Showing 67 items
matching metal imports
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Trafalgar Holden Museum
Container - Small screw lid jar
Used for the upkeep of leather boots in the period of 1900'sImported and sold by Holden and FrostSmall glass jar with metal screw on lid, paper label with instructionsPropert's Boot cream 516 medium brown for leather boots (imprint of horse and rider)boot, cream, properts -
Trafalgar Holden Museum
Tool - Foot print wrench
... used in Metal construction and plumbing Imported and sold ...used in Metal construction and plumbingImported and sold by Holden and FrostTwo part steel adjustable wrench, with outer covering inner, pivoted so that wrench is adjustableMade in Englandsteel, footprint, wrench -
Trafalgar Holden Museum
Equipment - Cart Buckle, during ca 1910
Imported and retailed by HOLDEN and FROST for the use on horse tackle during ca 19/20Sold by Holden and Frost for military, agriculture and civilian use c1910Nickel plated metal cart buckle NILcart, military, agriculture, civilian, buckle -
Trafalgar Holden Museum
Accessory - steel nickel plated ring
used on Horse tackle during the late 1800's and early 1900's by Holden and FrostImported used and sold by Holden and FrostNickel plated metal ring as used in the manufacture of Horse equipment equine military, civilian, agricultural c1900 -
Trafalgar Holden Museum
Accessory - Patent split link, Circa 1900
Used on Horse harness by Holden and frost during the late 1800's and early 1900's Imported and used by Holden and Frost Ca 1900Black metal patent split linkequine agricultural, military, civilian ca1900, split link -
Warrnambool and District Historical Society Inc.
Coin - Token, Bateman token, 1855
This coin is a Warrnambool Bateman penny. It is an example of an Australian token – a coin that had the value of a penny and was produced by businessmen in the 1850s to be used only in the business of the person named on the coin. There were two firms in Warrnambool that produced tokens in the 1850s – William Jamieson, a general storekeeper and William Bateman. The latter had a general store in Banyan Street and became in the early 1850s one of the largest merchant firms in the Warrnambool district. But the firm’s liabilities were financed by overdrafts and insolvency resulted. A disastrous and suspicious fire in 1856 destroyed the Bateman store and caused a great number of insolvencies in the district as so many businessmen and farmers were financed by Bateman who eventually left the district. This token is of supreme importance. It is significant for three reasons: 1. It is an example of an 1850s Australian token, demonstrating an early business practice in our history. 2. It is an example of a Warrnambool token produced by an important Warrnambool business (only two firms in Warrnambool produced tokens) 3. It is a Bateman token and these are comparatively rare because many Bateman tokens were destroyed in the 1856 fire. This is an 1855 metal token with, on one side, an image of a woman holding scales in one hand and a cornucopia in the other (Dea Pecunia?). The obverse side has the name of William Bateman Junior of Warrnambool. It is a business token which could be used only in the Bateman store in Warrnambool in place of a penny.One side: Woman image and the word ‘Australia’ Obverse side: ‘William Bateman Junr. & Co., Importers and General Merchants, Warnambool (sic), Victoria, 1855’ william bateman junior, warrnambool tokens, bateman token, coin tokens -
Kew Historical Society Inc
Print - Framed Fashion Plate, The Fashions … for the Englishwoman's Domestic Magazine, 1860, 1860
The Englishwoman's Domestic Magazine was issued monthly in the following years: 1852–1874; 1877; 1880–1890. Initially, it contained only nondescript black and white images. Aware of the growing interest in fashion, style and manners from the new middle classes, Samuel Beeton began to import tinted fashion plates directly from Jules David in Paris from 1860. Primary source for fashion design in the 1860sFramed fashion plate -'The Fashions … for the Englishwoman's Domestic Magazine'. Framed print of two women in 1860 costume. Bordered in pale green coloured card. Wire attached to metal loops at back. Masking tape at back.fashion illustration, englishwoman's domestic magazine