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John Oxley Library

Black Death in Queensland

By JOL Admin | 12 September 2008

Did you know?

Outbreaks of bubonic plague, spread by rats and introduced by ships from overseas, were common in Queensland at the turn of the century.

several figures dressed in protective clothing

Maryborough Outbreak (Primary Pneumonic Plague), MayJune 1905. John Oxley Library, State Library of Queensland. Neg 53460

Maryborough Outbreak (Primary Pneumonic Plague), MayJune 1905. John Oxley Library, State Library of Queensland. Neg 53460

The first known case of plague in Australia was reported in Sydney in January 1900.  The first case in Queensland occurred in Rockhampton in April 1900 and not long after cases arose in Townsville and Brisbane.

The first victim in Brisbane was a carter named James Drevesen, who worked at the wharves and lived in Woolloongabba.  He was admitted to the hastily built Colmslie Plague Hospital.   The Drevesen's house (pictured) was cleansed and fumigated, bed linen and curtains burned, and an iron stockade was erected around the property and two neighbouring houses.

rows of wooden houses

Bubonic plague in Hawthorne Street, Woolloongabba, Brisbane, Queensland, 1900. John Oxley Library, State Library of Queensland. Neg 47425

Timber residences in Hawthorne Street, Woolloongabba, Brisbane, Queensland, where the first case of Bubonic Plague occured in Brisbane. The house on the left of the photograph was occupied by James Drevesen, the first patient. Drevesen was a van driver employed to remove goods from the wharves where dead and plague-infected rats were found. 

mN WALKING ALONG DIRT STREET WITH SHEET METAL BARRICADE IN BACKGROUND

Quarantine barricade around houses in Hawthorne Street, Woolloongabba, Brisbane, Queensland, 1900. John Oxley Library, State Library of Queensland. Neg 47426

During the 1900 epidemic there were 136 identified cases of plague infection in Queensland. Fifty-seven of these cases perished. The majority of the 136 cases were male, with 114 males compared to 22 females. Brisbane registered the most cases with 56 infections and 25 deaths, followed by Townsville with 37 cases and 9 deaths, Rockhampton with 36 cases and 21 deaths, Cairns with 5 cases and 2 deaths, and Charters Towers and Ipswich both with 1 case but no fatalities.

For the next nine years epidemics occurred each year and were confined to ports.  The only inland centre which had the plague was Ipswich.  Measures taken to combat the disease included the surveillance of vessels arriving in the state, the destruction of rats, the establishment of isolation hospitals and special provisions for the disposal of the dead.  Plague victims who succumbed to the disease were wrapped in sheets soaked in carbolic acid and their coffins were slaked with lime.

a group of people standing around a pile of dead plague rats

Destroyed rats during the bubonic plague in Brisbane, Queensland, 1900-1902. John Oxley Library, State Library of Queensland. Neg 108588

After 1909 there were twelve plague-free years.  This led to a slackening in the regulations and a man died of plague suddenly in Brisbane in 1921.  This outbreak caused sixty-three deaths.  The last case of plague was reported in Queensland in 1922.

two nurses attend to patients in quarantine

Nurses tending to isolated plague cases, Maryborough, 1905. John Oxley Library, State Library of Queensland. Neg 168821

Sources about the plague in Queensland include:

Queensland Parliamentary Papers

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