Showing 185 items matching " chief engineer"
-
Wodonga & District Historical Society Inc
Mixed media - Presentation of Prince Philip's Banner to RAEME, 1986
RAEME Corps was first established in 1942 when the Ordnance Corps and the Service Corps were combined. The royal ascent was granted in 1948. The Royal Australian Electrical and Mechanical Engineers (RAEME) is a technical corps tasked with the maintenance of the Army's modern hardware and equipment. RAEME personnel are represented in most Army units. The Royal Australian Electrical and Mechanical Engineers corps motto is ‘Arte et Marte’, which is Latin for ‘With Skill and Fighting’. On the 5th March 1959, His Royal Highness, The Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh, accepted the appointment of Colonel-in-Chief of the Corps of the Royal Australian Electrical and Mechanical Engineers. On Tuesday 20 May 1986, His Royal Highness, The Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh, Colonel in Chief of the Royal Australian Electrical and Mechanical Engineers (RAEME) presented the Prince Philip Banner to the Corps at a Ceremonial Parade held at the RAEME Training Centre, Bandiana.These items are significant because they document an important event for the RAEME Unit at Bandiana.A collection of images and newspaper articles documenting an important event for the RAEME unit at Bandiana, Victoria. The Prince Philip features the Royal Cipher on the front and the RAEME Badge on the reverse.raeme, prince philip duke of edinburugh -
Narre Warren and District Family History Group
Book, Isaac Douglas Hermann, A labour of love : the public works of Carlo Catani Victoria 1876-1918, 2021
... Victoria's Engineer-in-Chief of the Public Works Department 1890 ...A commemorative work detailing the accomplishments of Italian immigrant, Carlo Catani who rose to become Victoria's Engineer-in-Chief of the Public Works Department 1890 - 1917. A much valued and loved public servant, Catani was responsible for the creation of new townships, roadways, the reclamation of swamplands, the opening up of new farmland, major landscaping projects, and giving Victorians access to scenic beauty spots across the State. In this dedicated compendium, historic praise and centennial commemorative events honouring his passing are also well recorded.viii, 100 p.; 25 cmnon-fictionA commemorative work detailing the accomplishments of Italian immigrant, Carlo Catani who rose to become Victoria's Engineer-in-Chief of the Public Works Department 1890 - 1917. A much valued and loved public servant, Catani was responsible for the creation of new townships, roadways, the reclamation of swamplands, the opening up of new farmland, major landscaping projects, and giving Victorians access to scenic beauty spots across the State. In this dedicated compendium, historic praise and centennial commemorative events honouring his passing are also well recorded. carlo catani, engineering -
Victorian Railway History Library
Book, David Burke, 30 Days On Australia's Railways - A diary of September journeys, 2014
An entertaining look at railway events in Australia in the month of September - from 1848, when a meeting was called to start a railway company in New South Wales, to 2013, when the great Bayer-Garrett AD6029 steam engine was restored to working order. For some strange reason, September has been a month when particularly memorable railway events tend to occur. Author David Burke has crafted a 'diary' which documents, day by day, major happenings to do with railways in Australia - from the days of steam, to diesel, to diesel-electric and electrification, covering the first trains that ran between New South Wales and Queensland, and to Melbourne. It was in also September that the first sod was dug for the Trans-Australian Railway across the Nullarbor to Perth. The book is heavily illustrated with historic photographs, both black and white and colour, newspaper cuttings, sketches and maps, and features 13 paintings by renowned railway artist Phil Belbin. Names that leap to the fore among those who made railway history happen include Ben Chifley, the locomotive driver who became Prime Minister of Australia, engineer Dr John Bradfield, designer of the Sydney Harbour Bridge and responsible for putting Sydney's city trains underground, James Fraser, first Australian-born Chief Commissioner for Railways, and Harold Young, the Scotsman who designed the C38 engine and the Silver City Comet. Cover picture shows: Climbing the steep Fassifern Grade with a heavy coal train maakes for plenty of Bayer-Garrett action in Phil Belbin's painting of the AD60 class at work on the Shorty North line to Newcastle New South Wales Australia.ill. p.172.non-fictionAn entertaining look at railway events in Australia in the month of September - from 1848, when a meeting was called to start a railway company in New South Wales, to 2013, when the great Bayer-Garrett AD6029 steam engine was restored to working order. For some strange reason, September has been a month when particularly memorable railway events tend to occur. Author David Burke has crafted a 'diary' which documents, day by day, major happenings to do with railways in Australia - from the days of steam, to diesel, to diesel-electric and electrification, covering the first trains that ran between New South Wales and Queensland, and to Melbourne. It was in also September that the first sod was dug for the Trans-Australian Railway across the Nullarbor to Perth. The book is heavily illustrated with historic photographs, both black and white and colour, newspaper cuttings, sketches and maps, and features 13 paintings by renowned railway artist Phil Belbin. Names that leap to the fore among those who made railway history happen include Ben Chifley, the locomotive driver who became Prime Minister of Australia, engineer Dr John Bradfield, designer of the Sydney Harbour Bridge and responsible for putting Sydney's city trains underground, James Fraser, first Australian-born Chief Commissioner for Railways, and Harold Young, the Scotsman who designed the C38 engine and the Silver City Comet. Cover picture shows: Climbing the steep Fassifern Grade with a heavy coal train maakes for plenty of Bayer-Garrett action in Phil Belbin's painting of the AD60 class at work on the Shorty North line to Newcastle New South Wales Australia.railroads -- australia -- history., railroad travel -- australia -- history. -
National Vietnam Veterans Museum (NVVM)
Medal, Raymond Henry Hunt
R54257 Chief Electrician Weapons Radio, Raymond Henry Hunt, Royal Australain Navy. Raymond Henry Hunt's unit: HMAS Hobart. His Vietnam Service was from 22nd March 1968 - 17th June 1968. In the early hours of 17 June 1968 Hobart was part of a naval task unit operating in the vicinity of Tiger Island north of the demilitarized zone off the east coast of North Vietnam. An unidentified aircraft was detected approaching the ship from the vicinity of Cap Lay and although evaluated as a ‘friendly’ it continued to close, firing a missile that struck Hobart amidships on her starboard side. The warhead passed through the main deck, seriously damaging several compartments, while the body of the missile passed through the outer skin of the aft funnel before ending up embedding itself in the forward funnel. In its passage shrapnel from the disintegrating missile killed Ordinary Seaman Butterworth who was closed up at the ships exposed anti aircraft control position above the bridge. Able Seaman JR Parker and Ordinary Seaman RF Davidson also suffered injuries. As Hobart's crew raced to action stations a second and third missile hit the ship. The second missile entered the transom without detonating, destroying the gunner's store before breaking up in the engineer's workshop and penetrating the after seaman's mess. The third missile hit the ship in the same area as the first, passing through one of the ship's fan spaces, the missile director equipment room and Tartar checkout room. Chief Electrician RH Hunt was killed in this attack and several sailors injured. Five Replica Medals are placed horizontally on a single line of a blackboard that sits on a black stand. The first four medals are silver with four different ribbons. The last medal is gold and white with green and white alternate ribbon.hmas hobart, royal australian navy, raymond henry hunt, friendly fire, north vietnam, r54257, chief electrician weapons radio, tiger island -
Kew Historical Society Inc
Journal, Newsletter No.150, March 2025
... : A whiet elephant? / Julie King pp4-5. John Hesketh: First chief ...Vanishing Living History [Ron Setford, Country Roads Board offices, Eastern Freeway, Kew City Hall] / Robert Baker p1. History News: 2025 Lectures, Members, Grants & Sponsors, Exhibitions, Donations to rhe Collection / p3. The Kew Reservoir: A whiet elephant? / Julie King pp4-5. John Hesketh: First chief electrical engineer to the Commonwealth of Australia / David Whie pp6-7. Typhoid Fever: a slice of life over the Summer of 1874–1875 / Suzanne McWha pp8-9&11. 38 Yarravale Road: growing up in the 1950s and 1960s / Gregor Evans pp10-11. Membership & Donations / p12.Published quarterly since 1977, the newsletters of the Kew Historical Society contain significant research by members exploring relevant aspects of the Victorian and Australian Framework of Historical Themes. Frequently, articles on people, places and artefacts are the only source of information about an aspect of Kew, and Melbourne’s history.non-fictionVanishing Living History [Ron Setford, Country Roads Board offices, Eastern Freeway, Kew City Hall] / Robert Baker p1. History News: 2025 Lectures, Members, Grants & Sponsors, Exhibitions, Donations to rhe Collection / p3. The Kew Reservoir: A whiet elephant? / Julie King pp4-5. John Hesketh: First chief electrical engineer to the Commonwealth of Australia / David Whie pp6-7. Typhoid Fever: a slice of life over the Summer of 1874–1875 / Suzanne McWha pp8-9&11. 38 Yarravale Road: growing up in the 1950s and 1960s / Gregor Evans pp10-11. Membership & Donations / p12.kew historical society (vic.) -- periodicals., kew historical society (vic.) -- newsletters, kew historical society (vic.) -- journals