Showing 4 items
matching improved harvester
-
Bendigo Historical Society Inc.
Document - BENDIGO FOUNDRIES
... Improved harvester... Target Stores Taylor Horsefield's engineering Works Improved ...Typed notes on Bendigo Foundaries. Notes mention some of the foundries that were in Bendigo, the work they did, where they were, and where some of their work can be seen.document, bendigo foundaries, horwood & sons, girton college, the victoria foundary, andrew harkness & co, palmer river diggings, george lansell, robert harkness, abraham roberts, united iron works, laanecoorie weir, bendigo railway station, coles new world supermarket, target stores, taylor horsefield's engineering works, improved harvester, hugh victor mckay, holland bros., state rivers & water supply, civic buildings, st aiden's, bendigo hospital, carter & brown, osborn bros, bendigo building society, a'becket chambers, fortuna, george lansell, lansell mine, army survey regiment, jorgenson's, st killian's fence, redpath & brown -
Lakes Entrance Regional Historical Society (operating as Lakes Entrance History Centre & Museum)
Book, Wheelhouse, Frances, Archaeological heritage impact assessment for the sand redistribution works at Lakes Entrance, Victoria, 1977
Years of painstaking research. The author tells how the Stump Jump Plough, the Stripper, the Header Harvester came to be invented. These many Australian inventions improved ploughing, seeding, shearing, wool-pressing. Also steam engines, tractors, four-To Dr. George Sutton who gave a lifetime of work to Australian agriculture.agriculture -
University of Melbourne, Burnley Campus Archives
Photograph - Colour print, The Herald, The Harvest of Oats is Finished at the Burnley School of Horticulture and Primary Agriculture, 1935-1990
Photograph made by A.P. Winzenried for, "Green Grows Our Gardern," p73Colour photograph. Copy of newspaper article, made by A.P. Winzenried. Caption reads, "The harvest of oats is finished at the Burnley School of Horticulture and Agriculture, but these cheery girl harvesters will not be able to stack the crop until the weather improves. There are about 20 girl students at Burnley this year learning chiefly horticulture, but they are taught to grow and reap crops for fodder as well." 9 female students standing in a line holding forks in a paddock.Handwritten underneath, "Barbara Betty Herald Dec 1st/45."a.p. winzenried, green grows our garden, harvest, oats, burnley school of horticulture and agriculture, female students at burnley, barbara betty, students working outside, forks -
University of Melbourne, Burnley Campus Archives
Book (Item), Let's improve our pastures; Productive pastures are gold
pastures, international harvester company of australia, grazing land, soil fertility