Showing 36 items
matching john sweeney
-
Eltham District Historical Society Inc
Photograph - Photograoh, The Allan Studio, Wedding of Mary Sweeney and Michael Carrucan at St John's, Heidelberg, 1909
Wedding of Mary Sweeney and Michael Carrucan at St John's, Heidelberg, 1909 Celebrant: Fr. Parker. L to R: Catherine Sweeney, Michael O'Heare, Michael Carrucan, Mary Carrucan (nee Sweeney), Thomas Sweeney, Ellen Sweeney. Image was also published on p126 of the book, St. John's on the hill: the history of the Heidelberg Parish/ by Eileen Vaughan. A photstat copy of the page was sent to Harry Gilham by Mary Nelson of North Caulfield (14 Oct 2004) along with an accompanying note which indicated the original photo would have been supplied for use in the book by the late Betty Erickson (nee Carrucan), Jack Carrucan's sister. Thomas Sweeney in the wedding party was Mary Nelson's uncle by marriage. He married Eveleen Nelson.Photo mounted on embossed cardThe Allan Studio, 318 Smith St., Collingwood. Inscribed in pencil on reverse by Harry Gilham the names of the people and publication detailscatherine sweeney, ellen sweeney, mary carrucan (nee sweeney), michael carrucan, michael o'heare, thomas sweeney -
Eltham District Historical Society Inc
Book, Diamond Valley sketchbook / text by Brian McKinlay ; drawings by Graham Hawley, 1973
Contents include short articles and illustrations of historic properties within the municipalities of Banyule, Nillumbik and Whittlesea. Including The Griffin House, Rosehill, Lower Plenty, The Austin Hospital, Heidelberg, St John's Church, Heidelberg, Banyule, Heidelberg, Trestle Bridge, Eltham, Diamond Valley railway, The Shillinglaw Cottage, Eltham, Montsalvat, Old England Hotel, Heidelberg, Eltham Primary School, Mud brick homes, Eltham, Sweeney's Cottage, Eltham, Pound Pend Tunnel, The Gold Memorial, Potter's Cottage, Memorial Tower, Charterisville, Weller's Pub, The Barrel, Eltham, Hassall's Gallery, The Old Bridge, Greensborough, Diamond Valley Shire Offices, Greensborough, St Katherine's Chapel, Yan Yean Reservoir, Mernda Hotel, Mernda Mechanics Institute, Old Barn, Mernda, Parade College, La Trobe University.Hardback with jacket ; 63 p. : ill., maps ; 22cm. diamond valley shire, shire of nillumbik, city of whittlesea, city of banyule, shillinglaw cottage, weller's hotel -
Federation University Historical Collection
Photograph - Photograph - Colour, Artafact, Graduate Diploma in Occupational Hazard Management - Intake 23, 1999, 1999
Victorian Institute of Occupational Safety and Health (VIOSH) Australia is the Asia-Pacific centre for teaching and research in occupational health and safety (OHS) and is known as one of Australia's leaders in the field. VIOSH has a global reputation for its innovative approach within the field of OHS management. Federation University VIOSH Australia students are safety managers, senior advisors and experienced OHS professionals. They come from all over Australia and industry. Students are taught active research and enquiry; rather than textbook learning and a one-size fits all approach. VIOSH accepts people into the Graduate Diploma of Occupational Hazard Management who have no undergraduate degree – on the basis of extensive work experience and knowledge.Timber framed colour photograph of thirty seven people with typed name plate at the bottom.Typed name plateviosh, viosh australia, graduate diploma in ocupational hazard management, steven bishop, jeanette bonaccorso, martin bruni, amanda coulson, jeffrey davis, garry davis, pauline disseldorp, john easton, tony evans, karine evesque, justin haddock, jennifer hamilton, ross hay, michelle heine, angy henn, jayne howard, david jenkin, fran jolliffe, jan kaminski, kirsty ludbrook, sali maclai, brian martin, ian menzies, clinton morton, alan moulds, filanthy nalpantidis, julie paice, narelle paton, andrew skegg, christopher smith, lynne stewart, rory sweeney, ray tyers, alison van der arend, anthony waningu, stephen white, andrew wiseman -
Port Melbourne Historical & Preservation Society
Photograph - Port Melbourne Cricket Club, 1st XI, 1949
Photograph of Port Melbourne Cricket Club 1st eleven 1948-49, on brown cardboard background with names printed on cardboardsport - cricket, arthur rowan, r bishop, james peter crichton, w price, j johnson, f stevenson, a downer, r webb, r barrand, p may, s findlay, w oldman, merv mckenzie, tommy lahiff, j blundell, w sweeney, tony bogdanoff, a oxworth, g nankivell, s timms, john william (jack) woodruff, les halfpenny, ian lee, les hill, ted sykes -
Bendigo Historical Society Inc.
Photograph - JOHN WILLIAMS COLLECTION: GRAVEL HILL PRIMARY SCHOOL1988
Set of twenty three coloured photographs of Gravel Hill primary school grade 6 1988 taken at Bi-centennial dress up day - Whipstick camp - Ballarat excursion and Wallaby track production. People in the photos are: John Lidner (whipstick env. Teacher) - Joy Rawlini (Office manager) - Jan Orr (art teacher 1988) - Brian Girvan (school cleaner) -John Williams (grade 6 teacher) - Geoff Kerr (grade 3/4 teacher) Murray Sweeney (principal) - Lee Aitken - Sam Houghton - Amber Hargreves - Brooke Boyd - Belinda Eastman - Melanie Pellas - Ray Baker - Jason Murphy - Emma Symes ''Paddy'' - Ben Goonan - Rob - Richard - Damon - Dan - Lee Tuoheybendigo, education, gravel hill primary school -
Eltham District Historical Society Inc
Photograph - Digital Photograph, Alan King, Sweeney's Cottage, Sweeneys Lane, Eltham, 30 January 2008
Part of the original cottage named Culla Hill built by Thomas Sweeney (a former convict) remains as a small section of today’s house. Covered under Heritage Overlay, Nillumbik Planning Scheme National Estate National Trust of Australia (Victoria) Local Sifgnificance Published: Nillumbik Now and Then / Marguerite Marshall 2008; photographs Alan King with Marguerite Marshall.; p19 Thomas Sweeney, a former convict who became a respected citizen, once lived on a property at what is now the corner of Sweeneys Lane and Culla Hill, Eltham. As Sweeney was one of the district’s first settlers, the property is registered by the National Trust. Thomas Sweeney was born in 1802, son of impoverished tenant farmers in Tipperary County, Ireland. He became a ploughman, then at 21 he was sentenced to hang for setting on fire the house of Patrick Guyder at Gullshill. It is said the arson was due to a dispute over undelivered guns to a social justice guerilla group, the White Boys, of which Sweeney was a member. But the sentence was commuted to life transportation to Australia in 1823.1 Apparently in Sydney he became a servant to James Chandler at Botany. Soon James Chandler leased his farm and became a catechist on the Hawkesbury River, so Sweeney was reassigned to a former convict, John Brown, at Liverpool. Later Sweeney was assigned to George Brown of Lake Illawarra. In 1831, Sweeney was granted a ticket-of-leave and bought a boat to carry goods between Illawarra district and Sydney Town. He married his first wife who had come to Australia as a free woman. However she drowned after bearing him a daughter. In 1838, one month after he had received a conditional pardon, Sweeney married a blacksmith’s daughter, Margaret Meehan, newly arrived from Ireland. They then moved to Port Phillip and squatted on the south side of the Yarra River, about seven miles (11km) from Melbourne. Around 1842, Sweeney bought 110 acres (44.5ha) in the parish of Nillumbik for £110. He built a slab hut 12 x 10 feet (3.6m x 3m) and then his homestead, Culla Hill, a typical Tipperary style cottage, now known as Sweeney’s Cottage. It was here that many generations of Sweeneys lived for almost 100 years. Culla Hill became a social centre for the district and the Catholic community used it as a church. Sweeney was apparently on good terms with a tribe of Aborigines living on the river nearby, who helped him build his house.2 Sweeney proved himself a civic-minded leader. In 1844, he led a call for a bridge over the Plenty River. He was on the first school board and supplied the first grain for Eltham’s mill. Sweeney profited during the gold rush, not by gold digging, but by providing supplies for nearby fields and others as far away as Beechworth.3 Thomas Sweeney died in 1867 and was buried at the Eltham Cemetery, leaving two sons, five daughters, and 300 acres (121.4ha), as well as Culla Hill. Culla Hill – by then reduced to 75 acres (30ha) – was sold out of the family in 1939, then renamed Sweeneys. The present Sweeneys Lane, running diagonally through the original holding, was the track to the house. Part of the original cottage remains as a small section of today’s house. The dining-family room fronted by a veranda is original, and although there have been some changes, the cedar door and most of the small 12-paned wooden-framed windows are original. The walls are made of the original hand-made brick. After buying the property in 1952 Mr and Mrs Burston demolished a dilapidated slab hut, a three-roomed detached kitchen and cellar, as materials needed to restore them were very difficult to obtain so soon after the war.4 However the barn remains almost in its original condition. It is believed to have been built from stone quarried on the property. Now roofed with iron sheets it was probably originally thatched. The sandstone barn has a peaked roof supported by the original saplings and a doorway large enough to accommodate a fully loaded wagon.This collection of almost 130 photos about places and people within the Shire of Nillumbik, an urban and rural municipality in Melbourne's north, contributes to an understanding of the history of the Shire. Published in 2008 immediately prior to the Black Saturday bushfires of February 7, 2009, it documents sites that were impacted, and in some cases destroyed by the fires. It includes photographs taken especially for the publication, creating a unique time capsule representing the Shire in the early 21st century. It remains the most recent comprehenesive publication devoted to the Shire's history connecting local residents to the past. nillumbik now and then (marshall-king) collection, culla hill, eltham, sweeney's cottage, sweeneys lane, thomas sweeney