Find • portrait collection • Results 6,391 to 6,420 of 10,681

Lady Tennyson

Lady Tennyson

Lady Tennyson with her sons.

Reverend A. N. Thomas

Reverend A. N. Thomas

Reverend A. N. Thomas.

Arthur Nutter Thomas

Arthur Nutter Thomas

[General description] The subject is facing the photographer in seven eighths view, lit so that his face, silver hair and clerical collar stand out from the dark background. He was the Anglican Bishop of Adelaide from 1906-1940. [On back of photograph] 'Right Reverend Arthur Nutter Thomas, D.D., Bishop of Adelaide' (A clipping on back of the photograph) 'The Right Reverend Arthur Nutter Thomas, Bishop's Court, North Adelaide- Late scholar of Pem. Coll., Cam. B.A. (1st cl. Cl. Trip.) 1891; Jeremie LXX. Pri. 1892; Carus Gr. Test Pri. and 2nd cl. Theol. Trip. Pt. ii 1893; M.A. 1895; Hon. D.D. 1906; Wells Coll. 1893. d 1894; 9 1895 Wakef. Consecrated Lord Bishop of Adelaide in Westminster Abbey on February 2, 1906, by the Archbishop of Canterbury, assisted by The Bishops of Lon., B and W, Ely, Glouc., Roch., Alb.,Wakef., Moos., and Vic., Bishops Suffr. of Kensington and Dorking, Bishops Montgomery and Ingham. Enthroned in S. Peter's Cathedral, 4th April, 1906. FC of All SS. Cathl., Wakef., 1894-1895; Dom. Chap. to Abp. of York 1895-99; c of Leeds 1899-1901; R of Guisborough 1901-1906; Chap. to Abp of York 1904-1906.'

C. R. Thomas

C. R. Thomas

C. R. Thomas.

E. Kyffin Thomas

E. Kyffin Thomas

E. Kyffin Thomas, proprietor & general manager of the Register.

Mrs. Mary Thomas

Mrs. Mary Thomas

Mrs. Mary Thomas is best remembered for her diary kept during a voyage on board the "Africaine" to South Australia in 1836. The Thomas family brought the first printing press to South Australia. Robert Thomas established the South Australian Gazette and Colonial Register newspaper

Mrs. Mary Thomas

Mrs. Mary Thomas

Mrs. Mary Thomas and her husband Robert Thomas were early pioneers to South Australia in 1836. Her letters between 1855 and 1860 to her daughter Helen on the Victorian goldfields gave a detailed account of colonial domestic life. Mary was 49 when she left a comfortable life in London for a tent in the sand hills of Holdfast Bay. She died aged 87 leaving 56 descendants

Morgan Thomas

Morgan Thomas

Morgan Thomas.

Rex. K. Thomas

Rex. K. Thomas

Rex. K. Thomas - Register staff member. 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.

Richard Thomas

Richard Thomas

Reverend Richard Thomas.

Richard Thomas

Richard Thomas

Reverend Richard Thomas, Bishop of Willochra.

Reginald Kyffin Thomas

Reginald Kyffin Thomas

Reginald Kyffin Thomas.

Robert Kyffin Thomas

Robert Kyffin Thomas

Robert Kyffin Thomas.

Robert Thomas

Robert Thomas

Robert Thomas was one of the proprietors of the original South Australian Register.

Robert George Thomas

Robert George Thomas

Robert George Thomas was among the first colonists to arrive in South Australia. At only sixteen years of age he arrived onboard the "Cygnet" with Deputy Surveyor George Strickland Kingston. He worked with both Kingston and the firm of Light Finniss. After returning to Britain and designing many large public and private buildings he returned to South Australia and designed many prominent buildings around Adelaide.

William Henry Tietkens

William Henry Tietkens

William Henry Tietkens.

William Henry Tite

William Henry Tite

William Henry Tite joined the partnership of Goode, Durrant, Tite and Company (the softgoods and drapery business) and remained with the firm until his retirement in 1894. He married Elizabeth Ann Moore and together they had 9 children. He was known as a considerate and impartial employer.

Timke Family

Timke Family

Timke Family: Back - Karl, Friedrick, Waldemor and Herman Front: Adeline, Edouvard, Phillip, Ida and Heidi.

Francis William Thring

Francis William Thring

Francis William Thring.

Walter Thompson

Walter Thompson

Walter Thompson, who resided at Fairy Knowe farm, O'Halloran Hill.

Millie Edwards and Francis Flynn

Millie Edwards and Francis Flynn

Emily (aka Millie) Edwards and Francis Joseph Flynn. Also known as General and Mrs Mite, Flynn was born in New York in 1872. In 1884 he married Edwards in England. They came to Australia in 1890 to tour. Flynn died in Broken hill in 1898. Millie moved to New Zealand and continued to perform under the name Mrs General Mite. She died in an acccident in Christchurch, New Zealand, on 16 December 1919, and is buried in Bromley Cemetery.

William Henry Tite

William Henry Tite

William Henry Tite.

Tobin Sisters

Tobin Sisters

Tobin sisters, the aunts of C. J. Dennis.

Woman in a wedding dress

Woman in a wedding dress

An unidentified woman poses in a wedding dress, holding a bouquet. The caption on back of photograph reads 'Lady Alice Todd in wedding dress', but the photograph is not the correct era to depict Lady Alice Todd who was married to Sir Charles Todd.

Sir Charles Todd

Sir Charles Todd

Sir Charles Todd, who was Postmaster General, Superintendent of Telegraphs and Government Astronomer of South Australia.

Charles Robert Todd

Charles Robert Todd

Charles Robert Todd, accountant in the Treasury. He died in North Adelaide, aged 47, in 1902.

Charles Todd

Charles Todd

Charles Todd, astromoner, electrical engineer, meteologist, public service head. He was always fascinated by telecommunications and eventually became Head of the Electric Telegraph Department and was the Astronomical and Meteorological Observer. He built the first telegraph line across Australia.

Sir Charles Todd

Sir Charles Todd

Sir Charles Todd pictured wearing his CMG decoration. He worked at the Greenwich Observatory and Cambridge University. Later he was engaged by the South Australian Government as astronomical and meteorological observer. In 1859 Todd conceived the idea of the transcontinental line from Adelaide to Darwin. The line was completed by 1872. His next great work was the line of 1000 miles from Eucla establishing communication from Adelaide to Perth. He worked for the South Australian and Commonwealth Governments for 51 years

Sir Charles Todd

Sir Charles Todd

Sir Charles and Lady Todd arrived in Adelaide in 1855. His wife, Alice Gillian Bell was the namesake of Alice Springs. Their daughter Gwendoline married William Henry Bragg and was the mother of William Lawrence Bragg, both of whom shared the Nobel Prize in Physics in 1915. Charles Todd worked at the Greenwich Observatory and Cambridge University. Later he was engaged by the South Australian Government as astronomical and meteorological observer. In 1859 Todd conceived the idea of the transcontinental line from Adelaide to Darwin. The line was completed by 1872. His next great work was the line of 1000 miles from Eucla establishing communication from Adelaide to Perth. He worked for the South Australian and Commonwealth Governments for 51 years

Sir Charles Todd

Sir Charles Todd

Sir Charles Todd.