Report on the Department of Ports and Harbours for the Year 1890-91
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Let's be clear from the start: this is not a novel. There are no characters in the traditional sense, unless you count the steam dredges and the harbours themselves. The 'plot' is the year's work: the meticulous recording of what was built, maintained, surveyed, and planned along the entire Queensland coast in a single financial year.
The Story
The book systematically walks you through the state's maritime lifeblood. It details the construction of new jetties, the dredging of silted channels, and the installation of navigation lights. It lists revenue from harbor dues and tracks the movement of ships carrying wool, sugar, and immigrants. The narrative is one of constant, grinding progress against the elements, told through tables, expenditures, and technical descriptions of engineering works from Thursday Island to Coolangatta.
Why You Should Read It
Its power is in the details. This report doesn't tell you about the dream of a new colony; it shows you the invoice. Reading it, you get a tangible sense of the scale of the endeavor. You see the priorities (coal exports were huge) and the challenges (constant silting, cyclones). It’s a foundational text, the bureaucratic blueprint for the state we know today. It turns abstract history into something concrete, literally—page by page, pier by pier.
Final Verdict
This is a niche read, but a fascinating one. It's perfect for history buffs who love primary sources, locals curious about their region's origins, or anyone with a soft spot for infrastructure and the quiet stories of how places are built. Don't expect a sweeping drama, but if you want to understand the nuts and bolts of 19th-century ambition, this is your original source material.
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Mark Hernandez
8 months agoThe layout is very easy on the eyes.