghost tours please 😅
hahaha , yeah my cousin just found out that there is a church buried or gone from that area in brisbane then i told him that the cemetary is under lang park football field and could not believe it ,,,took me a few years to get over it but its the truth and there you have it ...
Have you ever mentioned where "Milton" comes from Rob? I ask because it is also used for a Parish up on the Downs along the old Railway to Cooyar. Contains the now nearly defunct towns of Kulpi and Peranga along that line and the old Evergreen Pioneer Cemetery.
Thanks Rob. I love your vids. You've inspired me to dig further into the history here. I'm in Gordon Park and had no idea how much of this area was a quarry or what Eildon's hill actually was. (turns out i was also an "inmate" at Wilson Hall but never knew where it was. Now i live down the road.) I've spent time in all the places you show without realising the people who had been there before me. It's really cool, actually. so thanks again, mate.
when I was completing a first aid course, the trainer said there are some elements of the Lang Park redevelopment that memorialise the cemetaries. Something references shrouds, but I am not sure what.
Thanks! And yes it is a precarious place to be along North Quay. I didn't linger either, I filmed what I needed then was immediately moving away from the area.
The leading cause of death in the 25-45yo age group in 1860 were accidents. The second was respiratory TB. It's a little bit of a myth about poor sanitation being a primary reason for early deaths.
@@walkaboutwithrob I posted a couple of links which as host of the site you should be able to see despite YT blocking them. If not search "Death registration and mortality trends in Australia 1856-1906" it's a PhD thesis by Michael de Looper for ANU.
There are definately still burial sites at Lang Park. The only ones that were removed by the UQ archaeologists in 2001 were where the new development of the stadium was built - mainly on the Eastern side of the stadium. It was a salvage dig only. There is also a piped creek down the centre of the field that comes out into the Brisbane River - after rainfalls you can see the water gushing out into the river.
🇦🇺Mt Gravatt4122Australia 🇦🇺 hay Rob Tnd here... if u r eva in the Mt Gravatt area 4122 call in & have a look @ the fossilised serpents 🐍 that I have found & what i have discovered.. I'm talking about old aboriginal people's Dreamtime stories types things that I can prove r all true... any-a-ways God Bless brother 🙏 & I hope hear from u xox Tnb from beautiful Mt gravatt Brisbane Australia 🇦🇺 4122
Great video- I really appreciate just how much work would have gone into this, given trying to cross those roads there are a killer! Add to this however- I think there's a corner wedged somewhere in the Stadium itself where you can still see part of the old Boggo Road jail? I might be wrong & it may even be gone now with the CRR construction, but I seem to remember this little tidbit when I did a tour back in 2003!
@becsterbrisbane6275 thanks indeed! I haven't heard of any remnants of the old Boggo Road gaol being placed here. I'm wondering why someone would have transported a stone from that goal to Paddington. Keen to learn more if you find some info about it...
I grew up in nearby Auchenflower. I lived on the cnr Fortitude St/Lang Pde. Dunmore Tce was at the other end of Fortitude St on the ridge above overlooking the Brisbane River. Lima St and Chasely St were nearby. Fortitude, Chasely and Lime were the names of the ships which transported Lang's immigrants to Australia.
What a great historian you are.. this is a very interesting and substantial piece of information . We need more people like you telling Brisbane historical tales like these. Thank you Rob!
You're more than welcome! Really appreciate the positive feedback.
My first job working for Brisbane City Council at Toowong Cemetary was painting this church, the Sexton at the time gave myself and Don the job of painting the church as it took a few months to finish the job, the paint was supplied by the church we did it with ladders and a trestle, what you have said in your video is what i was told while painting the church, i was told a few bodies or remains were buried at the church not sure if this is correct as it was in early 70's when i was there and pleased to see the headstones are still there as the grounds are now smaller than i remember. I was employed as a Grave Digger at Toowong Cemetary i also worked at Lutwyche, Dutton Park or South Brisbane Cemetary, also dug graves at Nundah Cemetary.
My school would organise excursions to cemeteries in Sydney in the late 60's , l always loved the historic value of them.
@@gillianbrowning3177 Newtown cemetery is awesome
Sadly, the Qld team was buried there on Wed night.
Lol. Rip.
Hahaha. 🥲
Thanks Rob :) More cemetery videos please!
Thank you for such an informative talk on the history of the cemetries and burials that were once around Brisbane before a lot were exhumed and moved. So sad learning about the 3 little children.
Nearly 7000 are still there only a around 300 were exhumed and reburied . There were 4 little children but one got washed away in the floods before 1881 and the other 3 with their headstones are now in Toowong Cemetery
Be great to see some of Capalaba history, keep up the great work love watching and learning
Fascinating history. Thank you
I've known this for a while and done my own research on it in the past. As a footy fan and Brisbane Broncos tragic, I've always found it facinating I attend games over the top of a cemetary. Great to see a video on it!
thumbs up number 1k or something 👍🏻 great video 🙏 thank goodness we don’t live back then☝️ i appreciate a guy that can do his own research 👉 seems to be getting harder and harder to find.. these days .. when it should be getting easier and easier 😳 they had it tough back then .. it’s where a lot of the local queensland spirits comes from , not to mention the xxxx brewery just up the road .. God bless you 🙏
Fascinating to learn about the cemetry history, thank you!
Glad you enjoyed it
That first burial ground probably explains why I’ve picked up many people from the hostel (ex service station) opposite that plot of land that describe the hostel as haunted… people seeing shadow figures and furniture move
My daughter has handled, lace from dresses that others' were buried in from this massive North Brisbane burial ground. Please - as I have seen on other social media, I hope Paranormal Investigators and associated, leave this area of Christchurch and the surrounding burial ground alone and not make a mockery of this historic place. Brilliant doco, as always, Rob!
This sort of local history is absolutely fascinating and should be more widely known. Thanks!
Thank you!
And yet another thoroughly enjoyable video to watch. Keep up the good work. ☺️from Julianne
Very interesting, and the quality of the video is exceptional.
Thanks. I always try to put effort into the cinematography too.
Interesting chat. As always thanks for taking the time to put it all together. There may be some future stories from historic cemeteries about the place, Bald Hills/Bracken Ridge, Nundah and no doubt others looking back at the early settlers and settlement of these places.
Poltergiest the Movie comes to mind.... I visited the milton Church with its small Graveyard before the Stadium was Built.. Lots of very Old Graves were there from the 1865s backwards
I have always found the cemetery on Cemetery Road Upper Kedron to be the most fascinating. So tiny and many were killed in the famous train crash that happened between ferny grove and samford.
Rob, I'm not exactly sure why, but I enjoyed this one strangely more than your others. Thank you. It had me enthralled.
Thanks! This one came together quite quickly too.
I remember going to dances in that church in the mid sixties as a very young teen. It was the Bar K Ramblers Square Dance Club.
Glad you showed us that church, it's quite beautiful. Thanks Rob
Was it difficult to refrain from saying how the grounds ended up being the 'dead centre of Brisbane'? I'm both sad it wasn't used but also happy that the seriousness of the documentary was preserved.
People were dieing to get in.
Actually I wasn't aware that it was the dead centre of Brisbane. I'm glad the tone of the show came across - I wanted to keep the humour down for this one and really just cover the story. Thanks!
@@walkaboutwithrobWell when I am dead and buried I would be glad to have someone walk around on top of my grave and spin a humorous yarn or two
Hi Rob, just wanted to say this is another awesome video and I love learning about my home town - Brisbane. Keep up the great work
Really good video man
Thanks for the video! very interesting! can't wait the next one
Another great video. Thanks Rob
What a great video, thanks Rob, thanks for the research and effort
Possibly a new favourite video of yours Rob. A topic I thought I knew lots about but still learnt plenty from this video :)
Very interesting, Rob. Thank you for another wonderful video.
I believe that contributed to the Lang Park Ground being called the "Cauldron", cheers Rob... good video.
another great video 👍🏻 thankyou 😊
One person who was moved from there to South Brisbane cemetery is Thomas Mowbray, He would of been in the Presbetaryian section as he was known as the father of Presbetaryian in Brisbane. He was reinterred at South Brisbane with his wife after she passed away
As mentioned in this video: ruclips.net/video/vB_c2NzRDi0/видео.htmlsi=MvfEG_KiJN3PTiuA
very useful link re Rev Thomas Mowbray first Presbyterian Minister in Queensland
@@DwightWalkerwas lang a presbyatarion too .. i think he influenced my great grandfather to move out here . October 1864
@@jesusislukeskywalker4294 yes John Dunmore Lang was a Presbyterian (note spelling). Presbyter means elder.
I wonder if there are any ghosts of the people buried where Lang Park now stands who still haunt the place...
Thanks Robert - its was a great story - I knew a bit about subject too + PDT Architects were part of LANG PARK -STADIUM DEVELOPMENT WITH HOK ARCHITECTS (now POPUOLOS)
This is the church my grandparents were married in. Thank you so much for the history. It was fascinating.
Rob you always provide very informative and interesting historical content of the city and the area surrounding the city we love and live in good job and keep it up
Awesome and very interesting stories in this post Rob. I love these kinds of stories. Thanks Rob ❤❤❤
This video would have to be my favourite so far, very interesting history and I particularly enjoyed seeing inside the beautiful Anglican memorial church, which is a very fine building (thanks to Lars Anderson!)
love this one!!! Informative and visually stunning. Thank you very much Rob
Awesome, Thanks Rob, some of those Huge Figs on Dowse St must be from that time.
They are enormous, Learnt a lot..
Thanks Rob for following up on my suggestion, so much more than the tales from my construction work colleagues and the security guy told me, obviously hearsay is not always reliable, again thanks for enlightening me.
Thanks for suggesting it. This was a fascinating place to cover.
Outstanding mate
I found some interesting old fragments under the big old fig tree a long time ago, pottery, bits of shells etc.
G'Day Rob - what interesting stories. Thank you.
People are still dying to get into Lang Park
Brilliant work, Rob. Thank you yet again
Been following since you had like 1k subs, mate you've only gotten better each video. Great to see this one revisiting some old spots pun unintended) and some new ones too, with additional research!
Only comment is it would be great to see you collaborate more with the local historian you had on for the walk through Queen St, she was an absolute gem - maybe a sit down interview, or longer form content idea ;)
Top quality as always Rob, cheers
Thanks Rob, nice work. I've got one ancestor buried there and funny enough some others came out on the Fortitude.
yyyyyyyYYYYYEAH ROBBIE. I love your videos man!!! This made me feel closer to the city I love
Great work as always, Rob. There's also talk that many of the gravestones from this site were also used to pave an early iteration of Hale Street. Do you happen to know any truth to this?
Looking forward to what you have to offer for "Twisted Visions"!
No 505 perfect headstones were removed and broken up in 1930 by orders of William Jolly and secretly buried in Toowong Cemetery. We have found their location and have been unearthing them since 2013.
I watched the removal of the Hale St cemetery in 1990 walking to work from Petrie Terrace to Milton. The graves were between the church and Lang Park.
For years every single time we drive by here, whoever is in the car with me has been getting their own little history tour about it.
Cool. Local history is so fascinating and needs to be shared!
@@walkaboutwithrob Hear! hear!
@@straightedgeredhead🙏
I grew up not far from Lang Park, had interschool sports days there, tennis round the corner, school books, ice & swimming across the road, as was my kindy and the boot factory. It might have been not much known about elsewhere but us kids from Paddington, Milton, Bardon, Red Hill, The Gap etc knew the story of the grave yard & the many generations on rather non pc stories and jokes (goats came into a few of them...)
Enjoyed seeing what some of the quieter corners look like now.
I heard the old joke that the ghosts come out onto the field and play rugby when the Suncorp stadium is closed at night
Excellent production, so interesting thank you 🙏
The Bracken Ridge / Bald Hills cemitary is prity old too , we used wander round there as kids !!!
Thanks
@sophrapsune thank you most kindly for your very generous gift.
Great information again, big thumbs up.
What interesting history about different sites for different religions and sad that they moved them but progress happens. Shame they never thought of a cemetery for the future and a little further out. I suppose it was just tough and rough in those early days. Great video again. Thank you.
Great video!
Great documentary. Well done. In my view the whole concept of redeveloping a site for sport on top of Brisbane’s early pioneers final resting places is an absolute travesty. My G-G-G-Grandfather is one of these victims among the many thousands of others 😔
Hi, what was your ggg grandfather's name as I would like to compare it with the database I have of all who were buried in the 7 NOrth Brisbane Burial Grounds to give it it's proper name.
@@user-dn8mr9if5o his name was John Rains. He died in 1860 and was buried in the Church of England burial ground, Brisbane 👍
The gatekeeper and security officer that inducted my employees and myself told me there were ghost pictures, and he had more tales but he didn’t get time to tell me more , but apparently he had a few, he was a Pom from memory, nice guy
be interesting to run a ground penetrating radar around the areas..map out where people might lie..
They are around 30 metres down under an industrial rubbish dump and then the lot filled over with soil.
Thankyou Rob thanks for showing us the meaning when they say Suncorp Stadium or Lang Park Stadium is a Cemetary its not because of State of Origin and Qld win most years ts because literally the area is a former burial ground, and It be assumed that when they mean relocations back then 100 years ago I would assume that the head stones the things you see up top are relocated not the coffins, I too would gather there be hundreds if not 1000s of coffins and bodies in that area that weren't properly excume and relocated making the area a spirit filled experience. cheers for the history mate.
About 7000 sets of remains still lie there and about 300 were exhumed.
Really interesting, and adds colour to the family history. One day I will write it down, whether it’s ever read is another thing! RIP Kate Spilsbury who was exhumed from the Baptist portion to Toowong.
SPILSBURY Kate 21.4.1862 22y B 13.5.1913 Toowong 13.23.2 M Demolished Qld 1862/ B000775 George Reed Leonora On the 21st inst. At her residence, George street, the wife of Mr Thomas Spilsbury aged 23 years. (The Brisbane Courier 22.4.1862)
@@user-dn8mr9if5o my husband is descended from Thomas Spilsbury and his second wife, Annie Chalk. Their old house is in Spring Hill.
It was in investigating Paddington cemetery I came across an article from the Truth on Sunday the 29th of December, 1907 where the author goes through a number of those interred in the cemetery, who they were and their connections. In this article the author tells a very interesting tale about the murder of Robert Cox and its true perpetrator/s that I still have never heard repeated in any other discussion of the matter. The author claims it was relayed to them by the son of a man present that night (and a co-conspirator). It explains the holes in the prosecution of Fyfe and makes far more sense than the Mayne Inheritance, though Patrick Mayne was involved
I would be so interested in that. Where was the article?
@@Lisa-x3n5x Look on the website Trove. To find it again I searched Paddington Cemetery Barrett. It was part of a series over a number of weeks in the Truth as part of the 'Bygone Brisbane' section
Yes I read that article. Very useful.
It was not a murder rather an accidental death. Two men named Cox and playing cards at the Bush Inn with Patrick and a pollie whose name was not revealed but my research suggest a man named Sutton. Robert Cox accused the other chap of cheating at cards and the accused picked up a brass candle snuffer and threw it at Robert. Sadly it had a brass wick pricker on the end and it entered Robert's head and killed him. Aghast and very afraid of the police at that time the Pollie suggested they put the blame on Will Fyfe. Patrick being a butcher by trade was given the job of dismembering Robert. Fyfe got hung. Some months later the other Cox was on his way to the gallows at Darlinghurst for a completely different offence when he opened up about what really happened. The hanging of Fyfe was what weighed on Patrick's mind the rest of his life.
17:25 thanks Rob 👍 I'll avoid that spot on the way to the skate park, tippy toe pass it.
Great video!..... got to meet Darren lockyer drunk one night top of Caxton St at a take away.... he signed my shirt haha. State of origin 2006!, will never forget it
Fascinating!
You gotta do the spring hill salt baths, reservoirs and their outflows
I've done a show about Spring Hill...
@@walkaboutwithrob but have you covered the...... mud flood
@@WHDRWN So?
@@walkaboutwithrob joking
Was there on Friday to watch the reds game. Wish I knew all this information before I went. Love finding out history in areas you’ve been millions of times. And my company also maintains Toowong cemetery so tell your mate to stop doing ghost tours please 😅
hahaha , yeah my cousin just found out that there is a church buried or gone from that area in brisbane then i told him that the cemetary is under lang park football field and could not believe it ,,,took me a few years to get over it but its the truth and there you have it ...
My hero ❤
Have you ever mentioned where "Milton" comes from Rob? I ask because it is also used for a Parish up on the Downs along the old Railway to Cooyar. Contains the now nearly defunct towns of Kulpi and Peranga along that line and the old Evergreen Pioneer Cemetery.
@TubbsFarquhar Thanks for that. Usually things get named for people who first settle there or do the surveying.
Thanks Rob. I love your vids. You've inspired me to dig further into the history here. I'm in Gordon Park and had no idea how much of this area was a quarry or what Eildon's hill actually was. (turns out i was also an "inmate" at Wilson Hall but never knew where it was. Now i live down the road.) I've spent time in all the places you show without realising the people who had been there before me. It's really cool, actually. so thanks again, mate.
Thanks so much!
when I was completing a first aid course, the trainer said there are some elements of the Lang Park redevelopment that memorialise the cemetaries. Something references shrouds, but I am not sure what.
...not sure either
Thoroughly enjoyed this Rob
One of your best
I was a bit worried about the cars being so close to you 😀
Thanks! And yes it is a precarious place to be along North Quay. I didn't linger either, I filmed what I needed then was immediately moving away from the area.
The leading cause of death in the 25-45yo age group in 1860 were accidents. The second was respiratory TB. It's a little bit of a myth about poor sanitation being a primary reason for early deaths.
@chriswatson7965 Oh. Do you have some sources that I could review regarding this?
@@walkaboutwithrob I posted a couple of links which as host of the site you should be able to see despite YT blocking them. If not search "Death registration and mortality trends in Australia 1856-1906" it's a PhD thesis by Michael de Looper for ANU.
Very interesting... thankyou.
I don't think I would want a home though on-top of where people were buried.....their ghosts might complain a bit !😂
i know the area well but didn't know this
awesome
There are definately still burial sites at Lang Park. The only ones that were removed by the UQ archaeologists in 2001 were where the new development of the stadium was built - mainly on the Eastern side of the stadium. It was a salvage dig only. There is also a piped creek down the centre of the field that comes out into the Brisbane River - after rainfalls you can see the water gushing out into the river.
Gee, this makes me feel some type of way
What kind of way?
Thanks. Interesting.
🇦🇺Mt Gravatt4122Australia 🇦🇺 hay Rob Tnd here... if u r eva in the Mt Gravatt area 4122 call in & have a look @ the fossilised serpents 🐍 that I have found & what i have discovered.. I'm talking about old aboriginal people's Dreamtime stories types things that I can prove r all true... any-a-ways God Bless brother 🙏 & I hope hear from u xox Tnb from beautiful Mt gravatt Brisbane Australia 🇦🇺 4122
Dziękujemy.
Oh wow thank you! This is the very first donation I've ever received via Super Thanks. Much appreciated!
Great video- I really appreciate just how much work would have gone into this, given trying to cross those roads there are a killer! Add to this however- I think there's a corner wedged somewhere in the Stadium itself where you can still see part of the old Boggo Road jail? I might be wrong & it may even be gone now with the CRR construction, but I seem to remember this little tidbit when I did a tour back in 2003!
@becsterbrisbane6275 thanks indeed! I haven't heard of any remnants of the old Boggo Road gaol being placed here. I'm wondering why someone would have transported a stone from that goal to Paddington. Keen to learn more if you find some info about it...
So many people dying to get in there!
I’m the first here lovely
Second
You beat me by THAT much! 😁
Talks of the deaths of childen as a kid rolls by behind him on a scooter, classic 😅
But serious point made..
Purely coincidental. I only noticed the kid scoot by while I was editing.
There is a cemetary at stafford /wavell heights & a German one at nundah.
The ship Fortitude .... Fortitude Valley. Hmmm....
Yes that's where the suburb got its name from.
I grew up in nearby Auchenflower. I lived on the cnr Fortitude St/Lang Pde. Dunmore Tce was at the other end of Fortitude St on the ridge above overlooking the Brisbane River. Lima St and Chasely St were nearby. Fortitude, Chasely and Lime were the names of the ships which transported Lang's immigrants to Australia.
@@ralphmuller6040 Yes that's correct. Lima...
I've always wondered about that suncorp cemetary. If it was indigenous
Hi there mate in Sydney has the same shit Sydney railway
Station and a playing ground
Lif pole
Ha! ❤ the sponsorship
I wish i could be this early on a Mr Beast video.. Rob'll do i guess.
Thanks! Just happy to be in the same sentence as him.
@@walkaboutwithrob HAHA! You’re a legend Rob!
I’m bloody sick of not knowing when the pub crawls are!
Have you heard about the story of the Maybe family of Brisbane. It’d be a good one to cover… I reckon.
Mayne? Yes... I have heard of them.
Sorry, yes, Mayne. Stupid predictive text. 😅
Look for depressions