Showing 543 items
matching world war camp
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Linton and District Historical Society Inc
Photograph, Soldiers from Ballarat at Camp, Broadmeadows, April 1917, 1917
Photograph mounted on cardboard of group of soldiers in uniform, seated in rows. Members of front row are holding rifles. Two officers in centre of front row. Soldier seated on ground at front holds up sign in front of group. Words on sign are partially obscured by discoloration of photo, also bottom line of sign has been cut through when photo was mounted. Sign appears to read "Ballarat 18th Infantry Bde / A. Coy. 71st Infantry / Winners Championship / Camp Broadmeadows. / April 1917".world war 1914-1918, soldiers, 71st infantry, 18th infantry brigade -
Benalla Migrant Camp Exhibition
Functional object - Camp Garbage Bin, circa 1940-50s
This garbage bin originally belonged to the Dept of Defence Airforce Training Centre at Benalla, and after the end of World War 2, it became property of the Department of Immigration's Benalla Migrant Camp. Many of these bins were placed around the migrant accomodation huts and they are visible on photos of the camp.waste disposal, rubbish bin, garbage bin, garbage can -
Churchill Island Heritage Farm
Functional object - Furphy Water Cart, 1929
The family-owned Furphy company has been manufacturing agricultural equipment in Kyneton and then Shepparton in Victoria from the 1860s to the present day. In the late 1800s the company developed the Furphy Water Cart to help farmers transport water to and from and around their properties - especially in time of drought. At the beginning of World War One, the carts were used to distribute water amongst the thousands of soldiers completing their basic training at Broadmeadows. They were also used for the same purpose in the camps and battlefields overseas. As the soldiers gathered around the water carts they would often chat, share information and gossip amongst themselves. These practices resulted in the term Furphy evolving in to the Australian vernacular as meaning a statement or fact that isn’t quite true or a little bit dubious.Cylindrical tin water cart with small access lid on top, unpainted and mounted onto a two-wheel cartOn side of tank in black paint "CHURCHILL ISLAND" Embossed on end: Furphy water cart; makers Furphy & Sons, Shepparton and other inscriptions.farm machinery, water, furphy cart, horse drawn, furphy, churchill island, shepparton, kyneton