Showing 831 items
matching aboriginal history
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Lakes Entrance Regional Historical Society (operating as Lakes Entrance History Centre & Museum)
Book, PD Gardner author editor, The Exploration of Gippsland, 1976
An account of available reports of the confrontation between Gippslands early settlers and the Kurnai Tribeaboriginals, convicts, gippsland, heritage, settlers -
Lakes Entrance Regional Historical Society (operating as Lakes Entrance History Centre & Museum)
Postcard, Bulmer, 1920 c
Message on back to Mrs Roadknight from Rob and Judith BulmerBlack and white postcard of five Aboriginal children at Lake Tyers Victoriagenealogy -
Lakes Entrance Regional Historical Society (operating as Lakes Entrance History Centre & Museum)
Postcard, 1920 c
Also another black and white postcard of North Arm Lakes Entrance showing a large bight 05278.1Black and white postcard showing calm waterway betweem steep banks at the entrance to the North Arm Lakes Entrance VictoriaBackwater Cunninghame S Vogt Photoaboriginals -
Lakes Entrance Regional Historical Society (operating as Lakes Entrance History Centre & Museum)
Photograph, 1920 c
Black and white photograph of Lake Tyers taken from Aboriginal Station showing island in lake and entrance in distance with animal hides drying along the fence sheep and cattle Lake Tyers Victoriajetties -
Lakes Entrance Regional Historical Society (operating as Lakes Entrance History Centre & Museum)
Photograph, 1940 c
Also a black and white photograph of the tower and main enrance to St Johns church 05318.1 11 x 7 cmBlack and white photograph of St Johns church and timber bell tower at the Aboriginal station Lake Tyers Victoriaroads and streets -
Lakes Entrance Regional Historical Society (operating as Lakes Entrance History Centre & Museum)
Photograph, Bulmer, 1950 c
Black and white photograph of sign erected by the Foreshore Committee of Manaagement on the overflow camping reserve adjacent to the North Arm Marine Parade Lakes Entrance Victoriachurches, aboriginals -
Lakes Entrance Regional Historical Society (operating as Lakes Entrance History Centre & Museum)
Book, Goding, Alison, A Concise History of Australia, 1990
The story of Lake Tyers House, Gippsland, Victoria, built in 1886, and the early tourism industry. It is also describes early transport and land settlement, and touches on Aboriginal life before and after European. Index and bibliography.tourism, aboriginals, transport, waterways -
Lakes Entrance Regional Historical Society (operating as Lakes Entrance History Centre & Museum)
Book, Armstrong, John, Lost and Almost Forgotten Towns of Colonial Victoria, 1989
... as Lakes Entrance History Centre & Museum) 2 Marine Parade Lakes ...A comprehensive history of Port Stephens, N.S.W., including the strategic importance of the harbour when under American control during World War II.settlers, aboriginals, agriculture -
Lakes Entrance Regional Historical Society (operating as Lakes Entrance History Centre & Museum)
Book, Barraclough, Linda; Squires, Debra; Savige, Dr.Walter, East Gippsland Shire: Heritage Gaps Study - Volume 3: Environmental History, 2010
... Entrance gippsland History Aboriginals Exploration A Gippsland time ...A Gippsland time line - from before time began, until 1899, acquired from Internet, based on a Gippsland chronology to 1899.history, aboriginals, exploration -
Lakes Entrance Regional Historical Society (operating as Lakes Entrance History Centre & Museum)
Book, Holth, Tor and Barnaby, Jane, The Days of Mick Moon along the Snowy River
... Entrance gippsland Alpine Region Aboriginals A history ...A history of the mountain cattlemen of the Australian Alps, bushcraft, and harsh lifestyle in the Bogong high plains.alpine region, aboriginals -
Lakes Entrance Regional Historical Society (operating as Lakes Entrance History Centre & Museum)
Book, Land Conservation Council Victoria, The Gippsland Lakes Land Use Strategy Plan 1978, 1985
A review of public land use in the East Gippsland area, including natural resources, flora and fauna, recreation. Contains photographs, maps statistics.conservation, aboriginals, primary industry -
Lakes Entrance Regional Historical Society (operating as Lakes Entrance History Centre & Museum)
Book - Manuscript, Gelantipy Historical Society, Club Terrace, Errinundra, Bendock - History and People, 1993
... Entrance gippsland Settlers Aboriginals Surveying A brief history ...A brief history of the indigenoussettlers, aboriginals, surveying -
Lakes Entrance Regional Historical Society (operating as Lakes Entrance History Centre & Museum)
Book, McDonald, Geoff, The Gear Change 'Classic Edition', 1982
Behind the Aboriginal Land Rights - account of the Communist Party influence on Aboriginal Land Rights.ISBN 0949667501aboriginals -
Clunes Museum
Book, IAN D. CLARK. 1990, ABORIGINAL LANGUAGES AND CLANS, 1990
Full bibliographic detail on Dhauwurd wurrung, Djab wurrung, Djadja wurrung, Djargurd wurrung; Gadubanud; Girai wurrung; Gulidjan Jardwadjarli; Wada wurrung, Wergaia; East Kulin, Woi wurrung, Daung wurrung, Bun wurrung, Ngurai-illam wurrung, Barababaraba, Wadiwadi; Wembawemba; history of contact and settlement; effects on tradition; disruption of lifestyle; clan/subsection information; research based solely on archival sources.A MONASH UNIVERSITY PUBLICATION IN GEOGRAPHYnon-fictionFull bibliographic detail on Dhauwurd wurrung, Djab wurrung, Djadja wurrung, Djargurd wurrung; Gadubanud; Girai wurrung; Gulidjan Jardwadjarli; Wada wurrung, Wergaia; East Kulin, Woi wurrung, Daung wurrung, Bun wurrung, Ngurai-illam wurrung, Barababaraba, Wadiwadi; Wembawemba; history of contact and settlement; effects on tradition; disruption of lifestyle; clan/subsection information; research based solely on archival sources.book, aboriginal languages and clans -
Duldig Studio museum + sculpture garden
Sculpture, Karl Duldig, Moses by Karl Duldig 1956 (Bronze Cast 1979), 1956 / 1979
This sculpture is a bronze cast of Karl Duldig’s 1956 terracotta sculpture titled 'Moses'. The terracotta sculpture won the 1956 Victorian Sculptor of the Year award, an honor given by the Victorian Society of Sculptors. The National Gallery of Victoria purchased the original terracotta sculpture for the Gallery’s collection in 1956. In 1979 the NGV allowed Karl to cast the original terracotta sculpture in bronze (to a limited edition of 5). The National Gallery of Victoria holds one of these casts and one is in Duldig Studio collection. The original terracotta sculpture was exhibited in 1956 at the Olympic Arts Exhibition in Wilson Hall at the University of Melbourne. Two other works by Karl were also exhibited, a sandstone titled 'Adam and Eve' and a work titled 'Fountain'. The catalogue for the Olympic exhibition, which promoted modernism across a variety of disciplines, noted that Australia’s post war immigration program had given ‘further momentum to the modernist cause’. The identification of émigré artists, such as Karl Duldig, with the acceptance of modernism in Australia became a major theme in any discussion of art and design in the post war period. Ann Carew 2016The subject Moses and the tablets of law is an important theme in the history of art. For example the National Gallery of Victoria collection includes paintings on this topic by the Australian Aboriginal artist, Queenie McKenzie (1991), prints by the Russian-French modernist artist, Marc Chagall (1956), and a painting by 19th century British academic painter, John Rogers Herbert (1870s). Michelangelo’s sculpture of Moses is perhaps the most famous sculptural interpretation of the subject. In Karl’s hands we have a modern interpretation of the theme. His simplification and abstraction of form and attention to surface modeling is masterly. The figure has an emotional intensity and despite its relatively small scale, a ‘forceful monumentality’. The sculpture is aesthetically significant for its craftsmanship, expressive qualities and modernity. It is historically significant because of its associations with the 1956 Olympic Arts Festival. The Duldig Studio’s bronze cast of the sculpture was exhibited in the exhibition '1956: Melbourne, modernity and the XVI Olympiad, Museum of Modern Art at Heide.' Apart from the formal qualities of a work like Moses, its relevance as a motif in Judaism and Christian faiths ensures its place as a work of spiritual significance. Ann Carew 2016Bronze cast from terracotta sculpture. Depicts Moses as in Exodus 32 when he returns from Sinai with the tablets of the law to find his people worshipping the golden calf, in his fury he holds the tablets aloft above his head before crashing them down on the ground. -
Nillumbik Shire Council
Deborah Halpern (b.1957 Melb) with Malcolm Laurence (b.1974 Melb), Malcolm Laurence, The Spirit of Nillumbik (balustrade panels x11); Location: Eltham Town Square - Main St, Eltham, 2001
In October 2000, Council invited three artists from the region (Deborah Halpern, Matcham Skipper, Tony Trembath) to submit designs for a sculpture / public art work for the Eltham Town Square. The commission was paid for by supermarket giant Safeway (Woolies) as part of its supermarket permit, which required them to contribute to beautification work in the Town Square.This is the first of three parts. The 'Spirit of Nillumbik' is a celebration of the artistic spirit of Eltham and surrounding communities. Each area is identified through the flora and fauna represented in the panels. The work honours the many creative artists and architects, past and present, who have built homes and shaped lives and livelihoods with their unique creative spirit. Halpern describes her work as a public expression of their individual and collective visions. Halpern acknowledges these contributions to our hand-made history and the influence they have on the character and identity of Eltham and Nillumbik. Five picture and six woven balustrades each made out of welded steel / organic wrought iron and coated with wax. Imagery (flora - plants, landscapes and fauna - animals, birds, reptiles, insects) are all based on the local environment. There is also a relevant aboriginal presence amongst each of the panels. Each panel represents the different areas that make up the Shire. 'Water' for Warrandyte, 'Kangaroos' for Christmas Hills, 'Cockatoos and 'Valley Creek Flats' for Hurstbridge, 'Wombats', 'Bluetongues' and 'Possums' for St. Andrews/Kinglake, 'Orchids' for Panton Hill, 'Cows' and 'Grapevines' for the Kangaroo Gound Hill landmark. N/Apublic art, nillumbik, fauna, flora, wrought iron, balustrade, halpern, laurence, kangaroo, eltham town square, spirit, warrandyte, christmas hills, kangaroo ground, hurstbridge, kinglake, panton hill, water, valley creek flats, cockatoos -
Peterborough History Group
Map - Aboriginal Language Areas in Victoria: A reconstruction
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Peterborough History Group
Book, Australian Aborigines: the languages and customs of several tribes of aborigines in the Western District of Victoria, Published 1981, First published 1881
Information about local aboriginal tribesDoesn't specifically refer to Peterborough but explains early aboriginal culture and their relationship to the coastHardcover 111 page book with 104 page of annexures and index. Introduction by Jan Critchett, Warrnambool Institute of Advanced Education.Adhesive book plate with the name H W Grimwade.peterborough pre history, kirrie wurung, kaawirn kuunawarn, hissing swan aborigines, kirrae wurung, yarruun parpur tarneen -
National Wool Museum
Map, Northern Territory of Australia - Pastoral map
... . Includes pastoral leases, stations, aboriginal settlements ...Pastoral map of the Northern Territory, 1955. Includes pastoral leases, stations, aboriginal settlements,pastoral industry - history sheep stations - history, northern territory of australia, pastoral industry - history, sheep stations - history -
Koorie Heritage Trust
Book, Roberts, Jan, Massacres to mining : the colonisation of Aboriginal Australia, 1981
"If you take a people from their land and homes they will die. The mining, pastoral, forestry and tourism bodies are doing this every day of the year in Australia. But, more importantly, as this land - and in fact all things - are a part of us as we are a part of them both physically and spiritually, then to destroy all that - the environment- is to destroy the people. Massacre!"198 p.; maps; figs; ill.; index; 24 cm."If you take a people from their land and homes they will die. The mining, pastoral, forestry and tourism bodies are doing this every day of the year in Australia. But, more importantly, as this land - and in fact all things - are a part of us as we are a part of them both physically and spiritually, then to destroy all that - the environment- is to destroy the people. Massacre!"australian aborigines. treatment by white australians. | aboriginal australians -- treatment. | australia -- colonization -- history.massacres-aborigines, australia, | weipa mine-land dispossession, | mining companies-australia, | land rights-history -
Koorie Heritage Trust
Book, Bossence, William Henry, Murchison : the J. G. Kenny memorial history, 1965
... Federation Square, Melbourne melbourne Murchison-History Goulburn ...210 P.; map; facsimiles; indexes ; 21 cm.murchison-history, goulburn river valley, aboriginal protectorate-goulburn 40-56, ngooraialum tribes-customs - 23-39 -
Koorie Heritage Trust
Book, Stone, Sharman N, Aborigines in white Australia : a documentary history of the attitudes affecting official policy and the Australian Aborigine, 1697-1973, 1974
Selections from official published sources concerning government policy towards Aborigines; early explorers accounts; newspaper articles and letters illustrating racial attitudes to Aborigines.253 p. : ill. ; list of plates; index; bibliography; 24 cm.Selections from official published sources concerning government policy towards Aborigines; early explorers accounts; newspaper articles and letters illustrating racial attitudes to Aborigines.aborigines. race relations. australia, 1697-1973. readings from contemporary sources | aboriginal australians -- government relations. | australia -- history -- sources. | settlement and contacts - explorers | government policy - assimilation | government policy - initial period and protectionism | government policy - integration | race relations - racism - stereotyping -
Koorie Heritage Trust
Document - Printed Sheets, Berg, Jim, Pathways in Sociology - Deviance, Law and Penal System and Exchange & Society
... Australia. | Department of Aboriginal Affairs. Outlines the history ...Outlines the history of Victorian Aboriginal people in their treatment under the Victorian Aborigines Boards and subsequent Board. Also the attitudes of white society to Aboriginal people. The establishment and history of the Victorian Aboriginal Legal Service is also outlined.27 P.; refs.; 30 cm.Outlines the history of Victorian Aboriginal people in their treatment under the Victorian Aborigines Boards and subsequent Board. Also the attitudes of white society to Aboriginal people. The establishment and history of the Victorian Aboriginal Legal Service is also outlined.victorian aboriginal legal service | aboriginal australians. | victoria. aborigines welfare board | australian aborigines league | federal council for the advancement of aborigines | victoria. department of aboriginal affairs australia. | department of aboriginal affairs. -
Koorie Heritage Trust
Book, Robertson, Craig, Buckley's Hope : the real life story of Australia's Robinson Crusoe, 1981
Blurb: On Boxing Day 1803 a young English convict named William Buckley escaped from Victoria's abortive first settlement, at Sorrento.For the next thirty-two years Buckley survived in the wild, mainly because he was adopted and helped by the local tribes.In 1835 Buckley rejoined the civilization he had cast aside, emerging to meet Melbourne's founders. He became an important guide and interpreter in the crucial first years of the European conquest of the Port Phillip region.Then, as the Aborigines were engulfed by the flood of white men, Buckley found himself in no-man's land, mistrusted by his former black friends and by the white society who so misunderstood them. He was reviled, so harshly that his reputation has suffered to this day.This is William Buckley's story. It is a story based on fact, about a real Robinson Crusoe who was unique in Australia's history.And it is also a story of European intruders imposing their savage will on an alien, ancient continent. Rarely has Australian history come more alive than in the pages of this remarkable first novel. Buckley's life with the Aboriginal people of Port Phillip between 1803 and 1835; subsequent life in white community ; includes glossary of Aboriginal words (p. 271-280).288 p. : 3 maps ; 22 cm.Blurb: On Boxing Day 1803 a young English convict named William Buckley escaped from Victoria's abortive first settlement, at Sorrento.For the next thirty-two years Buckley survived in the wild, mainly because he was adopted and helped by the local tribes.In 1835 Buckley rejoined the civilization he had cast aside, emerging to meet Melbourne's founders. He became an important guide and interpreter in the crucial first years of the European conquest of the Port Phillip region.Then, as the Aborigines were engulfed by the flood of white men, Buckley found himself in no-man's land, mistrusted by his former black friends and by the white society who so misunderstood them. He was reviled, so harshly that his reputation has suffered to this day.This is William Buckley's story. It is a story based on fact, about a real Robinson Crusoe who was unique in Australia's history.And it is also a story of European intruders imposing their savage will on an alien, ancient continent. Rarely has Australian history come more alive than in the pages of this remarkable first novel. Buckley's life with the Aboriginal people of Port Phillip between 1803 and 1835; subsequent life in white community ; includes glossary of Aboriginal words (p. 271-280).buckley, william, 1780-1856 -- fiction. | novels in english. australian writers, 1945-. texts | convicts -- australia -- history -- fiction. | history - biographies - non-indigenous | settlement and contacts - penal colonies / convicts | settlement and contacts - colonisation - 1788-1850 | race relations - attitudes | language - vocabulary - word lists | kurnai / gunai people (s68) (vic sj55) | port phillip / western port area (vic sj55) -
Koorie Heritage Trust
Document - Printed Sheets, Barwick Diane E, Changes in the Aboriginal Population of Victoria, 1863-1966. (extract), 1971
Reviews Aboriginal population and the effects of white settlement on population together with the Aboriginal Protection Board and the Missions influences on population, Government policty and conditions to 1966.288-314 P.; refs.; map; figs.; tables; 30 cm.Reviews Aboriginal population and the effects of white settlement on population together with the Aboriginal Protection Board and the Missions influences on population, Government policty and conditions to 1966. victorian-aborigines - population 1863-1966., board for the protection of aborigines-history., aborigines, victoria-population decline. -
Koorie Heritage Trust
Book, Beesley, Midge, Raymond Island : past present future, 1986
In broad terms, my approach to writing this book has been to present, firstly -- as far as is possible, a general historical background to Raymond Island and it s subsequent development since first being opened up for settlement; secondly, to record the background histories of some of the early settlers; thirdly, by featuring a number of present-day residents, to convey an image of the type of person who today chooses to become an islander and thereby becomes part of a small community that, even in 1986, is 'different'.291 p. : ill. ; index; refs.; maps; 22 cm.In broad terms, my approach to writing this book has been to present, firstly -- as far as is possible, a general historical background to Raymond Island and it s subsequent development since first being opened up for settlement; secondly, to record the background histories of some of the early settlers; thirdly, by featuring a number of present-day residents, to convey an image of the type of person who today chooses to become an islander and thereby becomes part of a small community that, even in 1986, is 'different'.urbanisation -- raymond island -- gragin ( the aboriginal name for raymond island) -- gippsland lakes, other: local history -- kurnai -- gunai. -
Koorie Heritage Trust
Book, Alberts, Trish et al, Making a Difference / First Australians : Plenty Stories, 2010
... Federation Square, Melbourne melbourne Aboriginal Australians ...This book shares inspiring stories aabout how individuals and organisations have made a difference in Australian society by giving a voice to the histories and viewpoints of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples. Contents: Understanding each other; Koorie Heritage Trust; Bangarra Dance Theatre; The Aboriginal Baldja Network; Reconciliation Australia and the Stolen Generations Alliance; Working together for change; Glossary; Index.32 p. : ill., col. maps, ports. (some col.) ; 24 cm.This book shares inspiring stories aabout how individuals and organisations have made a difference in Australian society by giving a voice to the histories and viewpoints of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples. Contents: Understanding each other; Koorie Heritage Trust; Bangarra Dance Theatre; The Aboriginal Baldja Network; Reconciliation Australia and the Stolen Generations Alliance; Working together for change; Glossary; Index.aboriginal australians. | torres strait islanders. | australian -
Koorie Heritage Trust
Document - Report, Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Commission, The first step : a report on the initial community consultations on the Royal Commission into Aboriginal Deaths in Custody, 1992
In October 1987, the Royal Commission into Aboriginal Deaths in Custody was established to find out why so many Aboriginal people were dying in prison - 99 between January 1980 and May 1989 alone. Since then, tragically, there have been another 25 deaths.The findings of the Royal Commission and its recommendations have been widely publicised since their release in May 1991. They catalogue the terrible history of dispossession and oppression of our people. The Commission makes 339 recommendations on how the past hurt and current disadvantage of the Aboriginal people can be redressed... The main themes to emerge not surprisingly, underline many of the issues raised in the Royal Commission's Final Report - the plight of families of the deceases, Aboriginal / police relations, the lack of access to land, substance abuse, appalling health, inadequate housing, and the pressing need to provide education and employment for our youth.41 p. ; 25 cm.In October 1987, the Royal Commission into Aboriginal Deaths in Custody was established to find out why so many Aboriginal people were dying in prison - 99 between January 1980 and May 1989 alone. Since then, tragically, there have been another 25 deaths.The findings of the Royal Commission and its recommendations have been widely publicised since their release in May 1991. They catalogue the terrible history of dispossession and oppression of our people. The Commission makes 339 recommendations on how the past hurt and current disadvantage of the Aboriginal people can be redressed... The main themes to emerge not surprisingly, underline many of the issues raised in the Royal Commission's Final Report - the plight of families of the deceases, Aboriginal / police relations, the lack of access to land, substance abuse, appalling health, inadequate housing, and the pressing need to provide education and employment for our youth.australia. royal commission into aboriginal deaths in custody. | prisoners, aboriginal australian. | prisoners, aboriginal australian -- death. | prisoners, aboriginal australian -- mortality. | prisons and race relations -- australia. | police -- complaints against -- australia. | aboriginal australians -- social conditions. | aboriginal australians -- criminal justice system. -
Koorie Heritage Trust
Book, Hibbins, Gillian, A History of the Nathalia Shire : the good helmsmen, 1978
Contains a great deal of information about the Aboriginal peooples of the area. Pangerang tribeMaloga Mission StationCumeroogunga reserveAborigines-Nathalia shire-ConflictNathalia shire-Historyi-vi; pp. 265; illus. appendix; bib.; index; 22 cm.Contains a great deal of information about the Aboriginal peooples of the area. Pangerang tribeMaloga Mission StationCumeroogunga reserveAborigines-Nathalia shire-ConflictNathalia shire-Historyvictoria. nathalia region, 1840-1977. | nathalia district (vic.) -- history. -
Koorie Heritage Trust
Book, Broome. Richard, Coburg : between two creeks, 1987
... 1. Coburg (Vic.) -- History. 2. Aboriginal Inhabitants... Federation Square, Melbourne melbourne 1. Coburg (Vic.) -- History. 2 ...ix, 366 p. : ill., ports. ; appendices; maps; ; 26 cm.1. coburg (vic.) -- history. 2. aboriginal inhabitants-coburg., merri creek; woiworung; aborigines-social life and customs