Showing 13705 items matching " homes"
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Wonga Park Community Cottage History Group
Photograph (sub-item) - Mr. Edward Hughes’ home, ‘The Oaks’, in Hartley Road, Wonga Park in 1933
Mr. Edward Hughes’ home, ‘The Oaks’, in Hartley Road, Wonga Park in 1933. -
Wonga Park Community Cottage History Group
Photograph (sub-item) - The Heims’ family home, about 1933, with Mr. Van der Sluys in foreground
The Heims’ family home, about 1933, with Mr. Van der Sluys in foreground. -
Mont De Lancey
Shawl, Circa 1905
Worn by Mrs. Quayle's niece in 1905. From home of W.J. Sebire, WandinLight green embroidered silk evening shawl with plaited braid and long tassels.shawls, clothing accessories -
Mont De Lancey
Teaspoons, 1895
From the home of Mr. W. J. Sebire Wandin. Mrs. Thomas Quayle.Set of three silver teaspoons with decorative handles.teaspoons, spoons, tea accessories -
Port Melbourne Historical & Preservation Society
Audio - Oral History, Hugh Kilpatrick, Joy Fitzpatrick Phillips, 12 Aug 2003
Interviewed by his niece Joy Phillips at his home at 163 Stokes StreetHugh Kilpatrick speaking about his life in Port MelbourneDuration side 00:36:27families, domestic life, hugh kilpatrick, joy phillips -
Bendigo Historical Society Inc.
Newspaper - JENNY FOLEY COLLECTION: TREASURED MEMORIES
"Mainholm" was the Bridgewater home of Thomas Sloan who was married to Marion Kirk in 1916.Bendigo Advertiser ''The way we were'' from 2002. treasured memories: the Sloan, Isaac and Kirk families gather for wedding photos taken at 'Mainholm' in Bridgewater in 1910. The clip is in a folder.newspaper, bendigo advertiser, the way we were -
Stawell Historical Society Inc
Photograph, "Whitehall House" -- MrJohn Hutching’s First Home in Greens Creek
John Hutching’s First Home. Greens Creek before destroyed by fire 1877stawell -
Returned Nurses RSL Sub-branch
Newspaper - Newspaper clipping, [unknown]
Photograph with caption 'Sister Gethla Forsyth, AIF nurse home from Malaya'Newspaper clippingmalaya, gethla forsyth, aif -
Bendigo Military Museum
Souvenir - PICTURES, WALL HANGING, estimated Vietnam War
Items brought home from Vietnam by Geoff Hopper in 1970. Refer 596.3..1 & .2 Black lacquered wood with mother of pearl inlay of scenery and domestic chores. Metal tabs on back for hanging.souvenirs, vietnam, pearl -
Mont De Lancey
Container - Lidded Container, c1920
Used for storing various threads for mending in the home - cotton, silk, wool nylon.A decorated brown lidded round container coated inside with black and brown type lacquer. The outside of the container and lid has patterns painted by hand in yellow and red of a bird, ying and yang symbols and oriental script all surrounded in black lined sections. It appears to be made from papier-mache which is layers of cardboard glued together and tightly compressed. This can be seen by the damage sections which grey cardboard shows though. It would have been lacquered over and painted. The container has a variety of sewing items and mending threads for stockings, socks and other work. Some pearl buttons included.As mentioned above, the container has various patterns painted on it. The sewing items include brands of threads for sewing work - Darneezi, Eagley, Rite Tone, Clark's Filosheen,Chadwick's Wool and Nylon, Nylusta.sewingcontainer, threads, containers, sewing equipment, gibson collection -
Kew Historical Society Inc
Photograph - View from the Verandah of 52 Frater Street, Kew
52 Frater Street was the home of the Coade family from the second half of the 1940s. View from 52 Frater Street, Kew East 52 frater street -- kew east(vic.), coade family -
Kew Historical Society Inc
Photograph - View from 52 Frater Street, Kew East, 1946
52 Frater Street was the home of the Coade family from the second half of the 1940s. View towards Northcote from 52 Frater Street, Kew East Verso: "View ahead, Golf Links, and Northcote from sundeck / Sept '46"52 frater street -- kew east(vic.), coade family -
Kew Historical Society Inc
Photograph - View from 52 Frater Street, Kew East, 1946
52 Frater Street was the home of the Coade family from the second half of the 1940s. View from 52 Frater Street, Kew East. Verso: "R. L. view, Ivanhoe from sundeck / Sept 1946"52 frater street -- kew east(vic.), coade family -
Kew Historical Society Inc
Photograph - The Coade family outside 52 Frater Street, Kew East, May 1946
52 Frater Street was the home of the Coade family from the second half of the 1940s. Photograph of Mr & Mrs Coade and their daughter Jane outside 52 Frater Street, Kew East. Verso: "May 1946"52 frater street -- kew east(vic.), coade family -
Kew Historical Society Inc
Photograph - View from 52 Frater Street, Kew East, May 1972
52 Frater Street was the home of the Coade family from the second half of the 1940s. View from 52 Frater Street, Kew East Verso: "May 1972"52 frater street -- kew east(vic.), coade family -
Kew Historical Society Inc
Photograph - 52 Frater Street, Kew East, 1971
52 Frater Street was the home of the Coade family from the second half of the 1940s. View from 52 Frater Street, Kew East Verso: "1971"52 frater street -- kew east(vic.), coade family -
Kew Historical Society Inc
Photograph - 52 Frater Street, Kew East, August 1948
52 Frater Street was the home of the Coade family from the second half of the 1940s. Brick residence at 52 Frater Street, Kew East Verso: "52 Frater St, East Kew / August 1948"52 frater street -- kew east(vic.), coade family -
Orbost & District Historical Society
magazines, Needlework Illustrated; Australian Home Journal, September 1949; May 1963
Needlework Illustrated is issue 196 and cost 1/-. it was published quarterly. Australian Home Journal is the May 1963 issue. Women’s magazines just after WWII played a “reflecting role,” including topics of readers’ interests as well as containing news items. Women’s employment rate had grown during WWII. However, even though the number of women working outside the home grew rapidly most of them were still engaged entirely in homemaking. Therefore women’s magazines centered mostly home crafts. Articles as well as advertisements presented information on keeping the family healthy with guidelines for thrifty shopping and advice on how to look good through it all. Patterns and instructions were provided for women to create home articles and clothing. The main sources for kntting and needlework designs available to women were in journals, magazines and pattern books. Embroidery was an affordable way to personalise and add aesthetic value to domestic linen and examples of embroidered and crocheted pieces could be found in most Australian homes. These are examples of women's magazines. They give practical advice on needlework / knitting and evidences the widespread interest in contemporary fashion. In doing so it shows what were the fashionable, but broadly affordable, women's and children's clothing styles of their day. These magazines also reflect women's interests --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Two magazines. 3097.1 contains patterns, instructions, advertisements and photographs. It has a coloured cover - a pink background, black print an drawings of a woman wearing a top embroidered with roses and examples of needlework. 3097.2 contains patterns, advertisements, correspondence, and stories. It has a coloured cover with a photograph of a woman wearing a knitted jumper and three sewing patterns.magazine- needlework-illustrated magazine-australian-home-journal -
Glen Eira Historical Society
Document - Burreel
This file contains one item. 1. Auction leaflets for two periods of sale, 5 April and 30 April, years unknown, possibly 1990’s. Articles give same photograph of home, sketch of home and interior plan layout. Also includes history of Burreel to 1982/1983.burreel, biggin and scott, auctions, biggin kevin, lawson graeme, elsternwick, victorian style, mansions, stephen francis, glenhuntly road, buxton family, allen george, music, neate mary, nursing homes, alexander enid, cellars, bricks, bluestone, slate, verandas, fireplaces, plaster moulds, cool stores, gas lighting, cast iron works, architectural features, gardens -
Robin Boyd Foundation
Document - Manuscript, Robin Boyd, What Every Home Should Have, c. 1965
Boyd advocates that the Australian home needs a change of heart to provide more comfort, dignity, and happiness. As examples, he gives two bathrooms (one for parents and one for children), outdoor living, the ability to extend the home as the family gets bigger, kitchens with modern appliances, and central heating and cooling.Typewritten (c copy), quarto, 4 pagesaustralian home, appliances, robin boyd, manuscript -
Royal District Nursing Service (now known as Bolton Clarke)
Photograph - Photograph, black and white, Barry Sutton, c.1965
The photograph is taken in a Hospital Physiotherapy Department. Anne Radford is the Physiotherapist at the Hospital and is teaching RDNS Liaison, Sister Short, the transfer technique required when transferring a patient who will be discharged home. This knowledge will be given to the RDNS Sister who will be attending to the patient in her home when she is discharged.Liaison had occurred between Doctors and the Trained nurses of the Melbourne District Nursing Society (MDNS), from its inception in 1885. This increased when Midwifery was introduced in 1893 with close liaising with the Women’s Hospital. As District nursing grew it was recognized that closer liaising between many Public Hospitals would be beneficial, for not only the MDNS, later called Royal District Nursing Service (RDNS), nursing staff, but also for the patients and the hospitals. In August 1964 a Liaison Officer commenced at the Alfred Hospital. This soon increased to Liaison Officers working full time at several Public Hospitals. They facilitated the smooth transition from hospital to home for many clients that required ongoing nursing care. Liaison Sisters regularly attended discharge planning meetings, interviewed prospective clients, co-ordinated discharge and booked the first visit by the visiting RDNS staff. At the time of a patient’s discharge, the Liaison Sister forwarded information on their diagnosis and instructions regarding the care required at home to the appropriate RDNS Centre, and in turn the attending District Sister wrote a report of progress and any queries to the hospital doctor, via the Liaison Sister, at the time the patient was attending outpatients. Any new instructions were then sent back to the District Sister. Liaising also occurred between District Sisters in the field and Doctors when patients were referred by General Practitioners and did not attend a hospital. RDNS also held Physiotherapy workshops for staff teaching safe transferring techniques. The Physiotherapist would visit the home of a patient with the attending Sister when required.On the left of the black and white photograph is Royal District Nursing Service (RDNS), Liaison, Sister Margaret Short, and to her right is hospital Physiotherapist, Anne Radford, who is smiling at the patient. She has short dark hair and is wearing a white hospital coat. She is kneeling on a physiotherapy table behind, and assisting, a young patient to transfer. Sister Short, who has short dark hair and is wearing her RDNS, grey short sleeve uniform with the RDNS insignia seen at the top of the sleeve, and her grey peaked hat, is slightly bent over the physiotherapy table with her arms under the legs of the young patient.. The Physiotherapist has her hands under the patient's armpits. The patient, who has dark short hair and is wearing a long sleeve white top and check slacks, has her forearms through a transfer ring which is hanging from a thick rope. Her buttocks are just touching the dark covered physiotherapy table and the Sister is supporting her legs which are slightly raised off the table.. A row of crutches can be seen in the left rear of the photograph and a bar with some equipment hanging on it can be seen on the right rear behind the physiotherapy table..Photographer stamp. Handwritten information.royal district nursing service, rdns, rdns liaison, rdns uniform, sister margaret short, ms anne radford -
Sunbury Family History and Heritage Society Inc.
Photograph, World War 1 defence forces
The photograph was taken to welcome home the Sunbury men who had fought in overseas battles during World War 1.Those who were not wearing their uniforms had been discharged as a result of injuries but they were eligible to be included in the Welcome Home functions that took place after 1918.Many men from Sunbury enlisted in the defence forces during World War 1. Sadly some did not return while others did come home.A non- digital black and white photograph of a group of men with one little girl seated and standing in four rows in front of a large screen. Most of the men are wearing army uniforms, one is in a sailor's uniform and others are in civilian dress. world war 1, defence forces, sunbury -
Sunbury Family History and Heritage Society Inc.
Photograph, World War 1 defence forces, 1918
The photograph was taken some time after the end of World War 1. It was a Welcome Home reception for those men who had enlisted to fight in World War 1 and were lucky to return home. The reception took place in the Sunbury Fire Station which was located in Evans Street. At the end of World War 1, the local Sunbury community held a number of Welcome Home receptions to acknowledge the part played by many local men and women in World War 1.A non-digital black and white copy of a photograph of a lot of men at a reception seated at long tables in a large hall. There are flags from a number of countries festooned across the room. welcome home receptions, world war 1, sunbury, defence forces -
Department of Health and Human Services
Photograph, Berry Street Kindergarten
In 1877 the Victorian Infant Asylum was founded in Kew. In 1881, the asylum relocated to Berry Street in East Melbourne. By 1908, it was called the Foundling Hospital and Infants Home. It was non-denominational and controlled by a committee of management. By 1956, Berry Street consisted of a Mothercraft Training Centre and two main residential units: Berry Street for infants aged zero to 18 months, and Vale Street for toddlers aged zero to two years old. In August 1956, Berry Street was declared an approved category 2 Children's Home. In 1960, Vale Street was converted to an adult nursing home. In 1964, the name was changed to Berry Street Babies Home and Hospital. Berry Street was also an approved adoption agency. By 1968, Berry Street comprised the Training School for Mothercraft Nurses, the adoption agency, an infant life-protection house, a long-stay home for children to three years of age (the toddlers’ wing) and a small house for unmarried mothers. The home's infant life-protection work was seen as a critical agency function, particularly where family illness was putting pressure on mothers and Berry Street was able to provide respite and support. By the late 1960s, 30–40 adoptions annually were being arranged from Berry Street. By 1974 the home's orientation had shifted. Four family group homes had been established (two in Burwood, one in Ashburton and one in St Kilda), the mothercraft training function had been phased out, the toddlers wing converted to day care, and the main building (containing the nursery, administration, kitchen, dining room and single mothers accommodation) was demolished in favour of four home units, which housed 24 children, supervised by cottage parents. Berry Street provided short term, emergency and residential care for 'protection of infant' cases and state wards. Two flats were also established for short-term family accommodation. The nurses’ home was converted to house the home’s administration function and a social work service. The social work service coordinated family aid and family counselling services, and a neighbourhood house. In 1975 Berry Street also provided short-term care for 42 Vietnamese children brought to Australia in the official government-sponsored airlift. In 1976 Berry Street made application to change its category 2 Children's Home classification to category 1, as it was now catering for a wider range of children. It had ceased to be a babies’ home and hospital, and had started providing child and family care, including residential care. In 1977 Berry Street to established a family group home in Richmond to house children affected by the closure of St Cuthbert's Children's Home in Colac. Berry Street changed its name to Berry Street Child and Family Care in 1977. In 1978, the range of services provided by Berry Street Child and Family Care consisted of a social work counselling service, a financial aide, a family aide program using volunteers, two temporary accommodation units each housing eight children, an information and referral service, a neighbourhood house in Richmond, a day care centre for 36 children, and four family group homes. In 1980–81 the family group homes in Burwood were sold and the resources moved to the Richmond area. In 1994, Sutherland Youth and Family Services Inc. amalgamated into Berry Street Inc. During the 1990s, Berry Street combined with the Sutherland Community Resource Centre in Watsonia in Melbourne’s northern region. The agency operates today as Berry Street Victoria and has service centres across metropolitan and country Victoria. https://www.findingrecords.dhhs.vic.gov.au/CollectionResultsPage/BerryStreet -
Eltham District Historical Society Inc
Folder, 2 Metery Road, Eltham South
Morrison Kleeman Real Estate sales information material for the Alistair Knox designed house known as the Zull House. "Nestled into a private hill of more than an acre of established gardens, shady ornamental gardens, shady ornamental grapesvines and gumtrees, sounds of bellbirds engulf this Alistair Knox home of special ambience. This home features the textures and colours of nature, home made Hawthorn bricks, flooirng slate from the old St Kilda baths and recycled timbers..." The property was sold Feb 26, 2004 (Source: realestateview.com.au) Knox was a pioneer in the use of mudbricks and recycled materials and is significant to his contribution of this style of architecture in Eltham and the wider Shire of Nillumbik.1 documents, 2 pages A4 gayle blackwood collection, houses, morrison kleeman real estate, metery road, eltham south, alistair knox, zull, st kilda baths -
Surrey Hills Historical Society Collection
Photograph, Ray & David Theodoridis of Russell Street, 1960s
The boys have been identified as *Rea & David Theodoridis. they being 2 of 5 children of Peter and Ruth (nee Dawson) Theodoridis. Background shows Nos 11, 13 and 15 Russell Street in the 1960's. In the 1920s-1930s these were the homes of the Scott, Daniels & Hendy families. No 11 was the home of the Scott family (dem); no 13 may also have belonged to the Scott family. No 18 Russell Street, the family home of Eleanor (Lena) & Rea Dawson. * spelling authenticated by Theodata Williams Dec 2019A black and white photograph of two young boys sitting on small chairs in a front garden. There are two houses in the background on the other side of the road.russell street, surrey hills, scott family, daniels family, hendy family, (mr) david theodoridis, (mr) george david theodoridis, (mr) rae theodoridis -
Vision Australia
Administrative record - Text, 69th Annual Report 1964 Association for the Blind of Victoria, 1965
Articles in annual report include: The Association for the blind 69th annual report, Association for the blind balance sheet, gratifying scenes of the association's activities, Brighton home report, Blind citizens' community centre, Bendigo home report, Ballarat home report, welfare services, voluntary service, auxiliary report. The need for more government support is highlighted in the President's report, the formation of new Auxiliary in Geelong, Lady Delacombe agreeing to become Patroness of the Auxiliaries and fundraising to replace the existing Blind Citizens Community centre at Kooyong.1 volume of text and black and white illustrationsassociation for the blind, ann docherty, granny carson, annual reports -
Vision Australia
Text, Association for the Advancement of the Blind Home Committee November 1941 - May 1950, 1941-1950
Minutes of the monthly meetings of the AAB Home Committee held at 7 Mair Street, Brighton to discuss items related to the running of the Brighton home for the Blind (later named 'Elanora'). A brief index of names preceeds the minutes. Agenda topics included Accounts, Matron's Report, Applications for Admission and Official Visitors, appointment of a special nurse (p.39), an Adventist service conducted in the home being too large and needed to reduce number (p.92), and that bread for tea should be buttered late in the afternoon and not be in a melted condition (p.154). 1 paper registerassociation for the advancement of the blind, elanora home (brighton) -
Phillip Island and District Historical Society Inc.
Article, One Hundred Years of progress. Phillip Island Centenary and the formation of the Phillip Island Historical Society 1942, 1942
This was held on the centenary of European settlement of Phillip Island. It mentions the discoveries of Aboriginal artefacts on the Island.Historical2 A3 photocopied pages of a newspaper article from The Powlett Express Wonthaggi, June 5 1942 on the Centenary of Phillip Island and the formation of the Historical Society at Erehwon, the home of Cr and Mrs Davie on May 25 1942. Speakers included Mr & Mrs Hardy [McHaffie], Captain E. Dixon, Mr J. Gliddon, Mr W. Kennon and Mr J. Grayden.The Powlett Express Wonthaggi and Victorian State Coalfields Advertiser. One Hundred Years Of Progress Phillip Island Centenarycentenary celebrations 1942, phillip island and westernport historical society, centenary gathering at erehwon, cr dawson davie, j w gliddon, mchaffie, r. grayden, powlett express 1942, aboriginal artifact -
Warrnambool and District Historical Society Inc.
Miniature China Pieces (5), Mid 20th century
Miniatures such as these are still made today as collection pieces and can be seen on display in some houses. Some of these items might also be used as furnishing pieces in dolls houses though dolls houses with quality fittings are not bought or sold today as much as in the past. These china miniatures have no known local provenance but are retained for display purposes.These five items are miniature china pieces, used in a doll’s house or as collection pieces for display in a home. .1 Miniature house in red and cream colouring .2 Miniature basket in brown and cream colouring .3 Miniature jug or pot in brown and cream colouring (handle broken off) .4 Miniature jug in brown and cream colouring .5 Miniature brown urn .1 Englandwarrnambool, antiquarian household items, history of warrnambool