Showing 9902 items
matching the heads
-
Greensborough Historical Society
Tool - Pickaxe, Pickaxe head
Large pickaxe head. Used for loosening the soil in digging, shaped like a mattock, but having both ends pointed. Iron pickaxe head, large, (no handle)pickaxes, tools -
Trafalgar Holden Museum
Functional object - Axe head cover, Circa 1900
Leather axe head protector as made and sold by Holden and FrostMade and sold by Holden and FrostLeather axe head protector with leather strap and buckle leather, agriculture, civilian, axe head cover -
Trafalgar Holden Museum
Functional object - Axe head cover, Circa 1900
Used to protect axe head during transportationManufactured and sold by Holden and FrostBlack leather axe head cover with fastening straps attachedleather, axe head, cover -
Mont De Lancey
Tool - Felling Axe Head, Unknown
Used in the 19th century.A forged steel long narrow sharp bladed felling axe head without a handle - it has a hole for the handle. It was commonly used to chop down trees as it has a more elongated and rigid blade excellent for deep gouging cuts.The length of the handle, weight of the head and angle of the blade all play a role in just how deep it cuts. It was use din the 19th Century.There is a small grooved pattern on the head where the handle would attach. A circular indentation is evident.woodworking tools, steel, froes, cleaving axes, axes, cutting tools, hand axes, felling axes, axe heads, tool components, -
Puffing Billy Railway
Locomotive Head Board - Puffing Billy 100 Years Celebration, 2000
Historic - Puffing Billy Railway Locomotive Head Board - used in the Celebrating 100 years of the Upper Ferntree Gully to Gembrook railway. Historic - Puffing Billy Railway Locomotive Head Board - used in the Celebrating 100 years of the Upper Ferntree Gully to Gembrook railway. Locomotive Head Board - Puffing Billy 100 Years Celebration Tin head board with cream, red, white and black vinyl.Puffing Billy 18 December 1900 - 18 December 2000 100 Yearspuffing billy, head board, 100 years -
Trentham and District Historical Society
Photograph, Buffalo Head Hotel 2014, Photo taken in 2014
The Buffalo Head Hotel was the location of the first Tylden Kyneton Roads BoardPhotos of site of Buffalo Head Hotel taken in 2014trentham, tylden, kyneton, hotel, road board, -
Whitehorse Historical Society Inc.
Article, New sign for the City of Whitehorse, 1995
Whitehorse commissioners have wasted no time in establishing a corporate identity for the new municipality.Whitehorse commissioners have wasted no time in establishing a corporate identity for the new municipality. The logo features a chess-inspired outline of a white horse's head enclosed in a block of colour, dark green on one side of the head and terracotta on the other.Whitehorse commissioners have wasted no time in establishing a corporate identity for the new municipality.city of whitehorse, logos -
Wannon Water
Safety helmet, Protector Tuff Master
Damaged workers helmet. Head protection worn by construction worker damaged during a collapsed trench accident in Cherlin Drive 1979.The object illustrates the importance of wearing appropriate safety equipment.Grey plastic safety helmet, with fabric straps and rubber head fitting. Helmet has a large crack in the brim and a dent in the head area.Inscription : Protector Tuff master/approval G.M.E. HH22 BS2826-ASZ10-67warrnambool, safety equipment, water supply -
City of Moorabbin Historical Society (Operating the Box Cottage Museum)
Tools, wooden hammer with steel head, c1900
A hammer is a tool with a heavy head and a handle, often made of shock-absorbent wood or fiberglass that is used to strike an object. The most common uses for hammers are to drive nails, fit parts, forge metal, and break apart objects. Hammers vary in shape, size, and structure, depending on their uses. Hammers are basic tools in many trades. A hammer is composed of a head most often made of steel and a handle also called a helve or haft. Most hammers are hand tools. A traditional hand-held hammer consists of a separate head and a handle, fastened together by means of a special wedge made for the purpose, or by glue, or both. This two-piece design is often used, to combine a dense metallic striking head with a non-metallic mechanical-shock-absorbing handle -to reduce user fatigue from repeated strikes. If wood is used for the handle, it is often hickory or ash, which are tough and long-lasting materials that can dissipate shock waves from the hammer head. A well used hammer with wooden handle and steel headpioneers, early settlers, market gardeners, moorabbin, brighton, cheltenham, tools, craftsman, carpenters, blacksmiths, builders, woodwork, -
Orbost & District Historical Society
laminated photograph, This copy-April 2015
Joseph Roland Page Cross ; Service Number: 35864: Rank: Gunner; Roll title: FAB [Field Artillery Brigade] - 27 to 35 Reinforcements (November 1917 - June 1918) Conflict / Operation: First World War, 1914-1918; Date of embarkation: 9 November 1917; Place of embarkation: Melbourne; Ship embarked on: HMAT Port Sydney A15 (from First World War Embarkation Rolls). This photograph was used in the WW1 exhibition held in Orbost April 2015.This is a useful reference tool.A laminated b/w photograph of Gunner Joseph Roland Cross. It is a head and shoulders photograph of a soldier in uniform.GUNNER;Joseph Roland Cross HEAD DRIVER ; Heavy Artillery 28th Batallion, 3rd Brigade (1914-1918) WARcross-joseph-roland ww1 -
Ballarat Fire Brigade
Firemans axe
Axe was part of firemans belt was owned by Senior Firefighter (S/F) W.G. Jamieson who was stationed at Ballarat Fire Station as part of the permanent staff. firemans small personal axe (tomahawk), axe has black rubberised/plastic handle and metal headNo. 125 (right side of handle), TESTED 20,000 VOLTS (left side of handle), W.GILPIN (stamped into left side of head)w g jamieson, ballarat fire station, firemans axe -
Dandenong/Cranbourne RSL Sub Branch
WWI Belt Buckle with Snake clasp ( Refer also 0539 & 0539B)
Brass belt buckle. Rectangular shaped ring to fit around belt with small circle eyelet fused on to hold a "S" shaped clasp.The Clasp is in the form of snake with a head of both ends. S shape clasp has some markings on it and head of snake at both ends. -
Bendigo Historical Society Inc.
Instrument - SANDHURST DRUMMER'S COLLECTION: Drum with red trim
A ring called the hoop is used to attach the head to the shell, and the tuning bolts are tightened to tighten the head. The hoop is supported by the lug, and the hoop and lug are attached using a tuning bolt. Long ago, animal skins were used as drum heads, but now drum heads are primarily made of plastic. Basically, when the tension on the head is higher, the tone is higher, and when the tension is lower, the tone is lower.A Cylinder made of metal and wood 37 centimetres diameter and 21 centimetres high. It has a red, black and white wooden trim on the top and bottom and is held together with six metal clamps. There is a drum head on the top and bottom of the cylinder. Ever Play Extra brand is on the top drum head.Lowe musical instruments, drum, sandhurst drummers -
Greensborough Historical Society
Tool - Pickaxe, Pickaxe head
Medium sized pickaxe head. Used for loosening the soil in digging, shaped like a mattock, but having both ends pointed. Iron pickaxe head, medium size, (no handle)pickaxes, tools -
Stawell Historical Society Inc
Photograph, Federal Mine with Poppet Head and Winch House 1890's
Poppet Head and Winch House of Federal Mine. Group of 14 men and boys standing in front of mine. George Charles Cox (Sen) fifth from right.Base of Poppet Head and Engine shed with row of 14 men and boys posing in foreground. Chimney stack is behind Poppet Head in photo.stawell gold mining -
Bendigo Historical Society Inc.
Tool - MERCURY BUCKET
... and pulverised by the stamp heads. In some batteries ...Cast iron mercury bucket, used to hold mercury, potentially in the process of recovering minute pieces of gold mixed in soil and sediments. See research page for description of one process of using mercury to extract gold.gold mines, mining equipment, mercury bucket, miners used mercury in a number of ways to amalgamate gold, with each mill or battery operator having their preferred method depending on the nature of the ore. by the late 1850s the most common way of crushing goldbearing quartz ores or consolidated alluvial cements was in a stamp battery. the battery featured heavy iron stamp heads held in a frame, with each head often weighing up to 500 pounds (226 kg) or more (see msv 1880, page 45) (birrell 2005). stamp heads were lifted and dropped by a rotating overhead cam shaft driven by a steam engine or water wheel. ore was fed into a large cast-iron battery box, mixed with a steady stream of water, and pulverised by the stamp heads. in some batteries, mercury was placed in the base of the boxes to amalgamate with freed gold. the violent agitation of the mercury in the mortar box, however, could cause the mercury to break into myriad tiny globules that were carried away by the water with the tailings, thus losing a certain amount of gold in the process (thompson 1867; ritchie & hooker 1997). the water and sand slurry was splashed by the falling stamps from the box through fine mesh screens and onto inclined wooden tables below the mortar box (figure 2). the tables were covered with copper sheets or plates coated with mercury, which caught and amalgamated with a portion of the gold. the grey putty-like amalgam was periodically scraped off the sheets and retorted in a furnace to collect the gold and recover the mercury for reuse. mercury was inevitably lost from the plates, while poor maintenance resulted in further losses of gold and mercury in the tailings. mercury use and loss from gold mining in 19th century victoria. peter davies1, susan lawrence, and jodi turnbull, department of archaeology and history, la trobe university. -
Queenscliffe Maritime Museum
Photograph - Photograph of the sailing ship TORONTO at the entry to Port Phillip, Photograph of the sailing ship TORONTO under sail at the entry to Port Phillip
The brigantine TORONTO entering at the Heads of Port Phillip Victoria under sailBlack & white photo of the brigantine TORONTO at the Heads of Port Phillip VictoriaRefer Notes section for detailssailing ship toronto -
Federation University Historical Collection
Photograph - Photograph - Black and White, Sylvia Williams
Sylvia Williams was head of the Ballarat School of Mines Dressmaking Department between 1845 and 1960. Previously she had been a staff member of the E. Lucas and Co., clothing manufacturers of Ballarat and Melbourne. Black and white image of the head and shoulders of a woman. She is Sylvia Williams, former head of the Ballarat School of Mines Dressmaking Department. ballarat school of mines, williams, dressmaking, lucas, sylvia williams, staffmember -
Warrnambool and District Historical Society Inc.
Functional object - Model hat stand, Battersby & Co.England, c 1950
This hat stand appears to have been made by the English firm of Battersby & Company, a hat manufacturer established in England in the late 19th century. The stand may have been fitted on to the head by the Melbourne firm Ramie Specialty Co. Battersby hats must have been sold extensively in Australia.This hat stand is useful for display purposes and of interest because of its possible composition (ramie)This is a model of a head used for displaying men's hats. The head is made of composite material , originally a gold colour and lined what what may be the vegetable fibre, ramie. The head is mounted on a wooden stand with a stepped base. There are two labels, one on the neck of the head and the other on the back of the stand. The head is chipped and stained, with exposed nails. Battersby Hats Ramie Specialty Co. Pty. Ltd. Melbournebattersby hats, model head stand, vintage men's clothing, ramie -
Orbost & District Historical Society
black and white photograph, 13 March 1962
This photograph shows Mr Alex McDonald, the head of the Education Department, opening the new extensions at the 1962 Golden Jubilee of the Orbost High School.Orbost High School / Orbost Secondary College has played a significant part in the education of senior students in the Orbost district . It is the sole senior educational institution. This item is representative of its historyA black / white photograph of a man standing behind a lectern on a stage delivering a speech. There are other seated behind him.on back - " Mr Alex McDonald, head of Education Depet. Orbost H.S. Jubilee, 1962" -
Royal Australian and New Zealand College of Obstetricians & Gynaecologists (RANZCOG)
Print - Reproduction print of plate from 'Birth atlas', Maternity Center Association, 1943, Robert Latou Dickinson et al, Plate 12. Head turns upward pelvic floor retreats, 1943
A series of six prints showing various stages of labour, donated to the College in 2000.Black and white reproduction print of a plate from a book, enclosed in a wooden frame. Text at the top of the print reads 'HEAD TURNS UPWARD PELVIC FLOOR RETREATS PLATE 12'. The plate depicts a detailed cross section image of a baby in the womb. Label attached to back of work reads: 'Robert Latou DICKINSON and Abram BELSKI/ Plate 12. Head turns upward pelvic floor retreats/From: Birth atlas: reproduction of twenty-four life size sculptures of fertilization, growth,/stages of labour and involution./New York: Maternity Center Association, 1943. 6th ed./Gift of St Georges Hospital, Kew, 2000'.HEAD TURNS UPWARD PELVIC FLOOR RETREATS PLATE 12obstetric delivery -
Queenscliffe Maritime Museum
Functional object - Navigation Lights
The Marine Safety Act, Victoria requires that lights must be displayed from sunset to sunrise and in times of restricted visibility during daylight hours. A vessel's lights should indicate: what type of vessel it is, what the vessel is doing, the direction that the vessel is travelling in. E.G. For vessels under 50 m in length, a second masthead light is optional. For vessels under 12 m in length, sidelights may be a combined lantern on fore and aft centreline. Every vessel at sea must show light to indicate type of vessel, directionof travel and speed.Three metal navigational lights; red port, green starboad and clear head light. S/N Side Light (red) Elect. S/N 432 Side Light (Green) Elect. S/N 433 Head Light Elect.navigation light, marine safety, navigation, safety equipment -
Stawell Historical Society Inc
Photograph, Magdala cum Moonlight Mine Poppet Head 1899
Magdala cum Moonlight Mine Poppet Head 1899 Darling Road can be seen passing under the trestle tramway. Just in front of the first ore bin, a man can be seen opening the door of the bin to fill a dray for the crushing battery.Poppet Head and surrounding infrastructure.stawell gold mining -
Clunes Museum
Photograph
POPPET HEAD ERECTED 1865 AND USED TILL MINE CLOSED 1890. THEN USED FOR SHORT PERIOD 1930-32PHOTOCOPY OF PHOTOGRAPH, POPPET HEAD, PORT PHILLIP MINE, CLUNESlocal history, photography, photographs, mining -
Port Fairy Historical Society Museum and Archives
Tool - axe head
aboriginal stone axe head found on Jack Bourke's property (Albert Road) January 1972Stone axe head. Hole at one end and groove made for twinelocal history, ethnographic material, hunting, fishing, gathering, stone, aboriginal -
Tatura Irrigation & Wartime Camps Museum
Tool - Hammer, 1940's
Made by internees at camp 3, using wood sourced from under the barracks ie : stumps. Tapered head used in blacksmithing or for rock chippingHammer medium size, metal head, wooden handle, pointed on one end and square on the other. Handle thick at bottom end and tapered at top where head fits on.kazenwadel, blacksmith, wood, tools camp 3, metal -
Stawell Historical Society Inc
Photograph, Mine Stamper from Newchum Mine Pleasant Creek called "Vivian"
The main photograph of the battery, "Vivian" a 24 Head Stamper is now in Beaconsfield, Tasmania. The battery head stamper was made in 1862 for crushing gold ore for the "Newchum" mine at Pleasant Creek (now Stawell) Victoria. In 1933 the Chintock family used the Head Stamper to cruse tin ore in a mine at Blue Teir in north-eastern Tasmania. It is not know how or when "Vivian" the battery head stamper came to Tasmania. In 1993 the battery was restored as is a working exhibit in the museum at Beaconsfield Tasmania.Two colour photographs, one of the Battery and the other information about the Battery. The main photograph of the battery, "Vivian" a 24 Head Stamper now in Beaconsfield, Tasmania. The battery head stamper was made in 1862 for crushing gold ore for the "Newchum" mine at Pleasant Creek (now Stawell) Victoria. Beaconsfieldstawell, mining -
South West Healthcare
Heine Ophthalmoscope, Heine, Medical Equipment, 20th Century
1 Case with zipper: 1 Battery holder; 2 globes; 4 plastic ends; 1 May ophthalmoscope head: 1 metal viewer attachment.Case: "HEINE", "GERMANY" Instrument: "ANAX", "GERMANY" Head: "HEINE", "Miroflex", "Anax" "C-00. 13. 102" -
Royal Australian and New Zealand College of Obstetricians & Gynaecologists (RANZCOG)
Print - Reproduction print of plate from 'Birth atlas', Maternity Center Association, 1943, Robert Latou Dickinson et al, Plate 10. Full dilation cervix high head deep in pelvis, 1943
A series of six prints showing various stages of labour, donated to the College in 2000.Black and white reproduction print of a plate from a book, enclosed in a wooden frame. Text at the top of the print reads 'FULL DILATION CERVIX HIGH HEAD DEEP IN PELVIS PLATE 10'. The plate depicts a detailed cross section image of a baby in the womb. Label attached to back of work reads: 'Robert Latou DICKINSON and Abram BELSKI/ Plate 10. Full dilation cervix high head deep in pelvis/From: Birth atlas: reproduction of twenty-four life size sculptures of fertilization, growth,/stages of labour and involution./New York: Maternity Center Association, 1943. 6th ed./Gift of St Georges Hospital, Kew, 2000'.FULL DILATION CERVIX HIGH HEAD DEEP IN PELVIS PLATE 10obstetric delivery -
Federation University Historical Collection
Photograph, H. Yates Head of Department 1920 - 1962
Head of Geology department at School of Mines Ballarat which is a predecessor of Federation UniversityBlack and white Portrait of H. Yates Head of Department 1920 - 1962 in a red framehead of department, photograph, geology, p. l. day