Showing 4712 items
matching private
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Eltham District Historical Society Inc
Slide - Photograph, Private crossing over the Diamond Creek, Ninks Road, St Andrews North, c.Nov. 2001
Part of a slide show presentation "A Trip Down the Diamond Creek" by Russell Yeoman to the Eltham District Historical Society meeting of 14 Nov. 200135mm colour positive transparency Mount - Black and Whitediamond creek, ninks road, st andrews north -
Eltham District Historical Society Inc
Document - Brochure, The Barn at Kinloch Gardens; Eltham's Prestigious Private Country Estate, 1998
Colour photograph of "The Barn" and surrounding gardens, part of the Kinloch Gardens Estate, sales materials produced by Elders Real EstateDigital file only; created from scan undertaken by EDHS of item on loanarthur street, elders real estate, eltham, houses, jelbart property, kinloch gardens, real estate agent, the barn, woodridge estate -
Bendigo Military Museum
Book, Oxford University Press, Private Wars, 2000
Book documents the personal stories of ANZACs in the Great War.Hard black cover with title in white on spine. Dust jacket illustrated front and back. Title on spine. 360p. Page edges cut, black & white illustrations. Bendigo and District RSL stamp on first page."To Steve, many thanks for your friendship and support as Best Man on our wedding day. Daryl & Helen. 2 Sept 2000". "Donated by the family of Len Burke" on first page.books, military -
Wycheproof & District Historical Society Inc.
Framed photograph, JOSEPH NALDER 1873 - 1917 PRIVATE 291, C 1916
WW1 Australian Serviceman Joseph Nalder Pte. 2914 Supreme Sacrifice d. 18th October 1917 result of wounding in France. Died in War Hospital at Warrington, Lancashire, England. Age 44. Buried in Warrington War Cemetery, England. An early pupil of Towaninnie State School, he farmed at Lalbert, In the Mallee, Victoria and later at East Pingelly, W.A.This adds to collection of WW1 Serviceman’s records nationally and locallyLarge heavy brown wooden framed photo with gold inset , head and shoulders photograph of WW1 soldier Joseph Nalder in army uniform, cap with rising sun . Black and white rectangular photo.Noneww1, supreme sacrifice, wartime, lalbert, towaninnie, nalder -
Greensborough Historical Society
Photograph - Digital image, Charles Marshall et al, Private B.P.Buckland, 23rd Battalion, 31/10/1917
This photograph shows a young Australian soldier, Baden Powell Buckland of Yea, who enlisted when 17 years old. He made it to England before his true age was known and returned to Australia. He re-enlisted after his 18th birthday. This photograph was taken during his first enlistment.Digital copy of black and white photograph. "No.6770. Pte B.V. Buckland. 19th Reinfts, 23rd Battalion, 17-3-1917"charles marshall, world war 1, baden powell buckland -
Eltham District Historical Society Inc
Photograph, Memorial plaque erected in 1985 marking the site of the private cemetery and adjacent to the home of some of earliest pioneers of the Greensborough District, 1990c
Erected by the Rotary Club of Greensborough at the request of The Diamond Valley Shire Council and Nillumbik Historical Society as part of the Victorian 150th Anniversary commemorations. Names include James Whatmough, Margaret Whatmough, Many Ann Whatmough, Benjamin Whatmough, Jessie Whatmough, Robert Partington and James Partington.Photograph originally located in a magnetic style album titled 'Greensborough Bypass 1990s 5' suffering significant degradation. No information contained in album or on reverse of photos except where noted. Relocated to archival photosafe storage.greensborough, rotary club of greensborough, robert partington, nillumbik historical society, margaret whatmough, many ann whatmough, jessie whatmough, james whatmough, james partington, early settlers, diamond valley shire, cemetery, benjamin whatmough -
Warrnambool RSL Sub Branch
Book, WITH THE GREATEST RESPECT. The Private Lives of Earl Mountbatten and Prince & Princess Michael of Kent
Hard Cover with dust cover Authors' names, ' John Barratt with Jean Ritchie' on dust coverPublisher: Sidgwick & Jackson Limited London: 1991earl mounbatten. prince and princess michael of kent -
Ringwood and District Historical Society
Envelope, Packet: Ringwood Private Hospitals papers and clippings
The Pines; Manvantara - 10 pages -
Ringwood and District Historical Society
Photograph, Bond St, Ringwood - Eildon Private Nursing Home. 1987
Written on back of photograph, "14.3.87. Bond Street". Catalogue card reads, "Hospital 'Eildon', Bond St." -
Federation University Historical Collection
Photographs - Black and White, Private Residence of Townsend MacDermott, 1861
The residence was designed by architect Henry Richards Caselli.Copy of a black and white photograph purchased from the State Library of Victoria c1980. It shows a bluestone house with a number of women and girls on the verandah. townsend macdermott, henry richards caselli, bluestone house -
Australian Commando Association - Victoria
Book, The Private War of the Spotters: A history of the New Guinea Air Warning Wireless Company, February 1942-April 1945
The history of the New Guinea Air Warning Wireless Company. This reprinted version contains a map of the dispositions of Spotting Stations August 1943, additional MID awards listed and some additions to the nominal roll. The New Guinea Air Warning Wireless Company was formed in Port Moresby in late January 1942 and was granted “Separate Independent Establishment” status in October 1943. The company’s “founding father” was Major Don Small, who had witnessed Japanese air raids on Rabaul and realised that having lacked an effective early-warning system around New Britain meant that the defenders were taken by surprise. At the time, gaps had also appeared in the coast-watching communications network because the territory administration ordered the withdrawal of civilian wireless operators when Japan entered the war. The first influx of men into the company consisted largely of volunteers from the 39th Infantry Battalion, which was stationed at Port Moresby. Initial training was rudimentary, hasty, and was sometimes even carried out on en route to a new station. The first party of company personnel, or “spotters”, left Port Moresby as early as 1 February 1942, bound for the strategically important Samarai area, at the tip of Papua. In the first month of the company’s existence 16 spotter stations were established on the coast of Papua and in the mountains around Port Moresby. At the end of 1942 there were 61 operational stations being run by 180 men. The company’s high-water mark was in late 1944, by which time over 150 stations had been set up in Papua and New Guinea behind enemy lines. On 3 February 1942 the company issued its first air warning in Papua, when spotters at Tufi saw Japanese aircraft about to attack Port Moresby for the first time. The following month the company was responsible for the first Japanese killed in action in Papua by Australian ground forces, when spotters from Gona engaged the crew of a downed Japanese bomber. And in July 1942 the station at Buna signalled Port Moresby with news of the Japanese landings in Papua, marking the beginning of the Kokoda campaign. The dangers involved in the company’s work had also been made clear by this time. In July 1942 a party of spotters attempting to set up a station at Misima Island, off Milne Bay, was intercepted by a Japanese destroyer, resulting in the company’s first operational losses. Anticipating the direction of the campaign as a whole, the company’s focus moved north and north-west over the three years of its existence. In May 1942 a network was set up in the Wau area in association with the activities of Kanga Force. As part of the Wau network, spotter Ross Kirkwood audaciously constructed an observation post overlooking the Japanese airstrip at Salamaua. Kirkwood’s position was photographed by Damian Parer on the understanding that the pictures would not be published. They nevertheless appeared in a Sydney newspaper. The day after the publication of the photographs the observation post was attacked by the Japanese and Kirkwood was lucky to escape. In June 1944 the company’s headquarters were moved to Nadzab. By that time, spotter stations existed behind Japanese lines, as far north as Hollandia, and the company began to train Americans to perform similar work in the Philippines. In early 1945 the company moved to Balcombe, Victoria, where its members were posted to other units of the Australian Corps of Signals.gray plasticnon-fictionThe history of the New Guinea Air Warning Wireless Company. This reprinted version contains a map of the dispositions of Spotting Stations August 1943, additional MID awards listed and some additions to the nominal roll. The New Guinea Air Warning Wireless Company was formed in Port Moresby in late January 1942 and was granted “Separate Independent Establishment” status in October 1943. The company’s “founding father” was Major Don Small, who had witnessed Japanese air raids on Rabaul and realised that having lacked an effective early-warning system around New Britain meant that the defenders were taken by surprise. At the time, gaps had also appeared in the coast-watching communications network because the territory administration ordered the withdrawal of civilian wireless operators when Japan entered the war. The first influx of men into the company consisted largely of volunteers from the 39th Infantry Battalion, which was stationed at Port Moresby. Initial training was rudimentary, hasty, and was sometimes even carried out on en route to a new station. The first party of company personnel, or “spotters”, left Port Moresby as early as 1 February 1942, bound for the strategically important Samarai area, at the tip of Papua. In the first month of the company’s existence 16 spotter stations were established on the coast of Papua and in the mountains around Port Moresby. At the end of 1942 there were 61 operational stations being run by 180 men. The company’s high-water mark was in late 1944, by which time over 150 stations had been set up in Papua and New Guinea behind enemy lines. On 3 February 1942 the company issued its first air warning in Papua, when spotters at Tufi saw Japanese aircraft about to attack Port Moresby for the first time. The following month the company was responsible for the first Japanese killed in action in Papua by Australian ground forces, when spotters from Gona engaged the crew of a downed Japanese bomber. And in July 1942 the station at Buna signalled Port Moresby with news of the Japanese landings in Papua, marking the beginning of the Kokoda campaign. The dangers involved in the company’s work had also been made clear by this time. In July 1942 a party of spotters attempting to set up a station at Misima Island, off Milne Bay, was intercepted by a Japanese destroyer, resulting in the company’s first operational losses. Anticipating the direction of the campaign as a whole, the company’s focus moved north and north-west over the three years of its existence. In May 1942 a network was set up in the Wau area in association with the activities of Kanga Force. As part of the Wau network, spotter Ross Kirkwood audaciously constructed an observation post overlooking the Japanese airstrip at Salamaua. Kirkwood’s position was photographed by Damian Parer on the understanding that the pictures would not be published. They nevertheless appeared in a Sydney newspaper. The day after the publication of the photographs the observation post was attacked by the Japanese and Kirkwood was lucky to escape. In June 1944 the company’s headquarters were moved to Nadzab. By that time, spotter stations existed behind Japanese lines, as far north as Hollandia, and the company began to train Americans to perform similar work in the Philippines. In early 1945 the company moved to Balcombe, Victoria, where its members were posted to other units of the Australian Corps of Signals.world war ii, special operations, new guinea, new guinea air warning wireless company -
National Vietnam Veterans Museum (NVVM)
Audio - Audio, CD, Lenore Somerset: Memories of a performer (private and rare recordings)
Popular music from the 1960's and 1970'spopular music - australia -
Monbulk RSL Sub Branch
Book, Vintage books, In the footsteps of Private Lynch, 2008
Retrace Australia's role in the First World War from the trenches of Somme Mud to the wider war on the Western Front. Imagine this. You are a country boy and just eighteen. The war has been raging for two years and because of your age, you have not been eligible for enlistment. Your mates, older by a few months are joining up and disappearing to the great adventure across the world in Europe. And there is forever talk of the need for reinforcements, for men like you to join up and support the Empire, Australia and your mates in the line. Such was the case for Edward Francis Lynch, a typical country boy from Perthville, near Bathurst. When war was declared in early August 1914, he was just sixteen and still at school, but like a generation of young males in Australia, there was something to prove and a need to be there. Will Davies, editor of the bestselling Somme Mud, meticulously tracked Lynch and his battalion's travels; their long route marches to flea ridden billets, into the frontline at such places as Messines, Dernancourt, Stormy Trench and Villers Bretonneux, to rest areas behind the lines and finally, on the great push to the final victory after August 1918. In words and pictures Davies fills in the gaps in Private Lynch's story and through the movements of the other battalions of the AIF provides impact and context to their plight and achievements. Looking at these battlefields today, the pilgrims who visit and those who attend to the land we come to understand how the spirit of Australia developed and of our enduring role in world politics.Bibliography, notes, ill, maps, p.245.non-fictionRetrace Australia's role in the First World War from the trenches of Somme Mud to the wider war on the Western Front. Imagine this. You are a country boy and just eighteen. The war has been raging for two years and because of your age, you have not been eligible for enlistment. Your mates, older by a few months are joining up and disappearing to the great adventure across the world in Europe. And there is forever talk of the need for reinforcements, for men like you to join up and support the Empire, Australia and your mates in the line. Such was the case for Edward Francis Lynch, a typical country boy from Perthville, near Bathurst. When war was declared in early August 1914, he was just sixteen and still at school, but like a generation of young males in Australia, there was something to prove and a need to be there. Will Davies, editor of the bestselling Somme Mud, meticulously tracked Lynch and his battalion's travels; their long route marches to flea ridden billets, into the frontline at such places as Messines, Dernancourt, Stormy Trench and Villers Bretonneux, to rest areas behind the lines and finally, on the great push to the final victory after August 1918. In words and pictures Davies fills in the gaps in Private Lynch's story and through the movements of the other battalions of the AIF provides impact and context to their plight and achievements. Looking at these battlefields today, the pilgrims who visit and those who attend to the land we come to understand how the spirit of Australia developed and of our enduring role in world politics.world war 1914-1918 - personal narratives - australia, western front 1914-1918 - australian participation -
Moorabbin Air Museum
Book (collection) - Flying Training For The Private Pilot Licence Student Manual Part 2
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National Vietnam Veterans Museum (NVVM)
Photograph, Private Michael Herbert (MIA)
Framed black and white photograph head and shoulder of Pte Herbert (Missing In Action) wearing dress uniformphotograph, private michael patrick john herbert, missing in action -
National Vietnam Veterans Museum (NVVM)
Photograph, Private Thomas Dewar Magarey
Framed Collage including - Certificate of Discharge, A black and white photograph of Pte Magarey, Unit Badges and Service Medalsframed document, badges, service medals, pte magarey, collage -
Moorabbin Air Museum
Manual (item) - The Private Pilot (instructional manual) by C.S. Hames
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Moorabbin Air Museum
Manual (item) - Private Pilots Licence Courses, College of Civil Aviation Private Pilots Licence Course
College of Civil Aviation -
Moorabbin Air Museum
Book (item), V. Dyson-Holland, The Pilot's Reference Manual: A Reference Text for the Licensed Private Pilot, 04/1976
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Moorabbin Air Museum
Booklet - College of Civil Aviation Private Pilot's Licence Course
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Moorabbin Air Museum
Book (item) - The Private Pilot (instructional manual) by C.S. Hames
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Moorabbin Air Museum
Document (item) - Commonwealth Aircraft Corporation Newsletter, CAC: A Private Company with 1650 Employees
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National Vietnam Veterans Museum (NVVM)
Medal, Service Medals posthumously awarded to Private Errol Noack
The two medals are pinned on dark blue background that has a house shape which stands on a white base. The left medal has dark blue, red, yellow and blue stripes and a golden coin of Elizabeth II. The right medal has white and green ribbon and 6 pointed stars with white colour on top of golden colour.The left medal has texts: "ELIZABETH II DEI GRATIA REGINA E.D.". The right medal has text "1960".medal, medal, vietnam, noack, errol, republic of vietnam campaign medal, 5 rar -
Moorabbin Air Museum
Photograph (Item) - Photos WW2 Canada [training]& UK - private collection
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Moorabbin Air Museum
Photograph (Item) - Photos WW2 Singapore & Pacific islands RAAF - private album
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St Kilda Historical Society
Photograph, Private George Arthur Milton (c1914)
mounted and framed black and white photograph -
Tatura Irrigation & Wartime Camps Museum
Book, A Private Viewing, 1982
A collection of stories which shows the authors understanding of identity and compassion for human relationshipsPale blue front, white back dust cover. Blue hard cover. Black text. Back of a lady looking out a windowa private viewing, knorr h, camp 13, camp 1, tatura, ww2 camp 1, books, novels -
Wheen Bee Foundation
Publication, Whitten, M, Inquiry into the future development of the Australian honey bee industry: Private submission (Whitten, M.), 2007, 2007
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Wangaratta RSL Sub Branch
Framed medals, Private William T. Lawson
Service medals and ribbons awarded to William T. LAWSON VX148982 of Woods Point who served with the 14/32 Infantry Battalion.Black timber frame with six Medals and ribbons mounted on red feltPlaque - 3401136 / VX148982 William T. Lawson 14/32 Aust. Inft. Battalionwilliam t lawson, woods point, vx148982, 14/32 inf btn, 3401146 -
Lake Bolac & District Historical Society
Black and white photograph, Overcrowded Private Transport circa 1915
Lake Bolac, home from school, circa 1915. From the back (of the horse) - mounted; James, Teen and Cliff Murray, Harry Park, Billy and Sheila Murray. At the horses' head Faith Murray and adult, Kitty Grahamlake bolac, 1915, murray, park, graham