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John James Knight was editor-in-chief of The Brisbane Courier from 1906 to 1916, later managing director, then chairman of all of the company's publications. [10]The first edition of The Courier-Mail was published on 28 August 1933, after Keith Murdoch's Herald and Weekly Times acquired and merged The Brisbane Courier and the Daily Mail (first published on 3 October 1903).
Arthur Sidney Lyon (1817–1861), was a journalist and newspaper proprietor in Queensland, Australia.He was known as "the father of the press in colonial Queensland". He was the founder of the Moreton Bay Courier (later Brisbane Courier, now The Courier-Mail) and the Darling Downs Gazette.
The Central Buildings are a heritage-listed [1] series of six shops [2] located at 327 Honour Avenue, Graceville, Brisbane, Queensland, Australia. [1] They are a single-story structure located between Verney Road West and Rakeevan Road and have been listed on the Brisbane Heritage Register as a Local Heritage Place since 1 July 2005, due to being an art deco construction from the interwar ...
Sean Leahy is an Australian cartoonist working for the Courier Mail in Brisbane, Australia. He draws political cartoons for the paper, and also his own comic strip, Beyond the Black Stump, which is distributed in Australia.
The South Bank Piazza is a multipurpose venue located in the South Bank Parklands in Brisbane, Australia. [1] The Courier-Mail was the naming rights sponsor of the venue from 2013, [2] prior to which it was known as the Suncorp Piazza and is currently known as the South Bank Piazza.
Theophilus Parsons Pugh (1831–1896) was an Australian journalist, newspaper editor, politician, publisher and public servant, as well as the editor-in-chief of the Moreton Bay Courier, which he in 1861 renamed to The Courier, renamed again in 1864 to the Brisbane Courier.
"For the man on the land". The Brisbane Courier.No. 22, 218. Queensland, Australia. 13 April 1929. p. 13 – via National Library of Australia. —a description of Hivesville in 1929
Despite its incomplete state, the line from Ipswich to Brisbane was officially opened on 14 June 1875. At the opening, the platform at Brisbane Passenger Station was half-paved and the rooms and corridors incomplete, the roofing over the platform was still in progress and the place lit temporarily . [1] View from Roma Street, circa 1890