Showing 45145 items
matching the-herald
-
City of Moorabbin Historical Society (Operating the Box Cottage Museum)
Book, Herald Touring Club (Victoria), The Herald road guide, 1950s
... The Herald road guide ...Map of southeastern Australia, Adelaide to Brisbane, showing roads and distances, with chief detail about Victoria. Includes strip maps, itinerary guides, and index. Issued by the Herald Touring Club, with new district and city maps surveyed by the Club.1 atlas (224 p.), 1 folded map : ill., maps ; non-fictionMap of southeastern Australia, Adelaide to Brisbane, showing roads and distances, with chief detail about Victoria. Includes strip maps, itinerary guides, and index. Issued by the Herald Touring Club, with new district and city maps surveyed by the Club.automobile travel, road maps, herald touring club -
Lara RSL Sub Branch
Book, The Sun Herald 75 Years - A Tribute to the RAN
... The Sun Herald 75 Years - A Tribute to the RAN ...The Sun Herald 75 Years - A Tribute to the RAN -
Melbourne Tram Museum
Newspaper, The Herald, "Old Melbourne Passes", 28/06/1927 12:00:00 AM
... The Herald ...Newspaper clippings - cartoon - titled "Old Melbourne Passes" of the forthcoming closure of the Bridge Road tram route. featuring No. 1, with the destination of Exit. Dated 28-6-1927, published in The Herald.In ink along the bottom edge "in the Herald 28-6-27"trams, tramways, cable trams, closure, bridge road, richmond, last tram, tram 1 -
Bialik College
Newspaper articles, 'Ad-lo-yada A Success', Australian Jewish Herald, 1965; 'Model Seder', The Australian Jewish Herald, 9 April 1965, 1965
... ; 'Model Seder', The Australian Jewish Herald, 9 April 1965 ...Two newspaper articles: 'Ad-lo-yada a Success', The Australian Jewish Herald, 23 April 1965; 'Model Seder', The Australian Jewish Herald, 9 April 1965. -
Melbourne Tram Museum
Document - Notice, The Met, Public Transport Corporation, "Sun Herald Press Article", Sept. 1992
... The Met, Public Transport Corporation ...Notice - A4 sheet - titled "Sun Herald Press Article", dated 7/9/1992 from Russell Nathan, GM Tram and Bus concerning an article that appeared in the weekend Sun Herald commenting on the Secretary of the Tramway Union, relating to Conductor Shortages and support for Revenue Officers.trams, tramways, revenue clerks, conductors, pay in forms, unions -
Ringwood and District Historical Society
Envelope, Packet: The Herald Thursday 7 March 1867- article re Ringwood bushranger
... Packet: The Herald Thursday 7 March 1867- article re ..."The Herald" Thursday 7 March 1867 -
Lara RSL Sub Branch
Newspaper - Herad Sun Weekend dated 22/4/1998 - Vietnam 29 years After Te Fall of Saigon, Herald Sun Weekend dated 22/4/1998, 22/04/1995
This article was referring to a historical event from Vietnam War of a picture depicting the use of napalm and it's effects on people especially the young naked girl running from the Napalm. Alongside the picture of the young girl as a woman 20 years later. Herald Sun Paper supplement five double pagesHerald Sun Weekend, April 22nd, 1995, Vietnam 20 Years After The Fall of Saigon, The pain and despair of loss written on the front page with 2 photos one of young naked girl running from Napalm and her now as a grown woman. herald sun, weekend, vietnam, newspaper, 1995 -
Melbourne Tram Museum
Newspaper, The Herald, Decimal currency fares, 12/02/1966 12:00:00 AM
... The Herald ...Newspaper clippings - untitled - about the conversion to decimal currency from Monday 14/2/1966. Formal notice published Saturday 12/2/1966 published in the Herald. Gives details of acceptable coins and minimum amounts and change. Cutting has been glued to a sheet of cardboard. Signed W. Aird SecretaryIn ink along the top edge "Melb Herald"trams, tramways, fares, decimal conversion, notices and information, coins -
Melbourne Tram Museum
Newspaper, The Herald, "Thump! Tram runs wild", 22/10/1976
... The Herald ...A newspaper story from The Herald Friday 22/10/1976 about the derailment of tram 867 in Riversdale Road at the level crossing - see item 7221 for photographs. Quotes the driver John O'Connor and conductor Geoffrey Nicholson. Gives details of the event but not the cause.Yields information about the 1967 derailment of tram 867, and the people involved.Photocopy of a newspaper cutting from The Herald 22/10/1976 - 2 sheets stapled together.tramcars, trams, tram 857, riversdale road, level crossings, derailments, accidents -
Federation University Historical Collection
Photograph - Black and White, Richards & Co, Senior Athletic Team - Herald Shield Competition 1919, c1920
The photograph has the information written on the back. It states it is the Senior Athletic Team Champions Herald Shield 1919 Same image was reproduced in the SMB Students' Magazine 1921 with the caption "SMB Athletic Team 'Runners-up in Victorian Inter-Technical Schools' competition for the Herald Shield, 1920"A formal group photograph of 10 adolescent males in sporting attire. Footwear with spikes. A studio photograph Mounted on cream coloured ornate boardHandwritten in ink on back. "Senior Athletic Team Champions Herald Shield 1919. List of names and position of studentsathletic team, herald shield, champions, runners-up, harold maddison, a mccallum, harold wakeling, frank larkin, noel hoy, reginald wilson, 'buck' rankin -
Ballarat Heritage Services
Photograph - Image, Aeroplane Delivering the Herald Newspaper to Canberra, 1927, 1927
... Aeroplane Delivering the Herald Newspaper to Canberra, 1927 ...Aeroplane Delivering the Herald Newspaper to Canberra when Parliament was being opened,aeroplane, herald newspaper, airmail, canberra, parliament -
Ballarat Heritage Services
Newspaper - Newspaper article, The Sun Herald, Opera Alfresco brings arias to the musical masses, 02/02/2014
... Opera Alfresco brings arias to the musical masses...The Sun Herald ...Greatest hits: Jacqueline Dark performs at Opera in the Domain on Saturday Night (Sydney)1/2 page The Sun-Herald, 02 February 2014jacqueline dark, opera in the domain, opera -
Geelong RSL Sub Branch
News Papers, The Herald and The Argus, 15 August 1945
... The Herald ...The two News Papers are the Victory Editions of 15 August 1945 announcing Victory in the Pacific. 15 August each year is the celebrated date of VP day and commemorates the acceptance of unconditional surrender on 14 August 1945, it meant for Australians that WW2 was over. The Herald advises that the surrender was announced by the British Prime Minister Mr Attlee.These two News Papers are the originals as printed on 15 August 1945, that announced Victoria in the Pacific. The surrender was announced by the British Prime Minister Mr Attlee from London.Two News Papers, oblong, buff colour, paper.The Herald dated 15 August 1945, 16 Pages and the Argus dated 15 August 1945, 20 Pages.ww2, news papers, the herald, the augus -
University of Melbourne, Burnley Campus Archives
Photograph - Colour print, The Herald, The Harvest of Oats is Finished at the Burnley School of Horticulture and Primary Agriculture, 1935-1990
... The Harvest of Oats is Finished at the Burnley School of...The Herald ...Photograph made by A.P. Winzenried for, "Green Grows Our Gardern," p73Colour photograph. Copy of newspaper article, made by A.P. Winzenried. Caption reads, "The harvest of oats is finished at the Burnley School of Horticulture and Agriculture, but these cheery girl harvesters will not be able to stack the crop until the weather improves. There are about 20 girl students at Burnley this year learning chiefly horticulture, but they are taught to grow and reap crops for fodder as well." 9 female students standing in a line holding forks in a paddock.Handwritten underneath, "Barbara Betty Herald Dec 1st/45."a.p. winzenried, green grows our garden, harvest, oats, burnley school of horticulture and agriculture, female students at burnley, barbara betty, students working outside, forks -
Lara RSL Sub Branch
Newspaper - The Herald 15/8/1945 - Newspaper, Peace - World Hails Jap Surrender - The Herald Newspaper 15/8/1945
... Peace - World Hails Jap Surrender - The Herald Newspaper 15 ...World War 2 Ends with Jap SurrenderWorld War 2 Ends with Jap SurrenderThe Herald 15/8/1945 - Newspaper, Peace - World Hails Jap Surrender - 15/8/1945Articles covering Jap Surrender15/8/1945 the herald covers jap surrender -
Wangaratta RSL Sub Branch
Newspaper, The Sydney Morning Herald
... The Sydney Morning Herald ...Newspaper announcing Japan Capitulates and plans for surrender following cease fire in the Pacific .Newspaper consisting of 16 pages of large cream paper folded in half with black printing and imagesThe Sydney Morning Herald dated Thursday August 16 1945ww2, japanese surrender, pacific -
Melbourne Tram Museum
Newspaper, Public Transport Corporation (PTC), Advert - re The Melbourne Tram, 29/9/1992
... Advert - re The Melbourne Tram ...Advertisement in the Herald Sun promoting The Melbourne Tram using a Y1 class tram on a tourist service around Melbourne. See items 539, 627, 669, and 6905 for other related documents. The tram, Y1 611 was painted, publicity arranged but the service did not then operate as such. Published by the Public Transport Corporation.Yields information about the 1992 proposal for a tourist tram in Melbourne.Newspaper cutting from the Herald Sun 29/9/1992.tramways, trams, y1 class, public transport, the melbourne tram, tourist trams, ptc -
Mont De Lancey
Book, Geoff Gaylard, One Hundred & Fifty Years of News from The Herald, 1990
... One Hundred & Fifty Years of News from The Herald ...Folio sized hardcover book with a dark brown just jacket which has the title One hundred & Fifty Years of News from The Herald written in gold lettering at the top. Underneath is a picture of a folded Herald newspaper with a pair of gold rimmed glasses on a leather covered desk pad rimmed in gold. The Herald 150 1840 - 1990 is written as a symbol at the bottom. The spine has the title and publisher, Southbank, written in gold lettering. Inside are copies of the newspaper showing significant events as a mirror on part of our past. 401p.Annette Lord written in biro on the top right of the front endpaper.newspapers, documents, history, australia -
Eltham District Historical Society Inc
Newspaper - News Clipping, Herald, He died at Eltham. Herald, March 4, p3, 4 Mar 1965
John Lawrence Coleman (1934-1965) born January 10, was the son of Raymond John Coleman and Hanna May (Gillet) Coleman. He married Margaret Frances Dare in 1955 and was the father of two children. He died whilst attempting to rescue an older man trapped in the bushfire at North Eltham on March 3, 1965 He died at Eltham (Herald, 4 March 1965, p3) [Picture of John Lawrence Coleman] Builder Mr John Lawrence Coleman, 31, of Main Rd., Eltham, one of three men burnt to death yesterday in the fire at North Eltham. The other two were XXXXX, 33 who lives opposite the Colemans and Mr William Elwers, 64 of Batman Rd., Eltham. * * * Frank Martin was a volunteer with the Eltham rural fire brigade at the time of the 1965 bushfires which burnt Eltham North and Research. Frank was asked to assist with the removal of three bodies from the back gully (now Orchard Avenue). They were badly burnt and one was found stuck under a fence as though trying to escape. Volunteers John Coleman Jnr, William Elwers and George Crowe were killed trying to protect Eltham from bushfire – they were local heroes. At the time, John Coleman Jnr was survived by his wife Margaret and two young children – John 11 and Vicky 2. Margaret Coleman lived in the family home until 1992 when she sold it and moved to Tasmania to be close to her son. She died in 1997 aged 65 years. 75 yr old Ken Gaston grew up on Edendale farm, which was originally a poultry farm but is now owned and run by the Shire of Nillumbik as an educational farm for schools and visitors. He was Captain of the Eltham rural fire brigade in 1965 when John Coleman Jnr was burnt to death in the Eltham North bushfires serving as an unofficial volunteer. He was able to draw where the original Wattletree Road was and at the time was verified with the location of some remaining bitumen and a post from the original bridge over the Diamond Creek located near the junction of the Diamond Creek and another small creek which is further down from Research or Christmas Creek as locals refer to it. The original Main Road ran behind Colemans before the railway line was built beyond Eltham in 1912. (Information recorded by Harry Gilham, President EDHS c.2011) * * * Bushfires rage in Victoria, Snowy: Three dead (1965, March 4). The Canberra Times (ACT : 1926 - 1995), p. 1. Retrieved May 19, 2022, from http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article131758981 Includes two photos of the fire in North Eltham “Firemen make for safety as fire rages in Upper Glen Park Road, North Eltham, Victoria. The smoke hides a house.” and “A house explodes into flames at North Eltham, Victoria. Firemen said bottled gas went up.” Canberra Times (ACT : 1926 - 1995), Thursday 4 March 1965, page 1 ________________________________________ Firemen make for safety as fire rages in Upper Glen Park Road. North Eltham. Victoria. The smoke hides a house. A house explodes into flames at North Eltham. Victoria. Firemen said bottled gas went up. Bushfires rage in Victoria, Snowy: Three dead MELBOURNE, Wednesday.—Three people died today in a bush» fire which raged through North Eltham, about 15 miles from Melbourne. The victims were three men. A fourth man is feared to be dead. Another bushfire. sparked off by the heatwave sizzling over south-eastern Australia, is burning out of control in the Kosciusko State Park, in the Snowy Mountains. Firefighters fear that if it reaches pine forests up the Yarrangobilly River, they will be powerless to stop it. The three victims of the North Eltbam fire were trapped by flames in a valley. Their bodies were found only a few yards apart. They were named by police tonight as Mr. George Crowe, 78, of North Eltham, William John Ewers, 64, and John Laurence Coleman, 31, both of Eltham. The other two have not been identified. They are believed to be a man aged about 40 and an 18-year-old youth. At least 12 homes were destroyed by the fire, the worst in Victoria since 1962, when eight lives were lost and hundreds of homes burnt down at Warrandyte. At one time the township of Eltham was threatened, but a cool change swept in from the south and held back the wall of flames. More than 100 dogs, worth about £4,000, died when the fire raced through two kennels in Short Street, Eltham. and Upper Glen Park Road, North Eltham. A trickle of water Residents ran into the streets as the blaze raced towards their houses. Others frantically dug firebreaks around their homes. Mrs. Sue Recourt wept when firemen arrived while she was vainly trying to stop the flames with a trickle of water from the garden hose. A stack of firewood was blazing, but the firemen managed to save the house and rescue four goats. Many homes in Eltham were saved after flames had crept to within feet of their fences. Students at North Eltham State School had to be evacuated when the blaze threatened the building. Fire fighters were severely hampered by lack of water and narrow roads. The blaze, which began in above century heat, turned toward Wattle Glen, where two houses were gutted. Then the flames raced towards Hurstbridge to the north. Firemen battling desperately, controlled the fire late this afternoon. Five forest fires were still burning in Victoria tonight. IN VICTORIA THIS WEEK Tragic lack of central fire authority (1965, March 9). The Canberra Times (ACT : 1926 - 1995), p. 2. Retrieved May 19, 2022, from http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article131759928 Canberra Times (ACT : 1926 - 1995), Tuesday 9 March 1965, page 2 ________________________________________ IN VICTORIA THIS WEEK Tragic lack of central fire authority From Rohan Rivett It was the worst week for Victorian fire fighters since Black Friday 27 years ago. On that day one pilot up in a spotter plane said afterwards: "It seemed at times that half the State was on fire." This time, for three days on end, Gippsland men, women and children had moments of conviction that their towns would have blackened into anonymity before the weekend was out. The week began with horror at Eltham on the North-eastern edge of Melbourne. Eltham today is something of an artists' colony. Oil painters, water colourists, potters and sculptors proliferate. A number of University folk have emulated the example of Professor MacMahon Ball who pioneered the way by moving to Eltham and carving a home out of the bush in the thirties. Innermost Eltham is barely 14 miles from the G.P.O. Farthest Eltham stretches miles beyond. It served to illustrate the tragi-ludicrous truncation of Victoria's fire control. Part of Eltham is under the protection of the Melbourne Fire Brigade. But this responsibility ceases at some invisible and incomprehensible line — apparently determined by the meanderings of the water mains. At this point everybody's property throughout the rest of Eltham is dependent on the Country Fire Authority. Half an hour before midday on Wednesday, a fire suddenly started on the West side of Upper Glen road on the edge of Eltham. Before the fire brigade could arrive, it was burning on a widening front through timber and high grass north of Eltham. Two wind changes in rapid succession saw the fire leaping Diamond Creek. With a freshening wind it struck home after home in three streets. More than one of them exploded suddenly as if hit by an incendiary bomb. There is no piped gas in the Eltham area, hence many housewives use bottle gas. The flames outside caused the bottles to explode. Altogether twelve homes were completely incinerated and four more were badly damaged. Thirty prize dogs perished. About three hours after the fire started it raced suddenly down a gully hillside trapping an elderly man. Two other men apparently raced to the rescue. Flames caught the three men within yards of each other, not 200 yards off the Upper Glen Park Road where safety lay. They were burned to death. Next evening an angry and convincing secretary of the Fire Brigade Union, Mr. W. M. Webber, came on television and appealed to the people of Victoria to end the ridiculous and dangerous dualism in fire-fighting control. The Eltham fire, he said, had precisely illustrated the situation. The Metropolitan Fire Brigade area touched Eltham, but where the fire had gutted and killed, was just outside its area. Mr. Webber said his union had constantly urged one authority for the State with a complete reorganisation of fire protection. On Wednesday the union had repeated its call for an inquiry into fire protection in Victoria to the Chief Secretary, Mr Rylah. "No matter how close the liaison between the two organisations, there are always divided sections of thinking," Mr. Webber told viewers. "I don't know how much tragedy the com-munity can take before it demands that it is properly protected." Rumours that differences in gauge between taps and hose nozzles (as between the two authorities) accentuated the damage were denied by fire chiefs who said that all appliances were now carrying adaptors so that hoses could be linked to mains everywhere. But there is grave concern in the Metropolitan Fire Brigade's higher councils at the action of several Federal authorities with projects in and around Melbourne. They are installing non-standard equipment without reference to the State authorities or any dovetailing of appliances and equipment. Public alarm was not diminished by the publication on Friday and Saturday of a heart tearing letter from the young widow of John Lawrence Coleman, 31 year old father of two, who had died in the flames apparently trying to rescue the old man trapped in the gully. By that time, a Vast area of Gippsland was in flames and the troops had been sent in to back up the overworked and often helpless fire-fighters. By Saturday, the Leader of the Opposition, Mr. Stoneham, who has previously demanded a Royal Commission into fire-fighting arrangements, repeated his demand. To add to the Chief Secretary's worries he was publicly rebuked for allegedly implying on television that lives had been lost at Eltham because people went to the wrong place at the wrong time. In a letter to the Press, Professor MacMahon Ball pointed out that two of the men involved were experienced bushmen who had gone "to help an old man in great danger fully aware of the danger to themselves". As Victoria faced its sixth day of total State-wide fire ban, it looked likely that even official resistance was not going to silence the demand for one central authority to control the fire fiend. At the moment, the 400 square miles where two million Victorians live in Greater Melbourne are divorced from the rest of the State in planning, communications, equipment and control of personnel. No one doubts the whole-hearted co-operation and willingness to back each other up of the M.F.B. and the C.F.A., both at top-level and among the firemen themselves. However, when a city straggles so deeply into the country side, the absence of a single authority, to oversee and analyse the fire threat as a whole, suggests suicidal policy of divide and fuel. Emphasis of the tragic loss of a member of a pioneering family who died whilst helping others in his communitybushfire, cfa, country fire authority, fire brigrade, glen park road, heroes, john lawrence coleman, north eltham, victorian bushfires - 1965, volunteers, william john elwers, fire fighter, frank martin, george john crowe, ken gaston, orchard avenue -
Melbourne Tram Museum
Newspaper, Herald Sun, Newspaper clipping re flooding in South Melbourne, 13-1-1980
Newspaper cutting about flooding in South Melbourne disabling a tram and a "trammie" conductor or driver, directing traffic. Tram W7 1019, route 10.Yields information about the type of delays that can occur on a big tram system.Newspaper cutting from the Herald Sun 13-1-1980 about flooding in South Melbourne and delaying tram W7 1019"Sun Herald 13.1.80"trams, tramways, tramcars, flooding, floods, south melbourne, w7 1019, route 10, crews -
Bialik College
Newspaper Clipping, 'The Spirit of Israel', The Herald, 1 November 1967, 1967
... 'The Spirit of Israel', The Herald, 1 November 1967 ...Newspaper article 'The Spirit of Israel', published in The Herald, 1 November 1967.shakespeare grove, hebrew school, meretz -
Melbourne Tram Museum
Newspaper, Herald Sun, "Rough, but they like it", 1955
The article and photo report on the poor condition of the Victorian Railways tram tracks and the possible closure of the Sandringham to Black Rock tram line. Notes the passengers wish to keep the line and while the track is poor, the service runs on time. The tram line was closed on 5/11/1956.Yields information about the Sandringham to Black Rock line prior to the tramway closure.Newspaper clipping titled - "Rough, but they like it" - Melbourne Herald 5/11/1955"Melb "Herald" Sat 5 Nov 1955"trams, tramways, vr trams, track maintenance, tram tracks, sandringham to black rock -
Mission to Seafarers Victoria
Article - Facsimile, The Herald: He's a Light in the Harbor, 1956
... The Herald: He's a Light in the Harbor ...This a reprint of an article about Padre Oliver, published by the Herald on 7 July 1956.Reprint of an article bout Padre Oliver.padre oliver, frank oliver, the herald -
University of Melbourne, Burnley Campus Archives
Newspaper, The Young Herald, Big Openings in Farm Science, 1958
... The Young Herald ...careers in agriculture, students, dookie, agronomy, plant sciences, animal husbandry, longerenong -
Melbourne Tram Museum
Newspaper, Herald Sun, "Seaside tracks are "roads"", 1955
The article and photo report on the poor condition of roads in particular Hayden's Road and the former, short lived Victorian Railways Beaumaris - Black Rock tram line. Has two photos showing the road condition. The second photo shows sleepers from the former tram line and a badly worn road surface that had been placed on top. The item by a staff reporter likens the road to wartime battle fields. The tram line rails were lifted or removed during 1939 - see page 35 of The Brighton Electric Line.Yields information about the road condition in the Beaumaris area in 1955.Newspaper clipping titled - "Seaside tracks are "roads"" - Melbourne Herald 12/11/1955"Melb "Herald" Sat 12 Nov 1955"trams, tramways, vr trams, track maintenance, tram tracks, beaumaris -
Eltham District Historical Society Inc
Newsclipping, Angus Thompson et al, Another insurance storm brews, Herald Sun, Tuesday, December 27, pp4-5, 2011
A late afternoon storm on Christmas Day 2011. A flash flood occurred from significant rain fall and hail, which accumulated along an old waterway with floodwater submerging cars along Valonia Drive then down Grove Street flooding houses, through the Bible Street Reserve where it then submerged Main Road washing away the small railway trestle bridge opposite the reserve then flooding the Judge Book Village before finally entering the Diamond Creek. Widespread damage occured from hail and flash flooding.fay bridge collection, eltham, 2011-12-27, flood damage, floods, floodwater -
Stawell Historical Society Inc
Book, Herald Press, Family Herald
stawell -
NMIT (Northern Melbourne Institute of TAFE)
Folder: Bound folder of newspaper cuttings from The Age, The Argus and The Herald Sun, 1935-1956
... Folder: Bound folder of newspaper cuttings from The Age ...Bound folder of newspaper cuttings from The Age, The Argus and The Herald Sun, 13 December 1935 - 26 October 1956. On cover ‘News Cuttings’. Focused on education, technical schools, Preston Technical School, Collingwood Technical School.preston technical school, collingwood technical school, newspaper clippings, nmit -
Bialik College
Newspaper article, 'Make it a Date', The Daily Herald, 1964, 1964
... 'Make it a Date', The Daily Herald, 1964 ...Newspaper article 'Make it a Date', The Daily Herald, 1964.parents association, fundraising -
University of Melbourne, Burnley Campus Archives
Newspaper, The Herald, It Could be a Fine Approach, 1928
... The Herald ...trees, tullamarine, trees along the road