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Theodore, QLD

Town named after controversial politician 'Red Ted' Theodore.

Theodore is like no other town in Australia. Although it lies on the eastern side of the Great Dividing Range it is almost tropical with it extensive stands of palm trees in the main street and its 1950s ambience with old, charming timber houses and broad streets. It is a town which started as the small inland settlement of Castle Creek and was renamed after one of Australia's most controversial politicians, E. G. 'Red Ted' Theodore (Premier of Queensland 1919-25 and Treasurer and Deputy Prime Minister 1929-30). It is now an important town at the southern end of the coal-rich Bowen Basin.

Location

Theodore is located 140 m above sea level and 561 km from Brisbane via the Warrego and Leichhardt Highways.

 

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Origin of Name

Originally the town was known as Castle Creek. It grew up as a small settlement on the Dawson River servicing the needs of those who passed through and the surrounding properties. In the 1920s, when the government began to develop it as a model town, it was named after the then Premier of Queensland,  E. G. 'Red Ted' Theodore.

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Things to See and Do

Roman Catholic Church
Located on The Boulevarde, the Sacred Heart Catholic Church and residence are excellent examples of Queensland vernacular wooden architecture with a simplicity and practicality (admire the veranda at the front) suitable for the climate.

Hotel Theodore - Australia's only Co-operative Hotel
When Theodore was being developed as a vast irrigation project in the 1920s a boarding house was established to house the workers. The boarding house was later used to house the potential purchasers of the surrounding land. The Queensland Irrigation Commission owned the boarding house and eventually they acquired a liquor licence. In 1949 the Queensland Lands Commissioner and Irrigation Commissioner suggested that the town should have a Corporate Community Hotel. The result was a hotel which came into existence as a result of a special act of parliament - the Theodore Co-operative Hotel Association Enabling Act - and which was owned by members of the local community who bought shares at the price of two shillings and six pence. Over the years the old hotel has grown and it was eventually purchased from the Irrigation Commission for £10,000. The profits from the hotel are still used to fund community activities and projects and, over the years, money has gone to the school, hospital and local clubs. As the hotel's website explains (http://www.hoteltheodore.com.au/main/page_about_us.html.) "Many people past and present have numerous tales to tell of their visit to the local pub, their first beer, their first love, their first fight, their stag party, their wedding, their anniversaries, their birthday party, their going-away party ... some experiencing all eight."

Historic Buildings
Theodore is one of those towns where the visitor should park their car, get out and just wander. There are many interesting historic buildings. The Sacred Heart Catholic Church, a number of classic Queenslanders, the fascinating Hotel Theodore, the gloriously wide and well-planned streets and such quaint eccentricities as the Castle Creek Theatre on the main street. The name recalls the settlement before it became Theodore.

Dawson Folk Museum
Located on the corner of Second Avenue and Dawson Parade, in an old power house, the Dawson Folk Museum has a large collection of photographs as well as information about First Nation peoples, early European settlers, town plans and farm machinery. The Museum is open by appointment.  Phone either 0429 932 264 or (07) 4993 1264.

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Other Attractions in the Area

Isla Gorge National Park
Located 38 km south of Theodore on the Leichhardt Highway, the Isla (pronounced "eye-la") Gorge National Park is a spectacular landscape of sandstone cliffs and gorges. The main gorge can be conveniently reached on a 1.4 km dirt road which runs off the main Theodore-Taroom road. Look carefully. It is easy to miss it. The road leads to a viewing point where the national park's cliffs and deep sandstone gorges can be viewed. A narrow path leads to a viewing point with a panoramic view across the gorge. The bushwalks around and through the gorge are meant for experienced walkers only. There are a number of useful boards near the car park. One of boards points out "loose, crumbly rock makes the descent into the gorge dangerous. Only well-equipped, experienced walkers should enter this part of the park. Another offers detailed information about how to access Flagstaff Hill (it lies to the north) and the remarkable historic road from Roma to Rockhampton which was built out of large rock slabs in the 1860s.

Cracow
Fifty kilometres to the south-east of Theodore is the strange ghost-like town of Cracow (pronounced "Crack-oh") . Named in 1851 for a pastoral run, gold was first discovered in 1875 by itinerant fossickers and in 1881 the Golden Plateau mine was established. At its peak the town boasted five cafes, barber shop, billiard saloon, two butchers, a picture theatre and a soft drink factory. The closure of the mine in 1976 has left many houses and all the shops except for the Hotel deserted. If you look carefully you can still see the fading names of the businesses on the walls of the deserted buildings. There's an old boarding house and two buildings marked as the  Bank of New South Wales. The Cracow Hotel is reputedly the home of the world's last remaining travelling Boxing Tent and has an eclectic collection of memorabilia on display. You can catch the Boxing Troupe in Cracow  in March every year. Cracow Gold Mine now operates the underground mine and have undertaken the restoration of three historic buildings located alongside the Community Centre. Take a walking tour of the deserted buildings along the main street up to the abandoned hospital. Contact the owner of the Cracow Hotel on 4993 1620 to organise a visit.

 

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History

* Prior to European settlement the area around Theodore was inhabited by the Yeeman (now known as Iman) people whose numbers were decimated by massacres as settlers moved in. They managed to survive and now have Native Title in the area.

* The first Europeans into the area were the explorers Eldershaw, Archer and Leichhardt in the 1840s.

* Castle Creek grew up as a tiny settlement serving the needs of the large properties - Camboon and Walloon stations -  in the Dawson Valley. As well it provided a suitable resting place beside the Dawson River for bullock and horse teams moving to and from the port at Rockhampton.

* In 1923, under the premiership of E.G. Theodore, the government resumed the land from the larger properties in the district. The plan, typical of the socialist idealism of the time, was to develop a sophisticated irrigation system and sell small blocks of land which could be intensively developed. At the time a publication titled the 'Little Green Book' declared: 'Tens of thousands of acres of glorious land lie in idleness, awaiting the day when agriculture will awake them into fruitful activity. And, as the land is conquered, wealth and population will follow.' The plan was to build a model garden city and surround it with 5000 small farms all reliably irrigated by the waters of the Dawson Valley. The Little Green Book went on to describe the future town of Theodore as: 'planned on the most modern lines ... Traversing the township from north to south is a spacious garden boulevarde, intersected at intervals by avenues which have also been planted with palms and shade trees in such a manner as to led a restful appearance to the scene ... in the centre of the town is an oval around which has been erected the residences for the accommodation of members of the Commissioners local staff ... the oval is laid out in lawns, in the centre of which stands a picturesque water tower 50 feet high, from which the town water supply is reticulated. The floor of the tower is arranged as a bandstand.' Sadly, the bandstand has gone but the water tower is still in the roundabout at the end of the main street.

* The Theodore Irrigation Project was opened in 1924. The model town comprised a large settlers' and visitors' accommodation centre, a public hall with cinema, an Irrigation Commission office, shops, a sawmill and an electricity generation plant.

* In 1926 a railway line connected  Baralaba to Theodore. That same year saw the release of 264 irrigated lots of 10 to 24 acres and 109 dry-farm lots of 80-500 acres. Weirs were built on the Dawson River and tributaries for a gravitational channel system.

* From 1926 to 1958 the town was administered by the Queensland Irrigation Commission. After 1958 it became part of the Banana Shire.

* Today the town continues to prosper because of the nearby coal mining in the Bowen Basin and  because the rich black soils and the waters of the Dawson River are ideal for sorghum, wheat and cotton. There is also extensive sheep and cattle (the breeds in the local area include Brahman, a Brahman-Hereford cross called Braford, and Santa Gertrudis) breeding.

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Visitor Information

Theodore Visitor Information Centre, 55a The Boulevard, Theodore, tel: 0497 625 375.

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Accommodation

There is a useful local website http://www.mytheodore.com/

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Got something to add?

Have we missed something or got a top tip for this town? Have your say below.

25 suggestions
  • My wife and I are West Aussie’s. While staying at the show/sports complex in Theodore we travelled to Isla Gorge. The views are magnificent but the track is a disgrace. Please put a warning on the sign at the entrance.

    Terry Seymour
    • Thanks for that Terry. Exactly which track are you talking about? Is it the narrow one that runs along the ridge to the lookout which is off the Leichhardt Highway between Theodore and Taroom. I must admit I admired the view but didn’t go to the lookout. I met a man and his young son who had just done the walk and they thought the path was OK.

      Bruce Elder
  • Just stayed the night at Junction Park in Theodore. Great spot for travellers. Beautiful town and friendly locals. Make sure you stop at Theodore.

    Melissa
  • I think the fact that the Yeeman tribe and its language were wiped out of existence is worthy of noting. Perhaps some acknowledgement of the place names, meanings and sites of significance would be appropriate also. After all the killings that occurred, made the area known as where Australia’s most prolific mass murderer came from. Not that he was ever charged with a single crime. Rumours say he killed 100 Aboriginals. Others claim up to 300. I really think this needs to be acknowledged properly and respectfully as part of the area’s not so lovely history , despite the fact it was a shameful and terrible tragedy.

    Alison
  • This was my home town. Growing up there were the best years of my life. A friendly close knit town. It is a must to visit. I still have family and many friends living there and I will go home again.

    Laurel Alford (nee Canoy)
  • Power House Museum

    Damian Jones
    • Hi Alison. I live in Theodore and I am not familiar with that story. Are you perhaps referring to the Hornet Bank massacre in Taroom? We have the Willi Willi people here of which we have a very good relationship with. We need clarification on this.

      You are correct. I wrote Blood on the Wattle about Aboriginal massacres and the story that Alison tells is definitely the Hornet Bank Massacre which is mentioned in the history of Taroom. The man, mass murderer, she is referring to is Billy Fraser who, for years after the massacre, killed any Aborigine he saw. I will write about it at greater length but, in the meantime, here is the entry for Taroom:
      * In 1853 Andrew Scott established Hornet Bank Station on the Upper Dawson 40 km west of Taroom. The Yeeman, deprived of their traditional food supplies, started killing Scott’s sheep. In retaliation Scott called in the native police, an Aboriginal police force drawn from tribal groups far removed from the area.
      * In 1856 a man named Billy Fraser took over the lease of Hornet Bank. On 26 October 1857, while Fraser was in Ipswich, the Yeeman attacked Hornet Bank and killed Fraser’s mother; raped and murdered his three sisters; killed his three brothers, and disposed of three other people who were working on the station. Fraser became obsessed with the killing and vowed revenge. Vigilante posses scoured the land and killed any Aborigines they encountered. Within a decade the Yeeman had been wiped out. A more detailed account of this violent episode can be read in my book Blood on the Wattle.

      Sharyn
  • I worked at the Theodore hotel in the 1960’s. One of my memories is the sandflies in Theodore.

    John higgins
  • On our way North to visit our son in Mackay, the road by-passed the town centre. Heading back South we decided on a different route which did pass through the town.
    Though we had planned to stay further down the road somewhere, as soon as we saw your lovely clean town we decided to stay for a few days at Junction Reserve/Park.
    There is obviously a lot of civic pride here. We wandered the streets, talked to the locals, and patronised a number of local businesses. It’s a beautiful town you should all be proud of.

    Peter & Kathy
  • I heard a chap speaking about Theodore (on the the radio this morning). He mentioned you could stay in cabins on the river in town. Could you give me more details about the cabins, and are they dog friendly? What is the best route to take coming from the coastal border of NSW. Theodore sounds like a lovely place to visit, you should advertise it more. Thanks for your help.

    sylvia wylie
  • that Theodore is the best town ever

    josh
  • Hi Alison. I’m a descendant of the Yeeman people.
    I’ld Like to purchase a copy of your book.
    Where , how is this possible.

    Brad
  • I am Iman..The Yeeman known now as the Iman are not wiped out but infact now have Native Title.

    Danny Saunders "Waddy"
  • the town needs a pub tab

    ross gralow
  • As an ex-Theodore resident, I had been told that our town was designed by Sir Walter Burley-Griffin, who designed Canberra. If that is true, I think it worthy of mention.

    Suzanne Lanham
    • In reply to Suzanne Langham

      No it’s a myth.
      An international competition was held in 1911 by O’Malley (Min for Home Affairs) to select a design for the lay out of the capital city. An American artitect Walter Burley Griffin won the competition in 1913. Although submitted in Walter’s name, the plan was actually designed collaboratively with his architect wife & professional partner Marion Mahoney Griffin.

      Castle Creek aka Theodore was not thought about until Feb 1920 by Qld Premier Reg Theodore to set up as 1 in 5 irrigation zones, each town would be a ‘model gargen city’.
      It was not until 1922 before things started to happen in Castle Creek, which is 9 years after the Griffin’s design was accepted in Canberra.

      The Griffin’s won the competition because of the lake they had in their design, which was loosely based on a design for Chicago.

      So no the Griffin’s didn’t design Theodore though the myth still lives.

      Rose Connolly
  • I spent my childhood years here during WW11 leaving aged 12 in 1950.
    I loved the area and have returned to visit a few times in later years with my children and grand children as we all aged.
    It`s still a lovely clean town area, but sad to see all the old shops of my child hood have gone apart from the reduced Holmes dynasty . The popular IGA super market on Fleetwood’s corner now seems to be the centre of business.
    A sorry sight to see is the junk yard of wrecked machinery extending for a long distance on the bank of Castle creek in the centre of town. Add the mess of repairs to vehicles in the street where George’s garage existed. I see with the eyes of a tourist, the need for a cleanup. Sorry folks, but I still love my old town.

    David Fethney
    • In reply to David Fethney,

      I wonder if yours is the Fethney family who lived on some acreage, just beyond the Castle Creek Railway Bridge on the eastern side of the creek. I understand that home was purchased by Hamish Gunn and moved to his farm some short distance away. The Theodore Folk Museum is keen to know who lived where.

      Jenny Smith
      • Yes Jenny, that is exactly where my father built our house from timber purchased from Westmorlands sawmill on the opposite side of the Dawson river.
        The house was sold to Wal Brownley who moved it to his farm adjacent to his relative, Malcom Mc master and family, formally owned by the Harvey family. I`ve viewed the house and it much the same as I remember complete with stained glass windows Dad fitted
        Hamish and Charlie Gunn lived across the rail bridge and Hamish became close friends of our family spending some Christmas days with us.
        Charlie Gunn married my school teacher, Miss Smith… Jennette maybe her name? Any connection?
        I would love to talk to the museum people as I have some memories to share. My father was an engineer at the power house and I recently viewed the old steam engines he tended outside the old building
        I`m reluctant to supply my contact details on line, but would call the museum should you respond to this post.
        David Fethney.

        David Fethney
        • Thank you for that bit of information David, next time I am down that way visiting family I will pop over and look at the stained glass windows.

          Annabell
  • Hi could anybody tell me it there is a book dedicated to Theodore with pictures plz

    Sue foster