Showing 1089 items
matching eltham station
-
Eltham District Historical Society Inc
Photograph, George Coop, A Tait (Red Rattler) train in the storage yard at Hurstbridge Railway Station, 7-8 February 1981, 1981
Digital TIFF file Scan of 35mm Ilford FP4 black and white transparencyhorses, hurstbridge line,hurstbridge railway station, red rattler, tait train -
Eltham District Historical Society Inc
Photograph, George Coop, Hurstbridge Railway Station, 7-8 February 1981, 1981
... Eltham District Historical Society Inc 728 Main Rd Eltham ...Digital TIFF file Scan of 35mm Ilford FP4 black and white transparencyhurstbridge railway station, hurstbridge line,red rattler, tait train -
Eltham District Historical Society Inc
Photograph, George Coop, Hurstbridge Railway Station, 7-8 February 1981, 1981
Shows two trains on sidings in weekend storage.Digital TIFF file Scan of 35mm Ilford FP4 black and white transparencyhurstbridge railway station, hurstbridge line,red rattler, single motor carriage, tait train -
Eltham District Historical Society Inc
Photograph, George Coop, Hurstbridge Railway Station, 7-8 February 1981, 1981
Shows two trains on sidings in weekend storage.Digital TIFF file Scan of 35mm Ilford FP4 black and white transparencyhurstbridge railway station, hurstbridge line,red rattler, tait train -
Eltham District Historical Society Inc
Photograph, George Coop, Hurstbridge Railway Station, 7-8 February 1981, 1981
Shows two trains on sidings in weekend storage.Digital TIFF file Scan of 35mm Ilford FP4 black and white transparencyhurstbridge railway station, hurstbridge line,red rattler, single motor carriage, tait train -
Eltham District Historical Society Inc
Photograph, George Coop, Hurstbridge bound Single Motor Carriage 472M Tait (Red Rattler) train approaching Wattle Glen Railway Station, 7-8 February 1981, 1981
Digital TIFF file Scan of 35mm Ilford FP4 black and white transparency472m, hurstbridge line, level crossing, red rattler, single motor carriage, tait train, wattle glen railway station -
Eltham District Historical Society Inc
Photograph, George Coop, A Tait (Red Rattler) train departs Greensborough Railway Station bound for Princes Bridge, c. October 1982, 1982
... Eltham District Historical Society Inc 728 Main Rd Eltham ...Digital TIFF file Scan of 35mm Ilford FP4 black and white transparencygreensborough railway station, hurstbridge line, red rattler, tait train -
Eltham District Historical Society Inc
Photograph, George Coop, A Tait (Red Rattler) train arrives at Greensborough Railway Station bound for Eltham, c. October 1982, 1982
... Station bound for Eltham, c. October 1982... at Greensborough Railway Station bound for Eltham, c. October 1982 ...Digital TIFF file Scan of 35mm Ilford FP4 black and white transparencygreensborough railway station, hurstbridge line, red rattler, tait train -
Eltham District Historical Society Inc
Photograph, Ballarat Railway Station, c.October 1982, 1982
... Eltham District Historical Society Inc 728 Main Rd Eltham ...Digital TIFF file Scan of 35mm Ilford FP4 black and white transparencyballarat railway station -
Eltham District Historical Society Inc
Photograph, George Coop, Montmorency Railway Station, c.July 1983, 1983
... Eltham District Historical Society Inc 728 Main Rd Eltham ...Digital TIFF file Scan of 35mm Ilford FP4 black and white transparencymontmorency railway station, red rattler, tait train -
Eltham District Historical Society Inc
Photograph, George Coop, St Kilda bound (Red Rattler) Tait train at Brighton Beach Railway Station, 22 August 1983, 1983
Digital TIFF file Scan of 35mm Kodak Safety 5062 black and white transparencybrighton beach railway station, red rattler, sandringham lline, tait train -
Eltham District Historical Society Inc
Photograph, George Coop, St Kilda bound (Red Rattler) Tait train at Brighton Beach Railway Station, 22 August 1983, 1983
Digital TIFF file Scan of 35mm Kodak Safety 5062 black and white transparencybrighton beach railway station, red rattler, sandringham lline, tait train -
Eltham District Historical Society Inc
Photograph, George Coop, Single Motor Carriage Tait Parcels Van arriving at Heidelberg Railway Station, 23 August 1983, 1983
Looking southwest towards Banksia Street overpassDigital TIFF file Scan of 35mm Kodak Safety 5062 black and white transparencybanksia street, heidelberg railway station, overpass, parcels van, red rattler, single motor carriage, tait train -
Eltham District Historical Society Inc
Photograph, George Coop, Single Motor Carriage Tait Parcels Van at Heidelberg Railway Station, 23 August 1983, 1983
Looking southwest towards Banksia Street overpassDigital TIFF file Scan of 35mm Kodak Safety 5062 black and white transparencyheidelberg railway station, parcels van, red rattler, single motor carriage, tait train -
Eltham District Historical Society Inc
Photograph, George Coop, Single Motor Carriage Tait Parcels Van at Heidelberg Railway Station, 23 August 1983, 1983
Looking southwest towards Banksia Street overpassDigital TIFF file Scan of 35mm Kodak Safety 5062 black and white transparencyheidelberg railway station, parcels van, red rattler, single motor carriage, tait train -
Eltham District Historical Society Inc
Photograph, George Coop, Single Motor Carriage Tait Parcels Van at Heidelberg Railway Station, 23 August 1983, 1983
Looking southwest towards Banksia Street overpassDigital TIFF file Scan of 35mm Kodak Safety 5062 black and white transparencyheidelberg railway station, parcels van, red rattler, single motor carriage, tait train -
Eltham District Historical Society Inc
Photograph, George Coop, Single Motor Carriage Tait Parcels Van at Heidelberg Railway Station, 23 August 1983, 1983
Looking southwest towards Banksia Street overpassDigital TIFF file Scan of 35mm Kodak Safety 5062 black and white transparencyheidelberg railway station, parcels van, red rattler, single motor carriage, tait train -
Eltham District Historical Society Inc
Photograph, George Coop, Flinders Street bound Comeng train near Banksia Street overpass, Heidelberg, 23 August 1983, 1983
Looking southwest towards Banksia Street overpassDigital TIFF file Scan of 35mm Kodak Safety 5062 black and white transparencybanksia street, comeng electric train (1981), heidelberg railway station, overpass -
Eltham District Historical Society Inc
Photograph, Wheat train derailment near the yards of Dunolly Railway Station, Dunolly, Victoria, c.1975, 1975
GC visited Dunolly with his late father-in-law who used to be a gold miner up there. They were going past the station and noticed a wheat train had derailed in the yards and so he took the opportunity to photograph the goings-on. The fellow in the light grey slacks and beige shirt with tie approached GC and asked him what he was doing. He proposed that GC leave or alternatively, take as many photographs as he desired and then send him a complete set of prints, which GC did.Digital TIFF file Scan of 12.6 x 18.6 cm colour printb class diesel-electric locomotive, b80, derailment, dunolly, dunolly railway station, t-364, t-383, t-class diesel electric locomotive, victorian railways, wheat train -
Eltham District Historical Society Inc
Negative - Photograph, Montmorency Railway Station, 1998c
... Eltham District Historical Society Inc 728 Main Rd Eltham ...Roll of 35mm colour negative film, 8 strips and associated 10 x 15 cm colour printKodak Gold 100-5montmorency, railway station -
Eltham District Historical Society Inc
Photograph, Ian McDonald, Main Road, Eltham, corner of Arthur Street showing Shire Hall and Shire Office, 4 January 1968, 04/01/1968
... photograph collection woolworths eltham fire brigade fire station ...Note Cinema sign on hall.Black and white photographarthur street, dudley street, eltham, eltham hall, eltham shire office, main road, pph, produce paint and hardware centre, shire offices, shire of eltham pioneers photograph collection, woolworths, eltham fire brigade, fire station, sepp -
Eltham District Historical Society Inc
Photograph, Ian McDonald, Main Road, Eltham, between Arthur Street and Dudley Street, 4 January 1968, 04/01/1968
... of old Shire Office and Hall, former Fire Station, etc., Main...Eltham District Historical Society Inc 728 Main Rd Eltham ...Shows the 285 ft. frontage along Main Road consisting of old Shire Office and Hall, former Fire Station, etc., Main Road, Eltham, which was sold to Woolworths.Black and white photograph[Written on backing paper:] Shows area sold to Woolworths. I took these photos from the new fire station - the building in the middle is the old fire station - Moved to Research for Scouts 1970 - IMcDarthur street, dudley street, eltham, eltham hall, eltham shire office, main road, pph, produce paint and hardware centre, shire offices, shire of eltham pioneers photograph collection, woolworths, eltham fire brigade, fire station, sepp -
Eltham District Historical Society Inc
Photograph, Fred Mitchell, Yarra Glen Railway Station, 1991, 1991
Digital copy of colour photographfred mitchell collection, 1991, yarra glen railway station -
Eltham District Historical Society Inc
Photograph, Fred Mitchell, Yarra Glen Railway Station, 1991, 1991
Digital copy of colour photographfred mitchell collection, 1991, yarra glen railway station -
Eltham District Historical Society Inc
Photograph, Fred Mitchell, Steam Locomotive J-515 arriving at Hurstbridge Railway Station, 2004, 2004
Digital copy of colour photographfred mitchell collection, 2004, hurstbridge railway station, j-515, steam engine, steam train -
Uniting Church Archives - Synod of Victoria
Photograph, Undated
Born 1916 in Kettering Tasmania. Attended Clemes College Hobart. Served with 2nd A.I.F. Ordained Methodist minister March 1948. Married Muriel Campbell 1948. Stationed at: Foster-Toora, Terang, Eltham/Greensborough, Balaclava, Kew, Northcote/Thornbury. Served AMF in Korea and Japan. Chaplain Balcombe Army Camp. Retired 1981. Died March 7 2000.B & W waist length studio portrait of Horace Morrisby Watsonrev horace morrisby watson, methodist, minister -
Eltham District Historical Society Inc
Photograph, Rural view of trestle Bridge, Eltham, c.1912
The railway was commenced in 1900 and passed through the middle of the Shillinglaw farm. The line to Eltham opened in 1902. This view shows the the new Catholic Church, St Mary's in Henry Street (near Main Road, then Maria Street) and Shillinglaw Cottage visible in background past where Eltham Town Park and later the Eltham library (1994) was built. The church site had been relocated from further south along Main Road (near Wingrove Cottage) in order to be more central to the congregation following the shifting of the township away from Little Eltham and closer to the railway station. It was subsequently destroyed by fire in 1961.Black and white photographeltham, trestle bridge, bridges, catholic church, henry street, bridge, shillinglaw cottage, shillinglaw trees, shillinglaw farm -
Eltham District Historical Society Inc
Photograph - Digital Photograph, Marguerite Marshall, Strathewen Public Hall, 20 August 2008
Strathewen Public Hall, social and spiritual centre was later lost in the Black Saturday fires 2009. The Strathewen Community decided a community hall was needed in 1901. In 1902 locals built the hall with messmate trees. It was located on the Cottlesbridge-Strathewen Road. The first function was a Grand concert and Balll attended by about 120 people. Several denominations held Church services and Sunday School services in the Hall. It survived several bushfires until after this photo was taken when it was destroyed in Black Saturday, 9 February 2009. Published: Nillumbik Now and Then / Marguerite Marshall 2008; photographs Alan King with Marguerite Marshall.; p89 Strathewen was settled late, largely because it was difficult to access.1 Early selectors found it a struggle to survive. They had to do everything themselves, from felling trees for buildings, to taking produce to market along bush tracks that they had helped cut. Small dairy farms were typical but fruit became the district’s prime produce. The first settlers east of Arthurs Creek were brothers John and Duncan Smith whose station Glen-Ard was probably operated as a sheep run. Other early settlers were the Mann family, who were to donate land for the hall, provide postal services and John Mann was an Eltham Shire councillor from 1916 to 1919.2 In 1873 James Mann, his wife Jane and their six children, settled on 207 acres (83.7) (Lang Fauld Farm) on both sides of Eagles Nest Road, from the foot of Mount Sugarloaf to the bank of the Arthurs Creek. In 1883 James took up another selection on Chads Creek. It was very hard work and at times he was well behind with his rent. However the family had a good social life, attending the Primitive Methodist Church at the Arthurs Creek Township and on New Year’s Eve throwing a party for all the locals. By 1874 James Mann’s younger brother, John, selected 311 acres (125.8ha) between Eagles Nest Road and upper Arthurs Creek. He called it Carseburn after his home parish in Scotland. Tragically in 1875 John drowned in the Yarra River, at Richmond.3 John Mann’s oldest son, also John, later purchased Duncan Smith’s land, which he named Violet Glen. He was to give one acre (0.4ha) of this land for the Strathewen Hall site. A Mann family diary written at Carseburn in 1897, tells how the district’s name was selected. Strathewen is derived from ‘strath’ meaning ‘broad mountain valley’ and from the name of Ewen H. Cameron, the local parliamentarian for almost 40 years. ‘George Brain came around to get a petition signed to get a post office up here and we had to vote for a name—Strathewen, Glen-Ard, or Headcorie’.4 It was at Carseburn that a public meeting in 1901, decided to build the Strathewen Hall on the Cottlesbridge-Strathewen Road. In 1902 the locals built the hall with messmate trees. The first function was a Grand Concert and Ball attended by around 120 people and several Protestant denominations took turns to hold church services and Sunday School there. Fortunately the hall has survived bushfires to be the town’s spiritual and social centre.5 The area continued to develop and in 1909 a post office operated somewhere at Strathewen and from around 1916 at Carseburn.6 It was not until 1914 that land was bought to establish the Strathewen State School on School Ridge Road. The residents paid £100 to build it on two acres (0.8 ha) while the Education Department contributed £30 and leased the building annually for £1. When teacher Miss Mary Golding opened the school in 1917, it had no equipment.7 But in 1921 the Education Department provided desks and a hexagonal shelter shed (now a rare style in Victoria) and took control in 1925.8 By 1917 Strathewen was booming.9 George Apted had built a coolstore in 1916, and local orchardists bought storage space until the 1950s. This allowed the area to supply the market in and out of season. Guesthouses catered for growing tourism. In the mid 1920s Mrs Eleanor Sparkes built the guest-house Singing Waters, which operated through the 1930s. Her daughter Mrs Vera McKimmie, ran it until the 1950s and the house remains in Chads Creek Road. In the Great Depression land was cleared for timber to be sold as firewood and there was small scale sawmilling. However the orchard industry diminished for several reasons including the 1939 bushfires and rapid changes in production methods. Today the Apteds still operate an orchard and farm at Glen-Ard, which straddles the border between Strathewen and Arthurs Creek. It includes the southern part of Duncan Smith’s original Glen-Ard selection.This collection of almost 130 photos about places and people within the Shire of Nillumbik, an urban and rural municipality in Melbourne's north, contributes to an understanding of the history of the Shire. Published in 2008 immediately prior to the Black Saturday bushfires of February 7, 2009, it documents sites that were impacted, and in some cases destroyed by the fires. It includes photographs taken especially for the publication, creating a unique time capsule representing the Shire in the early 21st century. It remains the most recent comprehenesive publication devoted to the Shire's history connecting local residents to the past. nillumbik now and then (marshall-king) collection, strathewan public hall -
Eltham District Historical Society Inc
Photograph - Digital Photograph, Alan King, Busst House, cnr Silver Street and Kerrie Crescent, Eltham, 2 February 2008
Considered the best of the early mud-brick houses built by Alistair Knox. Covered under Heritage Overlay, Nillumbik Planning Scheme. Published: Nillumbik Now and Then / Marguerite Marshall 2008; photographs Alan King with Marguerite Marshall.; p143 The Busst house hidden by trees at the corner of Silver Street and Kerrie Crescent is considered the best of the early mud-brick houses built by Eltham architect, Alistair Knox. Knox himself said, that the Busst house was the most mature mud-brick house designed at that period. ‘It related with true understanding to its steep site and expressed the flexibility of earth building ………to develop a new sense of flowing form and shape’.1 Built in 1948 for artist Phyl Busst, a former art student at Montsalvat, the house helped usher in Eltham Shire’s distinctive mud-brick residential character. Knox was the pivotal figure of the style developed from the 1950s to the 1970s.2 Scarcity of building materials after World War Two encouraged mud-brick building because earth was a cheap and plentiful building medium. But when Knox began building in mud-brick in 1947, no council in Victoria knew anything of this ancient art and he needed a permit. Fortunately the Commonwealth Experimental Building Station at Ryde in NSW, had been experimenting with earth construction to help overcome the shortages of that time. They published a pamphlet that became available in Melbourne on the same day the Eltham Council was to consider whether the earth building should be allowed. Knox caught one of the three morning trains to the city in those days and bought several copies of the pamphlet to give to each councillor. On his return he found the councillors standing on the steps of the shire offices after lunch at the local hotel. He heard that earth building had been discussed before lunch and that they were not in favor of it. Knox gave each councillor a pamphlet. They passed that plan and by doing so, opened the door for all future earth building in Victoria and by default, in Australia.3 Mud-brick houses attracted artists to Eltham, for their aesthetic appeal and because they were cheap. Those who built their own houses, included film maker Tim Burstall, artists Peter Glass, Clifton Pugh, Matcham Skipper, Sonia Skipper and husband Jo Hannan. For Knox, mud-brick building was more than just a cheap building medium. He saw it as harmonising with the surrounding bush and as a way of counteracting the growing materialism of the age. He wrote of its impact on ‘ 20th century man. It should counteract the confusion that the perpetual flow of high technology products have upon him ..’.4 Building the Busst house on a steep site was difficult because most earth-moving equipment was then in its infancy. For instance drilling for explosives was done by hand, which was a slow and painful process. Knox, assisted by his foreman Horrie Judd and Gordon Ford (who was to become a famous landscape designer), built two large main rooms - a living room/ kitchen downstairs - and upstairs, a studio/bedroom. The studio/bedroom opens onto the balcony, which covers the living area. The bath made of solid concrete by stonemason Jack Fabro, is particularly deep. Sunshine pours through the three French windows of the north-east facing kitchen/living area, which is lined with timber. The large hearth can fit a family around the fire while the timber floors and solomite (compressed straw) ceilings add to the cosy atmosphere. The garden is thick with trees, and in the late 1990s, Ford put in a pool near the original dry wall he had built as a young man.This collection of almost 130 photos about places and people within the Shire of Nillumbik, an urban and rural municipality in Melbourne's north, contributes to an understanding of the history of the Shire. Published in 2008 immediately prior to the Black Saturday bushfires of February 7, 2009, it documents sites that were impacted, and in some cases destroyed by the fires. It includes photographs taken especially for the publication, creating a unique time capsule representing the Shire in the early 21st century. It remains the most recent comprehenesive publication devoted to the Shire's history connecting local residents to the past. nillumbik now and then (marshall-king) collection, alistair knox, alistair knox design, busst house, kerrie crescent, mudbrick construction, mudbrick houses, silver street -
Eltham District Historical Society Inc
Photograph - Digital Photograph, Alan King, Cameron family graves, Kangaroo Ground Cemetery, Eltham-Yarra Glen Road, Kangaroo Ground, 28 January 2008
Six year old Judith Furphy was the first person known to have been buried at Kangaroo Ground Cemetery in May 1851. The cemetery is situated on an ancient river bed with exposed Nillumbik sands. The rest of the district is formed from black volcanic soil which was hard to dig. According to local historian Mick Woiwod (deceased) the site may have been a burial ground for the local Wurundjeri people as the exposed softer sands were always their prefered camping sites. The Hon. Ewen Hugh Cameron who lived at Pigeon Bank and was the Member for Evelyn for 40 years (1874-1914) was buried here in 1915. Published: Nillumbik Now and Then / Marguerite Marshall 2008; photographs Alan King with Marguerite Marshall.; p39 The Wurundjeri people might have buried their dead on the site of the Kangaroo Ground Cemetery, according to local historian Mick Woiwod. Kangaroo Ground was a premier hunting ground, but camping on the black volcanic soil would have been uncomfortable. Unlike most of Kangaroo Ground, its cemetery, on an ancient river bed, comprises a rare exposure of Nillumbik sands – always the preferred campsite for Aboriginal people. The cemetery area is the only place where the soil was soft enough to dig a grave easily.1 Six-year-old Judith Furphy was the first person known to have been laid to rest at the Kangaroo Ground Cemetery. She died on May 17, 1851, from a chill caught by resting on wet grass. Local Andrew Ross wrote ‘..no public burying place existed nearer than Melbourne. The case being considered urgent, a general meeting of the settlers took place on the evening of the 17th……. The result was the selection of unoccupied crown land …….which was subsequently granted by Government for a public cemetery.’2 Judith was buried the next day on May 18. Her grave was marked by the trustees with a plaque, which unfortunately states nine years old, when she was probably only six. Judith came from an illustrious family. Her brother, Joseph, was the author of Such is Life and other works. Another brother, John, developed and manufactured the famous Furphy water cart, which distributed water to World War One soldiers along with the latest rumours. Hence the name Furphy entered the Australian idiom, as synonymous with ‘rumour’. Judith’s father Samuel helped build the first Kangaroo Ground church school. Inside, near the entrance of the cemetery, on Yarra Glen Road, stand a rotunda and a water tank. Occasional benches invite mourners to pause and remember. The gate with wrought iron and brick supports, bears the inscription ‘Erected by Sir Ewen and Lady Cameron in memory of their daughter, Flora Margaret’. These are only two of the famous people connected with this cemetery. The Hon. Ewen Hugh Cameron JP and MLA from 1874 to1914, who lived at Pigeon Bank, Warrandyte Road, was buried here in 1915. Unrelated, but with the same name, was Sir Ewen Cameron who had been Minister for Health and was laid to rest there in 1964. Sir Herbert Gepp, a leading industrialist and the former owner of Garden Hill, at Yarra Glen Road, was buried there in 1954.3 Many of the more imposing tombstones belong to the earlier graves. Unfortunately bushfires have cracked several. But this adds to the melancholy attractiveness of the cemetery, graced by some beautiful eucalypts, cypress and pines. Early pioneering families represented at the cemetery include Armstrong, Barr, Bell, Harkness, Jardine, Johnston, Rogerson, Stevenson, Thomson and Walters. Armstrong and Bell were among the first families to come to the district and Stevenson owned the district’s first sheep station. It took in much of present day Christmas Hills, which was the name he gave his sheep station. Harkness was the first to suggest a Kangaroo Ground school be built, and one of the first to suggest establishing the Eltham District Road Board. Many of these families leased pastoral land before the mid-century and bought land when it came on sale in 1849. In the cemetery’s early days sections were devoted to the major Christian denominations (mainly the Protestant) and one section was set aside for ‘other’ or ‘non-believers’. However in modern times burial plots have not been placed in areas according to religious beliefs.This collection of almost 130 photos about places and people within the Shire of Nillumbik, an urban and rural municipality in Melbourne's north, contributes to an understanding of the history of the Shire. Published in 2008 immediately prior to the Black Saturday bushfires of February 7, 2009, it documents sites that were impacted, and in some cases destroyed by the fires. It includes photographs taken especially for the publication, creating a unique time capsule representing the Shire in the early 21st century. It remains the most recent comprehenesive publication devoted to the Shire's history connecting local residents to the past. nillumbik now and then (marshall-king) collection, kangaroo ground, eltham-yarra glen road, agnes bell cameron, agnes cameron (nee bell), cameron family, edward aubrey haughton, eugene cameron, evelyn florence cameron, ewen hugh cameron, gravestones, jane armstrong, jane bell, jessie agnes haughton (nee cameron), jessie cameron, john donald cameron, kangaroo ground cemetery, neville cameron, simon armstrong, vera cameron, william bell armstrong, wurundjeri