George Land Bury from Nambour Street mural
George Land and Jane Ann Bury – Pioneers, Landowners and Builders Extraordinary of the Near North Coast
Researched and written by Lenore Tonks
What’s in a street name? For some signage nothing of particular importance but for other streets the name represents a feast of history and provides a snapshot into the early settlement of that area.
Bury Street, Nambour runs off Currie Street and ends where the old Moreton Central Sugar Mill was once situated. Today it is the site of Coles Supermarket. Bury Street was named in memory of George Land Bury one of the district pioneer settlers, landowners and builders. The image of George Bury (above) is taken from an excellent mural on a wall opposite the Nambour Council Chambers that depicts some of Nambour’s early pioneers.
George Land Bury
George was born in Yorkshire, England in 1851 the son of George Butt Bury and Sarah (nee Land) Bury. His father was a soldier in the 6th Dragoon Guards, and lost his life in the Crimean War. George Land Bury immigrated to Brisbane, Australia with his mother and sister in1869 aboard the sailing ship Light Brigade.
Jane Ann Bury (nee Traill)
George Land Bury’s future wife, Jane Ann Traill was born on the 24th March 1856 in Saint Nicholas, Aberdeen, Scotland to George Donaldson Traill and Annie Isabella Traill. The family migrated to Australia when Jane was a teenager.
Marriage
Jane Ann married George Land Bury at St John’s Church, Brisbane on 19th September, 1873. Jane was 17 years and George was 22 years old.
George was a ‘goer’ in today’s language. As a young man on the move, accompanied by his youthful bride Jane Ann they embarked on a full and successful life together.
Property
In 1870, the year, after he arrived in Brisbane, George travelled to Nambour and selected land at Petrie Creek. He worked as a builder and erected the first sawn timber house for Mr. W. Samwell at Old Nambour. It was a six-roomed homestead on a ridge situated on his 1625 acre property which he’d selected in March 1870, to the west of Gympie Road, overlooking the Petrie’s Creek Valley.
Namba was a successful cattle property, although the animals were sometimes disturbed by travelling Aborigines passing through in the bunya nut season, on their way up to Baroon Pocket. The land covered by this cattle-run has now become the residential areas of Burnside and Nambour Heights, stretching west as far as Highworth.
In 1880-81 George acquired land on the Mooloolah River, where he was a storekeeper, butcher shop proprietor and publican. During the late 1880s and 1890s George also selected land at various localities including Yandina, Palmwoods, Eumundi and Woombye.
Although George Bury did not actually live in Montville, he was the second selector to make application for freehold land at Montville on 26 July 1881. The deeds were prepared on 3 July 1886. L. Burnett had also made an application on 03.05.1881 and his deeds were prepared on 13.09.1887. (see Bailiff of Crown Land Report 9 December, 1885 – above).
During this period George and Jane resided at the Old Coach House (so-named as it was built in time to see the first Cobb and Co. Coach come through Mooloolah in November 1868.) The Bury family lived in this pit sawn timber home from 1878 to the early 1900s.
A son and two daughters were born to the couple before 1878. During their occupancy of the Old Coach house Jane gave birth to another seven children, from 1874 to 1892 – 2 daughters and 5 sons.
The pit sawn house stood on the corner of what is now known as Gympie Road and the Mooloolah Connection Road. In 1997, the house was removed to the Ewen Maddock Reserve and restored. It stands where the original Maddock home, Koongamoon, was built.
The Burys also owned several properties in Nambour, building a number of hotels in the town. He also constructed the Mooloolah and Maroochydore Hotels. In 1898 the Court House and stables at Woombye were relocated to Currie Street, Nambour, where a house he owned was rented as a police station.
In the late 1890’s the couple built a house on the site of the buildings at the corner of Currie and Mitchell Streets, which was then occupied by Dr. I. Charles. The family later moved into the Royal Hotel and then to their last home in Price Street, Nambour.
George Land Bury’s Public Service career
1888-1895 he served as a member of No.1 Sub-Division of the Caboolture Divisional Board and was Board Chairman from 1894-1895
1894-1896 A member for No.3 Sub-Division of the Maroochy Divisional Board.
1897-1905 A member for No.2 Sub-Division of the Maroochy Divisional Board.
During this period the Maroochy Divisional Board became the Maroochy Shire Council.
1899-1900 Elected as chairman of the Maroochy Divisional Board.
1903 – 1905 elected chairman of the Maroochy Shire Council.
As a commission agent and sugar planter he campaigned for the establishment of the Moreton Central Sugar Mill at Nambour, of which he was a Secretary and a Director.
1906 he presided over a meeting to decide if Nambour should have its own band. It is now known as the Sunshine Brass and is probably the longest running band on the Coast.
RETIREMENT, GOLDEN WEDDING CELEBRATIONS
George and Jane retired in 1910 and in September 1923 they reached their Golden Wedding Anniversary. Family and friends gathered privately to celebrate this milestone but the public also wanted to pay tribute to this popular couple who had been beneficiaries to many public institutions including the Ambulance, the Maroochy District Hospital, the Show Society and the Churches. A committee was formed and a public function organized.
Extract from ‘Nambour Chronicle and North Coast Advertiser’ – Friday, 21st September 1923.
Eighty people attended the evening with catering supplied by Williams’ Cafe. Cr. W. H. Harvey, (chairman of the Maroochy Shire Council), as chairman, opened the proceedings. After the loyal toast Mr and Mrs Bury were then toasted with Mr Harvey detailing George’s work in establishing the Moreton Mill and honoured one who had served the district with his outstanding public service. He trusted Mr. and Mrs. Bury would ‘be spared to attain their diamond wedding celebrations ten years hence. Mr. A. Bennett (manager of the E. S. and A. Bank, Nambour while congratulating Mr. and Mrs. Bury, regretted that he had not heard mention of Mrs. Bury, whose assistance could be counted as a large factor in Mr. Bury’s success, and the efforts of the early pioneering days. Mrs. Whitecross, responding, eulogised and thanked Mrs. Bury for the many acts of kindness and good works rendered. Throughout the evening musical entertainment was provided.
On behalf of his wife and himself, Mr Bury thanked the speakers all very heartily for their good wishes and congratulations. Mr and Mrs Bury were each presented with an umbrella and cane rocker. Mr. Bury expressed thanks on his and Mrs. Bury’s behalf. Mr. P. M. Murtagh presented a box of cigars and a cigar holder to Mr. Bury from his fellow-directors of the Moreton Mill. The proceedings closed with- ‘Auld Lang Syne.’
DEATH AND FUNERAL OF GEORGE LAND BURY
During a director’s meeting of the Moreton Mill on the 28th February,1925, George, who had been in indifferent health for some time, collapsed and four days later, on the 3rd March passed away at the age of 74 years at his residence in Price Street, Nambour.
The funeral the next day, held at the Nambour Town Hall, was attended by many residents from all parts of the Near North Coast and flags were flown at half-mast from the Shire Council and other buildings.
Departing from the Town Hall the funeral procession proceeded to the cemetery. The cortege was headed by the Nambour Town Band, of which the late Mr. Bury was its first president, and also one of the first guarantors, followed by many employees of the Morton Central Mill and Maroochy Shire Council. Some forty-three motor cars followed the hearse, and behind them again were vehicles and a few horsemen. At the cemetery gates the Band formed a guard and played the ‘Dead March in Saul’. At the graveside some three hundred and fifty persons gathered. The late George Land Bury leaves a widow, Mrs Jane Ann Bury and a family of six sons (two deceased), and four daughters. There are 53 grandchildren, and two great grandchildren.
THE DEATH OF JANE ANN BURY
Jane Ann Bury continued to live in the Price Street, Nambour residence after the death of her husband. She survived him by over eleven years, dying on the 24th August, 1936. She was 80 years of age and had achieved a full and rewarding life as a mother, beneficiary and charity worker. Her obituary of Friday, 28th August, 1936 which was published in the Nambour Chronicle wrote glowingly of her good works.
There was no public movement of a social and charitable nature that did not have as its ardent supporter Mrs G.L. Bury. Both her efforts and her financial aid were always disposed to assist any genuine request and many of the early settlers of the various localities in which the late Mrs Bury resided remember with gratitude her generosity and kindness. Her activities were found in all phases of charity and church work and she was also one of the earliest members of the Nambour Methodist Women’s Church Help Society in which she was keenly interested.
In various ways the highest ideals of mother hood were characteristic of her life and her kindly disposed nature, together with her example had endeared her to her numerous acquaintances and friends. Until Saturday last she was able to converse with her family who were at her bedside when the end came. The last function connected with the Methodist Church which the late Mrs Bury attended was on the occasion of the dedication of the ‘Roberts’ memorial gates.
The late Mrs Bury is survived by four daughters, and three sons (3 deceased). The sisters and brothers of the deceased are Mrs J. Campbell (Burpengary), Miss J. Trail (Landsborough), Mrs M. Woodgate (Brisbane), Mrs J. Shannon (Brisbane), Messrs A. Trail (Morayfield), John Trail (Gympie), David (Cinnabar), and Alfred Trail (Brisbane). The funeral was largely and representively attended. At the church and the graveside, the Rev. E.G. Hall conducted the services.
Jane Ann Bury is not mentioned in any publicized achievements relating to her husband, except for being recognized for her charity work at the couple’s 50th wedding celebration dinner and her obituary.
By all accounts the marriage of Jane Ann and George Land Bury was a happy and fulfilling union with George a man content with his life and without a doubt very fortunate with his life’s companion. From the little information gleaned from the few sources Jane Ann was a supportive loving wife and mother who complimented her very busy and ambitious husband in all aspects of their life together. Two lives well lived.
What a pity there isn’t a Nambour Street named for Jane Bury. It would have completed a fitting memorial to a great pioneering couple.
Brief Information on the children of Jane Ann and George Land Bury
Louisa Ann Trail was born in Yandina on the 14th April, 1874. She married John Anthony Low on 27/04/1898. Louisa died 16th April, 1957 and is buried in the Yandina Cemetery. Her husband, born in 1864 died on 28/06/1914. He was a farmer.
George Donaldson was born at Mooloolah on the 18th January 1976. He married Mary Ann Struthers. She died on the 21/01/1960 while George passed away on the 11/09/1945. Their son, another George Donaldson was also a pineapple farmer and lived in Bury Road, Beerwah. During the Second World War Italian P.O.W.’s worked on their farm. There is correspondence from one of the Italian P.O.W.’s who was allocated to George’s property. For further information refer to this site – Footprints of Italian P.O.W.’s in Queensland.
Sarah Jane was born on the 10/10/1877 and died on the 03/07/1961. She married James Thomas Lowe on the 27/04/1898. The couple produced five children in 12 years. Thomas was born in Dudley, Staffordshire, England to Solomon and Sarah Prudence Lowe on the 6/11/1868. He died on the 18/09/1958 aged 89 years. He was a butcher by profession. They lived at Windsor, Brisbane until their deaths.
Elizabeth Annabelle Bury born at Mooloolah on the 4/6/1880 and married Laurence Joseph (James) Buckley. They lived at Brookstead near Toowoomba. Elizabeth died on the 10th December, 1967.
John Edward born at Mooloolah on the 7/7/1882 died on 13/12 1914 at Nambour. A year before his death his profession was listed as ‘Butcher.’ He married Mary Josephine Glasgow on 04/07/1905. He is buried in the Nambour General Cemetery.
Henry David born at Maroochydore on 5/2/1884 and died on 19/12/1954. He was listed as a labourer and lived at Bli Bli according to the 1943 Electoral Roll. He is buried in the Nambour General Cemetery.
Alfred born at Mooloolah on 16/12/1885 and died on 16/7/1933. He married Margaret Murtagh on the 29/07/1908.
Brisbane Courier (Qld. 1864 – 1933), Thursday 20 July 1933, p15
Mr. Alfred Bury, third son of the late G. L. Bury, and Mrs. G. L. Bury, died at Nambour on July 16, aged 47 years. He was a native of Mooloolah, and after marrying a daughter of the late Mr. John Murtagh, of Dulong, followed farming in that district at Dulong, but latterly had lived in Nambour, and was in the employ of the Moreton Sugar Mill. His widow, four sons, and three daughters survive him.
Maud Anne was born at Mooloolah Valley on the Sunshine Coast on 10th December, 1887. She married Henry William George Zahn (born on 9th May 1886 at Warri, District of Braidwood N.S.W.) on 13th September 1911 at the St John the Baptist Anglican Church, Nambour, Queensland. Maud Anne Zahn nee Bury died at Murwillumbah N.S.W. on the 19th April 1967 and is buried at the Murwillumbah General Cemetery.
Henry William George Zahn was a Police Sergeant in the Queensland Police Force and died at Point Vernon a coastal suburb of the Fraser Coast region on the 20th June 1960 and he is buried at the Garden of Rest Cemetery, Maryborough, Queensland. They had four children.
William Mackie born at Mooloolah in 22/2/1890. Died in 22/01/1967. He married Jane Ann Gomersall on 2/11/1915. He enlisted at Mooloolah on 17/10/14 (aged 24 years and 7 months) to join the A.I.F. in World War 1 (5th Light Horse Regiment) but withdrew. Documentation stated that he was discharged at his own request because of family reasons. The ‘family reasons’ may have been the death of his older brother, John Edward who died on the 13th December, 1914. William was a clerk, He was 5ft 10¾ inches tall with very dark brown hair and brown eyes. His religion was listed as Church of England. In the Second World War he enlisted again in the Australian Army. (See certificate below).
Edward Charles born at Mooloolah on the 27/3/1892 died on 4/071920. He married Nellie Myers Mitchell on 20/02/1913. He and his wife farmed at Eudlo, Queensland. He is buried in the Nambour General Cemetery.
References:
Queensland Government Department of Lands
Street Signs – Tony Bryant 2012 from Snapped Signs
Sunshine Coast Time Line
The First Settlers of Petrie Creek
Maroochydore Queensland Shire Council Officers and Employees
Montville Memories – A Pictorial Journey
Nambour Chronicle and North Coast Advertiser Newspaper
Daily Mail Brisbane Newspaper
Courier Mail Brisbane Newspaper
Trove
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