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Whitehorse Historical Society Inc.
Document, Street Name Project, 2000 onwards
Nunawading & District Historical Society Inc collected the origins of street names to be an on-going projectNunawading & District Historical Society Inc collected the origins of street names to be an on-going projectNunawading & District Historical Society Inc collected the origins of street names to be an on-going projectnunawading district historical society inc, burwood east, street names, vermont south, blackburn, vermont, blackburn north, blackburn south, nunawading, mitcham, forest hill -
Ringwood and District Historical Society
Book, Sandy Ross, What's Behind the Name?, 2005
The history of 50 street names of Lilydale by Sandy Ross, Lilydale & District Historical Society Inc.Front page: Pickers at The Towers Vineyard with the earthworks for the new railway line to Warburton in the background. c1900. -
Coal Creek Community Park & Museum
Music Booklet, Tell Me Tonight and Her Name is Mary
White paper music booklet printed in black. Tell Me Tonight and Her Name is Mary10.8.33 J. Devlin Korumburra No 118 -
Linton Mechanics Institute and Free Library Collection
Book - Novel, Morgan, Charles, My name is Legion, 1925
340 p. : plain dark green cover, title and author's name embossed in gold on spinefictioncharles morgan, fiction -
Melbourne Tram Museum
Functional object - Material sample, Lod Promotions, PTV logo with name stitched onto a black cloth, 2014?
Material sample of the PTV logo with name stitched onto a black cloth by Lod Promotions of Braesidetrams, tramways, ptv, logos, uniforms, marketing -
Linton Mechanics Institute and Free Library Collection
Book - Novel, Wynne, Pamela (pen-name of Winifred Mary Scott), The Last Days of Summer by Pamela Wynne, 1934 reprint (first published 1931)
Romance novel.Hardcover book, 285 pages. Book has a red cover. Original dust jacket removed, title and author's name handwritten on spine.fictionRomance novel.pamela wynne, winifred mary scott, romance, fiction -
Whitehorse Historical Society Inc.
Article, Name for East East Burwood, 1969
A new locality name for the far east East Burwood sector of Nunawading will be considered by Council's Works Committee.A new locality name for the far east East Burwood sector of Nunawading will be considered by Council's Works Committee.A new locality name for the far east East Burwood sector of Nunawading will be considered by Council's Works Committee.city of nunawading works committee, suburbs, burwood east -
Melbourne Tram Museum
Functional object - Paperweight, Metropolitan Transit name, late 1980's
Acrylic or Perspex paperweight, clear, framing the green Metropolitan Transit name with emblem which is double sided.trams, tramways, paperweights, the met, metropolitan transit -
Linton Mechanics Institute and Free Library Collection
Book - Novel, Barre, Jean (pen name of Eda Kathleen Bridgman, also wrote as Lindsay Lee), Lover's pride, [1941]
282 p. : dark green/black cover, section of original dust jacket pasted to front. Title and author's name hand printed on spine.fictionfiction, jean barre, eda kathleen bridgman -
Warrnambool and District Historical Society Inc.
Label, Name labels Cramond & Dickson
John Glass Cramond 1829 and James Dickson 1831-1910 were founders of a large drapery store. Both were Scots and both came separately to Australia in 1852. Cramond initially came for gold but soon opened a store in St Kilda with a post Office attached and he was the first post master there. Dickson was a farmer’s son but became a draper and while he was unsuccessful on the Bendigo diggings and then returned to Melbourne where he met Cramond and soon after they opened a store on Lonsdale Street. They opened their business in Warrnambool in 1855 as a general store with groceries, drapery and ironmongery. Both partners were involved with the community and James Dickson was an original director of the Warrnambool Woollen Mill 1909 and the Warrnambool Cheese and butter factory. He also served on the committee of management of Warrnambool Base Hospital. These labels would have been used to sew to garments sold by Cramond & Dickson. A common item for many decades with which many people would identify.Eleven cloth name tag labels. White cotton fabric. Some are embroidered in navy blue and others in red.Those embroidered in red state Cramond & Dickson Warrnambool and the ones embroidered in navy blue state Cramond & Dickson Warrnambool & London.cramond & dickson, john glass cramond, warrnambool, james dickson -
Victorian Aboriginal Corporation for Languages
Book, Name list: residents on Warangesda Mission : 1887-1896, 1995
Comprehensive list of names from the Warangesda Mission from 1887-1896. Includes index references to each person.warangesda mission, name lists -
Federation University Historical Collection
Document - Report, Proposed Name for the "Tertiary Division" of the Ballarat School of Mines, 02/1968
In 1973 the tertiary division of the Ballarat School of Mines was the Ballarat Institute of Advanced Education, which was situated on a new campus at Mt Helen which opened in 1970. The first president of the Ballarat School of Mines was Redmond Barry.Seven foolscap pages of Principals comments on the proposed naming of the Ballarat School of Mines Tertiary Division to the Ballarat Institute of Advanced Education. ballarat institute of advanced education, university establishment, ballarat school of mines, mount helen campus, redmond barry, e.j. barker -
Ringwood and District Historical Society
Enrolment cards, Approximately 110 cards for Red Cross Emergency Service Ringwood Branch Company Enrolment used by local women. Yellow cards; name on front; details of training on back. 1939, 1939
Red Cross system cards of many well known local women enrolling in Red Cross in 1939 with details of their training.Approximately 110 enrolment cards for Red Cross Emergency Service used by local women. Yellow cards; name on front; details of training on back. -
Whitehorse Historical Society Inc.
Newspaper - Article, Don't alter track name, 1/05/1996
Article from Whitehorse Gazette; letter to the editor from Ted Jane making a plea to the City of Whitehorse not to change the name of the Bill Sewart Athletic Track.sewart, bill, local government, bill sewart athletic track -
Linton Mechanics Institute and Free Library Collection
Book - Novel, [s.n.], Dress rehearsal, [n.d.]
Romance fiction288 p. ; red cover, original dust-jacket removed, image from it has been pasted to front cover.Title and author's name handwritten on spine. Title page missing, limited information for catalogue record.fictionRomance fictionfiction -
Ringwood and District Historical Society
Work on paper, Nature Study Exercise Grade v111 name Wilson on the back c. 1930s (Part of the Wieland collection)
Ruby Wilson was related to the Wieland family through the marriage of her sister Amy Ellen Thelma to Stanley Wieland.Blue covered book with black stenciled picture of gum tree , koala , kangaroo and kookaburras.All pages filled with hand writing and drawn pictures In ink on back the name Wilson. -
University of Melbourne, Burnley Campus Archives
Newspaper - Newspaper Cutting, Local Government FOCUS, College Name Change Shows the Future, 1989
Article in "Local Government FOCUS" September 1989. Article on the change of name of Burnley College's Amenity Horticulture Section to The Environmental Horticulture Section. Dr. James Hitchmough (staff) mentioned.local government focus, dr. james hitchmough, amenity horticulture, environmental horticulture -
Geelong RSL Sub Branch
Field Dress Khaki Drill, There is no makers name, Trousers 1942. Jacket 1943
The Jacket and Trousers were issued to a member of the AIF in 1942/1943. The Jacket has no name in it. The Trousers were issued to a person named SERPELL.Field Dress Shirt and Trousers, Drill material, khaki in Colour. Brown buttons on the Jacket, metal buttons on the trousers.Inside the Jacket on a white tag V241 1943 Size Made in Australia. On the trousers Regimental No, Name SERPELL, Q106 Made in Australia Size, 1942.aif, serpell, ww2, 1942 1943 -
Linton Mechanics Institute and Free Library Collection
Book - Novel, Sandys, Oliver (pen-name of Marguerite Florence Laura Jarvis), Singing uphill, [n.d.] [194_?]
220 p.; red cover, original dust jacket has been removed, a section of it has been pasted to the front cover. This depicts a man and a woman near a farm fence, with a lamb in the woman's arms. Title and author's name handwritten on spine.fictionfiction, oliver sandys -
Ringwood and District Historical Society
Voters Roll, Winterbottom, E: Returning Officer, Borough of Ringwood, Copy of first Borough of Ringwood Voters' Roll for 1924, and a copy of Voters' Roll for the South-Western Riding of the Shire of Lillydale for 1924. Entries include surname, christian name, address, trade or occupation of owner or occupier, description and situation of property, valuation, and number of votes
Donated with the compliments of Ringwood and Croydon Mail 4-Dec-1924Small booklet, brown cover containing names, addresses, trades, description, situation, value of properties and number of votes. 39pp.; First Voters Roll for Ringwood (written on cover) +Additional Keywords: Winterbottom, EFirst Voters Roll for Ringwood (written on cover) -
Tatura Irrigation & Wartime Camps Museum
Book, Register of One-Name Studies 1987, Mar-87
A register of Societies, family associations and individuals interested in all references to a specific surname and its variantsSoft cover, green. Fifth Edition. "Guild of One-name studies, 1979" printed in shield in lower right-hand corner front cover. Loose-leaf supplement (pink) enclosed. 52 pagesgeneology, family name studies -
Whitehorse Historical Society Inc.
Article, Who gave Blackburn its name, 19/11/1969 12:00:00 AM
Mr Leigh Blackburn, in an address to the Nunawading Historical Society presented the different theories concerning the naming of Blackburn.Mr Leigh Blackburn, in an address to the Nunawading Historical Society presented the different theories concerning the naming of Blackburn. His great Grandfather James Blackburn I or great great grandfather James Blackburn II?Mr Leigh Blackburn, in an address to the Nunawading Historical Society presented the different theories concerning the naming of Blackburn. blackburn, leigh, blackburn, george, blackburn, james, blackburn, james -
Marysville & District Historical Society
Book, John Janetzki et al, In Jesus' Name-A Book of Prayer, 1978
A book for personal prayer and devotion.Cover is red with a gold cross on the front cover. Title is in gold lettering on spine.non-fictionA book for personal prayer and devotion.prayer, lutheran church, devotions -
The Beechworth Burke Museum
Ceremonial object - Ushabti of Taweret-Khaiti, Circa 1292 BC
Ushabti are tiny anthropoid (human-shaped) figures placed in the tombs of wealthy Egyptians. They were intended to do the work of the deceased in the afterlife. This purpose is implied through their name, which may have derived from the Egyptian word “to answer”. The Burke Museum in Beechworth is home to a particular ancient Egyptian Ushabti figure. This artefact was donated to the Museum in 1875. No details about how it left Egypt, arrived in Australia, and where it was located before this donation are known. The Nineteenth Century, when this artefact was donated, was a period when many museums acquired items of ancient Egyptian heritage. Many of these items were procured in less than desirable circumstances, having often been looted from ancient tombs and sold to tourists without documentation as to their original location and/or accompanying grave goods. These artefacts were also divested through partage (the trading of artefacts for funds); however, the latter is unlikely to have been the case for this artefact. Since the Ushabti was donated by an unknown donor, it is likely to have been in a private collection rather than an institution. Ushabti can be dated using iconographic analysis which is non-invasive and provides a comprehensive study of the artefact. The later period of the 18th Dynasty marked the beginning of an increase in both the inclusion of Ushabti as essential funerary items and the creation of Ushabti with tools. From this period, they are no longer depicted without tools. Depictions of tools including gardening hoes are frequently depicted grasped in the Ushabti’s hands whilst items like the seed-bag are depicted hanging on the back rather than in an alternative position. This Ushabti figure grasps a gardening hoe and a mattock and a small seed bag surrounded by a yoke bearing water jars are depicted on the upper back of the Ushabti. These features are essential in helping narrow this dating to the late 18th and before the early 20th Dynasty. The position of this seed bag also provides dating information. In the early 18th Dynasty this bag was consistently drawn on the front of the figurine; however, by the reign of Seti I, this feature moved to the back. Thus, since the seed bag is located on the back of this Ushabti, it cannot date to the early 18th Dynasty. By the 19th Dynasty, Ushabti’s were increasingly made from either faience or terracotta. The availability of these materials in Egypt resulted in the increase of Ushabti production with tombs containing many more figurines than previously seen. The Ushabti held by the Burke collections is made from terracotta. Terracotta was rarely used for Ushabti before and during the early 18th Dynasty with only the odd appearance until the late 18th Dynasty and becoming common through that period until the late Third Intermediate Period. Whilst the face has been damaged, there is no evidence for the Ushabti having been provided with an Osirian false beard. This omission rules out a dating of later than the 25th Dynasty when beards became prominent. The inscriptions also date the Ushabti to the New Kingdom. This is because of the use of sḥḏ (“to illuminate”) with Wsjr (“Osiris”) which only occurs in these periods. Therefore, considering all these elements, the Ushabti can be confidently be dated to between the late 18th to early 19th dynasty.Artefacts like this Ushabti are no longer exclusively representative of their origins in burial assemblages and significance in the mythology of the Egyptian afterlife but are also significant for the accumulated histories they have gained through travel. The movement of this artefact from Egypt to Australia allows insight into the collecting habits of the 19th century, and in particular, the reception of ancient Egyptian artefacts in small rural museums. The procurement of Egyptian artefacts was a social trend around the late 1800s to early 1900s. Egyptian artefacts were considered curiosities and recognised for their ability to attract public attention to museums. They were also utilised in Australian museums, like the Burke Museum, to connect the collection to one of the oldest civilisations known to man and since Australia was considered a “young” country by European settlers, this was vital and derived from an interest in Darwin’s “Origin of the Species” 1859. Furthermore, there was a culture of collecting in the 1800s amongst the affluent in English society which led to the appearance of many Egyptian artefacts in private collections. The acquisition of this Ushabti figure is not certain, but it was likely donated from a private collection rather than an institution. This particular artefact is significant as an example of a high-quality Ushabti representative of those produced during the late 18th or early 19th century. It provides insight into the individualism of an Ushabti and the mythology of ancient Egypt. It also provides an example of the types of items required in the tomb assemblages of this period and reinforces the importance of ensuring the successful afterlife of the deceased through art. This Ushabti belonged to a woman named Taweret-Khaiti, Chantress of Amun, in the late 18th Dynasty or early 19th Dynasty (c.1292 BC) of the Egyptian New Kingdom. It likely comes from an undetermined tomb in the locality of Thebes. This figure is made from Nile silt clay (a polyester terracotta; clay sourced from the banks of the Nile River) which was a popular material for Ushabti construction in the early 19th Dynasty. It is in a fair state of preservation (with the exception of a break through the centre) and originally made to a high quality. The face has been damaged but the eyes and eyebrows are clearly marked with black ink and the sclera painted white. The Ushabti is painted a light brown/yellow colour and features a vertical line of inscription down the lower front. The Ushabti wears a large wig and and a schematic collar. The arms are painted light brown and depicted crossed with bracelets around the wrists. It grasps a hoe and mattock. A yellow seed-basket is depicted on the Ushabti’s back. These features represent the likelihood that this particular Ushabti was intended to complete farm work for the deceased in the next life. There would have been additional Ushabti of similar design within the tomb who worked under the supervision of a foreman Ushabti. The foreman Ushabti would be depicted dressed in the clothing of the living. The inscriptions are painted freehand in black ink and written in a vertical column from the base of the collar to the foot pedestal on the front of the Ushabti. The owner of the Ushabti could elect to have the figures inscribed with their name, the Ushabti spell and any other details they deemed necessary. In the case of this example, the Ushabti is inscribed with the owner’s details and is an abbreviated version of the standard Ushabti formula. This formula ensured that the Ushabti would complete the desired task in the afterlife when called upon by the deceased. Ushabti which were not inscribed would represent their intended purpose through design; however, this Ushabti, like most made in the late 18th Dynasty, conveys its purpose both through both design and inscription. The inscription is as follows: sHD wsir nbt pr Smayt imn tA-wr(t)-xai(ti) mAa xrw which translates to: "The illuminated one, the Osiris (the deceased), the mistress of the household, Chantress of Amun, Taweret-Khaiti, true of voice (justified)"ancient egypt -
Greensborough Historical Society
Article - Article, Newsletter, What's In A Suburb Name? - Kingsbury, 09/2021
Article from Brooksy's Briefing September 2021 about the origin of the name of Kingsbury suburb. Kingsbury is named after Bruce Kingsbury, Victoria Cross recipient in World War II.Article from Brooksy's briefing September 2021world war ii, kingsbury, bruce kingsbury, victoria cross -
Greensborough Historical Society
Photograph - Digital image, Marilyn Smith, Scotland House: House name - Balquhidder, 03/12/2016
Formerly the home of Greensborough pioneer, John Scotland, this renovated home retains many original architectural elements. It was sold in December 2016. The house name is Balquhidder, named after a small town in Scotland which was the home of Rob Roy MacGregor.Digital copy of colour photographjohn scotland, scotland avenue greensborough, balquhidder -
Stawell Historical Society Inc
Photograph, St Patricks Promary School Holy Name Group 1938
St. Patricks School Holy Name Group (Males) 1938stawell education -
Ballarat Tramway Museum
Administrative record - Memorandum, State Electricity Commission of Victoria (SECV), "Name of Branch", 3/05/1966 12:00:00 AM
Yields information about the change of the name of the Ballarat and other SEC branches and how it was done., Yields information about the change of the name of the Ballarat and other SEC branches and how it was done.Duplicated notice on quarto paper about the change of name of the Ballarat Branch to the Mid-Western Branch, effective 1/7/1966. Notice signed by the Branch Manager 3/5/1966. Also noted the change of Geelong to Barwon and Mildura to Mallee branch.trams, tramways, workshops, ballarat, crews, depot -
Vision Australia
Audio - Sound recording, 2005 Graeme Innes letter to members regarding postal ballot on name change, 27/07/2005
In July 2005 Chairman Graeme Innes wrote to members to let them know that the vote on a special resolution to change the name to Vision Australia was successful, with 89% of members approving the change. Now the work of raising awareness of the name had begun and members were invited to become involved with this.1 CD with 1 sound filecorporation records, tony porter, vision australia -
Stawell Historical Society Inc
Photograph, Corry – Fay & Male. Female 2 photos (waiting on name clarification 2016)
Corry – Fay & Male. Female 2 photos (waiting on name clarification 2016)stawell