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Gympie (/ ˈ ɡ ɪ m p i / GHIM-pee) [3] is a city and a locality in the Gympie Region, Queensland, Australia. [4] [5] Located in the Greater Sunshine Coast, [6] Gympie is about 170.7 km (110 mi) north of the state capital, Brisbane.
The Gympie Region is a local government area in the Wide Bay–Burnett region of Queensland, Australia, about 170 kilometres (110 mi) north of Brisbane, the state capital. It is between the Sunshine Coast and Hervey Bay and centred on the town of Gympie .
The following are the chairmen of Gympie Division: 1880— : William Henry Couldery [11] The following are the mayors of Gympie Borough/Town/City: [12] 1880–82: Matthew Mellor, also chairman of Widgee Divisional Board, and Member of the Legislative Assembly for Wide Bay and Gympie; 1882–83: William Ferguson (S.M.) 1883–84: William Smyth
Cooloola Cove is a coastal locality in the Gympie Region, Queensland, Australia. [2] In the 2021 census , Cooloola Cove had a population of 2,921 people. [ 1 ]
Gympie Road is a major road in the northern suburbs of Brisbane, Queensland, Australia. The road forms part of the main road route from the Brisbane Central Business District (CBD) to the northern suburbs, Sunshine Coast and east coast of Queensland. Gympie Road is designated A3 from Lutwyche Road, Kedron to the Gympie Arterial Road, Bald Hills.
Memorial plaque for bandmaster Frederick Thomas Percival, 2015. Gympie Memorial Park was established in 1919–1921 as the Gympie and Widgee District Fallen Soldiers' Memorial Park, with a landscape design prepared by Brisbane's Parks Superintendent Henry (Harry) Moore and a focal timber bandstand designed by Brisbane City Council's architect Alfred Herbert Foster.
Gympie and Widgee War Memorial Gates is a heritage-listed memorial at Mary Street, Gympie, Gympie Region, Queensland, Australia. The gates provide an entranceway on Mary Street (the main street of Gympie) through to the Gympie Memorial Park in Reef Street. The gates were designed by George Rae and built in 1920 by A L Petrie & Son.
The Gympie Pyramid is a nickname for an archaeological site otherwise known as Rocky Ridge, or Djaki Kundu by the Gubbi Gubbi/ Kabi Kabi people. [1] It consists of the rounded eastern end of a sandstone ridge, and is located on the Gympie Connection Road, some 5 km (3.1 mi) north-east of the town of Gympie in Queensland, Australia.