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Harristown Named after the Brisbane businessman, George Harris Harrisville Twentv years separated the brothers, John and George Harris, but they set up in partnership as shipping agents in Brisbane in connection with the wool trade. When the older brother went off to London to look after the interests of the company there, George diversified and took the business into cotton growing among other activities. He married Jane, a daughter of George Thorn of Ipswich, and for some years owned Newstead House, but he lost it in bankruptcy proceedings. Hawthorne in Brisbane is named indirectly after Hawthorne in Melbourne. When the Baynes family moved from Victoria around 1875 they called their house here
Hawthorne House. The name then came to be used of the locality from the 1880s. Hay's Inlet It's Aboriginal name was Tungulba, meaning a place for fish-poison. Heathwood This area between Oxley Creek and
Blunder Creek was named after one of its early settlers.
The Helensvale railway siding served a sugar plantation of the same name around the end of the 19th century. The sugarcane was transported from there to the Nerang Central Mill for processing. Later the area was given over to dairying, but in the 1990s it was transformed into a residential area. The town grew up around the railway station. The name came from one of the earliest runs taken up by squatters during the great land rush of the early 1840s. The run was originally spelt Hellidon after the town of that name in Northamptonshire, England. In the local Aboriginal dialect the area was known as
Kuwirmandadu and meant the place of the curlew (Petrie). The white people called it Hemmant after William Hemmant, a Brisbane businessman and politician. The word Hendra comes from the Celtic languages, more particularly the Cornish, and in any of its forms - Hendra, Hendre or Hendref - refers to an established place of habitation. The name was chosen by Francis
Curnow, Commissioner for Railways 1885-1889, when naming the station on the train line. He had in mind a particular spot in Cornwall. Although the sub-division was originally called Heritage Woods it was gazetted in October 1991 as Heritage Park on the recommendation of the developers. |