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Whittlesea Historical Society Inc.
Slide - photograph, colour, Whittlesea school children at the school, c.1956-1966
The Whittlesea Primary School building opened for use on 1 September 1878. Its completion heralded the commencement of State School No. 2090, which replaced the former Church of England Denominational School No. 658, where Whittlesea’s children had been educated since 1855. 35mm colour positive transparency (17 of 17) Card mount - Kodachrome Transparency whittlesea, christ church whittlesea, sunday school, church, children -
University of Melbourne, Burnley Campus Archives
Slide - Glass slide, 1891-1905
Diagram.Cut No. 15. Magnified Roots and Soil.soil, diagram -
Eltham District Historical Society Inc
Slide - Photograph, Unidentified residential scene, c.Jun. 1985
35mm colour positive transparency (1 of 15) Mount - Kodak Kodachrome CardLen Big Topinfrastructure, residential, road drainage, roads, unidentified -
University of Melbourne, Burnley Campus Archives
Slide, Alan L. Mitchell
Students in front of entrance to original school grand building. alan l. mitchell, burnley gardens, students -
Melbourne Tram Museum
Slide - Set of 11, Colin Rough, 28/04/2003 12:00:00 AM
Set of 11, 35mm Tecnodia white plastic mount slides by Colin Rough of trams in St Kilda Road, near the Arts Centre on 28/4/2003. All in M>Tram livery unless noted otherwise. .1 - Z3 175, Route 22, Arts Centre. .2 - Z3 116, Melbourne University, route 72 in all over advertising for Vodaphone. .3 - Z3 190, Camberwell, Route 72 .4 - D1 3508, University, route 5, in in all over advertising for Cold Shot Beer .5 - D1 3501, University, route 6 .6 - Z3 157, University, route 3, in all over advertising for "Make Out" .7 - Z3 204, Toorak Route 8, in all over advertising for Qantas to Broome .8 - Z3 131, University Route 6 .9 - Z3 164, St Kilda Beach, route 16 .10 - D1 3508, University, route 5, in all over advertising for Cold Shot Beer .11 - Z3 175, Route 22, MorelandOn front written on a label "M>Tram, St Kilda Road, Melbourne 28/4/03" and the tram number.trams, tramways, st kilda rd, m>tram, route 22, arts centre, route 72, route 5, route 6, route 3, route 8, route 16, z3 class, tram 175, tram 116, tram 190, tram 3508, tram 3501, tram 157, tram 204, tram 131, tram 164, d1 class -
University of Melbourne, Burnley Campus Archives
Slide - Glass slide, 1891-1905
Sale Agricultural and Horticultural Society '48. Sale AHS Using the Hand drill.-' and 'Sale AHS Intertillage of Mangolds.' 2 images on 1 slide.48. Sale AHS Using the Hand drill/Sale AHS Intertillage of Mangolds.school gardens, australia, sale, agricultural and horticultural society -
Melbourne Tram Museum
Slide - Black and white - reproduction - Carlton cable tram and crews, 1912
Reproduction slide of a photograph of a cable tram, trailer number 201, with the destination or Carlton with the grip man and conductor standing in front of the tram. Both are young men. The conductor is adorned with his safety pins and trip slips, that he would punch a hole in when he sold or collected a fare. The bell punch in the conductor's right hand would sound a bell to indicate the fare had been collected. There is a church vicarage in the background - at Prahran terminus in Chapel Street outside Trinity church. Underneath the photo is written "A Paradox: two Badger ?" which is a reference to the General Strike in Brisbane of Jan 1912 by Brisbane Tramway Company workers over the wearing of Union badges which was strongly opposed by the Company Manager Joesph 'Boss' Badger. See also item 7485 for a similar-themed photograph about the Badger. At the time there was a major industrial or arbitration case before Mr Justice Higgins regarding Australian tramways employees and their working conditions.Demonstrate cable tram uniforms and cable tram trip slips that were used to account for fare collection and has a close association with an event in Brisbane that led to a General Strike.Kodachrome cardboard duplicate slide - Black and white - reproduction - Carlton cable tram and crews - 1910s? "CB7" in penciltrams, tramways, cable trams, carlton, bell punch, unifoms, crews, grip men, conductors, prahran, tram 201, unions, brisbane, joesph badger -
Ballarat Heritage Services
Slide, Dorothy Wickham, Scene, Papua New Guinea, 1958
The Kokoda Trail or track is a place of historic significance to many Australians. It is outside Australia in Papua New Guinea.Scanned from a coloured slideView from this sidepapua new guinea, papuan, scene -
Bendigo Historical Society Inc.
Slide - DIGGERS & MINING: BENDIGO
Diggers & Mining: Bendigo. View of Bendigo from tower in Rosalind Park overlooking old Post Office and Law Courts. Markings: 19 DEC74M10. Used as a teaching aid.Kodachcromeeducation, tertiary, bendigo, . -
Bendigo Historical Society Inc.
Slide - ALLAN BUDGE COLLECTION: SLIDE HOUSE, CARPENTER STREET, 1988
Slide, Allan Budge Slide Collection: house,Carpenter Street. Gables & Lacework.Plain brickwork is saved, perhaps oversaved, by barge board treatment.house, public, allan budge slide collection:, allan budge slide collection: -
National Vietnam Veterans Museum (NVVM)
Film - Film, USB
USB stick of photos relating to Vietnam War.vietnam, usb stick -
Flagstaff Hill Maritime Museum and Village
Currency - Coin, 1896
This Great Britain one shilling coin is dated 1896, which is during the reign of Queen Victoria. There were over 9 million of these coins minted. Queen Victoria succeeded King William IV to the British Throne in 1837 – she was only 18 years old at the time – and she ruled until 1901. British coins such as this one shilling were in circulation in the colony of Australia until 1910, when the Commonwealth of Australia began producing its own coinage. This one shilling coin was minted by the Royal Mint at Royal Mint Court, in Little Tower Hill, London, England. Coins for circulation in the Kingdom of England, Great Britain and most of the British Empire were produced here until the 1960’s when the Royal Mint shifted location to Wales. There are three main groups of shillings produced during Queen Victoria’s reign:- - The Young Head; 1837-1887, in 8 different versions, on the obverse showing the Queen’s maturing face over 50 years. - The Junior Head; 1887-1892, minted when Queen Victoria had been reigning for 50 years. Her head was smaller on the coins minted 1887-1889 than on those shillings minted 1889-1892. - The Old Head; 1893-1901, shows the veiled head of Queen Victoria. The obverse side of the coin was designed by Thomas Brock. The inscription’s translation is “Victoria by the Grace of God, Queen of the British territories, Defender of the Faith, Empress of India”. The reverse side of the coin was designed by Edward Paynter. The inscription "HONI SOIT QUI MAL Y PENSE" translates as "Evil be to him who evil thinks". AUSTRALIAN CURRENCY The early settlers of Australia brought their own currency with them so a wide variety of coins, tokens and even ‘promissory’ notes (often called IOU’s) were used in the exchange of goods and services. In 1813 Spanish dollars were imported and converted for use by punching a hole in the centre of the coin. Both the outer ring, called the holey dollar, and the punched out ‘hole’, called the dump, were then used as the official currency. In 1825 the British Government passed the Sterling Silver Currency Act, making the British Pound the only legal form of currency in the Australian colonies. Not enough British currency was imported into the colony so other forms of currency were still used. In the mid 1800’s Australia entered the Gold Rush period when many made their fortunes. Gold was used for trading, often shaped into ingots, stamped with their weight and purity, and one pound tokens. In 1852 the Adelaide Assay Office, without British approval, made Australia’s first gold coin to meet the need for currency in South Australia after the Gold Rush began. In 1855 the official Australian Mint opened in Sydney, operating as a branch of the Royal Mint in London, and the gold was turned into coins called ‘sovereigns’. Other branches also opened in Melbourne and Perth. Up to the time of Australia becoming a federation in 1901 its currency included British copper and silver coins, Australian gold sovereigns, locally minted copper trade tokens, private banknotes, New South Wales and Queensland government treasury notes and Queensland government banknotes. After Federation the Australian government began to overwrite privately issued notes and prepared for the introduction of its own currency. In 1910 a National Australian Currency was formed, based on the British currency of ‘pounds, shillings and pence’ and the first Commonwealth coining was produced. In 1966, on February 14th, Australia changed over to the decimal currency system of dollars and cents. Australia did not have its own currency in the colonial times. Settlers brought money from other countries and they also traded goods such as grain when currency was scarce. For a long time there was no standardised value for the different currencies. In 1825 British currency became the only official currency in the colony of Australia and coins such as this silver shilling were imported into Australia to replace the mixture of foreign currency. Australia became a Federated nation on 1st January 1901. In 1910 National Australian Currency was formed and Australia produced its own currency, based on the British ‘pounds, shillings and pence’. The British currency was no longer valid. This silver shilling is of national significance as it represents the British currency used in Australia from 1825-1910. This silver shilling is also of significance to Australia as part one of the British Colonies ruled by Queen Victoria. It is part of the special silver and gold coins minted 1887-1893 to celebrate the 50 years Jubilee of Queen Victoria’s reign 1837-1887. Coin, Great Britain Shilling, 1896. Silver coin, round. Obverse; Queen Victoria head, ‘Old Head’, looking left. Reverse; 3 shields (each crowned) - 3 passant lions (England), 1 rampant lion (Scotland), golden harp (Northern Ireland) - floral symbols between them – 1 rose, 2 thistles. Inscriptions on both sides of coin.Obverse “VICTORIA . DEI . GRA . BRITT . REGINA . FID . DEF . IND . IMP” Reverse “ONE SHILLING, 1896”, Inner band, [some letters hidden] “HONI SO VI Y PENSE” flagstaff hill, warrnambool, shipwrecked coast, flagstaff hill maritime museum, maritime museum, shipwreck coast, flagstaff hill maritime village, great ocean road, coin, currency, money, legal tender, australian currency history, royal mint, british shilling 1896, thomas brock, edward paynter, great britain shilling, queen victoria currency, queen victoria 50 years golden jubilee shilling, colonial australia currency, numismatics -
Marysville & District Historical Society
Flyer (Item) - Information flyer, Wayne Louk, ASHLAR COTTAGE B&B, Unknown
An information flyer regarding Ashlar Cottage B&B in Marysville. This cottage, along with the majority of the buildings in the township, was destroyed in the 2009 Black Saturday bushfires.An information flyer regarding Ashlar Cottage B&B in Marysville.marysville, victoria, australia, information flyer, accommodation, ashlar cottage b&b, 2009 black saturday bushfires -
Flagstaff Hill Maritime Museum and Village
Currency - Coin, 1826
This Great Britain shilling is dated 1826. There were over 6 million of these coins minted during the reign of King George IV, 1820-1830 This coin’s denomination is not inscribed on the coin but it has been identified as a shilling from information about the King George III currency 1816-1820. - This Shilling is 24mm (the same size as this coin) British coins such as this one shilling were in circulation in the colony of Australia until 1910, when the Commonwealth of Australia began producing its own coinage. This coin was minted by the Royal Mint at Royal Mint Court, in Little Tower Hill, London, England. Coins for circulation in the Kingdom of England, Great Britain and most of the British Empire were produced here until the 1960’s when the Royal Mint shifted location to Wales. The obverse side of the coin’s inscription translation is “George IV by the Grace of God”. The engraver of the obverse image was William Wyon. The reverse side’s inscription on the coin is translated " King of The British territories, Defender of the Faith” The engraver of the reverse image was William Wyon. AUSTRALIAN CURRENCY The early settlers of Australia brought their own currency with them so a wide variety of coins, tokens and even ‘promissory’ notes (often called IOU’s) were used in the exchange of goods and services. In 1813 40,000 silver Spanish dollars, purchased by the English government, were delivered to Sydney to help resolve the currency problem reported by Governor Macquarie. The coins were converted for use by punching a hole in the centre of the coin. Both the outer ring, called the holey dollar, and the punched out ‘hole’, called the dump, were then used as the official currency. The holey dollars hold the place of being the first distinctively Australian coins. In 1825 the British Government passed the Sterling Silver Currency Act, making the British Pound the only legal form of currency in the Australian colonies. Not enough British currency was imported into the colony so other forms of currency were still used. In the mid 1800’s Australia entered the Gold Rush period when many made their fortunes. Gold was used for trading, often shaped into ingots, stamped with their weight and purity, and one pound tokens. In 1852 the Adelaide Assay Office, without British approval, made Australia’s first gold coin to meet the need for currency in South Australia after the Gold Rush began. In 1855 the official Australian Mint opened in Sydney, operating as a branch of the Royal Mint in London, and the gold was turned into coins called ‘sovereigns’. Other branches also opened in Melbourne and Perth. Up to the time of Australia becoming a federation in 1901 its currency included British copper and silver coins, Australian gold sovereigns, locally minted copper trade tokens, private banknotes, New South Wales and Queensland government treasury notes and Queensland government banknotes. After Federation the Australian government began to overwrite privately issued notes and prepared for the introduction of its own currency. In 1910 a National Australian Currency was formed, based on the British currency of ‘pounds, shillings and pence’ and the first Commonwealth coining was produced. In 1966, on February 14th, Australia changed over to the decimal currency system of dollars and cents. Australia did not have its own currency in the colonial times. Settlers brought money from other countries and they also traded goods such as grain when currency was scarce. For a long time there was no standardised value for the different currencies. In 1825 British currency became the only official currency in the colony of Australia and coins such as this silver shilling were imported into Australia to replace the mixture of foreign currency. Australia became a Federated nation on 1st January 1901. In 1910 National Australian Currency was formed and Australia produced its own currency, based on the British ‘pounds, shillings and pence’. The British currency was no longer valid. This silver shilling is of national significance as it represents the British currency used in Australia from 1825-1910. Coin, Great Britain shilling. 1826. Silver coin, round. Obverse; King George IV bare head, looking left. Reverse; crowned lion; below, a large crown; below are a shamrock, rose and thistle united. Inscriptions on both sides of coin (denomination not inscribed).Obverse “GEORGIUS IV DEI GRATIA” and “1826” Reverse “BRITANNIARUM REX FIDEI DEFENSOR” flagstaff hill, warrnambool, shipwrecked coast, flagstaff hill maritime museum, maritime museum, shipwreck coast, flagstaff hill maritime village, great ocean road, coin, currency, money, legal tender, australian currency history, royal mint, great britain shilling 1826, king george iv currency, colonial australia currency, william wyon, numismatics -
Bendigo Historical Society Inc.
Film - BENDIGO BANK - 150TH BENDIGO BUILDING SOCIETY, June 2008
DVD. Bendigo Bank - Bendigo Building Society 150th. -
Bendigo Historical Society Inc.
Slide - DIGGERS & MINING. DIGGERS AND MINERS
Diggers & Mining: Bendigo. Central Deborah Gold Mine. Cars park beside the mine. Markings: 15 DEC74M10. Used as a teaching aid.Kodachromeeducation, tertiary, bendigo -
Bendigo Historical Society Inc.
Slide - RALPH BIRRELL COLLECTION: EIG SCHOOL, c1966
EIG School - Ralph Birrell Collection. - Construction of Latrobe Uni. C1966. Bendigo Institute of Technology, Engineering School, Applied Science. View looking over the caterpillars (perhaps on an excavator) 3 men in the back ground a truck and break rooms/storage rooms for equipment. An artistic photograph.Kodakeducation, tertiary, latrobe university bendigo, eig school - ralph birrell collection. - construction of latrobe uni. c1966. bendigo institute of technology, engineering school, applied science. view caterpillars 3 men truck break rooms/storage rooms for equipment -
Eltham District Historical Society Inc
Slide - Photograph, Unidentified rural scene, possibly Research / Kangaroo Ground district, c.May 1988
35mm colour positive transparency (1 of 9) Mount - Kodak KodachromeProcess Date MAY 88Mrural areas, shire of eltham, unidentified -
Kew Historical Society Inc
Slide - Newspaper, The Kew Mercury, 1888
One of a group of eight slides containing images of publications and newspapers produced in Kew including The Kew Mercury, and the Kew Advertiser. The slides were donated by Miss Katherine Murphy in 1980.35 mm colour transparency (slide) of a page of the 23 March 1888 issue of The Kew Mercury."Kew Mercury 1988 Ext Railway Rate List"newspapers -- kew (vic.), the kew mercury -
National Vietnam Veterans Museum (NVVM)
Film - Film, DVD, Modern Soldier: PTSD. Copy 1
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Federation University Historical Collection
Programme, Memorial Service Booklet for Hugh Dean Thomas Williamson, 1985
Hugh D.T. WIlliamson C.B.E. was born in Ballarat on 04 February 1901 and died on 20 December 1985. "He witnessed first-hand the difficulties of rural life exacerbated by a world war that had stripped whole towns of their young men, and the long, lean years of the Depression were to define the way he lived the rest of his life. Hard work, constancy, eschewing wastage of any kind along with a hunger to seize opportunities wherever they presented themselves were the principles that informed his life and career and which, in time, gave rise to a commitment to others and to organisations and communities in which he saw the same ideals. Hugh attained the rank of Honorary Colonel in the Salvation Army and attained its highest award in 1978 when he was presented with its Distinguished Service Medal. In his time with the Salvation Army, Hugh helped establish the Red Shield Appeal and established scholarships to support senior officers to obtain business management training at the Australian Administrative Staff College in Mt Eliza (operated from a property formerly owned by Sir Reginald Ansett). He began his working life at age 16 at the Ballarat Banking Company. He steadily worked his way up through the ranks of the banking industry to become General Manager of the ANZ Bank from which he retired in 1961. Hugh was also a founding Trustee of the William Buckland Foundation, an association which strongly influenced his decision to set up his own foundation."Yellow Order of Service booklet for the funeral of Hugh Williamson. hugh williamson, hugh d.t. williamson, memorial service, martin carlson, j. davis mccaughey, francis macnab, frank linsell, john norman, ian harrison -
Ballaarat Mechanics' Institute (BMI Ballarat)
Film - Photograph by Herb Richmond. ca 1971, Bald Hills- Railway over Road Bridge
Ballarat History35mm B&W Kodak Plus X Pan Film.ballarat, ballaraat, bald, hills, railway, bridge -
National Wool Museum
Currency - One Pound Note, John Ash, 1938 - 1948
John Ash succeeded Thomas Harrison as the Australian Note Printer in 1927 and oversaw the printing of a new series of banknotes, known as the Ash Series. First issued between 1933 and 1934, the new banknotes sought to improve the currency's resistance to counterfeiting. A special watermark was created to increase the security of the new series. Shaped as a medallion, the watermark showed the profile of Edward, the Prince of Wales. A new portrait of the King was also introduced, depicting him frontally rather than in profile as he had appeared in the prior banknotes of the Harrison Series (1923-1925). The back of each denomination contained an individual vignette that reflected a sector of the country's economy. The wool and agricultural industries were represented, as they had been in the first series of the nation's banknotes (1913-1914), and they were joined by manufacturing and commerce. The prominent British sculptor, Paul Montford, contributed to the design of the new series. Recognised for his sculptural works on the exterior of Melbourne's Shrine of Remembrance, Montford was commissioned to produce relief sculptures that formed the basis of the banknotes' vignettes. His sculptures were translated into wash drawings by Frank Manley, the artist and engraver for the Commonwealth Bank's Note Printing Branch. Manley accentuated the sculpture's three-dimensional qualities with deep shadows and touches of illusionism. A sheep in Montford's pastoral scene, for example, stands forward from the frame as if entering the viewer's space to escape branding and Manley preserves this visual conceit in his drawing. Whereas the printing of the previous series of Australian banknotes had been criticised for its poor definition, the sculptural basis of the Ash Series clarified the banknotes' imagery. During a period of record unemployment, the scenes emphasised the strength of the human figure in gestures of labour, evoking classical, heroic qualities in their poses. The sculptural forms suggested stability in the turbulence of the Great Depression and imparted a sense of solidity to paper currency. - museum.rba.gov.auCommonwealth of Australia paper one pound note in green and white tones depicting graphics and text. The obverse has a framed design with a blank portal to the left and King George VI in the right portal. The centre shows the Australian Coat of Arms, serial number, and detail over one pound symbol on a mosaic background, with signatories below. The reverse features a framed pastoral scene with farmers tending sheep, with a blank portal to the right.Obverse: ONE / 1 / 1 / ONE / COMMONWEALTH OF AUSTRALIA / K / 58 / 790230 / K / 58 / 790230 / This Note is legal tender for / ONE POUND / in the Commonwealth and in all / Territories under the control of the / Commonwealth. / [signature] / GOVERNOR / COMMONWEALTH BANK ON AUSTRALIA / [signature] / SECRETARY TO THE TREASURY Reverse: 1 /1 / 1 / 1 / PASTORALcurrency, money, pound note, pastoral scene, industry, commonwealth of australia, paul montford, king george vi, frank manly, john ash -
Port Melbourne Historical & Preservation Society
Flyer - Play promotion, Gasworks, Galaxy Design, The Borough, Jan 2006
Designed for "The Borough" written by Sean Barker and the people of Port Melbourne. Sean is an actor from St Kilda and a PMH&PS member. The theme of the production is the change in Port.Ephemera related to a production of "The Borough" at Gasworks, February 2006 two publicity flyersarts and entertainment - theatre, sean barker, susie stapleton, the borough - play -
Eltham District Historical Society Inc
Slide - Photograph, Unidentified rural scene, possibly Research / Kangaroo Ground district, c.May 1988
Montsalvat, Eltham, c.May 198835mm colour positive transparency (1 of 13) Mount - Kodak KodachromeProcess Date MAY 88Minfrastructure, roads, rural areas, shire of eltham -
University of Melbourne, Burnley Campus Archives
Slide - Glass slide, 1891-1905
20. Fjoo (Aranga saccharifera.)'line drawings, plants -
Port Melbourne Historical & Preservation Society
Flyer - 1992 Port Melbourne Council Election, 02 It's time for a change, Jul 1992
Produced in 1992 as two more women successfully ran for Port Melbourne City Council. Kept by donor until 2018 - Port Melbourne Electoral Material 1992 - Lyn Allison, Boundary ward .02 In ink on back "Di"local government - city of port melbourne, elections, lyn allison -
National Vietnam Veterans Museum (NVVM)
Film - Film, DVD, The Vietnam War: 1954-1975, 2011
vietnam war - history -
Bendigo Historical Society Inc.
Slide - BENDIGO & EASTER FAIR, 1975
Spire under construction, Sacred Heart Cathedral, Wattle Street, Bendigo. 1975.slide, bendigo, sacred heart cathedral, bendigo, sacred heart cathedral, spire under construction, bendigo -
Bendigo Historical Society Inc.
Slide - MOUAT CRAWFORD COLLECTION: FARMING IN THE WIMMERA, c1962
Mouat Collection - Farming in the Wimmera. View between the silos showing how they are attached to each other to give them strength and stability. Markings: Murtoa Bulk wheat Terminal. Used as a teaching aid.Perutz