Mount Pelion, Queensland
Mount Pelion is a rural locality in the Mackay Region, Queensland, Australia. In the, Mount Pelion had a population of 90 people.
Geography
The mountain Mount Pelion rises to above sea level in the south-east of the locality.The Bruce Highway enters the locality from the east and exits the locality to the north-west. The North Coast railway line also enters from the east but is north of highway.
Mount Pelion railway station is an abandoned railway station on the North Coast railway line in the east of the locality.
The land in the south of the locality is mostly unused, while the land in the north of the locality is predominantly used for growing sugarcane. There are some cane tramways to transport the harvested sugarcane to the local sugar mill. There is also some grazing on native vegetation.
History
The mountain was named by surveyor William Charles Borlase Wilson after the Greek mythological Mount Pelion. The locality and railway station take their name from the mountain.Mount Pelion Provisional School opened on 26 February 1924. On 1 August 1926 it became Mount Pelion State School. It closed on 31 December 1970. The school was located about 19 Bogga Road. On 11 August 1987 the school building was relocated to Northview State School in Mount Pleasant, [Queensland |Mount Pleasant] but it gradually fell into disrepair. On 24 October 2014 the building was moved to Sarina to be restored as part of the Sarina Tourist Art and Craft Visitor Information Centre in Railway Square.
Demographics
In the, Mount Pelion had a population of 125 people.In the, Mount Pelion had a population of 90 people.