List of Articles in Issue Vol 46 no 3, August 2024

Vol 46 no 3, August 2024
President's update
By Colin Thomas   |   August 2024   |   Vol 46 no 3

Vale, Mr Terence Lane OAMIt would be remiss of me not to commence this update without recognising the loss of esteemed member Terence Lane. Most would be aware of Terry’s contribution to the arts, primarily through his involvement as senior curator of decorative arts at the National Gallery of Victoria. Terry...

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Vol 46 no 3, August 2024
The reinterment of Captain Matthew Flinders RN
By Robert & Stephen Hannan   |   August 2024   |   Vol 46 no 3

A new high-speed rail line between London and Birmingham led to archaeological excavations at St James’s burial ground under Euston Station. In 2019, archaeologists uncovered a wooden coffin bearing an engraved plate identifying the remains as those of Captain Matthew Flinders (1774–1814); his to...

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Vol 46 no 3, August 2024
Miss Rutherford and Australian flora
By Yvonne Barber   |   August 2024   |   Vol 46 no 3

Many items of Australiana are distinguished by their use of Australian materials or their use of Australian motifs. In the late 19th and early 20th centuries, several English ceramic factories made wares specifically for the Australian market. The scanty records of the Sydney Technological Museum noted th...

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Vol 46 no 3, August 2024
Research assistance needed: Rabbi Leib Aisack Falk
By    |   August 2024   |   Vol 46 no 3

The family of the late Rabbi Leib Aisack Falk (1889–1957) is preparing a comprehensive book about him. Rabbi Falk was born in what is now Latvia, moving to Scotland in 1911, next going to Plymouth, then becoming a British Army chaplain in Egypt and Palestine 1918–1921. He came with his wife and c...

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Vol 46 no 3, August 2024
Decoding the Ex Libris designs of Eric Thake
By James Stanton   |   August 2024   |   Vol 46 no 3

When a library was a necessity for a well-educated person, ownership of a book was indicated by the presence of a bookplate pasted into their books. While generic bookplates exist, book collectors often approached an artist to design an ex libris specifically for them,...

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Vol 46 no 3, August 2024
Portière 1901, lost and found. Arts and Crafts needlework in South Australia
By Jo Vandepeer   |   August 2024   |   Vol 46 no 3

From either ends of the globe, Portière 1901 has been rediscovered. Over 120 years ago, it was created to commemorate the colony of South Australia joining the Federation of Australia. The Portière was commissioned and made by the first women in the world to gain both the right to vote and to st...

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Vol 46 no 3, August 2024
‘I’m on the throne!’
By R A Fredman   |   August 2024   |   Vol 46 no 3

Bob Fredman brings some country humour to discussing the design inspiration of a chair discovered in Brisbane, made of Queensland timbers, which also displays Egyptian design elements. He suggest it was probably made in Queensland and inspired by the finding of Tutankhamun’s tomb at Luxor in 1922.<...

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Vol 46 no 3, August 2024
Phillis Seal, a remarkable woman
By Carol Bacon   |   August 2024   |   Vol 46 no 3

On the death of her husband Charles in Hobart in 1852, Phillis Seal (1807–1877) became the first woman to own and run a whaling fleet. Buffeted by falling prices for whale oil and labour shortages due to the gold rushes, Phillis eventually sold her ships and retired to live near her eldest son at Ballarat in ...

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Vol 46 no 3, August 2024
Making the winning crochet design of 1924
By Peter Lane and Rachel Mansfield   |   August 2024   |   Vol 46 no 3

Peter Lane’s article, ‘Australian filet crochet, The Weekly Times Book of Patterns’ that appeared in May 2024 Australianaincluded biographies of the crochet designers and judges of the newspaper’s crochet competition. But it did not record the journalist, who used t...

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Vol 46 no 3, August 2024
Book reviews
By    |   August 2024   |   Vol 46 no 3

Book review byDr David Bedford of David J Mabberley, The Peter Crossing Collection, an illustrated cataloguePeter Crossing AM, Sydney, 2022. $95 plus pack and post; Book Review by Meredith Hinchliffe AM of Christine Erratt Ceremonial maces ofAustr...

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The Australiana Society acknowledges Australia’s First Nations Peoples – the First Australians – as the Traditional Owners and Custodians of this land and gives respect to the Elders – past and present – and through them to all Australian Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people.