y separately published work icon Queensland History Journal periodical issue  
Issue Details: First known date: 2018... vol. 23 no. 8 February 2018 of Queensland History Journal est. 2008 Queensland History Journal
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Contents

* Contents derived from the , 2018 version. Please note that other versions/publications may contain different contents. See the Publication Details.
Philip John MacMahon : Brisbane Botanic Gardens Curator 1889 - 1905 and His Vision of Brisbane as a 'City of Palms', John Leslie Dowe , single work biography

'Philip John MacMahon was curator of the Brisbane Botanic Gardens, Queensland, Australia, 1889-1905, and Director of Forests 1905-11. MacMahon significantly expanded the palm collection at the Botanic Gardens and he encouraged their wide-spread use in both public and domestic situations. He envisaged Brisbane as a 'City of Palms'. This paper provides a brief biography of MacMahon and outlines the development of the palm collection in the Brisbane Botanic Gardens during his curatorship.' (Publication abstract)

(p. 507-521)
Scenes of Faith and Sacrifice : The Gallipoli Diary of Padre George Green of the 2nd Light Horse Regiment, Simon Farley , single work biography (p. 522-533)
Anzac and the 'Memory Industry' : Reflections on Recent Publications, John A. Moses , single work criticism

'There have recently appeared, both in Australia and abroad, a considerable number of publications on 'memory studies', especially relating to the commemoration of fallen soldiers, mainly through the building of war memorials. A great deal of effort has quite recently been expended on this endeavour in Queensland, driven earlier by the Anzac Day Commemoration Committee [ADCC], and more recently by the Canon Garland Memorial Association. As scholars such as the American Professor Jay Winter have illustrated, commemoration, especially after World War I, became very common in all formerly belligerent countries. Everywhere, monuments were being erected, and large cemeteries near the sites of historic battles were constructed and generally maintained with great care. Very soon a Commonwealth War Graves Commission was established to be responsible for the graves of soldiers and airmen killed in combat on foreign soil. Nations honoured their dead heroes and sought to comfort the bereaved relatives; there were, of course variations in the style of monuments from country to country and there were also differences in the sponsorship of the memorialisation. Sometimes the initiative came from prominent individuals, governments, or, as in the case of Queensland, from voluntary associations as well as municipalities. What happened in Queensland was the local variation of a world-wide movement.' (Publication abstract)

(p. 534-541)
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