Showing 21192 items matching "post-colonialism"
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Tennis Australia
Net post, Circa 1915
A pair of Ayres 'The Cavendish' net posts (.1 (winch) and .2), comprising of a wooden post slotted and fixed into metal base. Winch system is 'The Eezewynder' model. Inscription around metal base: AYRES PATENT/THE CAVENDISH/TENNIS POSTS. Materials: Metal, Wood, Paint, Lacquertennis -
Bendigo Military Museum
Photograph - PHOTOGRAPHS, c.1914 - 1919
There are no last names listed with the spelling Valty - Valtz..1) Post card portrait photo, sepia, of a soldier in uniform with slouch hat. .2) Post card portrait photo, sepia, of a soldier in uniform minus hat..1) On rear in black pen appears to be: Valtyportrait postcard, soldier, ww1 -
Glenelg Shire Council Cultural Collection
Photograph - Photograph - Marine Discovery Centre Portland, Victoria, c. 1998
Coloured photograph: MDC inside. Young woman (/volunteer / employee) standing next to display stand of calendars and post cards, looking at a post card she is holding.Back: 'B8' -
Bendigo Historical Society Inc.
Document - ENVELOPE ADDRESSED TO HAROLD CURNOW
Envelope addressed to Mr. Harold Curnow Box 96, Post Office, Bendigo Vic. The envelope was posted in Melbourne on 2nd September, 1995. Nothing inside the envelope.person, individual, harold curnow -
Tatura Irrigation & Wartime Camps Museum
Photograph - copy, 1989 copy
Photograph is a view of Internment Camp 3 at Rushworth. The view is from the vegetable garden and tennis court, looking towards the huts. Camp 3 held Italian and German family groups. Black and white photograph. White posts in foreground leading to a gate entrance. Several army hut buildings behind fence. To the left of posts is a person sitting on a log.internment camp 3, rushworth victoria -
Tatura Irrigation & Wartime Camps Museum
Photograph, 1941
Construction work in camp 13Black and white photograph of 2 lines of steel posts in front of a line of wooden posts, then carpenters "horse" then Army huts, trees. Some buildings in course of construction.camp 13, construction work in victorian camps -
Rutherglen Historical Society
Image
One of a group of photographs of Rutherglen collected from magazines (Pix or People or Post), then pasted onto orange paper, date unknown. This one is of the Rutherglen Post Officepost office, rutherglen -
Bendigo Historical Society Inc.
Souvenir - SOUVENIR GLASS POST OFFICE, 1887
2 Souvenir glasses commemorating the Bendigo Post Office Centenary 1887 - 1987 tumbler style with gold rim and a depiction of the Post Office building on side in gold.organization, government, post office -
Chelsea & District Historical Society Inc
Photograph - South Yarra Post Office, Group of Postal workers, c 1910's
Mr Alfred Morton with his sisters, brothers and friends camping at Carrum in the 1890's. This area was later called Chelsea. Alfred Louis Morton (known as Louis) was born in Geelong in 1866, the fifth of eleven children of Mark Morton and Eliza nee Heard (married 1898). Alfred began work for the Post Office at South Yarra in the 1890s. In the late 1800s it was common for people from Melbourne and north of the city to travel to Chelsea area beaches for their holidays and many liked the area so much that, like the Mortons, they moved here permanently. In the 1890s Alfred’s sister, Mrs William Ashmore, built a weekend house at the foot of what is now Foy Avenue in Chelsea. The Morton family, including Alfred, visited the area often, camping on the foreshore during the 1890s. In 1911 Alfred moved his family permanently to a house on the corner of Morton Grove and Main Road Chelsea (now known as the Nepean Highway) on property that extended from the main road to the beach. This house was destroyed in the fire of 22 December 1913 which raged amongst the ti-tree on the foreshore between Aspendale and Chelsea. Many buildings were destroyed in this fire. The Argus newspaper reported on Wednesday 24 December that 94 houses were burnt with glowing embers blown a mile and half inland. According to the Argus but for the wide break provided by the Point Nepean Road (now the Nepean Highway) and the railway line, the scrub on the other side might have caught. The Morton children, Elsa and Ivan, attended Chelsea State School (now Chelsea Primary School) and Mrs Morton was active in the establishment of St Chad’s Church of England in Chelsea. At the age of 80 in 1945 Mr Morton was concerned about reports that English children had lost their toys due to the war and so he made (as part of a wider effort in Australia) 100 toy engines that were sent to England. He died in 1946 in Chelsea.Black and white photo of postal works in front of the South Yarra Post Office. Members of the Morton family are in the group.morton, chelsea, carrum, post office, south yarra, postal workers -
Ringwood and District Historical Society
Newspaper - Newspaper Clipping, Southwood Primary School, Ringwood - "One for Oz"
Newspaper clipping Maroondah Post, February 8th, 1995Title - One for Oz -
Greensborough Historical Society
Greeting Card, Cards from B. Vickers to M. Smith, 2011-2012
Christmas greeting cards from Beryl Vickers to Marilyn Smith.Two coloured Christmas cards, one with envelope (posted)Greeting messages from Beryl Vickers to Marilyn Smithberyl vickers, marilyn smith, tom vickers -
Glenelg Shire Council Cultural Collection
Photograph, n.d
Black and white photo of Drik Drik Post OfficeBack: 'Drik Drik P.O. Vic closed down 1971' - blue birodrik drik -
4th/19th Prince of Wales's Light Horse Regiment Unit History Room
Panoramic Post Card, Early 1900's
A four part panoramic post card photograph of AleppoPlatin Crayon O.I.M 677:06 Carte Postalepost card, aleppo -
4th/19th Prince of Wales's Light Horse Regiment Unit History Room
Post Card, c. 1914
A post card depicting a painting of East Harbour AlexandriaOn back in pencil: "Alexandria 6/12/14 Dear Clarence, We arrived here Saturday morning and are anchored in this harbour. We are going off in the morning (8th) after being on the boat exactly seven weeks. It would surprise you to see the big town and large buildings in this part of the world. There are all nations here Turks, Greeks, Arabs Egyptians & French It is funny to hear the chatter when they try to sell anything. Well I will have to stop here. I will write again, Arthur" post card, alexandria -
Flagstaff Hill Maritime Museum and Village
Timer, 1940s
Australia's first telephone exchange was opened in Melbourne in August 1880. It was operated by the Melbourne Telephone Exchange Company. Owned by W. H. Masters and T. T. Draper, the Manager of the Company was H. Byron Moore. This was only two years after the world's first exchange in the United States, and just four years after Bell first spoke on a telephone. The exchange was located in the old Stock Exchange building at 367 Collins Street, a site now occupied by the Commonwealth Bank. In 1884, the operations of the Company, by then known as the Victorian Telephone Exchange Company, had grown considerably and were transferred to Wills Street, Melbourne. Private ownership of this company continued until 1887 when it was bought out by the Victorian Colonial Government. Other colonial governments followed this example. By 1910, the growth in telephone services made additional accommodation necessary. This could not be provided in the existing building in Wills Street and arrangements were made for a new exchange in Lonsdale Street. Alexander Graham Bell visited Australia in 1910 to advise the Federal Government's Postal Commission. Telephone exchanges were established in Adelaide with (48 subscribers), Hobart (10 subscribers) and Launceston (35 subscribers). The first exchange in Western Australia was established in 1887 and located in a small three-room cottage in Wellington Street, Perth with 17 subscribers. The year 1888 marked the opening of the Fremantle exchange in a small room at the rear of the Town Hall. There were nine subscribers. Australia's first automatic exchange was installed in the GPO in Sydney, in 1911, for internal use. But the first automatic exchange for public use was opened at Geelong in Victoria in the next year July 1912 with 800 subscribers. Melbourne's first automatic exchange was opened in the suburb of Brighton in 1914; the first public automatic exchange in NSW began operating at Newtown, Sydney in 1915; and Queensland's first was installed at South Brisbane in 1925. 1929 saw the opening of Tasmania's first automatic exchange in Hobart. an automatic telephone service. In June 1977, the manual telephone exchange at Swansea was replaced with an automatic service and made Tasmania the first State in Australia to have a fully automatic network. The half-century following Federation saw the growth of the automatic operation; a great extension of trunk line services; The automatic telephone contributed greatly to the early popularity of telephones in Australia. It was a quicker and more convenient way of communicating with another person on the same exchange — instead of having to go through tedious processes with the operator. From its introduction, the number of automatic telephones in operation grew to a remarkable extent. In 1886, the first trunk link of 16 km was connected to the exchanges of Adelaide and Port Adelaide in South Australia. Then, in 1907, the first inter-capital telephone trunk line was opened between Sydney and Melbourne. It was followed by a line between Melbourne and Adelaide in 1914. Sydney and Brisbane were linked in 1923, and Perth and Adelaide in 1930. In 1930, the first overseas calls from Australia came possible with the introduction of a radiotelephone service to England, and through there to Europe and America. A similar service opened to New Zealand in the same year. Initially, trunk channels linked different manual trunk exchanges. It was necessary for a succession of trunk operators to connect the appropriate channels, one after the other until the connection was made. As trunk traffic grew. the system became increasingly unsuitable. More trunk operators had to be employed and so labour costs increased. It was a tedious and slow way of making a long-distance call, and it was sometimes hard to hear, particularly when several exchanges were linked With technical advances, trunk switching moved from manual operation through a partly automatic phase. Automatic transit switching equipment was used and only a single operator was required to connect a trunk call to a wanted automatic subscriber. Until well beyond the middle of this century, the majority of trunk traffic went through this single telephonist control. In 1953, the number of telephones in use in Australia passed the one million mark. By then, the need for improvement in the automatic exchanges was becoming well recognised. The need was for a telephone switching system which would do a better job more economically than the conventional step-by-step ex-change. This led to the adoption of the Crossbar system as the standard in automatic telephone exchanges in 1960. The introduction of Crossbar switching was a big step forward in the automation of trunk calls. It substituted automatic switching and charging equipment for the originating trunk operator, and improved the quality of the system radically. Before the introduction of the Crossbar system there were often very long delays in obtaining a booked trunk call, and the quality of sound was often very poor. With Crossbar, Subscriber Trunk Dialing (STD) became a reality. A trunk call by STD was as easy to make and almost as fast to connect as a local call.The item was made around the 1940s and used up until the 1970s in manual cord telephone exchanges as a way to time and charge users for trunk calls made over the telecom system of the time. Post Master General dept. - Trunk Call Timer.Inscribed PMG, C. of A, 37. Bell chimes at 3 min increments.flagstaff hill, warrnambool, shipwrecked-coast, flagstaff-hill, flagstaff-hill-maritime-museum, maritime-museum, shipwreck-coast, flagstaff-hill-maritime-village, timer, trunk call, telephone, cord exchange -
Ringwood and District Historical Society
Newspaper, Scrapbook Clipping, Library Collection, Ringwood, Victoria, `
``Newspaper clipping from the "Post", 10-2-98.The Maroondah community will lead the outer east with the development of a Public Internet Training and Access Centre. As part of the Multimedia Victoria funding allocation, a Learning Information Network and Community Service (LINCS) centre will be set-up at Eastland Shopping Centre in Ringwood. ` -
Ringwood and District Historical Society
Article, Library Reaches New Age
Newspaper clipping Maroondah Post June 9, 1996SOUTHWOOD Primary School students -
Ringwood and District Historical Society
Newspaper, Election of Cr RC Horman as Mayor of Ringwood in 1960
From Ringwood Post dated 8 September 1960 -
Ringwood and District Historical Society
Article, it's that time of year
Newspaper clipping RINGWOOD Post April 10, 1992SOUTHWOOD Primary School students Matthew Krause, Sarah Weinert and Somin Iskra -
Ringwood and District Historical Society
Article, The Human Face of the Police
Newspaper clipping Ringwood Post August 15, 1989SOUTHWOOD Primary School students Yvette Laracy, Ben Cooper, Mark Daltario and Alison Learmonth -
Ringwood and District Historical Society
Article, What I like about school
Newspaper clipping Maroondah Post Septemeber 4, 1996SOUTHWOOD Primary School students -
Ringwood and District Historical Society
Article, A Message from Southwoods Principle
Newspaper clipping Maroondah Post Septemeber 4, 1996SOUTHWOOD Primary School Principle, Gavin Bransgrove -
Ringwood and District Historical Society
Article, New boy in school
Newspaper clipping Maroondah Post February 21, 1996SOUTHWOOD Primary School Principle, Gavin Bransgrove -
Ringwood and District Historical Society
Article, Cooking Up a Storm
Newspaper clipping Maroondah Post November 13, 1996SOUTHWOOD Primary School students -
Ringwood and District Historical Society
Article, Southwood's Indonesian Experience
Newspaper clipping Maroondah Post May 8, 1996SOUTHWOOD Primary School students -
Ringwood and District Historical Society
Article, Footy in Black and White
Newspaper clipping Maroondah Post August 21, 1996SOUTHWOOD Primary School students -
Bendigo Historical Society Inc.
Photograph - BENDIGO VIEWS COLLECTION: SOLDIERS MEMORIAL AND POST OFFICE
Black and white photograph of the Soldiers Memorial and Post Office.bendigo, streetscape, soldiers memorial hall -
B-24 Liberator Memorial Restoration Australia Inc
Dutch Post Card
Included in the collection of Bill Bakker RNEIAAFDutch Post Card written in Dutch by Bill Bakkera23.13 -
St Kilda Historical Society
Photograph, Class 3 B+C, Elwood Central School, 1935, c. 1935
There are three copies of the same photograph Stamped on back: Elwood Primary School Scott Street Elwood 3184 phone (03) 9531 2762black and white post card good condition unmounted E.C.S Grade 3 B + C. Stamped on back: Elwood Primary School Scott Street Elwood 3184 phone (03) 9531 2762. 1935 -
University of Melbourne, Burnley Campus Archives
Document, Submission for course accreditation Bachelor of Applied Science (Horticulture), 1984
Submission to the Accreditation Board of the Post-Secondary Education Commissionpost secondary education commission, accreditation, courses, bachelor, applied science