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Port Douglas & Surrounding Area
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Port Douglas is a town in Far North Queensland, Australia, approximately
70 km north of Cairns. Its permanent population was about 3000 residents in 2006.
The town's population can often double, however, with the influx of tourists during
the peak tourism season May-September. The town is named in honour of former Premier
of Queensland, John Douglas. Port Douglas developed quickly based on the mining
industry. Other parts of the area were established with timber cutting occurring
in the area surrounding the Daintree River and with settlement starting to occur
on lots around the Mossman River by 1880.
Previous names for the town included Terrigal, Island Point, Port Owen and Salisbury.
The town is situated adjacent to two World Heritage areas, the Great Barrier Reef
and the Daintree Rainforest.
History
The Port Douglas township was established in 1877 after the discovery of gold at
Hodgkinson River by James Venture Mulligan. It grew quickly, and at its peak Port
Douglas had a population of 12,000 and 27 hotels. With the construction of the Mulligan
Highway it serviced towns as far away as Herberton.
When the Kuranda Railway from Cairns to Kuranda was completed in 1891, the importance
of Port Douglas dwindled along with its population. A cyclone in 1911 which demolished
all but two buildings in the town also had a significant impact. At its nadir in
1960 the town, by then little more than a fishing village, had a population of 100.
In the mid-1980s, tourism boomed in the region after investor Christopher Skase
financed the construction of the world-class Sheraton Mirage.
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