Regional Arts Development Fund (RADF) is a partnership between the Queensland Government and Moreton Bay Regional Council to support local arts and culture in regional Queensland. Thank you for allowing a newcomer to start finding her way to the stories of Moreton Bay. When I arrived I discovered I actually lived in the Moreton Bay area, rather than Brisbane, which meant I was eligible for assistance from this fund. I was a successful with a grant application for concept development of a project. Mapping the Stories: Inspiration
I STARTED LOOKING FOR STORIES, BUT REALISED IT WILL TAKE A TEAM TO PULL OFF A PROJECT LIKE THIS. Nonetheless. Moreton Bay has a number of History Museums, historic collections (including State Library of Queenslands John Oxley collection) and more. When people heard what I was up to several referred me to this book, it is availabe online at Gutenberg
Visiting Museums. The Seaside Museum on Bribie Island. Here I am in front of a photo of the Bribie Island Jetty circa 1920. Fabulous adventure and what a view of the Glasshouse Mountains, incredible mystic quality to the Mountains. So many possible stories, what are the important ones. Cook sailed passed naming the Glasshouse Mountains and Matthew Flinders first white explorer to go a shore. Some great stories here thanks to Bribie Island Historical Society. The story that intrigues me is how did it get its name. A kippa making ceremony at Samford Bora GroundOn permanent loan from the Queensland Museum is the diorama of the Samford Aboriginal Bora Ground. Comprehensive information on the advent of the preservation of the Samford Bora Ring by Dr Elizabeth Nesta Marks can be found at link https://www.qut.edu.au/research/why-qut/infrastructure/samford-ecological-research-facility I was immediately intrigued by this display, they are terms I've not heard of. I have a trip planned with Uncle Alan Parsons, a first nations storyteller to start further investigation. I have gathered lots of notes. Of course as you can see it is a place for celebration and corroboree.
Redcliffe: Down to the Sea Fell in love with Redcliffe and thrilled to announce I'll be performing at the Anywhere Festival, Down to the Sea, more details to follow. Hoping to connect with Redcliffe's many history buffs. A few photos detailing Redcliffe as Queensland's first White Settlement and home to the Bee Gees
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A storyteller finding her way in Queensland (RADF)Regional Arts Development Fund (RADF) is a partnership between the Queensland Government and Moreton Bay Regional Council to support local arts and culture in regional Queensland. Thank you for allowing a newcomer to start finding her way to the stories of Moreton Bay. When I arrived I discovered I actually lived in the Moreton Bay area, rather than Brisbane, which meant I was eligible for assistance from this fund. I was a successful with a grant application for concept development of a project. One song then started ringing through my head, It is an old folk song called Moreton Bay, here is a link to Bernard Fanning singing it (from the Ned Kelly Movie) www.youtube.com/watch?v=Sqr9jfaQJ5E Here is the text Moreton Bay One Sunday morning as I went walking By Brisbane waters I chanced to stray I heard a convict his fate bewailing As on the sunny river bank I lay I am a native from Erin's island But banished now from my native shore They stole me from my aged parents And from the maiden I do adore I've been a prisoner at Port Macquarie At Norfolk Island and Emu Plains At Castle Hill and at cursed Toongabbie At all these settlements I've been in chains But of all places of condemnation And penal stations in New South Wales To Moreton Bay I have found no equal Excessive tyranny each day prevails For three long years I was beastly treated And heavy irons on my legs I wore My back from flogging was lacerated And oft times painted with my crimson gore And many a man from downright starvation Lies mouldering now underneath the clay And Captain Logan he had us mangled All at the triangles of Moreton Bay Like the Egyptians and ancient Hebrews We were oppressed under Logan's yoke Till a native black lying there in ambush Did deal this tyrant his mortal stroke My fellow prisoners be exhilarated That all such monsters such a death may find And when from bondage we are liberated Our former sufferings will fade from mind Grim stuff indeed. Then I wondered who Moreton Bay was named after. I started to delve. Captain James Cook named "Morton Bay" after the Scottish Earl of Morton on the 17th May 1770, it was later misspelled as 'Moreton Bay' in translations from his journals James Douglas, 14th Earl of Morton,(1702 – 12 October 1768) was a Scottish astronomer and representative peer who was president of the Philosophical Society of Edinburgh from its foundation in 1737 until his death. He also became president of the Royal Society, and was a distinguished patron of science, and particularly of astronomy. Lord Morton had been influential in obtaining a grant of £4,000 to finance the voyage. Cook had been instructed by the earl to regard the native populations of the places he might visit as "human creatures... "No European nation has the right to occupy any part of their country ... without their voluntary consent." Cook had to be instructed that they were to treated as humans and white fellas had no right to occupy inhabitants country This naming seemed so incongruous and had me off immediately searching for the first nations people of the region. Below was photographed at the Redcliffe Museum. SO AS A NEWCOMCOMER I WOULD LIKE TO ACKNOWLEDGE THE GUBBI GUBBI / KABI KABI TURRUBAL YAGGARA / YAGGARPUL PEOPLE. So much to learn |
Anne E StewartStoryteller Categories |