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Port Fairy Historical Society Museum and Archives
Photograph, s.s.Casino
This photograph show the ship in dry dock (possibly Melbourne) for maintenance. The steamer S.S.CASINO was much loved by the whole Port Fairy community- with the possible exception of some of the fishermen whose boats she ran down! Transport of the large quantities of wool, potatoes, onions, grain, sheep, cattle and other produce grown on the rich lands of the Western District Belfast was served by a plethora of shipping, both sail and steam, but only one of the steamers then in the regular trade (S.S. DAWN) would ever be able to get up the river and reap the cost savings of loading against a wharf. It was not unusual for four steamers to be anchored in the bay at once and for seven or eight different steamers to call during a week. A number of inter-colonial steamers also called to pick up produce for delivery to Melbourne, Sydney and Adelaide. Production in the Western District was increasing and virtually all of that production had to go through one of the western ports in order to reach markets. By 1882 a meeting 15ft. March, 1882, in the office of auctioneer, J.B. HoIden in Cox Street took action and it was unanimously resolved - that the Belfast & Koroit Steamship Company be formed with a capital of £20,000 in 10,000 shares of £2 each". A number of steamers were offered by letter to the fledgling company, including the new and almost sister ships, CASINO and HELEN NICHOLL. The CASINO was on her delivery voyage from England was due to arrive in Warrnambool to load potatoes for Sydney and, initially, arrangements were made for her to call into Port Fairy for inspection by the BKNS Co directors. She eventually proceeded direct to Warrnambool and the Directors inspected her there. Without hesitation they purchased her even though they had to raise a large bank loan to do so. The CASINO arrived in Port Fairy on Saturday, 29th. July, 1882, steaming triumphantly up the Moyne River, and was greeted by crowds, many of whom had driven in from the surrounding countryside, which gave her “loud ringing English cheers". By 1884 the CASINO could not carry all the cargoes available to her and in December of that year the company purchased the new steamer BELLINGER to provide additional capacity. She helped to open up the intermediate ports of Lorne, Apollo Bay and Port Campbell, but the BELLINGER was not really suitable for the trade and she was sold in 1887, leaving the CASINO to operate alone -as she was to do for almost all of the next 45 years. The opening of the railway in 1890 decreased the cargo available to the steamers and the economic depression of the early 1890's worsened the situation. The weak soon began to fall by the wayside and when the Portland & Belfast SN Co. decided to go into liquidation in April 1895, the Belfast & Koroit Company bought the Portland Company's steamer DAWN on advantageous terms, a substantial part of the payment being in BKSN Co shares. The BKNS Co and the Howard Smith Line came into direct head to head competition and nearly forced the BKNS Co out of existence. Cargo dropped to such an extent that in 1899, they reached agreement that only one ship would run and that the ship which ran would pay a weekly amount to the competitor to stay out of the trade. This controlled service ceased in1909, and competition intensified when Howard Smith placed the newly built, larger steamer EUMERALLA on the run. The BKNS Co survived this competition and even prospered during it partly by extending on a more regular basis, the CASINO'S voyages to South Australian ports Port Macdonnell, Kingston, Beachport, Robe and, on occasions Adelaide. There were setbacks when, on 20 October 1924, CASINO went ashore at the Kennett River, near Apollo Bay, and again, in February l929, when she struck a submerged object at Warrnambool and had to be beached. The railways placed great competitive pressure on the small steamship company and this pressure was intensified when the Great Depression slashed the market for Western District produce, BKNS Co struggled on, paying dividends in most years, and the company planned a big celebration for the CASINO'S fiftieth anniversary in the trade on 29th July, 1932. Disaster struck soon after 9 o'clock on the morning of Sunday I0 July, 1932 when the CASINO was lost at Apollo Bay together with the lives of 10 crew members. Black and white photograph of ship in dry dockship, boat, sea, river, industry, belfast and koroit steam navigation company -
National Communication Museum
Tool - Morse Inker Tape
This tape is from the first telegram ever sent in Western Australia. This important event occurred on 21 June 1869. At this time the transmitted message was received on paper tape and later transcribed onto a telegram form for delivery. The original tape was presented to the Honourable Frederick Palgrave Barlee, Colonial Secretary of Western Australia, as a souvenir. "FPB" appears on an engraved shield on the lid. James Coats Fleming, the first telegraphist and later Superintendent of Telegraphs, sent the telegram. During 1875, Colonial Secretary Barlee transferred from Perth to Belize and then to Trinidad where he died in 1884. The fate of the case and spool, souvenir of that first telegram, was unknown. In July 1940, the WA Agent-General in London advised the Premier's Department in Western Australia that a Mrs EW Hillyer of Hertfordshire had the spool and case and was willing to sell it for ten guineas ($21). The Postmaster General's Department agree to the purchase and it duly arrived by registered mail. As a communications museum was planned in Melbourne, it was sent there to be included in the collection. Nothing more was heard until early 1980s when the relic arrived at the Post and Telecommunication museum in Perth. The case had been found in an old Melbourne strongroom where it had apparently been placed for safe-keeping and then forgotten. Initial attempts to decode the message on the tape were unsuccessful. Eventually, it was discovered that the Western Australian Telegraph Company, responsible for that first transmission, had devised its own code. A copy was obtained from the Battye Library and the message deciphered.This Morse tape is of historic significance as the first telegram ever sent in Western Australia. The occasion was momentous as the transition point between isolation and ease of connection for business and personal communications. The case is of aesthetic interest for the craftsmanship involved in the engraved text. Further, the tape has research potential owing to the unique information contained within this tape; that is, the code of the Western Australian Telegraph Company. This tape, may in turn be used to decode further messages sent by the Western Australian Telegraph Company. As the first telegraph message sent in Western Australia, this tape is rare. Despite a tumultuous journey from 1869 to the early 1980s, the tape's ceremonial wooden case provides provenance information which supports the tape's historic importance.Small wooden case (.1) holding a length of morse tape (.2) which was the first telegram ever sent in Western Australia . Wound onto a mother of pearl reel (.3). Accompanying signs and decoded message (.4,.5)..1 engraved on a metal shield shaped plaque on the lid: "WESTERN AUSTRALIAN / TELEGRAPHS / FPB" Inside: 'TRANSLATION OF REGISTER / TO THE CHAIRMAN OF FREMANTLE TOWN TRUST / His Excellency Colonel Bruce heartily congratulates the / inhabitants of Fremantle on this annihilation of distance / between the Port and the Capital, and he requests that this, / the first message, may be made publicly known. / GOVERNMENT HOUSE, / PERTH, June 21, 1869 / Transmitted 11 am / J.C.F."|.2: "Instrument Register / of the First / Telegraphic Message / in / Western Australia"|.3: "The first Telegraph Pole / in / WESTERN AUSTRALIA / was erected by / The Hon. Frederick P. Barlee / Colonial Secretary / on 19th Febr. 1869"telegram, commemorative item, morse inker, morse tape, morse code, code, postmaster-general's department -
Public Record Office Victoria
Letter, 1 December 1854
... Melbourne melbourne VA 856 Colonial Secretary's Office Eureka ...VA 856 Colonial Secretary's OfficeEureka Stockade:Hothams reply to Patrick Smyth's letter -
Public Record Office Victoria
Letter, 12 January 1854
... Melbourne melbourne VA Colonial Secretary's Office show of force ...VA Colonial Secretary's OfficeEureka Stockade:Rede reads the Riot Actshow of force -
Public Record Office Victoria
Report, 28 November 1854
... Melbourne melbourne VA 856 Colonial Secretary's Office paranoia ...VA 856 Colonial Secretary's OfficeEureka Stockade:Rede reports on a dinner held for the American Consul and states his mistrust of the Americansparanoia, mistrust, americanisation, robert rede -
Public Record Office Victoria
Letter, 27 November 1854
... Melbourne melbourne VA 856 Colonial Secretary's Office Eureka ...VA 856 Colonial Secretary's OfficeEureka Stockade:Rede warned by Father Smyth of attack on Camp -
Public Record Office Victoria
Letter, 20 December 1854
... Melbourne melbourne VA 856 Colonial Secretary's Office Eureka ...VA 856 Colonial Secretary's OfficeEureka Stockade:Rede to the Chief Commssioner 20th December Martial law must be enforced -
Public Record Office Victoria
Letter, 29 November 1854
... Melbourne melbourne VA 856 Colonial Secretary's Office trial ...VA 856 Colonial Secretary's OfficeEureka Stockade:Captain Pasley's Reporttrial, sedition -
Public Record Office Victoria
Report, 4 December 1854
VA Governor (including Lieutenant Governor 1851-1855 and Governor's Office)Eureka Stockade:Report from C.Pasley to the Honorable Colonial Secretary about the aftermath of the battleshow of force -
Public Record Office Victoria
Letter,Police Report, 16 October 1854
... Melbourne melbourne VA 856 Colonial Secretary's Office trial james ...VA 856 Colonial Secretary's OfficeEureka Stockade:Bentley predicts the destruction of his hoteltrial, james bentley, john dewes, james scobie, mr. j. f. bentley, charles hotham -
Public Record Office Victoria
Report, 16 October 1854
... Melbourne melbourne VA 856 Colonial Secretary's Office political ...VA 856 Colonial Secretary's OfficeEureka Stockade:Meeting of Diggers in Bendigopolitical meeting -
Public Record Office Victoria
Correspondence, 11 June 1854
... Melbourne melbourne VA 856 Colonial Secretary's Office riot Eureka ...VA 856 Colonial Secretary's OfficeEureka Stockade:List of men arrested on the charge of Riot at Bentley's Hotelriot -
Public Record Office Victoria
Deposition, 22 October 1854
... Melbourne melbourne VA 856 Colonial Secretary's Office trial james ...VA 856 Colonial Secretary's OfficeEureka Stockade:Bentley's servant confessestrial, james scobie, thomas mooney, michael welsh -
Public Record Office Victoria
Report, October 1854
... Melbourne melbourne VA 856 Colonial Secretary's Office fire; gold ...VA 856 Colonial Secretary's OfficeEureka Stockade:Weekly report from Gold Commissioners, Rede's account of the burning of Bentley's hotelfire; gold -
Public Record Office Victoria
Report, 21 December 1854
... Melbourne melbourne VA 856 Colonial Secretary's Office Eureka ...VA 856 Colonial Secretary's OfficeEureka Stockade:Gold Commissioner Wright reports on the state of the Goldfields post- Eureka -
Public Record Office Victoria
Letter, 14 December 1854,18 December 1854
... Melbourne melbourne VA 856 Colonial Secretary's Office trial ...VA 856 Colonial Secretary's OfficeEureka Stockade:Capt. Thomas' report - Flag capturedtrial, southern cross flag -
Public Record Office Victoria
Letter, 22 October 1854
... Melbourne melbourne VA 856 Colonial Secretary's Office trial Eureka ...VA 856 Colonial Secretary's OfficeEureka Stockade:Captain MacMahon reports on his arrival at Ballarat and steps taken by himtrial -
Public Record Office Victoria
Report, 30 November 1854
... Melbourne melbourne VA 856 Colonial Secretary's Office trial ...VA 856 Colonial Secretary's OfficeEureka Stockade:Captain Pasley's report - follow uptrial, sedition -
Public Record Office Victoria
Correspondence, 1854
... Melbourne melbourne VA 856 Colonial Secretary's Office trial ...VA 856 Colonial Secretary's OfficeEureka Stockade:Catholics protest over the treatment of Smyth's servanttrial, catholic, protest, maltreatment, johannes gregorious, james lord, timothy hayes, charles hotham, michael bourke, timothy shanahan, patrick curtain, michael quinlan, john hynes, john manning -
Public Record Office Victoria
Letter, 20 September 1855
... Melbourne melbourne VA 856 Colonial Secretary's Office Eureka ...VA 856 Colonial Secretary's OfficeEureka Stockade:Raffaelo Carboni seeks compensation -
Public Record Office Victoria
Report, 27 October 1854
... Melbourne melbourne VA 856 Colonial Secretary's Office trial ...VA 856 Colonial Secretary's OfficeEureka Stockade:Captain MacMahon reports on plans for the defence of the Government Camptrial, licencing, eureka, diggers -
Public Record Office Victoria
Report, 30 November 1854
... Melbourne melbourne VA 856 Colonial Secretary's Office sedition ...VA 856 Colonial Secretary's OfficeEureka Stockade:Rede's account of the attack on the 12th Regimentsedition -
Public Record Office Victoria
Report, 2 December 1854
... Melbourne melbourne VA 856 Colonial Secretary's Office robert rede ...VA 856 Colonial Secretary's OfficeEureka Stockade:Resident Commsisioner Rede’s description of the stockade (written on the day before the attack)robert rede, attack -
Public Record Office Victoria
Letter, 22 October 1854
... Melbourne melbourne VA 856 Colonial Secretary's Office trial Eureka ...VA 856 Colonial Secretary's OfficeEureka Stockade:Commissioner Rede reports arrest of 2 men concerned in the latest outragetrial -
Public Record Office Victoria
Petition, 1855
... Melbourne melbourne VA 856 Colonial Secretary's Office Eureka ...VA 856 Colonial Secretary's OfficeEureka Stockade:Petition to Lieutenant-Governor Hotham from concerned citizens of Melbourne 1855 -
Public Record Office Victoria
Letter, 1 December 1854
... Melbourne melbourne VA 856 Colonial Secretary's Office Eureka ...VA 856 Colonial Secretary's OfficeEureka Stockade:Hotham's reply to Rede's report 30th November -
Kilmore Historical Society
Photograph, Real Estate House, c1970
The building was originally the Colonial Bank of Australasia and has a series of occupants, include a real estate firm in the 1970's20cm x 10cm black and white photograph of 1 Powlett street, former colonial bank of Australasia. corner of Powlett Street and Lancefield Road. Two story light coloured rendered building with signage for "Real Estate House" on top of the ground floor. Other signage painted on the Lancefield Road side of the building include: "Land specialists to Kilmore & district". The building also has an adjoining cottage on the Lancefield Road side of the property. There is also a figure crossing the road and five vehicles in the background of the photograph, three regular vehicles and two possible emergency service vehicles. A street sign can be seen pointing to: Lancefield, Kyneton, Foote Street, Melbourne and Seymour.PHO-00003banks and banking, real estate agents -
Tarnagulla History Archive
Photograph: Colonial Bank of Australasia (later Union Bank) in Tarnagulla, June 1866
David Gordon Collection. There were four banks in Tarnagulla at one stage, but two - the National Bank and the Bank of Australasia - were open for a short period only. The single-storey brick building at far left was built in 1859 and used by the Union Bank until 1888, and was later renamed 'Lochcarron' and used as premises by doctors and dentists. The two-storey building (right) was built in 1866 by the Colonial Bank of Australasia. Before this, the site had been occupied by Foo's shop. Whilst it was being built, the Colonial Bank operated from Company's Hotel (later known as Burstall Hall and the Council Chambers). The double-storey building in this image was used by the Colonial Bank from 1866 until 21st February, 1888. The premises were sold to the Union Bank for £2500. The Union Bank moved in and commenced operations on 6th June 1888, continuing until 1942. The building was later used as a general store until the 1990s. Both buildings are now private residences. This image was created by Aime Marchand in June 1866. Marchand (1846-1910) made a series of fourteen photographs which were submitted to the 1866-67 Melbourne Intercolonial Exhibition, where they earned a 1st Class Honourable Mention. This is one of those fourteen images. Of French or Belgian origin and possibly formerly an assayer in California, Marchand appears to have begun his practice of photography in Tarnagulla around 1865 as an assistant to A.B. Clay. By the following year he had settled in Portland, where he opened the Royal Photographic Studio in Gawler Street. From his base in Portland he toured surrounding districts, offering portrait and view services. Little else is known about his life. He appears to have left Australia in 1878. A misprint of his name in a local directory as Annie Marchand created the misconception that he was one of only a few named women photographers in the colonies. -
The 5th/6th Battalion Royal Victoria Regiment Historical Collection
Weapon - Ammunition, Musket ball
representive of early ammunition used by colonial forcesblack, led ball with imperfections and filingwark vc club, colonial, musket -
Melton City Libraries
Drawing, Open Day at Strathtulloh, Unknown
"Strathtulloh, 1402-1600 Greigs Road, Melton South, is significant as an early property in Victoria, retaining different eras of pioneering dwellings, ranging from a ruin to a fine Colonial style homestead. The property has close historical association with the early settlement of the Melton district, and was owned by the Henty family in the 1840s. The Strathtulloh property was alienated by the Crown in 1840 to Charles James Garrard, who sold it in 1848 to Charles and Stephen Henty, whose sister Jane and her husband Samuel Bryan lived there in the late 1840s. In 1853 the property then passed to William Tulloh, after whom the homestead was named. A primitive bluestone ruin of near the Toolern Creek, built of vesicular bluestone and mud mortar, is of unknown origin. It has commonly been assumed to pre-date 1840, and to have belonged to the original holder of the Exford lease, Dr Watton or Port Phillip Association member Dr Cotterill. This is unlikely, as the 1841 census records Dr Watton, and everyone else in the district, as living in a ‘wood’ dwelling. It may instead have been the residence of Garrard, and the Bryans, in the 1840s and an early map names a site near here as ‘Bryan’s outstation’. It is assumed that the two-level stone building that became the kitchen is the earliest intact building on the site, and was the first homestead; it is likely to date to the 1840s or 1850s. The main homestead is a substantial villa constructed of random coursed bluestone, with a verandah facing three sides, attic bedrooms with dormer windows, a fan light over the front door, a hipped roof originally clad in slate, and a large cellar. Although demonstrating characteristics of pioneering construction, such as unworked log beams, pit sawn beams, hand-sawn lintels and colonial door locks, documentary evidence shows that it was built c.1869. The homestead has now been structurally repaired and decoratively restored; a sympathetic new semi-detached rear extension was added in the early years of the 21st century. The former kitchen building has also undergone minor repairs and alterations". Strathtulloh Homestead at 1402-1600 Greigs Road, Melton Southlocal architecture