Showing 6 items matching "manuka road"
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Eltham District Historical Society IncPhotograph, Clearing Manuka Road, Panton Hill, April 1987, April 1987
... Clearing Manuka Road, Panton Hill, April 1987......manuka road...Manuka Road, Panton Hill, Victoria...Eltham District Historical Society Inc 728 Main Rd Eltham melbourne panton hill manuka road Kodak CM 400 5079 Roll of 35mm colour negative film, 2 strips Clearing Manuka Road, Panton Hill, April 1987 Photograph ...Roll of 35mm colour negative film, 2 stripsKodak CM 400 5079panton hill, manuka road -
Eltham District Historical Society IncPhotograph, Clearing Manuka Road, Panton Hill, April 1987, April 1987
... Clearing Manuka Road, Panton Hill, April 1987......manuka road...Manuka Road, Panton Hill, Victoria...Eltham District Historical Society Inc 728 Main Rd Eltham melbourne panton hill manuka road Kodak CM 400 5079 Roll of 35mm colour negative film, 2 strips Clearing Manuka Road, Panton Hill, April 1987 Photograph ...Roll of 35mm colour negative film, 2 stripsKodak CM 400 5079panton hill, manuka road -
Eltham District Historical Society IncPhotograph, Clearing Manuka Road, Panton Hill, April 1987, April 1987
... Clearing Manuka Road, Panton Hill, April 1987......manuka road...Manuka Road, Panton Hill, Victoria...Eltham District Historical Society Inc 728 Main Rd Eltham melbourne panton hill manuka road Kodak CM 400 5079 Roll of 35mm colour negative film, 2 strips Clearing Manuka Road, Panton Hill, April 1987 Photograph ...Roll of 35mm colour negative film, 2 stripsKodak CM 400 5079panton hill, manuka road -
Warrnambool and District Historical Society Inc.Bottle, James Barnes Chemist, Early 1920s
... road This bottle was used in the pharmacy of James Barnes in Minyip and Horsham and possibly also in Warrnambool as the bottle was found in this city. Born in England, James Barnes came to Australia in 1873. He was a chemist and veterinary surgeon in Creswick, Minyip and Horsham before coming to Warrnambool about 1926. He purchased the pharmacy of Dougall and Easton at 102 Liebig Street which had been leased to Leonard Eason in the early 1920s. Barnes called this business the Manuka ...This bottle was used in the pharmacy of James Barnes in Minyip and Horsham and possibly also in Warrnambool as the bottle was found in this city. Born in England, James Barnes came to Australia in 1873. He was a chemist and veterinary surgeon in Creswick, Minyip and Horsham before coming to Warrnambool about 1926. He purchased the pharmacy of Dougall and Easton at 102 Liebig Street which had been leased to Leonard Eason in the early 1920s. Barnes called this business the Manuka Pharmacy. The chemist he brought in to manage the business, Len Suggett, eventually bought the business. Barnes died in 1939. His son Ralph also had a pharmacy business in Warrnambool in the 1920s. Although this bottle does not have the name ‘Warrnambool’ on it, it is likely that James Barnes used the bottle in his Warrnambool pharmacy. It is, therefore, of considerable interest as it is one of the few pieces of James Barnes’ mementoes found so far. James and Ralph Barnes were prominent chemists in Warrnambool in the 20th century. This is a glass bottle with a rectangular body with curved edges, a circular-shaped neck and a round moulded top. There is no stopper and the top has a small chip in the glass. The front of the bottle is embossed with the name of the chemist and the outline of a shield with the chemist’s initials. The bottle is empty and the inside of the bottle is discoloured from the original contents. ‘J.B.’ ‘James Barnes Chemist Minyip & Horsham’ On Base: ‘M’ chemists in warrnambool, history of warrnambool, james barnes,, warrnambool chemist -
Flagstaff Hill Maritime Museum and VillageClothing - Traveller's Apron, Eliza Towns, Circa 1915
... Road...trains...ships...Moana...Manuka...Flagstaff Hill Maritime Museum and Village Nhill Eliza Towns apron Travelling apron Tourist Apron textiles toilet apron sewing embroidery travel Warrnambool Great ocean Road trains ships Moana Manuka Feather stitch stem stitch fashion handmade clothing Charles Towns needlework "Hairpins" / "Nailbrush" / "Brush and Comb" / "Work" A half apron, made of ivory linen with two waist ties and seven pockets. ...This apron is one of several linen and clothing items that were made and belonged to Mrs. Eliza Towns and donated to Flagstaff Hill Maritime Museum and Village. Eliza was born Eliza Gould in 1857 in South Melbourne (Emerald Hill) and in 1879 married Charles Towns. In the early 1880's they moved to Nhill in western Victoria and remained there for the rest of their married life. Charles was a jeweller and later became an accountant and for many years was involved with the Shire Council, the local show committee (A & P Society), the Hospital Committee and the Board of the local newspaper (the Nhill Free Press). They had three children and lived a life that would be regarded as comfortably "middle class". Eliza probably had a treadle sewing machine and would have made many of her own clothes - adding her own handmade embroidered or crocheted decorative trim. In March 1915 Eliza travelled to San Francisco to visit her son, James. She went by train to Melbourne ("a pleasant journey on the up express') and the next day caught the express train to Sydney. She noted in her letters home that a " number of young men were going to Sydney to enlist but they had to stop in the corridors most of the way as there was no room for them to sit down". She spent the night on the train and arrived in Sydney the next morning and on the following day she boarded the R.M.S. "Moana" (a steamer which took about twenty-four days to reach San Francisco). She returned from Vancouver about five months later on board the "Manuka". It is very likely Eliza took this "Travelling Apron" with her on her travels. Eliza was travelling by herself and had no one to help her with her dress or her hair. "Travelling Aprons" (also known as Toilet Aprons or Tourist Aprons) were designed with different sized pockets for holding a lady's toiletries - hairbrush, hair pins, comb and sometimes even soap and a powder puff. This allowed the owner, when travelling and getting dressed in small places such as an overnight train compartment or a ship's cabin, to have all her requirements at hand without needing to search for them or have them roll onto the floor. Some of the pockets are finished with buttoned flaps to keep the items in place and when not in use, the apron could be hung up or rolled up and put away. Articles about the "Traveller's Apron" appeared in numerous Women's columns in Australian newspapers in the early 20th century - often with instructions and sometimes a pattern. In the "Age" on Sat 5th October 1907 in a column titled "Feminine Facts and Fancies" the author wrote "No man can appreciate the difficulties of dressing in a "wobbly" train or trying to do one's hair while a ship is weathering a storm". A year earlier (Saturday 24th March 1906) in the same column, the author wrote "... you have to spend nights in a train... forever struggling to dress yourself in a wretched little lavatory. You know how your hairpins and combs jump all over the place ... a train is always at its liveliest when you're trying to do your hair. My travelling apron saved me many a rage."This item is an example of the needlework skills of women in the early 20th century - combining machine stitching with hand embroidery to personalise and embellish a practical domestic object. It is also an excellent (and rare) example of an early 20th century innovation that helped solve the difficulties of privacy and convenience that many women experienced at a time when travel was becoming more accessible to them. A half apron, made of ivory linen with two waist ties and seven pockets. Along the top are two smaller pockets with triangular, buttoned flaps labelled "Hairpins" and "Nailbrush" and one larger unlabelled pocket. Underneath are two larger pockets labelled "Brush & Comb" and "Work" and two unlabelled narrow pockets. The seams are machine stitched and the pockets are outlined with hand embroidered feather stitch. The labels on the pockets are embroidered in stem stitch."Hairpins" / "Nailbrush" / "Brush and Comb" / "Work"flagstaff hill maritime museum and village, nhill, eliza towns, apron, travelling apron, tourist apron, textiles, toilet apron, sewing, embroidery, travel, warrnambool, great ocean road, trains, ships, moana, manuka, feather stitch, stem stitch, fashion, handmade, clothing, charles towns, needlework -
Ballarat Tramway MuseumEphemera - Miscellaneous tickets - set of 5, 1980s
... Set of five tickets collected by Dave O'Neil: 1 - Brisbane Tramway Museum Society pink ticket - No. 3797 - punched for Sept. 2 - Two different Edmondson style tickets for Train World - 624 Hawthorn Road, East Brighton - railway models and other rail items seller 3 - Off the Rails Collectables, Camperdown, Sydney - gives address and telephone numbers. 4 - Victorian Railways style first class ticket "Manuka to Corio" - No. 0140. ...Set of five tickets collected by Dave O'Neil: 1 - Brisbane Tramway Museum Society pink ticket - No. 3797 - punched for Sept. 2 - Two different Edmondson style tickets for Train World - 624 Hawthorn Road, East Brighton - railway models and other rail items seller 3 - Off the Rails Collectables, Camperdown, Sydney - gives address and telephone numbers. 4 - Victorian Railways style first class ticket "Manuka to Corio" - No. 0140. ...Set of five tickets collected by Dave O'Neil: 1 - Brisbane Tramway Museum Society pink ticket - No. 3797 - punched for Sept. 2 - Two different Edmondson style tickets for Train World - 624 Hawthorn Road, East Brighton - railway models and other rail items seller 3 - Off the Rails Collectables, Camperdown, Sydney - gives address and telephone numbers. 4 - Victorian Railways style first class ticket "Manuka to Corio" - No. 0140. The only Australian location with that name is in Canberra. Yields information about the different style of tickets used for promotion or as souvenirs.Four Edmondson size card tickets and one printed light card ticket.tramways, tickets, railways, btms, train world, souvenirs
