See Brisbane as it was in the swinging 60s
WHAT was Brisbane like in the Swinging Sixties? A suitcase of old photos has been turned into a book which gives us a stroll down memory lane.
IT WAS the era of moon landings, meter maids and Mini Mokes. The 1960s changed Australia's cultural landscape but a long-lost suitcase of photographs has opened a window to the past when protest marches, miniskirts and hippies dominated a decade.
Former press photographer Ron Morrison and his wife Elizabeth, a former journalist, discovered more than 600 negatives, transparencies and silver gelatine prints - shot all over the nation through the 1960s - when they moved house in 2009.
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The Newcastle couple had stored the photographs in a suitcase since 1975.
"They were in really good condition so we thought we'd do a book with them,'' Mr Morrison said.
"I think there's a real sense of nostalgia for that time. The 1960s were incredible - we had the assassination of JFK, the first man on the Moon, a prime minister who went missing and lots more.''
Mr Morrison, 80, and his wife, 79, ran a press photography agency from 1959 to 1970, snapping moments in Australian history and cultural life from one end of the country to the other.
In Those Were the Days, they capture trams rattling down busy Brisbane streets, paperboys selling wares on street corners and people at nightclubs when they first became popular after-dark venues.
It was a time when Surfers Paradise had one beachfront high-rise, Coles opened its first supermarket and the first Ford rolled off the production line to give Holden some competition.
Those Were The Days, by Ron and Elizabeth Morrison, Exisle Publishing, $40