Showing 134 items
matching a truscott
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Moorabbin Air Museum
Article (Item) - Photocopy of article about Bluey Keith William Truscott from air extra magazine
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Moorabbin Air Museum
Book - TRUSCOTT, JOHN AND CAROL BEASY, 1995
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Moorabbin Air Museum
Book - BLUEY TRUSCOTT, IVAN SOUTHALL, 1958
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Bendigo Historical Society Inc.
Administrative record - Truscott collection: grocer's day book
Book with black cover and red spine. It is a grocer's daybook listing of produce sold. Only the first twenty-seven pages are filled in and it covers the period from January 12th, 1920, to June 30th, 1920.business, grocer -
Bendigo Historical Society Inc.
Administrative record - Truscott collection: grocer's day book
The book has a green cover and brown spine. It is a large book with 743 pages, used by the storekeeper to record the purchases made. The book covers the decade of the 1920's"Ledger" written on the spine.grocer, bendigo businesses, truscott -
Bendigo Historical Society Inc.
Administrative record - Truscott collection: grocer's day book
The book has a green cover and brown spine. It is a large book with 743 pages, used by the storekeeper to record the purchases made. The book covers the years 1913-1914 and 1915."Ledger" written on the spine.grocer, bendigo businesses, truscott -
Bendigo Historical Society Inc.
Document - PETER ELLIS COLLECTION: NATIONAL FOLK FESTIVAL ADELAIDE
Document relating to the 25th National Folk Festival Adelaide Easter 1991 held in Adelaide. Documents include band members names and the instruments they play, letter relating to travelling allowance, and letters re: organisation. Also a Bendigo Building Society Unincorporated Bodies Authority New Account Form/Change of Signatories.clubs, music, national folk festival, peter ellis collection, 25th natiional fold festival adelaide easter 1991, peter ellis, emu creek bush band, wedderburn oldtimers, shirley andrews, maureen morris, harry mcqueen, lee baillie, steve brown, adrian verrindle, mrs cory, david ottery, anton marrone, nicole hayes, erica hayes, margaret hogan, caralyn marrone, dean swift, alan martin, alan russ, norma o'donnell, stan symes, heath walder, christian truscott, les daw, harry mcqueen, john mcqueen, graeme balaam, adrian murrell, gary lovejoy, shire of strathfieldsaye, herbert dean swift -
Bendigo Historical Society Inc.
Document - PETER ELLIS COLLECTION: VARIOUS CORRESPONDENCE, 3rd December, 1990
Various correspondence relating to teaching including Teacher Registration, references, Acknowledgement of application for Science Laboratory Position and interview details, letter of thank you from Continuing Education Bendigo.Bendigo Senior Secondary College, Diane Chapman, Music Co-ordinatorperson, individual, peter ellis oam, peter ellis collection, flora hill secondary college, ucnv, michael nihill, keith vance, peter lasscock, cheryl fox, bendigo senior secondary college, diane chapman, ron lake, bendigo college of advanced education, dennis o'hoy, bruce johnson, teachers registration board, bill jacobs, education department, g c rodgers, flora hill secondary college, continuing education bendigo, dina martin, t a mclelland, flora hill high school, bill louch, wedderburn old timers orchestra, break o' day, emu creek bush band, nicola hayes, erica hayes, anton marrone, christian truscott, david ottery, adrian murrell, white secondary college -
Bendigo Historical Society Inc.
Document - JOHN JONES COLLECTION: MAYORAL BALL DANCE CARDS, June 4th, 1964
Small folded dance card which belonged to Jean Jones. Cards were for the City of Bendigo Mayoral Ball, June 4th 1964, by The Mayor & Mayoress Cr. A. S. & Mrs. Craig. Cards are white with blue printing. At the top is the City of Bendigo crest. Mayoral Ball is printed in gold. Each card has a blue cord attached and one has a small blue, red and white pencil attached to the cord. On the inside is the names of twenty dances and five of them have the name of a partner written beside them. The other card only has Mayoral Ball Dance Programmes belong to my mother Jean Jones written on the back.City of Bendigoevent, recreation, ball dance, john jones collection - mayoral ball dance cards, cr a s & mrs craig, gael weibgen, ruth glover, jill watt, jeanette bolton, jeanette tredinnick, rosemarie harvey, leonie hocking, kay nelson, tony truscott, bruce white, kenneth millar, geoffrey brown, brian osborn, frank marcollo, john comer, brian fletcher, jean jones -
Mrs Aeneas Gunn Memorial Library
Book, Angus and Robertson, Bluey Truscott : Squadron Leader Keith William Truscott, RAAF, DFC and Bar, 1958
Biography of Keith William Truscott ('Bluey') concentrating on his service during World War II. Truscott, born at Prahran, Melbourne became one of Australia's best-known flying aces of the Second World War. Already famous as a footballer, playing Australian Rules for Melbourne's premiership team in 1939, Truscott enlisted in the RAAF in 1940 amidst considerable publicity.Ill, p.202.non-fictionBiography of Keith William Truscott ('Bluey') concentrating on his service during World War II. Truscott, born at Prahran, Melbourne became one of Australia's best-known flying aces of the Second World War. Already famous as a footballer, playing Australian Rules for Melbourne's premiership team in 1939, Truscott enlisted in the RAAF in 1940 amidst considerable publicity.world war 1939-1945 - personal narratives - australia, world war 1939-1945 - aerial operations - australia -
Benalla Aviation Museum and Men's Shed Inc.
Photograph - K Truscott 1940 Somers OTS
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Kilmore Historical Society
In His Courts, 1884
Published under the direction of the Tract Committee.Green clothbound hardcover book with images of foliage with yellow flowers. Cover faded, extremities moderately worn. Previous hinge repairs. Title page loose, hinges & binding loose. Foxing throughout. Undated. 240 pp. Fair condition.Inside front cover a stick on label, 'from/Mrs. Berry'. Front flyleaf handwritten cursive, 'Christ Church/Sunday School Library/Kilmore'. At bottom of page, 'No ID: -'.religious fiction, christ church sunday school library, whitburgh cottage collection -
Moorabbin Air Museum
Book - TRUSCOTT SECRET, JOHN & CAROL BEASY, 1995
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Narre Warren and District Family History Group
Book, Sheila Scotter, Sheila Scotter : snaps, secrets and stories from my life, 1998
There is no other store like David Jones... and there is no other consultant like Sheila Scotter! Known variously as the Kangaroo editor (by Diana Vreeland), the black and white lady from Albert Park, and the Silver Duchess, this is the autobiography, scrapbook-style, of one of Australia's doyennes of style. For Sheila Scotter's seventeenth birthday her parents put on a 'coming out ball' in the United Services Club in Calcutta, where they lived at the time. The teenager wore a pale turquoise silk taffeta ball gown. Sheila no longer remembers what happened to that dress, but she does know that it is responsible for the black-and-white wardrobe that has been her hallmark ever since, with the exception of one occasion and one occasion only. For her seventieth birthday party, close friend John Truscott conned her into wearing red, insisting that the theme for the event was all red. And what did the guests all wear? Black and white! This anecdote lite, stylish, idiosyncratic is typical of the many that make up Sheila Scotter's autobiographical assortment. Most Australian women know Sheila Scotter through her Women's Weekly column 'Sheila Scotter Suggests' which ran between 1975 and 1980 and totalled some 235 instalments. The fact that this column is still vividly remembered 17 years later attests to the sacred place it held in every Australian household. A feminist before the word was invented, Sheila has had a formidable career. Two chapters are devoted to her career in fashion, including her time as the editor-in-chief of Vogue and founding editor of Vogue Living. The art of fundraising is also treated in some depth. In snippets, we hear of her love of cricket (which she once played); we find out how she came to live in Australia in the first place and why she has made Melbourne her home. Not surprisingly, the book reflects the personal contradictoriness of its author/subject on the one hand an aristocrat, on the other a rogue who does not respect rank; blithely mixing innate feminism with blatant coquettishness; outrageous yet scrupulously stylish; in the know yet discrete; courting notoriety while at the same time needing solitude a Like all celebrity autobiographers Sheila reserves her right to privacy while basking in the limelight. But she has used this book to set the record straight on a number of issues, including why she left Vogue, her many romantic involvements, her much-publicised spat with socialite Lillian Frank, and what was wrong with David Jones, to whom she consulted during 1994-95. The book contains the expected wining, dining and partying, as well as the inside story on some recent scandals. Sheila Scotter is glamorous and alluring, a forthright mover and shaker who inspires fear in some, awe and respect in others, and admiration and loyalty in most. No matter what you think of her, you simply cannot ignore her. Friends and enemies alike are awaiting this book with bated breath for one reason: when Sheila Scotter speaks, people listen. Contents Foreword (by Ruth Cracknell, a personal friend) Before I Begin a (explaining the rationale for the book) 1 Thursday's Child (birthdays) 2 Christmases to Remember 3 In Fashion (career in fashion) 4 A Matter of Style (Vogue Living and its influence) 5 Marriage and Other Liaisons 6 A Mixed Salad of Letters (letters, personal and business, from prominent people) 7 Fundraising: Are Committees Really Necessary? 8 Loved Ones Departed (or Why I Envy the Angels) 9 Disappointments and Other Disasters (scandals and inside stories) 10 London, Paris, Sydney, Melbourne (the places she has lived) 11 Not the Last Instalment (a look ahead) Postscript (a tribute to some special men read between the lines) Source: Publisher253 p.; 25 cmnon-fictionThere is no other store like David Jones... and there is no other consultant like Sheila Scotter! Known variously as the Kangaroo editor (by Diana Vreeland), the black and white lady from Albert Park, and the Silver Duchess, this is the autobiography, scrapbook-style, of one of Australia's doyennes of style. For Sheila Scotter's seventeenth birthday her parents put on a 'coming out ball' in the United Services Club in Calcutta, where they lived at the time. The teenager wore a pale turquoise silk taffeta ball gown. Sheila no longer remembers what happened to that dress, but she does know that it is responsible for the black-and-white wardrobe that has been her hallmark ever since, with the exception of one occasion and one occasion only. For her seventieth birthday party, close friend John Truscott conned her into wearing red, insisting that the theme for the event was all red. And what did the guests all wear? Black and white! This anecdote lite, stylish, idiosyncratic is typical of the many that make up Sheila Scotter's autobiographical assortment. Most Australian women know Sheila Scotter through her Women's Weekly column 'Sheila Scotter Suggests' which ran between 1975 and 1980 and totalled some 235 instalments. The fact that this column is still vividly remembered 17 years later attests to the sacred place it held in every Australian household. A feminist before the word was invented, Sheila has had a formidable career. Two chapters are devoted to her career in fashion, including her time as the editor-in-chief of Vogue and founding editor of Vogue Living. The art of fundraising is also treated in some depth. In snippets, we hear of her love of cricket (which she once played); we find out how she came to live in Australia in the first place and why she has made Melbourne her home. Not surprisingly, the book reflects the personal contradictoriness of its author/subject on the one hand an aristocrat, on the other a rogue who does not respect rank; blithely mixing innate feminism with blatant coquettishness; outrageous yet scrupulously stylish; in the know yet discrete; courting notoriety while at the same time needing solitude a Like all celebrity autobiographers Sheila reserves her right to privacy while basking in the limelight. But she has used this book to set the record straight on a number of issues, including why she left Vogue, her many romantic involvements, her much-publicised spat with socialite Lillian Frank, and what was wrong with David Jones, to whom she consulted during 1994-95. The book contains the expected wining, dining and partying, as well as the inside story on some recent scandals. Sheila Scotter is glamorous and alluring, a forthright mover and shaker who inspires fear in some, awe and respect in others, and admiration and loyalty in most. No matter what you think of her, you simply cannot ignore her. Friends and enemies alike are awaiting this book with bated breath for one reason: when Sheila Scotter speaks, people listen. Contents Foreword (by Ruth Cracknell, a personal friend) Before I Begin a (explaining the rationale for the book) 1 Thursday's Child (birthdays) 2 Christmases to Remember 3 In Fashion (career in fashion) 4 A Matter of Style (Vogue Living and its influence) 5 Marriage and Other Liaisons 6 A Mixed Salad of Letters (letters, personal and business, from prominent people) 7 Fundraising: Are Committees Really Necessary? 8 Loved Ones Departed (or Why I Envy the Angels) 9 Disappointments and Other Disasters (scandals and inside stories) 10 London, Paris, Sydney, Melbourne (the places she has lived) 11 Not the Last Instalment (a look ahead) Postscript (a tribute to some special men read between the lines) Source: Publishersheila scotter, fashion