Heritage Treasures of the Toowoomba Region 2013 6791801HeritageTreasuresOfTheToowoombaRegion2013 | Page 16

12 C12 13 Hand-Painted Wall Map of Toowoomba Don Featherstone (1902-1984), a local artist and amateur cinematographer, was an ambulance officer with the QATB in Toowoomba from 1946 to 1960. Hampered in locating patients by the lack of appropriate street directories, he initially painted a large map of Toowoomba on a wall in the Brigade’s Herries Street Headquarters (now demolished). He then painted a cloth map, complete with a reference grid, a street index, and a ‘swing-arm’ to quickly locate addresses. This distinctive map, featuring 600 streets, now hangs in the Ambulance Museum at Highfields Pioneer Village. C13 Arthur Postle: Pittsworth’s ‘Crimson Flash C14 Tivoli Theatre, Clifton C13 Arthur Benjamin Postle (1881-1965) was born on the family farm at Springside, near Pittsworth, and educated at the local school. In the decade before WWI Postle emerged as a world champion short distance runner, defeating Australian, Irish, English and South African contenders and being heralded as ‘The Mighty Postle’, although better known as ‘The Crimson Flash’ from the colour of his uniform. He was inducted into the Australian Sports Hall of Fame in 1985. Postle memorabilia are a featured collection in the Pittsworth Pioneer Village. The motion picture was the staple cheap entertainment in most country towns from the 1920s to the coming of television in the 1960s. The Tivoli Picture Theatre, opened by local businessmen in a renovated Rickert’s Hall in 1921, is typical of country cinemas. It initially screened ‘silent’ movies with musical accompaniment until E F Morton’s Clifton Picture Company introduced ‘talkies’ in 1931. It ceased operations in late 1980 but Ruth Hungerford still hosts movie nights in the theatre. Clifton township has been the location for several recent Australian movies. C14 C12 C14