top of page
Search


North Queensland in WWII: Strategic Importance, Self-Reliance, and Local Labour
WWII reinforced what North Queensland had already learned: distance, difference, and enforced isolation shape infrastructure, economy, and culture. Cyclones, floods, and road closures — particularly the annual cutting of the Bruce Highway — were not just obstacles; they were drivers of independence, ingenuity, and community character.

Jennifer Smith
Nov 42 min read


Distance, Difference, and Forced Resilience: The Making of a Northern Identity
North Queensland has always been defined by what sets it apart: distance from southern capitals and the differences of its tropical climate. But it is the combination of these with actual, enforced isolation that has most shaped the region’s character.

Jennifer Smith
Oct 283 min read


🌩️ Cyclones, Survival, and the Making of North Queensland’s Resilient Spirit (1918–1927)
Cyclones are nothing new to North Queensland. They roll in from the Coral Sea almost every summer, testing the nerves of locals and the strength of their roofs.

Jennifer Smith
Oct 213 min read
bottom of page
