As the Queensland capital, Brisbane has no shortage of ANZAC sites, including the ANZAC Square Memorial in the heart of the CBD which is a great place to start exploring the history of Queensland’s involvement before checking another place of interest. Maybe something along the river, like the Teneriffe boardwalk, a stunning river walk that commemorates the history of Brisbane’s submariners.
Completed in 1930, ANZAC Square Memorial, the heritage-listed war memorial and town square, features the Shrine of Remembrance and Eternal Flame, with three memorial galleries located below commemorating Queensland stories from the First and Second World Wars, and post-1945. The Memorial has been expanded since it first opened and, in May 2022, it was in ANZAC Square that Queensland's first war memorial dedicated to Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islanders was unveiled.
Historical and breathtakingly scenic in equal parts, the Teneriffe riverwalk starts at the Commercial Road ferry – making it an easy journey from ANZAC Square in the CBD – and ends at the Brisbane Powerhouse. Along with the Submariners Walk Heritage Trail, the walk takes in some of Brisbane’s landmark buildings and delivers stunning views of one of inner-Brisbane’s most scenic suburbs.
The Dawn Service at ANZAC Square is the largest memorial ceremony in the River City, but with services held at local RSLs, Services Clubs and memorials across Brisbane, you can always pay your respects locally or visit somewhere new in another part of the city and suburbs. Some of the most spectacular places to commemorate ANZAC Day are the dawn services at Camp Mountain Lookout in Samford, Windsor War Memorial Park, Redcliffe Parade and Cameron Rocks Reserve on the Brisbane River. If you’re looking to join an ANZAC Day tour and expand your knowledge, the Brisbane Greeters regularly hold tours on ANZAC Day where participants have the opportunity to learn war stories and reflect on the ANZAC spirit. Advance bookings are essential for these free, richly historical walks.
Sunshine Coast
On the Sunshine Coast, the scenic Caloundra Coastal Walk is lined with plaques commemorating soldiers who fought for Australia. At Kings Beach headland, there’s a tribute to the sinking of the hospital ship Centaur during World War II, in which only 64 of the 332 people on board survived. If you’re in Caloundra on ANZAC Day, Dawn Service is held at the Kings Beach Amphitheatre and the Wreath Laying Service is held later in the morning at the Caloundra RSL Memorial Gardens Cenotaph.
Heading into the Sunshine Coast hinterland, the Landsborough Museum often hosts exhibitions which commemorate Australians who’ve served their country, including the ‘Far From This Land’ gallery, which shows the impact of World War I on the Sunshine Coast. The pictures in this gallery tell the stories of soldiers, Harry, James and William and staff nurse Connie. Sadly, like so many young Australians, only two of the four made it home from the war but their stories live on forever.
Outback Queensland
In the town of Roma, five-and-a-half hours’ drive west of Brisbane, a row of 93 bottle trees – ‘the Avenue of Heroes’ – was planted in 1920 in memory of the 93 local men who fell during the First World War. While each tree originally bore a plaque stating the name of one of the men, a cairn located outside the Post Office now holds the only remaining plaque and lists all 93 names since many trees have since been replaced or removed. ANZAC memorials are located across most Outback Queensland towns, including the Aramac War Memorial, Cloncurry War Memorial, Cunnamulla War Memorial Fountain, Mitchell War Memorial and Winton War Memorial.
Fraser Coast