Ravenshoe, Queensland
Ravenshoe is a rural town and locality in the Tablelands Region, Queensland, Australia. In the, the locality of Ravenshoe had a population of 1,332 people.
Geography
Ravenshoe is on the Atherton Tableland in Far North Queensland. It is located south west of the regional centre, Cairns.At above sea level, Ravenshoe is the highest town in Queensland, with Queensland's highest pub "The Ravenshoe Hotel" and highest railway station. It also has the Millstream Falls, the widest waterfall in Australia. Traditionally the main industry in Ravenshoe was timber, but since 1987, when the government made of surrounding rainforest world heritage listed, the main industries have been tourism, beef and dairy farming.
History
The traditional owners of the land in the Ravenshoe district are the Jirrbal people who speak a dialect of the Dyirbal language.The site of the present day Ravenshoe was first settled by pastoralists prior to 1881 but when stands of red cedar trees were found at nearby Cedar Creek, the mining entrepreneur, John Moffat purchased the pastoral properties in 1897. A village called Cedar Creek was established. By 1910, the nearby mining town of Herberton has been connected by railway to Cairns and Cedar Creek had been renamed Ravenshoe. The name is supposed to have been chosen because a copy of Henry Kingsley's novel Ravenshoe was found discarded nearby.
Ravenshoe State School opened on 5 February 1912. It expanded to offer secondary schooling on 3 February 1958.
By 1912, Ravenshoe had a store, a school, the Club Hotel and a population of 1,000 people. The timber industry was by now supplying Queensland maple, oak and black walnut.
Geraldton Road State School opened in 1916 via Ravenshoe. It closed in 1960. It was at 45 Geraldton Road.
Chilverton State School opened on 31 July 1916 "via Ravenshoe". It closed in 1 July 1956. It was at 12280 Kennedy Highway, which is in Ravenshoe today but on the boundary with Evelyn.
On 11 December 1916, Ravenshoe was finally connected with Cairns by the Tablelands railway line.
Ravenshoe Methodist Church was officially opened on Saturday 29 May 1920, the first church to be erected in Ravenshoe. It was built from timber and was and could seat 80 people. It cost £390. It was at 13 Moore Street. After the closure of the church some time after 1975, the building was relocated to 592 Wooroora Road to be incorporated into a house.
Horse Shoe Bend State School opened in 1917 under head teacher Mary Ellen Duffy. It closed in 1925 due to low student numbers. The school reopened in 1929 and closed on 1 August 1952. It was at 182 Glendinning Road.
Chilverton Methodist Church opened on 3 June 1929. It was built immediately adjacent and north of the Chilverton State School. It is no longer extant, but was at 12280 Kennedy Highway.
Vine Creek State School opened on 10 September 1936. It closed on 16 August 1945. The school was at 620 Tully Falls Road.
Roads connected Ravenshoe with Atherton and Innisfail by 1936.
On Sunday 25 July 1937, the foundation stone was laid for St Barnabas Anglican Church by Bishop John Feetham. It was named St Barnabas after the Bush Brotherhood of St Barnabas, who had served in North Queensland. On Sunday 14 November 1937, Feetham returned to officially open and dedicate the church. It was built from timber.
On Sunday 6 June 1937, St Theresa of the Child Jesus Catholic Church was officially opened and blessed by Bishop John Heavey. It was and built from timber. In the 1970s, it was relocated to enable the construction of a new church building, which was made from concrete blocks. The old church building was then used as a school building.
In World War II as part of the Atherton Project, tent encampments were established by the Australian Army near Ravenshoe, Wondecla and Wongabel.
By 1949, there were three sawmills, two hotels, two cinemas, a guest house and two churches.
The Ravenshoe Parish of the Roman Catholic Diocese of Cairns was established in 1949.
St Teresa's Catholic School was established in 1950 by the Sisters of Mercy. The single-room school building was the former Catholic Church at Irvinebank which was relocated to Ravenshoe. On opening there were 60 children enrolled from Years 1 through 7. In 1978 the Sisters of Mercy ended their role in the school, being replaced by lay teachers.
St Barnabas' School was established in 1953 by the Bush Brotherhood of St Barnabas. Reginald Halse, Anglican Archbishop of Brisbane unveiled a plaque on 27 September 1952 to mark the site of the new school, a block of land in anticipation of the school offering agricultural subjects. It closed on 31 October 1990. In 1992, the Queensland Education Department purchased St Barnabas' to establish a separate secondary campus for Ravenshoe State School.
Tully Falls State School opened on 9 August 1953. It closed on 31 December 1955.
Ravenshoe Seventh Day Adventist Church is a timber church built in 1980.
The railway service from Atherton to Ravenshoe closed in 1988, following the designation of the Wet Tropics of Queensland as a UNESCO World Heritage Site.
A Kingdom Hall of Jehovah's Witnesses was built in 1990.
The Ravenshoe Library opened in 1992 and had a major refurbishment in 2017.
Ravenshoe became national news after a vehicle ran into a gas cylinder at the Grigg Street 'Serves You Right Cafe' on 9 June 2015. In the resulting explosion and fire 20 people were hospitalised, 8 critically injured. Two people, the manager of the cafe and an 82-year-old Silver Valley resident, later died from their burns. there were still 7 people listed as critical with burn injuries. Five of them were females aged 43, 51, 59 and 75, and three males aged 56, 59 and 69. All were treated in Brisbane, while the driver of the vehicle that caused the explosion, with a broken spine and burns, was also listed as critical and treated in Cairns.
Demographics
In the, the locality of Ravenshoe had a population of 1,442 people, while the town of Ravenshoe had a population of 860 people.In the, the locality of Ravenshoe had a population of 1,400 people.
In the, the locality of Ravenshoe had a population of 1,332 people.
Education
Ravenshoe State School is a government primary and secondary school for boys and girls. The school has two campuses; a primary campus at 10 Ascham Street and a secondary campus at Moore Street. It includes a special education program operating at the Moore Street campus. In 2017, the school had an enrolment of 420 students with 46 teachers and 34 non-teaching staff. In 2018, the school had an enrolment of 385 students with 45 teachers and 39 non-teaching staff.St Teresa's School is a Catholic primary school for boys and girls at 6 Moffatt Street. In 2017, the school had an enrolment of 103 students with 12 teachers and 10 non-teaching staff. In 2018, the school had an enrolment of 94 students with 11 teachers and 9 non-teaching staff.
Amenities
Ravenshoe has a butcher, bakery, supermarkets, two cafes, several craft shop, a post office, a medical centre, a newsagency, a chemist, a hardware store, two pubs, two tyre shops, two salons, four fuel outlets, two caravan parks, a laundromat, bank branches, two real estate agencies and three schools and a community kindergarten.The Ravenshoe Millstream Country Club has a 9-hole golf course which is claimed to be the highest golf club in Queensland. Camping and caravan accommodation are available on site, for casual golfers.
The Tablelands Regional Council operate a public library at 24 Moore Street.
The Ravenshoe branch of the Queensland Country Women's Association meets at 15 Herbert Street.
St Teresa of the Child Jesus Catholic Church is on the south-east corner of Moore Street and Moffat Street. It is within the Ravenshoe Parish of the Roman Catholic Diocese of Cairns which is administered from the Malanda Parish.
St Barnabas Anglican Church is at 18 Moore Street.
Ravenshoe Seventh Day Adventist Church is at 32 John Street.
Kingdom Hall of Jehovah's Witnesses is at 13 Tully Falls Road.