Skip links and keyboard navigation

St John's Anglican Church Precinct

30-34 Macrossan Street, South Townsville

Add to favourites

St John's Anglican Church precinct, (2016); Toni Massey

St John's Anglican Church precinct, (2016)

St John's Anglican Church Church and Hall (2003); Heritage Branch staff

St John's Anglican Church Church and Hall (2003)

St John's Anglican Church, open sides, 2016; Toni Massey

St John's Anglican Church, open sides, 2016

St John's Anglican precinct at South Townsville tells the story of rebuilding after cyclones. It comprises a small timber church constructed in 1907; a timber rectory constructed c1907; and a small timber and fibrous-cement sheeted church hall. St John's Church is the third church erected on this site, replacing an 1898 church destroyed in 1903 by cyclone Leonta, which in turn, had replaced an 1884 church destroyed by cyclone Sigma in 1896. The rectory is also the third residence on the site, replacing vicarages destroyed in the 1896 and 1903 cyclones. These buildings remain amongst the earliest surviving Anglican Church buildings in the Diocese of North Queensland. The 1907 church was designed by Charles Dalton Lynch, the Townville partner of the architectural firm of Tunbridge, Tunbridge and Lynch. As Ross Island was a working class neighbourhood, it took four years to raise the funds for the new church, which was dedicated on 17 February 1907. The date of reconstruction of the vicarage is unclear, but it is known to have been in place by 1911.

Coordinates: -19.26343819, 146.82803303

Full details of this heritage-registered place are in the Heritage register.

Licence
Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International (CC BY 4.0)
Last reviewed
1 July 2022
Last updated
28 February 2023