Oceania (continent)
Found in 4939 Collections and/or Records:
Taupo - Terraces Hotel hot springs, 1948
120 x 75 mm.
Taupo - Terraces Hotel thermal valley, 1948
125 x 75 mm.
Tauranga Aerodrome, 1948
150 x 85 mm. Group of thirteen stood before an aeroplane. Persons present identified as: 'Flight Lieutenant Trolove and crew, Barrow, Furlong, Millie, Spencer, Warcup, Mayor and Mayoress, Hands and driver.' Tymms is ninth from the left.
Tauranga, Bay of Plenty, New Zealand, 1876
Tauranga - Rotura road, 1948
80 x 130 mm.
Taviuni Island from the sea, 1910
350 x 250 mm. No print.
Taviuni Island from the sea. Taviuni, often called the garden of Fiji, is famous for its cocoanut [i. e. coconut] plantations, 1910
Painting only. [No print].
Tawharo, King [captioned beneath plate], 1884 - 1885
127 x 182 mm. oval print. A head and shoulders portrait of this Maori Chief, a heavily tattooed man wearing a cloak made from birds’ feathers (probably kiwi, a ‘kahu-kiwi’). The ‘moko’ of this chief is very well defined, with complex designs around nose and chin, and diverging curved lines running upwards over his forehead from the bridge of his nose. Photograph by Josiah Martin.
Te Aroha, Thames River, 1880
198 x 146 mm. A view looking across the Thames River towards a bridge leading to the town of Te Aroha. With mountains in the background.
Te Haere, companion in Mr Hursthouse’s imprisonment, 1884 - 1885
139 x 201 mm. A full length view of a Maori male, dressed in a cloak decorated with hanging black cords (korowai). Charles Wilson Hursthouse (1841-1911) was a surveyor and engineer captured by the Maori Chief Mahuki in 1883 while surveying for the North Island main trunk railway. He and another Englishman were kept bound hand and foot for 48 hours.
Te Kuiti, N.Z., Panorama C, 1920 - 1929
The postcard is captioned 'T.K. 11 Maoriland Photographic Series'.
Teacher and others at Port Adam, 1892
205 x 149 mm. A view showing the teacher and two other islanders standing in front of a hut.
Teacher and scholars at Malanta, 1892
Teaching Staff and Pupils, and The Patteson Memorial Chapel, St. Barnabas' College - Melanesian Mission Station, 1885
Facing p.32, referred to on p.40. John Coleridge Patteson, 1827-1871, went to the South Seas as a missionary in 1855 and six years later he was made Bishop of Melanesia. In 1866 he moved the headquarters of the Mission from New Zealand to Norfolk Island, and established St. Barnabas' College 'on a slight ridge, half a mile from the sea' (Spruson, p.39). Bishop Patteson was murdered on 16 September 1871 and a memorial chapel was erected to commemorate him: it was completed in 1880.
Team of horses drawing tin from Ruby Flat, 1910-01
Landscape format. Ringarooma Road, near Scottsdale, Tasmania. [Team passing man holding a whip with forest in the background].
Team of oxen near Te-nai : 8 miles from Roteruai, 1910
Landscape format. North Island, New Zealand. [Team somewhat obscured in dust].
Team of oxen near the Arbur Mine on the road from Bhanxholm to Derby, Tasmania, 1910-01
[No print]. Missing.
Team of oxen of Te-nai, 1910
Landscape format. [Closer view of oxen stopped on the sandy road opposite wooden bungalow].
Team of oxen on the Ringarooma Road near Scottsdale, 1910-01
Landscape format. [Team pulling cart along dusty road with man walking beside with whip].
Team of sixteen horses passing under fig tree, near Atherton. North Queensland, 1910
Teams and packhorse outside store at Yungaburra, 1910
[Loaded packhorses outside wooden store building].
Teams of horses outside smithy at Yungaburra, 1910
Landscape format. [Smithy not visible].
Teams of horses outside smithy at Yungaburra, 1910
Landscape format. [Teams outside buildings, one marked 'Baker'].
Teamsters camped for the night, 1908
Showing a wagon-load of sacks, with the horse team loose and feeding, and the wagonners in the background.
Technological Museum and College - Sydney, 1908
A view taken from the junction of Harris Street and Mary Ann Street. The museum is the nearer building, with the technical college behind it and to the right, facing on to Mary Ann Street. Both buildings were designed by William E. Kemp, the college in 1891 and the museum in 1892.