Raglan, Queensland
Raglan is a rural town and locality in the Gladstone Region, Queensland, Australia. In the, the locality of Raglan had a population of 143 people.
Geography
The town of Raglan is located in the north of the locality. It is on Raglan Creek, which flows into Keppel Bay.The locality contains the following mountains:
- King Solomon Spur
- Marble Mountain
- Mount Alma
- Mount Bennett
- Mount Bomboolba
- Mount Despair
- Mount Erebus
- Mount Holly
- Mount Wendy
The Bruce Highway enters the locality from the east, passes through the town along Raglan Street, and exits to the north-west.
The North Coast railway line runs roughly parallel and north of the highway and passes through the locality with the following stations :Epala railway station
- Amos railway station, now abandoned
- Raglan railway station serving the town
There are two airstrips in the locality:
- Mt Bennett station airstrip
- The Old Station airstrip
History
The region was first declared as the County of Raglan and opened for British pastoral squatting in January 1854. The name Raglan was in honour of Fitzroy James Henry Somerset, First Baron Raglan, first Commander in Chief British Army in Crimea.British occupation began in early January 1856 during a punitive expedition led by Lieutenant John Murray of the Native Police. Murray was tracking down local Aboriginal tribes suspected of involvement in the killing of five people at nearby Mount Larcombe sheep station. With a posse comitatus of around twenty armed and mounted men, including troopers, constables and colonists, Murray surrounded a "large mob" of about a hundred Aboriginal people camped on a creek near to where the township of Raglan now stands. At the break of dawn, Murray's group attacked the camp and "bullets from a score or more carbines wrought death," with those being shot at running "from side to side in their frantic efforts to escape." Only a few escaped and these "were pursued and either shot or driven into the waters of Bay." A participant later wrote that the ammunition they used during the attack had become exhausted and that they had to use their rifles as clubs. Many of the Aboriginal people were killed or terribly wounded but no casualties were recorded amongst Murray's group.
The creek where this occurred was named Hourigan's Creek after the man who fired the first shot of the massacre. This shot was at "a huge savage who seen to get up and stretch himself," the rest of the Aboriginal camp still being asleep. The creek is still called Hourigan's Creek and is still used for shooting with the Raglan Target Sports Association complex being located on its banks. An early resident of Raglan recorded that when he first came to the area he noticed that "the skulls of black warriors...had been made into an ornamental border for a large flower bed in the garden" of the homestead of Raglan Station.
Raglan was established as a pastoral sheep station in 1857 by William Landsborough who held it for several years before selling it on. The allotments for the township of Raglan were first surveyed in 1865.
Gold was found in Raglan in 1867. In August 1867 a nugget of gold was found. Described as "a monster", it was long and wide, weighing and worth £1,400. There were around 300 gold diggers active at the Raglan goldfield at that time.
Raglan Creek Provisional School opened on 4 August 1879, but closed on 31 October 1879. It reopened on 5 March 1883, and became Raglan Creek State School on 1 January 1909. In 1911 it was renamed Raglan State School. The school closed on 13 December 1996. The school was at 18 Langmorn Street.
Langmorn Creek Crossing Provisional School opened on 20 October 1915 but closed circa 31 January 1916. It reopened as Langmorn Provisional School circa January 1926. On 1 January 1931 it became Langmorn State School. It closed on 26 October 1941, but reopened on 26 October 1944. It closed finally on 11 May 1962. It was at 187 Langmore School Road, now in Ambrose.
Hourigan Creek State School opened in 1916 and closed circa 1932. It was located on or near Hourigan Creek Road.
The Raglan Memorial Hall was built in about 1932 and was used for dances until 1990, after which it stood idle. It was relocated to the Calliope River Historical Village in March 2002 and officially re-opened by George Creed, the mayor of Calliope Shire.
Demographics
In the, the locality of Raglan Raglan was included with neighbouring Ambrose and together had a population of 545 people.In the, the locality of Raglan had a population of 146 people.
In the, the locality of Raglan had a population of 143 people.
Heritage listings
Raglan has a number of heritage-listed sites, including:- Langmorn Homestead, Langmorn Road
- Parson's Inn, Raglan Station Road
- Raglan Homestead, Raglan Station Road