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Studies 14 2024. Like Father, Like Son by Rod Fisher. Published posthumously, this book is a detailed genealogical study of Richard Harding Watt, a young Englishman who prepared a series of sketches during his 1860s sojourn in Brisbane. Subsequently a wealthy business man he developed a number of distinctive heritage listed buildings in Knutsford, UK. Available from Google Play Books
Papers 29, 2024. Brisbane: Redcoats to Diggers edited by Barry Shaw. Sixteen chapters drawn from presentations at four of our seminars. A range of topics are covered, from the purely military to the implications of war. The timeframe spans from colonial times to the 1939-45 War
Studies 13, 2023 Fettered Frontier: Founding of the Moreton Bay Settlement by Jennifer Harrison. An investigation of the struggle to locate and establish an outpost in remote Moreton Bay. The research for the book concentrated on the economic, climatic and legal back stories, together with the characters who made the decisions in London, Port Jackson (Sydney) and locally as well as the convicts who undertook the heavy manual work.
Tour 28 2022. Sandgate/Shorncliffe Heritage Tour Compiled by Barry Shaw. Thirty years after the first edition of this tour was a sell-out success, this second edition provides additional insight into the history of the area having been thoroughly updated and refreshed. With contributions from the BHG Committee and members of the Sandgate Historical Society Museum
Studies 12, 2022 Utopian Dreams and Dystopian Nightmares by Bill Metcalf. An exploration of seven  19th and 20th Century writer’s utopian and dystopian visions of what Brisbane could become, depending on the path people followed. Enjoy their literary expeditions into a Brisbane that never was, nor will it ever become — except in the minds of dreamers
Studies 11, 2021 It all happened at the Albert Hall (365 pages). Painstakingly researched and written by noted cultural historian Peter Roennfeldt, the book tells the story of this significant venue within its wider community context and helps to further dispel the notion that in the early 20th century Brisbane was a cultural backwater. Albert Hall was indeed a special inner-city venue, shared by all and remembered fondly by many
Papers 28, 2019 Brisbane: Commerce, construction and controversy edited by Barry Shaw. In this volume, aspects of Brisbane’s built environment, its recreational facilities and the construction of its road and rail network are examined
Papers 27, 2018 Training, Teaching and Turmoil – Tertiary Education 1825-2018 edited by Bill Metcalf and Barry Shaw. This volume looks at higher education before the advent of formal colleges and classes, and how it evolved into the multi-billion dollar university sector of today. It also considers the problems and issues confronting education and its likely future in Brisbane. Fourteen authors contributed, many presenting papers at the seminars held in 2017 and 2018 which addressed this theme
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