H.M. Prison Brisbane, commonly known as Boggo Road Gaol, was Queensland's main prison from the 1880s to the 1980s. By the time it closed, it had become notorious for poor conditions and rioting. Located on Annerley Road in Dutton Park, an inner southern suburb of Brisbane, it is the only surviving intact jail in Queensland that reflects penological principles of the 19th century. After closing in 1992, the larger 1960s section was demolished, leaving the heritage listed section (built as a women's prison in 1903).

It was officially known as "Brisbane Gaol" but was commonly known as "Boggo Road" after the original name of the Annerley Road. A new street formed after 1996 now has the name Boggo Road.

History

thumb|Entrance to the jail,

In the 1850s, the district where the jail was subsequently located was known unofficially as "Boggo" or "Boggo Scrub", and by the late 1850s the track through the area was known as Boggo Road.

It has been suggested that the name came about because the area was very boggy in wet weather. Another theory is that Boggo (or "Bloggo" or "Bolgo") was a corruption of an Aboriginal word meaning 'two leaning trees', and that the road was named after two prominent trees at either One-Mile Swamp or what is now Wilkins Street, off Annerley Road. Boggo Road was officially renamed Annerley Road in 1903, but the colloquial name for the jail that had long been in use stayed. The first cellblock opened on 2 July 1883, built by Robert Porter, contained 57 cells and was constructed using materials from the demolished Petrie Terrace Jail. This cellblock (later known as "No. 1 Division") was the scene of 42 hangings, including the hanging of Ernest Austin in 1913—the last execution in Queensland.

In 1903, a new prison was built to hold female prisoners; in 1921, when the women were transferred to a timber dormitory, this prison building was converted to the "No. 2 Division" for men. The structure is now the only section still standing and is listed on the Queensland State Heritage Register.

A new prison was built around the perimeter of No. 1 prison during the 1960s and No. 1 prison was demolished, leaving area for an oval and recreational facilities for the newly built prison, which had running cold water and toilet facilities in all cells. Under the oval was the facility that became known as the "black hole" where prisoners were subjected to "punishment". The "black hole" continued in use until the late 1980s. A new women's jail was also built at this time. The jail was originally designed to cater for 40 male prisoners serving as a holding place for prisoners heading to St Helena Island in Moreton Bay. However, by 1989 there were 187 male prisoners and the women's facility had around 200 additional prisoners.

Protests at the jail during the 1970s saw inmates undertake hunger strikes, roof-top protests, and rioting over the poor conditions and treatment. The prison was constantly in the headlines and became notorious around Australia. Cells in the No. 2 prison did not have any form of sanitation, and facilities for washing were lacking.

In 1993, Boggo Road Gaol hosted the concert "Jailhouse Rock", which included bands such as Divinyls, Rose Tattoo, Billy Thorpe and the Aztecs, Spy Vs Spy and Powderfinger.

Temporary closure of the Boggo Road Gaol historical site occurred from late-2005 to December 2012 during the 2006-2010 redevelopment of the surrounding site into the Boggo Road Urban Village and the construction of the southeast busway.

In December 2012, Boggo Road Gaol reopened to the public as a tourist attraction with guided tours being conducted by Boggo Road Gaol Pty. Like many other similar places around the country, the site also hosted guided ghost tours.

A second temporary closure, pausing all tours and activities, began in March 2022 and is ongoing while further surrounding development takes place, including Cross River Rail and the construction of a new shopping village. A reopening date is yet to be announced.

Heritage listing

The No. 2 Division and the remnants of No. 1 Division were listed on the Queensland Heritage Register in 1993.

Notable prisoners

  • Hon. Gordon Browna former President of the Australian Senate
  • James Finch and Andrew Stuartthe "Whiskey Au-Go-Go" murderers
  • Nathan Jonesactor and professional wrestler
  • Debbie Kilroyprisoner rights activist, founder of Sisters Inside
  • Patrick Kenniffalso known as Queensland's last bushranger
  • Michael PetersonAustralian surfing legend
  • Pluto (William Davis) – an Aboriginal Australian miner convicted of burglary
  • Wayne Michael Ryanconvicted multiple bank robber who escaped Boggo Road Gaol twice (1988 and 1989)
  • Ellen Thompsonthe only woman hanged in Queensland

Executions

42 prisoners were hanged at the Gaol.

thumb|right|Plaque on [[Gallows|gallows beam used at Boggo Road Gaol]]

{| class="wikitable"

|-

! Name

! Year of birth

! Year of death

! Place of origin

! Victims

|-

|James Gardiner||1864||1883||Scotland||Murder of Ada Gardiner at Rockhampton

|-

|Jango||c.1866||1883||Australia (Aboriginal)||Murder of Mrs Eliza Mills at Dingo

|-

|Tim Tie||1856||1886||China||Murder of Jimmy Ah Fook near Dulbydilla

|-

|Wong Tong||1857||1886||China||Murder of Cock Tow at the Seaview Plantation, Bundaberg

|-

|Christopher Pickford||1856||1887||United States||Murder of Martin Emmerson at Ravenswood

|-

|Ellen Thompson||1846||1887||Ireland||Murder of her husband William Thompson near Port Douglas

|-

|John Harrison||1860||1887||England||Murder of William Thompson near Port Douglas

|-

|Sedin||1864||1888||Java||Murders of John Fitzgerald, Christian Mariager, and J. P. Davis at Normanton

|-

|Francis Charles Horrocks||1875||1892||Queensland||Murder of Rudolph Weissmuller at Mooraree

|-

|George Gleeson||1865||1892||India||Murder of Patrick McKiernan at Prince of Wales Island

|-

|Leonard William Moncado||1850||1892||Chile||Murder of Bob, an Aboriginal boy aboard the barque "Sketty Belle"

|-

|George Thomas Blantern||1858||1893||England||Murder of Flora McDonald at Marlborough

|-

|Hatsuro Abe||1863||1894||Japan||Murder of a Japanese woman named Omatzie at Thursday Island

|-

|Mi-Orie||1866||1895||Malaita Island||Murder of Francis Macartney near Bundaberg

|-

|Jacky||1864||1895||Australia (Aboriginal)||Murder of Jacky Williams at Mount Morgan

|-

|Frank Tinyana||1858||1895||Filipino||Murder of Senior Constable William Conroy at Thursday Island

|-

|Willie Broom||1870||1900||Australia (Aboriginal)||Murder of thirteen-year-old Mary Le Blowitz at Stanton Harcourt, near Bundaberg

|-

|Wandee||1881||1901||South Sea Islands||Murder of Alfred Burnstead at Ayr

|-

|David Alexander Brown||1846||1901||USA||Murder of Graham Haygrath at Charters Towers

|-

|Gosano||1870||1905||South Sea Islands||Murder of Jack Parsons at Ingham

|-

|James Warton||1845||1905||Ireland||Murder of William Munday at Toowong

|-

|Johannes||1867||1906||Ceylon (Sri Lanka)||Murder of Police Constable Albert G. Price at Mackay

|-

|Twadiga||1876||1906||Solomon Islands||Murder of William Baulch at Mackay

|-

|August Millewski||1855||1907||Germany||Murder of Wallum Nabby at Nanango

|-

|Bismarck||1886||1909||Australia (Aboriginal)||Murder of Mrs Janet Evitts at Jundah

|-

|Arthur Ross||1888||1909||England||Murder of James Muir (Bank Clerk) at Gayndah

|-

|Alexander Bradshaw||1882||1910||Queensland||Murder of George Sutherland at Carron River (The charge of murder of Sutherland's wife Alice was then not proceeded with)

|-

|George David Silva||1884||1912||Queensland/Ceylon||Murdered six members of the Ching family at Alligator Creek

|-

|Charles Deen||1865||1913||Ceylon||Murder of Peter Dina (or Dinah) at Innisfail

|-

|Ernest Austin||1890||1913||Victoria||Rape and murder of 11-year-old Ivy Mitchell at Cedar Creek Rd, Samford

|-

|}

Boggo Road is mentioned in the Australian soap opera Prisoner as the prison where Joan Ferguson worked prior to coming to Melbourne. It was also visited in the season final of The Amazing Race Australia 2. Boggo Road is also the setting for the second episode of the sixth season of the American reality show The Mole. Australian rock band, The Chats also reference a 1989 riot at Boggo Road in the song "Boggo Breakout", within the album Get Fucked, released in 2022.

Eli Bell, the protagonist of the novel and Netflix series Boy Swallows Universe breaks into the prison to visit his mother Frankie on Christmas Day. Eli and his brother Gus' babysitter Slim Halliday was notorious for his escape attempts from the prison, one of which Eli replicated, but was unsuccessful.

See also

  • Boggo Road Busway
  • List of Australian prisons

References

  • Boggo Road Gaol Historical Society website
  • History of Boggo Road Gaol
  • Boggo Road Gaol Complex Discover Queensland Buildings website
  • Former Boggo Road Gaol archival recording, State Library of Queensland