Land sales occurred on Wickham Terrace in 1856. Because Spring Hill is higher than main Brisbane township, it was attractive for its views and cooling breezes. The better ventilation afforded by the breezes was also believed to create a healthier place to life, due to the prevailing belief in miasma (that disease was spread through bad air). Many prominent citizens built homes in Wickham Terrace and many civic institutions were established here. Rhoda Felgate occupied buildings here with her Twelfth Night Theatre.[2]
Over time, hospitals and medical practices began to dominate the street and, since World War II, Wickham Terrace has been noted for its private medical specialists (similar to Harley Street in London).[3]
Wickham Terrace is named after John Clements Wickham, the police magistrate and Government Resident of the Moreton Bay district.[4]
Landmarks[edit]
The Old Windmill and the Infinity Tower skyscraper under construction in 2013St Alban's Liberal Catholic Church, 2005
Many Brisbane landmarks are located on Wickham Terrace (as numbered, starting from the intersection at Ann and Wharf Streets):
^Radbourne, Jennifer, "Felgate, Rhoda Mary (1901–1990)", Australian Dictionary of Biography, Canberra: National Centre of Biography, Australian National University, retrieved 19 September 2023
^"Spring Hill". Queensland Places. Centre for the Government of Queensland, University of Queensland. Retrieved 9 January 2015.