Addresses
Type of place
Cottage, House
Period
Interwar 1919-1939
Style
Queenslander
Addresses
Type of place
Cottage, House
Period
Interwar 1919-1939
Style
Queenslander
98 Strong Ave was built in 1919 under the Anzac Cottage and TB Homes scheme, an initiative of the Queensland War Council under the auspices of a sub-committee named the Anzac Committee. Its directive was to establish homes for widows and dependants of enlisted men killed, and later those who contracted tuberculosis in the First World War. The construction of the homes was funded by the Queensland Lottery, the ‘Golden Casket’ and they were built on donated land using volunteer labour. Only thirty-eight Anzac Cottages were built in Brisbane, many of which no longer survive. 98 Strong Ave is important as a rare surviving example of a Anzac Cottage in Brisbane.
Also known as
De Lesle
Lot plan
L7_SL771; L6_SL771
Key dates
Local Heritage Place Since —
Date of Citation —
Construction
Walls: TimberCriterion for listing
(A) Historical; (B) Rarity; (D) Representative; (H) Historical associationInteractive mapping
Also known as
De Lesle
Lot plan
L7_SL771; L6_SL771
Key dates
Local Heritage Place Since —
Date of Citation —
Construction
Walls: TimberCriterion for listing
(A) Historical; (B) Rarity; (D) Representative; (H) Historical associationInteractive mapping
History
The Anzac Committee was formed as a sub-committee of the Queensland War Council in mid 1917 in an effort to ease the hardship experienced by the widows and children of soldiers and sailors killed in the First World War. The committee was formed in Brisbane to acquire land for the construction of homes for the widows and dependants of enlisted men, both military and naval, killed in the war and to establish new homes on the land. The scheme provided timber cottages, mostly built on donated land and constructed by volunteer labour. Much of the material used for the construction of the cottages was supplied at cost by many Brisbane businesses.
The costs associated with the establishment of the cottages were funded from the profits made by draws three, four and five of the Queensland lottery, the “Golden Casket”, which had been set up by the Queensland War Council to assist the war effort. This was an initiative of the Anzac Committee headed by Harry Coyne, MP.
The committee was also responsible for allocating the houses. A prerequisite for occupancy was that the widow was to be of ‘good character’, remain unmarried and respectable. The widow was to pay a small rent of 1/6 per week as well as the rates and other expenses. The rental monies were accumulated to fund the ongoing maintenance of the cottages. If the widow was to re-marry it was required that the cottage be vacated. The land was to be held in perpetuity by the Public Curator, with the widow or dependant signing a lease.
In Brisbane thirty-eight Anzac Cottages were built, with the first one opened in 1917.
The cottage at 98 Strong Ave was built in 1919 on two sixteen perch lots of land donated by Mr. J Bowden of Graceville. Numerous local residents signed up to construct the cottage with a ladies committee providing refreshments. To mark the completion of the cottage a dinner was held for the workers who had toiled under “trying conditions caused by the weather and the influenza epidemic”. The cottage was opened on 5 July 1919 and given to the widow of a fallen soldier. By 1920, a total of 32 Anzac Cottages had been built.
In June 1923 the Queensland War Council decided to use the balance in the ‘Anzac Cottage’ fund to build ‘TB’ homes. TB homes were intended for returned soldiers and sailors suffering from tuberculosis (‘TB’) and were rented for 8/- per week. Only married servicemen who did not own or were not buying a home were initially eligible and they were required to be members of the TB Sailors, Soldiers and Airmen’s Association of Queensland.
Homes were designed and built under the auspices of the Workers’ Dwelling Branch and were of a standard type, different to Anzac Cottages, costing around £700. The Public Trustee managed them in a similar way to Anzac Cottages. By October 1924 nine TB homes had been built.
The design of the TB home shared similarities with precut houses produced by firms like Campbell’s and particularly Brown & Board. Both firms were recorded as supplying materials to the Anzac Cottage scheme and produced designs which conformed to the requirements of the Workers Dwelling Act.
In 1927 the War Council agreed to build 23 more homes and terminate the scheme. Proceeds from the Golden Casket in 1929 were allocated towards the construction of more cottages. In 1932, the War Council passed control of the TB Homes and Anzac Cottages to the Public Curator who became the Trustee of the Anzac Cottages Trust. From this time both TB homes and Anzac Cottages were collectively called Anzac Cottages. The War Council was disbanded in November 1932 and the Anzac Cottage Committee ceased to exist.
The cottages continued to be rented to the descendants of Anzac soldiers and administered by the Public Trustee’s office. During 1956 all Anzac Cottages in Brisbane and nearby were inspected and it was estimated that repairs and painting would cost £17,000. As it was becoming increasingly difficult to find eligible homeless widows of soldiers or soldiers still suffering from TB, the Public Curator suggested that some of the vacant houses be sold to fund repairs. In 1960 the Queensland Legislative Assembly passed the Anzac Cottages & TB Homes Act which permitted the Public Curator to sell lands held in trust for the construction of Anzac Cottages or TB Homes and to sell vacant cottages for which no eligible occupant could be found. At the time it was reported that three cottages were vacant, 14 let to ineligible tenants and 33 to Anzac widows. Of the 26 TB homes, 22 were in Brisbane, one in Ipswich and three in Stanthorpe.
The last tenancy for an Anzac Cottage commenced in October 1978. By 1983 all but one cottage had been sold. This Anzac Cottage had additions made in 1962 and passed into private ownership in 1982. Alterations and additions were also made in 1995.
The Anzac Cottages Trust was wound up in 2000. The fund from the sales of land and cottages was distributed to six charitable institutions providing housing for veterans and used to construct, repair or improve rental units. In 2000 Strathearn in Alderley, the last Anzac Cottage constructed on donated land and administered by the Public Trustee was sold. It was listed on the Queensland Heritage Register in February 2007.
Description
The former Anzac Cottage / TB Home was a modest one storey timber-framed and clad cottage with a hipped extending over the front verandah. There are windows with hoods on the side. The roof is clad with corrugated metal sheets. Additions to the house were completed in 1962; with further alterations and additions to renovate the house in 1995.
The additions and extensions are not of cultural heritage significance.
Statement of significance
Relevant assessment criteria
This is a place of local heritage significance and meets one or more of the local heritage criteria under the Heritage planning scheme policy of the Brisbane City Plan 2014. It is significant because:
References
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‘Graceville Anzac Cottage’ Telegraph 26 June 1919, p.3 http://nla.gov.au/nla.news¬article176084747
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‘Anzac Cottages’ Telegraph 30 June 1919, p.12 http://nla.gov.au/nla.news¬article176085629
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Brisbane City Council Water Supply and Sewerage Detail Plans
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Brisbane City Council. Heritage Unit, research file – Anzac Cottages
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Brisbane City Council Properties on the Web
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Department of Natural Resources and Mines, Queensland Certificate of Title and other records
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Miles, J. and Rechner, J. Anzac Cottage “Strathearn” Conservation Plan (Brisbane: Miles & Rechner, 2002)
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Queensland Post Office Directories, 1868-1949
Citation prepared by — Brisbane City Council (page revised September 2020)