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Queenscliffe Maritime Museum
Book, Borough of Queenscliffe 150th Anniversary Community Capsule 4 May 2013, 2013
... borough of queenscliff... historical significance borough of queenscliff Borough ...Photos of items placed in the 150th anniversary time capsule which is to be opened in 2063Book commemorating the 150th anniversary time capsule containing items of local historical significanceBound Book containing local history artefactsBorough of Queenscliffe 150th Anniversary Community Capsule 4 May 2013borough of queenscliff -
Bendigo Historical Society Inc.
Book - QUEENSCLIFFE 1838 - 2000, 2000
Queenscliffe 1838 - 2000 Point Lonsdale and Queenscliff a Souvenir Album of Historic Photographs, second edition. 72 pages published by Borough of Queenscliffe with photographs, some colour, illustrations and maps.Ian Hawthornehistory, queenscliff, history - point lonsdale & queenscliff, maritime- sailing ships - lighthouses, grand hotels. -
Queenscliffe Maritime Museum
Letter - Letter ex Borough of Queenscliffe re sea rescue commendation to Queenscliff Lifeboat Crew 4-12-1961, Letter of commendation, 4-12-1961
Commendation to Queenscliff Lifeboat Crew 1961Queenscliff Lifeboat Crew Letter ex Borough of Queenscliffe re sea rescue commendation to Queenscliff Lifeboat Crew 4-12-1961Reverse " NIL "lifeboat resue -
Queenscliffe Maritime Museum
Letter - Letter ex Borough of Queenscliffe re WANGARA rescue 4 Dec 1961, Letter of commendation, 4-12-1961
Commendation to Queenscliff Lifeboat Crew re WANGARA 1961Queenscliff Lifeboat Crew Letter ex Borough of Queenscliffe re WANGARA rescue 4 Dec 1961Reverse " NIL "lifeboat resue -
Queenscliffe Maritime Museum
Functional object - Bathing Box No. 24, unknown - possibly 1935
Borough of Queenscliffe Bathing Boxes had to be registered to a particular rateable property. Bathing Box No. 24 belonged to a property in Simpson Street, Point Lonsdale The Bathing Boxes at Point Lonsdale were loaded onto trolleys and taken back to the property during winter so they were not destroyed by the wild weather. Eventually they became garden sheds in the back yards of residencies.Bathing Box No. 24 is one of a very few still remaining due to recent home extensions.Weatherboard with Galvanised Iron Roof with Wooden Slatted Air Vent. -
Queenscliffe Maritime Museum
Photograph - Queenscliff Lifeboat under sail, 06 March 1926
The Lifeboat Queenscliffe was built in Adelaide and commenced service at Queenscliff in 1926. She was taken out of service in 1976 by the Marine Board of Victoria and subsequently offered to the Borough of Queenscliffe for care and display. The Lifeboat is listed on the Australian Register of Historic Vessels (ARHV). To view the classification follow the link to the Queenscliffe page on the ARHV site. During her 50 years of service the Queenscliffe attended many calls for assistance both inside and outside the Heads. Some of the vessels and calls for help the lifeboat attended were: 1960 - Army Commandos lost in the Rip 1967 - The search for the late Prime Minister Harold Holt 1974 - The last attendance to a vessel was to the Brisbane Trader which was on fire The shed which housed the lifeboat is located on the Queenscliff 'New' or 'Steamer' Pier (built in 1884). This shed includes the internal section of the slipway used to launch and retrieve the lifeboat. The external slipway and some other structures associated with the lifeboat shed have been removed. Originally fitted with two masts, the stern mast being removed in the 1960's. A retractable centre plate was used when under sail. Delivered with an 80 hp Wayburn petrol motor which was later replaced by a 72 hp Gardiner diesel. Top speed of 7.5 knots and a range of 350 miles.Photograph of lifeboat Queenscliff at sea under sailQueenscliffelifeboat, a. macfarlane & sons -
Queenscliffe Maritime Museum
Vehicle - Lifeboat, A McFarlane and Sons, Lifeboat Queenscliffe, 1926
QUEENSCLIFFE was built in 1926 to a Royal National Lifeboat Institution (RNLI) design called the Watson Class. The double-diagonal planked vessel was built by A McFarlane and Sons in Port Adelaide SA, commissioned on the 6th of March 1926, and then officially named and launched on the 9th of April 1926. The original Wayburn petrol engine was replaced with a Gardner diesel. This gave QUEENSCLIFFE a top speed of 7.5 knots with a range of 350 miles. The equipment carried aboard included a VHF Radio Telephone, HF radio transceiver, visual signals, life rafts, hand rocket gun, flare gun, generator, search light and first aid supplies. In the tradition of many shore based lifeboats, QUEENSCLIFFE had its own shed and slipway and was always ready for launching when required to go to sea in response to an emergency call. Its area of operation included 'the Rip' at Port Phillip Heads and the Bass Strait seas immediately offshore. She was taken out of service in 1976 by the Marine Board of Victoria and subsequently offered to the Borough of Queenscliffe for care and display. The Lifeboat is listed on the Australian Register of Historic Vessels (ARHV). During her 50 years of service the Queenscliffe attended many calls for assistance both inside and outside the Heads. Some of the vessels and calls for help the lifeboat attended were: 1960 - Army Commandos lost in the Rip 1967 - The search for the late Prime Minister Harold Holt 1974 - The last attendance to a vessel was to the Brisbane Trader which was on fire The shed which housed the lifeboat is located on the Queenscliff 'New' or 'Steamer' Pier (built in 1884). This shed includes the internal section of the slipway used to launch and retrieve the lifeboat. The external slipway and some other structures associated with the lifeboat shed have been removed. Originally fitted with two masts, the stern mast being removed in the 1960's. A retractable centre plate was used when under sail. Delivered with an 80 hp Wayburn petrol motor which was later replaced by a 72 hp Gardiner diesel. Top speed of 7.5 knots and a range of 350 miles.QUEENSCLIFFE is a wooden lifeboat built in 1926 in South Australia. It has a long association with the Victorian port of Queenscliff. It was manned voluntarily by their local fishermen and is therefore closely attached to families of the Queenscliff community. It is a rare surviving example of the coastal shore-based lifeboats that were based around the Australian coastline.The lifeboat 'Queenscliffe' a Watson Class LifeboatQueenscliffelifeboat, rescue, watson class boat -
Queenscliffe Maritime Museum
Letter 9'4'1979 & newspaper clippings re QMM, Borough of Q'cliffe Ltr to Point Lonsdale Civic Association, dated 9/4/1979, 1980 onwards
Provision of marine life saving services displayProtest letter about the provision marine life saving services and various newspaper reportsProtest letter re the provision of life saving services and several newspaper clippings about QMM & its displaysReverse - " N/A "historical references -
Queenscliffe Maritime Museum
Photograph - Lifeboat 'Queenscliffe' 1970, 1970
The Lifeboat Queenscliffe was built in Adelaide and commenced service at Queenscliff in 1926. She was taken out of service in 1976 by the Marine Board of Victoria and subsequently offered to the Borough of Queenscliffe for care and display.A framed monochrome photograph of the lifeboat 'Queenscliffe' underway at sea with crew members on board.lifeboat, 'queenscliffe' -
Queenscliffe Maritime Museum
Photograph - Queenscliff lifeboat, Ben Blair, Lifeboat 'Queencliffe' motoring off Shortlands Bluff 1963, 1997
The Lifeboat Queenscliffe was built in Adelaide and commenced service at Queenscliff in 1926. She was taken out of service in 1976 by the Marine Board of Victoria and subsequently offered to the Borough of Queenscliffe for care and display.Ben BlairA framed painting of the lifeboat 'Queenscliffe' motoring off Shortlands Bluff in 1963.lifeboat 'queenscliffe', shortlands bluff, ben blair