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Old Courthouse
From the Queensland Heritage Register:
Building DescriptionThe former Ipswich Court House is a sandstone and brick single-storey building, the original section of which was completed in 1859 to a design by Charles Tiffin. In the early years of Ipswich, the building was used for public meetings as well as a court house. The original building consisted of the central sandstone courtroom with a vestibule at the front, flanked by two brick wings. The building was too small for its task by 1904. In 1936, a major extension in rendered brickwork was made to the west, adding a new court room and ancillary rooms with the entry off Ginn St. With this addition, the building was able to continue its function until a new Court House was built on a different site in 1982. The State Government carried out conservation work in the 1970s and 1980s. After the building ceased being used as a courthouse, the bench was moved to the original court room and the building became a community cultural centre.
Romanesque style
From the Queensland Heritage Register:
Queensland Heritage Register - Listing CriteriaThe former Court House Ipswich is a single-storey sandstone and brick Romanesque building. The interior of the original courtroom (Court Room 1) is divided internally into four bays. The early bench is at the western end of the courtroom. The side wings of the 1859 section are of facebrick and are each divided into three separate rooms. The 1936 section is to the west of the original sandstone section. This section is in brick with ruled joint render, and includes a large room (Court Room 2) and several smaller rooms. Court Room 2 is also divided into four main bays. The western facade is of simple Revival Classic design. The building is surrounded on three sides by a rendered brick fence with rendered brick piers and pipe and chainwire infill.
Entered into the Queensland Heritage Register 21 October 1992.
From the Queensland Heritage Register:
References (online)The Prosecution Project [accessed 18/04/2024]Record-breaking conviction [History Out There, accessed 18/04/2024]Ipswich Courthouse [accessed 12/07/2022]Ipswich in the Eighteen Fifties, Journal of the Royal Historical Society of Queensland, volume 6 issue 2, pp. 435-453Ipswich Court House - Queensland Heritage Register [accessed 20/09/2024]Court Canopy Removed, Queensland Times, Wed 17 Mar 1937, p6New Court Room, Queensland Times, Thu 7 Feb 1935, p6New Court Room at Ipswich Nearly Finished, The Telegraph, Sat 3 Apr 1937, p24New Court House Glass Smashed, The Telegraph, Thu 25 Mar 1937, p6Courthouse Story: Ipswich Should Save Historic Relics, Queensland Times, Mon 13 Jul 1936, p6Criterion A: The place is important in demonstrating the evolution or pattern of Queensland’s history.
The size and quality of the building demonstrate the importance of Ipswich as a major centre at this time.
Criterion B: The place demonstrates rare, uncommon or endangered aspects of Queensland’s cultural heritage.
Completed in 1859, the Court House is a rare example of a government building constructed in Queensland prior to Separation.
Criterion D: The place is important in demonstrating the principal characteristics of a particular class of cultural places.
It still contains early bench and court fittings and is important in demonstrating the principal characteristics of an early courthouse.
Criterion E: The place is important because of its aesthetic significance.
An unusual Romanesque building of sandstone and brick, it exhibits aesthetic characteristics valued by the community and is a landmark on a major intersection. It contributes to a precinct of historic buildings on the edge of the Ipswich CBD.
Criterion G: The place has a strong or special association with a particular community or cultural group for social, cultural or spiritual reasons.
It is closely associated with the Ipswich community as the main court house for the district from 1859 to 1982, and also as a venue for early public meetings.
Criterion H: The place has a special association with the life or work of a particular person, group or organisation of importance in Queensland’s history.
It is the earliest major Queensland work of architect Charles Tiffin, at that time Clerk of Works for Moreton Bay and later the first Queensland Colonial Architect.







