Showing 1834 items
matching yarra park
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Wonga Park Community Cottage History Group
Document - Title History, Title History of Section 8 Parish of Warrandyte Wonga park Cattle Station
... Old Yarra Road Wonga Park melbourne Title History of Section 8 ... -
Wonga Park Community Cottage History Group
Document - Title History, Title History of Crown Allotment G Parish of Warrandyte Wonga park
... Old Yarra Road Wonga Park melbourne Title History of Crown ... -
Wonga Park Community Cottage History Group
Document - Title History, Title History of Crown Allotment 9H Parish of Warrandyte Wonga park
... Old Yarra Road Wonga Park melbourne Title History of Crown ... -
Wonga Park Community Cottage History Group
Document - Title History, Title History of Crown Allotment 9Q Parish of Warrandyte Wonga park
... Old Yarra Road Wonga Park melbourne Title History of Crown ... -
Wonga Park Community Cottage History Group
Document - Title History, Title History of Crown Allotment 9R and 9R1 Parish of Warrandyte Wonga park
... Old Yarra Road Wonga Park melbourne Title History of Crown ... -
Wonga Park Community Cottage History Group
Document - Title History, Title History of Crown Allotment 9N Parish of Warrandyte Wonga park
... Old Yarra Road Wonga Park melbourne Title History of Crown ... -
Wonga Park Community Cottage History Group
Document - Title History, Title History of Lot 50 Plan of Subdivision No 4315 Wonga Park
... Old Yarra Road Wonga Park melbourne Title History of Lot 50 ... -
Wonga Park Community Cottage History Group
Document - Title History, Title History of Lot 51 Plan of Subdivision No 4315 Wonga Park
... Old Yarra Road Wonga Park melbourne Title History of Lot 51 ... -
Wonga Park Community Cottage History Group
Document - Title History, Title History of Lot 52 Plan of Subdivision No 4315 Wonga Park
... Old Yarra Road Wonga Park melbourne Title History of Lot 52 ... -
Wonga Park Community Cottage History Group
Document - Title History, Title History of Lot 53 Plan of Subdivision No 4315 Wonga Park
... Old Yarra Road Wonga Park melbourne Title History of Lot 53 ... -
Wonga Park Community Cottage History Group
Document - Title History, Title History of Lot 54 Plan of Subdivision No 4315 Wonga Park
... Old Yarra Road Wonga Park melbourne Title History of Lot 54 ... -
Wonga Park Community Cottage History Group
Document - Title History, Title History of Lot 55 Plan of Subdivision No 4315 Wonga Park
... Old Yarra Road Wonga Park melbourne Title History of Lot 55 ... -
Wonga Park Community Cottage History Group
Document - Title History, Title History of Lot 56 Plan of Subdivision No 4315 Wonga Park
... Old Yarra Road Wonga Park melbourne Title History of Lot 56 ... -
Carlton Football Club
Hand Held Bell, Hand Held Bell with a small inscription on the inside
The bell was used for Trade Week to signify "time's up" at Optus Oval. Prior to this it was used to let Alan Espie's children on their Wandin property to come home.Why Al chimes in for Carlton Tony De Bolfo, Carlton Media Feb 20, 2014 11:05AM Alan Espie with the famous bell. (Photo: Carlton Football Club) Alan Espie with the famous bell. (Photo: Carlton Football Club) Related Etched into the rim of the bell Alan Espie has rung at every trade week gathering since 1994 is a touching quote attributed to his grandson. Dear Pa, May you always ring true blue, Love Harry Just thinking about that inscription often brings big Al to tears. The story of the Espie bell has its origins at the old family property at Wandin in the picturesque Yarra Valley, in the days when the Espies’ kids were at the neighboring creek fossicking for local platypus. “If they got too far away we’d ring an old cowbell,” Espie recalled, “and years later, my daughter Jo brought me this replacement bell from some second-hand naval place”. “Not long after Shane (O’Sullivan) asked me to officiate at trade week and that’s when the bell came into vogue.” A permanent fixture at trade week, Espie would ring the bell to signal the opening of trading when club recruiters gathered – initially within the confines of the Carlton Heroes Stand at Visy Park, more recently at Etihad Stadium. In those early days at Carlton he caused a stir as bell ringer, drawing curious responses from officiating journalists, recruiters and coaches alike. “I even remember (Kevin) Sheedy asking me if I was selling muffins,” he recalled. Then, when trade day was relocated to Etihad, Espie’s daughter thought it appropriate to get the bell inscribed. “Because the bell was leaving Carlton, Jo got it inscribed on my grandson’s behalf, because he was only four or five then. When I saw what was inscribed I was tearful,” Espie said. “The bell is very important to me, particularly at this time, because Jo is battling health problems at the moment, my grandson is autistic and she’s fought like hell to get him through.” Espie joined Carlton’s Under 19 committee on the eve of the senior Premiership season of 1979 and managed the club’s junior squads, the Bert Deacon Squad included. “I worked very closely with Geoff Southby, ‘Swan’ McKay and Trevor Keogh when they were coaching the Under 19s and I was recruiting as well,” he said. “In 1981 and ’82 I forward scouted for ‘Parko’ (David Parkin) and later on I did the same for ‘Wallsy’ (Robert Walls). After that I coordinated recruiting in central Victoria and it was nothing for me to do 25,000ks a year in my own car – and I loved every minute of it.” Espie’s passion for Carlton and empathy for its wartime players Bert Deacon, Ollie Grieve and Jack “Chooka” Howell can be sourced to his childhood years. His grandparents lived not far from the old ground on Wilson Street “and that’s how I got in for the ’45 Grand Final”. “My uncle, who had just got back from the war, grabbed a ladder from Wilson Street and set it up against the barbed wire fence at the ground. I climbed the ladder and caught my arm on the barbed wire, but I got over the top and saw the game while I straddled the fence,” Espie said. “What I saw was what you would today call ‘spotfires’ and I reckon it took football 20 years to get rid of it.” Today, Espie continues to ring in the yearly trade talk days at AFL headquarters (with the notable exception of 2012 when he was hospitalized), but he’s in no doubt as to where the bell belongs. “This bell has had nothing to do with Wandin but everything to do with Carlton - and with the 150th year of the club I think the bell stays here (at Visy Park). I still hope to ring the bell for the AFL this year, but at least I’ll know where it is,” Espie said. “I’ve told Jo about this and she tells me Harry’s rapt, because he’s a big Carlton supporter and he’s so happy his name is on the bell.”Wooden handle attached to a brass bell."Dear Pa, may you always ring true blue, Love Harry" -
Carlton Football Club
Pewter Mug, TOM ALVIN PERPETUAL TROPHY Presented Latrobe Valley Hyundai, 1997
Yarra Valley Hyundai presentation to Carlton B&F winner 1997A perpetual Trophy presented by a major sponsor Hyundai in the guise of "TOM ALVIN PERPETUAL TROPHY". In 1997 it was presented to Craig Bradley Carlton Best & Fairest winner 1997. Career : 1986 - 2002 Debut : Round 1, 1986 vs Hawthorn, aged 22 years, 159 days Carlton Player No. 931 Games : 375 Goals : 247 Last Game : Round 19, 2002 vs Port Adelaide, aged 38 years, 291 days Guernsey No. 21 Height : 182 cm (5 ft. 11 in.) Weight : 81 kg (12 stone, 11 lbs.) DOB : 23 October, 1963 Premiership Player 1987, 1995 Carlton Legend Carlton Hall of Fame (1995) Best and Fairest 1986, 1988, 1993 All Australian 1986, 1993, 1994, 1995, 1997 Captain 1998-2002 Team of the Century: Wing International Rules Series vs Ireland : 2000, 2001 (captain), 2002 Off the field, Craig Bradley was a somewhat quiet, unassuming character who never hungered for the spotlight. But when the umpire’s whistle blew for a game of Australian football, he became a consummate professional whose outstanding ball-winning ability, accurate disposal, punishing non-stop running and longevity in the game made him one of the all-time greats. “Braddles” captained the Blues for three years, won two AFL Premierships, and picked up almost every possible honour in a stellar career that spanned 17 seasons and a record 375 games for the Carlton Football Club. He began his football journey at Pooraka in outer-suburban Adelaide, where his father was coach of the Under-19 team. Craig was a stand-out junior footballer, and in 1981 he was recruited by SANFL club Port Adelaide. At the same time, Essendon also made a big pitch for his signature. The Bombers were very intent on getting him to Windy Hill, but Bradley wasn’t then ready to make the big move interstate. Essendon redoubled their efforts after Bradley’s sensational debut year for Port Adelaide, which culminated in the Magpies’ 51-point demolition of Glenelg in the Grand Final. Playing on a wing, but roaming the length of the ground, 17 year-old Bradley was one of his team’s best. He followed up by winning Port’s Best and Fairest in 1982, before departing for England later that year, as a member of the Australian Under-19 cricket team. Cricket was Braddles’ other great sporting passion, and he would eventually play two Sheffield Shield games each for South Australia and Victoria, before giving the game away to further his football ambitions. Because of his cricketing commitments, Bradley missed most of the 1983 pre-season with Port, but it made little difference, because he had another dominant season for the Magpies and was named All Australian for the first time. Two more Port Adelaide Best and Fairests followed in 1984 and '85 – with the latter complemented by All Australian honours again. In that year of 1985, four South Australians were named as All Australians; Bradley, Stephen Kernahan, Peter Motley and John Platten – and to the chagrin and envy of every other VFL club (especially Essendon) the first three all signed to play with Carlton. In the following year that trio of stars took to VFL football like they were born to it, and a time of bubbling confidence began for the Old Dark Navy Blues. Braddles wasted little time in announcing his arrival into the upper echelons of our national game by playing in the 1986 Grand Final in his debut season at Princes Park; the same year he won his first Carlton Best and Fairest award in a tie with Wayne Johnston. The Blues lost heavily to Hawthorn on Grand Final day, but twelve months later bounced back to snatch the 1987 flag from the Hawks in Bradley’s 47th senior match. By then, he was already a budding champion whose amazing stamina was too much for almost every opponent. He simply ran his taggers into the ground, and he was as effective in the last minutes of a game as he was at the start. He won two more Carlton Best and Fairest awards in 1988 and 1993, and by the end of his superb career had been an All Australian six times. Aged 32, he picked up his second Premiership winner’s medallion in 1995 when the unstoppable Kernahan-led Blues demolished Geelong in a one-sided Grand Final, but those who thought he might retire after that triumph were right off the mark. He still had his zip, his footy smarts and his brilliant foot skills, and he had transformed himself from a purely attacking weapon into an equally-effective sweeper across half-back. And to cap off a memorable season, he became one of only a handful of players to be inducted into the Carlton Hall of Fame while still playing out their career. In 1997, at the age of 34, Bradley won the Sunday Age Footballer of the Year award. ”It’s not the end of the world when you reach 30,” he said in a blunt response to those who kept asking how long he intended going on – to his considerable annoyance. After being named All Australian yet again that year, he answered all those sorts of questions when he was appointed captain of his beloved Blues in 1998 – after the retirement of his great mate ‘Sticks’ Kernahan. Braddles led the Blues into another Grand Final in 1999, but the Wayne Carey-inspired Kangaroos proved just too good. Further indication of Craig Bradley’s enduring ability was his record in the often controversial and passionately-contested International Rules Series against Ireland. He first played for his country in 1984, and was recalled again in 2000. He was appointed captain of Australia in 2001, and played a fourth round of matches in 2002 at the age of 38 – a truly amazing achievement. In the millennium year of 2000, the honours kept rolling in for Braddles when he was included in both Carlton and Port Adelaide’s Team of the Century. In turn this raised the usual debate over why he had never won the game’s most prestigious individual award, the Brownlow Medal. The answer was apparently found when former field umpire Peter Cameron was interviewed, and he revealed that during most games, Bradley regularly back-chatted the men with the whistle. “He’s in the umpire’s ear all the time,’ said Cameron. By circumstance, Braddles wore his iconic number 21 guernsey for the last time against Port Adelaide at Princes Park in round 19, 2002. Carlton lost the match by 9 points, and Bradley suffered broken ribs and a punctured lung in a heavy collision. Even so, he was an almost unanimous choice as Best on Ground and was given three Brownlow Medal votes by the umpires. A few weeks later, Bradley’s farewell was typical of his nature. There was no big press conference, no stage-managed extravaganza. Instead, he issued a written statement through the AFL that caught everyone – including the Carlton Football Club by complete surprise. It read (in part); I have many people to thank and will do so in the coming weeks. I would however like to thank the Carlton Football Club and the Port Adelaide Football Club for many wonderful times and for their influence in helping to shape my life. To leave the game with a bit left in the tank and in good personal form makes me feel good. Since the foundation of the VFL in 1897, only three men (Michael Tuck, Kevin Bartlett and Simon Madden) have played more senior games than Craig Edwin Bradley of Carlton. A true Blue champion, he is one of only ten official Carlton Legends, and in 2006 was Carlton’s 17th inductee into the AFL Hall of Fame. In October 2006, it was announced that Bradley would return to the club for season 2007 as an assistant to senior coach Brett Ratten – a role he filled with the same intensity as he showed on the field. Bradley holds the club record for most career disposals, kicks, handballs, & Brownlow votes with totals of 8776, 5876, 2900 & 144 respectively.Pewter MugTOM ALVIN PERPETUAL TROPHY Presented Latrobe Valley Hyundai Best & Donated 1997 Craig Bradley -
Tarnagulla History Archive
Telegram, March 1862
... (?) Wilson to George Patterson, Little Park St, South Yarra. Text... M (?) Wilson to George Patterson, Little Park St, South ...Donald Clark Collection. A large lot of papers, including this and many other telegrams, were apparently found in the ceiling cavity of the Sandy Creek/Tarnagulla Post and Telegraph Office in the later 20th Century, during building works.Telegram sent from Tarnagulla Telegraph Office from M (?) Wilson to George Patterson, Little Park St, South Yarra. Text reads "Have been from home. Your letter just received. Will write on Monday'. -
Mont De Lancey
Scarf
Small square green silk souvenir scarf with 1956 logos, venues, olympic rings and map of AustraliaMelbourne Australia 1956 Olympic Games. Olympic Park, Olympic Village, Olympic Swimming Pool, and Main Olympic Stadium.scarves -
Sherbrooke Foothills Historical Society
Belgrave Town Park Opening 30 July 2005
Colour Photographs of the opening of the Belgrave Town Park 30 July 2005. The guests included James Merlino, Member for Monbulk; Shire of Yarra Ranges Mayor Cr David Hodgett; Yarra Ranges Councillor Cr Robyn Hale; foundation member of the Sherbrooke Foothills Historical Society Ian Warburton.On verso each numbered and with the text " Belgrave Images" Undated -
Wonga Park Community Cottage History Group
Wooden Butter Churn, Wooden Butter Churn, butter pats and glass covered dish
... Old Yarra Road Wonga Park melbourne Local orchardists ...Local orchardists generally had their own cow and were milked daily. They would seperate the cream from the milk in a seperator and then churn the cream that had not been used into butter using the butter churn The butter pats were then used to roll the butter into small balls or cylindrical shapes called bats. Wooden butter churn and internal photo Wooden butter pats -
Wonga Park Community Cottage History Group
Fruit Grading Rings, Six rings to size fruit for packing, unknown
... Old Yarra Road Wonga Park melbourne Used by R & J.M. Hooper ...Used by R & J.M. Hooper of Homestead Road, Wonga Park on their Orchard Used in early orcharding to size fruit before packing. There are several different types of rings, but they all do the same thing, the numbers are inches of diameter, if the fruit sits on that ring and doesn’t drop through that is it’s size. Fruit of all the same diameter would be packed into a box in a pattern that didn’t move around. With apples and pears that was about 70 pieces of 3 inch fruit per bushel down to about 170 fruit of 2 inch fruit per box. The Trayrude 2 -
Wonga Park Community Cottage History Group
Fruit Case Labels, Labels from R &J.M.Hooper Wonga Park, 1980
... Old Yarra Road Wonga Park melbourne Boxes of fruit were ...Boxes of fruit were labelled so that buyers knew who grew the fruit, the size of the fruit and the area where it was grown.Cardboard Labelled with Orchardists name and type of fruit. Label printed with " Grown and Packed by R. & J.M.Hooper, Wonga Park". Fruit being Peaches. Grade being Fancy also had Count for the number of Peaches and a Date. -
Wonga Park Community Cottage History Group
Coins, 6 Australian pre decimal, ie pre 1966
... Old Yarra Road Wonga Park melbourne 1946 Two shillings, 1952 ...1946 Two shillings, 1952 One shilling, 1946 sixpence, 1951 threepence, 1961 penny and 1961 halfpenny, mounted on a card and labelled -
Wonga Park Community Cottage History Group
Commemorative Tea towel, Wonga Park Primary School Centenary 1895 - 1995, 1995
... Old Yarra Road Wonga Park melbourne Memento to celebrate ...Memento to celebrate the Wonga Park Primary School centenary.Rectangular cream coloured linen tea towel with green printed title and stylized drawing of the original school building.Wonga Park P.S Centenary 1895 - 1995 -
Wonga Park Community Cottage History Group
Mug, Wonga Park Primary School Centenary, 1995
... Old Yarra Road Wonga Park melbourne Commemorative item ...Commemorative item produced as memorabilia for the centenary of Wonga Park Primary School.White china mug with gold rim and a green printed inscription on one side.Wonga Park P.S. Centenary 1895 - 1995 printed around a stylized drawing of the original school. -
Wonga Park Community Cottage History Group
Tie Pin, Wonga Park Primary School Centenary 1895 - 1995, 1995
... Old Yarra Road Wonga Park melbourne Item one of several made ...Item one of several made to commemorate Centenary of Wonga Park Primary School in 1995.Small gold coloured, stick format tie pin with circular emblem words around the outside and drawing in the centre denoting the occasion.Wonga Park P.S. Centenary 1895 - 199. stylized drawing of original school. -
Wonga Park Community Cottage History Group
Document, Wonga Park Telephone Listing possibly 1956, Believed to be 1956
... Old Yarra Road Wonga Park melbourne Paper document with phone ...Paper document with phone numbers for Whittlesea, Wonga Park and Yan Yean -
Wonga Park Community Cottage History Group
Scarf, Green and White Scarf commemorating Pan-Pacific Jamboree Yarra Brae Victoria
... Old Yarra Road Wonga Park melbourne Triangular green and white ...Triangular green and white cotton scouting scarf with Pan-Pacific Jamboree Yarra Brae Victoria emblem -
Wonga Park Community Cottage History Group
History Book, Discover Wonga Park Past and Present, 1984
... Old Yarra Road Wonga Park melbourne National Library ...34 page soft cover bookletNational Library of Australia card and ISBN Number ISBN O 9590801 0 4 -
Wonga Park Community Cottage History Group
Shire of Lillydale History Book, Border Country Episodes and Recollections of Mooroolbark & Wonga Park by G.F.James, 1984
... Old Yarra Road Wonga Park melbourne Written and Printed ...Hard cover book of 96 pages with a loose leaf coverWritten and Printed for Shire of Lillydale -
Wonga Park Community Cottage History Group
Card, Pan-Pacific Jamboree Headquarters Meal ticket Wonga Park probably 1948-9
... Old Yarra Road Wonga Park melbourne Pan-Pacific Jamboree ...