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   personalities such as Mrs Pat Jenkins for the
  display of arts and crafts, has been enormously successful. It also attracts
  Brisbane patrons travelling up by special steam train.26  | 
 
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   Churches The hallmarks of the religious observance in the
  Brisbane Valley have been both ecumenism and conservatism, particularly in
  the German Lutheran and Apostolic denominations. In the 1850s itinerant
  priests visited the pastoral stations. In the 1870s selectors commenced
  subscription lists to erect halls for all denominations. The Caboonbah Undenominational Church has been a successful
  example of this tradition. Church congregations
  expanded as districts prospered. In 1871 the Lutherans established a
  church at Fairney Lawn. The Apostolics
  formed a group at Tarampa in the early 1870s as did
  the Baptists in 1873. The same year the Presbyterians established a congregation at Esk
  and bought land. The Roman Catholic congregation began in 1877, the Anglicans
  formed their parish in 1889, the Methodists
  established a congregation in 1882 and the Salvation Army in 1892. The
  Methodists had already established themselves at Wivenhoe in 1871. Lowood had
  German Baptist and German Lutheran churches since the formation of the town.
  The Wesleyans had been holding services in a store in Lowood
  but in February 1892 decided to build a church.27 The most
  architecturally interesting church in the Brisbane Valley is St Andrews Anglican
  Church at Toogoolawah. It was designed by the
  diocesan and renowned Queensland architect, Robin
  S. Dodds, and dedicated by Archbishop Donaldson on
  Sunday 12 May 1912. The wooden church, 78 by 30 feet with shingle roof and
  silky oak altar was built for £900. Mrs Mary E. McConnel
  played a significant role in having the shingle roof erected. The carving on
  the altar was crafted by a Miss Crouch in honour of
  Herbert P. Gardener's son. The wardens at the time were H.P. Gardner and
  George Launder, both long serving Shire Councillors
  as well. The first wedding in the church was that of Sid Hill and Bertha Jones
  in June 1912.  | 
 
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   Within a year the
  building was damaged in a severe storm causing it to bulge out some six
  inches. The building now has been listed by the National Trust for its
  architectural significance. A new shingle roof of 32,000 crows
  ash shingles was put on as a single gable roof in 1964 and completed in 1966.
  The external walls of brown stained weatherboard feature buttresses supported
  by  | 
 
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   Cultural and Social Activities  | 
 
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   timber stumps angled into the ground. The
  interior lining consists of natural timber in tongue and groove with V
  joints. The doors and windows are gothic in style. A new rectory was built in
  1925 for £1,008.28 The Anglican and
  Roman Catholic residents of the Brisbane Valley were catered for by itinerant
  priests riding round their parishes, so the first church buildings
  constructed in the valley were those of the German Lutherans and Baptists,
  established between 1871 and 1873, soon after selectors occupied the land.      German residents           of    Fairnie      Lawn      district gathered in mid November 1871 to plan a
  Lutheran church. A £35 subscription was raised at the meeting and
  subscription lists were sent around the district and to Ipswich. Local
  trustees for the church were chosen and a site selected on
  rising ground near the new bridge. St Peters Church was consecrated on 2 June
  1872 by Rev. E. Heiner of Ipswich. Rev. F. Schirrmeister of the German Station in Brisbane and Rev.
  C. Hellmuth of Logan River also preached. About 250
  people gathered at Fredrich Draheim's
  house for the service by Rev. Heiner and then
  marched to the site of the church for the consecration. The church (32 by 21
  feet) was built of hardwood and the roof and doors of pine. The total cost of
  the building and seats was £80 and it was almost
  paid off. The building was submerged in the 1893 flood and later shifted to
  higher ground about a mile west. It has continued to serve the community for
  over a century and special celebrations were held on 10 September 1972.29  | 
 
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   The early churches of Lowood all conducted their services in German. A Lutheran
  church known as the Bethel Church was erected in the early 1880s, with
  services conducted by Rev. Heiner. Bandidt, Weise, and Marback were the first elders; the adjacent cemetery was
  the first in the district and available for all persons. The Lutherans opened
  a new church in 1896 with a fulltime minister, Pastor Hartwig
  in 1897. They had been part of the Evangelical Lutheran Synod but in 1906
  changed to the United German and Scandinavian Lutheran Synod. Between 1897
  and 1923 monolingual German-speaking Pastors S. Horelein
  and H. Wallatt served in Lowood.
  The first bilingual pastor came in 1913 and Pastor Ludwig Doehler
  came from Alberton in 1923. They built a new 50 by
  28 foot church costing £400 in 1910. President ofthe
  Synod, Rev. J. Kolhke opened it on 21 August 1910.
  The new Bethel Lutheran church was opened at Christmas 1915; its altar was
  designed by B.Qualischefski of Boonah Rural School. The opening services were
  held in 213  |