Connecting you with Australian culture online
In addition to the female colonists there were female Indigenous Australians - Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander women whose lives were changed dramatically when the English colonists arrived in large numbers. The lives of women like Truganini, Walye...
In 1788, the eleven ships of the First Fleet landed their 'cargo' of around 780 British convicts at Botany Bay in New South Wales. From 1788 to 1823, the Colony of New South Wales was officially a penal colony comprised mainly of convicts, marines and th...
Australian films and filmmakers receive acclaim on the world stage, and the achievements of Australian women onscreen are celebrated. The play's success encouraged Kate to turn the play into a film (1920), which she co-directed with Charles Villiers, mak...
The gold rushes of the nineteenth century and the lives of those who worked the goldfields - the 'diggers' - are etched into our national folklore. There is no doubt that the gold rushes had a huge effect on the Australian economy and our development as a...
Image courtesy of the Australian War Memorial. The myth of the digger and the larrikin hero is an important part of the Australian experience of pastoralism, the goldfields, bushranging, shearing and droving. The slang term 'digger' re-surfaced during th...
In 1788 the First Fleet landed at Camp Cove in Port Jackson with the 'cargo' of convicts which helped establish the penal colony of New South Wales. One in five of the convicts to arrive in the penal colony (1788-1823) was female and they made up the lar...
Nursing staff of a mobile hospital, including four Australian nurses, 1917. The involvement of Australian women as nurses in war began in 1898 with the formation of the Australian Nursing Service of New South Wales, from which sixty nurses served in The ...
Image courtesy of the Australian War Memorial. The involvement of Australian women in each war is closely connected to their role in society at different times, and the nature of each war. Australia has been involved in a number of wars including The Boer...
The first ship and crew to chart the Australian coast and meet with Aboriginal people was the Duyfken captained by Dutchman, Willem Janszoon. In 1770, Englishman Lieutenant James Cook charted the Australian east coast in his ship HM Barque Endeavour. Coo...
Description:Dee Why Books opened in 1994 at Dee Why, a suburb on the Northern Beaches of Sydney. > In January 1996, we combined our small shop in Dee Why with the larger neighbouring shop and created a bookshop with the space our books demanded. > July ...
SAHISTORYWEEKii SAHISTORYWEEKii SAOPENHERITAGE20-28MAY2006GUIDELINESFORVISITORSTOSTATEHERITAGE-LISTEDPROPERTIES>Pleaserespecttherestrictionsinplaceateachvenue. SAHISTORYWEEKviiSAHISTORYWEEKviiIntroducingSAOpenHeritageForthe rsttime,theSAHistoryWeekprogr...
University of New South Wales: on Colonial artists; women artists to 1950; black and white artists; Aboriginal artists of the Western Desert and the Sydney region. Australian National University and Proquest: Literary Studies, Australian Women's Weekly, ...
Daisy in exile: The diary of an Australian school girl in France 1887- 1889 translated by Marc Serge RiviËre. Daisy in exile: The diary of an Australian school girl in France forms part of the now large corpus of published journals, memoirs and letters b...
> Note: We don't search within the external databases and indexes for you, but we do provide you with access. University of New South Wales: on Colonial artists; women artists to 1950; black and white artists; Aboriginal artists of the Western Desert and ...
The gold rushes of the nineteenth century and the lives of those who worked the goldfields - the 'diggers' - are etched into our national folklore. There is no doubt that the gold rushes had a huge effect on the Australian economy and our development as a...
In 1788, the eleven ships of the First Fleet landed their 'cargo' of around 780 British convicts at Botany Bay in New South Wales. From 1788 to 1823, the Colony of New South Wales was officially a penal colony comprised mainly of convicts, marines and th...
In addition to the female colonists there were female Indigenous Australians - Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander women whose lives were changed dramatically when the English colonists arrived in large numbers. The lives of women like Truganini, Walye...
Sidney Nolan, Kelly and horse, 1946, enamel on composition board. Select a categoryArchitecture and Design Archives and Libraries Built, Natural & Historic Heritage Collecting Institutions Community Arts Cross Media Arts Exhibitions Festivals, Events Fil...
Australian films and filmmakers receive acclaim on the world stage, and the achievements of Australian women onscreen are celebrated. In directing her first feature film, My Brilliant Career (1979), Armstrong became the first woman to direct a feature-le...
The involvement of Australian women as nurses in war began in 1898 with the formation of the Australian Nursing Service of New South Wales, from which sixty nurses served in The Boer War. According to the Australian Department of Defence, 2,562 AANS nurs...
If you can see this message, you are probably not seeing this site in the way it was designed. This site uses cascading style sheets (CSS2) to control the way in which elements are displayed on the page.
You will still be able to access everything in this site, but we do recommend you upgrade your browser to a more recent, standards compliant, browser.