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matching how deep is high
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Tatura Irrigation & Wartime Camps Museum
Book, How Deep is High, 1999
... How Deep is High...how deep is high..., white text How Deep is High Book ...Written about Lavra Cameron of her personal encounter with the conflicting ideologies of Australian peopleDark blue soft cover. Orange, white and blue abstract design, orange and white text. Back cover orange, blue and white, white texthow deep is high, knorr h, fiction, camp 1, tatura, ww2 camp 1, books, novels -
Forests Commission Retired Personnel Association (FCRPA)
Splitting Gun, Black Powder
Black powder splitting guns were commonly used to split large logs into more manageable pieces before the advent of excavators and front-end loaders in bush logging operations. A typical splitting gun used in Victorian forests was a piece of high-grade steel about 1-1/2 to 2 inches in diameter and about 16 inches long, and slightly tapered at one end. They had a ¾ inch hole drilled about 9 inches deep into the centre of the shaft with a small pilot hole drilled from the outside to load the fuse. The tube was carefully loaded with an amount of black gunpowder using a funnel and spoon. Experience being the guide on how much powder to use, which depended on log size, species and difficulty of splitting the wood. The hole was stopped with a piece of wadded paper and the gun positioned at the end of a length of the log to be split. The splitting gun was then belted into the log with a large wooden maul or even the back of an axe to a depth of about 3 to 4 inches. There were often markings as a guide. This also had the effect of tamping the black powder inside the gun. Preferably the gun was backed up by another large log to absorb the shock and avoid it flying off in the bush somewhere. I have seen guns where a length of string and coloured flag could be attached to help find them. A length of fuse was then inserted in the small hole and lit. Kaboom !!!! Needless to say, the splitting gun was a dangerous implement.Commonly used to split pulpwood but now rareBlack Powder Splitting GunFive marking rings used to guide how far the gun was in the logforest harvesting -
Whitehorse Historical Society Inc.
Container - Box from 'The Leviathan" Tailors
How parcels were sent by Rail.Rectangle cardboard box ' The Leviathan' - Melbourne high class tailors and outfitters.Mrs P. Kemp 2331161 (Brewery family) Mr W.H. Whitney Box Hill 2d Victorian parcel Railway Stampthe leviathan tailors, whitney - mr w.h., kemp mrs p 2331161 (brewer family), victoria railways