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Ballarat Heritage Services
Work on paper, Bede TANGUTALUM, Yam, 1991
Bede TANGUTALUM (1952- ) Wurrumiyanga (Nguiu), Bathurst Island Tiwi People Bede Tungutalum works across a range of media, including carved and painted wooden sculpture,printmaking and painting. Tungutalum learned carving from his father, the well-known sculptor Gabriel Tungutalum, and was taught how to cut woodblocks for printing while attending Xavier Boys School at Nguiu. He refined and developed these techniques in the late 1960s and early 1970s. His earliest prints date from the late 1960s. In 1969, with fellow Tiwi artist Giovanni Tipungwuti, Bede Tungutalum established Tiwi Design, an art centre dedicated to the production of hand-printed fabrics featuring traditional Indigenous designs.Framed lithograph depicting yams, printed in colour inks, from multiple stonesbede tangutalum, tiwi, wurrumiyanga, bathurst island, tiwi design, yam, aboriginal -
Ballarat Heritage Services
Photograph, Clare Gervasoni, Daylesford Uniting Church, 18/10/2015
A red brick church on stone foundation in Daylesford, a hall, and a former church. The small building at the centre is the John Mitchell Memorial Hall named after a teacher and superintendent from September 1861 to 1921. It was still in existence in August 2024. daylesford uniting church, daylesford methodist church, daylesford -
Ballarat Heritage Services
Document - Report, University of Ballarat Eureka Centre Redevelopment Expression of Interest, 2007, 2007
An expression of interest prepared by the University of Ballarat to Lateral Projects and Development regairding an expression of Interest for the Eureka Centre Redevelopment Project. eureka centre, lateral projects, eureka heritage hub, teacher education, eureka genealogy -
Ballarat Heritage Services
Booklet, Gippsland Center for Art And Design, 2015
Red soft cover catalogue of an exhibition of works by completing Bachelor of Visual and Media Art studentsnon-fictiongippsland centre for art and design, alumni, switchback gallery, tony hanning, lucy chapman, megan cousins, rebecca gelll, jamie hall, chelsea ipenburg, hayden jackson, olivia king, rhys knight, claire marston, christopher miller, hannah o'loughlin, owyne turner -
Ballarat Heritage Services
Photograph - Image, Members of the Australasian Federation Convention
This group of men are considered fathers of Australian Federation. Sixteen men of the members of the Australasian Federation Convention, 1890. The bearded man standing in the centre is Henry Parkes. Hon. Andrew Inglis Clark (Tasmania), Hon. Sir Samuel Walker Griffith KCMG (Queensland), Hon. Thomas Playford (Sth. Aust.), Hon. Alfred Deakin (Victoria), Hon. Bolton Stafford Bird (Tas.), George H. Jenkins (Secretary to the Conference), Hon. Capt. William Russell Russell (New Zealand), Hon. Sir Henry Parkes (New South Wales), Hon. William McMillan (N.S.W.), Hon. Sir John Hall KCMG (N.Z.), Hon. John Murtagh Macrossan (Qld), Hon. Duncan Gillies (Vic.), Hon. John Alexander Cockburn M.D.(Sth.Aust.), Hon. Sir James George Lee Steere (Western Australia).national conventon, henry parkes, federation, duncan gillies -
Ballarat Heritage Services
Photograph - Mounted photograph, Nicholas J. Caire, Scene in the Jim Crow Ranges, c1895
Original photograph in the Jim Crow Ranges (around Daylesford)/ A person and horse can be located in the centre of the photograph, and a timber bridge in the background. jim crow ranges, daylesford, bridge, trestle bridge, horse, nicholas caire -
Ballarat Heritage Services
Photograph - Colour photograph, Phillip Brady and Cr Gerry Petrie at the 1979 Kew Festival, 1979
In 1979 Cr Gerry Petrie was the President of the Kew Festival. Kew resident Philip Brady was the festival presenter. They stand in front of the Kew Civic Centre.Left to right: Cr Gerry Petrie and Phillip Brady at the Kew Festival. They stand in Petrie Square in front of the Kew Civic Centre.city of kew, kew festival, philip brady, gerry petrie, kew civic centre, marble -
Ballarat Heritage Services
Photograph - Black and white photograph, Kew Municipal Brass Band at the Festival Fun Run 1979, 1979
Kew Municipal Brass band playing on the forecourt of the Kew Civic Centre, Cotham Road, Kew. city of kew, kew festival, kew municipal brass band -
Ballarat Heritage Services
Photograph - Colour, Clare Gervasoni, Marysville Information Centre, 2014, 01/11/2014
Colour photograph of Marysville Information Centre.bushfire, black saturday, marysville, marysville information centre -
Ballarat Heritage Services
Photograph - Colour, Clare Gervasoni, Eureka Centre, 2018, 25/10/2018
Colour photographs of The Eureka Centreeureka stockade memorial gardens, eureka stockade, eureka flag, eureka centre -
Ballarat Heritage Services
Photograph - Black and White, Batten Family, 1870+
Children of William Henry Batten L to R back: Lucy Alice, Anne, Florence Ellen Centre: Agnes, Margaret, Robert (Their mother Anna Maria Brommell died 1869) Sitting: Sarah Amy, Mabel Jessie (mother Kate Taylor - 9 more children came later)Photograph sepiaBATTEN FAMILY verso "2"william batten, william henry batten, lucy batten, anne batten, florence batten, agnes batten, anna batten, anna brommell, mabel batten -
Ballarat Heritage Services
Photograph - Photograph - Colour, Clare Gervasoni, Warrnambool Beach for the Life Saving Centre, Victoria, 2018, 29/12/2019
Colour photograph fron Killarney Beach, Victoria.coast, beach, warrnambool, life saving, surf life saving club, flags -
Ballarat Heritage Services
Photograph - Image, Tower Hill, Victoria, c1918, c1918
Tower Hill is a volcanic formation believed to have erupted about 32,000 years ago. Its formation is known as a "nested maar" and it is the largest example of its type in Victoria. During formation, molten lava pushed its way up through the Earth’s crust and encountered a layer of water-bearing rock. Violent explosions followed creating a shallow crater which later filled with water to form the lake. Further eruptions occurred in the centre of this crater, creating the islands and cone shaped hills. In 1892 Tower Hill became Victoria’s first National Park. In 1961, Tower Hill became a State Game Reserve under the then Fisheries and Wildlife Department and a major re-vegetation program began. (https://www.towerhill.org.au/index.php/about-reserve/history, accessed 23 December 2019)Black and white image of Tower Hill, near Koroit, Victoria.tower hill, volcano, crater -
Ballarat Heritage Services
Photograph - Photograph - Colour, Clare Gervasoni, "Hidden Ireland" Hot of the Press
Photograph of "Hidden Ireland' author Val Noone (right), Mary Doyle (centre) and Lisa Gervasoni (left) holding a photo of the book 'hot of the press'.val noone, mary doyle, lisa gervasoni, hidden ireland -
Ballarat Heritage Services
Photograph - Colour photograph, Tower Hill, 2016, 23/12/2015
Tower Hill is a volcanic formation believed to have erupted about 32,000 years ago. Its formation is known as a "nested maar" and it is the largest example of its type in Victoria. During formation, molten lava pushed its way up through the Earth’s crust and encountered a layer of water-bearing rock. Violent explosions followed creating a shallow crater which later filled with water to form the lake. Further eruptions occurred in the centre of this crater, creating the islands and cone shaped hills. In 1892 Tower Hill became Victoria’s first National Park. In 1961, Tower Hill became a State Game Reserve under the then Fisheries and Wildlife Department and a major re-vegetation program began. (https://www.towerhill.org.au/index.php/about-reserve/history, accessed 23 December 2019)Panaramic view of Tower Hill, Victoria.tower hill, volcano, crater -
Ballarat Heritage Services
Photograph, L.J. Gervasoni, Australian Ex-Prisoner of War Memorial, Ballarat, 2014, 04/11/2014
The Trustees of the Australian Ex-Prisoners of War Memorial have defined a Prisoner of War to be a person who was captured by a common enemy and/or interned in a neutral or non-combatant country. To be defined an Australian Prisoner of War, the person needs to be either an Australian Born person serving in the Uniform of an Australian Service; or in the Uniform of a friendly country, or Born Elsewhere and serving in the Uniform of an Australian Service. A Prisoner is a person who has lost personal privileges, suffers deprivation of liberty or is unable to return home or dies in captivity.Colour photograph of a War Memorial designed by Peter Blizzard. The granite wall of the Australian Ex-Prisoners of War Memorial features a listing the names of Australian Prisoners and was opened on the 6th February 2004 by General Peter Cosgrove AM MC to recognise and remember over 36,000 Australians who became Prisoners of War during the Wars of the 20th Century. In 2008 the Memorial became the First Military Memorial of National Significance outside Canberra. The Memorial which was designed by Peter Blizzard OAM, symbolises that all Australian prisoners embarked on a journey to serve away from their homeland and acknowledges the hardship, deprivation, brutality, starvation and disease endured by Prisoners of War during their capture and the scars that many continued to endure upon their repatriation to Australia. Heritage Victoria describes the memorial in the following way" "A JOURNEY OF HONOUR, REMEMBRANCE AND HEALING - The Australian Ex-Prisoners of War Memorial is a dramatic and highly symbolic tribute to the sacrifice made by more than 35,000 young Australian service men and women in four theatres of war. At the heart of the monument is a stark, 130 metre long, highly polished black granite wall, engraved with the names of all Australian prisoners of war. The names on this 'honour roll' are listed in historical order from the Boer War in 1899, through to the Korean War in 1953. It is a testament to the contribution made by so many. Standing sentinel at the centre of the Memorial are six huge basalt obelisks, etched with the names of all the countries where Australians were held prisoner of war. The obelisks stand in a large reflective pool, set back from the central pathway, symbolising the distance that separated Australia's prisoners of war from their homes and their loved ones. Opposite the pool is a larger obelisk flanked by flagpoles and a ceremonial stone on which to lay wreaths. The central pathway is itself symbolic, with each of the paving stones cut in the shape of a railway sleeper. The pathway defines 'the journey' taken by the prisoners of war and the journey visitors take around the monument. At the end of the granite wall where the pathway ends, visitors face a large stone engraved simply 'Lest We Forget'. Water flows from beneath the stone, along the base of the granite wall and into the reflection pool in which the obelisks stand. This cycle of flowing water, symbolising spirituality, healing, cleansing, birth and rebirth, guides visitors on their journey through the Memorial." ballarat, ballarat botanical gardens, peter blizzard, ballarat north gardens, war memorial, prisoner of war, prisoners of war -
Ballarat Heritage Services
Photograph, Australian Ex-Prisoner of War Memorial, Ballarat, 04/11/2014
DESCRIPTIONColour photograph of a War Memorial designed by Peter Blizzard. The granite wall of the Australian Ex-Prisoners of War Memorial features a listing the names of Australian Prisoners and was opened on the 6th February 2004 by General Peter Cosgrove AM MC to recognise and remember over 36,000 Australians who became Prisoners of War during the Wars of the 20th Century. In 2008 the Memorial became the First Military Memorial of National Significance outside Canberra. The Memorial which was designed by Peter Blizzard OAM, symbolises that all Australian prisoners embarked on a journey to serve away from their homeland and acknowledges the hardship, deprivation, brutality, starvation and disease endured by Prisoners of War during their capture and the scars that many continued to endure upon their repatriation to Australia. Heritage Victoria describes the memorial in the following way" "A JOURNEY OF HONOUR, REMEMBRANCE AND HEALING - The Australian Ex-Prisoners of War Memorial is a dramatic and highly symbolic tribute to the sacrifice made by more than 35,000 young Australian service men and women in four theatres of war. At the heart of the monument is a stark, 130 metre long, highly polished black granite wall, engraved with the names of all Australian prisoners of war. The names on this 'honour roll' are listed in historical order from the Boer War in 1899, through to the Korean War in 1953. It is a testament to the contribution made by so many. Standing sentinel at the centre of the Memorial are six huge basalt obelisks, etched with the names of all the countries where Australians were held prisoner of war. The obelisks stand in a large reflective pool, set back from the central pathway, symbolising the distance that separated Australia's prisoners of war from their homes and their loved ones. Opposite the pool is a larger obelisk flanked by flagpoles and a ceremonial stone on which to lay wreaths. The central pathway is itself symbolic, with each of the paving stones cut in the shape of a railway sleeper. The pathway defines 'the journey' taken by the prisoners of war and the journey visitors take around the monument. At the end of the granite wall where the pathway ends, visitors face a large stone engraved simply 'Lest We Forget'. Water flows from beneath the stone, along the base of the granite wall and into the reflection pool in which the obelisks stand. This cycle of flowing water, symbolising spirituality, healing, cleansing, birth and rebirth, guides visitors on their journey through the Memorial."australian ex-prisoner of war memorial, peter blizzard, prisoner of war, ballarat north gardens -
Ballarat Heritage Services
Photograph, Australian Ex-Prisoner of War Memorial, Ballarat, 2014, 04/11/2014
DESCRIPTIONColour photograph of a War Memorial designed by Peter Blizzard. The granite wall of the Australian Ex-Prisoners of War Memorial features a listing the names of Australian Prisoners and was opened on the 6th February 2004 by General Peter Cosgrove AM MC to recognise and remember over 36,000 Australians who became Prisoners of War during the Wars of the 20th Century. In 2008 the Memorial became the First Military Memorial of National Significance outside Canberra. The Memorial which was designed by Peter Blizzard OAM, symbolises that all Australian prisoners embarked on a journey to serve away from their homeland and acknowledges the hardship, deprivation, brutality, starvation and disease endured by Prisoners of War during their capture and the scars that many continued to endure upon their repatriation to Australia. Heritage Victoria describes the memorial in the following way" "A JOURNEY OF HONOUR, REMEMBRANCE AND HEALING - The Australian Ex-Prisoners of War Memorial is a dramatic and highly symbolic tribute to the sacrifice made by more than 35,000 young Australian service men and women in four theatres of war. At the heart of the monument is a stark, 130 metre long, highly polished black granite wall, engraved with the names of all Australian prisoners of war. The names on this 'honour roll' are listed in historical order from the Boer War in 1899, through to the Korean War in 1953. It is a testament to the contribution made by so many. Standing sentinel at the centre of the Memorial are six huge basalt obelisks, etched with the names of all the countries where Australians were held prisoner of war. The obelisks stand in a large reflective pool, set back from the central pathway, symbolising the distance that separated Australia's prisoners of war from their homes and their loved ones. Opposite the pool is a larger obelisk flanked by flagpoles and a ceremonial stone on which to lay wreaths. The central pathway is itself symbolic, with each of the paving stones cut in the shape of a railway sleeper. The pathway defines 'the journey' taken by the prisoners of war and the journey visitors take around the monument. At the end of the granite wall where the pathway ends, visitors face a large stone engraved simply 'Lest We Forget'. Water flows from beneath the stone, along the base of the granite wall and into the reflection pool in which the obelisks stand. This cycle of flowing water, symbolising spirituality, healing, cleansing, birth and rebirth, guides visitors on their journey through the Memorial."australian ex-prisoner of war memorial, prisoner of war, ballarat north gardens, peter blizzard -
Ballarat Heritage Services
Photograph - Colour, Centre Sanctuary Stone, Torphichen, Scotland, 2016
Colour photograph of the centre Sanctuary Stone at Torphichen, Scotland. torphichen, scotland, sanctuary stone -
Ringwood RSL Sub-Branch
Shield - Honour Board WW1, Circa 1922
Removed from the school when the property was sold and donated to the Ringwood RSL.Wooden Honour listing the names of Past scholars of Ringwood Primary School who took part in the Great War. The centre panel headed Memoriam lists the names of the 12 pupil who died on service. There are 68 other names listed on the board. School 2997.Details of many of the soldiers listed on the board are recorded in the book " The Anzacs of Maroondah" published in November 2018. -
Ringwood RSL Sub-Branch
Shield Honour Board, Circa 1922
Removed by the Ringwood Town Hall when it was demolished in the 1968 - 1970. Donated to the Ringwood RSL.Wooden Honour Board from the Ringwood Town Hall. Ringwood District Roll of Honour 1914 - 1918. The centre panel headed “Died on Service” list 14 names. The side panels comprise of 4 columns of names containing 108 in total. The top section includes carving of Gumnuts with a circular panel including a tree and plough. -
Ringwood RSL Sub-Branch
Book RAAF F111, From Controversy to Cutting Edge, 2010
Large hard cover book outlining a history of the F111 in Australian Service by Mark Lax. -
Whitehorse Historical Society Inc.
Photograph, Eastern Mail Centre, 1994
... Mitcham melbourne When the Eastern Mail Centre opened in 1992 ...When the Eastern Mail Centre opened in 1992, it was the biggest suburban mail centre in the country. Work on the $5.6 million centre began in February 1992 and was completed in late October of the same year.The centre was able to sort more that one million articles daily, and in 1992 operated 24 hours a day, six days a week, employing 400 staff.Black and white photograph of the interior of the Eastern Mail Centre, Rooks Road, Nunawading. Sorters at desks. Also see ND949.postal services, eastern mail centre, rooks road, nunawading -
Whitehorse Historical Society Inc.
Photograph, Eastern Mail Centre, Rooks Road, Nunawading, 1994
... , in Rooks Road, Nunawading postal services eastern mail centre rooks ...The Eastern Mail Centre was opened in 1992, in Rooks Road, NunawadingBlack and white photograph of the interior of the Eastern Mail Centre. In foreground a desk with a computer and phones.postal services, eastern mail centre, rooks road, nunawading -
Whitehorse Historical Society Inc.
Photograph, Georgies Bus, 1994
Georgies Bus was a converted bus that was used as a mobile information, counselling and referral service for 12 to 25-year olds. The bus moved to various locations on a regular basis after school hours.Black and white picture of a decorated bus with four people standing in the centre of the photograph. This photo was taken at the Mitcham Railway Station in 1994.counselling services, georgie's bus -
Whitehorse Historical Society Inc.
Photograph, Georgie's Bus
In 1988 Georgie's Bus, a mobile information a mobile information and drop-in centre, was funded by the Nunawading Council. The bus was prepared and operated by young women who took the service to Nunawading youth, wherever they congregated.Coloured photograph of staff standing beside Georgie's Mobile Youth Loungegeorgie's bus, city of nunawading, community services -
Whitehorse Historical Society Inc.
Photograph, Georgie's Bus
In 1988 Georgie's Bus, a mobile information and drop-in centre, was funded by Nunawading Council. The bus was prepared and operated by young women who took the service to Nunawading youth, wherever they congregated.Coloured photograph of Georgie's Bus - mobile information and drop-in centre.georgie's bus, city of nunawading, community services -
Whitehorse Historical Society Inc.
Photograph, Mitcham North Shopping Centre, 2006
Coloured Photo of Mitcham North Shopping Centre (opposite Park Road) looking south. Communications towers situated on roof of a security service building. Land surveyor and chemist on right (west side ).mitcham north shopping centre, shops, shopping centre -
Whitehorse Historical Society Inc.
Photograph, Mitcham - 1952, c1952
Sent to a parishioner at Christ Church Mitcham, by Phyllis Grant who lived at the Migrant Hostel in Mitcham in 1952-54, where her husband did development work under the P.M.G.Black and white photograph of Mitcham shopping centre looking east from Edward Street - although it was only a two lane road at Mitcham, Whitehorse Road had its service roads well developed. Note the early Holden in the foregroundwhitehorse road, mitcham, holden, grant, phyllis -
Ballarat Heritage Services
Photograph - Colour, Clare Gervasoni, Grindstone and Ochre, 25/12/2015
Photograph of a Grindstone and Ochre on display at the Tower Hill Interpretation Centre.tower hill, grindstone, ochre, aboriginal, aborigines