Showing 1673 items matching " 38"
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Lauriston Girls’ School (incorporating Lauriston Museum and Gallery)
Photograph, Lauristion Hockey Team 1922
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Lauriston Girls’ School (incorporating Lauriston Museum and Gallery)
Painting, Portrait of Miss Lillian Irving Co-Founder 1901-1933
Painted by Edith Alsop. Edith came from a progressive family, and encouraged by their parents, she along with her three sisters, went to Europe to discover contemporary art styles. The University of Melbourne holds an impressive collection of her works. The portrait was unveiled at the school on 2 August 1940. The OLA had agreed to purchase the painting at its AGM held on 20 March 1940. . The inscription reads "Miss Lilian Irving Co-founder 1901-1933". Size 840mm x 670mm. This portrait is part of the Record Series 74. Permanent/Semi-Permanent Displayed Works.Oil Portrait of Miss Lillian Irving Miss Lillian Irving Co-Founder 1901-1933 -
Lauriston Girls’ School (incorporating Lauriston Museum and Gallery)
Painting, Portrait of Miss Margaret Irving Founder & Headmistress 1931-1956
The portrait was commissioned by the Old Lauristonian Association and painted by W.B. McInnes in 1932. It was exhibited in the Australian Art Exhibition, November 1932, and entered for the Archibald Prize in 1933. The inscription reads "Miss Margaret Irving Founder and headmistress 1901-1933". Size 1000mm x 800mm. This portrait is part of the Record Series 74. Permanent/Semi-Permanent Displayed Works.Oil Portrait of Miss Margaret Irving Founder & Headmistress 1901-1933 Miss Margaret Irving Founder & Headmistress 1901-1933 -
Lauriston Girls’ School (incorporating Lauriston Museum and Gallery)
Painting, Portrait of Miss Elizabeth Kirkhope Headmistress 1901-1933
Painted by Robert Hoffman, a refugee who came to Australia prior to World War II. He was known to Mavis McCarty, the Lauriston art teacher. He went to the USA after the war and died soon after. Size 1100mm x 840mm. This portrait is part of the Record Series 74. Permanent/Semi-Permanent Displayed Works.Oil Painting of Miss Elizabeth Kirkhope Headmistress 1931-1956Miss Elizabeth Kirkhope Headmistress 1931-1956 -
Lauriston Girls’ School (incorporating Lauriston Museum and Gallery)
Painting, Portrait of Miss Gladys Davies Headmistress 1956-1972
Painted by June Mendoza AO. An Old Lauistonian (1939), June painted this portrait in 1972. An globally acclaimed portrait artist, her works include Queen Elizabeth and other members of the royal family, Prime Ministers and a range of politicians, sports people, military officers and celebrities. This portrait is part of the Record Series 74. Permanent/Semi-Permanent Displayed Works.Oil Portrait of Miss Gladys Davies Headmistress Miss Gladys Davies Headmistress 1956-1972 -
Lauriston Girls’ School (incorporating Lauriston Museum and Gallery)
Painting, Portrait of Mrs Susan St.Leon Headmistress 1973-1982
A portrait in oils or acrylic of Mrs Susan St. Leon, Size 1380mm x 900mm. Janet Dawson trained at the National Gallery School, Melbourne, and won a NGV Travelling Scholarship to study painting, lithography and etching at the Slade School and the Central School in London. Since then she has had numerous exhibitions, and is represented in all major public collections of Australia. She won the Archibald Prize in 1973 for one of her portraits. This portrait is part of the Record Series 74. Permanent/Semi-Permanent Displayed Works.Oil Painting of Mrs Susan St. Leon Headmistress Mrs Susan St.Leon Headmistress 1973-1982 -
Lauriston Girls’ School (incorporating Lauriston Museum and Gallery)
Painting, Portrait of Mrs Ruth Tideman Headmistress 1983-2000
The portrait was painted by Robert Hannaford in 2000, Archibald prize finalist. Painted by South Australian artist Robert Hannaford AM. He started off as a cartoonist for the Adelaide Advertiser, studied in the School of Mines in Ballarat and has lived and worked in India, Europe and Africa. This portrait is part of the Record Series 74. Permanent/Semi-Permanent Displayed Works.Oil Painting of Mrs Ruth Tideman Headmistress Mrs Ruth Tideman Headmistress 1983-2000 -
Lauriston Girls’ School (incorporating Lauriston Museum and Gallery)
Painting, Painting Ms Meg Hansen Principal 2000-2010
The portrait was painted by Evert Ploeg in 2010. Evert Ploeg is one of Australia's most highly regarded portrait painters, who has won a range of painting prizes, such as the 1999 and 2007 Archibald Prize and was awarded the highly coveted ‘Signature Status’ of The Portrait Society of America.. Archibald Prize winner 1999 & 2007. This portrait is part of the Record Series 74. Permanent/Semi-Permanent Displayed Works.Oil Painting of Ms Meg Hansen Principal Ms Meg Hansen Principal 2000-2010 -
Lauriston Girls’ School (incorporating Lauriston Museum and Gallery)
Photograph, Bikes Under Fig Tree (1951)
A row of bikes sit underneath a large fig tree with students in the background -
Lauriston Girls’ School (incorporating Lauriston Museum and Gallery)
Photograph, LGS Crockery Bookends
LGS Crockery and Bookends -
Lauriston Girls’ School (incorporating Lauriston Museum and Gallery)
Photograph, Photograph of Lilian Irving
Photograph of Lilian Irving -
Lauriston Girls’ School (incorporating Lauriston Museum and Gallery)
Photograph, Photograph Portrait of Margaret Irving
Sepia Photograph Portrait of Margaret Irving Reading -
Lauriston Girls’ School (incorporating Lauriston Museum and Gallery)
Letter, Old Lauristonian's Association Letter
Old Lauristonian's Association Letter -
Lauriston Girls’ School (incorporating Lauriston Museum and Gallery)
Photograph, Lauriston Baseball Team (1924)
Photograph of Lauriston Baseball Team 1924BB Champions 1924 -
Lauriston Girls’ School (incorporating Lauriston Museum and Gallery)
Photograph, Lauriston Baseball Team (1925)
Photograph of Lauriston Baseball Team (1925) -
Lauriston Girls’ School (incorporating Lauriston Museum and Gallery)
Photograph, Lauriston Hockey Team (1907)
Photograph of Lauriston Hockey Team (1907) -
Lauriston Girls’ School (incorporating Lauriston Museum and Gallery)
Photograph, Lauriston Hockey Team 1917
Photograph of Lauriston Hockey Team (1907) -
Lauriston Girls’ School (incorporating Lauriston Museum and Gallery)
Photograph, Lauriston's Junior Student' Boarding House, Wykeham Lodge, 1919 to 1932
Photograph of Lauriston's Junior Student' Boarding House, Wykeham Lodge, 1919 to 1932 -
Lauriston Girls’ School (incorporating Lauriston Museum and Gallery)
Magazine, Lauristonian Magazines - From 1901 to Current Day
Image of Lauristonian Magazines - From 1901 to Current Day -
Lauriston Girls’ School (incorporating Lauriston Museum and Gallery)
Photograph, Miss Margaret Irving standing in the garden near bamboo circa 1910
The students used the bamboo to make whistles.Photograph of Miss Margaret Irving standing in the garden near bamboo circa 1910 -
Lauriston Girls’ School (incorporating Lauriston Museum and Gallery)
Photograph, Miss Belcher, Miss Lillian and Miss Margaret Irving, circa 1910
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Lauriston Girls’ School (incorporating Lauriston Museum and Gallery)
Photograph, Mt Wyse with Boarders
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Lauriston Girls’ School (incorporating Lauriston Museum and Gallery)
Photograph, Senior Boarding House dormitory
Senior Boarding House dormitory with a small cubicle for each student -
Lauriston Girls’ School (incorporating Lauriston Museum and Gallery)
Photograph, Lauriston Tennis Team (1910)
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Lauriston Girls’ School (incorporating Lauriston Museum and Gallery)
Photograph, Lauriston Tennis Team (1918)
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Lauriston Girls’ School (incorporating Lauriston Museum and Gallery)
Programme, Dance Card (1966)
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Lauriston Girls’ School (incorporating Lauriston Museum and Gallery)
Letter - Invitation, Dance Invitations (1966)
The Lauriston Prefects request the pleasure of your company at a dance to be held at Lauriston on Saturday, 14th June, 1966 -
Royal District Nursing Service (now known as Bolton Clarke)
Photograph - Document/Letter, 1900
A letter dated 8th May 1973 details how the letter from Florence Nightingale was forwarded to Mrs E.G. (Janet) Wilson in 1955 by Gwendolen, Florence Nightingale's niece. The explanatory letter was forwarded by Elsa Halenstein and given to Royal District Nursing Service and remains in its Archives. From 1948 Mrs. Wilson served on the Committee of Management of Melbourne District Nursing Society (later Service), serving as President from October 1964-1967. In 1949 Mrs. Hallenstein served on the MDNS Committee of Management, becoming President of the now Royal District Nursing Service from 1967-1974. Florence Nightingale was the founder of modern nursing. Melbourne District Nursing Society (MDNS) only employed Trained nurses from its inception in 1885. They followed Florence Nightingale's basic rules of good hygiene, cleanliness, good nutrition and fresh air, which they learned during their Nursing Training at a Hospital, and taught to their patients by instruction and demonstration. In those days Trained nurses were called 'Nurse'. In 1892 MDNS employed Lucy Smith who, through the Nightingale Fund, did her nursing training at the Nightingale Training School at St. Thomas's Hospital in London. She was the first nurse from this school to work at MDNS. Florence Nightingale, born on the 12th of May 1820, was named after the place of her birth in Italy. Born into a wealthy family she was schooled at home where she excelled in her studies; spoke several languages fluently, and was taught home management. She believed she was ‘called’ to reduce human suffering and tended to ill members of her family and tenants on the family estate. She worked as a nurse at Salisbury Infirmary where she learned about nursing sanitation and hospital practice. Florence then enrolled at the Institution of Protestant Deaconesses at Kaiserswerth, Germany where she learned basic nursing skills, the importance of patient observation, and hospital organization. In 1853 she became Superintendent of the Institution for Sick Gentlewomen in Distressed Circumstances in London, where she reformed health care, working conditions, and hospital efficiency. The Crimean War broke out in late 1853 and a newspaper reported the injured and sick soldiers were being cared for by an “incompetent and ineffective medical establishment and that most basic supplies were not available for care”. After an outcry from the public, Florence was asked to lead a group of 38 nurses, whom she had trained, to Scutari where the wounded soldiers were sent. After arriving at the Barrack Hospital in October 1854, she found the soldiers were being cared for in overcrowded and filthy conditions; contaminated water, faeces on the floors and rats running freely. There were few supplies and equipment. Florence bought supplies and equipment and found help to assist in the laundry. The wards were scrubbed from floor to ceiling. Florence set a high standard of care with fresh air, hygiene, clean clothing, sufficient food and regular dressing of wounds being carried out. She realized the importance of psychological needs, and soldiers were assisted to write letters to relatives, and took part in education and recreational activities. Of a night Florence walked through the wards, carrying a lamp to light her way, to check on ill and wounded soldiers and became known as “The Lady with the Lamp”. She gained the respect of the soldiers and the establishment, and later, the public through the soldier’s letters and reports in the newspaper. After visiting Crimea she contracted ‘Crimean Fever’ from which she never really recovered. When she returned to London she was regarded a heroine. The public had given freely to buy her a gift but Florence preferred this money be used to establish a fund, which became known as the Nightingale Fund. Florence had kept excellent records on the running of the Barrack Hospital, medical and nursing staff efficiency, and the causes of illness and death. Many nurses from the training school became Matrons in many countries throughout the world. Florence pushed the Government for legislation to improve drainage and sanitation in homes and in the building of hospitals with fresh air a priority. She wrote the book ‘Notes on Nursing’ and many writings on health reform. She died, aged 90 years, in her home at 10 South Street, Park Lane on the 13th of August 1910. A handwritten letter, written in lead pencil, by Florence Nightingale. It is written to her niece Gwendolen.. The letter is on buff coloured paper and has the date 'Oct 17 1900'/ written in the top right hand corner; below this is, in capital letters, the two line black printed address - '10, South Street,/ Park Lane, W'/ is stamped. The bulk of the letter reads over eight lines: "Dearest Gwendolen",/ "Thanks for your / dear note,/ I shall gladly look / forward to seeing you, / on Friday at 5 ,/ ever your loving, / Aunt Florence./ . rdns, royal district nursing service, miss florence nightingale, mrs e.g. (janet) wilson, mrs d. (elsa) hallenstein -
Royal District Nursing Service (now known as Bolton Clarke)
Photograph - Photograph, Portrait black and white, c.1920
This photograph is a visual record of Mrs Tatham who was President of the Melbourne District Nursing Society (MDNS) from 1915 until 1923. Mrs. Tatham, with her happy disposition, tact and organizational skills, served the Melbourne District Nursing Society (MDNS) as a very active member for 25 years. At 38 years of age she was elected to the Committee of the MDNS in 1909, and in 1912 was elected as Honorary Secretary until being elected as President in 1915; a role she held until 1923. During this time she undertook roles on fund raising committees, as well as, in 1919, leading the committee in appealing to the public for funds to purchase motor cars for the use of the Society's Nurses so more cases could be visited during the Influenza Epidemic. In 1923 she resigned as President but agreed to take up the role as Vice-president and was the 'Head Almoner' in the Society's newly formed 'Committee of Almoners' who assisted discharged clients from the After-Care to receive assistance from other organizations if required; the name changed to 'Ward Visitors' when the newly formed 'Institute of Almoners' was formed with now trained Almoners. She remained as Vice-President until 1926 when she was appointed as Secretary of the Society and After-Care Home. She remained in this role until her death, aged 63 years, following a tragic car accident in October 1934. Mrs. Tatham was known as "a gentlewoman in the truest sense" and was held in high esteem by her friends and colleagues. Following her death a Ward in the After-Care Hospital was named the 'Constance Maud Tatham' Ward in her memory.Black and white head and shoulder photograph of Mrs. F. (Constance Maud) Tatham. She has a round visage and a small amount of dark curled hair is seen under a dark turned-up brimmed hat with large tails of a flat bow. She is wearing floral frock with buttons down the front; a dark and light coloured scarf is around her neck. melbourne district nursing society, after- care hospital, mdns president, rdns, royal district nursing service, mrs f. (constance maud) tatham -
Beechworth RSL Sub-Branch
Uniform - Jacket, Dress Uniform size 38 short, Jacket Service Dress Army, C. 1968
Standard dress uniform jacket for soldiers.Khaki coloured single breasted jacket fastened with four centre plastic buttons and a belt. Belt attached to jacket on back via two leather loops buttoned around a fabric loop. Jacket carries two breast pockets on exterior with flap, each fastened with single plastic button and two metal press studs. Two hip pockets with flaps, unfastened. Interior is lined with synthetic fabric; one interior chest pocket on the left hand side underneath which is a manufacturers label (transcribed below). Small square paper tag sewn into left jacket interior (transcribed below).Interior label reads "E.W. P/LTD./SOUTH AUSTRALIA/1968/[broad arrow symbol]/SIZE 36 SHORT/CLASS 8406/66-019-8479/ARMY No./NAME/DRY CLEAN ONLY./REPRESS USING IRON AND DAMP CLOTH OR MEDIUM TO HOT STEAM IRON./CREASE UPPER HALF OF LAPELS ONLY." Written on the label is handwritten text "J.V." And "12/0L/0/67." Stamped in purple ink "BATCH No./385." Paper tag reads "62000/LOT 12 36S/GLOBE6/67."military, uniform, vietnam war, 1960s, dress uniform, beechworth, returned services league