The visit to Paronella Park

 

Foreword

On 19May1999 I visited Paronella Park at Mena Creek. Whilst there I took a large number of photos (be warned if you click on to the following page you are facing a big download).

As a lot of you reading this are not from North Queensland I've included a little bit of information about Paronella Park. What follows is a direct steal from the informaton sheet handed to visitors. Hopefully the copyright owner will forgive this transgression as my sole intention is to tell everyone how fantastic Paronella Park is and hopefully persuade more people to visit it.

Some of you may have read the mention of Paronella Park in my friend Henry's pages, like him my first memory of Paronella was in the late 1960s when it was still very much a going concern. It saddens me to see the state it is in today, however the young couple who have taken over seem determined to restore what can be restored and to preserve what cannot. They have worked as hard as Jose himself to get the operation to the standard it is today, I wish them every success.

 

The History of Paronella Park

Jose Paronella arrived in Australia from Catalonia in Spain, in 1913. For the next 13 years he worked, cutting cane initially, then purchasing; improving, and reselling cane farms. In 1924 he returned to Spain and married Margarita in 1925. The trip back to Australia was their honeymoon. Jose first saw this 13 acres of virgin scrub along Mena Creek in 1914. He eventually purchased it in 1929 for 120 pounds and started to build his pleasure gardens and reception centre for the enjoyment of the public.

The earliest structure, the Grand Staircase, was built to facilitate bringing up the river sand to make the concrete. First they built a house to live in, then they started on the Castle itself. Apart from the house, which is made of stone, all of the structures were constructed of poured, reinforced concrete, the reinforcing being old railway track. The concrete was covered with a plaster made from clay and cement, which they put on by hand, leaving behind the prints of their fingers as a reminder of the work they had done.

They laboured with unswerving determination, until, in 1935, the Park was officially opened to the public. The Theatre showed movies every Saturday night. in addition, with canvas chairs removed, the Hall was a favourite venue for dances and parties. A unique feature was the myriad reflector, a great ball covered with 1270 tiny mirrors, suspended from the ceiling. With spotlights of pink and blue shining on the reflector from the corners of the hall, it was rotated slowly, producing a coloured snowflake effect around the walls, floor and ceiling. During the mid-sixties the Theatre ceased to be, and the Hall became devoted to functions, particularly Weddings.

Above the Refreshment Rooms was the projection room, and up another flight of stairs was the Paronella Museum. This housed collections of coins, pistols, dolls, samples of North Queensland timbers and other items of interest. Originally, food service was from the lower Refreshment Rooms downstairs. The concrete slab tables forming the lower Tea Gardens and the swimming pool both proved extremely popular, as they still do today. The avenues and paths were well laid out with the familiar shaped planters which are still to be seen wherever you go in the Park. Two tennis courts were behind the Refreshment Rooms, with a children's playground, The Meadow, situated near the creek.

Upwards of 7000 trees were planted by Jose. These included the magnificent Kauris lining Kauri Avenue. A Tunnel was excavated through a small hill. Above its entrances are the delightful stonework balconies. Walking through here brings you to spring fed Teresa Falls, named for his daughter. The creek is lined with rocks and traversed by small bridges. Some parts have cascades built out of rocks, so the sound of water is always there. The Hydro Electric generating plant, commissioned in 1933, was the earliest in North Queensland, and supplied power to the entire Park.

In 1946, disaster struck. Upstream from the Park a patch of scrub had been cleared and the logs and branches pushed into the creek. When the first rains of the Wet Season came, the whole mass began to move downstream until it piled up against a railway bridge a few hundred metres from the Castle. Water backed up until the weight broke the bridge, and the entire mass descended on the Park. The downstairs Refreshment Rooms and the Hydro were extensively damaged, as was the Theatre and Foyer.

Undaunted, the family began the task of rebuilding. The Refreshment Rooms downstairs were beyond repair, so this service was moved upstairs, and only the structure of the building recreated. In addition, Jose built the fountain. The Castle was repaired, the gardens replanted, and the Park was alive again.

In 1948, Jose died of cancer, leaving Margarita, daughter Teresa, and son Joe, to carry on. In time, Teresa married and eventually moved to Brisbane with her husband. Joe married Val in 1952, and they had two sons, Joe (Jose) and Kerry. Renovations and maintenance meant there was always plenty of work, and the floods of 1967, '72 and '74 further added to the load. in 1967 Margarita died, and in 1972,Joe died, leaving Val and the two boys to continue the hard working tradition and keep the dream alive.

The Park was sold out of the family in 1977 and sadly, in 1979, a fire swept through the Castle. For a time, the Park was closed to the public. Cyclone Winifred in 1986 and a flood in January 1994 remind us yet again that Nature always has the upper hand.

Mark and Judy Evans, the current owner/operators, purchased the Park in 1993 and formulated a plan to put the Park back on the map.

They see the Park as a work of art, and work on maintaining and preserving, rather than rebuilding. Small restoration projects have been undertaken, pathways uncovered and improved, and the Museum, an ongoing project, is continuously being enhanced.

The Park gained National Trust listing in 1997 ' and 5 Tourism Awards in 1998.

Paronella Park'; life as a pleasure gardens continues as Jose intended, for visitors, and with social gatherings, particularly weddings, happening as always.

 

 

 

 

 

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