Showing 5 items matching phil lang
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Port Melbourne Historical & Preservation Society
Card - City of Port Melbourne business card for Phil Lang, Councillor, City of Port Melbourne, 1990s
... City of Port Melbourne business card for Phil Lang...phil lang.... Early 1990s Phil Lang, Councillor... card for Phil Lang, Councillor Card City of Port Melbourne ...City of Port Melbourne business cards with red embossed city crests (some differences) and black or grey printing. Early 1990s Phil Lang, Councillorlocal government - city of port melbourne, phil lang -
Port Melbourne Historical & Preservation Society
Functional object - Correspondence Pouch, City of Port Melbourne, Cr Phil Lang, c. 1990
... Correspondence Pouch, City of Port Melbourne, Cr Phil Lang...Mail bag for correspondence for Port Melbourne Cr Phil Lang... of Port Melbourne, Cr Phil Lang Functional object Mail bag ...Used by Councillor LangMail bag for correspondence for Port Melbourne Cr Phil Lang, c1990Mail Bag - Councillor P. Langlocal government - city of port melbourne -
Port Melbourne Historical & Preservation Society
Photograph - Last City of Port Melbourne Council, 1993/94
... Phil LANG... BLACKMORE, Chris RAEBURN, Lyn ALLISON. Front row from left - Phil..., Lyn ALLISON. Front row from left - Phil LANG, Jim MITCHELL ...Last City of Port Melbourne Council. Back row from left - Liana THOMPSON (Mayor), Perce WHITE, Kerrie McKENDRICK, Robert BLACKMORE, Chris RAEBURN, Lyn ALLISON. Front row from left - Phil LANG, Jim MITCHELL, Brenda BEDFORD.Coloured photograph of the last City of Port Melbourne Council before amalgamation. Photograph taken in Mayor's Room at the Port Melbourne Town Hall.amalgamation, councillors, local government - city of port melbourne, port melbourne town hall, liana thompson, perce white, kerrie mckendrick, robert blackmore, chris raeburn, lyn allison, phil lang, jim mitchell, brenda bedford -
Port Melbourne Historical & Preservation Society
Flyer - Campaign Leaflets, 1974 Port Melbourne Council Election, 1974
... Phil Lang... Michael Barbieri Phil Lang ALP Australian Labor Party Pink Panther ...Campaign leaflets for 1974 Port Melbourne Council, Boundary Ward Election .01 - Michael Barbieri, independent .02 - Phillip Lang, ALPlocal government - city of port melbourne, politics, societies clubs unions and other organisations, michael barbieri, phil lang, alp, australian labor party -
Melton City Libraries
Pamphlet, Thoroughbred Country, c.1985
"Melton has a long and celebrated history of horse breeding and racing. Draught horses were a crucial aspect of life in the early days of European settlement, and were heavily depended upon for both transport and agricultural labour. Peppercorn trees at the corner of Station and Brooklyn roads have been associated with a horse trough installed there to provide a drink to workhorses carting produce to the chaff mills and railway station south of Melton.20 Breeders, trainers and harness drivers in the area later became such an influential force in the equine industry that this came to be a defining aspect of the district’s identity and reputation.Pioneer of the Victorian horse racing industry and early Rockbank squatter William Cross Yuille was one of the earliest importers of stud racehorses in the district in the 1850s. A leading sports editor and writer, Yuille established bloodstock auctioning agency W. C. Yuille & Co. and was involved in the compilation of the first Australian Stud Book, which ensures the integrity of thoroughbred breeding in Australia. According to early Melton chronicler Alexander Cameron, horse races were first organised in the area by Rockbank farmer William Keating. Keating owned racehorses of his own, and many brought horses from Melbourne for the events, which ‘drew large gatherings’.22 Melton Racing Club meetings were held on the Exford Estate with the permission of H. W. Staughton, who built a small wooden grandstand in 1882. Other early races and sports meetings are said to have been held in the vicinity of the current-day Melton golf course.23 An 1884 article reported that Melton’s ‘race programme … equals any put forth by country towns of far greater size’. Ernest Clarke was another important figure in the early horse racing industry in Melton. He established the Melton Stud in 1902, which bred numerous successful racehorses. Perhaps most notably The Welkin, one of the most famous stallions in Australian horse racing in the early twentieth century. The Welkin sired Gloaming, bred by Clarke at the Melton stud in 1915 and one of Australia’s greatest champion racehorses. During a long and prestigious career in both Australia and New Zealand, Gloaming achieved a triumphant 57 wins out of 67 starts and won a record amount of prize money. Ken Cox purchased the Stockwell Stud in Diggers Rest in 1957 and developed it into one of the largest and most renowned thoroughbred breeders in Australia. With its top-class facilities, international design standards and scientific methods, Stockwell became ‘the flagship of the Victorian breeding industry’.26 As well as racing studs, numerous trotting tracks were established on the flat plains around Melton in the 1960s.27 Other studs to play a leading role in the development of Melton as thoroughbred country were Cornwall Park and Merrywood at Toolern Vale, St John’s Lane Stud at Diggers Rest and Birchwood, Teppo Park and Dreelburn in the far north-east of the shire, near Sunbury. By 1985, thoroughbred horse breeding was such big business in Melton that the shire council adopted the slogan ‘The Heart of Thoroughbred Country’, which was used throughout its promotional material.29 But the slogan contained deeper meaning and was not just about Melton’s great equine industry and thoroughbred champions, the council explained: ‘“Thoroughbred Country” should be seen as a new concept of Melton, as a place where people can achieve the “Thoroughbred” ideal, excellence in all aspects of life’. The aim of the council in promoting ‘The Heart of Thoroughbred Country’, was ‘to instil in present and future residents the feeling that this is a place that is better than others. A place to be proud of’. In 1988, Melton’s champion reinsman Gavin Lang won his 176th race of the season, claiming the national harness racing record for the most wins in a single season.The following year, the first Melton Plate was held at Moonee Valley Racecourse, cementing the district’s importance in the harness racing industry. The inaugural winner was Victorys Phil, owned by local Danny Mullan. By the 1990s, Melton had earned the title of the ‘Home of Harness Racing in Victoria’. State-of-the-art, world-class harness racing facility and entertainment complex Tabcorp Park opened in Melton in 2009. In 2011, the Shire of Melton was home to over 140 registered trainers and over 1,200 horses. The municipality’s continuing leadership and influence in the industry today is a testament to the skills, talents and leadership of the local community over its history".Shire of Melton pamphlet of a map and information of the equine industry in Meltoncouncil