MS 000073 (Box 031-4); E. S. Miller's papers about the First Fleet; Miller, Everard Studley, 1886-1956.; A variety of documents such as newspaper clippings, brochures and The First Fleet’, comprising nineteen chapters, an index and a bibliography 1787-88.
Includes:
References to Captain Arthur Phillip, Watkin Tench, Phillip Gidley King, John Hunter, John White and Jean-Francois La Perouse.
A description of the vessels, 'Sirius', 'Supply', 'Charlotte', 'Hyena' and 'Lady Penrhyn',
Correspondence between Phillip and the British Government re attitude to convicts .
References to the diaries of Hunter, King and Tench,a description of contact and conflict with the Aboriginal Australians and conditions of life in general.
Newspaper cuttings include : 150th commemoration of the arrival of the First Fleet and related early settlements - this has references to Baptist missionary, William Carey, famous ships and descendants of Governor King.
An extensive bibliography of primary and secondary sources is given at back of the manuscript.
Everard Studley Miller (1886-1956), philanthropist, was born on 24 October 1886 at Studley Park, Kew, Melbourne, younger of two sons of (Sir) Edward Miller, banker, and his wife Mary Elizabeth, née Darlot, and grandson of Henry ('Money') Miller. He was educated at Melbourne Church of England Grammar School and at Sherborne School, Dorsetshire, England. Though he would have liked to have gone to the University of Cambridge and become a don, he followed the wishes of his father and returned to take up his position in the family business of the Bank of Victoria, probably until 1927 when the bank amalgamated. He had continued studies under (Sir) Archibald Strong, classical scholar and writer. In 1914 he joined the (Royal) Historical Society of Victoria and attended meetings of the Classical Association.
Miller collected small objets d'art and prints, particularly Arundel chromolithographs reproducing Italian Primitives. His chief interests were engineering and photography. He practiced the latter from 1903, increasingly for the purpose of historical study, as an aid to preserving 'the monumental memories of early Australia'; he assembled his work in a series of albums, the first of which was called Historical Monuments in Victoria I. In the pursuit of family history and the history of pioneers he travelled extensively, first in Tasmania and later in Great Britain and Europe. Between 1914 and 1919 he joined Isaac Selby in protesting against the resumption of the old Melbourne cemetery which contained monuments to distinguished pioneers of the Port Phillip settlement.
Daryl Lindsay, from 1941 director of the National Gallery of Victoria, on whom Miller called frequently, remembered that he showed considerable interest in the administration of the Felton Bequest.
In increasingly poor health after World War II, Miller lived quietly at the family house Glyn, designed by the architect Rodney Howard Alsop, in Kooyong Road, Toorak, until his death on 5 July 1956. He was cremated with Anglican rites. A bachelor, tall and distinguished-looking, he was shy and retiring in manner, inclined to contemplation rather than business or society. His most cherished ambition took form in a will which, from an estate sworn for probate at £262,950, bequeathed property and money to the value of £170,000 to the National Gallery of Victoria, as a purchasing fund to be used for the acquisition of 'portraits of individuals of merit in history, painted, engraved or sculptured before 1800'. Purchases were made from about 1960 until 1977 when the fund was exhausted. His collection of photographic material was left to the Royal Historical Society of Victoria; the classics department of the University of Melbourne obtained a selection of his library.
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A-110.002-C; Church of England, Christ Church, Tarraville, c. 1863; Henderson, James; Photograph of a drawing by J.B. Henderson of the Church of England on Tyers Street, Tarraville.
This wooden rectangular timber Victorian Carpenter Gothic was built in 1856 to a design by J. H. W. Pettit and George Hastings.
It was reputedly the first church in Gippsland and is a rare surviving example of drop slab construction, with the building being constructed without the use of nails.
[source: Central Gippsland Tourism]
Victorian Heritage Register (VHR) Number : H0999
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GS-ICD-29; The road through Stony Rises, Pirron Yallock; Law, Robert, 1870-1930.; Stony Rises are an area of rocky ground formed on geologically recent lava flows around Mount Porndon, extending north to form the southern and southwestern shoreline of Lake Corangamite. Pirron Yallock is on the Princes Highway 15 km west of Colac in western Victoria.
The image shows a long winding road cutting through low shrubbery. Advancing towards the camera is a one horse drawn carriage with two men sitting atop of it. Further down the road at the first bend, another man can be seen standing next to a bicycle.
The landscape is listed in the Victorian Heritage Register.
Permission to be obtained for reproduction and publication. For a high resolution copy of this image, contact Royal Historical Society of Victoria; 1900; Photograph; Images collection![Photography Photography](/wp-content/plugins/ehive-search/images/catalogue_photography.png)
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