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Ballarat Heritage Services
digital photographs, Lisa Gervasoni, Dior Exhibition NGV International
exhibition, national gallery of victoria, ngv international, fashion, designer, dresses, embroided, miranda kerr, wedding dress -
Ballarat Heritage Services
digital photographs, Lisa Gervasoni, Dior Exhibition NGV International
exhibition, national gallery of victoria, ngv international, fashion, designer, dresses, embroided, pale pink -
Ballarat Heritage Services
digital photographs, Lisa Gervasoni, Dior Exhibition NGV International
exhibition, national gallery of victoria, ngv international, fashion, designer, dresses, black beaded dress, black, beaded -
Ballarat Heritage Services
digital photographs, Lisa Gervasoni, Dior Exhibition NGV International
exhibition, national gallery of victoria, ngv international, fashion, designer, dresses, orange -
Ballarat Heritage Services
digital photographs, Lisa Gervasoni, Dior Exhibition NGV International
exhibition, national gallery of victoria, ngv international, fashion, designer, dresses, black, silver, sequins -
Ballarat Heritage Services
digital photographs, Lisa Gervasoni, Dior Exhibition NGV International
exhibition, national gallery of victoria, ngv international, fashion, designer, dresses, black, velvet, white -
Ballarat Heritage Services
digital photographs, Lisa Gervasoni, Dior Exhibition NGV International
exhibition, national gallery of victoria, ngv international, fashion, designer, dresses, black, satin -
Ballarat Heritage Services
digital photographs, Lisa Gervasoni, Dior Exhibition NGV International
exhibition, national gallery of victoria, ngv international, fashion, designer, dresses, black, chiffon, velvet -
Ballarat Heritage Services
digital photographs, Lisa Gervasoni, Dior Exhibition NGV International
exhibition, national gallery of victoria, ngv international, fashion, designer, dresses, bronze -
Ballarat Heritage Services
digital photographs, Lisa Gervasoni, Dior Exhibition NGV International
exhibition, national gallery of victoria, ngv international, fashion, designer, dresses, multi coloured -
Ballarat Heritage Services
digital photographs, Lisa Gervasoni, Dior Exhibition NGV International
exhibition, national gallery of victoria, ngv international, fashion, designer, dresses, pink, chiffon, hot pink -
Ballarat Heritage Services
digital photographs, Lisa Gervasoni, Dior Exhibition NGV International
exhibition, national gallery of victoria, ngv international, fashion, designer, dresses, pale green -
Ballarat Heritage Services
digital photographs, Lisa Gervasoni, Dior Exhibition NGV International
exhibition, national gallery of victoria, ngv international, fashion, designer, dresses, white, textured -
Ballarat Heritage Services
Document, Zena Cumpston, Indigenous Plant Use: A booklet on the medicinal, nutritional and technological use of indigenous plants, 2020
non-fictionindiginous plants, koori food, botany, river mint, kulin national plant list, nardoo, murnong -
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
Ceramic - Artwork - Ceramics, John Eagle, 1979
Mark EAGLE (1942 - ) Mark Eagle studied at RMIT and first exhibited at the National Gallery of Victoria in 1975. He is known for his copper red glaze on hand thrown stoneware and porcelain, and won the National Bicentennial Art-Craft Award for Functional Pottery in 1988. He taught ceramics at Ballarat Grammar School between 1980 and 1994.Photograph of a lidded bowl with glaze decoration ceramics, australian studio pottery, john eagle -
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, Clare Gervasoni, Henty School Memorial, 2015, 22/12/2015
The memorial was unveiled on 16 September 1927 by the Hon. A.S. Rodgers, M.H.R. in front of a large gathering. Radio Station 3LO broadcast the National Anthem at the prearranged time of 2.00 pm and the announcer, in a Melbourne studio, read an address prepared by James Sexton. The gathering listened to the broadcast on a six-valve radio set, loaned by Mr J. James. Colour photograph of a memorial commemorating the Henty School, Major Mitchell, the Henty Brothers and Alexander Peacock.henty, henty school, henty school no 2020, memorial, henty memorial, major mitchell memorial, alexander peacock -
Ballarat Heritage Services
Photograph, Clare Gervasoni, Henty School Memorial, 2015, 22/12/2015
The memorial was unveiled on 16 September 1927 by the Hon. A.S. Rodgers, M.H.R. in front of a large gathering. Radio Station 3LO broadcast the National Anthem at the prearranged time of 2.00 pm and the announcer, in a Melbourne studio, read an address prepared by James Sexton. The gathering listened to the broadcast on a six-valve radio set, loaned by Mr J. James. Colour photograph of a memorial commemorating the Henty School, Major Mitchell, the Henty Brothers and Alexander Peacock.henty, henty school, henty school no 2020, memorial, henty memorial, major mitchell memorial, alexander peacock -
Ballarat Heritage Services
Photograph, Clare Gervasoni, Marble Plaque on the Henty School Memorial, 2015, 22/12/2015
The memorial was unveiled on 16 September 1927 by the Hon. A.S. Rodgers, M.H.R. in front of a large gathering. Radio Station 3LO broadcast the National Anthem at the prearranged time of 2.00 pm and the announcer, in a Melbourne studio, read an address prepared by James Sexton. The gathering listened to the broadcast on a six-valve radio set, loaned by Mr J. James. Colour photograph of a memorial commemorating the Henty School, Major Mitchell, the Henty Brothers and Alexander Peacock.henty, henty school, henty school no 2020, memorial, henty memorial, major mitchell memorial, alexander peacock, education -
Ballarat Heritage Services
Photograph, Clare Gervasoni, Marble Plaque on the Henty School Memorial, 2015, 22/12/2015
The memorial was unveiled on 16 September 1927 by the Hon. A.S. Rodgers, M.H.R. in front of a large gathering. Radio Station 3LO broadcast the National Anthem at the prearranged time of 2.00 pm and the announcer, in a Melbourne studio, read an address prepared by James Sexton. The gathering listened to the broadcast on a six-valve radio set, loaned by Mr J. James. Colour photograph of a memorial commemorating the Henty School, Major Mitchell, the Henty Brothers and Alexander Peacock.henty, henty school, henty school no 2020, memorial, henty memorial, major mitchell memorial, alexander peacock -
Ringwood RSL Sub-Branch
Uniform, USA Camouflage Jacket with two USA medals. Defense Medal and Vietnam Medal, Unknown presumably USA made
Vietnam conflict.Vietnam conflict00128.1 USA Camouflage jacket 2 chest pockets, black buttons with black buttons down the front. Has Vietnam cloth badge on left shoulder. 00128.2 Medal. Inscribed United States of America (reverse), and Republic of Vietnam service (front) Colours are green, red & yellow. 00128.3 Medal Only inscription, National Defence. Colours, red, white & blue and yellow. -
Ringwood RSL Sub-Branch
Framed Object Certificate, Unknown
0233.1 Framed Service Award Certficate to John Anderson 0233.2 Certficate for 50 year service to the war effort presented to John Anderson0233.1 Presented by National RSL Canberra 0233.2 50th Anniversary to War effort -
Ringwood RSL Sub-Branch
Medal - Assorted Vietnam medals, Vietnam medals
Group of 6 Vietnam era medals complete with shoulder title for RA Sigs.Australian Active Service medal clasp Vietnam. Logistics support medal. Reserve force decoration. National medal. Australian Defence medal and Efficiency decoration with 2 clasps QE11. 3166251 J.D. Mather complete with photograph of Major Mather. -
Ballarat Heritage Services
Photograph - Digital photograph, Wayne Phillipson, Peta Knott and Dorothy Wickham at Lacock National Trust Village, United Kingdom, 30/1072016
Lacock was on the main London to Bristol road until the road was re-routed through Chippenham. There are no obvious signs of the 21st century in this National Trust village, except the motor car. It has been run by the National Trust since 1944 and residents are on a lease. The oldest house in the village is King John's Hunting Lodge, parts of which date back to the 13th century. In this village there are buildings from every century since right up until the 18th century. The abbey was founded in 1229 by Ela, Countess of Salisbury. Lacock village and abbey were used as the set in the Harry Potter films.Dorothy Wickham and Peta Knott, formerly of Museums Australia (Vic) currently working as a marine archaeologist in England. Taken at Lacock National Trust Village, United Kingdomdorothy wickham, peta knott, lacock national trust village -
Ballarat Heritage Services
Photograph - Photograph - Colour, Aboriginal Rock Huts at Tyrendarra, 2016, 16/04/2016
The Budj Bim National Heritage Landscape - Tyrendarra Area on the Australian National Heritage List lies on the Tyrendarra lava flow between the Fitzroy River and Darlot Creek close to the township. These photographs were taken during a guided tour with Gunditjmara guide Dennis Rose. Remains of stone shelters built and used by the Gunditj Mirring people.rock shelter, aboriginal, aborigines, tyrendarra, winda mara, dennis rose, budj bim national heritage landscape, gunditjmara -
Ballarat Heritage Services
Photograph - Colour, Aboriginal Rock Hut recreations at Tyrendarra, 2016, 16/04/2016
The Budj Bim National Heritage Landscape - Tyrendarra Area on the Australian National Heritage List lies on the Tyrendarra lava flow between the Fitzroy River and Darlot Creek close to the township. The Budj Bim Cultural Landscape was ascribed on the UNESCO World Heritage List on 06 July 2019 (AEST). These photographs were taken during a guided tour with Gunditjmara guide Dennis Rose.Remains of stone shelters built and used by the Gunditj Mirring people.rock shelter, aboriginal, aborigines, tyrendarra, winda mara, rock hut, gunditjmara, unesco world heritage -
Ballarat Heritage Services
Digital photograph, Dorothy Wickham, The London Eye, 2016, 19/09/2016
At 135m, Coca-Cola London Eye is the world’s largest cantilevered observation wheel. It was conceived and designed by Marks Barfield Architects and was launched in 2000. It has won over 85 awards for national and international tourism, outstanding architectural quality and engineering achievement. In fact, it has become the UK’s most popular paid for visitor attraction. A remarkable feat of design and engineering, the London Eye gave London’s skyline a dramatic new addition and has been offering guests a new perspective on London ever since. Originally, it was intended as a temporary structure, able to be dismantled and transported to a new location, and had planning permission for just five years. But with millions boarding it every year, its popularity has prompted its lease to be extended. Today it is a permanent fixture on the London skyline and a beautiful symbol of modern London. (https://www.londoneye.com/about-us/#sthash.Xxd6iuOj.dpuf)london eye, ferris wheel