Showing 4 items matching "bayview campus"
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Williamstown High SchoolPlans: Bayview Campus 1995
... Plans: Bayview Campus 1995...Architect drawings and correspondence re: new building at Bayview Campus. Consists of 80+ A3 pages of architects drawings, notes and letters....Plans: Bayview Campus 1995 ...Architect drawings and correspondence re: new building at Bayview Campus. Consists of 80+ A3 pages of architects drawings, notes and letters.williamstown high school, 1995, architect's drawings -
Williamstown High SchoolBayview Campus 2005
... Bayview Campus 2005......Bayview Campus...Bayview Campus 2005 ...One compact disk containing 142 photographs of Williamstown High School in 2005, before the rebuild.williamstown high school, 2005, bayview campus -
Williamstown High SchoolStaff 2014 - Bayview
... Colour photograph and legend of Williamstown High School staff of 2014, Bayview Campus....Williamstown High School 76 Pasco St Williamstown melbourne williamstown high school Staff Colour photograph and legend of Williamstown High School staff of 2014, Bayview Campus. Staff 2014 - Bayview ...Colour photograph and legend of Williamstown High School staff of 2014, Bayview Campus.williamstown high school, staff -
Mentone Grammar SchoolMemorial Stone from Hellfire Pass, Thailand
... Though he did not work on the railway, he died through malnutrition and forced labour in Ambon, 1945 and is remembered in our Avenue of Honour (Bayview Campus) ...Though he did not work on the railway, he died through malnutrition and forced labour in Ambon, 1945 and is remembered in our Avenue of Honour (Bayview Campus) Memorial Stone from Hellfire Pass, Thailand ...The cased Memorial Stone originates from Hellfire Pass, the name of a remote railway cutting on the former Burma (“Death”) Railway, in Thailand. It was a particularly difficult section of the line, which was built without appropriate tools, using the forced labour of Australian, and other allied Prisoners of War. Many men died during the building of the railway, 69 on the Hellfire Pass alone. Archibald Fredrick Roberts, one of the original 1923 schoolboys of Mentone Grammar, was taken prisoner by Japanese forces in 1942. Though he did not work on the railway, he died through malnutrition and forced labour in Ambon, 1945 and is remembered in our Avenue of Honour (Bayview Campus)
