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Cotton Tree, Queensland

Cotton Tree, Queensland

FieldValue
typesuburb
nameCotton Tree
cityMaroochydore
stateqld
imageThe bank of Maroochy River in Cotton Tree, Queensland 01.jpg
captionThe bank of Maroochy River in Cotton Tree, 2018
coordinates
postcode4558
pop
countyCanning
lgaSunshine Coast Region
stategovMaroochydore
fedgovFairfax
dist116.6
dir1E
location1Nambour
dist219.6
dir2N
location2Caloundra
dist3109
dir3N
location3Brisbane
near-nMaroochy River
near-neCoral Sea
near-eCoral Sea
near-seCoral Sea
near-sAlexandra Headland
near-swMaroochydore
near-wMaroochydore
near-nwMaroochydore

| near-n = Maroochy River | near-ne = Coral Sea | near-e = Coral Sea | near-se = Coral Sea | near-s = Alexandra Headland | near-sw = Maroochydore | near-w = Maroochydore | near-nw = Maroochydore

Cotton Tree is a coastal neighbourhood within the suburb of Maroochydore in the Sunshine Coast Region, Queensland, Australia.

Geography

Although not officially bounded, Cotton Tree is generally recognised as being bounded by the Maroochy River and Cornmeal Creek to the north, and to the south and west by Aerodrome Road and by the Pacific Ocean to the east.

Etymology

The area takes its name from a large Hibiscus tiliaceus tree which is also known as the cotton tree. Plenty of these are still visible near the caravan park and old creek around Fourth Avenue.

History

The first European 'holiday maker' to arrive was convict John Graham in 1827 who escaped from Moreton Bay and spent six years living with local aborigines belonging to the Gubbi Gubbi language group.

The whole (Maroochy Shire) area was protected by the Bunya proclamation 1842–1860. This was established after Andrew Petrie explored the area in 1838 and named the Maroochy River using the language of Brisbane aboriginals who accompanied him.

Timber getters arrived in the 1850s but the Maroochy River bar wasn't navigable so Mooloolah River bar was used instead with Cotton Tree used as a timber depot in 1856 by William Pettigrew and purchased 1864. He ran steamer ships in both rivers and to Brisbane and thus opened a post office receiving office in 1891 as the first shop in Cotton Tree. The headland at Alexandra Headland was used as a bullock paddock and for his own home which was also part of his 330-acre landholding.

The Cotton Tree area was first gazetted as a wharf and water reserve (215 acres) in 1873. By 1880 it was re-gazetted as a camping reserve and used by the Salvation Army amongst others.

The town of Maroochydore was subdivided from the Cotton Tree reserve in 1903 by Surveyor Thomas O'Connor. (Thomas & O'Connor streets both near Bradman Avenue bear his name).

Until the 1910s, Cotton Tree was accessible only by water. Then a road through what is now Maroochydore was planned to access the area. By 1927 it was a main road. By 1937 it was a bitumen road.[[File:Cotton Tree Post Office Maroochydore Queensland.tiff|thumb|Cotton Tree Post Office in the 1930s]]Cotton Tree has its own post office located in King Street since the 1930s.

The fatal Maroochy air crash occurred on the beach on 30 December 1950.

Cotton Tree Aquatic Centre was opened along the banks of the Maroochy River on 12 December 1981.

Heritage listings

Cotton Tree has a number of heritage-listed sites, including:

  • Cotton Tree Caravan Park, Cotton Tree Parade A heritage application for Cotton Tree Bacpackers timber building was made but subsequently refused.

Amenities

Cotton Tree Pier, 2019

The suburb consists of a beach, a river mouth, several restaurants and cafes, lawn bowls club, RSL club, surf club, Swan's rugby club, library, child care centre, resorts, homes, units, Weir's surf shop, olympic swimming pool and numerous other shops, offices and businesses. The Maroochydore Surf Life Saving Club is right on the beach. Pincushion Island currently sits just 100m off the sand to the north of river mouth. (The river mouth moves not the Island)

A large part of Cotton Tree is used for camping and is now known as the Cotton Tree Caravan Park. Today camping still takes place on 8.7ha of the total 90–110ha. The land size changes significantly based on the sand movement and development of river mouth. Cotton Tree includes 2 caravan parks which maybe heritage listed. Also includes 2 Rugby union fields, 6 tennis courts, 3 bowling greens, 50m swimming pool, 2x0.5 basketball courts, 2 ping pong tables and 2 waterfront parks, 1 on the river, 1 on the beach. Surf breaks include Pipes/Seabreeze, Poofters dunnies/Abdul's, Carpark, Pinnies, the Mouth and North Shore. (Pipes was named after the location of the old sewer effluent pipe, Poofters after a derelict toilet block, Abdul's after death of local surfer Ryan Abdy)

Although 'unbounded' as a suburb it's generally recognised as being east of Aerodrome Road and including all numbered avenues and esplanades. Sometimes known as Forgotten Tree.

References

References

  1. {{cite QPN. 39094. Cotton Tree
  2. {{Queensland Globe
  3. "Cotton Tree".
  4. (6 January 1923). "Renaming a Maroochydore Reserve.". [[The Brisbane Courier]].
  5. "Council plants a number of new cotton trees in Cotton Tree". Sunshine Coast Regional Council.
  6. "Species profile—Hibiscus tiliaceus (cotton tree)". Queensland Government.
  7. "Guide to Maroochydore, QLD".
  8. "A short history of Maroochy".
  9. "Alexandra Headland History". Sunshine Coast Australia.
  10. Shorthouse, Janel. (22 June 2011). "Cotton Tree Caravan Park – the first holiday destination on the coast – ABC Sunshine & Cooloola Coasts Qld – Australian Broadcasting Corporation".
  11. (31 December 1950). "3 DIE IN BEACH CRASH.". [[The Sunday Mail (Brisbane).
  12. {{cite QHR. 30454. Cotton Tree Caravan Park. 602707
  13. "No heritage at Cotton Tree Backpackers".
  14. "Home – Maroochy Surf Club".
  15. (13 February 2016). "Sunshine Coast Rugby Union | Maroochydore Swans Rugby Union Club".
  16. "Sunshine Coast Council – Library".
  17. "Cotton Tree Holiday Park – Sunshine Coast".
Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

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