Showing 4 items
matching dorothy kirk
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Linton and District Historical Society Inc
Photograph, Marjorie Kirk and Alex McBeath, 1939, 1939
... Dorothy Kirk.... Attendants: Dorothy Dench (nee Kirk) and Armstrong Kerr..... Attendants: Dorothy Dench (nee Kirk) and Armstrong Kerr. Marjorie ...Wedding photograph of Marjorie Kirk and Alex McBeath, 1939. Attendants: Dorothy Dench (nee Kirk) and Armstrong Kerr.Sepia studio photo of wedding group. Photograph mounted in brown folder.marjorie kirk, alex mcbeath, armstrong kerr, dorothy dench, dorothy kirk, weddings -
Glen Eira Historical Society
Book - The Kirk Family
... Kirk Dorothy... Kirk Thomas Kirk Anna Gill Anna Marie Murrumbeena Kirk Dorothy ...A seventy-nine page book by Brian Kirk, written about his family and their origins on arriving in Australia about 1791. It was donated by M. Dunbar on behalf of Brian Kirk, The Kirk Family, on 25/05/2005. Murrumbeena is first mentioned page 36 as the home of Thomas and Anna Kirk.kirk brian, kirk thomas, kirk anna, gill anna marie, murrumbeena, kirk dorothy, kirk marjorie, kirk thomas edward, cusworth linda jean, carlyon street, ormond, clerk, estate agent, neerim road, kirk jenny, hammand olsen real estate agency, wahroonga road, murrumbeena presbyterian tennis club, murrumbeena garden club, murrumbeena cricket club, murrumbeena park bowling club, blackwood street, home units, carnegie station, verdew hospital, hospitals, hughesdale, murrumbeena primary school, primary schools, kirk margaret jean, driver edyth, omama road, kirk gregory brian, kirk lindal may, kirk heather lee, shooting, medals, korowa girls’ school, kirk jennifer, malvern caulfield real estate institute -
Ballarat Heritage Services
Photograph - Digital Photograph, Dorothy Wickham, Memorial board, Greyfriars Kirkyard, c2017
Greyfriars Kirkyard is the graveyard surrounding Greyfriars Kirk in Edinburgh, Scotland.Memorial board, Greyfriars CemeteryList of names of important people buried at Greyfriars Cemetery.memorial board, greyfriars cemetery -
Ballarat Heritage Services
Digital Photograph, Dorothy Wickham, Interior, St Giles Cathedral, Edinburgh, Scotland, 10/2016
St Giles, also known as the High Kirk of Edinburgh is the principal place of worship for the Church of Scotland. It is very interesting for the mason's marks found on its many stone columns inside the church, and for its connections to the graveyard outside. According to wikipedia, "There is record evidence of a church here, very likely on the present site, in the year 854. In 1120 King Alexander I, rebuilt the church in the Norman style. Of this building characteristic features survived until 1798. During the fourteenth century, Edinburgh was captured and plundered by the English under Edward II. and Edward III., and twice St Giles was laid waste. After restoration, the church was more thoroughly ruined at the Burnt Candlemas in 1387, when Richard II. sacked the city. The western part of the fabric was soon in use again ; but the restoration of the choir and transepts, which were much enlarged, lasted on into the sixteenth century. In 1467 the city endowed St Giles as a collegiate church. It now became usual to speak of the nave, where the stonework was ancient, as the Old Kirk, while the eastern part of the building was called the New Kirk. When the movement for reform drew large crowds to St Giles, separate services began to be regularly held in the Old and New Kirks. Soon this was not enough, and the great church was partitioned off into smaller sections. In 1571 St Giles was seized by Kirkcaldie of Grange, and held by him as a stronghold for Queen Mary. This resulted in serious damage to the structure.Two colour photographs of the interior if St Giles Cathedral, Edinburgh, Scotlandst giles cathedral, architecture, mason's marks, stonemasons, church of scotland