Conversations
Here are conversations that have happened in the last week on Flickr Commons:
Abandon Hope all you who enter here
- beachcomber australia said:
- beachcomber australia said:
- beachcomber australia said:
- beachcomber australia said:
- Suck Diesel said:
- Suck Diesel said:
Sydney Station balloon loop
- 8 older comments, and then…
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covid convict said:
I think this pic might have been taken from the Canada Building (Canada Cycle & Motor Co), at the SW cnr George/Little Regent Sts...the first one was built in ca. 1910...it was 7 storeys high...it burned down in December 1913...and was replaced by the second Canada Building in ca. 1914-15...which is still standing as of 2026. I can't think of any other candidates...up six storeys or so and looking straight up the George St tram tracks...
So my hunch is the pic might have been taken from the first Canada Building, before the construction of the Parcels Office...
trove.nla.gov.au/newspaper/article/234761852 - the earlier Canada Building
trove.nla.gov.au/newspaper/article/238959536 - after the December 1913 fire
This [1927] view from the Central Station clock tower shows the 'new' Canada Building (with the Resch's sign...in the Tooth's Brewery heartland!!!)...but it gives you an idea of the location, etc
Of course the date marker here is Orchard's Chambers, at the NE cnr George/Quay Sts...it was built in ca. 1910-11...in this pic it looks to be nearing completion, but the ornamental parapet and tower with a cupola on top haven't been built yet...
So all up I think the date might be ca. 1910-11
Orchard's Chambers...still there as of 2026...but without the cupola...
Termonfeckin, where women rule the roost!
- 10 older comments, and then…
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Wendy: said:
fabulous green house and kitchen garden!!
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beachcomber australia said:
Archiseek has a brief history, but won't let me copy'n'paste ...
www.archiseek.com/1870-an-grianan-newtown-house-termonfec...
GoogleMapsSatellite (not 3D) - maps.app.goo.gl/UaXEeBsnakqYsuJk6
Admiring the huge greenhouses which seems to have gone. -
Dún Laoghaire Micheál said:
beachcomber australia
Archiseek (via Windows Snipping Tool) -
"Originally built in the 1780s by the McClintock family and called Newtown House. In 1852 it was sold to a Drogheda merchant and shipbuilder called Ralph Smyth who extended it around 1870. It was redesigned with two elevations of similar architectural merit, both with fine dressed limestone porticos giving it an overall Italianate appearance. The house as it survives today is Smith's work, but a portion of the McClintock building survives at the east end of the south front.
In the early 1920's it was bought by Helen Lentaigne, who allowed the newly constituted Irish Countrywomen's Association to use Newtown House as a venue for one of the first ICA Summer Schools during the 1930's. In July 1945 Mrs Lentaigne sold Newtown House to the Irish Tourist
Board, who renovated the premises and opened the house as Tearman Hotel.
The seeds of An Grianan, were sown in 1952, when Muriel Gahan of the ICA proposed the idea for a residential college for social and educational purposes to Dr Morris, of the W.K. Kellogg Foundation of America, through a chance introduction. It was purchased and entrusted for the benefit of the people of Ireland. In October 1954 it was officially opened by the then President of Ireland Sean T O'Kelly." -
Dún Laoghaire Micheál said:
25" OS - Newtown House

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beachcomber australia said:
[ Admires Dún Laoghaire Micheál's Snipping Tool ! ]
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Niall McAuley said:
The forementioned Ralph Smyth, 79 still in residence, 1911
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Niall McAuley said:
Smyth died here in 1918, son Ralph G. Smyth present.
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Dún Laoghaire Micheál said:
Irish Times 1951 . . .
"SMYTH-December 19. 1951. at his residence. Broomhall Grange. Worcester, Ralph George Smyth, late of Newtown House, Termonfeckin, Drogheda Co. Louth, in his 89th year." -
Dún Laoghaire Micheál said:
Drogheda Independent 1952 -
"Mr. R. G. Smyth, late of Termonfeckin
The death occurred at his residence, Broomhall Grange, Worcester, England, of Mr. Ralph Geo. Smyth, formerly of Newtown House, Termonfeckin, Drogheda (now the Tearmann Hotel). Deceased, who had reached the advanced age of 89, was the last of that particular branch of the Smyth family, and was a cousin of the Misses Smyth, of Newtown, Drogheda. He had resided at Termonfeckin until Mrs. V. Lentaigne purchased the estate some 30 years ago, his father, the late Capt. R. Smyth, having been the previous owner. The family owned house property in Drogheda as well as extensive acreage in Termonfeckin and were prominently connected with the. old Drogheda Steampacket Company.
The late Mr. Smyth is well remembered in the Termonfeckin district where he was much esteemed by the local people, and the news of his passing will arouse deep regret there in particular. "
The Double Cross of Clogher
- 11 older comments, and then…
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Anne McGinley said:
Cross of Clogher - Irish - The Metropolitan Museum of Art share.google/Nc9BBF3a1c7AbqWDI
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beachcomber australia said:
Safe in the County Museum Monaghan ?
From "Irishmusic1981" on Instagram ...
"Cross of Clogher (12th- 14th centuries)
The Cross was uncovered in a thatched roof of a church at Slavin, County Fermanagh. It was later donated to Saint Macartan's Seminary, Monaghan.
The Cross of Clogher is one of the most famous pieces of Medieval Irish Art.
The oak cross is fully encased in bronze. Each bronze
panel is riveted on the wood and richly decorated with
Christian iconography. The topmost panel depicts a
crucifixion scene in high relief with angels on either side.
The reverse is decorated in a repeated geometric design.
Video taken by me at the County Museum in Monaghan."
www.instagram.com/reel/DMSJfu-M3wD/ -
beachcomber australia said:
Wondering if this is the church where the cross was found in the thatch?
Via Monkiiiey Henry Clark
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John Spooner said:
Account of the discovery in the Frontier Sentinel - Saturday 22 May 1943:
The Clogher Cross was found by the late Rev. E. J. Quigley, P.P., Newbliss, in 1898, when he was a curate in Devenish, Garrison. A dying man named Campbell handed him the cross. which had hung for 50 years or more in the old thatched chapel at Slavin on the lough side. It is a medieval treasure and is now in the Museum attached to the Seminary in Monaghan. It might be called the Devenish Cross.
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John Spooner said:
On the occasion of a shrine being provided for the cross, the Frontier Sentinel of Saturday 1 January 1949 gave Fr. Quigley's account of comforting the dying man Campbell and how he got hold of the cross:
" I called back a few times and comforted him (Mr. Campbell). He got somewhat better . , and was grateful. ' They tell me,' he said, ' you are interested in old noggins, horn spoons and pewter plates. I have none of these things, but step up on that chair, and in the bed tester (a canopy) over the bed you'll find a weighty cross.'
"I did as he told and, covered with dust and grime. there was the now famous Cross. 'Tie it on your bciycle and bring It home with you.'
"'This old Cross,' he said, 'was hanging long ago in the old thatched roof Church at Slavin, on the shores of Lough Erne. It is very old, and the people loved it. Some way or other it got into our family to keep it safe. It is here for fifty years. There it is, take it. I know you will look after it.'
"I took it, cleaned it as best I could . . . " -
Dún Laoghaire Micheál said:
John Spooner You beat me too it. My duplicate post will be removed.
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Suck Diesel said:
beachcomber australia This looks like the graveyard of Slavin Anglian Parish Church, so doesn’t gel with Fr. Quigley being a Catholic
www.census.nationalarchives.ie/pages/1901/Fermanagh/Edern... -
Dún Laoghaire Micheál said:
Slavin Church (CoI) is in the adjacent Carrigolagh townland and has its own graveyard. In the townland of Slavin (Slawin) there is a separate "Burial site" which may have been associated with a R.C. Chapel.

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Dún Laoghaire Micheál said:
Once Ivy-clad structure seems to be in CoI environs at Carrigolagh -

Advertising hoarding from Sydney, ca. 1885-1890 / photographed by Arthur K. Syer
- 2 older comments, and then…
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covid convict said:
20th century pic of the Harrison Jones & Devlin wool store...shows matching windows and saw tooth roof which beachcomber australia points out in his note...this pic is taken kind of opposite to where Syer's pic would have been taken...for what it's worth the HJD wool store was significantly enlarged in ca. 1886...prior to this it was half the size of the later building and it didn't abut the Paragon Hotel...I tend to suspect the Syer pic was taken after the ca. 1886 additions, but I'm not certain on that at all...

Seen here pre the ca. 1886 additions...zoom in at the SLV original trove.nla.gov.au/work/238285219
Happy 18th Birthday, Flickr Commons!
- 1 older comment, and then…
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Rex Mandel said:
Squirrel balls?
Central Railway Station, Sydney
- 21 older comments, and then…
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covid convict said:
trove.nla.gov.au/newspaper/article/227179589 - the Australian Star, 13th May, 1893...item on Fitzgerald's Circus, which had just set up their tent opposite the Railway Station, in George St...they were evidently there until ca. mid August...after which they did a few suburban shows and then went to Goulburn...
trove.nla.gov.au/newspaper/article/13905628 - SMH, 3rd June, 1893...another item re Fitzgerald's Circus...mentions the rain...1893 was evidently a wet year...lots of floods and widespread deluges...
trove.nla.gov.au/newspaper/article/13911869 - SMH, 10th July, 1893...wonderful description of the previous evening's show!
trove.nla.gov.au/newspaper/article/113723447 - the Evening News, 22nd July, 1893...'Scene at Fitz-Gerald's Circus: A Lion Attacks the Tamer' (!)
trove.nla.gov.au/newspaper/article/113727467 - SMH, 8th August, 1893...another Lion attack...a different lion this time!!!
trove.nla.gov.au/newspaper/article/13904646 - SMH, 28th September, 1893..report on yet another (this time near fatal) attack on lion tamer Captain Humphreys...
Francis Chichester after his solo flight, Sydney, 1930
- 4 older comments, and then…
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covid convict said:
trove.nla.gov.au/work/188067323 - similar NLA Fairfax pic...
During his 1929-30 England Australia flight, Chichester arrived at Darwin on 25th January, 1930...he then flew south and landed in Sydney on 30th January, 1930...
trove.nla.gov.au/newspaper/article/16621143 - SMH, 27th January, 1930...'Mr Chichester ; Arrival at Darwin'
trove.nla.gov.au/newspaper/article/16622272 - SMH, 31st January, 1930...'Long Flight Ends ; Mr Chichester ; Lands at Mascot'
One interesting and probably long-forgotten piece of trivia re Chichester's 1929-30 England-Australia flight is that at the time he was often regarded as a New Zealander…during the 1920s, Chichester had lived in New Zealand for the best part of a decade, and on his arrival in Sydney he was greeted by a sizable contingent of the Sydney New Zealand Association, who’d adopted him as one of their own…
trove.nla.gov.au/newspaper/article/90104968 - the Adelaide Chronicle, 6th February, 1930...some background on Chichester's arrival in Sydney...per this item, members of the Sydney New Zealand Association carried Chichester in triumphal fashion to the NSW Aero Club clubhouse...
trove.nla.gov.au/newspaper/article/160633355 - the Sydney Mail, 5th February, 1930...here even the Sydney Mail refers to Chichester as 'the New Zealand airman'...
trove.nla.gov.au/work/188067345 - NLA Fairfax pic of Chichester at Mascot...here he's chatting with NSW Attorney-General Frank Boyce, who represented the State Government at the official welcome...
trove.nla.gov.au/work/188067346 - I suspect these chaps might be members of the Sydney New Zealand Association, who were at Mascot to welcome Chichester...
trove.nla.gov.au/work/188532887 - ditto...the Maori chap we see here in the middle might be Bill Rangi (Wiremu Haeata Rangi), a New Zealand WW1 veteran who lived in Sydney after WW1...but I haven't yet managed to find a pic of Rangi which might confirm this...
Following his 1929-30 flight from England to Australia, Chichester shipped his aircraft to New Zealand...where it was fitted with floats and converted to a seaplane...and re-registered as ZK-AKK. The following year Chichester then made the first solo trans-Tasman flight from west-east...albeit via Norfolk Island and Lord Howe Island. He left Auckland on 28th March, 1931...and landed at Cascade Bay, Norfolk Island that same day...he flew to Lord Howe Island on 1st April. Unfortunately, at Lord Howe his aircraft was damaged when it capsized during a squall…following repairs, which took some 9 weeks, he flew to Australia on 6th June, intending to make for Port Macquarie…however, he encountered bad weather and ended up off course, at Jervis Bay, South of Sydney…at Jervis Bay his aircraft was then lifted aboard HMAS Albatross and later transported to Sydney....he arrived in Sydney on 12th June on HMS Albatross...and departed Sydney 3rd July on a proposed world tour...as things transpired Chichester's world tour flight ended in disaster when he reached Japan...on 14th August his aircraft crashed after hitting overhead wires... Chichester was quite badly injured and the aircraft was written off... -
Flickr said:
Congrats on Explore! ⭐ January 24, 2026
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Cornelis M.J. said:
Congratulations on this photo in Explore !
⭐
I appreciate if you accept my invitation
and also join this group!
(if you want to see/follow my photostream,
click: www.flickr.com/photos/cmjdumoulin-photo/) -
Michael Gschwind said:
Glückwunsch zu Explore !
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Francesco Dini said:
Congrats on making Explore! 🎉✨ 👏 - Wonderful light and mood 🌅
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Sigurd Krieger said:
Congrats on Xplore!!
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gato-gato-gato said:
Toll gemacht.
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Hefin Owen said:
Congratulations on Explore
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Lukas Larsed said:
Congrats on Explore 🎉
Glass negatives of Sydney regions, including Clovelly, Coogee, and Manly, ca 1890-1910, by William Joseph Macpherson
Marking National Photography Month with a photo by Angelo Rizzuto (Anthony Angel) highlighting his great eye for detail (LOC)
- 3 older comments, and then…
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John Sagle said:
Such humanity in that photograph. Wonderful image.
Hat & Boots Texaco, Seattle, Washington (LOC)
- 23 older comments, and then…
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jacklowry47 - thanks for 1K followers said:
Wow! That is a big hand!! Very impressive to see. Great outdoor photo.
Kellar in his latest mystery (LOC)
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bill doyle said:
that’s one way to get a head!
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jessamyn west said:
This guy!
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Harry_Kellar
Fantastic_Futures_2025-241
from British Library
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rebfoto said:
👍
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Flickr said:
Congrats on Explore! ⭐ January 23, 2026
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Michael Gschwind said:
Glückwunsch zu Explore !
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Sigurd Krieger said:
Congrats on Xplore!!
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Francesco Dini said:
Congrats on making Explore! 🎉✨ 👏 - Very impressive! 🌟
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Cornelis M.J. said:
Congratulations on this photo in Explore !
⭐
I appreciate if you accept my invitation
and join the group!
(if you want to see/follow my photostream,
click: www.flickr.com/photos/cmjdumoulin-photo/) -
Lukas Larsed said:
Congrats on Explore 👏
Headshots of five Aboriginal women working at Canobie Station
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taycal9297 said:
Sophie, Mangelo, Alice, Unknown, Eliza. Based on named portraits in this album.
Unknown event and location
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Ryan Tucker said:
Potentially a track event at Beazley Field in Dartmouth during the Canada Summer Games in August of 1969. Ref. Retrieval Code 101-80C-1-4-H-10
Big Rocks and slow horses
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beachcomber australia said:
Google Lens found a copy of the dolmen photo on Facebook, which says,
"AUGHNACLIFFE DOLMEN OLD PHOTO
Following our recent article on the Dolmen Portal/Tomb at Aughnacliffe (see 13th September) a reader has sent us in this photo.
It was taken at the site around 1910 and includes both locals and visitors appreciating the history of what they are standing beside."
See - www.facebook.com/photo.php?fbid=3014354222139798&id=1... -
beachcomber australia said:
Amazed that it is still standing. I wouldn't spend too much time underneath!
In 2017 via Hugh Rooney 34, who says,
"... The Village of Aughnacliffe in County Longford is home to the Aughnacliffe Dolmen. The dolmen gives the townland its name “The Field of the Stones”. These tombs are thought to be places used for burial, ritual and religious activities. Dating from 3800BC this is quite possibly the most unusual looking dolmen in Ireland. On your approach to the dolmen it looks as though someone has been balancing huge stones one on top of the other. As you go around the portal tomb the form and shape appears completely different from each side. This monument is also unusual in that it has two capstones or roofstones, as similar portal tombs and dolmens typically have only one."

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beachcomber australia said:
The Aughnacliffe Post Office and Mr K. Mulligan's premises (right hand photo) seems to have been rebuilt - maps.app.goo.gl/BCW6wrqi9rAnPkPA7
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beachcomber australia said:
[Aside] Pssst! Do you want to know how the dolmen looked on Tuesday 4 July 1786 ?
catalogue.nli.ie/Record/vtls000740203
The NLI is always amazing ... -
John Spooner said:
There appears to be an animal (donkey) on the cricket field, on the right-hand picture, partially obscured by the non-striking batsman.
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Suck Diesel said:
Kate Mulligan, sub post mistress, presumably showing some of her extensive family posing outside
www.census.nationalarchives.ie/pages/1911/Longford/Sonnag... -
Suck Diesel said:
beachcomber australia Yes, long gone
Moynalty was ahead of the curve with AI
- 11 older comments, and then…
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beachcomber australia said:
AI-223 is a Model T Ford (80% sure) from the reverse view -
catalogue.nli.ie/Record/vtls000316314 -
Niall McAuley said:
AI 223 is registered to J. C. Cooney, Kells in the 1914-15 Motor Directory
John C. Cooney, 32, Hardware Merchant, in the 1911 census -
Mike Grimes said:
Streetview
maps.app.goo.gl/A6GxF5KJjw2nG1KGA -
Mike Grimes said:
J.C.'s father.
www.archiseek.com/1921-george-cooney-garage-kells-co-meath/ -
Niall McAuley said:
Looks like a British Army recruiting poster at left.
4 Guards in Bearskins, not much help on dating, would be between 1900 when the Irish Guards were added and before 1915, the Welsh. -
Mike Grimes said:
Niall McAuley perhaps the chap on the left is doing the recruiting? Could he be wearing a uniform and Sam Browne maybe?
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Mike Grimes said:
Or he could be an RIC officer. The building with the posters is now Deignans shop, but used to be the RIC barracks.
beyondtheborora.com/the-battle-of-salford-bridge/ -
National Library of Ireland on The Commons said:
Almost certainly butting up against 1914, thanks. Very high Royal plate number too.
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Dún Laoghaire Micheál said:
I'm seeing fowl play on the far footpath.
Brisbane city street accident involving a Hudson Terraplane and a Ford utility, 1943
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Tony Glue said:
This is actually on the corner of Brunswick and Ann streets, Fortitude Valley.
A Priest and a Nun in the family!
- 29 older comments, and then…
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Bernard Healy said:
Dún Laoghaire Micheál Irish Independent 26th February 1959 notes his death aged 55. He was described as a native of Ballylanders and Pastor of St Mary's Church, Deer River, Duluth.
I'd imagine these are the Crawfords in 1911: www.census.nationalarchives.ie/pages/1911/Limerick/Ballyl... -
Bernard Healy said:
CORRECTION - I think this IS the ordination of a Fr Foley.
The Limerick Leader, 3rd May 1937 records that Fr Maurce F Foley, native of Ballylanders was appointed Pastor of St Joseph's Church in Seattle, Washington. He was ordained on the Feast of Corpus Christi, June 16th 1927. He did his seminary studies in St John's College, Waterford.
The Catholic Northwest Progress of 11th Jan 1952 refers to him as the late Fr Maurice Foley, having died after a long illness on 14th March 1951.
The same newspaper - 18th March 1949 mentions the death of Fr Foley's father (Michael Foley of Ballylanders) and gives the following info:
He is survived by his widow. {Bridget four sons. Thomas Foley,‘ ‘New ‘York City, James Foley, Wickenburg, Ariz.. John Foley, Ballylanders, and Father Foley; a daughter, Mrs. Patrick Connery, Ballylanders; a. brother, John Foley.‘ and a sister, Mrs. John McGrath, both of Dubuque, Iowa; and eleven grandchildren. -
Bernard Healy said:
And here we have the Foley family in the 1911 Census: www.census.nationalarchives.ie/pages/1911/Limerick/Ballyl...
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Bernard Healy said:
Limerick Leader Nov 12th 1927 notes the departure of Fr Maurice Foley and his brother Thomas for America.
Same paper Aug 5th 1939 records Fr Foley home in Ballylanders for a visit.
Same paper March 19th 1949 - death of Michael Foley (aged 80), father of Fr Maurice
Same paper 11th June 1949 - Fr Maurice home in Ballylanders for vacation.
Same paper 21 March 1951 - death of Fr Maurice.
Gold miners at mine head, Gulgong area, New South Wales, c.1872
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Blue Mountains Library, Local Studies said:
I believe the man on the right is standing next to a hand operated air pump drive wheel used to provide rudimentary ventilation to the shaft. Firedamp would not be a problem but CO₂ buildup would be.
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Underground_mine_ventilation#
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Firedamp
The rope and canvas bucket next to the man holding the windlass handle would be for raising the rock, earth (mullock) and hopefully rich wash dirt when they hit bottom and locate the gutter. There is a similar bucket in the foreground next to the air pump, behind the split timbers used for shoring the shaft and drive below. However there does not appear to be a flag flying as required by law for a gold strike.
collection.sl.nsw.gov.au/digital/8OJWMabzQL0JJ
GULGONG AND HOME RULE. (1873, August 16). The Sydney Mail and New South Wales Advertiser (NSW : 1871 - 1912), p. 215. Retrieved January 22, 2026, from nla.gov.au/nla.news-article162655932
The other three men standing up by the windlass wear close fitting miner's caps for working underground. Their three broad-brimmed hats and jackets hang by the side of the mine head.
The manager in shined shoes with collar and tie stands at left, he is the only one in the group who moved during the exposure but not as much as the blurry figure behind him. The overseer stands next to him.
Their shoes/boots appear to be a mix of lace-up and elastic-side. -
Blue Mountains Library, Local Studies said:
The Gulgong area became a rush in April 1870, when Tom Saunders found 400 gms of gold at Red Hill, in the heart of the present town. Further major finds were made at nearby Canadian Lead in August 1871 and at Home Rule, 11 km south-east of Gulgong, in May 1872. By 1874, around 8,500 kg gold had been extracted from the Gulgong field.
Charles Bayliss, as operator for the American and Australasian Photographic Company, photographed Home Rule on 15 July 1872, when its population was around 3000. Fortunately, the Gulgong Guardian 13 July 1872 described Home Rule that very week and it’s interesting to compare Bayliss’s images with the reporter’s narrative.
www.sl.nsw.gov.au/blogs/home-rule-not-call-arms#:~:text=T.... -
Blue Mountains Library, Local Studies said:
There is another photo of the same miners and their mine head with a short handle pick lying on the ground and an eighth man, taken from a different direction showing surrounding buildings with a distant roof under construction here - collection.sl.nsw.gov.au/digital/NRWNop6yJljab
In Glendalough the stone lies still.
- 13 older comments, and then…
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Suck Diesel said:
[maps.app.goo.gl/Mw3Lkd3j5K2LWPJG9]
I wonder if the last caretaker Peggy Byrne was related to the earlier Mary?
Of course, the Clan O'Byrne were local -
CASSIDY PHOTOGRAPHY said:
Dear N.L.I. . . . May I dare suggest you "follow" NASA . . . It might give you a very different understanding of our "maker".

26_0069007 Rohr Collection Image
from SDASM Archives
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Chuck Walla said:
Nelson Photo Supplies is still in business with the same phone number. Today, digital aprons are not needed.
26_0069017 Rohr Collection Image
from SDASM Archives
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Chuck Walla said:
The object to the right of the Moviscop viewer is a film splicer. There are pins sticking up out of the film splicer. To do an edit, you lay the film down with the pins through the film's sprocket holes. There's a sharp blade that makes a clean cut. There's a tool to scrape the emulsion off. Then you apply glue to one side and place the ends into the film splicer. You clamp the film down. When the glue dries, you're done.
26_0069019 Rohr Collection Image
from SDASM Archives
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Chuck Walla said:
I'd expect archived film to be handled with lint-free, Nylon gloves. This keeps the film clean of finger oils and contaminants. Note the stamped metal Rohr property tag with ID K-32141. Something wrong? Your corrections are welcomed and make this a more useful image.
26_0069020 Rohr Collection Image
from SDASM Archives
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Chuck Walla said:
Note the stack of what look like 16 millimeter film cans in the background. Television news reporters used to go out and shoot news and b-roll on 16mm film. The film would need to be developed and edited before being presented on air. Oprah Winfrey, for example, recalled her coworkers shooting news footage on a 16mm Bell and Howell camera while working in Nashville and Chicago TV news.
26_0069021 Rohr Collection Image
from SDASM Archives
26_0069034 Rohr Collection Image
from SDASM Archives
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Chuck Walla said:
The person's name tag is blocked by their collar.
26_0069032 Rohr Collection Image
from SDASM Archives
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Chuck Walla said:
Behind the phone is what looks like an intercom system. Voycall and NuTone made similar systems during this era. This would allow you to hands-free talk with somebody in the darkroom without interrupting their process. In newer phone systems, all of this was integrated into a phone.
26_0069051 Rohr Collection Image
from SDASM Archives
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Chuck Walla said:
This may be the photo and plate making process for offset printing? Someone who knows could add tags.
26_0068338 Rohr Collection Image
from SDASM Archives
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Chuck Walla said:
If possible, this should be rotated 90 degrees clockwise.
26_0069060 Rohr Collection Image
from SDASM Archives
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Chuck Walla said:
The name tag looks like it says, "Loren Watson." If this is incorrect, please post a comment below or correct the tag. Thank you.
26_0069073 Rohr Collection Image
from SDASM Archives
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Chuck Walla said:
A Wikipedia article includes four photos of rail cars being prepped for paint at this facility. One is a former Great Northern Railroad car acquired by Amtrak. The dates are slightly different than other sources. Your comments are helpful.
26_0069091 Rohr Collection Image
from SDASM Archives
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Chuck Walla said:
Is the overpass State Route 60? If so, what's the street in the foreground?
26_0069092 Rohr Collection Image
from SDASM Archives
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Chuck Walla said:
According to one source, Rail Systems Incorporated was hatched by Rohr in 1973 after winning a contract to refurbish 300 Amtrak rail cars. This was apparently taken around the time the contract was awarded. The company was sold in 1977. It's located on Etiwanda in Mira Loma.
Indian parcel courier on Royal Enfield motorbike, Sydney, c.1933
- 1 older comment, and then…
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Stephen said:
Absolutely sensational nostalgia. I love the advertisement.
Haymarket, Sydney 1924
- 1 older comment, and then…
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covid convict said:
Amongst other things, this pic gives a good view of the site of
Anthony Hordern & Sons' Haymarket Palace Emporium, which fronted George/Barlow/Parker Sts. By the time this pic was taken, Horderns had long since moved to their massive New Palace Emporium, which occupied the block bound by George/Pitt/Liverpool/Goulburn Sts...it was built in 1904-05. But many of the Haymarket Palace Emporium buildings remained standing for years afterwards...albeit with additions, etc...
The Haymarket Palace Emporium buildings seen here were built/rebuilt following the catastrophic July 1901 fire, which damaged and destroyed most of the original Emporium buildings...some were rebuilt in the later half of 1901...the others appear to have been built/rebuilt in the following year or so...
search.records.nsw.gov.au/primo-explore/fulldisplay?docid... - link to the pic at NSW State Archives, where you can zoom in on the detail...when you get there, wait a few moments for the image to load...
City of Sydney Archives pic of Hordern's original Haymarket Palace Emorium, as it appeared in 1889
Where are British Library images
from British Library
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JAYKAY144 said:
Please provide a link to your Illustrations/art collection here. Thank you

