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Level of Significance

  • File
  • Local
  • Regional
  • State
  • National

Age (approx)

130yrs

Trees

1

Diameter

2m

Height - 26m

Details

Common name
Agathis robusta
Botanical name
Smooth Barked Kauri Pine
Type
Individual Tree
Condition
Good
Municipality
Toowoomba Regional (QLD)
Location
Queens Park Margaret Street Toowoomba East QLD 4350
Access
Unrestricted
Significances
  • Outstanding species (Scientific)
  • Landscape (Social)
  • Landmark (Social)
  • Park/Garden/Town (Historic)
  • Attractive (Aesthetic)
Date of measurement
01 May 2013
Date of classification
26 Mar 2014
Other register(s)
False

Statement of Significance

The rich, fertile soil, temperate climate and the interest of many of its citizens in things botanical, has resulted in Toowoomba Region’s ability to grow a wide range of indigenous and non-indigenous plants. In 1860, the area was the first to hold an Agricultural Show in Queensland – 15 years before Brisbane. Walter Hill, the then Government Botanist and first curator of the Brisbane City Botanic Gardens, travelled to Toowoomba to advise with the design and planning of Queen's Park and street plantings in Toowoomba. He subsequently imported many tree species from Europe, Asia and other parts of the world to be planted there. Hill Street in Toowoomba is named in his honour. The town attracts many visitors in September for its famous Carnival of Flowers, where people come from near and far to enjoy Toowoomba’s many parks and gardens.
The area that is now Queen’s Park and the Toowoomba Botanic Gardens (26.3 ha) was gazetted as a public reserve in 1869 and the Botanic Gardens were established in the 1870s as a place for botanic research and as a regional adjunct to the Brisbane Botanic Gardens (established in 1855). The then Mayor William Groom obtained £500 from the colonial government in 1874 to establish the botanic gardens. Walter Hill assisted with its designing and planning. Many of the trees planted in Queen's Park were imported by him from throughout the world. The far sightedness and work of the early planners has provided Toowoomba with a wonderful green area close to the centre of the city. The young trees planted in 1875 now form broad avenues of mature shady trees throughout the park. Queen's Park, and its superb floral presentations and leafy environment, are one of the central features of Toowoomba’s Spring Carnival of Flowers, an annual event held in September each year. This tree would have been one of the early ones planted after the establishment of the gardens.

Its height, trunk circumference and canopy spread make it an outstanding example of the species. It is an important landmark as a result of its size and contributes significantly to the landscape of these historic gardens. It has contemporary association with the community, being an important part of a park central to the annual the Carnival of Flowers. It is a wonderful looking tree and is a better than an average example of its species in its particular location.

The tree is situated close to the intersection of the main north-south pathway with the pathway running inside the southern boundary; about 100 m north of the end of the loop formed by Arthur Street west of Lindsay Street.