Showing 47 items
matching daylesford botanic gardens
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Ballarat Heritage Services
Photograph - Digital photographs, L.J. Gervasoni, Wombat Hill Botanic Gardens 150 Anniversary Event Daylesford, 2013
... Wombat Hill Botanic Gardens 150 Anniversary Event...Wombat Hill Botanic Gardens, Daylesford, Central Highlands... Hill Botanic Gardens 150 Anniversary Event Daylesford ...Digital imagesvictoria, 150, anniversary, botanic, gardens, wombat hill, botanic gardens, heritage, celebration, garden party, daylesford, brass band, daylesford brass band -
Ballarat Heritage Services
Digital photographs, Wombat Hill Botanic Gardens 150 anniversary event Daylesford crowd, 2013
... Wombat Hill Botanic Gardens 150 anniversary event...Wombat Hill Botanic Gardens, Daylesford, Central Highlands... daylesford people crowd community Womabt Hill Botanic Gardens Digital ...Digital images of Wombat Hill Botanic Gardens taken on their 150th anniversary.victoria, 150, anniversary, botanic, gardens, wombat hill, botanic gardens, heritage, celebration, garden party, daylesford, people, crowd, community, womabt hill botanic gardens -
Ballarat Heritage Services
Digital photographs, L.J. Gervasoni, Wombat Hill Botanic Gardens 150 anniversary event Daylesford crowd, 2013
... Wombat Hill Botanic Gardens 150 anniversary event...Wombat Hill Botanic Gardens, Daylesford, Central Highlands... Office goldfields victoria 150 anniversary botanic gardens wombat ...Digital imagesvictoria, 150, anniversary, botanic, gardens, wombat hill, botanic gardens, heritage, celebration, garden party, daylesford, people, crowd, community, governor, governor of victoria, alex chernov, vice regal -
Ballarat Heritage Services
Photograph - Colour, Clare Gervasoni, Wombat Botanical Gardens, Daylesford, 2019, 23/04/2019
... Office goldfields wombat botanical gardens daylesford botanical ...An avenue of trees in the Wombat Gardens. wombat botanical gardens, daylesford botanical gardens, daylesford, trees -
Ballarat Heritage Services
Photograph - Colour, Clare Gervasoni, Wombat Botanical Gardens, Daylesford, 2019, 23/04/2019
... Office goldfields wombat botanical gardens daylesford botanical ...Water stressed Rhododendrons in the Wombat Gardens. wombat botanical gardens, daylesford botanical gardens, daylesford, trees -
Ballarat Heritage Services
Photograph - Colour, Clare Gervasoni, Wombat Botanical Gardens, Daylesford, 2019, 23/04/2019
... Office goldfields wombat botanical gardens daylesford botanical ...Trees in the Wombat Gardens. wombat botanical gardens, daylesford botanical gardens, daylesford, trees -
Ballarat Heritage Services
Photograph - Colour, Clare Gervasoni, Wombat Botanical Gardens, Daylesford, 2019, 23/04/2019
... Office goldfields wombat botanical gardens daylesford botanical ...Trees in the Wombat Gardens. wombat botanical gardens, daylesford botanical gardens, daylesford, trees -
Ballarat Heritage Services
Photograph - Colour, Clare Gervasoni, Wombat Botanical Gardens, Daylesford, 2019, 23/04/2019
... Office goldfields wombat botanical gardens daylesford botanical ...Trees in the Wombat Gardens. wombat botanical gardens, daylesford botanical gardens, daylesford, trees -
Ballarat Heritage Services
Photograph - Colour, Clare Gervasoni, Wombat Botanical Gardens, Daylesford, 2019, 23/04/2019
... Office goldfields wombat botanical gardens daylesford botanical ...Trees in the Wombat Gardens. wombat botanical gardens, daylesford botanical gardens, daylesford, trees -
Ballarat Heritage Services
Photograph - Colour, Clare Gervasoni, Wombat Botanical Gardens, Daylesford, 2019, 23/04/2019
... Office goldfields wombat botanical gardens daylesford botanical ...Trees in the Wombat Gardens. wombat botanical gardens, daylesford botanical gardens, daylesford, trees -
Ballarat Heritage Services
Photograph - Colour, Clare Gervasoni, Wombat Botanical Gardens, Daylesford, 2019, 23/04/2019
... Office goldfields wombat botanical gardens daylesford botanical ...Trees in the Wombat Gardens. wombat botanical gardens, daylesford botanical gardens, daylesford, trees -
Ballarat Heritage Services
Photograph - Colour, Clare Gervasoni, Begonia Conservatory in the Wombat Botanical Gardens, Daylesford, 2019, 23/04/2019
... Headland's work. wombat botanical gardens daylesford botanical ...Daylesford's begonia collection was stared by French born curator W. Gascoigne in 1885. He was an experienced horticulturalist. The plants were grown again in the 1930s in a new glasshouse. Curator Bill Greville obtained 45 plants from the Ballarat City Council, 30 from Queens Park in Essendon, and soon haad 250 tubers including a (lost) one named 'Daylesford'. When Alf Headland was appointed part-time caretaker in 1956, he found tw tubers in the wood shed and became expert in their cultivation. He continuted well into his retirement when Greg Rae too over. In 1988 the conservotory was named to honur Alf Headland's work.Hot house in the Wombat Gardens with a Begonia display.wombat botanical gardens, daylesford botanical gardens, daylesford, trees, begonia, begonia house, begonia conservatory -
Ballarat Tramway Museum
Photograph - Photo card Ballarat album sheet 1920c
Part of an album of photo cards - cigarette card size - that depicted various country towns c1920. Has photos of the Fernery, Botanic Gardens, Sturt St, Eureka Stockade, and the garden gates with a weighing machine. Possibly published by the Rose Stereograph Co.Demonstrates photo albums and collector type photo cards.Grey card photo album cardboard sheet with teal coloured right hand edge titled "Ballarat" containing 8 small printed photos and "Daylesford" on the other side, though no photos were with the sheet when obtained. See Reg Items 4083 for the bottom left hand corner - from a Rose Stereograph Co. postcard. Each photo has a title on the sheet, though some of them are not correctly located.ballarat, tramways, trams, esco, sturt st, gardens, eureka stockade -
Port Fairy Historical Society Museum and Archives
Photograph
Showing the flood waters of 1946 around the Band Rotunda in the botanical gardens. Funding for the construction of the Rotunda was bequeathed in the Will of local resident Mrs Annie Williams, who was born in Daylesford in 1872 and died in Kew in 1930. Annie’s Will stipulated that the remaining value of her Estate be spent on erecting a Bandstand in the Port Fairy Botanical Gardens dedicated to the memory of her brother Hugh, a stretcher bearer in WW1 and who died in 1921 after being discharged with health issues, her husband Henry, and herself naturally. There is a plaque dedicated to Annie on the Bandstand She requested that the Bandstand be a replica of the one at Daylesford but by 1933 the value of her Estate had diminished to £76.4/8 which was insufficient to cover a similar design and the Borough Councillors felt it would be too extravagant for the Port Fairy Botanical Gardens. Local builder J.J.McLaren’s tender of £71.15/- was accepted and the octagonal concrete pillared construction was completed with the use of sustenance labour the following year. The Bandstand was opened in December, 1934 with a performance by the Port Fairy Band and local residents enjoying the entertainment and a picnic. In 1934 it was reported that there was some fuss in Council because of the whereabouts of the sum of approximately £3/- , being the amount left over from the build. After some months of debate, in which the Councillors suggested that the Engineer had used the money inappropriately, and to which he responded that the build had cost more than the quote, the matter seems to have ended there An image of the flood waters in the botanical gardens in 1946Black and white photograph of Flood water around rotunda in the gardensflood, river, botanical gardens, port fairy, moyne river, rotunda, bandstand -
Port Fairy Historical Society Museum and Archives
Postcard, The Park Port Fairy
Funding for the construction of the Rotunda was bequeathed in the Will of local resident Mrs Annie Williams, who was born in Daylesford in 1872 and died in Kew in 1930. Annie’s Will stipulated that the remaining value of her Estate be spent on erecting a Bandstand in the Port Fairy Botanical Gardens dedicated to the memory of her brother Hugh, a stretcher bearer in WW1 and who died in 1921 after being discharged with health issues, her husband Henry, and herself naturally. There is a plaque dedicated to Annie on the Bandstand She requested that the Bandstand be a replica of the one at Daylesford but by 1933 the value of her Estate had diminished to £76.4/8 which was insufficient to cover a similar design and the Borough Councillors felt it would be too extravagant for the Port Fairy Botanical Gardens. Local builder J.J.McLaren’s tender of £71.15/- was accepted and the octagonal concrete pillared construction was completed with the use of sustenance labour the following year. The Bandstand was opened in December, 1934 with a performance by the Port Fairy Band and local residents enjoying the entertainment and a picnic. In 1934 it was reported that there was some fuss in Council because of the whereabouts of the sum of approximately £3/- , being the amount left over from the build. After some months of debate, in which the Councillors suggested that the Engineer had used the money inappropriately, and to which he responded that the build had cost more than the quote, the matter seems to have ended there Coloured photograph (hand tinted) of the stand of cypress trees leading to the rotundaThe Park, Port Fairy - No. 3botanical, garden, cypress, tree, rotunda -
Port Fairy Historical Society Museum and Archives
Postcard, "The Park", Port Fairy
Funding for the construction of the Rotunda was bequeathed in the Will of local resident Mrs Annie Williams, who was born in Daylesford in 1872 and died in Kew in 1930. Annie’s Will stipulated that the remaining value of her Estate be spent on erecting a Bandstand in the Port Fairy Botanical Gardens dedicated to the memory of her brother Hugh, a stretcher bearer in WW1 and who died in 1921 after being discharged with health issues, her husband Henry, and herself naturally. There is a plaque dedicated to Annie on the Bandstand She requested that the Bandstand be a replica of the one at Daylesford but by 1933 the value of her Estate had diminished to £76.4/8 which was insufficient to cover a similar design and the Borough Councillors felt it would be too extravagant for the Port Fairy Botanical Gardens. Local builder J.J.McLaren’s tender of £71.15/- was accepted and the octagonal concrete pillared construction was completed with the use of sustenance labour the following year. The Bandstand was opened in December, 1934 with a performance by the Port Fairy Band and local residents enjoying the entertainment and a picnic. In 1934 it was reported that there was some fuss in Council because of the whereabouts of the sum of approximately £3/- , being the amount left over from the build. After some months of debate, in which the Councillors suggested that the Engineer had used the money inappropriately, and to which he responded that the build had cost more than the quote, the matter seems to have ended there Black and white photograph of the stand of cypress trees with the rotunda in the backgroundThe Park Port Fairy - No 3botanical, garden, trees, rotunda, path -
Port Fairy Historical Society Museum and Archives
Photograph
Funding for the construction of the Rotunda was bequeathed in the Will of local resident Mrs Annie Williams, who was born in Daylesford in 1872 and died in Kew in 1930. Annie’s Will stipulated that the remaining value of her Estate be spent on erecting a Bandstand in the Port Fairy Botanical Gardens dedicated to the memory of her brother Hugh, a stretcher bearer in WW1 and who died in 1921 after being discharged with health issues, her husband Henry, and herself naturally. There is a plaque dedicated to Annie on the Bandstand She requested that the Bandstand be a replica of the one at Daylesford but by 1933 the value of her Estate had diminished to £76.4/8 which was insufficient to cover a similar design and the Borough Councillors felt it would be too extravagant for the Port Fairy Botanical Gardens. Local builder J.J.McLaren’s tender of £71.15/- was accepted and the octagonal concrete pillared construction was completed with the use of sustenance labour the following year. The Bandstand was opened in December, 1934 with a performance by the Port Fairy Band and local residents enjoying the entertainment and a picnic. In 1934 it was reported that there was some fuss in Council because of the whereabouts of the sum of approximately £3/- , being the amount left over from the build. After some months of debate, in which the Councillors suggested that the Engineer had used the money inappropriately, and to which he responded that the build had cost more than the quote, the matter seems to have ended there Black and white photograph of gardens with dividing paths and palm treebotanical, rotunda, gardens, trees, bandstand