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Graceville Memorial Park

Graceville Memorial Park
Graceville Memorial Park.jpg
War memorial, 2014
Location 173 Oxley Road, Graceville, City of Brisbane, Queensland, Australia
Coordinates 27°31′03″S 152°58′35″E / 27.5176°S 152.9765°E / -27.5176; 152.9765Coordinates: 27°31′03″S 152°58′35″E / 27.5176°S 152.9765°E / -27.5176; 152.9765
Design period 1900 - 1914 (early 20th century)
Built 1904
Official name: Graceville Memorial Park, Graceville Recreation Reserve
Type state heritage (built, landscape)
Designated 5 September 2006
Reference no. 602443
Significant period 1904-1950s (fabric, historical)
1904 - (social)
Significant components staircase/stairs - divided, sports field/oval/playing field, memorial - column, memorial - tree/avenue of trees, basement / sub-floor, croquet lawn, memorial - drive/road, grandstand, machinery/plant/equipment - transport - road, clubroom/s / clubhouse, flagpole/flagstaff
Graceville Memorial Park is located in Queensland
Graceville Memorial Park
Location of Graceville Memorial Park in Queensland
Graceville Memorial Park is located in Australia
Graceville Memorial Park
Location of Graceville Memorial Park in Queensland

Graceville Memorial Park is a heritage-listed park at 173 Oxley Road, Graceville, City of Brisbane, Queensland, Australia. It was established in 1904. It is also known as Graceville Recreation Reserve and the Sherwood War Memorial. It was added to the Queensland Heritage Register on 5 September 2006.

Graceville Memorial Park, located on a flat, low-lying part of Graceville, was gazetted as the Graceville Recreation Reserve in 1904, but it was referred to as Graceville Memorial Park by 1926. The park was enlarged in July 1979, with the resumption of about 11 perches of vacant, ownerless land (lot 2, RP 70795) for an access way to Churchill Street, south of the park.

From 1840 to 1859 the peninsula that includes the suburb of Graceville was known as Boyland's Pocket, a run for sheep and cattle. After 1859 the area was subdivided into farms with an average size of about 30 to 40 acres. Maize, potatoes, and bananas were grown, cotton was attempted in the 1860s, and sugar cane was produced until a cold spell in the 1870s. The area was relatively isolated from Brisbane until the railway line from Ipswich crossed the river from Chelmer to Indooroopilly in 1875. Graceville's subdivision for residential housing started during the building boom of the 1880s, and the Graceville railway station was opened in 1886. The Shire of Sherwood was created in 1891, excised from the Yeerongpilly Division (created in 1879).

From the late 1880s onwards there was an increased interest in Queensland in healthy outdoor recreation, and the flood-prone grassland on which the park was later sited was used as a lacrosse field in the 1890s. The formation of sporting clubs in Queensland led to pressure on local councils to provide facilities, and in May 1904 fourteen acres of this grassland was gazetted as the Graceville Recreation Reserve by the Queensland government. The reserve was vested in the Sherwood Shire Council, to be held in trust for recreation purposes, and the park's primary role since then has been as a leased venue for various team sports, mainly cricket and hockey, but also including soccer, rugby league, and Australian Rules football. A croquet club and a tennis club were also established. Other users included the Graceville Methodist Sunday School, which held classes in a ground shed on the reserve between November 1914 and November 1917, and a bridge club, which was formed at the croquet club premises around 1929. Aviators may have also used the park as an aerodrome in the 1920s.


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