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North Pine Presbyterian Church facts for kids

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North Pine (former) Presbyterian Church
North Pine Presbyterian Church (1992).jpg
North Pine (former) Presbyterian Church, 1992
27°15′40″S 152°57′11″E / 27.2612°S 152.9531°E / -27.2612; 152.9531
Country Australia
Denomination Lutheran (since ????)
Previous denomination Presbyterian (1883 – ????)
History
Status Church
Founded 1883
Dedicated 8 June 1884
by Rev. Alexander Macintosh
Architecture
Architectural type Church
Style Gothic Revival
Years built 1883 - 1884; 1911
Construction cost 142
Specifications
Materials Timber; corrugated iron

The North Pine Presbyterian Church is a special old building in Whiteside, Queensland, Australia. It used to be a Presbyterian church. Now, it is used by the Lutheran community. This church was built a long time ago, between 1883 and 1884. It is so important that it was added to the Queensland Heritage Register on October 21, 1992.

As of 2019, the building was still used for church services by Lutherans and other Christian groups. In January 2021, the original Presbyterian group joined with another church. Their services now happen in a different location.

Discovering the Church's History

This small church is made of timber. It was first built in 1884 in a place called Petrie. Later, in 1985, it was carefully moved to its current spot.

How the Land Was Chosen

The area around Redcliffe was opened for farming in 1863. A person named Constance Spry bought the land where the church would later stand in 1866. She sold it to William Townsend in 1867. Ten years later, Townsend divided his land into smaller pieces. One piece, about one acre, was bought by the Presbyterian Church.

Many churches were built in the local villages during the 1870s and 1880s. However, most of these old churches are no longer standing. They were either taken down, burned, or moved.

Building the Church

The Presbyterian church group in North Pine was first looked after by ministers from Bald Hills. In 1873, they became their own separate church group. The church building in Petrie was constructed between 1883 and 1884. A local builder named James Foreman built it for about A£142.

In 1911, the area of North Pine was renamed Petrie. Around this time, the church got new front doors. These doors came from the home of a famous local person, Tom Petrie. During the Second World War, a new ceiling was put into the church.

On June 14, 1916, a special plaque was revealed. It listed the names of twenty-two people from the church area who joined the army for World War I.

The Church's New Home

In 1985, the church building was moved to land that James Foreman, the original builder, once owned. Many of the church's first pews are still used today. The pulpit, where the minister speaks, is a copy of the original one. This church is one of several historic buildings in the North Pine Country Park Historical Village. It is the oldest church still standing in the area.

The North Pine Country Park was once part of a large farm called Griffin's Whiteside Run. James Foreman chose this land in 1868. His original house is now where the park caretaker lives. Later, the Hyde family owned and farmed the land. The Morton Bay Council bought the land in 1985.

What the Church Looks Like

This church is made of timber with its wooden frame showing on the outside. It has a roof made of corrugated iron that slopes down on two sides (a gable roof). You can find it at the southern end of Main Street in the North Pine Country Park Historical Village.

Church Design and Features

The building shows influences of Gothic Revival style. This means it has some features like old European churches. It stands on concrete stumps. At the front, there is a porch with a corrugated iron roof. The church has a rectangular shape. At the back, there is a small room called a vestry. It has weatherboard walls and a corrugated iron roof that slopes in one direction.

You can enter the porch from both sides through pointed arch openings. The church has tall, narrow windows called lancet windows. Most of these windows have clear glass. The back of the church, where the roof forms a triangle, is covered in weatherboard. Both ends of the roof have vents to let air into the ceiling space.

Inside the Church

Inside, the church has a flat ceiling made of wooden boards. The sides of the ceiling follow the slope of the roof. There are two fancy plaster vents and four lights with white glass. Behind the pulpit, there is a window made of three lancet windows that looks into the vestry. The inside walls are made of vertical wooden boards with a decorative wooden rail along the bottom.

The vestry room has walls and a ceiling made of fibrous cement sheets with timber strips. The floor in the vestry is one step higher than the church floor. Inside the church, you will find many timber pews, which are church benches, in different styles. There is also a carved timber pulpit with pointed arch designs.

The Surrounding Historical Village

The North Pine Country Park is very large. The area around the church includes a "Main Street" with several other old buildings. These include a bank, a courthouse, a store, a bakehouse, a jail cell block, and public toilets. There are also three round concrete time capsules. The original homestead's driveway is still there, lined with tall pine trees. Other parts of the park have "Petrie Street," "Griffin Avenue," "Whiteside Street," and "Kirriwian Lane." Here you can find Todd's Cottage and an old school room.

Most of the buildings in the park, except for the bank, are made of weatherboard with corrugated iron gable roofs. They sit on timber stumps. The bank is also weatherboard, but it has a timber shingle roof. The courthouse has a front porch with a corrugated iron roof. The store has a corrugated iron roof over its front sidewalk. The bakehouse has a similar roof over its sidewalk and decorative wooden trim on its front gable. It also has a small lean-to structure on its northern side.

Todd's Cottage is a single-story building with an attic. It has a corrugated iron roof that covers porches on all four sides. The school room has a porch on its eastern side with a lower roof. There is also a small, separate square room to the southeast.

Why This Church is Important

The North Pine (former) Presbyterian Church was added to the Queensland Heritage Register on October 21, 1992. It met several important rules to be listed.

A Glimpse into Queensland's Past

This church is one of the few old buildings left from the early days of the Pine Rivers Shire. It helps us understand how Queensland's history unfolded.

A Great Example of Old Church Design

The church is a very good example of a timber church built in the 1880s. It shows us what buildings from that time looked like.

Beautiful to Look At

The way this timber church is built, with its wooden frame showing, makes it a beautiful part of the park's scenery. It adds to the charm of the historical village.

Important to the Community

This church is the oldest church still standing in the area. It has a strong and special connection with the local community for its social, cultural, and spiritual meaning.

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