Find • hearses • Results 1 to 25 of 25

Horse-drawn Hearse

Horse-drawn Hearse

Horse-drawn Hearse.

Horse Drawn Hearse

Horse Drawn Hearse

Fred Carr, wearing the top hat, on a horse-drawn hearse at Port Adelaide.

Motor Hearse, Mount Gambier

Motor Hearse, Mount Gambier

First Motor Hearse in Mount Gambier. Owned by W. Pearce.

Funeral car procession

Funeral car procession

ENFIELD: Funeral car procession. The Buick hearse registration number 36-572 was registered in 1924 and owned by Pengelley and Knabe.

Funeral of Sir Edward Stirling

Funeral of Sir Edward Stirling

Pallbearers removing the casket from a horse drawn hearse at the funeral of Sir Edward Stirling.

Funeral procession of Sir Edward Stirling

Funeral procession of Sir Edward Stirling

Horse drawn hearse leading the funeral procession of South Australian surgeon, scientist, and politician, Sir Edward Stirling.

Funeral in Broken Hill

Funeral in Broken Hill

Photographs of a funeral cortege travelling through Broken Hill. It has been suggested that this may have been the funeral of Bert Fisher, a senior union official who died close to the beginning of World War II. The Australian Club Hotel ceased trading in 1941.

Funeral Procession

Funeral Procession

Funeral procession with a horse drawn hearse and mourners following on foot.

Gawler

Gawler

Funeral procession in horsedrawn vehicles outside Charles George Rebbeck Undertakers Parlour. He also owned the furniture store, was elected as Councillor for East Ward in 1899-1900 and 1909, and was Mayor of Gawler in 1901-02 and 1910-1911

Gawler

Gawler

Horsedrawn Funeral cortege, Tod Street, outside the premises of Taylor & Forgie builders and undertakers.

Glen Osmond

Glen Osmond

Toll House and gate, Glen Osmond - tolls were instituted in 1841 to help pay for the new road to Mt. Barker and ceased in 1847. The hexagonal toll house was designed to be as comfortable as possible for the tollkeeper who lived there. There was space for a vegetable garden. Various tolls were established for all the traffic which included coach, chariot, chaise, gig, hearse, waggon and dray

Glen Osmond

Glen Osmond

Toll House, Glen Osmond. Tolls were instituted in 1841 to help pay for the new road to Mt. Barker and ceased in 1847. The hexagonal toll house was designed to be as comfortable as possible for the tollkeeper who lived there. There was space for a vegetable garden. Various tolls were established for all the traffic which included coach, chariot, chaise, gig, hearse, waggon and dray

Horse-drawn cart

Horse-drawn cart

A horse-drawn cart used as a hearse, with Walter and Albert Carman.

Funeral carriage outside the business of Charles Brown at Willunga

Funeral carriage outside the business of Charles Brown at Willunga

WILLUNGA: A funeral carriage outside the business of Charles Brown. From left: Martha Brown, Walter Brown, Charles Brown and Charles Brown Senior. Martha and Charles Brown arrived from England in 1866. Charles established his business in Willunga in 1871. He was the local carpenter, wheelwright and undertaker.

St John's Anglican Church, Halifax Street

St John's Anglican Church, Halifax Street

Funeral cortege outside St John's Church, Halifax Street, with the hearse adjacent to the gate and a long line of horse drawn cabs along the street. [Original image is damaged.]

Cemetery

Cemetery

Photograph of a funeral procession of hearses about to enter the cemetery.

Funeral of Sir John Bice

Funeral of Sir John Bice

Horse drawn hearse and carriages passing through Adelaide during the funeral of Sir John Bice, a South Australian politician; pedestrians are walking along the side of the road as they follow the procession.

Pall bearers at the funeral for Tom Price, Premier of South Australia

Pall bearers at the funeral for Tom Price, Premier of South Australia

Pall bearers removing the casket from a horse drawn hearse after the arrival at Mitcham cemetery for the funeral of Thomas Price, Premier of South Australia.

Pall bearers at the funeral for Tom Price, Premier of South Australia

Pall bearers at the funeral for Tom Price, Premier of South Australia

Pall bearers removing the casket from a horse drawn hearse after the arrival at Mitcham cemetery for the funeral of Thomas Price, Premier of South Australia 1905-1909.

Funeral procession for a deceased nurse in Adelaide

Funeral procession for a deceased nurse in Adelaide

Uniformed nurses line a road waiting for a horse drawn hearse, escorted and followed by other nurses to pass during a funeral for a deceased nurse in Adelaide.

A state funeral procession in London, Great Britain

A state funeral procession in London, Great Britain

Crowds watching a state funeral procession progressing towards Big Ben tower; the horse drawn hearse is escorted by uniformed soldiers and preceded by a military band, possibly that of Lord Kitchener who died at sea in 1916.

Funeral procession travelling along King William Street, Adelaide

Funeral procession travelling along King William Street, Adelaide

Mourners walking in front of a horse drawn hearse with others following in carriages proceeding along King William Street, Adelaide; other vehicles and passers-by have stopped in respect.

Funeral procession in Adelaide

Funeral procession in Adelaide

A hearse leading a funeral procession of motor cars along a suburban street in Adelaide South Australia.

Funeral procession of the late Hon. C.J. Rhodes (Bulawayo)

Funeral procession of the late Hon. C.J. Rhodes (Bulawayo)

Commercially produced photograph of Cecil Rhode's funeral procession. Shows the hearse being drawn through the countryside by a bullock team.

Photograph album of Flight Lieutenant N.W. Pemberton

Photograph album of Flight Lieutenant N.W. Pemberton

Photograph album belonging to Flight Lieutenant Neville Wheeldon Pemberton, No. AU SX417230, RAF 358 Squadron, from Adelaide, of active service during World War Two, comprising: landscapes, cities, buildings, local peoples and Australian and Allied military forces in the Middle East, India and Ceylon, all captioned. Selected photographs have been digitised. See below for details.