St George's Anglican Church, Beenleigh

[1] In March 1871, the Reverend Dubois was appointed as the Church of England minister for Beenleigh , preaching his services in the local court house.

[3] However, by March 1873, plans for the church slowed when Dubois left the district and the Bishop of Brisbane failed to appoint a replacement minister.

[1] This single-skin timber church is a one-storey building on low concrete stumps with steeply pitched galvanised corrugated iron gable roofs.

[1] The walls consist of vertical jointed (VJ) boards fixed to an exposed stud frame that is decoratively patterned with cross bracing.

Arched double doors constructed of diagonal timber boards open directly from the porch onto the main space of the church.

[1] St George's Anglican Church was listed on the Queensland Heritage Register on 21 October 1992 having satisfied the following criteria.

[1] The place has a special association with the life or work of a particular person, group or organisation of importance in Queensland's history.

St George's Anglican Church is a surviving example of the ecclesiastical work of prominent architect FDG Stanley.

St George's Church of England, Beenleigh, circa 1912
The current church, built 1964