Showing 4 items matching "threshing team at work."
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Buninyong & District Historical Society
Work on paper - A sheet of photographs showing aspects of farm work, A sheet of 6 laser-copied photographs taken from originals by Arthur Skelton, depicting aspects of farm work
... Threshing team at work....Harvesting. Farm machinery. Threshing team at work. Belt ...Laser copy is clear and in good condition. The original photographs are showing signs of fasding.harvesting., farm machinery., threshing team at work., belt drive from traction engine., belt drive from early farm tractor., stacking of bagged grain., building of straw stack. -
Rutherglen Historical Society
Image, 1890s
... Black and white photograph of a threshing team at work... threshing Black and white photograph of a threshing team at work ...Black and white photograph of a threshing team at workagriculture, farming, harvest, steam tractor, wheat harvest, threshing -
Bendigo Historical Society Inc.
Newspaper - JENNY FOLEY COLLECTION: HARD YAKKA
... yakka: the McNicol's threshing team hard at work, 1912. Photo... team hard at work, 1912. Photo courtesy of Korong Historical ...Bendigo Advertiser ''The way we were'' from 2001. Hard yakka: the McNicol's threshing team hard at work, 1912. Photo courtesy of Korong Historical Society. The clip is in a folder.newspaper, bendigo advertiser, the way we were -
Orbost & District Historical Society
black and white photograph, late 19th century - early 20th century
Maize, or corn as it is called in America and New South Wales, has been grown on the Orbost flats for at least 70 years. When early settlers began to arrive on the Snowy River somewhere in the 1880s, the land was mostly swamps and heavily timbered jungle on the river frontages. The swamps were drained, bit by bit, by stout hearted men with short handled shovels and working in mud and water. The frontages were cleared by axe and shovel and fire. Several kinds of crops were experimented with such as hops, hemp and maize, the latter grew particularly well and became the main crop of district. The problem then was to thresh and deliver the product to the market. A small single cob machine was brought here and one man turned the handle, while the boy or Mum fed the cobs singly into the machine. A good day’s work would thresh about 50 bushels or about 12 bags (4 bushels). The task then was to cart the maize to market. For a few years this was done by horses and dray carrying about 60 bushels to Mossiface, where it was loaded onto river boats to Lakes Entrance, and then by ocean boats to Melbourne. ( from NEWSLETTER OCTOBER, 2006) This is a pictorial record of farming practices in Orbost in the early 20th century.A black / white photograph of a horse team hauling a wagon loaded with bags of maize.A man is sitting on the edge of the wagon.farming-orbost agriculture maize corn transport