The Shark Attacks That Forced Queenscliff’s Rock Pool Into Existence

The rock pool tucked beneath the cliff at the northern end of Queenscliff Beach is among the last ocean baths built on the northern beaches before the Second World War, with construction beginning in 1937 and swimmers diving in by mid-1938, driven into existence less by civic planning than by a string of fatal shark attacks that made delay impossible to justify.



By the time a supervised swimming pool on that stretch of coast became a serious conversation, four people had been killed or badly injured by sharks within a short distance of Queenscliff Beach over barely two years. A fifth had disappeared entirely. Fear, rather than bureaucratic enthusiasm, is the reason the pool exists at all.

The Summer That Changed Everything

The cascade of attacks that forced the issue began in January 1934, when Colin Grant, a 22-year-old Queenscliff SLSC member, was attacked by a shark at Queenscliff Beach and taken to Manly Hospital, where his left leg was amputated below the knee. Two months later, 17-year-old Frank Riley was attacked at Dee Why and died on the beach.

Attack at Queenscliff Rock pool
Photo Credit: Trove

The month after that, 15-year-old Leon Hermes was attacked at North Steyne and died in Manly Hospital. In March 1935, Herbert McFarlane, 22, was attacked at North Narrabeen and also died in Manly Hospital. In June 1935, Queenscliff SLSC wrote to the two local authorities whose boundaries met at this stretch of coast, urging the construction of a rock pool at the northern end of Manly Beach.

The surf club also made a practical observation: when floodwaters from Manly Lagoon emptied into the ocean, thousands of small fish were swept out with them, attracting sharks, while the discolouration of the water from those floodwaters made it harder for lifesavers to spot the threat. The two authorities responded that there was no money available.

Eight months later, in February 1936, 14-year-old David Paton was taken by a shark at South Steyne. His body was never recovered.

A Clydesdale Horse and a Trolley on Rails

By the end of 1936, one of the two authorities had included the rock pool in its programme of works for the following year. But the question of who would pay was far from settled.

Manly was at that time building a seawall along North Steyne and needed good quality stone. The excavation of the pool would produce rock, so arrangements were made to sell the stone to the neighbouring authority for use in the seawall construction, at 25 shillings per perch plus three shillings and sixpence for cartage.

The excavated rock was loaded onto a trolley running on rails across the beach, pulled by a Clydesdale horse, from the pool site to the seawall.

Collapsed Seawall. Photo Credit: Manly Library/Jan Harkins (Facebook)

The practical arrangement suited everyone, but the financial question remained unresolved. Warringah Shire had started work on the pool on the assumption that Manly Municipality would contribute half the cost, given that the majority of people likely to use the pool lived in Manly rather than Warringah.

Manly’s aldermen voted on the matter repeatedly throughout 1937 and into 1938, then deferred it again and again.

Two Years of Delays, One Very Frank Letter

By June 1938, Warringah Shire had written to Manly Municipality with a detailed accounting of what had already been spent: £1,000 from a government grant, £1,000 in loan funds, and £180 from Warringah’s own reserves, totalling £2,180, with an estimated further £250 required to complete the work.

Photo Credit: Trove

The letter noted pointedly that “the impression had been given that the Municipality of Manly would willingly bear half the cost, it being understood that statements to this effect were made at a meeting of the Queenscliff-North Steyne Progress Association.”

Manly finally agreed to contribute £250 on completion.

By mid-1938, swimmers had begun using the pool, though it was still unfinished. A string of injuries followed. As late as November 1938, the Warringah engineer admitted the pool was incomplete, and by December the surf club was formally complaining about the danger it posed to bathers. The pool was not finished to most people’s satisfaction until early 1939.

A Pool Shaped by What Was Already There

The finished pool measured 50.3 metres long and approximately 14 metres wide, cut into the rock platform and formed on all four sides by concrete. But it was narrower at its western end than its eastern end, and that irregularity was not an accident or an oversight. The low-flow pipes connecting Manly Lagoon and the Pacific Ocean, built in 1910, ran along the western edge of the site and could not be moved.

The pool had to fit between the cliff on one side and those pipes on the other, which is why it was narrower at the western end and why access was available from three sides only, the western, northern and eastern walls, with the southern wall chained off because it was too narrow for safe passage.

That constraint has never changed. The pool remains narrower at its western end than its eastern end, a physical record of the infrastructure that was already on site when it was built.

At the time of construction, Queenscliff SLSC’s timber clubhouse sat just metres west of the pool. In 1939, a new clubhouse was built on the site of the current building, and the old one near the pool was demolished soon after.

War, Neglect and a Valve That Wouldn’t Open

Once the pool was finished, the two authorities proved more cooperative on subsequent improvements. They split the cost of additional concrete work at the western end in 1940 and the installation of pool lighting in 1941. Then the war intervened. From early 1942, the beach was surrounded by barbed wire and expenditure on swimming facilities was suspended.

Photo Credit: Lisa Wheeler/Google Maps

The pool was not well maintained through the wartime years. By 1944, the valve used to empty it had been closed for so long it could not be opened, and the western end was filling with sand and seaweed. In June 1945, the surf club described the pool’s condition as “deplorable”: half-filled with sand, the iron railing along the southern wall so badly rusted as to be dangerous. By early 1946, the two authorities had finally agreed to share the cost of repairs.

The years that followed brought recurring arguments about maintenance costs and repairs. In January 1948, club captain Dudley Parkhill told the Sydney Morning Herald that the Queenscliff rock pool was “a menace to surfers and a disgrace” and that since June 1947, when heavy seas had carried away the railing, there had been 47 accidents at the pool.

The repairs were eventually undertaken, costs shared. In 1952 the floor was concreted at a cost of £350.

An Improving Relationship

By March 1960, the surf club’s tone had shifted entirely. A formal letter expressed “the Club’s thanks for the work done and improvements made on the Queenscliff pool, and advising that the pool is in the best and cleanest condition it has been for a number of years.”

More substantial work was undertaken in 1960, including a concrete retaining wall at the base of the cliff, a promenade with drainage gutters, improved access from the clifftop, and a concrete floor across the whole pool area. The cost was £6,500.

One authority’s share was not settled until 1964, a delay that prompted a letter of remarkable diplomatic delicacy: “There is an understanding of their precarious position, and the matter will not be raised again.”

What that financial precariousness involved is not recorded. The money came through in 1964.

The Pool Today

The most significant change to the pool in the decades since came in 1999, when the low-flow pipes were extended from the western end of the pool to just beyond the eastern end, at the same height as the southern wall. That extension created the wide promenade now running along the southern side of the pool.

Queenscliff Amateur Swimming Club was founded in the 1960-61 season. The two-storey brick clubhouse on the site of the old surf club was opened in 1962. The pool was heritage-listed and in 2014 was renovated to include widened ramp access, safer stairs and a new ladder at the deep end.

It remains open 24 hours a day, free of charge, at the northern end of Queenscliff Beach, cleaned on a rotating roster by Northern Beaches authorities. Six lanes. Fifty metres. Narrower at the western end than the eastern end, just as it was designed to be, and for exactly the same reasons it always was.



Published 30-April-2026

Former Queenscliff Health Centre to Provide Homes for Older Women at Risk

The former Queenscliff Community Health Centre, a local landmark that served the Northern Beaches community for more than 40 years, is now mid-way through its transformation into 37 social housing apartments, with priority given to women at risk of homelessness and seniors aged 55 and over.



Community housing provider Link Wentworth is delivering the three-storey development under Round One of the Housing Australia Future Fund, supported by more than $6.5 million in additional funding. Construction is on track for completion by late 2026. For Queenscliff residents, the project breathes new life into a building that has been at the heart of the suburb since it opened, ensuring the former health centre continues to serve the community rather than sitting vacant.

Out of respect for the privacy and safety of future residents, the specific street address is not published. The development is referred to publicly as the Queenscliff development.

A Health Centre Reimagined

The Queenscliff Community Health Centre served the Northern Beaches community for more than four decades before closing in 2018 following the opening of a new health facility at Brookvale. The building sat dormant for several years while Link Wentworth and Landcom worked through the planning and approval process before construction began.

The originial building form  (top left), the current state of the building and an aerial image of the site by Nearmap.
Photo Credit: The Urban Developer

Rather than demolishing and rebuilding, Link Wentworth chose to honour the history and architecture of the original health centre by incorporating the site and its surrounding amenities directly into the new design. The result is a three-storey complex that respects the character of the original building while completely transforming its purpose. A building that once provided healthcare to generations of Northern Beaches families now provides something just as fundamental: a safe and stable place to live.

The 37 apartments across the complex comprise 27 studio apartments, eight one-bedroom apartments and two two-bedroom apartments, with each home designed to offer genuine long-term security to its occupants rather than temporary accommodation.

Addressing a Crisis Hiding in Plain Sight

The decision to prioritise women at risk of homelessness and seniors aged 55 and over reflects a pattern that 2021 Census data makes clear: women aged 55 and over are the fastest growing group experiencing homelessness in Australia, recording a six per cent increase in the most recent count.

The drivers are structural and persistent. Lower lifetime earnings, limited superannuation accumulation and rising living costs combine to place older women at particular financial risk as they age, with many facing housing insecurity for the first time late in life and with few options to course-correct. On the Northern Beaches, where rental vacancy rates are among the lowest in Sydney and median rents sit well above state averages, that vulnerability is especially acute.

Link Wentworth chief executive Andrew McAnulty noted the organisation sees firsthand through its housing operations how profoundly a safe, stable and affordable home changes the course of a person’s life. The Queenscliff health centre site, he said, will do exactly that for some of the Northern Beaches’ most vulnerable residents, turning a familiar local building into a place those residents can genuinely call home.

Link Wentworth on the Northern Beaches

Link Wentworth is one of Australia’s leading community housing providers, managing social and affordable housing across Sydney with a long-standing presence on the Northern Beaches. The organisation manages homes in perpetuity rather than as time-limited projects, meaning the Queenscliff development will serve vulnerable residents of the area for generations rather than as a short-term measure. Tenants pay rent calculated as a proportion of their income, ensuring homes remain genuinely affordable for those on very low to low incomes.

What Comes Next

Construction continues through 2026, with the development expected to welcome its first residents by late in the year. Applications for social housing are managed through Housing Pathways, the centralised NSW system, and residents can register their interest or update existing applications at housing.nsw.gov.au.

For more information about Link Wentworth and its housing services, visit linkwentworth.org.au or call 13 14 21.



Published 26-February-2026.

Community Pride As Queenscliff SLSC Members Earn National Honours

Three members from Queenscliff SLSC have been recognised with National Medals, marking years of verified operational service by local volunteers who have helped protect swimmers and beachgoers on the Northern Beaches.



Recognition Of Long Service

The honours formed part of a national recognition round announced by Surf Life Saving Australia, which recognised 212 members nationwide for long and diligent service. Queenscliff SLSC recipients are Jayson Elkins, Melissa Way, and Janet Young, all awarded the National Medal after meeting strict Commonwealth requirements. 

The Commonwealth established the National Medal in 1975 to recognise sustained operational service in roles involving risk to life and property, with eligibility set by government regulation. Members qualify by completing at least 30 patrol hours per season across 15 full years, with only verified operational service counted and junior, cadet, and leave periods excluded.

Queenscliff’s Role In Beach Safety

Queenscliff SLSC has patrolled Queenscliff Beach since 1924 and remains one of the longest continuously operating surf life saving clubs on the Northern Beaches. Generations of volunteers support weekend and holiday patrols, emergency responses, and water safety duties for locals and visitors. 

The recognition of Elkins, Way, and Young reflects years of consistent service across many patrol seasons. Their awards confirm they met national service thresholds based on verified long-term operational commitment.

How The National Medal Is Awarded

Members or clubs lodge National Medal applications, with endorsement from state centres before processing by Surf Life Saving Australia. The Australian Honours and Awards Secretariat gives final approval. 

Applications proceed only after the full service period is completed, with early submissions rejected. Members who continue eligible service may apply for clasps every 10 years, with each application requiring full resubmission of service history.

Community Recognition At Club Level

National Medals are usually presented at club or service level. This keeps recognition linked to the communities where service takes place. For Queenscliff Surf Life Saving Club, the awards recognise long-term volunteer commitment that supports ongoing beach safety. 



They also highlight the role of experienced members whose consistency and local knowledge help keep the coastline safe.

Published 31-December-2025

Queenscliff Man Killed In Sydney CBD E-bike Crash

A Queenscliff man has died after his e-bike collided with a garbage truck in Sydney’s CBD, drawing attention to the risks faced by riders travelling into the city and prompting a full police investigation.



Crash Scene In Ultimo

Police said the crash occurred at a busy Ultimo intersection. Emergency crews attended the scene, where the rider, a man in his 30s from Queenscliff, was treated by paramedics but could not be saved. His death has sent shockwaves through the Northern Beaches community, where he lived.

Photo Credit: Sunrise/Facebook

The incident happened about 6:00 am on Tuesday, 2 December 2025. The collision occurred at the intersection of Little Regent Street and George Street in Ultimo. The inner-city area carries heavy traffic, particularly in the early morning.

Police Investigation

Police from Surry Hills and Sydney City Police Area Commands, along with specialist transport officers, attended after reports of a crash involving an e-bike and a garbage truck.

Photo Credit: Sunrise/Facebook

Officers located the damaged e-bike and the truck at the scene and established a crime scene to allow investigators to examine what led to the collision. Traffic in the area was affected for several hours while inquiries were carried out.

Emergency Response And Investigation

NSW Ambulance paramedics treated the e-bike rider at the scene, but his injuries were fatal. The driver of the garbage truck, a 28-year-old man, was taken to hospital for mandatory testing, a routine step following fatal road crashes.

Investigators are expected to review factors such as vehicle movements, road conditions and visibility at the intersection. A report will be prepared for the coroner, who will ultimately determine the cause of death and any contributing factors.

Community Impact And Safety Focus

The man’s connection to Queenscliff has resonated with residents on Sydney’s Northern Beaches. Many locals commute by bike or e-bike into the city. The crash has renewed concern about the safety of vulnerable road users, especially when sharing roads with heavy vehicles during peak travel times.



Authorities have urged motorists and riders alike to take extra care, especially in high-traffic inner-city areas. Police said investigations are continuing and no conclusions have yet been reached about fault.

Published 19-December-2025

Water Concerns Spike At Queenscliff As Faecal Levels Surge

Queenscliff recorded one of the highest faecal pollution spikes seen on Sydney’s coast, raising concern for locals who swim, surf and spend time along the Northern Beaches.



Rising Bacteria Levels Across Key Swim Spots

Dates from recent testing show the worst readings were taken in late September and October as summer approached. Government testing from multiple beach sites showed sharp increases in E. coli and enterococci. Queenscliff recorded levels more than 1400 percent above safe limits. Narrabeen Lagoon followed with readings more than 700 percent above guidelines.

Photo Credit: Wikimedia Commons

Shelly Beach, North Curl Curl, Long Reef, Tamarama and several river and lagoon sites also recorded unsafe levels during routine checks. Water specialists described these spikes as a sign of pressure on ageing sewer systems. They noted that heavy rainfall washes pollutants into creeks, rivers and ocean outfalls that feed into popular swimming areas.

Sewer Strain Linked To Pollution Spread

Experts who reviewed the testing said leaking pipes and older sewer networks were likely behind the spikes. They explained that population growth had outpaced maintenance and upgrades in some suburbs. Sewer lines that carry fats, oils, grease and household waste can leak when overloaded or when ageing pipes weaken.

Photo Credit: Northern Beaches Council

Testing also linked recent greaseball debris on Central Coast beaches to a Sydney wastewater system. Samples matched waste products that come from treatment plants, including material that should stay inside the system. Authorities are investigating how these solids entered the ocean.

Conditions Vary Between Beaches

Locals at Queenscliff and Narrabeen Lagoon avoid the water after storms. They reported visitors getting sick when surf events happened soon after rain. They said swimmers often receive no warnings despite frequent poor readings.

Officials urged the public to check Beachwatch alerts and wait one day after rain. They noted statewide water quality improved this year but said monitoring, sewer upgrades and public awareness need attention.

Community Response And Health Advice

Parents, long-time swimmers and dog owners shared concern over the rising results. Residents near Narrabeen Lagoon said pets had developed skin infections after contact with the water. Surfers at Queenscliff said pollution became visible after storms and noted that past competitions led to illnesses among young athletes.



Health experts said children, older swimmers and people with weaker immune systems face the highest risk. They urged swimmers to watch for odd smells or cloudy water. Grey patches often signal broken-down toilet paper. They pushed for sharper awareness at the beach. Community reports help track problem spots.

Published 20-November-2025