English: Photographer: Unidentified
Location: Chillagoe, Queensland, Australia
Description: Chillagoe is located 140km west of Mareeba on the Atherton Tablelands. In 1901 a huge copper smelter was built to take advantage of the rich mineral deposits in the Chillagoe area, and created 200 jobs. A railway to Mareeba facilitated the transport of the copper to the coastal shipping ports of Port Douglas and Cairns. By World War One, Chillagoe was one of the largest metallurgical developments in Queensland.
Part of the Willmett's postcard series no. 46.
In 1903 Chillagoe had a population of 723, swelling to 1,600 in 1907. At it s peak in 1917, Chillagoe had a population of about 10,000 with at thirteen hotels, two newspapers, and a hospital. In 1943 the smelters closed, plunging Chillagoe into a decline it has never recovered from. The town became over grown with an introduced plant called Rubber Vine and the only source of employment was from the limited cattle and rail industries. In 1953 tobacco was unsuccessfully trailed down. Electricity and sealed roads only came to Chillagoe In 1970. Today the population of Chillagoe hovers around 150. The only industries in the town are cave tours, and a small gold mine nearby. (Information taken from: Atherton Tablelands database, 2005, retrieved 21 February 2005, from http://www.tablelands.org/index.html?setLoc=26)
View this image at the State Library of Queensland: http://hdl.handle.net/10462/deriv/2135
Information about State Library of Queensland’s collection:
http://pictureqld.slq.qld.gov.au/