Showing 356 items
matching kerosene
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Flagstaff Hill Maritime Museum and Village
Lamp
Glass kerosene table lamp, conical shape at base with scalloped pattern at edge of base. Base comes in to a stem then becomes rounded at top, has a rounded pattern. flagstaff hill, warrnambool, shipwrecked-coast, flagstaff-hill, flagstaff-hill-maritime-museum, maritime-museum, shipwreck-coast, flagstaff-hill-maritime-village -
Orbost & District Historical Society
lantern, circa 1890
This item is an example of a lighting device used before electricity and battery power were widespread.A small brass Elfin Reflector Night kerosene lantern with a reflector plate at the back. A handle runs around the middle. It has a small canvas wick. The glass is missing.On top of fuel tank-ELFIN REFLECTOR NIGHT LAMP On back-MADE IN U.S.A. BY EDWARD MILLER & CO USA On wicker winder (left) -E. MILLER -CO.U.S.A.lamp lantern kerosene oil lighting miller-edward -
Whitehorse Historical Society Inc.
Domestic object - Kerosene Cooking Stove, c1934
The donors advised that it was purchased in England in 1934 by one of the parents (not advised) and then brought out to Australia when the immigrated. It was used by them in the eastern suburbs when the did not have electricity or gas. They later moved to the Dandenongs and again had to use it for cooking.Unit consists of a base with three large adjustable kerosene burners under a grid on which pots and pans were placed. At the right hand end is a round metal enclosure in which is enclosed a large glass bottle with a special top. Bottle is filled with kerosene (Royal Daylight Oil) and inverted. Kerosene then flows from container to burners. Flow is controlled by the adjustable needle jet for each burner.|OVEN is separate and has open frame of holes at bottom. It is placed over one of the burners. Heat of the oven is therefore controlled by adjusting the heat of the burner underneath.|There is a spare burner, trays etc and some spare parts in the oven. There are four parts to the stove.Oven - Valor No 112|Base - Valor No 603|Patent No 333107|Reg Design No 777773 - 1932|Patent No 405758 - 1934domestic items, cooking -
Tatura Irrigation & Wartime Camps Museum
Suitcase, 1940's
Made & used at one of the wartime camps. It was made using kerosene tins.Metal handmade suitcase, with handmade metal handletatura, internee camps, suitcase, ww2 camps, personal, effects, travel, goods -
Bright & District Historical Society operating the Bright Museum
Lamp kerosene
Pewter base with urn shaped base decorated with Roman style heads, flowers etc.lighting, lamp, kerosene -
Clunes Museum
Functional object - LAMP ( KEROSENE)
SMALL BULLSEYE LAMP. (NIGHT LIGHT) WITH GLASS GLOBE - ORANGE COLOURlocal history, lighting, kerosene -
The Beechworth Burke Museum
Photograph, The Ovens and Murray Advertiser, Unknown
The photograph depicts a rocking chair, a kerosene lamp, a bottle holder, and two epergnes.The photograph contains historical and research significance of domestic life in Beechworth. Through the depiction of the historical rocking chair, the kerosene lamp, the bottle holder and the epergnes, the picture displays some of the everyday objects that would have been found within a Beechworth house. Although kerosene lamps and bottle holders are no longer in widespread use, this photograph not only acts as historical document and depiction of both, but it also displays the evolution of everyday tools. The interpretive capacity of the photograph extends its significance as it contains the potential to reveal information regarding the domestic life of Beechworth residents. Moreover, it also has protentional to demonstrate the shifting designs of rocking chairs, kerosene lamps, bottle holders and epergnes.Black and white rectangular photograph printed on paper.Reverse: BMM A03328/ 1997.3132/ 28 1/2 ems/ E32k491/ THE OVENS AND MURRAY ADVERTISERrocking chair, chair, lamp, kerosene lamp, bottle holder, burke museum, beechworth -
Trafalgar Holden Museum
Functional object - Kerosene Coach Lamp, Circa 1900
Manufactured by Holden and Frost for illumination on buggies during ca 1900Manufactured and used by Holden and FrostKerosene coach lamp. Red painted. Drop down rear door with red glass circular lens. two square glass panels with red etched floral pattern in betweenbuggie, lamp, civilian 1900 -
Puffing Billy Railway
Victorian Railways Track Ganger's gas Lamp
vaporizing kerosene gas lamps of this type were used by track gangers to facilitate night works. Historic - Victorian Railways - Permanent Way and Works - track equipment - Ganger's Lamp made of metal, brass and glass V.R ( and Arrow symbol ) AL 14puffing billy, victorian railways, ganger's lamp -
Flagstaff Hill Maritime Museum and Village
Functional object - Lamp Shade, After 1975
A lamp shade in the design used in the late 19th and early 20th centuries for a decorative kerosene lamp.The glass lamp shade was made as an example of the design used for late 19th and early 20th-century decorative glass used on kerosene lamps in a domestic situation. Blue glass lamp shade with bulbous bodyflagstaff hill, warrnambool, flagstaff-hill-maritime-museum, maritime-museum, shipwreck-coast, flagstaff-hill-maritime-village, kerosene lamp, replacement glass, glass lamp shade, blue glass, lighting -
Orbost & District Historical Society
lantern
This item is an important example of the early technology of artificial light. It has historical significance in demonstrating lighting devices used before the widespread use of electricity.Kerosene/oil hand-held lantern with carry handle. Red glass window (for a show of red light) and a clear glass window that opens for lighting of wick. (Dietz Dainty Tail Lamp)lantern candle dietz-dainty-tail-lamp -
Orbost & District Historical Society
slush lamp
In the days before battery powered torches many used a slush lamp to provide the light they needed to carry out their duties. It held a flammable liquid like paraffin. When the wick was lit the slush lamp provided sufficient light.Slush lamps were designed to be carried around but they could be dangerous because they have flame as a source of light. This is an example of a portable lighting device in common usage before the use of batteries.A black metal slush lamp with two glass panels and a stock. At the back is a hinged door. There is a hole on top caused by rust or being burned through. Kerosene or oil was probably the fuel used.On top of light - Serial No 339220slush-lamp lighting kerosene oil -
Flagstaff Hill Maritime Museum and Village
Lamp
Kerosene lamp, masthead mooring light. Glass lense with section missing, galvanised iron construction with brass fitting marked "Anchor". Base corroded out, burner missing and top corroded. flagstaff hill, warrnambool, shipwrecked-coast, flagstaff-hill, flagstaff-hill-maritime-museum, maritime-museum, shipwreck-coast, flagstaff-hill-maritime-village, kerosene lamp -
Numurkah & District Historical Society
Kerosene Lamp
Yellow painted metal kerosene lamp has cylindrical container for fuel at the base and an upright piece at the back with a tin circular reflector. On top of the fuel container is a wick-burner (no glass cover)V inside a "three-leaf clover" Made in Englandkerosene, lamp -
Flagstaff Hill Maritime Museum and Village
Lamp
Masthead lamp, single wick oil or kerosene type. Hinged top lid, removable burner and shade. Galvanised iron construction with brass fittings and glass lens. Brass plaques on lid and burner.flagstaff hill, warrnambool, shipwrecked-coast, flagstaff-hill, flagstaff-hill-maritime-museum, maritime-museum, shipwreck-coast, flagstaff-hill-maritime-village, masthead lamp -
Yarrawonga and Mulwala Pioneer Museum
Kerosene Lantern X 2
Two metal lanterns with metal handles. A 7cm oval glass inserts in each of the 3 sides. A hinged door is on the fourth side. Open arched top on each. A kerosene lamp base inside.One is labelled CRB. One is labelled OCA. -
Parks Victoria - Point Hicks Lightstation
Stand, pump & tank
Was the stand for a Chance Brothers air & oil containers fitted with pump handle & pressure gauges.This type of installation was once common and relied on the lightkeeper having to pressurise the cylinders manually at regular intervals throughout the hours of darkness. The oil was fed under pressure to the burner mantle. It is all that remains of an air and kerosene oil tank installation, with each rounded side formerly supporting a heavy iron tank. The containers would have been fitted with a pump handle and pressure gauges. An intact assemblage is displayed in the AMSA offices, Canberra with a text that explains ‘This type of installation was once common and relied on the lightkeeper having to pressurise the cylinders manually at regular intervals throughout the hours of darkness’.The system involved vaporising kerosene under pressure and mixing it with air and then burning the vapour to heat an incandescent mantle. The use of kerosene as a fuel to light the lantern became the most common system of illumination from the 1860s after the oil industry in the United States began to develop. The kerosene vapour burner was created in 1901 by British inventor Arthur Kitson (1859-1937) and perfected by Chance Bros for burning a more intense light in their renowned lenses. The lamp had to be watched throughout the night in case a mantle broke, and the tanks needed to be maintained by hand-pumping each hour or so. The Point Hicks lantern was initially lit by a six-wick Trinity house kerosene burner. This was replaced by the more efficient and brighter 55mm vaporised kerosene mantle burner in 1905, and the tank stand is probably original to this apparatus. Electricity eventually replaced kerosene at Point Hicks in 1964 making the tank installation obsolete, and the last kerosene system in an Australian lighthouse was replaced in 1985. Gabo Island Lightstation has a pair of tanks that are not attached to the optical system and are no longer in the lighthouse. They are also missing the pressure gauges that were formerly attached to the top of each cylinder. An intact tank assemblage is displayed at the Cape Schanck Lighthouse Museum it is detached and not original to the lighthouse. Although corroded, the remnant Point Hicks tank stand has first level contributory importance to the lightstation. It is significant for its provenance and historical value as part of the Chance Bros vaporised kerosene burner introduced in 1905 to intensify the light and improve the efficiency of the system. The rusted iron stand rests on four short legs and is shaped like a pair of spectacles. -
Flagstaff Hill Maritime Museum and Village
Functional object - Lamp Shade, After 1975
A decorative kerosene lamp representing the type of light fitting in use during the late 19th and early 20th centuries.This glass lamp shade replicates the design of late 19th and early 20th-century decorative glass used on kerosene lamps in a domestic situation.Lamp shade; blue glass lamp shade with bulbous middleflagstaff hill, warrnambool, flagstaff-hill-maritime-museum, maritime-museum, shipwreck-coast, flagstaff-hill-maritime-village, kerosene lamp, replacement glass, glass lamp shade, lamp fitting, light fitting, lamp shade, glass lamp fitting, blue glass -
Warrnambool and District Historical Society Inc.
Functional object - Kerosene Lantern, Nier Feuerhand Company, Germany, c. 1930
This lantern was made about 1930 by the Nier Feuerhand Company of Germany. Hermann Nier began making miners' lamps and household lanterns in the 1870s in East Germany and in 1893 he and his brother Ernst founded the Nier Feuerhand Company. By 1930 this company was the world's largest producer of household lanterns and after an interruption in World War Two it was re-established in West Germany and continued until the 1990s with the trade name still in use today. Feuerhand lanterns were used extensively in countries such as Australia because of his strong lighting qualities and its ability to stay alight in external conditions.This lantern has no known local provenance but is retained because it is a fine example of the type of household lighting used in Australian homes, farms and businesses in the 19th and early 20th centuries.This is a kerosene lantern with a metal base and frame holding a plain glass mantle open at the top. A metal handle is attached to loops at the top of the frame. There is a wooden handle at the top to assist in the removal of the glass mantle. The base has an opening with a screw top for the filling with kerosene or other heating liquid and also a rotating wheel on the side for controlling the size of the flame. The glass has printing and a logo etched on to it and the base has printing and a logo. The item is very rusted but appears to have been painted brown.Feuerhand Made in Germany No. 327vintage lighting, feuerhand lanterns -
Numurkah & District Historical Society
Kerosene Lamp
Lamp made from metal/tin. Cylinder base to store the kerosene, with pump attachment to pump kerosene up to the lamp area. The lamp is attached to the base via a metal tube. the lamp is cylindrical with clear plastic lenses. On top of the lamp is a perforated metal cylinder for venting the fumes. on top of that is a metal circle for hanging the lamp. This is also a long screw which can be undone to access the lamp area. The whole lantern has a thick metal wire loop handle.lamp, lantern, kerosene, light -
Bendigo Historical Society Inc.
Slide - MAGIC LANTERN COLLECTION: CHILDREN'S SMALL MAGIC LANTERN PROJECTOR
Object. Magic Lantern Collection -Children's small Magic lantern Projector powered by Kerosene lamp and mounted on a wooden base. Brass fittings. Stored in small wooden box without lid /Brass fittings.Wiener Flachbrennerphotography, projectors - still, magic lantern, wiener flachbrenner -
Warracknabeal and District Historical Society
Tractor - International Harvester Titan 10-20hp, c.1915
2 cylinder, petrol kerosene, 4 stroke farm tractor. Body is grey, wheels and pulley faces are red. Magneto ignition, enclosed transmission, chain drive, steel spoked wheels. Serial no: 56099 -
Bendigo Historical Society Inc.
Newspaper - JENNY FOLEY COLLECTION: COOL MAN
Robert Herbert Meurer (1916-2009) was born in Bendigo, the son of Herbert and Mary MeurerBendigo Advertiser ''The way we were'' from 2002. Cool, man: a plaque from the back of a kerosene fridge, noting the telephone number 19 would suggest a fairly early fridge. The clip is in a folder.newspaper, bendigo advertiser, the way we were -
Clunes Museum
Financial record - CHEQUE BOOK / BANK, 1935 AND 1944
BANKING DETAILS OF ACCOUNTS FOR GROCERIES, KEROSENE, CLOTHING, WOOD, STAMPS AND SERVICES TO CLUNES LADIES BENEVOLENT SOCIETY FROM 1935 - 44.1 SECTION OF CHEQUE BOOK CLUNES BENEVOLENT SOCIETY AT UNION BANK OF AUSTRALIA, CLUNES 1935 - 1939 .2 CHEQUE BOOK CLUNES LADIES BENEVOLENT SOCIETY AT UNION BANK OF AUSTRALIA, CLUNES 1944 .3 CHEQUE BOOK 1944 - 1951 AS ABOVE .4 CHEQUE BOOK 1939 - 1942local history, commerce, documents, banks, societies -
Orbost & District Historical Society
lantern, Kwang Hwa, first half 20th century
This item is an example of a lighting device commonly used before electricity was widely available for domestic use.A hurricane lamp with a rounded tank and small carry handle (a larger handle is possibly missing). It has a lever to open the glass tank. It has a metal base which is filled with kerosene. On top is a metal hood with vents.Around base : Chinese characters. On top : "Made in China KWANG HWA"lighting lantern kerosene-lamp hurricane -lamp -
Lakes Entrance Regional Historical Society (operating as Lakes Entrance History Centre & Museum)
Photograph, 1945
Black and white photograph of Mr R A Andy Beveridge of KiaOra Guesthouse wearing thigh high waders, holding a box under one arm, a kerosene tin bucket in other hand. Lakes Entrance Victoriagenealogy, guesthouses -
Bendigo Historical Society Inc.
Document - MCCOLL, RANKIN AND STANISTREET COLLECTION: LIST OF PAYMENTS MONUMENT HILL CONSOLIDATED CO
A4 sheet dated 31/8/39, handwritten list of payments - kerosene, mercury, firewood, fuses for motors, wire rope, fittings for sand pump etc. On top of paper ' Monument Hill Consolidated Co.'business, mining, monument hill consolidated company -
Kiewa Valley Historical Society
Photos - Horse team working on farm x3
Horses were coupled together to form a team to pull farm machinery to work on farms. Later, petrol and kerosene equipment was used and then diesel. The Kiewa Valley consisted of farming families before the Kiewa Hydro Electric Scheme was constructed in the late 1940's at the upper end of the valley. Three large black & white photos of a horse team pulling farm equipment. 1. Mouldboard plough 2. header 3. thresher or chaff cutter. 1.& 2. are working on the farm 3. is pulling the machinery to a nearby farm. No labelsfarm equipment. horse teams. farming. crops. -
Greensborough Historical Society
Booklet, Laurel recipe book and household guide, 1950s
A small recipe book produced by the Vacuum Oil Company in Melbourne. Laurel Kerosene was used for household cooking and heating in the mid 20th century.Bookletnon-fictionrecipes, recipe books, household hints -
Halls Gap & Grampians Historical Society
Photograph - B/W, C 1933
The photo shows the Wannon River in flood. Augustus (Gus) Knight built the footbridge. The boat was constructed using kerosene tins or honey tins.Photo shows five adults, four standing and one squatting, on a foot bridge. There are four children in front of them in a boat.structures, bridges