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Gold Coast - History |
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Captain
Cook passed this coast in 1770 and named Point Danger and Mount Warning. A
government surveyor named Dixon charted the Gold Coast region in 1840. He
named many of the landmarks after senior naval officers as was the custom
at the time. Since then the Surveyor General Sir Thomas Mitchell changed
many of the names to Aboriginal names. Examples of these changes include:-
the River Barrow became the Nerang River, the River Perry became
Tallebudgera Creek, Anson Creek became Currumbin Creek and the River
Arrowsmith became the Coomera River. The beach at Broadbeach named Kurrawa
is aboriginal for "deep blue sea". At
the time of the mapping Queensland was not a state but was still part of
New South Wales. The region was to be made available for free settlers. By
1845 there were only 1,599 white people in what was to become Queensland.
By
1850 there were still only 2,000 white people in the whole area that would
be Queensland. In December 1859 the new colony of Queensland was declared
and by the Census of 1861 Queensland's population had grown to 32,838.
Another
pioneer of the area was J Meyer who established a ferry to enhance
development. Meyers was known as an aggressive settler who brought
visitors to the area. In 1888 he built the Main Beach Hotel on the
southern side of the Nerang River, to accommodate the influx of people
brought in by his ferry. In
1923 James Cavill visited from Brisbane. He built the Surfers Paradise
Hotel in the area known as Elston. The land was purchased for only $80 and
the entrepreneur was offered $370,000 for the land before his death.
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