Historical information
Erection of new butts by the members of the St Kilda Volunteer Army Corps in 1874, after the government took possession of the land that the Volunteer Army Corps had been using. The butts were banks constructed of sand and earth, kept together with saplings, to create areas for shooting practice. They were constructed on the beach at Hobson's Bay, half a mile from the St Kilda jetty. An article about this appeared in the Illustrated Australian News for Home Readers on 25 February 1874, available on the National Library of Australia Trove site https://trove.nla.gov.au/newspaper/article/63105925. The lithograph appeared in the Illustrated Sydney News and New South Wales Agriculturalist and Grazier on 28 February 1874, available on the National Library of Australia Trove site https://trove.nla.gov.au/newspaper/article/63105925
Physical description
Photograph of black and white lithograph
Inscriptions & markings
Erection of New Butts by the Members of the St Kilda Battery R.V.V.A. 1874
Subjects
References
- New St Kilda Rifle Butts Article in Illustrated Australian News for Home Readers, Wednesday 25 February 1874, page 26
- Erection of New Butts by the Members of the St Kilda Battery R.V.V.A.