39 Juliet Street, Mackay

Authors

  • Clive Moore University of Queensland

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.1558/qre.25840

Keywords:

North Queensland, Mackay, autobiography, Queenslander houses, family history

Abstract

My earliest memories are of 39 Juliet Street, Mackay. The house was built in the 1920s, my parents bought it in 1949 and it was sold after my father’s death in 1998. I have positioned the house within the environment and architecture of North Queensland, and particularly the town of Mackay. Changes are illustrated and dated through the inclusion of some family photographs, which double as a pictorial history of a Queensland family between the 1950s and 1970s. We all think of ourselves as part of families, but when one house contains a family over decades, it too is part of the upbringing. The essay begins with a discussion of North Queensland houses – ‘Queenslanders’, as they were known – and the weather conditions that influenced their architecture. This is followed by a description of the house and its immediate neighbourhood, the uses made of the upstairs and the downstairs areas, and 1960s renovations. My parents are described, along with our means of transport, the Protestant–Catholic divide of the 1950s and 1960s, and my upbringing and that of my brother and sister. The article also discusses holidays, schooling and discovering the world beyond Mackay.

Author Biography

  • Clive Moore, University of Queensland

    Clive Moore graduated from James Cook University with an Honours degree in history in 1973 with a thesis entitled ‘The Transformation of the Mackay Sugar Industry’. His 1981 PhD, also from James Cook University, was entitled ‘Kanaka Maratta: A History of Melanesian Mackay’. He is now an Emeritus Professor at the University of Queensland, where he worked for 28 years, retiring as McCaughey Professor of Pacific and Australian history in 2015. In 2005, he received a Cross of Solomon Islands for historical work on Malaita Island. He was inaugural president of the Australian Association for Pacific Studies (2006–10) and was made a Fellow of the Australian Academy of Humanities in 2010. He received an Outstanding Alumni Award from James Cook University in 2012, and the John Douglas Kerr Medal of Distinction, awarded by the Royal Historical Society of Queensland and the Professional Historians Association (Queensland) in 2015. He has published extensively on Mackay and Australian South Sea Islanders, New Guinea and the Solomon Islands, and Australian masculinity and sexuality. His recent major publications are Solomon Islands Historical Encyclopaedia, 1893–1978 (2013) and Making Mala: Malaita in Solomon Islands, 1870s–1930s (2017), Tulagi: British Outpost of Empire (2019) and Honiara: Village-City of Solomon Islands (2022). He is also the author of The River: Mackay in the Nineteenth Century (2023), published on the website of the Mackay Historical Society.

References

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Published

2023-05-11

Issue

Section

Memoir

How to Cite

Moore, C. (2023). 39 Juliet Street, Mackay. Queensland Review, 29(2), 67-106. https://doi.org/10.1558/qre.25840