Hostname: page-component-84b7d79bbc-g5fl4 Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-07-31T22:08:30.973Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Inscription of Historical Seascapes: Aesthetics, Politics, and the Construction of the Capricorn Coast's Scenic Highway

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  26 February 2016

Get access

Extract

According to Stephen Dovers, environmental history can provide broad historical perspectives on things like colonial impacts, the evolution of technologies, the emergence of institution settings, the growth of commodity trade and changing land use regimes. It is a useful method of gathering baseline data on the past states of natural environments and, because this often relies on ‘local knowledge’, has the potential to foster community participation and engender community empowerment. Through the intelligent critique of past regimes, such history can, moreover, convey policy lessons, by offering what elsewhere Dovers describes as an ‘antidote to policy amnesia’. He also suggests that ‘a more innocent and less driven purpose’ of environmental history is ‘to unearth stories worth listening to’. While Dovers is careful not to claim too much for environmental history, and concedes that it ‘provides clues and some cues at best’, he may well be understating the power of stories, especially those that relate to relationships between people and place. Peter Hay reminds us that there is a powerful congruence between empathy with place and a commitment to the protection and maintenance of local natural ecosystems. A deep sense of place instils a desire to act ethically towards that place, and usually it is grounded in a concern for the life — human and otherwise — that has been integral to it. However, it is also formed out of emotional attachments to scenery — land and seascapes built up, as Simon Schama puts it, ‘as much from strata of memory as from layers of rock’.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Notes

1 Dovers, Stephen R., ‘On the Contribution of Environmental History to Current Debate and Policy’, Environment and History 6(2) (2000).Google Scholar

2 Dovers, Stephen R., ‘Still Settling Australia: Environment, History and Policy’, in Environmental History and Policy: Still Settling Australia, ed. Dovers, Stephen (Melbourne: Oxford University Press, 2000): 18.Google Scholar

3 Dovers, ‘Still Settling Australia’: 17.Google Scholar

4 Hay, Peter, Main Currents in Western Environmental Thought (Sydney: UNSW Press, 2002): 154.Google Scholar

5 Schama, Simon, Landscape and Memory (New York: Alfred A Knopf, 1995): 7.Google Scholar

6 Morning Bulletin, 14 December 1883.Google Scholar

7 Morning Bulletin, 22 November 1884.Google Scholar

8 Morning Bulletin, 9 April 1884.Google Scholar

9 Easter at Emu Park’, Morning Bulletin, 27 March 1883.Google Scholar

10 Morning Bulletin, 20 September 1880.Google Scholar

11 Dutton, Geoffrey, Sun, Sea, Surf and Sand: The Myth of the Beach (Melbourne: Oxford University Press, 1985); Robert Drewe, The Body Surfers, London: Faber & Faber, 1983); Drewe, Robert (ed.), Picador Book of the Beach (Sydney: Pan Macmillan, 1993); Phillip Drew, The Coast Dwellers: Australians Living on the Edge (Ringwood: Penguin, 1994); Leone Huntsman, Sand in Our Souls: The Beach in Australian History (Carlton: Melbourne University Press, 2001).Google Scholar

12 Broeze, Frank, Island Nation: a History of Australians and the Sea (Sydney: Allen & Unwin, 1998): 223.Google Scholar

13 Morning Bulletin, 22 April 1884.Google Scholar

14 Morning Bulletin, 20 September 1880, 27 March 1883.Google Scholar

15 Our Fish Supply’, Morning Bulletin, 10 January 1883: ‘Our Fish and Oyster Supply’, Morning Bulletin, 1 August 1885.Google Scholar

16 Morning Bulletin, 20 September 1880.Google Scholar

17 Morning Bulletin, 13 April 1883.Google Scholar

18 Days at the Coast’, Morning Bulletin, 11 February 1885.Google Scholar

19 Morning Bulletin, 20 September 1880.Google Scholar

20 At Yeppoon’, Morning Bulletin, 6 April 1883.Google Scholar

21 Our Watering Places’, Morning Bulletin, 14 December 1883.Google Scholar

22 Seaside Sojourning: Fourth Article’, Morning Bulletin, 29 January 1886.Google Scholar

23 Seaside Sojourning: Fourth Article’.Google Scholar

24 Schama, Landscape and Memory: 12.Google Scholar

25 Jim Crow Mountain’, Morning Bulletin, 24 February 1886.Google Scholar

26 As part of the Historical Coastlines project, more than 600 historical photographs have been collected and catalogued, and are available for viewing on the Coastal CRC website, www.coastal.crc.org.au/envhist/index.htmlGoogle Scholar

27 The first serious accusation related to overspending on the Yeppoon end of the Rockhampton to Yeppoon road: Morning Bulletin, 9 June 1883.Google Scholar

28 Carpenter, Leo, Livingstone: A History of the Shire of Livingstone (Bowen Hills, 1991): 6466.Google Scholar

29 Carpenter, Livingstone: 61.Google Scholar

30 This phrase was used in reference to a request for a road to a property in the Shoalwater Bay region. The Board granted the applicant, F. W. Wade, £25 to do the work himself, but the Morning Bulletin believed that this ‘formed a very bad precedent’, Morning Bulletin, 4 July 1884.Google Scholar

31 Yeppoon Sugar Plantation’, Capricornian, 11 November 1893.Google Scholar

32 Gogango Divisional Board Minutes — 6 March 1894’, Morning Bulletin, 7 March 1894.Google Scholar

33 Gogango Divisional Board Minutes — 3 July 1894’, Morning Bulletin, 4 July 1894.Google Scholar

34 Gogango Divisional Board Minutes — 7 August 1894’, Morning Bulletin, 8 August 1894.Google Scholar

35 Gogango Divisional Board Minutes — 7 January 1896’, Morning Bulletin, 8 January 1896.Google Scholar

36 Morning Bulletin, 17 September 1921.Google Scholar

37 Cosgrove interview with A. Davison, Yeppoon, 27 April 1980.Google Scholar

38 Capricornian, 1 November 1924.Google Scholar

39 Cosgrove, Betty, ‘Peter Fitzallan MacDonald: A Life Apart’, MA. Central Queensland University, 1994.Google Scholar

40 Evening News, 5 December 1923.Google Scholar

41 Morning Bulletin, 23 August 1925.Google Scholar

42 William Beak to the Editor, Capricornian, 29 October 1925.Google Scholar

43 Morning Bulletin, 31 July 1925.Google Scholar

44 Evening News, 13 September 1936.Google Scholar

45 Ocean Heights Transactions’, Morning Bulletin, 1 April 1930.Google Scholar

46 Diamond, Marion, From Bulldust to Beef Roads and Beyond: Main Roads — The First 50 Years (Brisbane: Queensland Department of Main Roads, n.d.): 3637.Google Scholar

47 Diamond, From Bulldust to Beef Roads and Beyond: 3435.Google Scholar

48 Diamond, From Bulldust to Beef Roads and Beyond: 36.Google Scholar

49 Main Roads Act 1920, s 33 (h) (10 Geo. V.No.26).Google Scholar

50 Morning Bulletin, 4 April 1928.Google Scholar

51 Diamond, From Bulldust to Beef Roads and Beyond: 37.Google Scholar

52 Laurent, John, ‘“Industry Policy” and the Australian Motor Industry, 1920–1942’, Journal of the Royal Australian Historical Society 80(1&2) (1994).Google Scholar

53 Minutes of the Works Committee, RCC, 14 October 1932, RCC Chambers.Google Scholar

54 Minutes of the Works Committee, RCC, 11 November 1932.Google Scholar

55 Proposed Berserker Range Tourist Road, H. R. Gardner, MLA Rockhampton Papers, HG/1, James Cook University Library; Minutes of the Works Committee, RCC, 2 March 1933.Google Scholar

56 Minutes of the Works Committee, RCC, 13 August 1935.Google Scholar

57 Actually No Money for Road Works’, Morning Bulletin, 3 June 1936.Google Scholar

58 Diamond, From Bulldust to Beef Roads and Beyond: 49.Google Scholar

59 Diamond, From Bulldust to Beef Roads and Beyond: 4951.Google Scholar

60 Diamond, From Bulldust to Beef Roads and Beyond: 42.Google Scholar

61 Queensland Parliamentary Debates, 26 November 1936: 1775–77.Google Scholar

62 Minutes of the Works Committee, RCC, 3 February 1933.Google Scholar

63 Minutes of the Works Committee, RCC, 27 August 1936.Google Scholar

64 Evening News, 7 September 1936.Google Scholar

65 Evening News, 7 September 1936.Google Scholar

66 Annual Report of the Commissioner for Main Roads, 1937–38: 10, QPP, I Sess., Vol. 1, 1938: 1180.Google Scholar

67 Increasing Beauties of Coastal Road’, Morning Bulletin, 22 September 1938.Google Scholar

68 Morning Bulletin, 8 August 1938.Google Scholar

69 Evening News, 15 September 1938.Google Scholar

70 Livingstone Shire Council Minutes, 22 November 1938, LSC Chambers.Google Scholar

71 Queensland Government Gazette, no. 156, 18 December 1943: 1712.Google Scholar

72 Evening News, 14 September 1938.Google Scholar

73 Evening News, 16 September 1938.Google Scholar

74 Livingstone Shire Council Minutes, 7 February 1939, LSC Chambers.Google Scholar

75 William Beak to the Editor, Evening News, 20 September 1938.Google Scholar

76 Fitzgerald, Ross, From the Dreaming to 1915: A History of Queensland (St Lucia: University of Queensland Press, 1982).Google Scholar