Land in Sandgate became available in 1853,[1] allowing a small seaside settlement to develop. By 1874, coach services connected Sandgate to Brisbane.[2] The railway line from Brisbane to Sandgate opened in 1882.[3]
From its first settlement Sandgate relied on inadequate water supplies from tanks and the local lagoons. Many investigations into better water supplies were carried out over the years, but it was not until November, 1921, that Sandgate was connected to the Brisbane water supply system. At the official opening, the Minister for Works, Mr. W. Forgan Smith, described this as "a historic occasion."[9]
The original Sandgate Town Hall was designed by Richard Gailey and built in 1882 at Kate Street, Shorncliffe but burned down on 24 May 1910.[10]
Its replacement was built in 1911–1912 at 5 Brighton Street, Sandgate to be closer to the Sandgate railway station and the Sandgate Post Office. After the amalgamation into City of Brisbane, the Sandgate Town Hall was used as a library, School of Arts and a health clinic. Today it is used as meeting rooms available for use by community groups.[11][12]
From the inception of the Town Council the elected aldermen chose one of their number to be mayor for the ensuing year.[13] This changed in 1921 when the mayor was elected directly by the voters from a separate list of mayoral candidates.[14] In 1924 the procedure was changed again, and the aldermanic candidate receiving the most votes became mayor.[15]
"LOCAL GOVERNMENT". The Brisbane Courier. No.19, 792. Queensland, Australia. 28 June 1921. p.8. Retrieved 16 December 2020– via National Library of Australia.
"Local Government Meetings. Mayoral Elections." The Brisbane Courier (National Library of Australia), 13 February 1888. p. 6. Retrieved 4 November 2017.
"COUNCIL MEETINGS". The Brisbane Courier. No.19, 822. Queensland, Australia. 2 August 1921. p.9. Retrieved 26 July 2020– via National Library of Australia.
"SANDGATE POLL". The Brisbane Courier. No.20, 663. Queensland, Australia. 14 April 1924. p.11. Retrieved 16 December 2020– via National Library of Australia.