Find • Aboriginal • Results 1,591 to 1,620 of 4,075

Children riding Mountford's camel

Children riding Mountford's camel

Aboriginal children riding Mountford's camel, Musgrave Ranges.

Adnyamathanha wet weather shelter

Adnyamathanha wet weather shelter

The 'skeleton' of an Adnyamathanha wet weather shelter near Nepabunna, Northern Flinders Ranges, South Australia.

Susie Wilton and a child

Susie Wilton and a child

Susie Wilton demonstrating a method of carrying children at Nepabunna Mission Station, Northern Flinders Ranges, South Australia.

Susie Wilton and a child

Susie Wilton and a child

Susie Wilton demonstrating a method of carrying children at Nepabunna Mission Station, Northern Flinders Ranges, South Australia.

Hut at Nepabunna

Hut at Nepabunna

An example of the huts lived in by the Aboriginal residents of Nepabunna. Three children stand in front of the hut.

Aboriginal woman decorated for Pukamuni ceremony

Aboriginal woman decorated for Pukamuni ceremony

An Aboriginal woman of Melville Island decorated for the Pukamuni burial ceremony.

Aboriginal man being decorated for Pukamuni ceremony

Aboriginal man being decorated for Pukamuni ceremony

An Aboriginal man of Melville Island being decorated with paint for the final Pukamuni burial ceremony.

Aboriginal child decorated for Pukamuni ceremony

Aboriginal child decorated for Pukamuni ceremony

An Aboriginal child of Melville Island decorated with paint for the Pukamuni burial ceremony.

Aboriginal man (Jack Navy) holding cooked Kulama Yam

Aboriginal man (Jack Navy) holding cooked Kulama Yam

An Aboriginal man of Melville Island, identified as Jack Navy, holding a cooked Kulama Yam against his body to prevent sickness, during the annual Kulama Ceremony.

Portrait of an Aboriginal couple

Portrait of an Aboriginal couple

A studio portrait, probably taken by George Freeman, the manager of the Melbourne Photographic Company, Adelaide. It features an Aboriginal couple wearing animal skins. The man is posed with a shield and a spear, while the woman is holding a sword club.

South Australia and Northern Territory views

South Australia and Northern Territory views

A half morocco over pebbled cloth album, inscribed on front pastedown 'Zur Erinnerung an Adelaide Sud-Australien / von Herrn & Frau Unbehaun / December 1899' [In memory of Adelaide, South Australia, from Mr & Mrs Unbehaun], and containing 24 window mounted silver gelatin prints, each 100 x 150 mm and with a manuscript caption on the album page beneath.

Aroona Station

Aroona Station

Tonal pencil drawing on paper, believed to be of the original Aroona Station (circa 1854), north of Wilpena Pound in the Flinders Ranges, South Australia. The scene shows the main homestead set at the bottom of high ranges, with wooden huts and two cattle yards nearby on the plain. A pair of cattle and three horses are grazing to the left, while a man is visible a little further away. A group of four Aboriginal Australians with a baby and a dog gather near a campfire in the foreground, with one holding a spear.

Domestic Hut, Flinders Ranges

Domestic Hut, Flinders Ranges

Tonal pencil drawing on paper of a domestic wooden hut with a stone chimney and a thatched roof which is assumed to be on the original Aroona Station (circa 1854), north of Wilpena Pound in the Flinders Ranges, South Australia. Two saddles sit on the verandah. The scene depicts an Aboriginal Australian approaching the hut holding up a Christian cross towards a man coming out the front door, with a cat standing beside him, back arched. A dog on a chain stretches towards the figures from the left. Artwork is signed by the artist in the lower right corner, and rough sketch of the hut is on the reverse side.

Men with dogs

Men with dogs

Aboriginal men with dogs in a paddock. One man has a broom and another has an axe.

Women with children

Women with children

Aboriginal women with two children.

Women by a shack

Women by a shack

Aboriginal women with children outside the front of a shack.

Tommy, Frances & Garnet

Tommy, Frances & Garnet

Tommy, Frances & Garnet in their little Humpy. Taken about 200 yards from the house of Thomas Henry Bowman. Tommy is believed to be an Aboriginal police officer and tracker. See also PRG 280/1/28/291 for more information on Tommy.

Fanny, Port Lincoln

Fanny, Port Lincoln

Photograph of Fanny, the last member of the Port Lincoln Aboriginal tribe. Born in Poonindie, and died in Port Lincoln in 1922 [also at B 38271 & B 71140].

Aboriginal woman from Arrabury Station

Aboriginal woman from Arrabury Station

An Aboriginal woman from Arrabury Station.

Miscellaneous photographs

Miscellaneous photographs

A collection of photographs with no particular link to the White family, but with inherent historic interest. They include images of Randall's/Randles Corner, Parachilna Siding, early Grange and Henley Beach, transport, portraits, Adelaide Oval, Portland Cement quarry and miscellaneous. See 'contents' for details of individual items.

Mid North and Flinders Ranges

Mid North and Flinders Ranges

Records of the Reverend Arthur M. Trengove comprising lantern slides and glass plate negatives. Contents include the Flinders Ranges and Alligator Gorge area, Horrock's Pass, agricultural and picturesque bush scenery captured while touring, both with horse and cart and later with motor vehicles. Trengrove probably used some of these slides during lectures or presentations, or during church services. It is likely he took a selection of slides with him on his tours, and made presentations to a wide variety of audiences. See CONTENTS for more information and details of the images.

Children playing on a saw horse

Children playing on a saw horse

One of a collection of photographs taken at work camps at the Coober Pedy Aboriginal Reserve, one in August 1961 and another in August 1962. This image shows a number of children, supervised by adults, playing on a saw horse. The cottage under construction can be seen in the background.

Children playing on a saw horse

Children playing on a saw horse

One of a collection of photographs taken at work camps at the Coober Pedy Aboriginal Reserve, one in August 1961 and another in August 1962. This image shows a number of children, supervised by adults, playing on a saw horse. A cottage on the reserve can be seen in the background.

Volunteer group

Volunteer group

One of a collection of photographs taken at work camps at the Coober Pedy Aboriginal Reserve, one in August 1961 and another in August 1962. This image shows a large group of people, presumably the volunteers at the work camp with some of the locals.

Priscilla Hubert, Betts Corner Homeland

Priscilla Hubert, Betts Corner Homeland

Priscilla Hubert and her family in her house at Betts Corner Homeland, Ceduna. The photographer describes the homeland, "Betts Corner homeland was the last homeland to be built around the Ceduna region with ATSIC money and as result it is a very basic settlement. The day I visited Priscilla Hubert's house with Shelly I was very fortunate to be invited into her house for a cup of tea and make some images of the children. On average there is fifteen people living in this three bedroom house and when extended family and friends come to visit this can swell to thirty people. Once inside the house I found it to be very clean and orderly, all the children played beautifully together, Priscilla took me into the main bedroom where the kids were all watching Video Hits on TV and dancing. This was an amazing experience and I found it very rewarding to make images of this family group and give them some photographs to hang on their walls. An hour before going to Betts Corner I was two kilometers down the road at the Ceduna MotorX track where the South Australian State Titles were being held. The contract between the children at Betts Corner and the children at the track was stark. The kids at the track were dressed in the latest gear, riding motorbikes worth thousands of dollars, and their parents were camping in upmarket caravans towed by the latest 4WD's."

Priscilla Hubert, Betts Corner Homeland

Priscilla Hubert, Betts Corner Homeland

Priscilla Hubert out the front of her home at Betts Corner Homeland, Ceduna. The photographer describes the homeland, "Betts Corner homeland was the last homeland to be built around the Ceduna region with ATSIC money and as result it is a very basic settlement. The day I visited Priscilla Hubert's house with Shelly I was very fortunate to be invited into her house for a cup of tea and make some images of the children. On average there is fifteen people living in this three bedroom house and when extended family and friends come to visit this can swell to thirty people. Once inside the house I found it to be very clean and orderly, all the children played beautifully together, Priscilla took me into the main bedroom where the kids were all watching Video Hits on TV and dancing. This was an amazing experience and I found it very rewarding to make images of this family group and give them some photographs to hang on their walls. An hour before going to Betts Corner I was two kilometers down the road at the Ceduna MotorX track where the South Australian State Titles were being held. The contract between the children at Betts Corner and the children at the track was stark. The kids at the track were dressed in the latest gear, riding motorbikes worth thousands of dollars, and their parents were camping in upmarket caravans towed by the latest 4WD's."

Priscilla Hubert, Betts Corner Homeland

Priscilla Hubert, Betts Corner Homeland

Priscilla Hubert and her family at Betts Corner Homeland, Ceduna. The photographer describes the homeland, "Betts Corner homeland was the last homeland to be built around the Ceduna region with ATSIC money and as result it is a very basic settlement. The day I visited Priscilla Hubert's house with Shelly I was very fortunate to be invited into her house for a cup of tea and make some images of the children. On average there is fifteen people living in this three bedroom house and when extended family and friends come to visit this can swell to thirty people. Once inside the house I found it to be very clean and orderly, all the children played beautifully together, Priscilla took me into the main bedroom where the kids were all watching Video Hits on TV and dancing. This was an amazing experience and I found it very rewarding to make images of this family group and give them some photographs to hang on their walls. An hour before going to Betts Corner I was two kilometers down the road at the Ceduna MotorX track where the South Australian State Titles were being held. The contract between the children at Betts Corner and the children at the track was stark. The kids at the track were dressed in the latest gear, riding motorbikes worth thousands of dollars, and their parents were camping in upmarket caravans towed by the latest 4WD's."

Koonibba house

Koonibba house

Workers including Mark Smith, George Mastrosavas, and Wayne Miller preparing to lay concrete around a new home at Koonibba. The photographer describes the Community, "The Koonibba Community is located in the vicinity of an Aboriginal ceremonial ground and traditional meeting place. The community was established in 1898 at a time when land on the west coast of South Australia was shifting from pastoralism to agriculture, it was originally a Lutheran Mission. The place now consists of a small township, surrounding land and the area around the Koonibba Rockhole. The township comprises administration buildings, the old Mission Church of the redeemer, community housing, school, childcare centre, hall, health clinic, workshop and various other buildings. Most of the existing structures are associated with the early phases of the Lutheran Mission. The area is 850ha, just off the Eyre Highway and 8km NNW of the township of Koonibba, 25km north west of Ceduna. On the day that these images where made I was lucky enough to record a number of resident tradesmen building new, and repairing old, community homes. I was also allowed to record some of the students from the primary school and in the childcare centre."

Indigenous workers from the Koonibba Community

Indigenous workers from the Koonibba Community

Indigenouse workers from the Koonibba Community, including from left to right, Ashley Peel, Gordon Davey, George Mastrosavas, and Wayne Miller, building community houses. The photographer describes the Community, "The Koonibba Community is located in the vicinity of an Aboriginal ceremonial ground and traditional meeting place. The community was established in 1898 at a time when land on the west coast of South Australia was shifting from pastoralism to agriculture, it was originally a Lutheran Mission. The place now consists of a small township, surrounding land and the area around the Koonibba Rockhole. The township comprises administration buildings, the old Mission Church of the redeemer, community housing, school, childcare centre, hall, health clinic, workshop and various other buildings. Most of the existing structures are associated with the early phases of the Lutheran Mission. The area is 850ha, just off the Eyre Highway and 8km NNW of the township of Koonibba, 25km north west of Ceduna. On the day that these images where made I was lucky enough to record a number of resident tradesmen building new, and repairing old, community homes. I was also allowed to record some of the students from the primary school and in the childcare centre."

Kaurna reconciliation artwork

Kaurna reconciliation artwork

Photographs of the artwork created for the reconciliation public art project, Kaurna meyunna, Kaurna yerta tampendi (Recognising Kaurna people and Kaurna Land), featuring: pieces of the scultpure in the process of being carved, the installation of the artwork at the Adelaide Festival Centre, and various views of the finished artwork in location at the Adelaide Festival Centre, including close ups of the various components of the scultpure, children having their photograph taken by the sculpture, and various shots of the artwork at night time, illuminated by the lights of the street and the Adelaide Festival Centre. Various buildings can be seen in the background, including the Festival Centre complex, Parliament House, Stamford Plaza hotel, Skycity Casino and the Myer building.