Cannon Hill was named after the Weedon family home 'Cannon Hill House'. Built in 1867, the house, which had extensive grounds and a maze, burnt down in 1927. Cannon Hill was still mainly bush, with a few settlers growing crops or bananas until the 1880s. In 1881, the Queensport Freezing and Food Export Company produced the first frozen meat. This began Cannon Hill's change from rural and residential to an area focussed on grazing and the meat industry. Officially, most of the meat working was in the suburbs of Morningside or Murarrie, but Cannon Hill supported and is identified with the meat industry. In 1889, the train line came to Cannon Hill, but the area was still mainly bush for another twenty years. One waved a red flag to tell the driver to stop.
Gradually semi-rural Cannon Hill came to be seen as the meatworkers' area. More workers came with the new meatworks. In 1931 the saleyards opened and many stockmen and their families moved into the area.
During the Depression itinerant workers lived in a settlement on the corner of Creek and Richmond roads, with huts made out of flattened kerosene tins.
An American Army camp was located at the corner of Lang and Richmond roads during the Second World War. Most of the development of Cannon Hill took place in the 1940s and later, and even into the 1950s cattle were driven along the main roads to their fate. It is now a popular suburb to live, and is still growing.
What a nice history lesson along with your sketches JJ! So interesting to learn about life so far away from my front door!
ReplyDeleteThank you Hap. I know I like to know about the places I see in drawings and paintings too.
ReplyDeleteLooking gooed. Don't forget the sleepers will be horizontal. This will help the illusion that the ground they are on is flat.
ReplyDeleteOna
Thanks Ona. I was struggling again, with perspective .........sigh. I try to draw what I see, but it never looks right.. :-( I fear I will never get it right..
ReplyDeletei find one's art really authentic when the subject is mundane such as what you've done here. nice job. -- http://sketchperiments.weebly.com/1/post/2011/06/of-street-sighting-and-barbeshop-boredom.html
ReplyDeleteThank you Karl!! I do like your work very much too..
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