Luoi Quay aka ‘Laffie’
Late on the afternoon of Wednesday, March 26th, 1930, Luoi Quay, the then oldest identity of the Central West, died. He was known locally as ‘Laffie ‘ because of his ever jovial disposition. On 10 …
A Small Town in Queensland, Australia
Late on the afternoon of Wednesday, March 26th, 1930, Luoi Quay, the then oldest identity of the Central West, died. He was known locally as ‘Laffie ‘ because of his ever jovial disposition. On 10 …
On 19 April, 1929 the Chinese baker and storekeeper, Quan Hong – known to locals as ‘Charlie’ – was viciously attacked in his rooms at the back of his store. He died a few hours …
Chin Min or ‘Feasting the Dead’ Ceremony A news item in The Morning Bulletin (12 April 1946) tells us that Chinese residents were still living in Barcaldine in the mid-1940s. The news item reported that …
Thomas Ang Wong originated from Amoy in China. He was born in Xiamen Shiqu, Fujian in 1827. On 11th September 1854 he married Emma Welton in Sydney, moving to Queensland about 1864. He set up …
Yung Doong Yung Doong was a Chinese storekeeper, and a long time resident of Barcaldine. His store was in Oak Street about three house blocks east of Maple Street. He was also referred to as …
Chinese settlers were in residence in the Barcaldine area well before the railway line arrived and the town was settled. I have been able to find reference to quite a number of the Chinese people, …
This is the second and third parts of the story of a Chinese exhumation reported in the Western Champion 18 April 1905. It appears there was a fair bit of confusion about the approvals process …
THE CEMETERY PLAN My initial analysis of the 1889-1996 data from the (second) Barcaldine Cemetery has allowed me to construct a series of plan segments to show who’s buried in most of the graves. Sadly, …