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matching union flag
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Wangaratta RSL Sub Branch
Mixed media - Framed photograph of two soldiers
It is believed Private C SMITH is one of the soldiers featured in this photograph. Private John Claude SMITH 2020 was born 2/8/1893 at Wangaratta He was employed by the Railways and trained in Liverpool, NSW. He enlisted on 8/2/1915 and embarked on 9/8/1915 from Sydney on the "Runic". He served with the 18th battalion on the western front and was discharged on 27/5/1919. Many soldiers going off to the war had a photograph taken of themselves in uniform, often a studio portrait taken by a professional; many also carried a photograph of a loved one with them. But most people were still rather formal and camera-conscious, and smiling for the camera was not usual. Timber frame containing image of two soldiers within a map of Australia below a crown in top centre position with Union Jack and Red Ensign flags in the background. Back has been re-mounted with chipboard. Has wire hangings on the back.ww1, north wangaratta, 18th battalion -
Bendigo Historical Society Inc.
Photograph - IAN DYETT COLLECTION: Image of Presentation piece
Sir Gilbert Joseph Cullen Dyett (1891-1964) was born in Bendigo, at the age of 14 he started working for J H Curnow Real Estate and Auction rooms. In March 1915 he was commissioned as Lieutenant in the 7th Battalion and was badly wounded at Lone Pine, Gallipoli. After the war he was prominent in many organizations including Anzac Remembrance Appeal, Ocean Road Trust, Returned Services League, Australian War Memorial, The British Empire Service League, Racecourse Licences Board of Victoria, Victoria Trotting and Racing Association (which was largely controlled by John Wren) He was caricatured as Captain Dwyer by Frank Hardy in his novel Power without Glory. HE was Knighted in 1934. Died in Fitzroy in1964 and is buried in Bendigo. Ref. Australian Dictionary of Biography. https://adb.anu.edu.au/biography/dyett-sir-gilbert-joseph-cullen-6071 IAN DYETT COLLECTION: Black and white Image of Presentation piece to Sir Gilbert Dyett as the Federal President of the Returned Sailors & Soldiers Imperial League of Australia for presiding over the Seventh Biennial Conference held at Anzac House Melbourne from the 9th to the 13th of November 1934. In two sections with black frames probably joined by hinges resting on a black case in which the piece may have kept. Decorations on the piece include the Union Jack and the Australian Flag. The photograph in is mounted on grey card.gilbert dyett, seventh biennial conference of the british empire service league, anzac house melbourne -
Ringwood RSL Sub-Branch
Framed object, C1945
... flag together with union Jack and printed words 'For King... with Australian flag together with union Jack and printed words 'For King ...Framed photo of sailorUnderneath photo of the sailor is a sticker with Australian flag together with union Jack and printed words 'For King and Country'. Hand written on reverse of photo is the sailors name 'William Vivian RAN'. -
Bendigo Military Museum
Memorabilia - SHIRE OF KARA KARA, FRAMED
Item relates to Leslie Pyers MM No 2134, 38th Bn AIF. Refer Cat No 3993P for his service details.Certificate, “In Freedoms Cause”, has decorative coloured boarder with 5 flags across the top with Union Jack centre with a female kneeling in white robe at bottom. Mounted in a brown plastic frame with glass front. In pen, “Leslie Pyers 17.7.19”certificates, appreciation, military, shires -
Flagstaff Hill Maritime Museum and Village
Equipment - Lifebuoy, Loch Ness, 1869-1909
... (the red flag with the Union Jack on it). Lifebuoys were part... (the red flag with the Union Jack on it). Lifebuoys were part ...This lifebuoy bears the name of the ship, its origin, the shipping company and the red ensign. These details mean that the lifebuoy was part of the lifesaving equipment on the sailing ship the Loch Ness, part of the Glasgow Shipping Company’s Loch Line (G.S.C. on the red pennant) and a British-registered ship (the red flag with the Union Jack on it). Lifebuoys were part of the emergency lifesaving equipment carried on vessels in the late 19th and early 20th century. The ring was made of strips of cork wood joined together to make the ring shape then covered in canvas and sealed usually with white paint. Four evenly spaced canvas reinforcing bands would be added for strength and for a place to thread a rope or line. A lifebuoy, or life-preserver, is used as a buoyancy device often thrown to an endangered or distressed person in the water to keep them afloat while they receive help. It is usually connected by a rope to a person in a safe area such a nearby vessel or on shore. Lifebuoys is a made from a buoyant materials such as cork or foam and ae usually covered with canvas for protection and to make it easy to grip. The first use of life saving devices in recent centuries was by the Nordic people, who used light weight wood or cork blocks to keep afloat. Cork lifebuoys were used from the late 19th to early 20th century. Kapok fibre was then used as a filling for buoys but wasn’t entirely successful. Light weight balsa wood was used as a filler after WW1. In 1928 Peter Markus invented and patented the first inflatable life-preserver. By WW2 foam was combined with Kapok. Laws were passed over time that has required aeroplanes and water going-vessels to carry life-preservers on board. The ship LOCH NESS 1869-1922 … The ship Loch Ness, of Glasgow, was the same ship what William Carmichael sailed on to Australia when he laid the commemoration stone on behalf of his sister Eva and himself, dedicated to their parents, brothers and sisters. The family members lost their lives on June 1, 1878, when their ship, the Loch Ard, was wrecked at Mutton Bird Island in south west Victoria. Eva Carmichael was one of the two survivors from that shipwreck, the other 52 tragically lost their lives. The ship Loch Ness was a three-masted sailing ship built in 1869 for the Loch Line owned by the Glasgow Shipping Company. The line transported cargo and passengers from Glasgow, Scotland, to Australian ports. The Loch Ness was sold in 1908 to Stevedore & Shipping Co, Sydney for use as a coal hulk. In 1914 the Australian Government took over the ship for naval defence purposeless. In 1926 the ship was sunk during gunfire practice by the 1922 built, light cruiser HMAS Melbourne, near Fremantle, Western Australia. The lifebuoy is an example of equipment carried on vessels in the late 19th and early 20th century to help preserve life. There were many lives lost in Australia’s colonial period, particularly along the coast of South West Victoria. The lifebuoy is significant for its connection to the ship Loch Ness on which William Carmichael, brother of Eva Carmichael, travelled to lay a memorial to their parents and all of their other siblings who lost their lives in the Loch Ard disaster of 1878 near Peterborough, Victoria. Lifebuoy, round, cork filling inside canvas cover, painted white, with rope attached. Lifebuoy has printed name of vessel Loch Ness, Glasgow. Symbols of red flag with white initials G S Co. There is also a red ensign."LOCH NESS", "GLASGOW" "G S Co"flagstaff hill, warrnambool, shipwrecked-coast, flagstaff-hill, flagstaff-hill-maritime-museum, maritime-museum, shipwreck-coast, flagstaff-hill-maritime-village, loch ness, loch ard, william carmichael, eva carmichael, lifebuoy, glasgow sailing ship, loch ness of glasgow, life rings, safety ring, life-saving buoy, ring buoy, life preserver, personal floating device, floatation device, safety equipment, g s c, glasgow shipping company, hmas melbourne, cruiser melbourne -
Ringwood and District Historical Society
Photograph, Laying foundation stone for Ringwood Town Hall, Maroondah Hwy, Ringwood - 1927
Black and white photograph (2 copies- one original on cardboard backing)Written on rear of backing sheet: "Mayor A.T. Miles speaking at laying of Foundation Stone of Ringwood Town Hall, 19-2-1927." A.F.B. Long, Town Clerk behind Mayor. Left-hand side of photograph 3rd from Mayor Arthur Blood. Note Union Jack - not yet the Australian flag. -
Bendigo Military Museum
Flag - FLAG, AUSTRALIAN
The Australian Flag formally adopted on 14 April 1954. A simplified version was first adopted in 1903.Australian flag - blue flag with Southern Cross and Union Jack in the top left corner. Two metal hooks in the corners to thread through the ropes.australian flag, australia -
Bendigo Military Museum
Flag - FLAG, BRITISH, Harry West Pty Ltd, 1939 - 1945
Item relates back to Cat No 4316.4.Flag - cotton, coloured red, blue, white. Rope, Union Jack, wide heavier cotton along one short end.flag, british -
Bendigo Military Museum
Flag - VICTORIAN STATE FLAG, Evans Evans Flags, c.1980
The flag is made of a polyester material. Basic colour is blue. The left quadrant is the Union Jack. Right side has a Royal Crown. It is of white, gold and red colours and under the Crown are five white stars representing the Southern Cross. The spine has a thick white reinforcement. There are metal connectors at top and bottom of spine.flag, victoria, australia -
Bendigo Military Museum
Flag - R.A.A.F. FLAG, Carroll and Richardson
... The flag has a Union Jack filling the top left quarter...Flag RAAF The flag has a Union Jack filling the top left ...The flag has a Union Jack filling the top left quarter. Under the Union Jack is a large 7 pointed white star. On the right half is a white star Southern Cross array. Under the Southern Cross is the RAAF white and blue roundel with an image of a hopping kangaroo. The spine of the flag has a white reinforced strip of 5 cm width. The top corner has a short nylon 5 cm loop. The bottom corner also has a small nylon loop 5cm long.flag, raaf -
Lakes Entrance Historical Society
Photograph - Entrance viewed from Jemmys Point, Brooks Photographic Union, 1888 c
Marked on photo Gilders Jetty Flag Staff Red light and groynes on Bullock IslandBlack and white photograph of New Works area prior to opening Lakes Entrance VictoriaBullock Island and Entrance View from Jemmys Point overlooking piers before Entrance was openedwaterways, islands, gippsland lakes