Heritage Treasures of the Toowoomba Region 2013 6791801HeritageTreasuresOfTheToowoombaRegion2013 | Page 20

16 17 D6 D5 D5 Former Ceramic Counter Front In 1923 Heinrich Warneke installed this ceramic counter front at his butcher shop on the corner of Ruthven and Little Streets, now Art Gallery Park. Villeroy and Boch in Dresden, Germany, produced the counter front in the 1880s. It features pilasters with vase decorations topped by capitals with the heads of pigs, sheep and cattle. When subsequent owners moved the shop to opposite the Town Hall, and later to 184 Hume Street, they were careful to take the ceramics with them. Today these rare panels grace the wall of Payne’s Butcher Shop and are much admired as a reminder of Toowoomba’s German heritage. D6 Trades Hall and Associated Memorabilia The Trades Hall at 19a Russell Street was built by local workers who raised their own deposit to secure a loan during the economic depression of the 1930s. The foundation stone was laid on 21 March 1934 and contains the name of Jack Duggan, a future MLA, Deputy Premier of Queensland and Mayor of Toowoomba. The Trades Hall is a heritage-listed building which holds decades of local history in the form of an honour roll of members who served in various wars, photographs of groups and memories of dances held there in earlier times. Photographs of the Eight Hour Committees from 1912 to 1920 are reminders of the efforts of workers in earlier times to achieve better conditions for their fellow workers. D7 D7 The Ray White Shed, Crow’s Nest Many early rural businesses offered multiple services such as real estate, auctioneering, insurance and equipment sales; some grew into major enterprises. Ray White started such a business in a tin shed in Crow’s Nest in 1902, and is now an international company. The shed was later moved to a local farm from where it was retrieved in 1994, being relocated (with minor restoration) to the Carbethon Folk Museum in Crow’s Nest. While not on its original site, the shed is an important reminder of rural enterprise. D8 Acland No 2 Colliery Coal had been mined on the eastern Darling Downs from 1888 but major expansion occurred in the early 20th century to supply Toowoomba Hospital, Toowoomba Gas Works, Oakey Abattoir, a number of brick works and cheese factories and, above all, the Queensland Railway’s steam engines as the rail network expanded into local farming communities. Acland No 2 Colliery opened in 1929 and closed in November 1984. This colliery is the only surviving historic coal mine on the Downs. The underground mine, ancillary buildings and assorted equipment represent the transition from early handpicking and steam technology to mechanization. Its closure was forced by the advent of open-cut mining, the coming of electricity and the replacement of steam locomotives with diesel engines. From 1985 local farmers Kath and John Greenhalgh operated it as a working museum until its final closure in 2000. D8