List of Queensland's Q150 Icons
Queensland's Q150 Icons is an official list of cultural icons compiled as part of Q150 (the 150th birthday of Queensland) in 2009 by the Government of Queensland, Australia, that represent the people, places and events that are significant to Queensland.
History
A list of 300 nominations for Queenlsand cultural icons was compiled by the Queensland Government, organised into 10 categories, and then the Queensland public were invited to vote to produce a final list of 150 icons. The final list was announced on 10 June 2009 by the Queensland Premier Anna Bligh, as part of Queensland's 150th birthday celebrations, a year-long event known as Q150.[1]
State shapers
This list is for people and organisations that are significant to Queensland.
1 | Yungaba Immigration Centre |
2 | Steve Irwin |
3 | Surf Lifesavers |
4 | Sir Joh Bjelke-Petersen |
5 | Leslie Thiess[2] |
6 | Founders of QANTAS |
7 | Clem Jones |
8 | Eddie Mabo |
9 | State Emergency Service |
10 | John Flynn |
11 | Charles Kingsford Smith |
12 | James Cook |
13 | Royal Agricultural Society of Queensland |
14 | Isolated Children's Parents Association[3] |
15 | Wayne Bennett |
Influential artists
1 | Bee Gees |
2 | Powderfinger |
3 | Geoffrey Rush |
4 | Keith Urban |
5 | Oodgeroo Noonuccal (Kath Walker) |
6 | Steele Rudd |
7 | Judith Wright |
8 | Billy Thorpe |
9 | Hugh Lunn |
10 | Savage Garden |
11 | Gladys Moncrieff |
12 | Graeme Connors |
13 | William McInnes |
14 | David Malouf |
15 | Charles Chauvel |
Sports legends
1 | Wally Lewis |
2 | Cathy Freeman |
3 | Pat Rafter |
4 | Rod Laver |
5 | Allan Border |
6 | Greg Norman |
7 | Susie O'Neill |
8 | Dick Johnson |
9 | Allan Langer |
10 | Gunsynd |
11 | Mal Meninga |
12 | Grant Hackett |
13 | Matthew Hayden |
14 | Kieren Perkins |
15 | Mick Doohan |
Locations
1 | Australia Zoo (Sunshine Coast Hinterland) |
2 | Australian Stockman's Hall of Fame (Longreach) |
3 | Surfers Paradise |
4 | Bundaberg Rum Distillery |
5 | Big Pineapple (Nambour) |
6 | South Bank Parklands (Brisbane) |
7 | Noosa |
8 | Breakfast Creek Hotel (Brisbane) |
9 | Yatala Pie Shop |
10 | Barcaldine Tree of Knowledge |
11 | Paronella Park (North Queensland) |
12 | Lone Pine Koala Sanctuary (Brisbane) |
13 | Currumbin Wildlife Sanctuary (Gold Coast) |
14 | Great Dividing Range |
15 | Darling Downs |
Natural attractions
Structures and engineering feats
1 | Story Bridge (Brisbane) |
2 | Kuranda Scenic Railway (Cairns) |
3 | XXXX Brewery (Brisbane) |
4 | Brisbane City Hall |
5 | Skyrail Rainforest Cable (Cairns) |
6 | Gateway Bridge (Brisbane) |
7 | Suncorp Stadium (Lang Park) |
8 | Q1 (Gold Coast) |
9 | The Gabba (Brisbane) |
10 | The University of Queensland Great Court |
11 | St John's Cathedral (Brisbane) |
12 | Old Museum (Brisbane) |
13 | QANTAS Hangars (Longreach and Cloncurry) |
14 | Hornibrook Highway Bridge (Redcliffe) |
15 | Burdekin Falls Dam |
Defining moments
1 | World Expo '88 (1988) |
2 | 1974 Queensland floods |
3 | QANTAS takes to the air (1920) |
4 | 1982 Brisbane Commonwealth Games |
5 | Mabo High Court of Australia decision (1992) |
6 | Fitzgerald Inquiry (1987–89) |
7 | Queensland proclaimed as a new colony (1859) |
8 | Gold discovered in Queensland (1858) |
9 | World Heritage listing of the Wet Tropics (1988) |
10 | Queensland wins its first Sheffield Shield (1995) |
11 | Bellevue Hotel and Cloudland demolished (1979 and 1982) |
12 | Queensland the first with free education |
13 | Australia's first Aboriginal Parliamentarians: Neville Bonner (1971) |
14 | All chained up for women's rights (1965 at Regatta Hotel) |
15 | Railway comes to Queensland (1865) |
Innovations and inventions
1 | Royal Flying Doctor Service |
2 | Cervical cancer vaccination (Professor Ian Frazer) |
3 | Polio treatment |
4 | Blue Care (formerly Blue Nurses) |
5 | School of the Air |
6 | Billabong |
7 | Lamington |
8 | Kids Alive - Do the Five[4] |
9 | Lucas' Pawpaw Ointment[5] |
10 | Weis Fruit Bar |
11 | Immune system research wins Nobel Prize |
12 | Southern Cross windmills[6] |
13 | Tilt train |
14 | Dingo fence |
15 | wotif.com.au |
Events and festivals
1 | Ekka (Brisbane) |
2 | State of Origin series |
3 | Birdsville Races |
4 | Riverfire (Riverfestival) |
5 | Woodford Folk Festival |
6 | Carnival of Flowers (Toowoomba) |
7 | Country Music Muster (Gympie) |
8 | Indy (Gold Coast) |
9 | Apple and Grape Harvest Festival (Stanthorpe) |
10 | B&S Balls |
11 | Beef Australia (Rockhampton) |
12 | Brisbane to Gladstone Yacht Race |
13 | Mount Isa Rodeo |
14 | Panyiri Greek Festival (Brisbane) |
15 | Noosa Triathlon |
Typically Queensland
1 | Backyard BBQs |
2 | Queenslander house |
3 | XXXX beer |
4 | Bundy Rum (and bear) |
5 | Sunshine |
6 | Bowen mango |
7 | Summer afternoon storms |
8 | "Waltzing Matilda" |
9 | Macadamia nut |
10 | Maroon |
11 | Jacaranda tree |
12 | Cane fields |
13 | Cane toad |
14 | Thongs |
15 | Mud crab |
References
- Bligh, Anna (10 June 2009). "PREMIER UNVEILS QUEENSLAND'S 150 ICONS". Queensland Government. Archived from the original on 24 May 2017. Retrieved 24 May 2017.
- Bell, Peter (2016). "Thiess, Sir Leslie Charles (Les) (1909–1992)". Australian Dictionary of Biography. Archived from the original on 30 June 2017. Retrieved 24 May 2017.
- "ISOLATED CHILDREN'S PARENTS' ASSOCIATION". Archived from the original on 24 May 2017. Retrieved 24 May 2017.
- "Kids Alive - Do The Five". Archived from the original on 10 August 2017. Retrieved 24 May 2017.
- "Lucas' Papaw Remedies". Archived from the original on 5 June 2017. Retrieved 24 May 2017.
- "IZ Windmill". Pentair Southern Cross. Archived from the original on 7 April 2018. Retrieved 25 May 2017.
External links
Media related to Q150 Icons at Wikimedia Commons