Find • Hindley Street • Results 751 to 780 of 957


Latin Quarter Restaurant, Register Place
Latin Quarter Restaurant and Cabaret, Register Place, west side, near Morphett Street and Hindley Street


West Terrace
West Terrace, east side, 21 December 1962, left side of building is 39 yards north from Hindley Street and frontage is 13.5 yards. Left side of the building being demolished abuts Rose Street.


Gilles Arcade
Southern end of Gilles Arcade off Currie Street. View looking south was taken October, 1959. Frontage of McPherson's building between the crosses is 11 yards. This is the facade of the old Royal Victoria Theatre. This theatre began as the Queen's Theatre and is the oldest intact theatre in mainland Australia. However the first theatre in Adelaide was the Royal Victoria Theatre on North Terrace. This name was used by the old Queen's Theatre (in the now called Playhouse Lane) from 1850 but the opening of the Theatre Royal in Hindley Street saw the demise of the Royal Victoria Theatre. Between 1933 and 1973 the building changed hands and housed McPherson's Store and Warehouse, Dalgety's Factory and Store and McPherson's Showroom


Premises of W.T. Flint and Son
ACRE 49: Premises of W.T. Flint and Son Ltd. on the corner of Hindley Street and Bank Street; the business was closed on 30 June 1953 and the building was demolished to allow the road to be widened.


Premises of W. T. Flint and Son
ACRE 49: Premises of W.T. Flint and Son, drapers and ironmongers at 48 and 50 Hindley Street; the business closed on 30 June 1953 and the building was demolished before the widening of Bank Street.


Theatre Royal, Adelaide
The Theatre Royal in Hindley Street, Adelaide. The poster advertises the production of 'La Fille du Tambour Major'. The entrance doors to the pit and gallery, stalls and dress circle areas of the theatre can be seen on the street frontage. Next door on the east are the premises of Tattersalls, A.M. Bickford & Sons and J. Miller Anderson & Co. In right foreground an elaborate gas lamp with a stag design on the glass sides is attached to the balcony of the building opposite the theatre.


Places (Adelaide)
Street light - Hindley Street.


Places (Adelaide)
Street light - Hindley Street.


Bank of New South Wales, Adelaide
Bank of New South Wales building in Adelaide, possibly in Hindley Street. The Australian coat of arms is displayed above the portico, and a flag pole is above this. A car and a person riding a push bike are in the street.


'Old Gateway - South Australian Bank'
View from the street of heavy stone pillars which were once part of a gateway to the old South Australian Bank(?). Signs advertising Miller Anderson Limited General Drapers can be seen on a parked delivery truck, and in the background. The photograph was possibly taken from North Terrace looking towards Hindley Street.


'Old Register Building' - Adelaide
Old Register Building next to the Colonial Mutual Fire Insurance Building near the intersection of Hindley Street and King William Street. People are crossing the tram line and cars are parked at the kerb.


McDonald's restaurant
McDonald's restaurant, corner Hindley Street and Bank Street, Adelaide.


District Offices of the I.O.O.F.M.U.
View of the facade of the District Office of the I.O.O.F.M.U (Independent Order of Oddfellows Manchester Unity). Ernest Benda, Tobacconists, was located at 41 King William Street (between Hindley Street and Gilbert Place, Acre 78). The Oddfellows Adelaide District Office shared the building from 1869-1873.


The Old Colonists Banquet Group : William Pybus, Jnr
Arrived in South Australia in March 1840 on board the ship the "Orissa". Ironfounder and engineer, Adelaide.


1956 Melbourne Olympic Games motion picture
Two athletes in a suburban street carrying movie cans labelled "Official Olympic Games Film in colour. Rush to Wests Theatre Adelaide". The film had its Adelaide gala premier at Wests Theatre, Hindley Street, Adelaide, on 9 May 1957.


Entrance to the Civic Theatre, Adelaide
Entrance to the Civic Theatre, Hindley Street, Adelaide. 'The Jolson Story', 'Drums over the River', and 'Forbidden', are being advertised as well as a competition to name a new theatre being constructed on Rundle Street.


Adelaide Global Strike 4 Climate
Viewed from the intersection with Hindley Street South Australian Police vehicles lead the Global Strike 4 Climate protest march down King William Street, Adelaide.


Adelaide Global Strike 4 Climate
The head of the Global Strike 4 Climate protest march crossing the intersection of King William Street and Hindley Street, Adelaide.


Adelaide Global Strike 4 Climate
The head of the Global Strike 4 Climate protest march crossing the intersection of King William Street and Hindley Street, Adelaide.


Adelaide Global Strike 4 Climate
The head of the Global Strike 4 Climate protest march crossing the intersection of King William Street and Hindley Street, Adelaide.


'Bob, the railway dog' at Port Augusta
PORT AUGUSTA: 'Bob, the railway dog' sitting on top of the driver's car of a stationary locomotive at Port Augusta Railway yard, railway staff stand in a group alongside the vehicle. Left to right: C.E. Dench, G. Graham, T. Nicholls, G. Denham, Harrison or Spooner, ?, T. Stack, ?; on engine: Fred Lyons, J.W. Roberts.


John Baptist Austin
John Baptist Austin III, mining expert; son of Rev. John Baptist Austin was born at Hastings. The family left England in 1843 aboard the "Augustus" arriving in Adelaide in 1844. The family lived at Macclesfield, later the property was called "Lashbrooke". John Baptist Austin III became interested in mining. Together with his family he lived at Burnside from 1876 until his death in 1896. He is remembered as a mining expert, journalist and his lithograph entitled "Adelaide, South Australia, from west end of Hindley Street" printed in 1849.


Humphrey Harding Bickford
Humphrey Harding Bickford arrived in South Australia with his wife Sarah aboard the 'Gratitude' on the 15th August 1848. He established a saddlery in Hindley Street (see B 17391) which he ran until killed by a fall from a horse near Cross Keys on 30th October 1864 (see Register 31 October 1864). He was survived by his wife Sarah, who continued to run the saddlery until 1879, and two sons Humphrey and John. He was buried in the West Terrace Cemetery.


Percival E. Hoare
[General description] Head and shoulders portrait of Percival E. Hoare, accountant at Harrold Brothers in Hindley Street and collector of antiquities. He wears his hair with a curl on top of his head and one over each ear.


William Paxton
A drawing from S.T.Gill's "Heads of the People" of William Paxton, a druggist on Hindley Street. Artist's caption reads 'Throw physic to the dogs'.


Richard Anstice Perkins
Richard Anstice Perkins aged 2, arrived in South Australia with his parents in 1840 on board "Java". He later helped his parents with their farm at Blackiston, near Mount Barker. He frequently saw bullock teams stuck in Hindley Street and often fed his own bullocks under the gum trees growing where the Arcade is now. He married Elizabeth Amelia Orr, they had nine children and lived at Mount Gambier. In 1877 he was made Overseer of the Government Experimental Farm at Mt Muirhead. He was an expert agriculturalist and well respected in the district. After his work at the Experimental Farm he took up land at Albacutya near Rainbow in the Mallee


John Woodforde
[General description] This portrait shows Dr. Woodforde seated and resting an elbow on a small table. He wears a dark suit with frock coat and a chin strap beard. He was the ship's surgeon on the 'Rapid' and upon arrival in the colony was appointed by Colonel Light as surgeon to the Survey Department at Rapid Bay. He later established a private practice in Hindley Street. He was appointed Coroner for Adelaide in 1857. [On back of photograph] 'John Woodforde, M.D. / Medical advisor to Colonel Light. Arrived in South Australia on the 'Rapid' in 1836 / presented by Miss Meliora O'Halloran'.


W. R. Cade's Orchestra
W.R. Cade's orchestra which used to play at the Wondergraph Theatre, Hindley Street. Back: Les Digman; Stan Baines; Chas Alison; Bill May; Bill Sterm; Gus Gooley; Alf Amoi. Front: James Buckley (Pianist); Seymour Pank; Bill Cade (Conductor); Janz Hackendorf (father of Carmen Hackendorf); Elford Mack.


Showroom Display
Showroom display from Adelaide Sports Depot, 15 Hindley Street.


Fenn Place
Fenn Place, east side in 1935. Extreme right is 64 yards north of Hindley Street. The left hand portion of this block of buildings has been excluded; frontage of the entire block was 20 & half yards. The photograph shows part of a two storey house behind an iron fence. There appears to be a verandah decorated with wrought iron lacework. The two storey brick building next door is derelict with broken glass in the windows.