Peel Island (Queensland)

Coordinates: 27°30′S 153°21′E / 27.500°S 153.350°E / -27.500; 153.350
Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

Peel Island
Native name:
Teerk Roo Ra
Sunrise at Horseshoe Bay, Peel Island
Map
Geography
LocationMoreton Bay
Coordinates27°30′S 153°21′E / 27.500°S 153.350°E / -27.500; 153.350
Area590 ha (1,500 acres)
Length1 km (0.6 mi)
Width3 km (1.9 mi)
Administration
Australia
StateQueensland
RegionSouth East Queensland
Local government areaRedland City

Peel Island
Federal division(s)
Bowman
Suburbs around Peel Island:
Moreton Bay Moreton Bay Moreton Bay
Cleveland Peel Island Dunwich
Moreton Bay Moreton Bay Moreton Bay
Peel Island
Huts constructed for patients on Peel Island, Moreton Bay, 1907
Built1870s–1960s
OwnerQueensland Parks and Wildlife Service
Official namePeel Island, Moreton Bay
TypeHealth and care services: Lazaret/leprosarium
Criteria
  • A: The evolution or pattern of Queensland's history
  • B: Rare, uncommon or endangered aspects of Queensland's cultural heritage
  • E: Its aesthetic significance
Designated21 June 1993

Peel Island (

heritage-listed island located in Moreton Bay, east of Brisbane, in South East Queensland, Australia. The island is a locality within the local government area of Redland City and a national park[4][5] named Teerk Roo Ra National Park and Conservation Park.[6]

The island is only accessible by watercraft.

kayakers. The island is known for its natural environment, with bird and animal life largely undisturbed by pollution.[7] In the 2021 census, there were no people resident on the island.[1]

The isolation and limited access to Peel Island has meant that many of the original

lazaret buildings still stand in original condition to this day.[8] Access is restricted in an effort to preserve the historic remains. As a result, the Queensland Parks and Wildlife Service has managed the park since 1992, during which time they have restored a number of key structures, and have worked to make the island a safe place for future visitors.[9]

Peel Island, located between North Stradbroke Island and Cleveland

Geography

Peel Island is situated in the southern half of Moreton Bay on the east coast of Australia, approximately 20 kilometres (12 mi) from Brisbane, Queensland, and 6 kilometres (3.7 mi) from the town of Cleveland. The island lies between Cleveland Point and Dunwich on North Stradbroke Island and is fringed with mudflats, seagrass, coral reefs and mangroves. The island covers an area of approximately 400 hectares (990 acres), and extends for 1 kilometre (0.62 mi) north to south and 3 kilometres (1.9 mi) east to west. Horseshoe Bay, running in an unbroken arc along the southern side of the island, provides clean, sheltered waters for swimming.[citation needed]

The northern tip is known as Cucumber Point.[10] A headland to the south-east is known as The Bluff.[10] The Harry Atkinson Artificial Reef has been constructed to the north of Peel Island,[11] off of Amity Banks. It was established in 1975. More closer in the west is another artificial reef, known as West Peel Artificial Reef. Peel Island has been part of a declared fish habitat zone since 1971.[12]

History

During the mid-19th century, Peel Island was used as a

carbolic to sanitise them before they ventured on to Brisbane with the new arrivals.[13] Remains of the old quarantine station are at the southwest corner of the island, where the old well can be found.[citation needed
]

Peel Island was used as an

asylum for vagrants from Brisbane around the start of the 20th century, but the conditions were too harsh and the inmates were moved to Dunwich, on nearby Stradbroke Island. Peel Island was also used as a sisal farm. The inmates would harvest the sisal and manufacture rope which was sold to help fund the asylum. Remnants of the sisal plantations are still visible when walking around the western side of the island.[citation needed
]

Between 1907 and 1959 the island was a leper colony.[7]

In 2007, the island was declared as Teerk Roo Ra National Park and Conservation Park,[7][6] usually called Teerk Roo Ra National Park. Since 2011 it has been jointly managed by the Quandamooka Yoolooburrabee Aboriginal Corporation and the Queensland Parks and Wildlife Service.[14]

The leper colony's housing is currently being restored,[when?] possibly for school camps, but there is asbestos in some of the housing used for Indigenous Australians housed there. After the island was decommissioned as a leper colony, it was discovered that the strain of leprosy which infected its inhabitants was non-contagious.

Peel Island Lazaret

Peel Island operated as a

leprosarium,[15] is important to Queensland history because of its social and political significance in terms of state health policy, serving as a reminder of the conditions in which people lived and worked on the island.[citation needed
]

Background

The lazaret (lazaretto, leper colony or leprosaria) in Queensland was established to isolate those infected with leprosy.

Hansen's disease, to Australia.[17] Hansen's disease has had a history of forced patient isolation from society, and Queensland's Leprosy Act of 1892 was an example of legislation intended to isolate leprosy patients from the mainland.[18]

Peel island caretaker cottage, 1907

Before Peel Island was used as a lazaret in 1907, it was used for a number of other purposes by colonial and Queensland governments, as well as being occupied by

Friday Island and another on Dunwich, North Stradbroke Island. Both were closed due to varied criticism of conditions and treatment of patients. Subsequently, the Peel Island lazaret was established as a replacement.[20][21] Peel Island was used for multiple purposes at any given time by the government, but was specifically chosen over North Stradbroke Island to permanently establish the lazaret.[17]

Conditions

Particularly under earlier operations of the lazaret, the isolation of Peel Island more resembled

incarceration than that of a medical institution for ill patients. In many instances, sufferers were removed from their families and communities without notice or an opportunity to say goodbye.[18][22][15] Patients were often locked up or chained by police before they were taken to the lazaret.[23] There have been several accounts of patients being trawled behind a charter ship, isolated on a dinghy en route to the island.[22] Once, at the facility, patients sought help from the outside community and the press in order to improve the dreadful conditions to which they were subjected.[24] Because the lazaret was designed around the principle of isolation, each patient was housed in a separate hut, then grouped into three compounds according to gender, race and severity of illness.[16] Each compound was surrounded by 8-foot (2.4 m)-tall wired fences which would be locked at night so as to prevent perceived "illicit behaviour" between the patients.[22]

In a standard hut, each patient was supplied with a bed,

cottages, attendants’ quarters and caretakers’ residences.[25] For many years it was prohibited to remove the bodies of patients who had died on the island, making it necessary for them to be buried there.[22]

To this day, the site has been preserved and remains a confronting reminder of the conditions of the lazaret.[22][26]

Life

Boredom was a real issue for patients on Peel Island. Whilst staff could freely leave the island, patients were confined there – often for many years – without a release date. Patients, mostly men, would often go fishing or do some gardening to pass the days.[18] Most patients had wireless radio sets, and in the later years of the lazaret, films were shown and dances were organised for both staff and patients.[16] Many of these social events led to marriages over the years. Staff would often spend time at Horseshoe Bay, enjoying the beach and serenity away from the centre of the lazaret.

Due to the isolation and oft-substandard living conditions, many patients and staff members enjoyed drinking. By the 1950s, the island's occupants had built a reputation among the wider mainland community for their alcohol consumption and intoxicated behaviour.

Although the

Anglican Church of the Good Samaritan was built in the north-eastern corner of the lazaret in 1908, originally for primary use by Melanesian patients; it subsequently closed.[25][27]

In 1925, the island's first multi-purpose

medical facility was built, and the first hospital building followed in 1937. It was not until 20 years after the opening of the lazaret on Peel Island that the first medical treatment building (a surgery) was erected, and electricity was not available on the island until 1948 – 17 years after it was available on the mainland.[25]

Racial discrimination

There were dramatic disparities between the treatment of non-white patients (

colonised world, it was viewed as an imperial disease associated with race. This was reflective of the social attitudes of the time.[21]

After much criticism of the conditions in former lazarets on both Friday Island (which held Indigenous Australians and South Seas Islanders) and

inter-racial patients highlighted the inequality in patient care.[20][21]

The lazaret was divided into compounds which separated white and non-white patients.

corrugated iron, with corrugated iron roofs and walls. Windows were made by cutting the wall with tinsnips. At first, the floor was merely the existing dirt, which would turn to mud in the rain as there were cracks in the roofs. The floors were later covered in cement.[22] Each hut also often housed two patients, although only built and designed for one. These living conditions were extremely harsh, leaving many non-white patients sick, and it is argued that this had a direct effect on their higher death rate on the island.[18][21][22]

At the beginning of World War II, resources for the number of patients on the island became limited. As a result, in 1940 all 50 non-white patients detained on Peel Island were sent to Fantome Island. By 1945, 40 of the patients had died of tuberculosis leaving further speculation as to the treatment of the patients.[18][22] Authorities recognised the segregation between the basic standard of housing and treatment provided to white versus non-white patients as early as 1912. However, it was not until much later in the operation of the lazaret that these conditions were revised and consequently improved.[18]

Patients and staff

When the lazaret first opened in 1907 there were 71 patients – 26 transferred from North Stradbroke Island, 30 from Friday Island, and 15 arriving later from

Cooktown, Cairns and Halifax.[16] Over the 52 years that Peel Island was an operating lazaret, over 500 patients passed through its doors. Nearly 200 of these died, while others went into remission and eventually left the island. In some instances, the disease reoccurred, which meant patients had to return to the island, sometimes even for a third or fourth time.[16]
Understandably, patients on Peel Island did not agree with the isolation "treatment" policy, and spoke up against the idea. In 1926, 35 patients petitioned to the Premier of Queensland to repeal existing legislation. A section of the petition stated: "There are patients who would astound you by their fine healthy appearance, still they are held in segregation by the cruel and unjust law in existence."[16] It would be another 33 years until the lazaret on Peel Island closed, and patients could return to their communities.[citation needed]

For many of the 52 years that Peel Island was an operating lazaret, it was inadequately staffed. Due to the

medical care.[25]

  • Rosemary Opala was a nurse at Peel Island lazaret. Through both her art and writing, Opala became a significant commentator on the lazaret's history, its social stigma, and the controversial treatment of its patients. She is also recognised for her work documenting and promoting Peel Island's natural environment.
  • Noel Laddie Agnew was the son of a postmaster's family and grew up in Dunwich on Stradbroke Island. In 1904, at the age of eight years, he was diagnosed with Hansen's disease and was one of many patients transferred from Stradbroke Island to the Peel Island lazaret in 1907.
    optic nerves, Noel Laddie Agnew died on Peel Island at the age of 41.[16]
  • June Berthelsen was another patient on the island, having been diagnosed with Hansen's disease in 1956.[29] Her memoir, The Lost Years: A Story of Leprosy, documents her experiences as a sufferer of Hansen's disease, and details her period on the island between 1956 and mid-1958. She was the only patient to have written a personal account about her experiences, which includes descriptions of her time on the island and the difficult daily living conditions there, as well as her experiences from her personal life and encounters off of the island. Her account describes her relationship with the nursing and medical staff on the island. The memoir mentions the Queensland government's non-payment of a pension to women sufferers of Hansen's, while male patients did receive it.[29]

Medical treatments and cures

Lazaret in 1954

One of the first

Chaulmoogra nut. Although this treatment was often painful, and there was doubt as to whether it had long-term benefits, it remained a main treatment on Peel Island and around the world for more than 30 years.[30] During this time, many medical professionals believed that a good diet and a stress-free lifestyle was more likely to send the disease into remission.[31] In January 1947, Peel Island patients were treated with the first of several sulfone derivative drugs, which were developed in the United States.[16]
These drugs proved the most successful in the long line of treatments for Hansen's disease sufferers, and from then on, the disease became easy to treat.

Social consequences

Hansen's disease was believed to be highly

fears about the disease by isolating patients backfired, leading the public to believe the disease was worse than it actually was.[33][34] Rosemary Opala described the island as "folklore" where "the mystery, however, gothic fiction|gothic, is so much more romantic and aesthetically satisfying."[32] From the relocation of patients in 1959 to the Queensland Parks and Wildlife Service taking responsibility in 1992, Peel Island was left relatively untouched, as some of the original stigma remained.[32]
Much criticism has been levelled at the treatment of the patients on the lazaret. Hansen's disease not only affected the ill but also their families.[18][22] As infected patients were sent into isolation, many families were left without a breadwinner; some were driven out of communities by fear and ignorance of the disease, and others found themselves unemployed as word spread about disease in the family.[18] Furthermore, by extension, the carers of the island were viewed by many as a "people apart". Carers were viewed as "do-gooders", resented for their ability to come and go from the island at will.[32]

Closing of the lazaret

Due to the breakthrough in the treatment of Hansen's disease in the 1940s, the need for isolating patients declined and, therefore, so did the purpose of the lazaret on Peel Island. In 1959, the lazaret officially closed, and the remaining ten patients were sent to the

vaccines
to prevent the disease, as well as early detection.

Heritage listings

In 1993, Peel Island was recognised for its outstanding cultural heritage, and was consequently placed on the Queensland Heritage Register and the former Register of the National Estate.[35] In December 2007, Peel Island was declared as Teerk Roo Ra (Place of Many Shells) National Park and Conservation Park.[8][6] It is also listed on the Redland City Heritage Register. [36]

See also

References

  1. ^ a b Australian Bureau of Statistics (28 June 2022). "Peel Island". 2021 Census QuickStats. Retrieved 10 November 2023. Edit this at Wikidata
  2. ^ "Quandamooka Country Map - Quandamooka Coast". Archived from the original on 8 August 2020. Retrieved 13 December 2020.
  3. ^ "Quandamooka Place Names, Jandai Aboriginal Language – Lines in the Sand". Archived from the original on 18 September 2020.
  4. ^ "Peel Island (Turkrooar) – island in Redland City (entry 26292)". Queensland Place Names. Queensland Government. Retrieved 12 November 2019.
  5. ^ "Peel Island – locality in Redland City (entry 43647)". Queensland Place Names. Queensland Government. Retrieved 12 November 2019.
  6. ^ a b c "Teerk Roo Ra National Park". Parks and forests. 15 July 2022. Retrieved 10 November 2023.
  7. ^
    Fairfax Digital. Archived
    from the original on 28 October 2009. Retrieved 15 June 2009.
  8. ^ a b c Queensland Government Department of National Parks, Recreation, Sports and Racing. Teerk Roo Ra National Park – Nature, Culture and History. The State of Queensland. 2013. Web. Accessed: 14 September 2013
  9. ^ FOPI Inc. "Management" and "History", Friends of Peel Island Association. Redlands City Council and Arts Queensland, 19 February 2011. Web. 28 August 2013.
  10. ^ a b "Queensland Globe". Government of Queensland. Archived from the original on 19 December 2017. Retrieved 26 October 2021.
  11. ^ "The Summary: what did the Moreton Bay Marine Park Review achieve?". BayJournal. 6 June 2009. Archived from the original on 3 March 2011. Retrieved 15 June 2009.
  12. ^ "Declared Fish Habitat Area summary - Peel Island". parks.des.qld.gov.au. Government of Queensland. 17 February 2021. Archived from the original on 26 October 2021. Retrieved 26 October 2021.
  13. ^ "Cholera ship – the SS Dorunda, 1885". North Queensland History. 22 June 2013. Archived from the original on 29 October 2013. Retrieved 27 October 2013.
  14. ^ "Teerk Roo Ra National Park". Parks and forests. 30 November 2020. Retrieved 10 November 2023.
  15. ^ a b Carr, Cameron (10 July 2022). "Archaeologists investigate medical incarceration of Indigenous Australians in leprosariums". ABC News. Australian Broadcasting Corporation. Archived from the original on 11 July 2022. Retrieved 12 July 2022.
  16. ^
    ISBN 978-0-646-50770-5{{citation}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link
    )
  17. ^ a b c d Jonathan Prangnell; University of Queensland Archaeological Services Unit, School of Social Science, University of Queensland, Brisbane, QLD 4072 (1 January 2009), The Archaeology of the Peel Island Lazaret: Part 1: Survey, School of Social Science, The University of Queensland, archived from the original on 5 September 2020, retrieved 28 October 2013{{citation}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  18. ^
  19. ^ No Author. "50th Anniversary of the Closing of the Peel Island Lazaret". John Oxley Library – Blogs. The State Library of Queensland, 2013. Web. Retrieved 3 October 2013
  20. ^ a b c d Blake, Thom. 'The leper shall dwell alone: A history of Peel Island lazaret'. Brisbane: Moreton Bay Matters. 19. (2002): 72–86. Print.
  21. ^ a b c d e f O’Brien, Anne. 'All Creatures of the Living God: Religion and Leprosy in Turn of the Century Queensland'. History Australia. 5.2 (2008). 40.1–40.16. Print.
  22. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m Allam, Laura "You'll Have to Go Away: The Leprosarium on Peel Island Archived 25 October 2021 at the Wayback Machine." Hindsight. ABC. 5 September 2010. Web. 25 September 2013.
  23. ^ Friends of Peel Island Association. "History – Lazaret (1907–1959)". FOPIA Inc. 2011. Web. Accessed: 4 September 2013
  24. ^ Muller, Linda, ‘Rosemary Dispels Leprosy Island Myths’, UQFL, Rosemary Opala Collection, Box 9, Folder 21, Fryer Library, University of Queensland Library.
  25. ^ a b c d e ‘Peel Island Lazaret Timeline’, UQFL, Rosemary Opala Collection, n.d., Box 11, Folder 13, Fryer Library, University of Queensland Library.
  26. ^ Negus, George. "Peel Island." George Negus Tonight. ABC. 1 November 2004. Web. 1 October 2013.
  27. ^ "Closed Anglican Churches". Anglican Church South Queensland. Archived from the original on 3 April 2019. Retrieved 29 June 2020.
  28. ^ Woodall, Peter. "The Birds of Peel Island". Cleveland DC, QLD: Friends of Peel Island Association Inc., 2010. Print.
  29. ^ a b Berthelsen, June. The Lost Years: A Story of Leprosy. Chipping Norton, NSW: Surrey Beatty & Sons, 1996. Print.
  30. ^ No Author. "History of Leprosy". Stanford University, 2005. Web. Accessed: 20/9/13
  31. ^ Ree, Hugo, ‘Island’, UQFL Rosemary Opala Collection, Box 11, Folder 5, Fryer Library, University of Queensland Library.
  32. ^ a b c d Opala, Rosemary. "A Legend of Leprosy in Moreton Bay". Australian Folklore. 12 (1997): 220–223. Print.
  33. ^ Opala, Rosemary. "Sharing Lost Lives". Box 5, Fryer Library, University of Queensland Library.
  34. ^ Opala, Rosemary. "A Speck On The Map." Box 5, Fryer Library, University of Queensland Library.
  35. ^ "Peel Island (entry 601091)". Queensland Heritage Register. Queensland Heritage Council. Retrieved 12 July 2013.
  36. Redland City Council. March 2006. p. 4. Archived
    (PDF) from the original on 15 April 2020. Retrieved 5 September 2020.

Further reading

External links