Showing 13528 items
matching hunter-william-surveyor
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Whitehorse Historical Society Inc.
Photograph, William Sandilands, 1939
Faded sepia photograph of William Charles Sandilands on a motorbike in front of a wooden house with a tank at the right. William was the eighth child of Louisa Amelia Schwerkolt (1890-1966) and John Sandilands (1881-1958)Billy on motorbike outside grandmas place. (Francesca Schwerkolt)sandilands william, schwerkolt louis, schwerkolt francesca (both) -
Stawell Historical Society Inc
Book, Esma Barratt, Brothers Barratt, Known Descendants of Thomas and William Barratt, 2000
Off White card cover with brown border and Two Portrait's on upper right, the other mid left.Brothers Barrett Thomas Barrett 1832-1900 William Barrett 1832-1910 Known descendants of Thomas & William Barrettstawell, family history -
Ringwood and District Historical Society
Books, Ian McKellar Books (4): History of the Family, History of Cape Otway, 14 Radar Station Wilson's Promontory, and Mt Hunter Tin Mine. Published 1989-2010
4 books by Ian C. McKellar; �37 A Year And A Free Passage - A History Of The McKellar Family Of Warrnambool. Published by Ian and Margaret McKellar, Heathmont, 1989. Printed by Globe Press P/L Brunswick - 153 pages.; Defending The Eye Of The Needle - A History Of Cape Otway 1939-1945. Published for Ian McKellar and Morrie Fenton, 2010. Printed by PenFolk Publishing, Blackburn - 195 pages.; History And Memories Of 14 Radar Station Wilsons Promontory. Published by Ian and Margaret McKellar, Heathmont, 2004. Printed by PenFolk Publishing, Blackburn - 103 pages.; The Rise And Fall Of The MtHunter Tin Mine, A History Of Northern Wilsns Promontory. Published by Ian and Margaret McKellar, Heathmont, 1993. Printed by Ringwood Litho Art and Design - 46 pages. +Additional Keywords: McKellar, Ian / McKellar, Margaret / Fenton, Morrie -
Ringwood and District Historical Society
Photograph, Ringwood High School - 1954, Form 1D. Boys standing (L-R): 1. Alan Carter, 2. David Lightfoot, 3. Maurice Henry, 4. Peter Van Ketwick, 5. Douglas Hume, 6. Alistair Wilkie, 7. John McCallum, 8. Robert Summerville, 9. Geoff Barker, 10. Ken Landy, 11. Peter Gluth, 12. Alan Richards, 13. Geoff Edwards, 14. Len Armfield, 15. Ray Davidson. Girls standing: 1. Sally Wilson, 2. Brenda Shore, 3. Jeanette Hancy, 4. Lea Boyce, 5. Carol Kennedy, 6. Joy MacDonald, 7. Diana Richards, 8. Racheal Nield, 9. Jeanette Martin, 10. Muriel Peacock, 11. Jennifer Bradley. Girls seated: 1. Barbara Tortoise, 2. Barbara Gotts, 3. Janice White, 4. Fay Clarice, 5. Wendy Pyke, 6. Moya Crane, 7. Dianne Dewer, 8. Dorothy Hunter, 9. Nola Hind, 10. Barbara Johnson, 11. Meryl Hearnes
Written on list in sleeve, "High School - Bedford Rd. Ringwood. Photo Pupils - Form 1D. Reading from Left to Right: Back row boys: 1. Alan Carter, 2. ??, 3. Maurice Henry, 4. Peter Van Ketwich, 5. Douglas Hume, 6. ??, 7. John Callam, 8. ??, 9. ??, 10. ??, 11. Peter Gluth, 12. ??, 13. Geoff Edwards, 14. Len Armfield, 15. Ray Davidson". -
National Vietnam Veterans Museum (NVVM)
Book, Corder, EM, The Deer Hunter, 1978
Young steel worker from Pennsylvania is not prepared for the horrors of war in VietnamfictionYoung steel worker from Pennsylvania is not prepared for the horrors of war in Vietnam vietnam, american, movie -
National Vietnam Veterans Museum (NVVM)
Book, Brennan, Matthew, Hunter-Killer Squadron: Aero-Weapons,(Copy 1 (hardcover)
They came together to form one of the most potent fighting forces the world had ever seen: Red teams, heavily armed Huey helicopters and the deadly AH-1 Cobras.They came together to form one of the most potent fighting forces the world had ever seen: Red teams, heavily armed Huey helicopters and the deadly AH-1 Cobras. 1961-1975 - personal narratives, american, vietnamese conflict, 1961-1975 - regimental histories - united states, huey helicopter, ah-1 cobra -
National Vietnam Veterans Museum (NVVM)
Book, Brennan, Matthew, Hunter-Killer Squadron: Aero-Weapons, (Copy 2 - softcover)
They came together to form one of the most potent fighting forces the world had ever seen: Red teams, heavily armed Huey helicopters and the deadly AH-1 Cobras.They came together to form one of the most potent fighting forces the world had ever seen: Red teams, heavily armed Huey helicopters and the deadly AH-1 Cobras. 1961-1975 - personal narratives, american, vietnamese conflict, 1961-1975 - regimental histories - united states, huey helicopter, ah-1 cobras -
Victorian Aboriginal Corporation for Languages
Book, Amanda Lissarrague, A salvage grammar and wordlist of the language from the Hunter River and Lake Macquarie, 2006
B&w photographs, word listsawabakal, kuringgai, wonnarua, lake macquarie, hunter river -
Koorie Heritage Trust
Book, Webb, Stephen G, Palaeopathology of Aboriginal Australians : health and disease across a hunter-gatherer continent, 1995
This book is a study of the health of Australia's inhabitants over 50,000 years. It represents the first continental survey of its kind as well as being the first to quantify and describe many important aspects of Australian hunter-gatherer health.xii, 324 p. : ill. ; 26 cm.This book is a study of the health of Australia's inhabitants over 50,000 years. It represents the first continental survey of its kind as well as being the first to quantify and describe many important aspects of Australian hunter-gatherer health.paleopathology -- australia. | aboriginal australians -- diseases -- history. | aboriginal australians -- health and hygiene -- history. | paleopathology. | paleopathology -- australia. | disease. | health. | hygiene. -
Whitehorse Historical Society Inc.
Article, Gough - the big vote hunter, 1974
PM Gough Whitlam's whirlwind tour included Blackburn lake Sanctuary (photo).PM Gough Whitlam's whirlwind tour included Blackburn lake Sanctuary (photo).PM Gough Whitlam's whirlwind tour included Blackburn lake Sanctuary (photo).webster, jean, whitlam, margaret, blackburn lake sanctuary, whitlam, gough -
Moorabbin Air Museum
Manual (Item) - Sir W. G. Armstrong Whitworth Aircraft Ltd , Technical Notes - Hunter Airframe Course (Mk.1-6)
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Moorabbin Air Museum
Book - SUBMARINE HUNTER, BEN (ZBIGNIEW) PATYNOWSKI, 2008
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Ararat Gallery TAMA
Textile, Frances Burke, The Hunter (place mat), 1950-1955
Frances Burke: Designer of Modern Textiles Australia’s most influential and celebrated textile designer of the mid-20th century, Frances Burke (1904-1994), employed Australian native flora, garden flowers, marine subjects, Indigenous culture and increasingly, abstract motifs in her stunning modern fabrics. A confident, determined designer and businesswoman; Burke made the shift from fine art to design in 1937. While she began by designing dress fabrics for Melbourne’s fashionable Georges Department store, printing them on linen using lino blocks, she was an early adopter of the screen-printing process and during the war years began printing on cotton. Burke’s furnishing fabrics took their place in influential modern buildings Australia-wide through collaborations with leading architects and interior designers. They included Robin Boyd’s 1949 House of Tomorrow, Roy Grounds’ Quamby flats, Guilford Bell’s Royal Hayman Island Resort for Ansett Airlines, and Yuncken, Freeman Brothers, Griffiths and Simpson’s Canberra Civic Centre Theatre. In the post-war period, Burke made regular trips to the United States and Europe, on her return advising homeowners and manufacturers on the latest trends in products, colours and home design in lectures and interviews. At New Design her fabric showroom and interior design consultancy Burke introduced furniture by emerging designers Clement Meadmore and Grant Featherston in the early 1950s and presented local and imported homewares, mostly from the United States. She was enthusiastic about the convenient and comfortable lifestyle experienced by ordinary American women. Her fabrics and advice were regularly featured in Australian Home Beautiful, Australian House and Garden and the newspapers of the day. Some of Burke’s designs had remarkable longevity. Tiger Stripe (1938) for example, continued to be produced in a wide range of colours until 1970 and Crete (1946) remained a popular choice for interiors into the 1960s. Drawing from a rich variety of sources including Indigenous culture in Goanna (c.1954) and Pacific Island tapa cloth designs in Bird and Tree (1940), Burke also looked to Japan in designs such as Plum Blossom (1948) and Zen (1965). She loved exploring the potential of native flora, seen in designs including Waratah (1955) and Flannel Flower (1955), while garden flowers were the source for many other designs including Belladonna (1940), Periwinkle (n.d.) and Rose (1947). Burke’s clever interplay of a single striking printed colour with lively gestural lines revealing the white base fabric, gave her designs a vibrancy that characterised the optimistic post-war era. This can be seen in Burke’s fabrics for Hayman Island including Angel Fish and Seapiece (both 1949) which expressed the freshness and excitement of the luxurious new tropical resort and led to further commissions. Burke’s three decades in business (1937-1970) were an unparalleled success in the story of Australian design. Her fabrics have been collected by the NGA, the Powerhouse Museum, NGV, RMIT Design Archives and Sydney Living Museums in addition to Ararat Gallery TAMA. Written by Nanette Carter and Robyn Oswald-Jacobs. -
Ararat Gallery TAMA
Textile, Frances Burke, The Hunter (place mat), 1950-1955
Frances Burke: Designer of Modern Textiles Australia’s most influential and celebrated textile designer of the mid-20th century, Frances Burke (1904-1994), employed Australian native flora, garden flowers, marine subjects, Indigenous culture and increasingly, abstract motifs in her stunning modern fabrics. A confident, determined designer and businesswoman; Burke made the shift from fine art to design in 1937. While she began by designing dress fabrics for Melbourne’s fashionable Georges Department store, printing them on linen using lino blocks, she was an early adopter of the screen-printing process and during the war years began printing on cotton. Burke’s furnishing fabrics took their place in influential modern buildings Australia-wide through collaborations with leading architects and interior designers. They included Robin Boyd’s 1949 House of Tomorrow, Roy Grounds’ Quamby flats, Guilford Bell’s Royal Hayman Island Resort for Ansett Airlines, and Yuncken, Freeman Brothers, Griffiths and Simpson’s Canberra Civic Centre Theatre. In the post-war period, Burke made regular trips to the United States and Europe, on her return advising homeowners and manufacturers on the latest trends in products, colours and home design in lectures and interviews. At New Design her fabric showroom and interior design consultancy Burke introduced furniture by emerging designers Clement Meadmore and Grant Featherston in the early 1950s and presented local and imported homewares, mostly from the United States. She was enthusiastic about the convenient and comfortable lifestyle experienced by ordinary American women. Her fabrics and advice were regularly featured in Australian Home Beautiful, Australian House and Garden and the newspapers of the day. Some of Burke’s designs had remarkable longevity. Tiger Stripe (1938) for example, continued to be produced in a wide range of colours until 1970 and Crete (1946) remained a popular choice for interiors into the 1960s. Drawing from a rich variety of sources including Indigenous culture in Goanna (c.1954) and Pacific Island tapa cloth designs in Bird and Tree (1940), Burke also looked to Japan in designs such as Plum Blossom (1948) and Zen (1965). She loved exploring the potential of native flora, seen in designs including Waratah (1955) and Flannel Flower (1955), while garden flowers were the source for many other designs including Belladonna (1940), Periwinkle (n.d.) and Rose (1947). Burke’s clever interplay of a single striking printed colour with lively gestural lines revealing the white base fabric, gave her designs a vibrancy that characterised the optimistic post-war era. This can be seen in Burke’s fabrics for Hayman Island including Angel Fish and Seapiece (both 1949) which expressed the freshness and excitement of the luxurious new tropical resort and led to further commissions. Burke’s three decades in business (1937-1970) were an unparalleled success in the story of Australian design. Her fabrics have been collected by the NGA, the Powerhouse Museum, NGV, RMIT Design Archives and Sydney Living Museums in addition to Ararat Gallery TAMA. Written by Nanette Carter and Robyn Oswald-Jacobs. -
Ararat Gallery TAMA
Textile, Frances Burke, The Hunter (place mat), 1950-1955
Frances Burke: Designer of Modern Textiles Australia’s most influential and celebrated textile designer of the mid-20th century, Frances Burke (1904-1994), employed Australian native flora, garden flowers, marine subjects, Indigenous culture and increasingly, abstract motifs in her stunning modern fabrics. A confident, determined designer and businesswoman; Burke made the shift from fine art to design in 1937. While she began by designing dress fabrics for Melbourne’s fashionable Georges Department store, printing them on linen using lino blocks, she was an early adopter of the screen-printing process and during the war years began printing on cotton. Burke’s furnishing fabrics took their place in influential modern buildings Australia-wide through collaborations with leading architects and interior designers. They included Robin Boyd’s 1949 House of Tomorrow, Roy Grounds’ Quamby flats, Guilford Bell’s Royal Hayman Island Resort for Ansett Airlines, and Yuncken, Freeman Brothers, Griffiths and Simpson’s Canberra Civic Centre Theatre. In the post-war period, Burke made regular trips to the United States and Europe, on her return advising homeowners and manufacturers on the latest trends in products, colours and home design in lectures and interviews. At New Design her fabric showroom and interior design consultancy Burke introduced furniture by emerging designers Clement Meadmore and Grant Featherston in the early 1950s and presented local and imported homewares, mostly from the United States. She was enthusiastic about the convenient and comfortable lifestyle experienced by ordinary American women. Her fabrics and advice were regularly featured in Australian Home Beautiful, Australian House and Garden and the newspapers of the day. Some of Burke’s designs had remarkable longevity. Tiger Stripe (1938) for example, continued to be produced in a wide range of colours until 1970 and Crete (1946) remained a popular choice for interiors into the 1960s. Drawing from a rich variety of sources including Indigenous culture in Goanna (c.1954) and Pacific Island tapa cloth designs in Bird and Tree (1940), Burke also looked to Japan in designs such as Plum Blossom (1948) and Zen (1965). She loved exploring the potential of native flora, seen in designs including Waratah (1955) and Flannel Flower (1955), while garden flowers were the source for many other designs including Belladonna (1940), Periwinkle (n.d.) and Rose (1947). Burke’s clever interplay of a single striking printed colour with lively gestural lines revealing the white base fabric, gave her designs a vibrancy that characterised the optimistic post-war era. This can be seen in Burke’s fabrics for Hayman Island including Angel Fish and Seapiece (both 1949) which expressed the freshness and excitement of the luxurious new tropical resort and led to further commissions. Burke’s three decades in business (1937-1970) were an unparalleled success in the story of Australian design. Her fabrics have been collected by the NGA, the Powerhouse Museum, NGV, RMIT Design Archives and Sydney Living Museums in addition to Ararat Gallery TAMA. Written by Nanette Carter and Robyn Oswald-Jacobs. -
Ararat Gallery TAMA
Textile, Frances Burke, The Hunter (place mat), 1950-1955
Frances Burke: Designer of Modern Textiles Australia’s most influential and celebrated textile designer of the mid-20th century, Frances Burke (1904-1994), employed Australian native flora, garden flowers, marine subjects, Indigenous culture and increasingly, abstract motifs in her stunning modern fabrics. A confident, determined designer and businesswoman; Burke made the shift from fine art to design in 1937. While she began by designing dress fabrics for Melbourne’s fashionable Georges Department store, printing them on linen using lino blocks, she was an early adopter of the screen-printing process and during the war years began printing on cotton. Burke’s furnishing fabrics took their place in influential modern buildings Australia-wide through collaborations with leading architects and interior designers. They included Robin Boyd’s 1949 House of Tomorrow, Roy Grounds’ Quamby flats, Guilford Bell’s Royal Hayman Island Resort for Ansett Airlines, and Yuncken, Freeman Brothers, Griffiths and Simpson’s Canberra Civic Centre Theatre. In the post-war period, Burke made regular trips to the United States and Europe, on her return advising homeowners and manufacturers on the latest trends in products, colours and home design in lectures and interviews. At New Design her fabric showroom and interior design consultancy Burke introduced furniture by emerging designers Clement Meadmore and Grant Featherston in the early 1950s and presented local and imported homewares, mostly from the United States. She was enthusiastic about the convenient and comfortable lifestyle experienced by ordinary American women. Her fabrics and advice were regularly featured in Australian Home Beautiful, Australian House and Garden and the newspapers of the day. Some of Burke’s designs had remarkable longevity. Tiger Stripe (1938) for example, continued to be produced in a wide range of colours until 1970 and Crete (1946) remained a popular choice for interiors into the 1960s. Drawing from a rich variety of sources including Indigenous culture in Goanna (c.1954) and Pacific Island tapa cloth designs in Bird and Tree (1940), Burke also looked to Japan in designs such as Plum Blossom (1948) and Zen (1965). She loved exploring the potential of native flora, seen in designs including Waratah (1955) and Flannel Flower (1955), while garden flowers were the source for many other designs including Belladonna (1940), Periwinkle (n.d.) and Rose (1947). Burke’s clever interplay of a single striking printed colour with lively gestural lines revealing the white base fabric, gave her designs a vibrancy that characterised the optimistic post-war era. This can be seen in Burke’s fabrics for Hayman Island including Angel Fish and Seapiece (both 1949) which expressed the freshness and excitement of the luxurious new tropical resort and led to further commissions. Burke’s three decades in business (1937-1970) were an unparalleled success in the story of Australian design. Her fabrics have been collected by the NGA, the Powerhouse Museum, NGV, RMIT Design Archives and Sydney Living Museums in addition to Ararat Gallery TAMA. Written by Nanette Carter and Robyn Oswald-Jacobs. -
Beechworth Honey Archive
Publication, e-book, A manual of bee-keeping (Hunter, J.), London, 1879, 1879
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Park Orchards Community House
Newspaper, Gentle exercise course at Park Orchards Community House, with tutor Betty Hunter. Doncaster and Templestowe News, 16 September 1986
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Park Orchards Community House
Newspaper, Exercise classes at Park Orchards Community House, with Betty Hunter. Doncaster and Templestowe News 1 February 1989
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Ringwood RSL Sub-Branch
Book - Author- David L Mearns, The Shipwreck Hunter
Paperback book -
Bass Coast Shire Council - Robert Smith Collection
Artwork, other - [Title Page Plate for his Journal], John Hunter
Scotland/Australia 1737 - 1821Engraving -
Linton Mechanics Institute and Free Library Collection
Book - Novel, Daudet, Alphonse, Tartarin of Tarascon : traveller, 'Turk', and lion-hunter ; alternative title: The prodigious adventures of Tartarin of Tarascon, [First published 1872. This edition 1887?]
245 p. : ill. (Illustrated by Montegut, De Myrbach, Picard, Rossi; engraved by Guillaume Brothers). Pale green cover, spine and corners trimmed with brown leather, embossed in gold.fictionalphonse daudet, fiction -
Linton Mechanics Institute and Free Library Collection
Book - Novel, Stuart, Logan, The bandit hunter, 1957
Western160 p. : red cover, image cut from original dust jacket pasted to front, depicting two men reaching for their gunsfictionWesternfiction, westerns, logan stuart -
Moorabbin Air Museum
Model (Item) - Hawker Hunter Czech scale 1:72 needs repair tail
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Federation University Historical Collection
Document - Invoice, Invoice from William Flynn, 25/05/1977
Invoice from William Flynn to Mr Dixon of the Ballarat School of Minesballarat school of mines, dixon, william flynn, invoice -
Eltham District Historical Society Inc
Folder, Reverend William Finn, 1865
Folder of information on Reverend William Finn, Trustee, Eltham Cemetery, 1865reverend william finn -
Victorian Aboriginal Corporation for Languages
Thesis, Alexandra Blaszak, The vocabulary of Eastern Kulin : Boonwurrung, Taunurung and Woiwurrung language varieties : a study of the non-verb language of the William Thomas Papers (MS 214), 2008
BA (Honours) thesis examining the vocabularies presented in the William Thomas Papers.maps, word listsboonwurrung, taungurung, woiwurrung, barry blake, reverend william thomas, eatern kulin language, language revival -
Whitehorse Historical Society Inc.
Photograph, William Cook, 1880s
Black and white photo of William Cook in formal pose about 1880.cook, william -
Old Colonists' Association of Ballarat Inc.
Photograph - Colour, Clare Gervasoni, William Collard Smith Memorial in the Ballarat Town Hall, 28/05/2017
Photograph of a marble memorial to Lieutenant Colonel William Collard Smith M.L.A..In Memoriam Lt.Col. Willia Collard Smith M.L.A. Ballaarat West Member of the Municipal Council of Ballaarat from 1856 until 1892 Chairman 1860-1. Mayor 1874 and 1887 Obiit 20th October 1894william collard smith, ballarat, council, mayor, volunteer regiment -
Mt Dandenong & District Historical Society Inc.
Photograph, Two men seated at The Rock, William Street, Kalorama. 1943, 1943
Laurie ? and friend seated on rock formation in William Street, Kalorama in 1943.kalorama, william street