Showing 407 items
matching 'wool house'
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Glenelg Shire Council Cultural Collection
Photograph, Portland Wool Exchange, n.d
Port of Portland AuthorityFront: (no inscriptions) Back: 177 (centre, pencil)port of portland -
Glenelg Shire Council Cultural Collection
Photograph - Portland, Portland Wool Exchange, n.d
Port of Portland Authority archives.Front: (no inscriptions) Back: (no inscriptions) -
Glenelg Shire Council Cultural Collection
Photograph, Wool Bales, n.d
Port of Portland AuthorityFront: (no inscriptions) Back: 177 (centre, pencil)port of portland -
Glenelg Shire Council Cultural Collection
Photograph, Portland Wool Exchange Carpark, n.d
Port of Portland AuthorityFront: (no inscriptions) Back: 177 (top centre, pencil)port of portland -
Glenelg Shire Council Cultural Collection
Photograph, Portland Wool Brokers Limited, n.d
Port of Portland AuthorityFront: (no inscriptions) Back: 177 (centre, pencil)port of portland -
Glenelg Shire Council Cultural Collection
Photograph, Truck with wool bales outside Portland Wool Exchange, n.d
Port of Portland AuthorityFront: (no inscriptions) Back: 177 (top right, pencil)port of portland -
Glenelg Shire Council Cultural Collection
Photograph, Portland Wool Brokers Limited, Wool Store, n.d
Port of Portland AuthorityFront: (no inscriptions) Back: 177 (top left, pencil)port of portland -
Glenelg Shire Council Cultural Collection
Photograph, Portland Wool Brokers Limited, Front Entrance, n.d
Port of Portland AuthorityFront: (no inscriptions) Back: 177 (centre, pencil)port of portland -
Glenelg Shire Council Cultural Collection
Photograph, Wool bales, n.d
Port of Portland Authority Archivesport of portland archives, wool bales, maritime industry -
Glenelg Shire Council Cultural Collection
Photograph, Loading wool, n.d
Port of Portland Authority Archivesport of portland -
Glenelg Shire Council Cultural Collection
Photograph - Photograph - wool bales being loaded, 1965
Port of Portland Authority ArchivesBack: 11/65 4 in pencil F3port of portland archives, wool bales -
Glenelg Shire Council Cultural Collection
Photograph - Photograph - loading wool, n.d
Port of Portland Authority Archivesport of portland archives, wool bales, marine industry -
Glenelg Shire Council Cultural Collection
Photograph - Photograph - wool bales, 1965
Port of Portland Authority ArchivesBack: 11 and 65 in pencilport of portland archives, port of portland, wool bales, industry -
Glenelg Shire Council Cultural Collection
Photograph - Photograph - wool bales, n.d
Port of Portland Authority Archivesport of portland archives, wool bales, maritime industry -
Glenelg Shire Council Cultural Collection
Photograph - Photograph - loading wool, n.d
Port of Portland Authority Archivesport of portland archives -
Glenelg Shire Council Cultural Collection
Photograph - Photograph - wool bales, n.d
Port of Portland Authority Archivesport of portland archives, wool bales -
Glenelg Shire Council Cultural Collection
Photograph - Photograph - Wool, n.d
Port of Portland Authority Archivesport of portland -
Glenelg Shire Council Cultural Collection
Photograph - Photograph - Wool, n.d
Port of Portland Authority Archivesport of portland -
Glenelg Shire Council Cultural Collection
Photograph - Photograph - Loading wool, 1965
Port of Portland Authority ArchivesBack: 11 and 65 in pencilport of portland -
Glenelg Shire Council Cultural Collection
Photograph - Photograph - N.W., of T.B.& S. abattoir; red brick wool store; petroleum installations; north/central Portland residential areas and Portland Harbour, 1955
Port of Portland CollectionFront: NOV 1955 'AIRSPY PHOTO' ref NO 2/b/74port of portland archives, portland harbour, portland residential areas, tb and s abattoir, red brick wool store, petroleum installations -
Glenelg Shire Council Cultural Collection
Pamphlet - Brochure - Portland Wool Brokers Limited, Victoria, n.d
Four page brochure, produced by Portland Wool Brokers Limited, extolling the virtues of Portland Wool Stores and Wool Exchange to buyers and clients; black and whiteFront: 'VIVIAN' -top right corner, handwritten, blue biro, smudged -
Glenelg Shire Council Cultural Collection
Clothing - Pith Helmet, n.d
White pith helmet, outside cotton fabric, pleated band around base of crown. Inside lined with green felt, maker's tag attached to top inside crown, brown leather headband and chin strap, headband hand stitched round edge with yellow wool. -
Glenelg Shire Council Cultural Collection
Administrative record - Shearer's Tally Book, n.d
A shearer's tally book is a place to record and display shearing information.Shearer's tally book issued by the Graziers' Association of Victoria for 1930, 1931. Beige coloured cardboard cover.shearing, rural industry, sheep farming, wool farming, wool growing, graziers association of victoria -
Glenelg Shire Council Cultural Collection
Clothing - Tie, 'Tee Dee', n.d
Tie. Bicentennial, dark blue, wool/polyester. Small green and yellow bicentennial logos. -
Glenelg Shire Council Cultural Collection
Clothing - Clothing - Lady's Jumper, n.d
Items hand made by Mrs Grace Osbourne. She won prizes at the Warracknabeal Show and elsewhere for her hand workLady's hand knitted short sleeved jumper. Mauve with stripes of green and cream, back and front of body, between armholes and waist. Wide ribbed waistband, collar with moss stitch border, front neck opening, 2 hand made cream wool buttons, and mauve loops -
Glenelg Shire Council Cultural Collection
Programme - Souvenir Programme - Portland Trade Fair Association, n.d
Souvenir programme for Portland Trade Fair Association's 5th Trade Fair at Dalgety's North Portland Wool Store - August 5, 6 & 7, 1971. Butt cardboard covers, green and orange print.portland trade fair association, 1971, trade fair -
Glenelg Shire Council Cultural Collection
Postcard - Postcard - Ocean Pier Portland Harbour, Victoria, n.d
Black and white photo postcard. View from loading vessel at Ocean Pier, Portland, looking towards shor.Front: 'SHIPPING WOOL, DEEPWATER PIER, PORTLAND VICTORIA' - printed in black, lower border Back: 'SHIPPING WOOL DEEPWATER PIER, PORTLAND, VICTORIA' 'TOYE PHOTO' -white script lower edge of postcard -
Flagstaff Hill Maritime Museum and Village
Craft - Ship Model, Cutty Sark
ABOUT THE CUTTY SARK The CUTTY SARK, built in Britain in 1869, was one of the last historic sailing ships. She traded in tea from China for a few years then began trading with Australia in the wool industry. She held the record sailing speed from Australia to Britain for ten years! Later a Portuguese company bought her as a cargo ship (and renamed her as FERREIRA) then she was purchased by a returned sea captain for use as a training ship in Cornwall. After the captain’s death she was transferred to a training college in Greenwich in 1938. In 1954 she was placed permanently in dry dock at Greenwich for display.The sailing ship CUTTY SARK carried export cargos of wool from the Australian wool industry.Ship model Cutty Sark, a Clipper in full ship rig with raised poop deck, deck house, 3 boats on deck (1 has fallen). Two toned black and tan hull, 3 jibs set in diorama of blue sea, light house and another small yacht. Is housed in glass sided case with dark grey painted structure. flagstaff hill, warrnambool, shipwrecked coast, flagstaff hill maritime museum, maritime museum, shipwreck coast, flagstaff hill maritime village, great ocean road, cutty sark, historic sailing ship, tea clipper, sail training vessel, cadet training ship, commercial trading vessel, cargo sail vessel, ship model cutty sark, australian wool export -
Flagstaff Hill Maritime Museum and Village
Functional object - Urinal, circa 1825
It is probable that the urinal was situated in the forward part of the ship rather than the stern, being one of two placed on either side of the deck and housed immediately adjacent to the doors into for-castle, or crew sleeping quarters. The toilets on maritime vessels were (and still are) called the ‘heads’, after the sanitation arrangements common until the end of the eighteenth century. The name was given to the ‘head’ of the ship, forward of the forecastle and around the beak or bowsprit. These first lavatories were floored with grating or nets so the force of the sea could wash them clean, and they were always used on the lee or non-weather side so the effluent fell directly into the water rather than back on board. The Children wrecking: The barque Children was one of the first vessels to be lost in the Western District the vessel was wrecked to the east of Warrnambool on 14th January 1838. When it ran ashore in hurricane-force winds, 22 passengers and crew were fortunate to escape being battered to death on the rocks. The Children broke up within 20 minutes, sweeping sixteen of those on board to their deaths. After eleven days, the survivors, all of whom were injured, were rescued and taken to Portland. According to Lloyd's Shipping Register 1837-1839, the Children was built in 1825 at Liverpool and operated by owners Gordon & Co, of London. Registration number 123/1837, James Henty then bought her in 1837 as a three-masted barque of 254 tons, with a hull of “part pitch pine, felt sheathed” and “coppered in 1837” at Launceston registered number 6/1837. In 1838 the Children, under her master Captain H. Browne, completed a successful round trip from Launceston to London (carrying wool and whale oil loaded in Portland), returning in late November of that year carrying a general cargo including house bricks used for ballast. On the 11th of January 1839, the Children sailed from Launceston for Adelaide, with 24 passengers, 14 crew, and an awkward mixed cargo, including 1500 sheep, 8 bullocks, 7 horses, and farming implements, and six whaleboats with associated whaling gear. One account states that when the Children were “put out from port she was light and badly ballasted”. The vessel immediately encountered four days of hurricane-force storms, eventually clearing on the early morning of the 14th. However, it was too late to take accurate measurements of the sun or stars to establish their position relative to the coast. The Children collided with a limestone stack at the entrance of Childers Cove, and the seas smashed her into pieces within half an hour. All the cargo and 16 lives were lost including 8 children. The Henty brothers contributed £150 towards a fund for the 22 survivors at a memorial service held in Launceston later that year. It was a major financial setback for James Henty and his brothers, but one from which they recovered. In a submission to the Governor of New South Wales dated 24 March 1840, the Henty’s summarised their work over the previous six years of establishing the Portland settlement stating. “Six stations have been occupied, one at Portland Bay three at the open country about 60 miles inland called ‘Merino Downs’ They have erected two houses at Portland Bay and two others at Merino Downs”.This urinal is significant as part of the vessels original fittings he Children was delivering cargo intended for the Portland Bay settlement of her owners the James Henty brothers The wreck is also significant as one of the first vessels to have been lost in the Western District of Warrnambool. As a result the shipwreck of the Children is registered with the Victorian Heritage Register S116. A lead urinal with a rounded back at the top splash plate with an attached semi-circular receptacle or basin (20cm deep and projecting forward 30cm). At the sides are flanges with bolt holes connecting to a ship's wall. The urinal is drained by a funnel-shaped outlet also made of lead, reducing from a 10cm radius to a joined 5 cm pipe. The urinal was recovered from the wreck of the CHILDREN.Noneflagstaff hill, warrnambool, flagstaff-hill, flagstaff-hill-maritime-museum, shipwreck-coast, shipwreck artefact, the children, lead ship’s plumbing, crew urinal, the ‘heads’, ship plumbing, james henty, portland bay, urinal, ship's urinal -
Flagstaff Hill Maritime Museum and Village
Functional object - Nail, circa 1825
Nails such as this solid copper nail were forged by blacksmiths. A nail of this length could have been used for the ship's decking. It was recovered from the shipwreck of the barque Children. The Children wrecking: The barque Children was one of the first vessels to be lost in the Western District the vessel was wrecked to the east of Warrnambool on 14th January 1838. When it ran ashore in hurricane-force winds, 22 passengers and crew were fortunate to escape being battered to death on the rocks. The Children broke up within 20 minutes, sweeping sixteen of those on board to their deaths. After eleven days, the survivors, all of whom were injured, were rescued and taken to Portland. According to Lloyd's Shipping Register 1837-1839, the Children was built in 1825 at Liverpool and operated by owners Gordon & Co, of London. Registration number 123/1837, James Henty then bought her in 1837 as a three-masted barque of 254 tons, with a hull of “part pitch pine, felt sheathed” and “coppered in 1837” at Launceston registered number 6/1837. In 1838 the Children, under her master Captain H. Browne, completed a successful round trip from Launceston to London (carrying wool and whale oil loaded in Portland), returning in late November of that year carrying a general cargo including house bricks used for ballast. On the 11th of January 1839, the Children sailed from Launceston for Adelaide, with 24 passengers, 14 crew, and an awkward mixed cargo, including 1500 sheep, 8 bullocks, 7 horses, and farming implements, and six whaleboats with associated whaling gear. One account states that when the Children were “put out from port she was light and badly ballasted”. The vessel immediately encountered four days of hurricane-force storms, eventually clearing on the early morning of the 14th. However, it was too late to take accurate measurements of the sun or stars to establish their position relative to the coast. The Children collided with a limestone stack at the entrance of Childers Cove, and the seas smashed her into pieces within half an hour. All the cargo and 16 lives were lost including 8 children. The Henty brothers contributed £150 towards a fund for the 22 survivors at a memorial service held in Launceston later that year. It was a major financial setback for James Henty and his brothers, but one from which they recovered. In a submission to the Governor of New South Wales dated 24 March 1840, the Henty’s summarised their work over the previous six years of establishing the Portland settlement stating. “Six stations have been occupied, one at Portland Bay three at the open country about 60 miles inland called ‘Merino Downs’ They have erected two houses at Portland Bay and two others at Merino Downs”.This nail is significant as part of the vessels original fixtures. The Children was delivering cargo intended for the Portland Bay settlement of her owners the James Henty brothers The wreck is also significant as one of the first vessels to have been lost in the Western District of Warrnambool. As a result the shipwreck of the Children is registered with the Victorian Heritage Register S116. Ship's nail, copper, with a washer attached. The nail has a round head, solid round shank and a flat end. It is bent, twisted and has indentations in the centre section. The nail was recovered from the wreck of the CHILDREN.warrnambool, flagstaff-hill-maritime-museum, shipwreck-coast, shipwreck artefact, the children, nail, copper nail, ship's nail, children shipwreck