Showing 13336 items
matching horse-drawn
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Wangaratta RSL Sub Branch
Unframed Photograph, Light Horse
Light Horse soldiers probably 8th Brigade taken in front of grandstand at Wangaratta ? showgrounds Black and white unframed photograph of Light Horse Troop soldiers taken at side of a grandstand."Light Horse" handwrittenlight horse, wangaratta -
Melbourne Tram Museum
Photograph - MMTB horse drawn cable drum wagon, Keith Kings
Photo shows the horse drawn MMTB cable drum carrying wagon at the TMSV Museum at Bylands, mid 1970s. Has the MMTB identification, address and mass details painted on the vehicle. Behind the wagon is a Furphy water cart. Used to carry and distribute cable including overhead. Photo of the vehicle can be seen on page 68 of the book Destination City 3rd Edition.Yields information about the MMTB cable drum carrying wagon at Bylands.Photograph - MMTB horse drawn cable drum wagon at the TMSV Bylands Museum On rear in ink. TMSV – Horse drawn cable drum wagon at Bylands (Also Furphy water tank), Keith Kings photo. tramways, tmsv, bylands, horse drawn vehicles, overhead, cable drum -
Ringwood and District Historical Society
Photograph, Mr B.B.McAlpin driving horse drawn carriage with other family members. Ringwood
Black and white photograph"Written on back of photograph" Mr B.B.McAlpin driving, Mrs McAlpin beside him, Mr J.McAlpin standing on step, Mrs J.McAlpin behind Mr B.B.McAlpin -
Ringwood and District Historical Society
Photograph, Mr Clarence Hams in horse drawn carriage- Warrandyte Road, Ringwood. c1918
Black and white photograph"Written on back of photograph" Mr Clarence Hams in buggy at top of Kennedy's Hill - Warrandyte Road. -
Ringwood and District Historical Society
Photograph, Judy O'Brien of Mooroolbark and friends Shirley Bonica and Linda Stewart in old-fashioned dress, in horse drawn trap
Catalogue card reads, "Judy O'Brien of Mooroolbark and friends Shirley Bonica and Linda Stewart gain a place with her old-fashioned turnout in the fancy dress senior section". No other information as to date or occasion. -
Castlemaine Art Museum
Photograph - Black and white print, H.Appel's Five Flag's Hotel, Campbells Creek. With 3 horse drawn carriages - 6 gentlemen and 2 ladies with a baby
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Stawell Historical Society Inc
Photograph, Horse drawn wagons loaded with bagged Grain
Black and white photograph of Stawell Flour Mill owned by Frayne family for many years. Photograph copied from "Stawell & The Grampians " booklet p32. Published 1911 (Cat no 3580 m/box 3 room 2).Wooden 3 storey building verandah and wooden paling fence. stawell industry -
Malmsbury Historical Society
Photograph (Item), "Memorabilia Display, Horse Drawn Scarifyer", Malmsbury ca1988
Buildings - Town Hall People - "Slimmon Family,Len Williams" -
Malmsbury Historical Society
Photograph (Item), "M.H.S. Exhibition At St Johns Church, Horse Drawn Ere", Malmsbury c1991
Associated with - M.H.S. Buildings - St Johns Church People - "Keath, George" -
Malmsbury Historical Society
Photograph (Item), "Steam Train, Horse Drawn Wagons, Old Lamps", Malmsbury ca1990
Buildings - Malmsbury Town Hall People - "Keath, George; Dorothy" -
Malmsbury Historical Society
Photograph (Item), "Train Display, Horse Drawn Wagons", Malmsbury ca1990
Buildings - Malmsbury Town Hall People - "Keath, George" -
City of Ballarat Libraries
Photograph, Mrs May and daughters in horse drawn gig at Glendaruel circa 1905
glendaruel, may, vehicle, farm -
City of Ballarat Libraries
Photograph - Card Box Photographs, Horse Drawn Cab Rank, Ballarat circa 1870
Some of the businesses that can be seen are M.P. Whiteside (Tailor) and Alex Marks & Co. The Burke & Wills monument can also be seen.horse drawn cab, ballarat, sturt street, burke & wills monument, vehicle, streetscape, commerical, m.p. whiteside, alex marks & co. -
City of Ballarat Libraries
Photograph - Card Box Photographs, Horse Drawn Spring Card, Gazzard Coach Builders, Ballarat circa 1900
gazzard coach builders, creswick road, vehicle, manufacturing -
City of Ballarat Libraries
Photograph - Card Box Photographs, Horse Drawn Phaeton Buggy, Gazzard Coach Builders, Ballarat circa 1900
gazzard coach builders, creswick road, vehicle, manufacturing -
Ambulance Victoria Museum
Photograph, framed, The first two horse-drawn St John Ambulance wagons near Studley Park, Kew - 1899
Black and white photograph (Print) with mountboard surround, enclosed in a timber frame (painted green) with Perspex glazing. Hanging string attached at back.horse-drawn ambulance, kew, studley park -
Southern Sherbrooke Historical Society Inc.
Photograph, Photo - Bill Hermon with his son John, sitting on a horse drawn potato planter
B&W photo of Bill Hermon sitting on the back of a piece of farm equipment which is probably a potato planter. His son John is sitting in the hopper, holding light reins which are attached to the yokes of two draughthorses. John looks about four years old. They are resting. Photo taken 16th November 1947. -
Bayside Gallery - Bayside City Council Art & Heritage Collection
Work on paper - ink and watercolour, Annette Meikle, Horse-drawn tram, 1977
In 1977, artist Annette Meikle undertook a commission to illustrate a book recording stories of places and people in the Bayside area. It was published in 1978 as Sandringham Sketchbook, with text by Elizabeth Waters. The sketches were intended to record remaining examples of Bayside’s early architecture and environment, as well as reflect newer architectural changes. Meikle went on to donate 22 of these sketches to Bayside City Council in 2003.Annette Meikle, Horse-drawn tram 1977, ink and watercolour, 35 x 23.5 cm. Bayside City Council Art and Heritage Collection. Donated by the artist, 2003annette meikle, sandringham sketchbook, elizabeth waters, horse-drawn tram, tram, public transport, horse, beaumaris tramway company -
Wonga Park Community Cottage History Group
Negative (Item) - Negative of a photo, Mrs. Sharpe in her horse-drawn cart, 1919, at the corner of Jumping Creek and Hartley Roads
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Wonga Park Community Cottage History Group
Photograph (sub-item) - Black and White, Mrs. Sharpe in her horse-drawn cart, 1919, at the corner of Jumping Creek and Hartley Roads, c 1919
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Ringwood RSL Sub-Branch
Medal - M2-032252 Pte W Lemming, M2 signifying Motor Vehicle not horse drawn
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Merbein District Historical Society
Photograph, Merbein Co-op Horse drawn cart with employees No 1, c.1943
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Merbein District Historical Society
Photograph, Merbein Co-op Horse drawn cart with employees No 2, c.1943
garnie griffin, dot leeder, icky james, don kimpton, halliday, lee -
Merbein District Historical Society
Photograph, Merbein Co-op Horse drawn cart with employees No 3, c.1943
george sylvia -
Merbein District Historical Society
Photograph, Merbein Co-op Horse drawn cart with employees No 4, c.1943
halliday, king, lylia lee, don kimpton, bessie flenley, elwyn rickard, dot leeder -
Stawell Historical Society Inc
Photograph, Fully Loaded horse drawn carriages in Main Street Stawell
Main Street Scene Bone Saddlers and Harness Maker Times Newspaper Office. Whiteside's building at centre and Town Hall Hotel on Rightstawell -
Lara RSL Sub Branch
Photograph, Set 4 photographs. and others for Torquay Light Horse camp, 1940
These images capture for all time Light Horsemen travelling through Geelong on their way to camp at Torquay for the last Group meeting in Australia . information following - details obtained from .........https://torquayhistory.com/light-horse-brigade/ On Australia Day, 1997, Sir John Young unveiled this plaque on Point Danger, Torquay. Torquay history, Light Horse Training Camp, WW2 Plaque at Pt. Danger Note----- (See images to view plaque) The plaque identifies a significant event in Torquay’s history and the sentiments of ‘change’ for the Light Horse Brigade – from horses to machines. In 1940 the four Light Horse Regiments (4th, 8th, 13th and 20th), some 5000 Light Horse and 2000 horses camped and trained at Torquay. Three other regiments, formerly mounted on horses, were also at Torquay ‘mounted’ on privately owned trucks and cars. Division troops included Artillery, Engineers, Signals, Field Ambulance and other branches of the Army necessary to enable a Division to function. It wasn’t just the sheer numbers of men coming to this little town that made the event significant, it was also the fact that the men of the Light Horse were dramatic, almost glamorous figures and it is easy to see their exploits as some splendid adventure. Horses have played a special role in the story of Australia. They were the only means of transport across this huge country, so it was necessary for everyone to have the ability to ride a horse. When war broke out in 1899 between Britain and the Boers of South Africa (“Boer” was Dutch for “farmer”) Australia sent troops to fight. At first Britain was wary of using untried, unprofessional colonial cavalrymen but soon saw that the slouch-hatted Australian “bushmen” were a match for the fast-moving and unconventional mounted commandos of the Boers. The Australians proved themselves to be expert rough-riding horsemen and good shots. Bush life had hardened them to go for long periods with little food and water. They also showed remarkable ability to find their way in a strange country and use its features for cover, in both attack and defence. By 1914, when Australia joined the war against Germany, there were 23 Light Horse regiments of militia volunteers. Many men from these units joined the Light Horse regiments of the Australian Imperial Force (AIF). Men were given remounts (if not using their own horses) – army horses bought by Commonwealth purchasing officers from graziers and breeders. These were called “walers” because they were a New South Wales stockhorse type – strong, great-hearted animals with the strains of the thoroughbred and semi-draught to give them speed, strength and stamina. On 1st November, 1914, Australia’s First Infantry Division and the first four Light Horse regiments sailed for England in a fleet of transport ships. The first of the Light Horse arrived at Gallipoli in May without their horses. Back with their horses after Gallipoli, they were formidable combatants across the Sinai and Palestine. Some British commanders observed that the light horseman moved with a “lazy, slouching gait, like that of a sleepy tiger” but described how the promise of battle “changes that careless gait, into a live athletic swing that takes him over the ground much quicker than other troops”. They had Light Horse, Torquay, training campdeveloped a reputation as formidable infantrymen. The Turks called them “the White Ghurkas” – a reference to their deadly skill with the bayonet. The Arabs called them “The Kings of the Feathers”. The plume had originally been a battle honour of the Queensland Mounted Infantry for their work in the shearer’s strike of 1891. During WW1 it was adopted by almost all the Light Horse Regiments. It was the proud badge of the light horseman. The most famous of their battles was the attack on Beersheba- the charge of the 4th Light Horse Brigade. Mounted infantrymen and their superb walers had carried out one of the most successful cavalry charges in history – against what seemed impossible odds. They surprised the Turks by charging cavalry-style, when they would normally have ridden close to an objective then dismounted to fight. The fall of Beersheba swung the battle tide against the Turks in Palestine; and changed the history of the Middle East. While 19 men from the Surf Coast Shire served with the 4th Light Horse over the course of WW1, only four were involved in the charge of Beersheba- John GAYLARD, Philip QUINN.(Winchelsea); Wallace FINDLAY (Anglesea); Harry TRIGG (Bambra). After the war, Light Horse units played a key role in the Australian Government’s compulsory military training programme. The Citizen Military Forces (C.M.F.) thrived on the glamour of the wartime Light Horse tradition, ignoring the possibility that motor vehicles would soon replace the horses. When training was no longer compulsory, the C.M.F. regiments declined and horses became more of a luxury during the 1930s depression years of poverty and unemployment. Some regiments were motorised. Then, in 1939, Australia joined Britain in another world war. Training was increased for the militia at both home bases and regional training camps. The camp at Torquay in 1940, commanded by Major General Rankin, was at Divisional strength. By the end of the camp some felt that the Division was ready for active service. Gradually, over the next four years, the Australian Light Horse units were mounted on wheels and tracks and the horses were retired. Six men enlisted at the Torquay camp and another 57 men and women enlisted at Torquay for service in WW2. Those who served in the Militia provided valuable Officers and NCOs and men for the armed services during the war. Each infantry division of the 2nd AIF had a Light Horse regiment attached to it. But the day of the Australian mounted soldier hadn’t quite passed. During World War II, Australia’s 6th Cavalry Regiment formed a mounted unit they called “The Kelly Gang” which did valuable scouting work. In New Guinea, a mounted Light Horse Troop did patrol duty and helped carry supplies. Some fully equipped walers were flown into Borneo for reconnaissance in rugged mountain country. But by the end of the war, in 1945, the horse had disappeared from the Australian Army. References: Australian Light Horse Association www.lighthorse.org.au National Australia Archives Australian War Memorial Surf Coast Shire WW1 memorials www.togethertheyserved.com The Light horse- a Cavalry under Canvas Light Horse, Training Camp, Torquay, WW2 Late in 1939 it was decided to set up a Lighthorse training camp in Torquay to train both men and horses for the battles of the Second World War. Horses, men and equipment came on special trains from all over Victoria and NSW, and as you would expect horseman came from areas such as Omeo and Sale, the Wimmera and the Western District. They arrived at the Geelong racecourse for watering in the Barwon River and then were ridden across the ford at the breakwater and began their 11 mile trek to Torquay. Light Horse, Training Camp, Torquay, WW2 Tent city By the end of January 1940 the camp at Torquay accommodated some 5000 men and 2500 horses of the Second Cavalry Division. The rows of horses, tents and huts near Blackgate Road were quite a sight. While the cavalrymen engaged in exercises on the land and on the beaches, many of the troops took over the Torquay School for special training of men and officers. Mr Bob Pettit local farmer and Councillor for the Barrabool Shire, wrote about the Light horse in the Surf Coast Community News in 1985 saying “They used to travel about the district riding four abreast in one long convoy. To my annoyance they went through my property and shut all the gates behind them. I had certain gates open to let stock in to the water holes and it would take me three -quarters of an hour to follow the horsemen up and put all the gates right again” he continued “the men from the Light Horse were here when the fire went through in March 1940. He recalled an incident when early one morning, as some one blew the bugle, a soldier putting a white sheet on the line frightened the horses. They panicked and ran off in all directions. Six went over the cliff near Bird Rock, five were never found, and the rest were gathered up after nearly a fortnight in the bush around Addiscott and Anglesea" Light Horse, Training Camp, Torquay, WW2, Geelong Parade Geelong parade The training camp culminated in a parade through the streets of Geelong on March 12th 1940. The salute was given at the Town Hall and the troops continued on a route to the You Yang’s for a training exercise. Note-----(see media section for photograph) The Camp was abandoned in mid 1940 as it was deemed unsuitable for training during winter and the cost of a permanent camp could not be justified if it could not be used all year. Historic.......Rare,,,Interpretive.Sepia photographs.set of four ....post card size ....Horses &LighthorsemenNo 1, Lighthorsemen Regiment Geelong 1940......No 2 Light Horse at Breakwater Geelong 1938 to 1940....No 3 Light Horse at Breakwater Geelong 1938 to 1940.....No 4 Light Horse crossing Breakwater camped at Geelong Showgrounds. These markings are on reverse of photographs.light horsemengeelong 1940., world war 2 -
Tatura Irrigation & Wartime Camps Museum
Photograph, D. Walker, Horse trough Tatura, 1986
Photograph of concrete horse trough in Walshe Street Tatura. Built in memory of Annis and George Bills, who had no family and donated money to build horse troughs in many towns. Flowers are planted in trough by Parks and Garden workers.Black and white photograph of horse trough, Tatura.on back: horse trough, donated by Annis and George Bills, Tatura, 1986annis and george bills -
Lara RSL Sub Branch
Photograph, Regiment of the Australian Light Horse on the March in Jerusalem in Palestine
By 1914, when Australia joined the war against Germany, there were 23 Light Horse regiments of militia volunteers. Many men from these units joined the Light Horse regiments of the Australian Imperial Force (AIF). Initially Australia promised four regiments of Light Horse, 2000 men, to fight in the British cause. By the end of the war, 16 regiments would be in action.The Light Horse were seen as the “national arm of Australia’s defence” and young men, most from the country, flocked to join. Framed and glass covered photo of a Regiment of the Australian Light Horse on the March in Jerusalem in Palestine"A Regiment of the Australian Light Horse on the March in Jerusalem in Palestine."ww1, world war 1, australian light horsemen, palestine, lara r.s.l. -
4th/19th Prince of Wales's Light Horse Regiment Unit History Room
Booklet, 4th/19th Prince of Wales's Light Horse Regiment, Being a Brief Illustrated History of the 4th/19th Prince of Wales's Light Horse, July 1971
Spirex bound A4 booklet, clear plastic coverDefence Regional Library stamps./4/19 pwlh, history