Find • portrait collection • Results 5,641 to 5,670 of 10,681


Miss Fanny Markey
Miss Fanny Markey and her sister Vi. According to a researcher, Frances Annie Markey was born 17 August 1893 in Wonna and died 1964, and she is the brother of Edward Thomas Markey. Her youngest sister Violet Ethel May Markey was born 1909 and died 1957. Both were children of William James Markey & Annie Markey.


C. B. Marryat
C. B. Marryat, architect of Urrbrae.


Charles Marryat
Charles Marryat, Dean of Adelaide from 1887-1906. He arrived in Sydney from England in 1852 working as chaplain on an emigrant ship. After holding positions in the NSW penal establishments he moved to Adelaide in 1853 and held the position of curate at Trinity Church. He was described as a man of strong opinions. He was the doyen of the clergy, devout and remembered for establishing synod regulations.


Charles Marryat
Charles Marryat, Dean of Adelaide. He was curate at Holy Trinity, Adelaide and then incumbent at St Paul's, Port Adelaide and then Christ Church, North Adelaide. His aunt was the sister of Augustus Short, bishop of Adelaide. Augustus Short had the deciding vote on his appointment which was felt to be unfair at the time. Although he was not regarded as a brilliant speaker he was clear and concise and a man of strong opinions


Charles Marryat
Charles Marryat, Dean of Adelaide.


Charles Marryat
Charles Marryat, Dean of Adelaide.


Charles Marryat
Charles Marryat.


Charles Marryat
Charles Marryat.


Charles Marryat
Charles Marryat, Dean of Adelaide.


Grace Montgomery Marryat
Grace Montgomery Marryat.


Gracie Marryat
Gracie Marryat, Mrs C. Herbert Hughes.


Mabel Marryat.
Mabel Marryat.


Marryat family
Marryat family.


Marryat Family
Marryat Family.


W. G. Marsh
W. G. Marsh.


W. G. Marsh
Reverend W.G. Marsh of St. Luke's Church, Whitmore Square.


Reverend W. G. Marsh
Reverend W.G. Marsh.


Dr. Marshall
Dr. Marshall.


Dorothy Marshall
Official photograph of Dorothy Marshall, State Superintendent of the Australian Women's Land Army, in uniform. Copied from a leaflet in PRG596.


James Marshall
James Waddell Marshall - draper, importer, furniture merchant, benefactor and business executive. After arriving in South Australia and marrying Annie Walters he dropped the name Waddell. With fellow assistant William Taylor they set up a store in Hindley Street. Later they bought another business in Rundle Street (Marshall's) which grew to be the largest of its kind in South Australia. He served on numerous boards and later lived with his second wife at Unley Park


Samuel Marshall
Samuel Marshall arrived in South Australia in February 1839 on board the ship "Thomas Harrison". He was a carpenter, pianoforte maker, organ builder and lived at Plympton


Thomas Marshall, junior
Thomas Marshall, junior.


Charles Latimer Marson
Charles Latimer Marson, St. Oswald's Church, Parkside.


Robert Humphrey Marten
Robert Humphrey Marten, [a doctor who died in Crafers, Adelaide on 8/4/1933. Born in Penn Hale, Wolverhampton, England, on 8/3/1860, the son of Henry John Marten and Frances Anne Dimmock, and great-grandson of his name-sake who was a London businessman and non-conformist. He was a graduate of Caius College, Cambridge, MB. BChir, MRCS, LRCP; and Major RAMC in World War 1. He appears to have emigrated after graduation (1888) but frequently travelled back to England. He was in contact with his English relations in the 1920s. He had sons, who also served in WWI. Information provided by Jane Fellows].


Basil Parkes Martin
Basil Parkes Martin, Public Trustee. Born at Goodwood November 15, 1869. He was the son of Edward Martin of Unley Park, Chief Clerk of the Police Department, and brother of CG Martin, Secretary to the Attorney General's Office. Basil Parkes Martin was a civil service for 48 years. He was a junior clerk in the Lands Office and the Supreme Court. He was accountant, then Deputy in the Public Trustee's Office and ultimately Public Trustee. He married Olive Lillicrapp and they had a son and daughter.


Catherine Edith Martin
Mrs Catherine Edith Macauley Martin and her sister Mrs Bethune. Mrs Bethune is on the left. Mrs Martin was an Australian novelist who used the pseudonyms MC, and Mrs Alick MacLeod. She was brought to South Australia as a child and lived at Mount Gambier and later in Adelaide. One of her books "Indigenous Australians" is among the best books of its kind in Australian literature. Her interests were nurtured by her friend, reformist and writer Catherine Helen Spence


James Martindale Junior
James Martindale Junior of the Register staff. The Register was originally known as the South Australian Gazette and Colonial Register and later the South Australian Register was South Australia's first newspaper. It was first published in London in June 1936 and moved to Adelaide in 1837.


John Baxter Mather
John Baxter Mather was an Adelaide painter (landscapes and seascapes) illustrator and cartoonist, etcher, critic and journalist. He became director of the Art Gallery of South Australia.


Llandaff Brisbane Mathews
Colonel Llandaff Brisbane Mathews VD died in 1904 aged 72. It is possible that he was a colonel in the colonial garrison and aide-de-camp to three South Australian governors. In 1901 he received a decoration "at the hands of" the Duke of Cornwall, now the Prince of Wales. The Colonial Auxiliary Forces Officer's Decoration, post nominal letters VD, was established in 1889 as recognition for long and meritorious service as a part-time commissioned officer in any of the organised military forces of the British Colonies


Pastor Matschoss
Pastor Matschoss, Lutheran Minister at Mt Gambier.