Sunshine Coast History
Extract
from the Wikipedia Article on the Sunshine
Coast
The Sunshine Coast (population 290,645 with up to an
additional 50,000 in visitors and seasonal workers) is a
coastal region located in South East Queensland, north of the
Queensland capital of Brisbane. The Sunshine Coast has recently
been united into a single Local Government Area, the Sunshine
Coast Regional Council.
The Sunshine Coast is bordered by the Pacific Ocean in the
east, and extends to the local government boundaries beyond the
Blackall Range to the west. Occasionally, the towns of Gympie,
which is 30 minutes' drive north of Noosa Heads, and
Caboolture, 30 mins drive south of Caloundra, have been
included in a broader definition of the Sunshine Coast
region.
History
Since the Glass House Mountains were first sighted by James
Cook from the deck of HM Bark Endeavour in 1770, the Sunshine
Coast's history has been as diverse and colourful as its
scenery.
The Sunshine Coast's first white inhabitants were three
castaways who shared the life of the Aborigines for 8 months;
it became the home of numerous runaway convicts who preferred
life among the Aborigines to the living hell of the Moreton Bay
Convict Establishment; it was the scene of some of the most
bitter skirmishes of Australia's 'Black War'.
Timbergetters used its rivers and lakes as seaways to float
out their great logs of cedar, gold diggers scaled its
mountains to reach the Gympie gold. With the coming of the
railway line to Gympie, the coastal towns, founded as ports for
its early river trade, were bypassed, and grew slowly into
quiet holiday resorts whose peace remained undisturbed until
the development boom of the 1960s and 1970s - just 200 years
after Cook had passed that way.
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