Queensland Government Intelligence and Tourist Bureau (1922) The Wonderland of the North: scenic beauties of North Queensland: the ideal Australian winter tour. A. J. Cumming, Government Printer, Brisbane, QLD, Australia
- Item Type
- Book
- Collection
- North Queensland Collection
- Location
- Townsville Campus Library
- Item Code
- NQ 919.430441 WON
- Related Links
- NQH: Townsville and the Tropic Coast, North Queensland
- NQH: The Great Barrier Coral Reefs, Queensland, Australia
- NQH: Cairns and Hinterland
- NQH: Within the Barrier
- NQH: North Queensland: the holiday land
- Subjects
- Travel guides; Gladstone; Townsville; Magnetic Island; Ayr; Whitsunday Passage; Cairns; Atherton Tableland; Barron Falls; Kuranda; Malanda; Chillagoe Caves; Cooktown; Innisfail; Bowen; Proserpine; 1920s; 50 Treasures
Summary
This item is one of our 50 Treasures: Celebrating 50 years of James Cook University.
Trisha Fielding answers the question 'Why is this significant?'
The Queensland Government Intelligence and Tourist Bureau was established in 1907. Its main activities included serving as a booking agency and producing films and brochures to promote tourism in Queensland. It heavily utilised Queensland's mild climate and stunning scenery in its promotions.
One of the Bureau's earliest promotional booklets – Within the Barrier: Tourists' Guide to the North Queensland Coast – was written by Edmund James Banfield. First published by Messrs T. Willmett & Co. of Townsville in 1907, it preceded the publication in 1908 of his popular book Confessions of a Beachcomber – about his life on Dunk Island. Sometime after its formation in April 1907, the Bureau published a print run of 5,000 copies of Within the Barrier for distribution in Australia and in London.
A retired journalist, who had been a sub-editor of the Townsville Daily Bulletin in its early years, Banfield proved an excellent mouthpiece for the Bureau. His books about his idyllic life on Dunk Island mirrored the government's rhetoric, which focused on the state's naturally beautiful attractions, and the mild climate. In My Tropic Isle (1911) Banfield wrote of Dunk:
'Such is this delicious Isle – this unkempt, unrestrained garden where the centuries gaze upon perpetual summer. Small it is, and of varied charms – set in the fountain of time-defying youth. Abundantly sprinkled with tepid rains, vivified by the glorious sun, its verdure tolerates no trace of age.'
Other early publications from the Bureau included Queensland the Winter Paradise of Australasia; North Queensland: the Holiday Land and The Wonderland of the North: Scenic Beauties of North Queensland. All were filled with verbose descriptions of popular Queensland destinations, along with a wealth of supporting photographs (though many were grainy, low quality black and white pictures that did not reproduce particularly well).
In 1929, responsibility for the Bureau was transferred to the Railway Department. By this time, the railway had reached Cairns, which meant that the Great Barrier Reef could legitimately be promoted as a holiday destination accessible by rail. In the early 1930s, the word Intelligence had been dropped from the Bureau's name and it became the Queensland Government Tourist Bureau.
The Great Barrier Coral Reefs, published around 1939, was a much slicker publication than many of the Bureau's earlier booklets. It traded unashamedly on romantic notions of the reef and its islands. Written largely to promote the Capricorn region, it included stylised maps of islands in the Whitsunday and Cumberland groups that mimicked treasure maps – suggesting that a 'world of fantasy' awaited the reef tourist. 'Is there any fairer garden on land than the coral gardens beneath these translucent waves?' it asked.
Additional Information
Trisha Fielding is an historian and writer whose published works include the books Neither Mischievous nor Meddlesome: The Remarkable Lives of North Queensland's Independent Midwives 1890-1940, Queen City of the North: A History of Townsville, and the history blogs North Queensland History and Women of the North. In 2019 Trisha was commissioned to write a commemorative volume for JCU's 50th anniversary in 2020. She holds a Master of History degree from the University of New England and a Bachelor of Arts with Distinction majoring in History and Journalism from the University of Southern Queensland. Trisha also works part time in JCU Library's Special Collections.
Collection access: Special Collection items may be used on the Library premises by visiting the appropriate Reading Rooms during opening hours. Digital copies of selected items from the special collections will be made available through the repository as copyright or other restrictions allow.
Cover title: Queensland's wonderful north.
Corporate creator does not appear on item.
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