Basin Pocket, Queensland


Basin Pocket is a suburb of Ipswich in the City of Ipswich, Queensland, Australia. In the, Basin Pocket had a population of 890 people.

Geography

The suburb is bordered to the north and west by the Bremer River, and to the east and south by East Ipswich.
The land use is almost entirely residential apart from parkland along the riverbank. There are no shops in the suburb but there a small set of shops providing basic services on the corner of Chermside Road and Jacaranda Street in East Ipswich just beyond the south-eastern boundary of Basin Pocket.

History

The origin of the suburb name is derived from "The Basin", an enlarged natural widening used by river steamers to turn before or after berthing at Ipswich, to which the suburb is adjacent. The explorer Allan Cunningham noted the Basin in 1828, and the Rev. Dr John Dunmore Lang suggested that Basin Pocket or Booval might have been a better site for the main settlement.
A ferry service between Basin Pocket and North Ipswich was established by William Isaac Lawrence sometime after his family settled there in the 1860s..
St John's Anglican Church was opened on 3 September 1921 by Canon T. L. H. Jenkyn, the rector of St Paul's Anglican Church in Ipswich. It was dedicated on 11 September 1921 by Archbishop Gerald Sharp. Its closure circa 2018 was approved by Bishop Cameron Venables. The church was at 82 Blackall Street.
St Philomene's Catholic Church was dedicated on 2 June 1940 by Archbishop James Duhig.
At the Basin Pocket recorded a population of 861 people.
In the Basin Pocket had a population of 890 people.

Facilities

There are no schools in Basin Pocket. The nearly primary school is Ipswich East State School in neighbouring East Ipswich to the south-east. The nearest secondary schools are Bremer State High School in Ipswich to the south-west and Bundamba State Secondary College in Bundamba to the south-east.