Coomera River Ferry and construction of the road bridge
Bain, Jack (1929) Coomera River Ferry and construction of the road bridge. [Image]
Available under Licence Creative Commons Public Domain Dedication.
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Abstract
This image was taken in November 1929 and shows the Coomera Ferry with the Coomera Bridge under construction. The road bridge over the Coomera River was constructed by M. R. Hornibrook Ltd using predominately local material with the exception of steel bars manufactured at Lithgow NSW and girders that originated from Belgium. The bridge contained 224 girders that were 61½ feet long and 6½ tons each and were the largest solid girders ever imported into Queensland at the time.
The bridge opened on 14 June 1930 with the Attorney General N. F. Macgreaty’s car officially recorded as the first to cross the new bridge. However, according to local legend, it was not the first crossing. The Attorney General’s car had been proceeded a week earlier by two young students from Coomera State School, Vince and Allan Hargraves, who rode their horses over the bridge.
The opening of the bridge was an important event which included a picnic at the site followed by a ‘smoke concert’ at the Grand Hotel in Labrador and an afternoon tea at the Capitol Theatre in Coolangatta. With the opening of the road bridge the ferry crossing was no longer required and, after sixty years, ceased operation.
The Coomera River Bridge is still used to support the service road network next to the bridges of the M1 Pacific Motorway. https://www.goldcoaststories.com.au/the-coomera-river-bridge/
The name Coomera comes from a Bundjalung language (Ngaraangbal dialect) word kumera referring to a wattle tree, whose bark was used to stupify fish (Wikipedia)
Vehicle Ferry on the Coomera River with the new bridge under construction. The road bridge over the Coomera was constructed by M. R. Hornibrook Ltd using predominately local material with the exception of steel bars manufactured at Lithgow NSW and girders that originated from Belgium. The bridge contained 224 girders that were 61½ feet long and 6½ tons each and were the largest solid girders ever imported into Queensland at the time. (https://www.goldcoaststories.com.au/the-coomera-river-bridge/)
Additional Information
Item Type: | Image | ||||||
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Source Media: | B & W Photograph | ||||||
Collection: | Bain/O'Gorman | ||||||
Sub-Collection Title: | Australia - Queensland - Gold Coast Region |
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Date: | November 1929 | ||||||
Keywords: | Coomera River - Queensland; Ferry - Coomera River - Queensland | ||||||
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Date Deposited: | 17 Jan 2023 05:42 | ||||||
Last Modified: | 12 Aug 2024 23:07 | ||||||
Copyright Owner: | Out of copyright | ||||||
Copyright Statement: | You are free to use this image without permission. Please attribute Queensland University of Technology | ||||||
Location: |
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URI: | https://digitalcollections.qut.edu.au/id/eprint/6803 | ||||||
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Admin: | item control page [repository staff only] |