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Chelsea & District Historical Society Inc
Photograph - Chelsea State School, A group of young girls, 1917
Chelsea State School was built on Argyle Avenue and officially opened on 27 January 1915.Sepia photo of young girls at Chelsea State School.chelsea, education, chelsea primary school, school, chelsea state school, young girls -
Chelsea & District Historical Society Inc
Photograph - Chelsea State School, Grade 3, c 1920's
Chelsea State School was built on Argyle Avenue and officially opened on 27 January 1915.Sepia photo of Grade 3 at Chelsea State School. chelsea, education, chelsea primary school, school, chelsea state school, grade 3 -
Chelsea & District Historical Society Inc
Photograph - Aerial Photo of Chelsea, c 1923
Points of interest in the photo are Fox Theatre, Chelsea Railway Station and the building site of Masons Theatre on the corner of Chelsea Road and Station Street. Mr William Herbert Hansom was a pioneer of aerial photography in Australia.Black and white aerial photo of Chelsea, bordered by Thames Promenade, Balantyne Avenue, Catherine Avenue and Chelsea Road, Station Street, The Strand, Bath Street.W. H. Hansom ("Manders") Aerial Artist, Personally Conducted Flights over Melbourne and Suburbs St James' Building Bourke Street, Melbournechelsea, aerial photo, station street, chelsea road, the strand, bath street, fox theatre, masons theatre, w. h. hansom, chelsea railway station -
Chelsea & District Historical Society Inc
Photograph - Chelsea State School, Grades II & Ic, 13 June 1922
Chelsea State School was built on Argyle Avenue and officially opened on 27 January 1915.Sepia photo of Grade II and Ic children at Chelsea State School, in 1922chelsea, education, chelsea primary school, school, grade 7 & 8 -
Chelsea & District Historical Society Inc
Photograph - Chelsea State School, Grade 3, 1941
Chelsea State School was built on Argyle Avenue and officially opened on 27 January 1915.Black and white photo of Grade 3 children at Chelsea State School, in 1941chelsea, education, chelsea primary school, school, grade 7 & 8 -
Chelsea & District Historical Society Inc
Photograph - Chelsea State School, Grades VII and VIII, c. 1920's
Chelsea State School was built on Argyle Avenue and officially opened on 27 January 1915.Sepia photo Grades VII and VIII, Chelsea State School, in 1920's. chelsea, education, chelsea primary school, school, chelsea state school -
Chelsea & District Historical Society Inc
Photograph - Chelsea State School, Grade 6A, 1962
Chelsea State School was built on Argyle Avenue and officially opened on 27 January 1915.Black and White photo of Grade 6A at Chelsea State School, in 1962chelsea, education, chelsea primary school, school, grade 6a, chelsea state school -
Chelsea & District Historical Society Inc
Photograph - Chelsea State School, Grade VI, 18 August 1918
Chelsea State School was built on Argyle Avenue and officially opened on 27 January 1915.Sepia photo of Grade 6 with a female teacher at Chelsea State School.chelsea, education, chelsea primary school, school, chelsea state school, grade 6 -
Chelsea & District Historical Society Inc
Photograph - Chelsea State School, Grade 6B, 1962
Chelsea State School was built on Argyle Avenue and officially opened on 27 January 1915.Black and white photo of Grade 6B at Chelsea State School, in 1962chelsea, education, chelsea primary school, school, grade 6b, chelsea state school -
Chelsea & District Historical Society Inc
Photograph - Chelsea State School, Grade 1 and 2
Chelsea State School was built on Argyle Avenue and officially opened on 27 January 1915.Sepia photo of Grades 1 and 2 at Chelsea State School. chelsea, education, chelsea primary school, school, chelsea state school, grade 1, grade 2 -
City of Moorabbin Historical Society (Operating the Box Cottage Museum)
Book, Diggerson, Margaret, The fallen from Chelsea and Carrum : those who served and died in World War I, 2014
91 pages non-fictionworld war one, chelsea, carrum, soldiers -
Chelsea & District Historical Society Inc
Photograph - Chelsea State School, Grade 7 & 8, 1950
Chelsea State School was built on Argyle Avenue and officially opened on 27 January 1915.Black and white photo of Grade 7 & 8 children at Chelsea State School, in 1956chelsea, education, chelsea primary school, school, grade 7 & 8 -
Chelsea & District Historical Society Inc
Photograph - Chelsea State School, Grade 3B, 1962
Chelsea State School was built on Argyle Avenue and officially opened on 27 January 1915.black and white photo of Grade 3B and a female teacher at Chelsea State School.chelsea, education, chelsea primary school, school, chelsea state school, grade 3b -
Chelsea & District Historical Society Inc
Photograph - Chelsea Junior Football Club, posed in front of Dorney's Shop, 1922
The Chelsea Junior Football Club with Bill Dorney in front of Bill Dorney Shop. Mr Dorney had taken the boys for a ride on his horse and cart. Mr Dorney's Hairdressing and Billiard Saloon was situated at 415 Nepean Highway, Chelsea. The premises was destroyed by fire in August 1937.Black and white photo of junior football players of Chelsea Junior Football Club. The group are posed in front of William (Bill) Dorney's Hairdressing shop & Billiard saloon in Nepean Highway, Chelseafootball, chelsea junior football club, chelsea, sport, william dorney, shop, nepean highway, horse and cart -
Chelsea & District Historical Society Inc
Photograph - Camping at Carrum, Morton Family, c 1890's
Mr Alfred Morton with his sisters, brothers and friends camping at Carrum in the 1890's. This area was later called Chelsea. Alfred Louis Morton (known as Louis) was born in Geelong in 1866, the fifth of eleven children of Mark Morton and Eliza nee Heard (married 1898). Alfred began work for the Post Office at South Yarra in the 1890s. In the late 1800s it was common for people from Melbourne and north of the city to travel to Chelsea area beaches for their holidays and many liked the area so much that, like the Mortons, they moved here permanently. In the 1890s Alfred’s sister, Mrs William Ashmore, built a weekend house at the foot of what is now Foy Avenue in Chelsea. The Morton family, including Alfred, visited the area often, camping on the foreshore during the 1890s. In 1911 Alfred moved his family permanently to a house on the corner of Morton Grove and Main Road Chelsea (now known as the Nepean Highway) on property that extended from the main road to the beach. This house was destroyed in the fire of 22 December 1913 which raged amongst the ti-tree on the foreshore between Aspendale and Chelsea. Many buildings were destroyed in this fire. The Argus newspaper reported on Wednesday 24 December that 94 houses were burnt with glowing embers blown a mile and half inland. According to the Argus but for the wide break provided by the Point Nepean Road (now the Nepean Highway) and the railway line, the scrub on the other side might have caught. The Morton children, Elsa and Ivan, attended Chelsea State School (now Chelsea Primary School) and Mrs Morton was active in the establishment of St Chad’s Church of England in Chelsea. At the age of 80 in 1945 Mr Morton was concerned about reports that English children had lost their toys due to the war and so he made (as part of a wider effort in Australia) 100 toy engines that were sent to England. He died in 1946 in Chelsea.Sepia photo of members of the Morton family camping at Carrum (now Chelsea).morton, chelsea, carrum, post office, south yarra, camping, tents -
City of Kingston
Photograph - Digital image, Black and white, c. 1910
Black and white image of Chelsea Railway Station showing the impact of the railways on the development of the area. Shops and shoppers can be seen behind the station buildings.The extension of the railway line from Mordialloc to Frankston influenced the development of the villages along the train line. Shops and community buildings were built in proximity to the station, along with the subdivision of land for houses. Black and white image of Chelsea Railway Station showing platforms and local shopschelsea, railway station, railway, shopping strip, public transport -
Chelsea & District Historical Society Inc
Photograph - Chelsea State School, Grade 7 & 8, 1928
Chelsea State School was built on Argyle Avenue and officially opened on 27 January 1915.Black and white photo of Grades 7 and 8 at Chelsea State School, in 1928chelsea, education, chelsea primary school, school, chelsea state school, grade 7, grade 8 -
Chelsea & District Historical Society Inc
Photograph - Chelsea State School, Children outside Hoadleys Hall "Joss House", 1912
In January 1912, a small school was established at Chelsea, with 65 students, in Hoadley’s Hall, located on Main Road, Chelsea, near the Nepean Highway. Due to its Oriental appearance, the local people called this hall “The Joss House.” Hoadley's Hall was was originally used at the Melbourne Show Grounds by Hoadley's which was moved to Chelsea. The Hall was also used for church services by different religions before they built their own churches. A new brick school was built on Argyle Avenue and officially opened on 27 January 1915.Black and white photo of children at Chelsea State School, in 1912, standing in front of Hoadley's Hall.chelsea, education, chelsea primary school, school, hoadleys hall, joss house -
Chelsea & District Historical Society Inc
Photograph - Chelsea State School, 1920's
Chelsea State School was built on Argyle Avenue and officially opened on 27 January 1915.Black and white photo of Chelsea State School. Mr Rogers, the Head Teacher is standing in the doorway.chelsea, education, chelsea primary school, school, chelsea state school, mr rogers -
Chelsea & District Historical Society Inc
Photograph - Chelsea State School, Group of girls, 1917
Chelsea State School was built on Argyle Avenue and officially opened on 27 January 1915.Sepia photo of girls at Chelsea State School, in 1917. Some of the girls are holding "Cupie Dolls"chelsea, education, chelsea primary school, school, chelsea state school, cupie dolls -
Chelsea & District Historical Society Inc
Photograph - Chelsea State School, Grade VII, 1920's
Chelsea State School was built on Argyle Avenue and officially opened on 27 January 1915.Sepia photo of Grade ViII with a Mr Rogers, Head Teacher at Chelsea State School.chelsea, education, chelsea primary school, school, chelsea state school, grade vii, mr rogers -
Chelsea & District Historical Society Inc
Photograph - Chelsea State School, Grades 3 and 4, 1917
Chelsea State School was built on Argyle Avenue and officially opened on 27 January 1915.Sepia photo of Grades 3 and 4 with two female teachers at Chelsea State School.chelsea, education, chelsea primary school, school, chelsea state school, grade 3, grade 4 -
Chelsea & District Historical Society Inc
Photograph - Chelsea State School, Children outside Hoadleys Hall "Joss House", 1914
In January 1912, a small school was established at Chelsea, with 65 students, in Hoadley’s Hall, located on Main Road, Chelsea, near the Nepean Highway. Due to its Oriental appearance, the local people called this hall “The Joss House.” Hoadley's Hall was was originally used at the Melbourne Show Grounds by Hoadley's which was moved to Chelsea. The Hall was also used for church services by different religions before they built their own churches. A new brick school was built on Argyle Avenue and officially opened on 27 January 1915.Sepia photo of children and adults at Chelsea State School, in 1914, standing in front of Hoadley's Hall.chelsea, education, chelsea primary school, school, hoadleys hall, joss house, chelsea state school -
Chelsea & District Historical Society Inc
Photograph - Chelsea State School, Children outside Hoadleys Hall "Joss House", 1912
In January 1912, a small school was established at Chelsea, with 65 students, in Hoadley’s Hall, located on Main Road, Chelsea, near the Nepean Highway. Due to its Oriental appearance, the local people called this hall “The Joss House.” Hoadley's Hall was was originally used at the Melbourne Show Grounds by Hoadley's which was moved to Chelsea. The Hall was also used for church services by different religions before they built their own churches. A new brick school was built on Argyle Avenue and officially opened on 27 January 1915.Sepia photo of children and adults at Chelsea State School, in 1912, standing in front of Hoadley's Hall.chelsea, education, chelsea primary school, school, hoadleys hall, joss house, chelsea state school -
Chelsea & District Historical Society Inc
Photograph - Chelsea State School, Grade 6, 1920
In January 1912, a small school was established at Chelsea, with 65 students, in Hoadley’s Hall, located on Main Road, Chelsea, near the Nepean Highway. Due to its Oriental appearance, the local people called this hall “The Joss House.” A new brick school was built on Argyle Avenue and officially opened on 27 January 1915.Black and white photo of Grade 6 children at Chelsea State School, in 1920, with the Headmaster, George Rogerschelsea, education, grade 6, george rogers, school, chelsea state school -
Chelsea & District Historical Society Inc
Photograph - Camping at Carrum, Morton Family, c 1890's
Mr Alfred Morton with his sisters, brothers and friends camping at Carrum in the 1890's. This area was later called Chelsea. Alfred Louis Morton (known as Louis) was born in Geelong in 1866, the fifth of eleven children of Mark Morton and Eliza nee Heard (married 1898). Alfred began work for the Post Office at South Yarra in the 1890s. In the late 1800s it was common for people from Melbourne and north of the city to travel to Chelsea area beaches for their holidays and many liked the area so much that, like the Mortons, they moved here permanently. In the 1890s Alfred’s sister, Mrs William Ashmore, built a weekend house at the foot of what is now Foy Avenue in Chelsea. The Morton family, including Alfred, visited the area often, camping on the foreshore during the 1890s. In 1911 Alfred moved his family permanently to a house on the corner of Morton Grove and Main Road Chelsea (now known as the Nepean Highway) on property that extended from the main road to the beach. This house was destroyed in the fire of 22 December 1913 which raged amongst the ti-tree on the foreshore between Aspendale and Chelsea. Many buildings were destroyed in this fire. The Argus newspaper reported on Wednesday 24 December that 94 houses were burnt with glowing embers blown a mile and half inland. According to the Argus but for the wide break provided by the Point Nepean Road (now the Nepean Highway) and the railway line, the scrub on the other side might have caught. The Morton children, Elsa and Ivan, attended Chelsea State School (now Chelsea Primary School) and Mrs Morton was active in the establishment of St Chad’s Church of England in Chelsea. At the age of 80 in 1945 Mr Morton was concerned about reports that English children had lost their toys due to the war and so he made (as part of a wider effort in Australia) 100 toy engines that were sent to England. He died in 1946 in Chelsea.Sepia photo of members of the Morton family camping at Carrum (now Chelsea). Tents and a wagon in the backgroundmorton, chelsea, carrum, post office, south yarra, camping, tents, wagon -
Chelsea & District Historical Society Inc
Photograph - Chelsea State School, Students, staff and Family on a picnic, c 1912-14
In January 1912, a small school was established at Chelsea, with 65 students, in Hoadley’s Hall, located on Main Road, Chelsea, near the Nepean Highway. Due to its Oriental appearance, the local people called this hall “The Joss House.” Hoadley's Hall was was originally used at the Melbourne Show Grounds by Hoadley's which was moved to Chelsea. The Hall was also used for church services by different religions before they built their own churches. A new brick school was built on Argyle Avenue and officially opened on 27 January 1915.Sepia photo of children, staff and family from Chelsea State School, at a picnic, amongst the te trees.chelsea, education, chelsea primary school, school, hoadleys hall, joss house, picnic, te trees -
Chelsea & District Historical Society Inc
Photograph - Morton Family, Morton's house, Chlesea, pre 1913's
Mr Alfred Morton with his sisters, brothers and friends camping at Carrum in the 1890's. This area was later called Chelsea. Alfred Louis Morton (known as Louis) was born in Geelong in 1866, the fifth of eleven children of Mark Morton and Eliza nee Heard (married 1898). Alfred began work for the Post Office at South Yarra in the 1890s. In the late 1800s it was common for people from Melbourne and north of the city to travel to Chelsea area beaches for their holidays and many liked the area so much that, like the Mortons, they moved here permanently. In the 1890s Alfred’s sister, Mrs William Ashmore, built a weekend house at the foot of what is now Foy Avenue in Chelsea. The Morton family, including Alfred, visited the area often, camping on the foreshore during the 1890s. In 1911 Alfred moved his family permanently to a house on the corner of Morton Grove and Main Road Chelsea (now known as the Nepean Highway) on property that extended from the main road to the beach. This house was destroyed in the fire of 22 December 1913 which raged amongst the ti-tree on the foreshore between Aspendale and Chelsea. Many buildings were destroyed in this fire. The Argus newspaper reported on Wednesday 24 December that 94 houses were burnt with glowing embers blown a mile and half inland. According to the Argus but for the wide break provided by the Point Nepean Road (now the Nepean Highway) and the railway line, the scrub on the other side might have caught. The Morton children, Elsa and Ivan, attended Chelsea State School (now Chelsea Primary School) and Mrs Morton was active in the establishment of St Chad’s Church of England in Chelsea. At the age of 80 in 1945 Mr Morton was concerned about reports that English children had lost their toys due to the war and so he made (as part of a wider effort in Australia) 100 toy engines that were sent to England. He died in 1946 in Chelsea.Sepia photo of Mr Alfred Morton and his friend, Mr Doug Campbell at his holiday house, in what was to become Morton Grove, Chelsea. morton, chelsea, carrum, morton grove, holiday house -
Chelsea & District Historical Society Inc
Photograph - Chelsea State School, Front view of the school, 1960
Chelsea State School was built on Argyle Avenue and officially opened on 27 January 1915.Black and white photo of the front of Chelsea State School. Two cars parked on street in front of school.chelsea, education, chelsea primary school, school, chelsea state school, school playground, garden, opening -
Chelsea & District Historical Society Inc
Photograph - Chelsea State School, Mr Rogers, Head Teacher, 1917
Chelsea State School was built on Argyle Avenue and officially opened on 27 January 1915.Black and white photo of Chelsea State School playground. Mr Rogers, the Head Teacher is standing next to a picket fence.chelsea, education, chelsea primary school, school, chelsea state school, mr rogers, school playground