Showing 311 items
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Women's Art Register
Book, Uta Grosenick, Women Artists in the 20th and 21st Century, 2003
Individual focus on 47 women artists, predominantly from the UK, USA and Europe, in photographs and brief text prepared by various critics and writers.bookIndividual focus on 47 women artists, predominantly from the UK, USA and Europe, in photographs and brief text prepared by various critics and writers.marina abramovic, louise bourgeois, guerrilla girls, cindy sherman, adrian piper, georgia o'keefe, portraiture, perfomance, political art, tracey emin, hannah hoch -
Bendigo Historical Society Inc.
Document - NEW CHUM & VICTORIA LINES OF REEF - LIST OF REFERENCE NUMBERS FOR ALL MINING REPORTS
Handwritten list of Reference Numbers for all Mining Reports. Fourteen References listed.document, gold, new chum & victoria lines of reef, new chum & victoria lines of reef, list of reference numbers for all mining reports, mines dept. special edition australian mining standard 1/6/1899, mines dept booklet'bendigo goldfield' geo brown 1936, mines dept annual and quarterly reports, mines dept bulletin no 33 h. herman 1914, annals of bendigo, a. richardson, booklet 'healthy golden bendigo' 1906 public library bendigo, souvenir '200th dividend' , issue 'new moon' by directors 1/12/1906, mines dept bulletin no 47 structure of bendigo goldfield h herman 1923, publication 'the bendigo goldfield resources of the central area' victor j r pabst 21/2/1917, the bendigo goldfield registry j n macartney 1/3/1871, mines dept bulletin no 30 h herman 1914, bendigo amalgamated goldfields coy financial report 1920. mining sales catalogues j h curnow & son -
St Kilda Historical Society
Photograph
The bluestone 1857-58 former Wesleyan Church, on the corner of Fitzroy Street and Princes Street St Kilda, was one of the first Wesleyan churches in Victoria designed in the gothic style. It had a square central entrance tower and early English stepped buttresses and pinnacles above. It was later the St Kilda Uniting Church and was closed on 25 June 1978. It has now been covered to flats.According to Heritage Victoria: The old St Kilda Methodist Church is a finely designed 1850's church building and centrepiece of a group of individually significant buildings in an urban conservation area. Towered churches from the 1850s are rare in Melbourne and this building is thus of special significance in this regard as well as for its design and detailing. This building is an important work of architects Crouch & Wilson. Thomas Crouch was prominent in St Kilda Methodist church affairs and lived locally. He served a term as mayor of St Kilda and also designed the chapel at Pentridge and Methodist churches at Fitzroy, Collingwood, Flemington, Daylesford and Maldon. St Kilda was the home of many of the better off Melbournians in the 1850s, '60s and '70s. The adjacent former Sunday School is one of Melbourne's finest and the combination of fine church and hall side by side gives each added significance. https://vhd.heritagecouncil.vic.gov.au/places/1110churches, fitzroy street, st kilda, crouch, st kilda uniting church, st kilda wesleyan methodist church, princes street -
St Kilda Historical Society
Ephemera - Brochure, St Kilda City Council, Central Ward, Why You are Invited to Support Tippett, George, 1932
Political campaign advertisement for George Tippett, a candidate for Central Ward in the St Kilda Council elections of 1932. Includes a photo of the candidate. He was unsuccessful.Yellow coloured paper, folded, printed in red and blue on both sides.george tippett, st kilda council, st kilda council elections -
St Kilda Historical Society
Ephemera - Brochure, St Kilda City Council Election, Central Ward, Vote and Work for Councillor John Talbot, 1949
Campaign material for the re-election of John Talbot as councillor for the Central Ward in the St Kilda City Council elections held on 25 August 1949. The brochure contains his personal details and municipal record, along with polling day details. Talbot was first elected in 1946 and served continuously until 1969, including three terms as mayor, in 1950-51, 1964-65 and 1965-66.Folded white paper (discoloured with age) printed in black on both sidesjohn talbot, st kilda council, st kilda council elections -
St Kilda Historical Society
Ephemera - Brochure, St Kilda City Council - Central Ward, Vote [1] Talbot, John, 1946
Campaign material for the election of John Talbot as councillor for the Central Ward in the St Kilda City Council elections held on 22 August 1946. The brochure contains his personal and Army service details as well as polling day information. Talbot won the election and then served continuously until 1969, including three terms as mayor, in 1950-51, 1964-65 and 1965-66.Folded white paper (discoloured with age) printed in black on both sides, with a one page insert, printed in black on one sidejohn talbot, st kilda council, st kilda council elections -
St Kilda Historical Society
Ephemera - Program, Elwood Central School Annual Speech Night, 1954
Program for Elwood Central School's Annual Speech Night, held in the St Kilda Town Hall on 15 December 1954. Contains details of staff, prizewinners and evening events.White paper, discoloured with age, printed in blue on both sides and folded in half.elwood central school, elwood - schools -
St Kilda Historical Society
Photograph, Donald McDonald, Inverleith, c.1872
Picture of late 19th century double storey mansion with central arcaded entry way with two symmetrical wings with arched portico to the side. Classical romanesque style. Part of Donald McDonald collection of images.J F McMullen. Backed, unmounted copy of black and white photo, good condition.Inverleith, Acland St, E side, residence of J F McMullen banker,photograph 1872, flats now stand on Acland St frontage' -
St Kilda Historical Society
Photograph, Donald McDonald, Euro Reko, c.1872
Front view of two storey mansion, central tower, polychrome brick, arched windows and single storey verandah to right side of building. Two couples in garden foreground. Built 1860, photograph taken 1872. Designed by Reed and Barnes.backed, unmounted copy, black and white photo, good condition.Built 1860, designed by Reed and Barnes, Euro Reko, Burnett Street S E side, through to Gurner Street. Photograph taken 1872. Demolished.' -
St Kilda Historical Society
Photograph, Donald McDonald, St Margarets, c.1872
Double storey, double fronted stone rendered, central entry way, stone verandah and stone columns. Circular driveway in foreground, photograph taken 1872, demolished 1964backed, unmounted copy, black and white photo, good condition.St Margarets, 56 Barkly Street, built for Thomas Alston, silk merchant. Photograph 1872. Demolished 1964. -
St Kilda Historical Society
Photograph, St Margarets, c.1964
Double storey, double fronted stone rendered, central entry way, stone verandah and stone columns. Second storey verandah has been added in the classical style consistent with lower storey. Stone columns and stone balustrading. Demolished 1964.black and white photograph, mounted, fair condition. Original plus copy.St Margarets, 56 Barkly Street. Photo taken 1964 before demolition.' -
St Kilda Historical Society
Photograph, Class 3 B+C, Elwood Central School, 1935, c. 1935
There are three copies of the same photograph Stamped on back: Elwood Primary School Scott Street Elwood 3184 phone (03) 9531 2762black and white post card good condition unmounted E.C.S Grade 3 B + C. Stamped on back: Elwood Primary School Scott Street Elwood 3184 phone (03) 9531 2762. 1935 -
St Kilda Historical Society
Photograph, Form 1F, Elwood Central School, 1971
black and white photograph mountedForm 1F, Elwood Central School, 1971 -
St Kilda Historical Society
Photograph, Form 1B, Elwood Central School, 1939
black and white photograph adhered to cardboardForm 1B, 1939 -
St Kilda Historical Society
Photograph, Form 1E, Elwood Central School, 1969
Kodak black and white photograph unmounted fair conditionElwood Central Form 1E 1969. Elwood Central Primary School 1969. -
St Kilda Historical Society
Photograph, Girls pupils Elwood Primary School 1947
notes: girl pupils at Elwood (primary?) school in 1947 hard to read in photo, girls hold a sign: Form 1? (suggesting central rather than primary school) black and white photograph adhered to cardboard -
St Kilda Historical Society
Photograph, Form 2C, Elwood Central School, 1940
black and white photograph adhered to cardboardInscription: IIC -
St Kilda Historical Society
Photograph, Elwood Primary School, Scott St, Elwood
Formerly Elwood Central School. no date given, but car suggests 1930s?black and white photograph unmounted -
St Kilda Historical Society
Photograph, Elwood Central School, c. 1970
black and white photograph mounted good conditionGrade 6R, Elwood Central School -
St Kilda Historical Society
Photograph, Elwood Central School, c. 1939
Don Taggart is on extreme right of the first standing row.black and white photograph fair condition accompanied by a much larger copyGrades 3A and 4C, Elwood Central School, 1939 -
St Kilda Historical Society
Photograph, St Moritz St Kilda - images collection #1, c1940s
The St. Moritz Ice Rink was a popular ice skating rink on The Esplanade, St. Kilda, Victoria. It operated between 1939–1981. As one of only two ice rinks in Melbourne in the 1940s and 1950s, it played a central role to the sport of ice hockey in Australia. Closed in 1982, it soon suffered a major fire and was then demolished, an event later seen as a major blow to the heritage of St Kilda. It was first built as the Wattle Path Palais de Danse in 1922, a very large dance hall, designed by architects Beaver & Purnell, The Wattle Path was the venue for the first all-Australian dance championship, and featured some of the best dance bands of Australia, as well as from America. Popular throughout the 1920s, it suffered due to the Great Depression, and closed in the early 1930s. From 1933-1936 the building became a film studio, Efftee Studios, for Frank W. Thring. In 1938, businessman Henry Hans "Harry" Kleiner announced that the Wattle Path would become an ice rink. He was sole proprietor until 1953, when he sold the business to J. Gordon and T. Molony, both champion skaters. Trade declined during the 1970s. The building was sold in 1980 to developers Hudson Conway and trucking magnate Lindsay Fox and was closed in early 1982. It was nominated to the Historic Buildings Preservation Council, but a majority of City of St Kilda councillors voted to oppose this action and uphold a demolition permit already issued. The building infamously suffered a fire later that year, leaving only the facades, which were demolished soon after. The site remained vacant until about 1991, when a mid-price hotel called the St Moritz was constructed. By 1993 it was simply called the Novotel St Kilda. The hotel closed in 2019 and was replaced by an apartment complex.black and white photographSt Moritz, St Kilda. Ice Skating. Caf�st moritz, st kilda, the esplanade, ice skating -
Robin Boyd Foundation
Booklet, Geographers, Atlas of Central London
... melbourne Walsh St library Atlas of Central London Booklet ...walsh st library -
Robin Boyd Foundation
Map, RACV, Central Gippsland
... melbourne Walsh St library Central Gippsland Map RACV ...walsh st library -
Robin Boyd Foundation
Book, Elizabeth Jolley, Central Mischief: Elizabeth Jolley on Writing, Her Past and Herself, 1962
Hardcover w/Dust JacketSmall gift card. To Patricia from Unaaustralian biography , walsh st library -
Robin Boyd Foundation
Book, Martha Boice, Walking Tour of Central South Yarra, 1988
SoftcoverSigned By Authorswalsh st library -
Victorian Aboriginal Corporation for Languages
Periodical, Australian Institute of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Studies, Australian Aboriginal studies : journal of the Australian Institute of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Studies, 2009
Social Engineering and Indigenous Settlement: Policy and demography in remote Australia John Taylor In recent years neo-liberals have argued that government support for remote Aboriginal communities contributes to social pathology and that unhindered market engagement involving labour mobility provides the only solution. This has raised questions about the viability of remote Aboriginal settlements. While the extreme view is to withdraw services altogether, at the very least selective migration should be encouraged. Since the analytical tools are available, one test of the integrity of such ideas is to consider their likely demographic consequences. Accordingly, this paper provides empirically based speculation about the possible implications for Aboriginal population distribution and demographic composition in remote areas had the advice of neo-liberal commentators and initial labour market reforms of the Northern Territory Emergency Response been fully implemented. The scenarios presented are heuristic only but they reveal a potential for substantial demographic and social upheaval. Aspects of the semantics of intellectual subjectivity in Dalabon (south-western Arnhem Land) Ma�a Ponsonnet This paper explores the semantics of subjectivity (views, intentions, the self as a social construct etc.) in Dalabon, a severely endangered language of northern Australia, and in Kriol, the local creole. Considering the status of Dalabon and the importance of Kriol in the region, Dalabon cannot be observed in its original context, as the traditional methods of linguistic anthropology tend to recommend. This paper seeks to rely on this very parameter, reclaiming linguistic work and research as a legitimate conversational context. Analyses are thus based on metalinguistic statements - among which are translations in Kriol. Far from seeking to separate Dalabon from Kriol, I use interactions between them as an analytical tool. The paper concentrates on three Dalabon words: men-no (intentions, views, thoughts), kodj-no (head) and kodj-kulu-no (brain). None of these words strictly matches the concept expressed by the English word mind. On the one hand, men-no is akin to consciousness but is not treated as a container nor as a processor; on the other, kodj-no and kodj-kulu-no are treated respectively as container and processor, but they are clearly physical body parts, while what English speakers usually call the mind is essentially distinct from the body. Interestingly, the body part kodj-no (head) also represents the individual as a social construct - while the Western self does not match physical attributes. Besides, men-no can also translate as idea, but it can never be abstracted from subjectivity - while in English, potential objectivity is a crucial feature of ideas. Hence the semantics of subjectivity in Dalabon does not reproduce classic Western conceptual articulations. I show that these specificities persist in the local creole. Health, death and Indigenous Australians in the coronial system Belinda Carpenter and Gordon Tait This paper details research conducted in Queensland during the first year of operation of the new Coroners Act 2003. Information was gathered from all completed investigations between December 2003 and December 2004 across five categories of death: accidental, suicide, natural, medical and homicide. It was found that 25 percent of the total number of Indigenous deaths recorded in 2004 were reported to, and investigated by, the Coroner, in comparison to 9.4 percent of non-Indigenous deaths. Moreover, Indigenous people were found to be over-represented in each category of death, except in death in a medical setting, where they were absent. This paper discusses these findings in detail, following the insights gained from the work of Tatz (1999, 2001, 2005) and Morrissey (2003). It also discusses a further outcome of this situation - the over-representation of Indigenous people in figures for full internal autopsy. Finding your voice: Placing and sourcing an Aboriginal health organisation?s published and grey literature Clive Rosewarne It is widely recognised that Aboriginal perspectives need to be represented in historical narratives. Sourcing this material may be difficult if Aboriginal people and their organisations do not publish in formats that are widely distributed and readily accessible to library collections and research studies. Based on a search for material about a 30-year-old Aboriginal health organisation, this paper aims to (1) identify factors that influenced the distribution of written material authored by the organisation; (2) consider the implications for Aboriginal people who wish to have their viewpoints widely available to researchers; and (3) assess the implications for research practice. As part of researching an organisational history for the Central Australian Aboriginal Congress, seven national and regional collections were searched for Congress?s published and unpublished written material. It was found that, in common with other Aboriginal organisations, most written material was produced as grey literature. The study indicates that for Aboriginal people and their organisations? voices to be heard, and their views to be accessible in library collections, they need to have an active program to distribute their written material. It also highlights the need for researchers to be exhaustive in their searches, and to be aware of the limitations within collections when sourcing Aboriginal perspectives. Radiocarbon dates from the Top End: A cultural chronology for the Northern Territory coastal plains Sally Brockwell , Patrick Faulkner, Patricia Bourke, Anne Clarke, Christine Crassweller, Daryl Guse, Betty Meehan, and Robin Sim The coastal plains of northern Australia are relatively recent formations that have undergone dynamic evolution through the mid to late Holocene. The development and use of these landscapes across the Northern Territory have been widely investigated by both archaeologists and geomorphologists. Over the past 15 years, a number of research and consultancy projects have focused on the archaeology of these coastal plains, from the Reynolds River in the west to the southern coast of the Gulf of Carpentaria in the east. More than 300 radiocarbon dates are now available and these have enabled us to provide a more detailed interpretation of the pattern of human settlement. In addition to this growing body of evidence, new palaeoclimatic data that is relevant to these northern Australian contexts is becoming available. This paper provides a synthesis of the archaeological evidence, integrates it within the available palaeo-environmental frameworks and characterises the cultural chronology of human settlement of the Northern Territory coastal plains over the past 10 000 years. Ladjiladji language area: A reconstruction Ian Clark and Edward Ryan In this reconsideration of the Ladjiladji language area in northwest Victoria, we contend that while Tindale?s classical reconstruction of this language identified a fundamental error in Smyth?s earlier cartographic representation, he incorrectly corrected that error. We review what is known about Ladjiladji and through a careful analysis demonstrate not only the errors in both Smyth and Tindale but also proffer a fundamental reconstruction grounded in the primary sources.ladjiladji, social engineering, dalabon, indigenous health, coronial system, radiocarbon dating -
Victorian Aboriginal Corporation for Languages
Thesis, Stephen Morey, The verbal system of the Central Victorian language, the Aboriginal language of Melbourne : an investigation into the manuscripts of Rev. William Thomas (1793-1867)
This thesis examines and analyses the linguistic data in the papers of the Reverend William Thomas (1793-1867) in the Mitchell Library, Sydney (Thomas MS 214). This data was found to refer mainly to the Aboriginal language of the Melbourne area, described by Blake and Reid (1998) as the Central Victorian Language.word listswathawurrung, wathaurong, boonwurrung, boon wurrung, woiwurrung, thagungwurrung, djadjawurrung, tjapwurrung, wergaia, wemba baraba, wemba wemba, yeti, madhi madhi, ledji, wadi, nari nari, wimmera, ballarat, bacchus marsh, gippsland, mount gambier, wonnin, john green, george augustus robinson, r h mathews, luise hercus, linguistics, sociolinguistics -
Whitehorse Historical Society Inc.
Document, Belmont Orchard Estate, 1924
Brochure for auction of Belmont Orchard Estate, BlackburnBrochure for auction of Belmont Orchard Estate, Blackburn, (now Nunawading) 66 sites, 2 February 1924. Agents: Coghill & Haughton, Frank Fisher.Brochure for auction of Belmont Orchard Estate, Blackburnauctions, belmont orchard estate, patterson street, nunawading, central road, joyce street, lilian street, west avenue -
Whitehorse Historical Society Inc.
Legal record - Land Title, Central Road, 1975
Certificate of Title Vol. 4891 Fol. 97808 to William Elliott Wilson, 2 August 1924, with transfers to 5 May 1975.Certificate of Title Vol. 4891 Fol. 97808 to William Elliott Wilson, 2 August 1924, with transfers to 5 May 1975. With floor plan of house, and letter from National Library of Australia to Mrs L Tetlow re. John Flynn's ownership of the house.Certificate of Title Vol. 4891 Fol. 97808 to William Elliott Wilson, 2 August 1924, with transfers to 5 May 1975. central road blackburn, no. 93, flynn, john, rev. -
Ballarat Heritage Services
Photograph - Colour, Central Highlands Historical Association Expo, c 1996
Central Highlands Historical Association [CHHA] is a vital link in the regional history network being the umbrella association for over 30 historical societies, museums and family history organisations in the central highlands region of Victoria. CHHA continues to be an active and innovative organisation. It is represented at Local and State levels on matters of joint concern to its members. Aims and Purposes: Formed in 1984 the inaugural CHHA meeting was held on Saturday 23 June 1984, at the Ballarat City Library in Camp Street, Ballarat. A main focus of CHHA is to assist its member societies by developing and maintaining resources and information networks. To promote history and heritage in the region To encourage the preservation and conservation of heritage To promote and encourage easier public access to records through local museums and societies 6 coloured photographs postcard sizenonechha, central highlands historical association, dorothy wickham, clare gervasoni, raymond shuey