Booval contains both residential and commercial areas.
Booval straddles Brisbane Road, the main arterial link to the Ipswich Motorway. The Booval Fair shopping centre, located on Brisbane Road, contains a number of major chain stores, including Woolworths and Big W, while a number of smaller businesses line South Station Rd and Brisbane Rd.
The first large-scale cotton crops in Queensland were grown at Booval in the 1860s.[3]
The settlement of Booval derived from a private estate and its strategic location on the road and railway between Ipswich and Brisbane.[4]
In December 1895 the Anglican Diocese's architect John Buckeridge called for tenders to erect the Church of All Saints in Bundanba (as Bundamba was then known)[5] on land donated by Miss Ferrett and Mr Harry Ferrett. BishopWilliam Webber laid the foundation stone on Friday 24 January 1896.[6] Bishop Webber opened and dedicated the new church on Saturday 16 May 1896.[7][8] In April 1897 Harry Ferrett was married in the church.[9] In 1913 the church building was moved by rolling it on beer barrels to Silkstone. In 1930 it was moved again on a flat-top lorry to its current location in Booval.[10] A new church hall for All Saints' Anglican Church was opened on Sunday 10 May 1930.[11] The second All Saints' Anglican Church was dedicated in 1983.[12]
Booval Primitive Methodist Church opened on Wednesday 16 May 1900.[13] It was a established by a group of Primitive Methodist believers who disagreed with the plan to unite all the Methodist denominations into a single Methodist Church in Australia, choosing to break away and establish an ongoing Primitive Methodist congregation. Circa November 1905, the Primitive Methodist congregation sold the church building to the Congregational Church, which held its opening services on Sunday 26 November 1905 with a celebratory tea-meeting on Saturday 9 December 1905.[14][15] The church building was at 148 Brisbane Road (north-western corner with South Station Road, 27°36′50″S152°47′19″E / 27.6140°S 152.7885°E / -27.6140; 152.7885 (Booval Primitive Methodist / Congregational Church (former))).[16][17] The Congregational Church held its last service in that church building in December 1969, selling the church building to fund the purchase of a new site on the corner of Sloman Street and South Station Road where they would build a new church to replace the house on the site at the time of purchase. However, the planned amalgamation of the Congregational Church into the Uniting Church in Australia disrupted the plan and the Congregational members became members of the Trinity Uniting Church in North Booval.[18] The church building on the corner of Brisbane Road and South Station Road is no longer extant (the site has a Kentucky Fried Chicken store as at February 2022).[19]
By the time of 1915, Booval was occupied largely by miners, many of which had Welsh origins.[20]
Sacred Heart Catholic Primary School opened on 25 January 1931.[21]
In August 1947, the Glenville Hall in South Station Road was relocated to 185 Cascade Street, Raceview, to become the Raceview Public Hall.[22] As at 2022, the building is still extant, but not in use as a public hall.[23]
Sacred Heart Catholic Secondary School opened on 1964 and closed on 1975.[21]
Trinity Ipswich Uniting Church in North Booval was formed in July 1970 as an amalgamation of a number of Ipswich churches:[18]
Booval Congregational Church, originally located on the corner of Brisbane Road and South Station Road until December 1969, and then at a house on the corner of Sloman Street and South Station Road where it closed in July 1970
North Booval Presbyterian Church in Bridge Street
North Booval Methodist Church in Tuggerah Street
Vision Christian School opened on 25 January 1982 and closed on 1992.[21]
Demographics
In the 2016 census Booval had a population of 2,622 people.[24]
In the 2021 census, Booval had a population of 2,723 people.[1]
^"ALL SAINTS' HALL". Queensland Times. Vol. LXX, no. 13774. Queensland, Australia. 12 May 1930. p. 6. Archived from the original on 30 January 2021. Retrieved 18 September 2020 – via National Library of Australia.
^Council, Ipswich City. "Suburb and Place Names". www.ipswich.qld.gov.au. Archived from the original on 20 September 2017. Retrieved 20 September 2017.
^"PUBLIC HALL AT RACEVIEW". Queensland Times. No. 18, 938. Queensland, Australia. 16 August 1947. p. 2 (DAILY). Archived from the original on 20 February 2022. Retrieved 20 February 2022 – via National Library of Australia.