Showing 966 items matching bushfires
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Pyrenees Shire Council
Sculpture, Murray Walker, After the Bushfires Pyrenees by Murray Walker, 2020
... After the Bushfires Pyrenees by Murray Walker ...Bronze Sculpture -
Ringwood and District Historical Society
Photograph, After the 1939 Bushfires at Warranwood
... After the 1939 Bushfires at Warranwood ...Digital photograph -
Darebin Art Collection
Painting - Deanne Gilson, Deanne Gilson, Post Preston, After the Bushfires, Our Country, Plants and Animals Need Healing, 2021
... Post Preston, After the Bushfires, Our Country, Plants and ...Deanne Gilson is a Proud Wadawurrung woman, emerging Elder, cultural educator and award-winning visual artist from Ballarat, Victoria. Deanne works primarily in painting, fabric/textile design, clay installation and digital imagery. She explores the colonial disruption of her Wadawurrung family, looking at how the male and female gaze has and still does impact her matriarchal women. With an art practice that looks at the objectified, Deanne has found ways to cope with trans-generational trauma through art. Deanne is the first Wadawurrung artist since colonisation to revive lost cultural knowledge found specifically on her ancestral artefacts, consisting of four marks that define her family. Along with re-telling her mother’s Creation Story and the stories based on today’s lived experiences concerned with the physical and spiritual experience. Deanne has been developing her multidisciplinary practice in regional Victoria for almost 35 years and has shown across the National Gallery Victoria and the Koorie Heritage Trust. Post Preston, After the Bushfires, Our Country, Plants and Animals Need Healing is winning work in the 2021 Koorie Art Show. -
Whittlesea Historical Society Inc.
Photograph - Brown Album, Result of bushfire Britannia Creek 1926, 1926
Digital image from Brown Album, p.1. Inscribed under photograph: "Result of bushfire Britannia Creek 1926". Photographs in the Brown Album are of groups of family members and friends located in the areas of Whittlesea, Glenvale, Preston, Northcote, Jacks' Creek, Toorourrong Reservoir, Strathbogie, Mornington, Eltham, Heidelberg, 1926 Bushfires, Britannia Creek, WW1 Service men and camp, WW1 plane, groups of children and family homes they lived in.Digital JPG file Scan of black and white photo from Brown AlbumResult of bushfire Britannia Creek 1926school fire, britannia creek, bushfire, 1926, brown album -
Whitehorse Historical Society Inc.
Document, Bushland Reserves Fire Management Strategy, 2010
... Bushfires ...City of Whitehorse Strategy to assess the risk of bushfire and consider any necessary responses, Oct 2010.City of Whitehorse Strategy to assess the risk of bushfire and consider any necessary responses, Oct 2010.City of Whitehorse Strategy to assess the risk of bushfire and consider any necessary responses, Oct 2010.bushfires, bushland -
Forests Commission Retired Personnel Association (FCRPA)
Bushfire Awareness - gallows sign
Bushfire awareness gallows signs were common features during the summer fire season and hung outside both FCV offices and on major roadways This large metal sign has different text on each side and the text and lettering is simple enough to be read from a moving vehicleBushfire Awareness - gallows signbushfire -
Ballarat Heritage Services
Booklet - Program, Art remEMBERS Supporting the Victorian Bushfire Appeal, 15 March 2009
A concert with all proceeds going to the Victorian Bushfire Appeal. The bushfires in Victoria during 2009 were catastophic. The performers and organisers gave their time free of charge for this concert that was held at WCPA, Wendouree.12 page booklet with maroon cover with white text.Wendouree Centre for Performing Arts Sunday the 15th of March 2.30pm ART remEMBERS Supporting the Victorian Bushfire Appeal All proceeds going to the Victorian Bushfire Appealconcert, victorian bushfire appeal, wcpa, jacqueline dark, 2009, jason wasley, simon maiden, vox, peter tulloch, university of ballarat, entertainers -
Whittlesea Historical Society Inc.
Photograph - Brown Album, The boys after the bushfire Britannia Creek 1926, 1926
Digital image from Brown Album, p.2. Inscribed under photograph: "The boys after the bushfire Britannia Creek 1926". Photographs in the Brown Album are of groups of family members and friends located in the areas of Whittlesea, Glenvale, Preston, Northcote, Jacks' Creek, Toorourrong Reservoir, Strathbogie, Mornington, Eltham, Heidelberg, 1926 Bushfires, Britannia Creek, WW1 Service men and camp, WW1 plane, groups of children and family homes they lived in.Digital JPG file Scan of black and white photo from Brown AlbumThe boys after the bushfire Britannia Creek 1926school fire, britannia creek, bushfire, 1926, brown album -
Forests Commission Retired Personnel Association (FCRPA)
Bushfire awareness sign, Protect your forests from fire, 1953
Bushfire Prevention Week was initiated by the Forests Commission in 1930. Victoria’s State Governor, Lord Somers, the Lord Mayor of Melbourne, Sir Harold Luxton and the newly appointed Minister for Forests, William Beckett launched the innovative campaign with great flourish to 250 invited guests at Melbourne’s opulent Town Hall on Monday 13 January 1930. Special church sermons had been held previously on Sunday. The packed program of gala events included lavish luncheon talks at city clubs, scholarly lectures broadcast on the wireless, together with daily articles in the Melbourne and country press about the pressing need for fire prevention. The slogan for the ground-breaking campaign was… Prevent Bush Fires – It Pays… The Shell Petrol Company of Australia supplied 15000 windshield stickers, the British Australasian Tobacco Company donated a large supply of stamp stickers, while many other companies drew attention to the campaign in their newspaper advertisements. The Victorian Railways and many city firms displayed special fire posters, while Bryant and May posted messages on their limited-edition matchbox covers which are now highly prized by phillumenists (i.e. matchbox collectors). The Postmaster General's Department franked postage stamps and letters with special bushfire slogans. While plainclothes police were secretly deployed to the bush to arrest potential arsonists. Canvas and enamel fire prevention signs were erected on most roads leading to forest areas. Letters to the Editor later appeared in many city and country newspapers extolling the virtues of Bushfire Prevention Week and urging for its continuation as an annual event. Although a new idea for Australia, the Canadian Forest Service had been running a similar program for a few years. The Forests Commission in its 1929-30 Annual Report, under the title of "Propaganda", noted with some glee… "One of the most gratifying features of the ''Week" was its low cost to the Government, the major part of the publicity material being donated by private firms." And so for the next 50 years until the 1980s, Bushfire Prevention Week continued unabated with the Forests Commission producing a series of coloured “Magic Lantern” slides which were manufactured by Alex Gunn and Sons in Collins Street Melbourne for screening at Val Morgan cinemas. The slides famously introduced the menacing character, Willy Wildfire, warning motorists to be careful with matches. Now known as Fire Action Week, it remains a key event in the annual calendar for both DEECA and the CFA and is still going strong... These canvas fire awareness signs were used right throughout the period of the Forests Commission until the mid 1980sBushfire awareness signProtect your forests from firebushfire -
Forests Commission Retired Personnel Association (FCRPA)
Bushfire awareness sign, Camp Fires, 1962
Bushfire Prevention Week was initiated by the Forests Commission in 1930. Victoria’s State Governor, Lord Somers, the Lord Mayor of Melbourne, Sir Harold Luxton and the newly appointed Minister for Forests, William Beckett launched the innovative campaign with great flourish to 250 invited guests at Melbourne’s opulent Town Hall on Monday 13 January 1930. Special church sermons had been held previously on Sunday. The packed program of gala events included lavish luncheon talks at city clubs, scholarly lectures broadcast on the wireless, together with daily articles in the Melbourne and country press about the pressing need for fire prevention. The slogan for the ground-breaking campaign was… Prevent Bush Fires – It Pays… The Shell Petrol Company of Australia supplied 15000 windshield stickers, the British Australasian Tobacco Company donated a large supply of stamp stickers, while many other companies drew attention to the campaign in their newspaper advertisements. The Victorian Railways and many city firms displayed special fire posters, while Bryant and May posted messages on their limited-edition matchbox covers which are now highly prized by phillumenists (i.e. matchbox collectors). The Postmaster General's Department franked postage stamps and letters with special bushfire slogans. While plainclothes police were secretly deployed to the bush to arrest potential arsonists. Canvas and enamel fire prevention signs were erected on most roads leading to forest areas. Letters to the Editor later appeared in many city and country newspapers extolling the virtues of Bushfire Prevention Week and urging for its continuation as an annual event. Although a new idea for Australia, the Canadian Forest Service had been running a similar program for a few years. The Forests Commission in its 1929-30 Annual Report, under the title of "Propaganda", noted with some glee… "One of the most gratifying features of the ''Week" was its low cost to the Government, the major part of the publicity material being donated by private firms." And so for the next 50 years until the 1980s, Bushfire Prevention Week continued unabated with the Forests Commission producing a series of coloured “Magic Lantern” slides which were manufactured by Alex Gunn and Sons in Collins Street Melbourne for screening at Val Morgan cinemas. The slides famously introduced the menacing character, Willy Wildfire, warning motorists to be careful with matches. Now known as Fire Action Week, it remains a key event in the annual calendar for both DEECA and the CFA and is still going strong... These canvas fire awareness signs were used right throughout the period of the Forests Commission until the mid 1980sBushfire awareness signbushfire -
Clunes Museum
DIARY, CIRCA 1943
DIARY LISTING THE VICTIMS OF THE BUSHFIRE IN 1943 BY AN OFFICER OF THE RATIONING DEPT.NOTES ON VISIT TO CLUNES BY AN OFFICER OF THE RATIONING DEPT. REFERRING TO VISIT TO CLUNES AS A RESULT OF 1943 BUSHFIRE.RECEIVED FROM MR. JOHN MCNAUGHTON 60 COTTRELL ST WERRIBEE. VIC. 3030. 1992local history, documents, bushfire 1943 -
Victorian Interpretive Projects Inc.
Photograph - Digital, Andrew Matheson, Bushfire on Mount Warrenheip, 2013, 15/05/2013
A bushfire broke out on Mount Warrenheip in May 2013.Eight photographs of Mount Warrenheip, near Ballarat, with clouds of smoke caused by a bushfire. The photos were taken from Bungaree.warrenheip, fire, bushfire, smoke -
Ballarat Heritage Services
Photograph - Colour, Clare Gervasoni, Crossways Country Inn, Marysville, 2012
Crossways was built in the early 1920s. it was one of only a few Marysville buildings to survive the 2009 bushfires. Armed with only a bucket, co-owner Greg Cherry miraculously saved the building over a 12 hour ordeal. Crossways later provided a much needed refuge for the Marysville community and firefighters in the aftermath of the fires. A number of colour photographs of Crossways after the 'Black Staturday' bushfire.greg cherry, crossways county inn marysville, bushfire, black saturday -
Forests Commission Retired Personnel Association (FCRPA)
Fire Beater - Leather, c 1940s
Bushfire perimeter rather than bushfire area is the main control problem for firefighters on the ground. A conundrum rapidly compounded by spot fires. A small 5 ha fire can be nearly 1 km around the perimeter. That's a long way to build a control line by hand in rough bush. Dry firefighting techniques by hand were mostly confined to “knocking down” or “beating out” the flames, as well as "digging out". Digging or raking a “mineral earth” trail down to bare dirt proved most effective in forest fuels which, unlike grass, tend to retain heat and smoulder. Early tools were whatever happened to be close at hand. They were simple and primitive and included shovels, slashers, axes, hoes, beaters and rakes. A cut branch to beat the flames was often the only thing available. Farming and logging tools, developed over centuries of manual labour, and readily available at local hardware stores came into use, but little thought was given to size, weight, and balance. This leather beater was based on a century-old stockman's design which used green cow hide leather lashed to a broom handle. It's recommend that users lift no more than above knee height to conserve energy and let the beater to the work. For years foresters experimented with combination tools. In about 1952 fire beaters and other implements were being replaced with Rakuts and later RakehoesEarly firefighting toolBushfire beater - Leather with wooden handlebushfire -
Forests Commission Retired Personnel Association (FCRPA)
Fire Beater - Canvas, c 1930s
Bushfire perimeter rather than bushfire area is the main control problem for firefighters on the ground. A conundrum rapidly compounded by spot fires. A small 5 ha fire can be nearly 1 km around the perimeter. That's a long way to build a control line by hand in rough bush. Dry firefighting techniques by hand were mostly confined to “knocking down” or “beating out” the flames, as well as "digging out". Digging or raking a “mineral earth” trail down to bare dirt proved most effective in forest fuels which, unlike grass, tend to retain heat and smoulder. Early tools were whatever happened to be close at hand. They were simple and primitive and included shovels, slashers, axes, hoes, beaters and rakes. A cut branch to beat the flames was often the only thing available. Farming and logging tools, developed over centuries of manual labour, and readily available at local hardware stores came into use, but little thought was given to size, weight, and balance. This canvas hose beater was based on a century-old design which used lengths of canvas fire hose rivetted together and lashed with wire to a broom handle. The hose was be soaked in water to improve its effectiveness. If the flames were more than a metre or so the user was generally not able to get close enough to extinguish the fire It's recommend that users lift no more than above knee height to conserve energy and let the beater to the work. For years foresters experimented with combination tools. In about 1952 fire beaters and other implements were being replaced with Rakuts and later RakehoesEarly firefighting toolBushfire beater - Canvas with wooden handleR P PWD (Public Works Department) The handle has painted markings which indicate which FCV District it belonged to.bushfire -
Southern Sherbrooke Historical Society Inc.
Book - Local History, Sassafras-Ferny Creek Fire Brigade, Hills Of Fire, 1992
... bushfires ...pp viii, 76; 6 appendices & bibliography, footnotes, 1 map, photographs. A history of bushfires in the Dandenong Ranges and the Sassafras-Ferny Creek CFA Brigade.sassafras-ferny creek fire brigade, dandenong ranges, bushfires -
Whitehorse Historical Society Inc.
Photograph, Bushfire in Heatherdale
... bushfires ...Coloured photo of Bushfire in Heatherdale, 1962. This fire came through from Kinglake, to Warrandyte, to Mitcham, crossing Whitehorse Road and burnt out at Canterbury Road.bushfires, heatherdale, mitcham -
The WAMA Project : The National Centre for Environmental Art
Work on paper, Roger Edwards, On the Ash Bed, 2020
The irresistible appeal of our unique Terrestrial orchids will often find native plant enthusiasts down on hands and knees following a hot summer bushfire surveying the forest floor where flowering colonies may emerge stimulated by the ‘Ash Bed’ effect and the symbiotic relationship with a particular soil Hyphae. Many like the small Hare orchid and Red Beaks depicted in this work may not be seen flowering again on the site until the next fire event.This work is one of a number painted by the artist after bushfires in the Grampians. Roger Edwards was a Forest Officer, posted to Cavendish, in SW corner of the Grampians, in 1975. He retired in 2018, enabling him to devote more time to his art.Environment, Wildflowers, Landscape, Botanic artGift of Rob Youl to commemorate artist, Betty Conabere.This painting shows orchids and other native plants regrowing densely in an ashbed after a Grampians bushfire. It is an aesthetic depiction of important ecological processes. wildflowers, lanscape, orchids, bushfire, grampians, environment, recovery after fire, botanic art -
The WAMA Project : The National Centre for Environmental Art
Painting, Roger Edwards, A Bushfire Response, 2016
Since moving on from tonal pen and pencil work many years ago watercolour has been my medium preference for painting Flora and Fauna. Although better known for my Australian bird studies I do like to portray remnant grassland featuring the terrestrial orchids that occur there. As a Forest Officer for the past 40 odd years working in and around the Grampians area I have been blessed with the opportunity to observe and study much of the wildlife of the area. If you can imagine a peregrine falcon swooping down from a ledge, echidna playing trains, goanna striding to a tree or a sittella placing shingles on the nest This has been much of my life as a forester and artist. This work is one of a number painted by the artist after bushfires in the Grampians. Roger Edwards was a Forest Officer, posted to Cavendish, in SW corner of the Grampians, in 1975. In the 1980s he photographed details of the wildflowers and their recovery after fire. He retired in 2018, enabling him to devote more time to his art.Environment, Wildflowers, Landscape, Botanic artGift of Rob Youl to commemorate artist, Betty Conabere.This painting shows orchids and other native plants regrowing after Grampians bushfire. It is an aesthetic depiction of important ecological processes. wildflowers, lanscape, orchids, bushfire, grampians, environment, recovery after fire, botanic art -
Whitehorse Historical Society Inc.
Document, Charles Edgerton, 1851 - 1908
Life history of Charles Edgerton.Life history of Charles Edgerton who purchased land in Edgerton Road, Mitcham from Carl Benno Schwerkolt in 1892 and an account of the 1905 bushfire in the area. Prepared by Anne Jones.Life history of Charles Edgerton.edgerton, charles, schwerkolt, carl benno, edgerton road, mitcham, jones, anne -
Forests Commission Retired Personnel Association (FCRPA)
Burnt cash box from FCV Macedon Office after 1983 Ash Wednesday Bushfires
Linked to the 1983 Ash Wednesday BushfiresSmall metal lockable cash box with handle and tray insert This item was burnt in the 1983 Ash Wednesday bushfires which destroyed the FCV Office and nursery It was recovered from ashes of the building It was in the office safe and contained charred bank notes and a chequebushfire -
Victorian Interpretive Projects Inc.
Photograph - Colour, Marysville after Black Saturday
In February 2009 bushfires devastated Marysville, resulting in in nation-wide support enabling a rebuilding programme. A number of colour photographs documenting the remarkable recovery of Marysville after the 2009 Black Saturday Bushfires. Badly burnt trees reshoot, houses are rebuilt, but black scars remain on hillsides where the heat was at its hotest.marysville, bushfire, regrowth -
Greensborough Historical Society
Slide - Photograph, John Ramsdale, Post bushfire regrowth, Upper Plenty: Slide 31, 1990s
... bushfires ...Photograph shows a bush scene with trees that are regenerating after a bushfire in the Upper Plenty area.Part of the John Ramsdale collection of slides and audio visual material.Colour photograph scanned from slide.No maker's marks. Caption on slide "T & Bs"bushfires, upper plenty, vegetation -
Greensborough Historical Society
Newspaper Clipping, Diamond Valley Leader, Firefighting aircraft boost, 13/09/2017
... bushfires ...The largest ever firefighting aircraft fleet will be rolled out in Victoria, ahead of growing bushfire warnings.News article 1 page, black text.firefighting, aircraft, bushfires, bushfire management -
Greensborough Historical Society
Newspaper Clipping, Diamond Valley Leader, Bushfire overlay expands, 18/10/2017
... bushfires ...Thousands of properties in Nillumbik and Banyule face tougher planning controls under changes to bushfire management overlay. News article 1 page, black text.nillumbik, banyule, bushfire management, bushfires -
Southern Sherbrooke Historical Society Inc.
Information folder - Fires 2003, 2003
... bushfires ...Folder containing information pertaining to the 2003 Victorian, NSW & ACT bushfires. Contents: -3 photos of Omeo after the fires, by Dulcie Strahan -DSE/DPI Fire Update report dated 21st February -2 photos of fires in North-east Victoria by Andrew Aubert -3 Fire Overview maps, dated 24 January, 27 January (2 copies) and 16 February -leaflet, "Upper Murray Fires", community update, dated 12 January -copy of fire overview map, dated 16 February, with annotations -weather page, Border Mail, 8 Januarybushfires -
Eltham District Historical Society Inc
Photograph, Thomson's Hotel, Kinglake, after bush fire, 25 February, 1926
... bushfires ...Remains of Thomson's Hotel, Kinglake following a bushfire on 25 February 1926.This photo forms part of a collection of photographs gathered by the Shire of Eltham for their centenary project book,"Pioneers and Painters: 100 years of the Shire of Eltham" by Alan Marshall (1971). The collection of over 500 images is held in partnership between Eltham District Historical Society and Yarra Plenty Regional Library (Eltham Library) and is now formally known as 'The Shire of Eltham Pioneers Photograph Collection.' It is significant in being the first community sourced collection representing the places and people of the Shire's first one hundred years.Digital imagesepp, shire of eltham pioneers photograph collection, kinglake, thomson's hotel, bushfires -
Greensborough Historical Society
Booklet, Parks Victoria et al, Plenty Gorge Park fire recovery, 15/04/2020
... bushfires ...Community update on rehabilitation of the section of Plenty Gorge Park affected by a bushfire in December 20196 p. text and colour photographs and mapplenty gorge park, bushfires, blue lake, yellow gum park, plenty -
Victoria Police Museum
Photograph (police motorcycle)
Frank Porter standing beside his parked BSA A10, registration number CR-016, with a Studebaker parked behind him, registration number HAH-043. The ground is charred and smouldering and heavy smoke fills the background of the photograph. Circa 1962St Andrews Bushfirespolice vehicles; wireless patrol; motor transport branch; motor transport section; police motorcycles; bsa motorcycle; porter, frank -
Orbost & District Historical Society
newsaper/magazine, Ash Wednesday, February 1983
This magazine was published to raise money for the State Disaster appeal. It was a tribute to the photographers and reporters who contributed to the coverage of the Ash Wednesday bushfires for these publications.this item is a contemporary record of a major fire disaster in Victoria and is a useful reference tool.A large 78 pp stapled magazine. On the front cover is a coloured photograph of the town of Macedon the morning after the bush fires in February 1983. It has white ASH WEDNESDAY in print on a red background above the photograph and 1983 BUSHFIRES in white print on a red background belop the photograph. The photograph extends to the back cover. The magazine contains black/white photographs, stories and reports.bushfires ash-wednesday magazine disasters-victoria