Following
World War I, Pozieres was one of the
Pikedale soldier settlements established in the
Granite Belt area of the
Darling Downs. As part of this initiative, the Amiens branch railway was constructed west of
Cottonvale. The line was not built to convey passengers but rather to transport fruit from the soldiers' orchards to markets in
Brisbane and
Sydney. The line was opened on 7 June 1920 and it closed on 28 February 1974. The name
Pozieres comes from the Pozieres railway station, named by the
Queensland Railways Department in 1920, which in turn was suggested by surveyor George Grant and the
Returned Soldiers and Sailors Imperial League of Australia, commemorating the famous
World War I Battle of Pozières. A postal receiving office was opened at Pozieres on 1 May 1921, upgraded to a post office about March 1924. Pozieres State School opened on 16 June 1921. In November 1921, an Anglican minister, Reverend Alan Thompson, was appointed to the soldier settlement towns but at June 1922, the parishioners were lobbying for a church as services were being held in private homes. Pozieres Anglican Church Centre opened circa 1929. It is now closed. == Demographics ==