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The Curtain Fig National Park is a national park on the Atherton Tableland in Far North Queensland, Australia.The National Park is located near Yungaburra. [1] Its most valued features are its once regionally common, now endangered Mabi forests including a huge strangler fig which attracts up to 100 000 visitors per year, locally known as the Curtain Fig Tree, plus a near threatened, locally ...
Protected area in Queensland, Australia Yungaburra National Park Queensland IUCN category II (national park) Yungaburra National Park Nearest town or city Yungaburra Coordinates 17°17′16″S 145°34′15″E / 17.28778°S 145.57083°E / -17.28778; 145.57083 Established 12 September 1953 Area 0.055 km 2 (0.021 sq mi) Managing authorities Queensland Parks and Wildlife Service See ...
Yungaburra is also the site of the war memorial to soldiers lost, opened 22 June 2013. [citation needed] There is a network of walking tracks around the town including Peterson's Creek. [citation needed] Yungaburra has a library at Maud Kehoe Park operated by the Tablelands Regional Council. [35]
Sarah Palin, former governor of Alaska and 2008 Republican vice presidential nominee, speaks at the Take Our Border Back Convoy rally with rocker Ted Nugent at One Shot Distillery and Brewery in ...
Yungaburra: 40.1: 24.9: Lake Barrine Road – south – Malanda: Atherton: 53.6: 33.3: Tinaroo Falls Dam Road – north–east – Tinaroo: 56: 35: Kennedy Highway (National Route 1) – west, then north – Tolga / – east, then south – Evelyn: South–western end of Gillies Highway. State Route 52 continues south–west as Atherton ...
Yungaburra Community Centre is a heritage-listed community hall at 19 Cedar Street, Yungaburra, Tablelands Region, Queensland, Australia. It was built from 1910 to c. 1926. It is also known as Tivoli picture theatre, Williams Estate Hall, and Yungaburra Hall. It was added to the Queensland Heritage Register on 21 October 1992. [1]
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The extended Williams family worked together and had commercial interests in a number of interlinked fields. Because of the variety of enterprises owned by the family in Yungaburra and other local centres, they were major providers of employment in the area and made an important contribution to the development of Yungaburra. [1]