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Image Not Available for Beautiful Brisbane postcard album
Beautiful Brisbane postcard album
Image Not Available for Beautiful Brisbane postcard album

Beautiful Brisbane postcard album

Date1936
Object number00049238
NamePostcard Album
MediumInk on paper
DimensionsOverall: 110 x 165 mm, 17 g
ClassificationsPosters and postcards
Credit LineANMM Collection Gift from Dianne Charge
DescriptionThis album forms part of a collection of a photograph album with photographs and ephemera from a 1936 passenger cruise to Fiji on the P&O line STRATHNAVERHistoryThis packet of postcards of Brisbane scenes is part of a group of souvenirs, the main element of which is a cardboard photo album issued to passengers on P&O cruises to record their voyage, as well as menus, postcards, a book mark, other cruise ephemera and personal photographs probably from a box-brownie style camera, of a July 1936 cruise to Fiji by Eric Saxton. There is also a large print of the cruise ship STRATHNAVER and the album contains annotated photographs of 'Native Markets', 'Firewalkers' and other Fijian scenes, as well as a section on a day tour conducted to the Blackall Ranges in Queensland. Launched in 1931, the STRATHNAVER was a Royal Mail Ship and ocean liner operated by the Peninsular and Oriental Steam Navigation Company (P&O). It was the first of a series of Strath class ocean liners built in the 1930s by the Vickers-Armstrong shipyard, in Barrow-in-Furness, then in Lancashire. The STRATHNAVER was the sister ship of the RMS STRATHAIRD, with both ships serving the Australian mail route. The ships became known as The White Sisters, being the first P&O liners to be painted with white hulls and yellow funnels. Two further Strath class ships, slightly larger and with only one funnel, the STRATHMORE and the STRATHEDEN, joined them on the Sydney run from the mid 1930s. A fifth ship, the STRATHALLAN, was completed in 1938 and requisitioned as a troop ship in World War II. Increasing unreliability of the older pair of Strath liners led P&O to replace them both with the SS CANBERRA in 1961. SignificanceThe album is a rare example of a complete, intact, scrapbook album style passenger's record of a pacific cruise voyage in the 1930s. It is also rare as it includes original personal photographs as well as cruise line ephemera.

The album's photographs, postcards, ship menus and other ephemera documents the early twentieth century enthusiasm for cruises in exotic locations that provided many Australians with experiences of Indigenous cultures.