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Melbourne Legacy
Photograph, The Age, Preparing for Badge Week 1960, 1960
A photo promoting Legacy Week in 1960. The slogan was 'Help Legacy'. The poster of a Legacy Boy was printed in 1960 with the slogan 'The Legacy Boy, worthy son of a worthy father.' The photo was similar to that printed in The Age on 7 September 1960. The caption of that photo said 'Executive Officers of Legacy, Mrs Judith Saxon, Mrs Edith Upton and Mr Ivan Layton, were busy yesterday preparing badges and tins for the street appeal which will be held on Friday as part of Legacy week.'A record of publicity photos taken in 1960 for promoting Legacy during Legacy week and an early example of the type of collection tins used in the 1960s.Black and white photo of three people with collection tins for Legacy week in 1960.Back side of photo: written by hand, 'Age / 1960'. Posters in the photo have the date as 1960.legacy week, fundraising, ivan layton -
Melbourne Tram Museum
Newspaper - Photocopy, The Age Newspaper, Old Trams no more expensive, 10-9-1995
Article titled "Old Trams no more expensive" - about the cost of maintaining the W class Trams. According to Rohan Storey of the National Trust, they were of the view that the costings were biased. Compares the cost of new trams such as the Z class. Features a photo by Robert Banks of trams stored in the "Henderson Springs" factory in Racecourse Road Flemington,Yields information about the storage of W class trams in a former factory in Flemington.Photocopy of an article "Old Trams no more expensive" written by Sue Hewitt for The Age 10-9-1995. From The Age newspaper.trams, tramways, new trams, z class, w class tram, national trust, stored trams -
Greensborough Historical Society
Photograph, Barclay Family, Eric Barclay, age 3, 1941_
Eric Barclay age 3 (approximately) in 1941, standing with my scooter in Henry Street Grace Park. Outside Mrs Bowles' house which later became the home of Mr and Mrs Dunstone; parents of Maurice (deceased) and Les who lives in Greensborough.Mid 20th century photo of child.Black and white photograph of child with scooter. Digital copy. Includes caption.Handwritten caption.barclay family, eric barclay -
University of Melbourne, Burnley Campus Archives
Newspaper - Newspaper Cutting, The Age, Green Oasis Full of Secrets, 2012
Article about the Melbourne Club garden when the Club opened its gardens for the first time to raise funds for the Friends of Burnley Gardens. This was instigated by John Fordham,arborist and FOBG member, who is their arborist.Article in "The Age" 22.09.2012 by Denise Gaddthe age, denise gadd, melbourne garden club, fobg, friends of burnley gardens, john fordham -
University of Melbourne, Burnley Campus Archives
Newspaper - Newspaper Cutting, The Age, Burnley Welcome Back, Sugar Gum, 2013
Article about the construction of the table and benches made from the Sugar Gum which had to be removed at Burnley Gardens. Welcome-back ceremony advertised for 14.02.2014. Photograph of Andrew Smith, Gardens Manager, beside the table. Paid for by the Friends of Burnley Gardens.Article in "The Age" 09.02.2013 by Megan Backhouse the age, megan backhouse, burnley gardens, andrew smith, gardens manager, fobg -
University of Melbourne, Burnley Campus Archives
Newspaper - Newspaper Cutting, The Age, It's a Beautiful World of Spring at Bunnings Warehouses, 1997
Article about former student, Dan Gray.Article in "The Age" 9 October, 1997dan gray, students, the age -
University of Melbourne, Burnley Campus Archives
Newspaper - Newspaper Cutting, The Age, A taste of Sweet Somethings, 2016
Article on Dr. Chris Williams and sweet potatoes at Burnley.Article in "The Age" 30.04.2016 by Megan Backhousemegan backhouse, the age, chris williams, swett potatoes -
University of Melbourne, Burnley Campus Archives
Newspaper - Newspaper Cutting, The Age, Duo Takes a Punt on Burnley, 2014
Article about the Botanicca Project next to Burnley Gardens (formerly part of site.)Article in "The Age," 14.07.2014 by Susannah Pettythe age, susannah petty, botanicca project -
Mission to Seafarers Victoria
Article - Newspaper cliipping, The Age, The Flying Angel, the Harbour Lights Guild Greets London Visitor, 11 March 1938
The article confirme the Guild was first created in Melbourne and that the name was copied by English committees around 1932-1933 as Lady Janet Bailey reveals :" I must admit we flagrantly took that title from Australia".Two columns article published in the Agelady huntingfield, ladies harbour lights guild, lhlg, lady janet bailey, amy brown -
University of Melbourne, Burnley Campus Archives
Newspaper - Newspaper Cutting, The Age, Dorothy May Jessep Garden Enthusiast, 2002
Obituary in "The Age" 08.03.2002 by Robert Withers.obituary, robert withers, the age, dorothy jessep, a w jessep -
Melbourne Tram Museum
Newspaper, The Age Newspaper, "Trams crash, 31 hurt", 7-2-1989
Reports on a significant rear on collision between two Z class trams, Z3 171 and another in Mt Alexander Road at Thorn Street Essendon. Gives details of the event. Story by Graeme Walker and Innes Willox and Age photographer Craig Abraham. In The Age, there is a second item about the rearrangement of Transport Departments - V-line, The Met into the Public Transport Corporation and the formation of the Roads Corporation from the Road Construction Authority and the Road Traffic Authority. Quotes Mr Kennan, Minister, Mr Brown Opposition spokesman and Peter Parkinson of Trades Hall. Item written by John Masanauskas.Yields information about an accident rear on in Mt Alexander Road Essendon and transport management rearrangements.Set of two newspaper clippings; 1 - "Trams crash, 31 hurt" - The Sun 7-2-1989 2 - "A painful end to tram journey" and "Left-wing wins in transport merger" - The Age 7-2-1989tramways, trams, mt alexander road, accidents, z3 class, tran 171, unions, amalgamation, management, the met, v-line, ptc, public transport corporation -
Eltham District Historical Society Inc
Document - Newspaper clipping, "The lap of luxury; Blending into Eltham environ", Property Age, The Age, Wednesday 24 June 1998, p5, June 1998
Both of the architects involved in the 2.4-hectare Kinloch Gardens parkland development in Arthur Street, Eltham, are now living on the estate. The project was conceived by Eltham architect Ian Jelbart, whose family has owned the land for more than 100 years, and fellow architect Graeme Gunn, who in the 1960s was one of the creators of the Merchants Builders concept that set new trends in Melbourne housing. The $5 million project is based around two of the original buildings, on what was once a 100-hectare farm owned by the Jelbart family. Ian Jelbart always intended to continue living in the original homestead building, and now Graeme Gunn has moved into the big residence that once was the barn. Kinloch Gardens is designed to combine the more manageable land sizes increasingly demanded by buyers with ample "internal space, flexible floorplans, privacy and individuality of designs. Individual houses are placed on small separate allotments around an area of private parkland. The aim is to ensure total privacy, offer virtually unlimited views and parkland vistas, and remain aesthetically compatible with the local environment. Homes in four basic designs over either two or three levels are being sold off the plan, with prices ranging from the high $200,000s to the high $300,000s. Two have already been sold. Indication of land-only values The prices being asked for some vacant blocks offered for private sale provides an enlightening comparison of the relative "land only" values for homes sites in various areas. A 751 sq metre block on a new residential estate in Bentleigh/Carnegie is offered at $235,000, equivalent to $312/square metre; while in Merrett Drive, Williamstown, a 561 sq metre allotment offered for $169,000 carries a rate of $301/sq metre. In Barnsbury Road, Balwyn, the $450,000 price tag on a 584 sq metre allotment equates to $770 sq metre; and in York Street, Richmond, a 198 sq metre postage stamp is priced at $230,000 or $1162/sq metre. - Rex BookerDigital file only; created from scan undertaken by EDHS of item on loanarthur street, eltham, graeme gunn, houses, ian jelbart, jelbart property, kinloch gardens, rob maclellan, robert marshall, woodridge estate -
The Mrs Aeneas Gunn Memorial Library
Book, Jonathan Cape, The life and works of Alfred Aloysius Horn : an old visiter / the works written by himself at the age of seventy-three, and the life, with such of his philosophy as is the gift of age and experience taken down and here edited by E.Lewis, 1927
Reminisces of an African explorerIll, p.318.non-fictionReminisces of an African explorerexplorers - africa, africa - description and travel -
Moorabbin Air Museum
Book (Item) - "Jet Age" - Big Book on World Air Transport - in the jet age
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Whitehorse Historical Society Inc.
Newspaper - Newspaper Age 1898, 24.10.1898
Age newspaper 24.10.1898. This newspaper was used as packing for a picture in the children's room, and the paper would have been read by August Schwerkolt. The house was purchased by Whitehorse Council, and pulled down in 1924. The paper was found in a machine drawer in September 2014 by Rosalie Wale, a great great grand-daughter of August Schwerkolt and works at Schwerkolt Cottage.1898 Age newspapersAge Melbourne 24/10/1898documents, newspapers -
Melbourne Tram Museum
Newspaper, The Age, "Glow-worms on strike night", "Trains back but trams will stop during Friday", c1974
Newspaper clipping from The Age, c1974 titled "Glow-worms on strike night" with the sub-title of "Trains back but trams will stop during Friday". Has a photo of motor vehicle lights in Kingsway near McRobertson Girls High School, showing the traffic snaking along the road during the train strike. Notes that trams will not be running on Friday, when a stop work meeting will be held. Quotes the premium Mr. Hamer about the strikes. Item not dated.. Photo by Michael Rayner of The Age.trams, tramways, unions, kingsway, strike, night photo -
University of Melbourne, Burnley Campus Archives
Newspaper - Newspaper Cutting, The Age, Ring-Barked, 1949
Article in "The Age" 16.11.1949 by Robin Boyd, Director, "The Age" Small Homes Service, deploring the removal of old trees from vacant building sites.the age, robin boyd, trees, removal of trees for building houses -
Eltham District Historical Society Inc
Newspaper - News Clipping, Adam Carey, They were promised a new hospital, but locals prefer derelict farmhouse, The Age, December 4, p11, 2023
The Age, Monday, December 4, 2023, p11 Article about local protest at Victorian Government decision to build a community hospital on the site of an old derleict farmhouse owned by the Department of Transport at 405 Ryans Road, Diamond Creek. The site was until 2017 part of a potential route fior the North East Link.community hospital, cr. ben ramcharan, cr. natalie duffy, department of ttransport, diamond creek, eltham community hospital, james bant, james merrett, martin penrose, north east link, petition, protest, ryans road -
Greensborough Historical Society
Newspaper clipping, Greensborough church centenary, 25/02/1950
Greensborough Methodist Church commenced services in 1850 and celebrated its centenary in 1950.Copy of article in "The Age" 25 February 1950methodist church greensborough -
Melton City Libraries
Newspaper, Oppy's first ride here, 1996
Born 1904, he attended Melton School 430 1913/14. Achieved fame in bicycle racing, later was a well known Member of Parliament, held ministerial positions both in Australia and overseas. On October 27th launched Melton’s History–Plains of Promise 1985.Memories of Hubert Opperman, article featured in the Agelocal identities -
Whitehorse Historical Society Inc.
Newspaper - Article, The Age, Obituary, 20/04/1999
Death Notice of Roger de Stoop in The Ageobituaries, de stoop, roger, belgians in australia -
Mission to Seafarers Victoria
Article, Kerrie O'Brien, Want to peek inside Melbourne’s finest mansions and buildings? This is your chance, 30 June 2022
Open House 2022: "Like many Melburnians, Ying-Lan Dann has long been fascinated by the Mission to Seafarers, in Docklands. When she was invited to create a work in response to a building as part of this year’s Open House Melbourne, she knew immediately which it would be. Taking a peek behind the closed doors of some of Melbourne’s finest and most interesting buildings is a core premise of the weekend event, now in its 15th year. During that time, the program has grown from half a dozen buildings to a 200-plus strong list that extends to Ballarat and Bendigo. “[It’s] much more expansive and citizen-led,” says Fleur Watson, Open House Melbourne’s executive director. “As a public festival, it has always had a spirit of generosity, this gesture of opening up and allowing visitors to come and look and experience things.” Swinging open their doors at the end of the month will be some of the city’s finest mansions, including Villa Alba in Kew and Brighton’s Billilla, the Cairo flats in Fitzroy, the newly renovated Jewish Museum designed by Kerstin Thompson, the Melbourne Quakers Centre, the Albanian Mosque in Carlton North and many more. Considering how to approach the event this year, held remotely for the past two, Watson decided to explore beyond the traditional, with associate professor and director of curatorial practice at Monash University Tara McDowell. The two have co-curated an exhibition of works to run concurrently with the Open House program, called Take Hold of the Clouds. That’s where Dann’s work, Circular Temporalities, comes in, one of seven commissions around town in which local and international artists respond to chosen buildings or sites. A lecturer in interior design at RMIT as well as an artist, she is interested in time and finding different mediums to show things in flux and, having grown up on Phillip Island, she often uses water as a theme. When she started spending time at the Mission, Dann found there was an oculus at the top of the dome, known as the Norla Dome. She thought about how that small but significant opening related to where sailors spent so many months of the year, the sky being the only thing they would see much of the time, stars guiding the way in times gone by, and of the recent stories she’d heard about sailors being trapped at sea during COVID. Built in the Arts and Craft style between 1916 and 1919 and designed by architect Walter Butler, the Mission includes a chapel, clubroom, Chaplain’s house, a small cottage and the Norla Dome, which was apparently inspired by the Pantheon. The Mission was funded by the government and the Ladies Harbour Lights Guild, who Dann was also intrigued by. “One of the things those women identified is that life at sea is very dangerous [and they] wanted to give them a space of sanctuary and support,” she says, adding that for many years, the dome was used as a gymnasium. Her work inside the dome includes a 35-minute loop film, recorded from the ferry during the crossing from Queenscliff to Sorrento. The horizon takes up about a third of the shot and moves as the waves rise and fall, mirroring the journeys made by the sailors who found refuge at the mission over the years; it will be projected onto a gauze-like fabric, allowing glimpses of the building behind. Dann also plans to activate the site over the course of the weekend and will read a poem by Justin Clemens.The articles gives an insight of the création of the artwork by Ying-Lan Dann. digital copy of an article with photographs published in the Ageopen house melbourne, 2022, ying-lan dann, take hold of the clouds, norla dome, exhibition, the age, cultural events -
Melbourne Tram Museum
Newspaper, The Age, "tickets please", May 2008
Newspaper article titled "tickets please" prepared by Melinda Houston, May 2008 to record the 10th anniversary of the last Melbourne tram conductors. Includes extensive background notes, timelines, photos, the tram blockade. Includes photos of Kevin Tierney, Roberto D'Andrea, Christine Zidkowski, Ken Walker, Bernard Lamberty and Yields information about the phasing out of Melbourne tram conductors.Four page article from The Age magazinetrams, tramways, conductors, melbourne -
Melbourne Tram Museum
Newspaper, The Age, "Tram supporter dies", 21/07/1992 12:00:00 AM
Newspaper clipping, The Age 21/7/1992, titled "Tram supporter dies" about the death of Sir Robert Risson the previous day, aged 91.trams, tramways, robert risson, chairman -
Australian Queer Archives
Book, Don't leave me this way : art in the age of AIDS (Canberra : National Gallery of Australia, 1994), 1994
246 p. : ill. (some col.)Agony down under: Australian artists addressing AIDS / Ted Gott Allan from Sadness: a monologue with slides / William Yang Art from the Pit: some reflections on monuments, memory and AIDS / Simon Watney America: where angels don't fear to tread / Thomas Sokolowski The war on culture / Carole S. Vance Read my lips / Jimmy Somerville For a friend / Jimmy Somerville, Richard Coles Self-documentation, self-imaging,: Australian people living with HIV/AIDS / Kathy Triffitt, co-ordinator Aesthetics and loss / Edmund White Psycho-cultural responses to AIDS / Dennis Altman Faces of AIDS / Lynn Sloan Lovers and friends / Richard Coles Where the streets have new aims: the poster in the age of AIDS / Ted Gott OI: opportunistic identification, open identification in PWA portraiture / Jan Zita Grover Don't leave me this way: art in the age of AIDS : catalogue of works. -
Robin Boyd Foundation
Newspaper - Clipping, The Age, Award for Robin Boyd, 10.03.1973
This announces the posthumous 1973 Architecture Critic's medal to Robin Boyd by the American Institute of Architects. A very short biography of Robin Boyd is given.Handwritten in pencil Age and date at the topwalsh st library -
University of Melbourne, Burnley Campus Archives
Newspaper - Newspaper Cutting, The Age, Ground Control, 2015
Article about John Rayner, Senior Lecturer in Urban Horticulture at Burnley, John Rayner. Description of his garden in the Dandenongs.Article in "The Age" February 7, 2015 by Megan Backhousemegan backhouse, john rayner, lecturer, urban horticulture -
University of Melbourne, Burnley Campus Archives
Newspaper - Newspaper Cutting, The Age, Up the garden Path, 2008
Article about Burnley Gardens following an interview with Andrew Smith, Gardens Manager.Article in the "Weekend Age" February 16,2008 by Anne Kurnuszko.anne kurnuszko, andrew smith, gardens manager, the age -
University of Melbourne, Burnley Campus Archives
Newspaper - Newspaper Cutting, The Age, Gentle Rebirth, 2015
Article about Boroondara General Cemetary in Kew. Interview with Helen Page (1961) on her involvement with the Cemetary Trust and the restoration of the cemetary landscape.Article in "The Age" 18 July, 2015 by Megan Backhousethe age, megan backhouse, boroondara general cemetery, kew, landscape -
University of Melbourne, Burnley Campus Archives
Newspaper - Newspaper Cutting, The Age, The News of the Day, 1861
Description of the monthly meeting of the committee of the Horticultural Society of Victoria. Progress on fencing and clearing of 11 acres, cottage built for foreman. Dr Mueller had given a very valuable collection of trees, plants and shrubs.Photocopy of article in "The Age" 6 June, 1861 p5. the age, rhsv