5 988 résultats
1887144645Adelaide: E.S. Wigg & Son 1887. First Edition. Hardcover. Very Good. Adelaide E.S. Wigg & Son 1887 this Adelaide edition is the first edition. Octavo xxii last blank 301 2 blank colophon pages plus a Woodburytype portrait frontispiece of Bishop Short image size 145 × 98 mm mounted on card printed with his facsimile signature. Gilt-pictorial brown cloth a little flecked rubbed and bumped; trifling signs of use and age; overall an excellent copy. A London edition of this book was published in 1888 with pages ix-304 from the table of contents onwards being the sheets of this Adelaide edition. The first eight pages the cloth colour lettering and decoration differ and it invariably contains the Woodburytype frontispiece portrait. The Woodburytype is derived from the original albumen silver photograph occasionally but not invariably found as the frontispiece in the Adelaide edition. Ferguson 18499 not noting the last point. E.S. Wigg & Son hardcover
29623The expedition was the culmination of several varying investigations over the previous decade: Madigan's first aerial reconnaissance in 1929 Colson's crossing practically along the 26th parallel in 1936 and a journey by truck around the northern end of the desert in 1937. This pioneering scientific expedition of nine men and seventeen camels left Andado in early June and reached Marree on 8 August after a journey of 800 miles in a little over ten weeks. <p>The Reports are contained in the following volumes of the Transactions and Proceedings of the Royal Society of South Australia: Volume 68 Part 1; Volume 69 Part 1; Volume 70 Parts 1 and 2; and Volume 72 Part 1 1944 to 1948. The series is preceded by MADIGAN C.T.: Introduction Narrative Physiography and Meteorology 22 pages plus 10 plates and a large detailed folding map 535 × 395 mm. 1st Report HICKMAN V.V.: Biology - Scorpions and Spiders 31 pages with 3 illustrations. 2nd CARROLL D.: Geology - Desert Sands 11 pages plus a plate. 3rd KINGHORN J.R.: Biology - Reptiles and Batrachians 7 pages. 4th MUSGRAVE A.: Biology - Hemiptera 2 pages. 5th WHITLEY G.P.: Biology - Fishes 4 pages. 6th MADIGAN C.T.: Geology - the Sand Formations 19 pages with illustrations plus 8 plates. 7th EARDLEY C.M.: Botany. Part I: Catalogue of Plants 30 pages plus 11 plates. Part II: The Phytogeography of some important Sandridge Deserts compared with that of the Simpson Desert 29 pages with a map. 8th CROCKER R.L.: The Soils and Vegetation of the Simpson Desert and its borders 24 pages plus 15 plates and a folding map 300 × 325 mm. Each volume is quarto in original wrappers edges a little discoloured; overall a fine set. 5 items. unknown
1983117693South Yarra: Gryphon Books 1983. First Edition. Hardcover. Fine/Fine. South Yarra Gryphon Books 1983. Quarto 131 pages with numerous black and white and colour illustrations and 6 tipped-in colour plates. Cloth; a fine copy with the near-fine dustwrapper. The foreword is by Germaine Greer. Gryphon Books hardcover
1962140264Adelaide: Libraries Board of South Australia 1962. Hardcover. Very Good. Adelaide Libraries Board of South Australia 1962/ 1838. Octavo ii new preliminaries iv versos blank iv-31 pages plus a folding map of the fledgling colony. Synthetic cloth; front cover lightly scored; free endpapers tanned; an excellent copy. Peade SA34: one of only 91 copies. This was one of the earliest facsimile editions published by the library 'reproduced . using the xerographic process' with the text bound from concertina-fold paper printed on one side only uncut and unopened along the leading edges. Libraries Board of South Australia hardcover
1969LFA-126748638Une revue de 24 pages, format 150 x 240 mm, illustrée, brochée, publiée en 1969, Société des Amateurs de Jardins Alpins, bon état
1943129212Adelaide: The Apex Club printed by Thornquest Press 1943. First Edition. Paperback. Very Good. Adelaide The Apex Club printed by Thornquest Press 1943. Octavo 32 pages with a few illustrations and period advertisements plus advertisements on three surfaces of the covers. Three-colour pictorial title-wrappers with the front cover design by Keera Crozier slightly marked and creased; a light vertical crease down the centre and a tiny closed tear at the leading edge of all leaves; a very good copy. The results for many of the races are pencilled in as the publisher intended. A loosely-inserted newspaper tearsheet gives some interesting details: 'Spurred on by a crowd estimated at 20000 Alf Wormald 14 won the Soapbox Derby today in his "Kitty-Hawk" by 25 yards from Brian Collins "Jeep" and Brian Polkinghorne "Tobruk Rat"'. Well it was in aid of a patriotic fund. The Apex Club (printed by Thornquest Press) paperback
1943129211Adelaide: The Apex Club printed by Thornquest Press 1943. First Edition. Paperback. Very Good. Adelaide The Apex Club printed by Thornquest Press 1943. Octavo 32 pages with a few illustrations and period advertisements plus advertisements on three surfaces of the covers. Three-colour pictorial title-wrappers with the front cover design by Keera Crozier slightly marked and creased; an excellent copy. Loosely inserted is a duplicate typescript letter annotated in ink and pencil to Vernon Branson of Rigby Limited author of 'The Golden Jubilee of the Apex Club of Adelaide 1936-1986'. It is from a fellow Apex member; it contains details of those who have donated prizes for the Derby with a request for thank-you letters to be sent. The Apex Club (printed by Thornquest Press) paperback
1933141962London: Stanley Paul & Co. Ltd 1933. First Edition. Hardcover. Very Good. London Stanley Paul & Co. Ltd. 1933. Octavo 256 pages plus 28 pages of plates totalling 40 illustrations from photographs. Gilt-lettered black cloth a little rubbed sunned and marked; front cover slightly bowed; extremities a little bumped; edges a little foxed and marked; flyleaves lightly discoloured; a very good copy. The autobiography of British soldier artist and sculptor Adrian Jones 1845-1938. Pages 111-114 and the plate facing page 96 refer to his Boer War Memorial sculpture at the entrance to Government House at the corner of North Terrace and King William Street Adelaide. Jones tells the story from the initial request by 'an influential Committee representing the City of Adelaide' chaired by Sir Kiffin Thomas to the unveiling in 1904 and Sir William Sowden's letter of appreciation some 21 years later. The Memorial 'was designed along the vigorous lines that appeal so strongly to the Australian people. Indeed many Australians told me that they thought it the best statue in the country but this may have been said to please me' page 112. His 'magnum opus however was his "Peace Quadriga" 1912 for Constitution Arch Hyde Park Corner his hopes for a major unveiling ceremony and perhaps even a knighthood dashed by the death of his great advocate King Edward VII in 1910'. 'Public Statues and Sculpture Association' website. With a foreword by Lt.-Gen. Lord Baden-Powell. Stanley Paul & Co. Ltd hardcover
1868142860Adelaide: Townsend Duryea 1868. First Edition. Hardcover. Very Good. Adelaide Townsend Duryea 1868. A large quarto album approximately 415 × 365 mm containing 18 albumen paper portraits each approximately 280 × 210 mm mounted on the rectos of cloth-hinged thick card leaves interleaved with guards plus one leaf of letterpress see below. Contemporary half roan and cloth lettered and tooled in gilt with a binder's ticket on the front pastedown 'Bound at the "Register" Office Grenfell Street Adelaide'; covers slightly worn; leaves slightly cockled; one guard missing; most photographs lightly discoloured near the right-hand edge; a few light spots of foxing mainly to the guards and the versos of the mounts and some minor signs of age and handling but overall in excellent condition. The subjects include some of the most prominent figures in early colonial South Australia. In order of appearance the portraits depict John Morphett President Henry Ayers Charles Hervey Bagot John Henry Barrow Charles George Everard John Baker William Wedd Tuxford Thomas Elder William Peacock William Morgan Thomas Hogarth John Tuthill Bagot Thomas English Henry Mildred John Crozier William Parkin John Hodgkiss and Emanuel Solomon. <p>The 'South Australian Advertiser' for 20 August 1868 records that: 'Mr. Duryea is preparing a parliamentary group containing the members of both Houses of the Legislature which promises to be an effective affair. The members of the Council have already given him sittings and a fine series of portraits is the result'. In the subsequent months Duryea exhibited the photographs at his King William Street studio but most accounts refer to them assembled as a group around Morphett. This photo-collage with the portraits all heavily cropped is almost certainly the basis for a contemporary carte de visite published by Duryea see SLSA B 9258. However most of the images in this album appear to be rare or even unrecorded in their uncropped form; indeed the only other examples we located were of Henry Ayers and Charles Hervey Bagot. It is also rare to find photographs of early colonists at all let alone of this size quality and quantity. <p>The guard leaves for the portraits of Morphett Hogarth J.T. Bagot and Mildred contain manuscript biographical details in a single hand. Although we have not identified the writer it is likely to be one of the eighteen MLCs as he refers to 'our chamber' in the entry for Morphett. The portrait of C.H. Bagot is accompanied by a similar short biography but this time in letterpress and misspelling his middle name as 'Harvey'. C.H. Bagot English Mildred Crozier Parkin and Solomon are identified in another hand on the mounts beneath the image. Townsend Duryea] hardcover
1919108343Adelaide 1919. First Edition. Hardcover. Very Good. Adelaide circa 1919. A custom-made photograph album 190 × 200 mm containing 6 card leaves with an original gelatin silver photograph mounted on both sides of each leaf with interleaved tissue-guards. Each photograph is approximately 135 × 95 mm. Half leather and cloth lettered in full in gilt on the front cover with 'The Eucalypts' in gilt on the spine; leather discoloured and moderately rubbed with slight wear in a few areas; some tiny paint spots near the head of the front cover; tissue-guards a little foxed and offset; marginal silvering-out to five prints; overall in very good condition. All but the first portrait is signed and only the last one contains an additional inscription the date '10.1.19'. The State Library of South Australia has another example of this album enabling us to confirm the identities where the handwriting was unclear. Ministers of religion lawyers doctors and architects predominate. The subjects are Reverend A.H. Gifford possibly A.E. Gifford; Benjamin Benny 1869-1935 senator and solicitor; George McEwin 1873-1945 lawyer and philanthropist; Edward Erskine Cleland 1869-1943 barrister and judge; Alfred McBain Bonython 1865-1954 architect; Sir James Wallace Sandford 1879-1958 merchant and politician; Reverend Wilfred Harris Unitarian minister returned to England in 1918; Dr Herbert Frank Shorney 1878-1933 opthalmologist; Sir Thomas John Mellis Napier 1882-1976 later a SA Supreme Court judge; Harold Reid; Edward Warner Benham 1872-1948 lawyer and academic; and Francis Hedley Counsell 1864-1933 architect. <p>The subtitle is a misquote from 'Among the Sandhills' by Adela Florence Nicolson née Cory 1865-1904 an English poet who wrote under the pseudonym Laurence Hope 'The scented orange bushes check the breeze Granting in tribute many waxen stars And aromatic Eucalyptus trees Defy the sun with grey-green scimitars'. We have saved the best until the end: we purchased this item decades ago and have postponed cataloguing it innumerable times not knowing who 'The Eucalypts' were. We have finally solved the puzzle by the simple expedient of spending untold hours on it. We eventually discovered the lengthy biographical sketch of Alfred Bonython compiled by Giles Walkley for the University of SA's database on architects accessible online. Among many other interesting details he records that 'At the age of 42 Bonython became the father of a fourth daughter . Determinedly reviving his literary activities he joined both at their outset in 1910 Lady Symon's Poetry Society and the "liberal Christian" discussion group The Eucalypts Club . SRG 252'. hardcover
193697765Adelaide: Amalgamated Publishing Company 1936. First Edition. Hardcover. Very Good. Adelaide Amalgamated Publishing Company September 1936. Large octavo 352 pages with hundreds of portraits. Faux leather; covers marked and a little bowed; endpapers a little discoloured as ever; ownership details on the flyleaf; a very good copy. Still a useful retrospective parochial biographical dictionary. Amalgamated Publishing Company hardcover
73309One item is quarto; one is 260 × 140 mm; the others are octavo nine of them are single-paged - five of which have conjugate blanks - and the others each contain two to four pages of text. The most interesting items are leaflets for the Annual Literary Competition in 1885 one page 1888 2 pages 260 × 140 mm and 1889 4 pages with one page announcing the sixth annual competition and another page devoted to reading clubs. The other items are notices of meetings some with agendas an 1888 questionnaire sent to member societies and an unused SALSU prize plate 100 × 80 mm mounted on a blank page of the only duplicate item in the group. George Hussey was general secretary for the entire period. The 1885 item above has a chipped creased and torn blank bottom margin and the 1888 item above is creased and folded with some mainly marginal splits along two folds; overall the condition is very good or better. Nothing if not rare and there is enough wheat among the chaff to get the literary taste and flavour of the times. 14 items. unknown
190327306Adelaide: W.K. Thomas & Co 1903. First edition. Pamphlet. Good overall. A printed pamphlet unrecorded by Trove committing to print the paper read by J. Griffiths before the Cambrian Society in Adelaide on Saturday 29 August 1903. It recounts Welsh history to 1485. It appeared as an article in The Evening Journal of the Adelaide South Australian newspaper on that date on page 5. <br /> <br /> 12mo 12pp staplebound cream paper covers with black title covers dusty foxing throughout still very readable. W.K. Thomas & Co unknown
2001137422Adelaide: Pioneers Association of South Australia Inc 2001. First Edition. Hardcover. Fine/Fine. Adelaide Pioneers Association of South Australia Inc. 2001. Small quarto xiv 258 pages with numerous illustrations some in colour plus 16 pages of colour plates. Papered boards; a fine copy with the fine dustwrapper. 'An edited collection of articles published by the Pioneers Association of South Australia over the past 70 years' dustwrapper. Pioneers Association of South Australia Inc hardcover
118411All portraits are albumen paper photographs approximately 140 × 103 mm mounted on cabinet cards 165 × 107 mm with the first 16 uniformly presented as oval vignettes 68 × 48 mm on plain black gilt-edged cards with the subject's name and period in office printed in gilt in the margin below the photograph; the last one ninth Earl of Kintore in office from 11 April 1889 to 10 April 1895 is on a white card of Stump & Co. Gresham Gallery Adelaide with only 'Earl Kintore' written in ink on the verso. It seems likely that the uniform series was produced during this period. Two photographs have minimal loss to one edge; a number are a little scuffed or marked; five have a marginal stain well clear of the portrait proper; a bottom corner of one card is cracked but firm; one card Lieutenant-Colonel F.G. Hamley had broken in two a few millimetres above the portrait proper and was held together with clear tape now removed by our conservator leaving only a light residual stain. In chronological order the governors and administrators A present are Hindmarsh Stephen A Gawler Grey Robe Young Finniss A MacDonnell Daly Hamley A Hanson A Musgrave Cairns A Jervois Robinson Boucaut A and Kintore. The only one not represented is Sir James Fergusson 16 February 1869 to 18 April 1873. 17 items. unknown
1910137365Near Kingston: Unidentified Photographer 1910. Very Good. Near Kingston Unidentified Photographer circa 1910s. A gelatin silver photograph 207 × 307 mm with one short tear to the top edge expertly sealed; in excellent condition. '2343 Near Kingston River Murray' is written in red pencil on the verso. The State Library of South Australia has a poor-quality reproduction of this image in its Kingston-on-Murray Collection B 31442 dated 'Approximately 1870'. This is clearly incorrect as PS 'Marion' wasn't built until 1897. [Unidentified Photographer unknown
1917137366Adelaide: Unidentified Photographer 1917. Very Good. Adelaide Unidentified Photographer circa 1917. A gelatin silver photograph 220 × 310 mm with two tears to the top edge expertly sealed; in excellent condition. '2790 Pennington Park' is written in red pencil on the verso; ''& Cathedral' has been added later in lead pencil. The State Library of South Australia has a damaged smaller-format example of this photograph in its Searcy Collection 'St. Peter's Cathedral North Adelaide PRG 280/1/18/356' 15 × 20 cm approximately 1917. [Unidentified Photographer unknown
1986140420Marden: South Australian Genealogy and Heraldry Society Inc 1986. First Edition. Hardcover. Very Good. Marden South Australian Genealogy and Heraldry Society Inc 1986. Octavo four volumes xvi 479; xvi i 480-945; xvi i 946-1414; and xvi 1415-1762 2 127 index pages. Cloth slightly rubbed; ownership label to each front free endpaper; an excellent set. A perennially useful reference work. 4 items. South Australian Genealogy and Heraldry Society Inc hardcover
212950Adelaide South Australia Genealogy.Society 1987-1989. 8 volumes. 8vo. c220pp. per volume. . Original wrappers name on title-pages a very good set. . First editions. Adelaide, South Australia Genealogy..Society, 1987-1989. unknown
1812133915Paris: Imprimerie Royale 1812. Very Good. Paris Imprimerie Royale 1812 second issue/ 1811. An engraved map 'Gravé par P.A.F. Tardieu . Ecrit par Giraldon et Lale' matted framed and glazed visible image size surface 510 × 760 mm; external dimensions approximately 725 × 980 mm. Vertical centrefold crease as issued; paper a little tanned with some offsetting and a few spots of foxing; in excellent condition not examined out of the frame. One of the earliest published charts of the South Australian coastline compiled by Louis de Freycinet on the Baudin voyage 1800-1803. It includes the complete coastline of Kangaroo Island which was first circumnavigated and fully charted by the French on this voyage Matthew Flinders had charted its north coast a short time previously. The charming engraved vignettes of Australian wildlife are after drawings by Charles Alexandre Lesueur. <p>This example is from the scarce second issue published as Plate 10 of the imperial folio atlas to the 'Partie navigation et géographie' volumes of the official account of the expedition 'Voyage de découvertes aux terres australes' 1812. It had previously appeared as Plate 2 in the second part of the atlas to the 'Historique' volumes published in 1811 Tooley 611. Tooley does not appear to list this issue but does list a subsequent state twice as 414 and 633 which includes a price at the bottom right and the reference 'Hyd. Fr. N° 636' next to the plate number. Imprimerie Royale unknown
196280222Adelaide: Public Library of South Australia 1962. Hardcover. Very Good. Adelaide Public Library of South Australia 1962 facsimile edition/ 1831. Octavo v 40 pages. Gilt-lettered synthetic cloth a little rubbed at the head and foot of the spine; endpapers tanned; an excellent copy. Peade SA10: one of only 134 copies. This was one of the earliest facsimile editions published by the library 'reproduced . using the xerographic process' with the text bound from concertina-fold paper printed on one side only uncut and unopened along the leading edges. <p>The appendix includes a report of a voyage from Sydney to Kangaroo Island and of observations made during a stay of seven months on and near the island by Captain Sutherland. Public Library of South Australia hardcover
123505Very Good. Folio five documents approximately 387 × 240 mm each each being a bifolium centrefold blank last page docketed; the first page in each instance contains a small hand-coloured diagram of the block showing the orientation of the land a paper-over-wax impressed seal and the signature of Governor George Gawler as Resident Commissioner and Alfred Miller Mundy as Private Secretary dated 16 July 1840. Three horizontal creases when the documents are folded thus the docketed portion of the last page becomes visible on one of the exposed panels; a few tiny marginal chips; one document has a short split along one fold and its outer panels when folded are a little tanned; trifling signs of age; overall all five documents are in very good condition. The consecutively numbered land grants 1037 to 1041 are for 'Eighty acres numbered 957 to 961 in the Provincial Survey marked with the Letter C' purchased by 'George Frederick Dashwood Esquire Royal Navy Forest Lodge Bracknell Berks'. The purchase price of £80 per section is not shown; all five documents have the word 'Duplicate' in ink in a contemporary hand at the head of the first page and they have a slightly different title to examples we have seen where purchase prices are recorded 'Land Grant under Preliminary Sales in England and Partial Purchase in the Province'. <p>Lieutenant George Frederick Dashwood RN 1806-1881 . 'was a naval officer public servant and politician in South Australia. He was appointed an acting member of the Legislative Council of South Australia serving from June 1843 to June 1844. He entered the Royal Naval College Dartmouth in 1819 and served 1832-1833 under Captain C. H. Fremantle on HMS "Challenger" noted for earlier 1829 claiming all of New Holland west of New South Wales for the Crown. He was commissioned lieutenant in December 1833 later served on the survey vessel "Sulphur". Dashwood suffered terribly from rheumatism and was retired on half pay. Dashwood married Sarah Rebecca Loine on 27 December 1839 in a Catholic church in London. They arrived in South Australia aboard "Orissa" in November 1841. He purchased an estate 5 miles 8 km west of Meadows named Dashwood's Gully. He and Sarah married again in a civil ceremony for reasons of bureaucratic convenience. In 1844 he applied for partial remission of the purchase price of the land by virtue of his naval service. This was initially refused but granted in 1850 after much argument. In 1842 he was appointed justice of the peace and sworn in as magistrate and on 15 June 1843 he was appointed to the Legislative Council holding this position until July 1844 when he resigned and apart from a public meeting at which he protested against the proposed settlement in the colony of a contingent of Parkhurst boys he took no part in public life until November 1846 when he was reappointed JP and in April 1847 he was made Acting Commissioner of Police and Police Magistrate. Two years later he was appointed Stipendiary Magistrate for Port Adelaide. In October 1850 he was appointed Police Commissioner a position he held until January 1852 when he was appointed Collector of Customs succeeding later Sir R.R. Torrens. In July 1858 he was appointed Emigration Agent in Great Britain and apart from a visit in May 1861 was in England until late 1862 when the office was abolished and served as Stipendiary Magistrate in various places including Mount Barker and Strathalbyn. In 1875 he was appointed Stipendiary Magistrate for Port Adelaide and Edithburgh. He held this post until around 1880' Wikipedia. <p>'From Almanda to United States: Lost Localities in the City of Onkaparinga' consulted online records more specifically that Dashwood 'had purchased sections 955 956 957 958 959 960 and 961 in the Hundred of Kuitpo in 1840 while still living in Berkshire' that Dashwood Gully had a post office and a school which operated from 1863 to 1869 and that the area continued to be known as Dashwood Gully until at least the 1950s. George Gawler 1795-1869 was South Australia's second governor. 'Disputes between the first governor Captain Sir John Hindmarsh and the resident commissioner Sir James Fisher over their respective jurisdictions had retarded the colony's development so the two offices were combined in Gawler. Thus as governor he became representative of the Colonial Office in the province and as resident commissioner representative of the non-governmental Colonization Commission which was responsible for the control of land sales for applying the proceeds to the emigration of labourers and for raising loans until such time as the colony had sufficient revenue to support itself. On 12 October 1838 Gawler with his wife and five children arrived in Adelaide in the "Pestonjee Bomanjee" and found conditions far worse than he had been led to expect. The most urgent necessity he believed was to promote rural settlement. He persuaded Charles Sturt to accept the post of surveyor-general and until he could assume office Gawler himself took charge of the Survey Department reorganizing it and conducting preliminary explorations. He also hired every available surveyor including some of Light's former officers. In October 1839 to his dismay he was ordered to dismiss them. The commissioners had appointed Lieutenant Edward Frome as surveyor-general and sent him out with a party of sappers. Gawler solved the problem by amalgamating the two forces feeling justified by the increasing volume of land sales. In 1839 over 170000 acres 68797 ha were sold'. Gawler produced results: within twelve months 200000 acres had been surveyed and by May 1841 mapping of 7000 square miles had been completed and over 500000 acres divided into sections. These rare land grants are evidence of Gawler's energy and zeal. Unhappily for him history was about to repeat itself: his 'major weakness was his complete failure to understand political realities. His recall and his successor Captain Sir George Grey arrived together on 10 May 1841' 'Australian Dictionary of Biography'. <p>Alfred Miller Mundy 1809-1877 has his own claims to fame as well. He 'enlisted in the army and was stationed in Sydney in November 1827 when he was promoted . to lieutenant. He was appointed a Magistrate in Tasmania in March 1835 and as Justice of the Peace in 1837. He resigned his commission in 1839 but was later commonly referred to as "Lieutenant Mundy". On 11 July 1839 Mundy John Bourke and Joseph Hawdon set out from Melbourne for Adelaide Mundy and Bourke on a light tandem and Hawdon on horseback following the route taken by Charles Bonney via Portland Bay and the Glenelg River. They arrived in Adelaide exactly a month later and estimated it could easily be done in half that time. He joined with Edward Bate Scott and Edward John Eyre who had a scheme to purchase and transport livestock from Adelaide to the Swan River Colony now Perth aboard chartered ships as far as King George's Sound then the only deepwater harbor in Western Australia and then drive them overland to Perth. On 30 January 1840 they loaded some stock onto the schooner "Minerva" and a few days later the remainder onto the barque "Cleveland". Eyre sailed aboard "Minerva" while Mundy was aboard the "Cleveland". The stock consisted of 1700 sheep which included over 1000 ewes and 450 lambs 6 horses and 100 cattle. They achieved good prices in Perth and would have made a tidy profit except many sheep and cattle died on the track in Western Australia ascribed to their eating poisonous plants. On 3 April 1840 Eyre and Mundy were elected honorary members of the WA Agricultural Society. They arrived back in Adelaide aboard "Minerva" in May 1840. Mundy was appointed acting Clerk of the Legislative Council in June 1840 and Private Secretary to the newly appointed Governor Grey in May 1841. He was appointed by the Governor to the Legislative Council on 15 June 1843 originally as a non-official appointee then as Colonial Secretary from 15 June 1848 to 14 June 1849 when he returned to England on leave of absence. His brother Edward Miller Mundy who was MP for the constituency of South Derbyshire had died childless on 29 January 1849 and Alfred resigned on succeeding to the family estate which included lucrative coal mines. He was Sheriff of Derbyshire in 1855 and a JP and DL for that county and a JP for Nottinghamshire. He died on 30 March 1877 while on holiday in Nice' Wikipedia. <p>These documents indicate Mundy was also private secretary to Governor Gawler by mid-July 1840 little more than two months after he arrived in Adelaide. He was successful in securing another important government contract too: less than a year later on 5 June 1841 he married Jane Hindmarsh 1814-1874 the eldest daughter of the colony's first governor John Hindmarsh. He had been recalled by the Colonial Office and he sailed for England on 14 July 1838. The 'recall was not considered a disgrace either in Adelaide or at the Colonial Office' and he 'had high hopes of reinstatement and left his wife in Adelaide. she married off her daughters with enviable success: in July 1840 Mary to G.M. Stephen a cousin of James Stephen at the Colonial Office and in July sic 1841 Jane to Alfred Miller Mundy a cousin of the earl of Lincoln. Mrs Hindmarsh also managed the sale of her husband's land to such effect that her account of £12000 was by far the largest in the Adelaide branch of the Bank of Australasia when she left to rejoin her husband in 1841' after he was appointed governor of Heligoland in 1840 ADB. 5 items. unknown
193721355Adelaide: E. S. Wigg & Sons 1937. Very good condition. Folding travel sheet with magnificent poster art cover illustration in bright red yellow and blue showing a paddle wheeler and tall trees on the banks of the Murray. Verso unfolding to full page advertisements with heading "Follow the Winter Sunshine to Renmark on the Murray" text at the left and b&w printed photographic ills at the right. Small map printed on blue rear panel. 5 1/2 x 8 1/2" folded; unfolds to 11 x 17". Trove 57137600. E. S. Wigg & Sons unknown
190577578Adelaide: Government Printer 1905. Very Good. Adelaide Government Printer 1905. Folio 3 pages plus 4 plates contained in 106 pages plus 8 plates 11 full-page diagrams 2 folding charts a full-page colour map of Lefevre Peninsula and a very large folding colour map of the state. Small holes in the inner margins where sewn when bound now disbound; an excellent copy. South Australian Parliamentary Paper Number 29 of 1905; one of 700 copies printed. The four plates relate to Point McLeay Mission Station. Government Printer unknown
184180317London: The Queen's Printers 1841. First Edition. Hardcover. Very Good. London The Queen's Printers 1841. Foolscap folio 166 pages with the last page the printed endorsement only. Later but not recent binder's cloth; leading edge of the title leaf has minimal expert reinforcement; tiny bottom corner pieces missing from the first and last few leaves; first and last pages a little discoloured and lightly marked; a very good copy. Ferguson 3222: 'A very valuable repository of information concerning South Australia and its early troubles. Copies of the foundation documents are given'. At the head of the title page 'Colonial Land & Emigration Office' is written in ink next to an oval ink stamp noting it was 'Received CL&EO Mar 13 1841'. The Queen's Printers] hardcover