Showing 11 items
matching alexandra babies home
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Ballarat Heritage Services
Photograph - Image, Alexandra Babies' Home, Ballarat East
... Alexandra Babies' Home, Ballarat East...alexandra babies' home...The Alexandra Babies Home operated between 1909 and 1974....Black and white image of Alexandra Babies' Home. ... Office goldfields The Alexandra Babies Home operated between 1909 ...The Alexandra Babies Home operated between 1909 and 1974.Black and white image of Alexandra Babies' Home. alexandra babies' home, ballarat east, scott parade, architecture -
Ballarat Heritage Services
Photograph - Photograph - Colour, Ballarat Female Refuge - Alexandra Babies' Home, 2000
... Ballarat Female Refuge - Alexandra Babies' Home...Ballarat Female Refuge - Alexandra Babies' Home...The Alexandra Babies' Home was adjacent to the Ballarat... Office goldfields The Alexandra Babies' Home was adjacent ...The Alexandra Babies' Home was adjacent to the Ballarat Female Refuge in Scott's Parade, Ballarat East. The babies from the unmarried mothers at the Refuge remained at the Babies' Home until around the age of three years, when they were usually transferred to the Ballarat Orphanage in Stawell Street, Ballarat East. The Babies' Home was suddenly closed in 1973 under the Hamer Government. Postcard size coloured photographsballarat female refuge - alexandra babies' home, scott's parade, female refuge, ballarat babies' home, alexandra babies' home -
Ballarat Heritage Services
Photograph - Photograph - Colour, Dorothy Wickham, Sign at Alexandra Babies' Home, 2000
... Sign at Alexandra Babies' Home..., welfare, town and city mission, women, alexandra babies home, baby.... The plaque was on the wall of the Alexandra Babies' Home in Scott's.... The plaque was on the wall of the Alexandra Babies' Home in Scott's ...The plaque reads: This playground was equipped by a gracious donation from the Ballarat Travellers Club 1954. The plaque was on the wall of the Alexandra Babies' Home in Scott's Parade Ballarat. The home is adjacent to the building known as the Ballarat Female Refuge. Postcard size coloured photographellis, sarah ellis, ballarat female refuge, ballarat, welfare, town and city mission, women, alexandra babies home, baby, orphanage -
Federation University Historical Collection
Ticket, Ballarat Town and City Mission Annual Tea Ticket, 1946, 1946
... Alexandra Babies' Home...The Annual Tea for 1946 was in aid of the Alexandra Babies... The Annual Tea for 1946 was in aid of the Alexandra Babies' Home ...The Annual Tea for 1946 was in aid of the Alexandra Babies' Home, Ballarat .Orange printed card for the Ballarat Town and City Mission Annual Tea Ticket and Sunday School Anniversary Services. ballarat town and city mission, alexandra babies' home, w.j. wiley -
Brown Hill Progress Association Inc.
Photograph - Black and White, Sarah Jane Ellis
... Alexandra Babies' Home... 1941. The Alexandra Babies' Home was built adjacent... from 1884 until 1941. The Alexandra Babies' Home was built ...Sarah Jane Ellis was matron of the Ballarat Female Refuge, Scott's Parade, from 1906 until 31 May 1921. The Ballarat Female Refuge was established in Grant Street by a group of 26 women in 1867. Caselli designed the building in Scott's Parade and unmarried mothers were catered for in this residence from 1884 until 1941. The Alexandra Babies' Home was built adjacent to the Refuge and opened in 1909. The Babies' Home closed in 1973.A woman in white apron and cap. She is Sarah Jane Ellis was matron of the Ballarat Female Refuge (1906-1921)sarah ellis, ballarat female refuge, caselli, alexandra babies' home -
Ballarat Heritage Services
Photograph - Photograph - Colour, Dorothy Wickham, Ballarat Female Refuge laundry, 2000
... Alexandra Babies' Home... Mission Alexandra Babies' Home orphan Postcard size coloured ...Ballarat Female Refuge was established in 1867 by a group of 26 Ballarat ladies. The laundry was attached to the Refuge, supposedly to train the women there for domestic work, but by the size of the mangle, this was impossible. Unbearably hot in summer, and freezing cold in winter, the women had to work in the laundry while they were at the Refuge. It provided a means of supporting the Refuge financially.Postcard size coloured photographsballarat female refuge laundry, sarah ellis, ballarat female rufuge, ballarat town and city mission, alexandra babies' home, orphan -
Ballarat Heritage Services
Photograph, Dorothy Wickham, Swimming Pool, playground at Ballarat Female Refuge, 2000
... , welfare, town and city mission, women, alexandra babies home, baby..., alexandra babies home, baby, orphanage Ballarat female refuge ...This playground was made adjacent to the Ballarat Female Refuge for the use of babies and toddlers of the unmarried mothers at the Home.postcard size coloured photo of a baby / toddler swimming poolellis, sarah ellis, ballarat female refuge, ballarat, welfare, town and city mission, women, alexandra babies home, baby, orphanage, ballarat female refuge, ballarat, swimming pool, women -
Ballarat Heritage Services
Photograph - Photograph - Colour, Dorothy Wickham, Ballarat Female Refuge, 2000
... alexandra Babies Home... Femail Refuge welfare town and city mission alexandra Babies Home ...Ballarat Female Refuge was established in 1867 by a group of 26 Ballarat ladies. It was moved to the present site in Scott's Parade in 1884. It is now a private residence.Postcard size colour photgraphs showing the interior and exterior of the Ballarat Female Refuge. ballarat femail refuge, welfare, town and city mission, alexandra babies home, baby, orphanage, sarah ellis -
Ballarat Heritage Services
Photograph - Photograph - Black and White, Opening MIssion Rescue and Children's Home Canadian, 2000
... alexandra babies home... alexandra babies home babt orphanage Black & white photograph ...The Mission Rescue and Children's Home Canadian opened on Friday November 22, 1907. The formal opening at 3pm was conducted by the Mayor of Ballarat City Councillor F. Brawn with Hon David Ham to preside. The Hon Alfred Deakin gave an address. The Town Mission was established in Ballarat East by a group of Wesleyans. "Australian Silverpen" wrote an historical sketch about the Town Missioner, Martin Hosking. From miner's tent to mission pulpit : Martin Hosking, Ballarat's town missionary : an in memoriam sketch / by The Australian Silverpen. See https://trove.nla.gov.au/work/223253590?q=town+mission+hall+ballarat&c=book&versionId=244807517 See also Dorothy Wickham's Beyond the Wall: Ballarat Female RefugeBlack & white photograph of an advertisement for the opening of the Canadian Mission Rescue and Children's Home.canadian home'martin hosking, sarah ellis, ballarat female refuge, ballarat, welfare, town and city mission, women, alexandra babies home, babt, orphanage -
Kew Historical Society Inc
Work on paper, Madford: the property of A.S. King Esq, c.1875
The Victorian-era mansion Madford in Wellington Street had several incarnations before it was finally demolished. While the precise details of its original construction have not been discovered, we know that it was originally named Elm Lodge, and that the property was offered for sale in 1863 by Thomas Mitchell, of the firm Mitchell & Bonneau, wholesale ironmongers and merchants. The house was sold in about 1873 to William Siddeley (1827-1905), who was described on the occasion of his death as ‘the father of Australian shipping’. The next owner was Arthur Septimus King (1827- 99), who renamed the house Madford after his purchase of the property in 1875. It was A.S. King for whom this artwork was completed. Following King’s death in 1899, portions of the property were sold, including to the Borough of Kew in 1905, to form the Alexandra Gardens. Then, in 1920, the house and its remaining lands were sold to the Catholic Church who opened St Anthony’s Home for Children on the site in 1922. That building was promptly demolished, and the site redeveloped circa 1976.Gift of James Pearson, 2022This fine perspective drawing of the architectural elements of Madford [formerly Elm Lodge, later St Anthony's Home for Babies] is contrasted with the freer addition in watercolour of the layout and plants of the garden facing Wellington Street. The view selected is the south-facing main facade and the west facing side. After A.S. King purchased the house in 1875, it was extended with new wings at the rear to accommodate his large family. There is no indication of these extensions in the painting so its creation must predate the renovations, and probably depicts the original building on the site."MADFORD / The Property of A. S. KING Esq"elm lodge, madford, st anthony's home for babies, houses -- wellington street -- kew (vic.), thomas mitchell, william siddeley, arthur septimus king -
Kew Historical Society Inc
Photograph, Madford, Wellington Street, circa 1965, c. 1965
This work forms part of the collection assembled by the historian Dorothy Rogers, that was donated to the Kew Historical Society by her son John Rogers in 2015. The manuscripts, photographs, maps, and documents were sourced by her from both family and local collections or produced as references for her print publications. Many were directly used by Rogers in writing ‘Lovely Old Homes of Kew’ (1961) and 'A History of Kew' (1973), or the numerous articles on local history that she produced for suburban newspapers. Most of the photographs in the collection include detailed annotations in her hand. The Rogers Collection provides a comprehensive insight into the working habits of a historian in the 1960s and 1970s. Together it forms the largest privately-donated collection within the archives of the Kew Historical Society.‘Elm Lodge’ had a frontage to Wellington Street and extended to Cotham Road. It was renamed ‘Madford’ in 1874, after its purchase by the pastoralist Arthur Septimus King, the grandson of Philip Gidley King, third Governor of New South Wales. The Alexandra Gardens were developed on the northern section of Madford after the sale of the land to the Borough of Kew in 1905. King’s house, and the remaining garden, was sold to the Catholic Church in 1920, and subsequently developed into ‘St Anthony’s Home for Babies’ in 1922. The organisation relocated to Footscray in 1975, and the building demolished."Madford (formerly Elm Lodge) in Wellington Street Kew during the period when it was St. Anthony's Home for babies (now demolished). From the 1860s it had been the home of the King family. Harold Septimus King was one of the notable residents of Kew."madford, elm lodge, wellington street (kew), dorothy rogers