I didn't realise that the housing situation in Brisbane at the end of WW2 was as dire as this article at The Conversation indicates, with lots of people living in shanty towns. (The only area that would probably qualify as such in my lifetime was Cribb Island - where I think not that many people owned the rather ramshackle houses they lived in. The area has long since been covered by the grounds of Brisbane Airport, but I did go to primary school with at least a couple of Cribb Island kids.)
Here are some extracts:
The housing shortage in Brisbane alone was calculated at 13,500 houses in 1945 – a time when the city’s population was 380,000 people. New house construction was “not keeping pace with the needs of a growing population”. By 1949, an estimated 30,000 to 40,000 people were considered homeless.
During World War II, Brisbane was a major United States military base. After the war, pressure mounted to convert abandoned sites, such as the US Army camp at Barrambin (Victoria Park), into temporary housing for families.
At first, the state government refused, stating that facilities designed for men would need upgrades if they were to be used by women and children. Undeterred, families started squatting in these disused facilities across the city.
My research identified a total of 11 informal settlements across Brisbane in this postwar period, including eight housing camps in former military facilities, and three on public parkland.
Living conditions were poor. Residents relied on kerosene stoves and there was no running water.
In 1947, dozens of children were hospitalised with gastroenteritis – and 14 died.
Faced with rising public pressure, including a campaign led by the Courier Mail, authorities recognised the futility of threatening eviction and began taking a position of tolerance.
The Queensland Housing Commission requisitioned military camps. Brisbane City Council and the Queensland government supplied drinking water, toilets and tents to families camping in the bush on the city’s fringe.
Oh, and here is more about Cribb Island, from one of the linked articles above:
Cribb Island was initially known as “the poor man's seaside resort” (So you know your Brisbane, 1929). Connected to the mainland side of Moreton Bay through land reclamation works which were often submerged during high tide, Cribb Island was located 15 km from Brisbane's city centre but remained an isolated community (Jolliffe, 1980). At its peak Cribb Island had a Methodist church (1918), state school (1919), a post office (1920), Catholic church (1936), Catholic school (1952), police station, medical clinic, cinema, general store (1930s) and a bus service. Most dwellings were considered substandard and referred to as “humpies”. Following a Brisbane City Council order to demolish 100 dwellings at Cribb Island in 1929, locals protested claiming Cribb Island was “a health resort on the seashore” where the ordinance did not apply, and that “Many parts of Brisbane were wretched slums, compared with their little township which they kept spotless” (Cribb Island - Council Evictions, 1929).
Well, I would never have guessed it had a cinema once! And I doubt the Catholic School was still going into the 1960's - otherwise the few classmates I had from there would presumably not have needed to come.
Anyway, all rather interesting...

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