Showing 244 items
matching the bluff
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Bayside Gallery - Bayside City Council Art & Heritage Collection
Sculpture, Guy Boyd, The swimmer, 1988
bronzesculpture, swimmer, female, figure, guy boyd, public art, bayside, bayside city council, australian bicentennial project, guy martin à beckett boyd, bronze, city of sandringham, indigenous resource garden, bluff road, sandringham -
City of Kingston
Photograph - Digital image
Sepia toned digital image of Isabella Macdonald nee Munroe (1820-1906) Born in Skye, Scotland, Isabella arrived in Melbourne on the 'Glen Huntly' on April 17, 1840. She died at Cranbourne in 1906.Isabella Munroe travelled to Australia with her mother, travelling under her maiden name of Mary McKenzie, on the Glen Huntley, arriving in the Port Phillip District 17 April 1840. The Glen Huntley arrived flying the yellow quarantine flag indicating it was carrying passengers with infectious diseases. Of a passenger complement of 170 passengers, during the voyage 105 contracted various diseases including fever, scarlatina, measles, small pox, and chicken pox. Both Mary and Isabella were held for a period in the camp at Little Red Bluff or Red Cliffs, known today as Point Ormond. Isabella married Alexander Macdonald at Scots Church, Melbourne on 17 February 1841. After their marriage they started the sheep run named Stringy Bark, on the Yarra, near where Kew is today. Sepia toned digital image of Isabella Macdonald standing beside a table. -
Linton Mechanics Institute and Free Library Collection
Book - Novel, Cody, Stetson, Gunsmoke at Necktie by Stetson Cody, 1957
Necktie was a small town owned by a man who considered himself bigger than the law. He was wrong. Cactus Jim Clancy arrived on a secret mission and called his bluff.Hardcover book with a colour image of a man wearing a red shirt, holding a revolver riding a horse. A woman and a man in the background. The man wi aiming a rifle at the horse rider. 160 pages.fictionNecktie was a small town owned by a man who considered himself bigger than the law. He was wrong. Cactus Jim Clancy arrived on a secret mission and called his bluff.stetson cody, westerns, fiction -
Victorian Railway History Library
Book, Light Railway Research Society of Australia et al, Rocky Bluff to Denmark, 1978
The Light Railway Research Society of Australia's book on the Rocky Bluff to Denmark timber Tramway in Queensland.ill, maps, p.65.non-fictionThe Light Railway Research Society of Australia's book on the Rocky Bluff to Denmark timber Tramway in Queensland.light railways - australia - history, railroad operations - australia - history