pamatravel.wordpress.com
Tasmania 2016, Day 11 – On the road again
https://pamatravel.wordpress.com/2016/02/16/tasmania-2016-day-11
On the road again. Travels with Peter and Majella. February 16, 2016. Tasmania 2016, Day 11. Majella’s plan for today was to explore the Tamar Valley north from Launceston. It changed slightly yesterday when, after eating lunch at the Wursthaus, she crossed the mall and found Gourlay’s Confectionery Shop. Just before 9:00 Majella and the toffee watchers headed off. They were back, with sweets and satisfied with their viewing before 9:30. We all boarded the van and headed off to explore. We arrived there ...
ontheconvicttrail.blogspot.com
On The Convict Trail: January 2015
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On The Convict Trail. Wednesday, 28 January 2015. Hardcastle was built for a handsome, bearded clergyman, the Reverend Isaac Hardcastle Palfreyman, pastor of the Free Methodist Church in Murray Street. He bought the land in 1887 from an unlikely quartet of people-a gentleman, a painter and glazier, a farmer and a widow. Two lots of a sub-division, Numbers 4 and 5, were needed and the cost was £282: 10:0. Hardcastle’s restoration is certainly worth every effort the present owners have put into it. The Her...
ontheconvicttrail.blogspot.com
On The Convict Trail: Queen Adelaide Inn
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On The Convict Trail. Sunday, 9 August 2015. The Queen Adelaide Inn began life as a comfortable 4 roomed brick cottage that was built by James Sly, a bootmaker, in the mid 1840’s. By 1853, it had been purchased at public auction by George Pollock for the sum of 500 pounds. The building still remains to this day in South Hobart and appears to be undergoing a major renovation. Fantastic that the place has managed to survive for all these years. Main Text and Information Source –. Sunday, August 09, 2015.
ontheconvicttrail.blogspot.com
On The Convict Trail: June 2015
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On The Convict Trail. Sunday, 28 June 2015. The Denison Hotel found itself in the public spotlight in 1900 when advertising on the exterior wall of the hotel was thought by some of the Hobart public to be threatening common decency. The buildings western wall had been painted with a mural which was designed to capture the attention of people travelling down Macquarie Street….and capture their attention it certainly did! Main Text and Information Source –. Sunday, June 28, 2015. Wednesday, 24 June 2015.
ontheconvicttrail.blogspot.com
On The Convict Trail: Clarendon House
http://ontheconvicttrail.blogspot.com/2015/08/clarendon-house.html
On The Convict Trail. Wednesday, 5 August 2015. 261,733 blog views! Thank You to Everyone who has Visited. Hope you continue to enjoy the posts. On 1 May 1829 he married his second wife, Eliza Eddington, aged 19 the daughter of Tasmania’s first Lieutenant Governor and his mistress, Margaret Eddington By the time she was ten, Eliza owned 900 sheep. In 1824, under the name Eliza Eddington, she was granted 500 acres not far from Clarendon so she did not come empty-handed to her marriage in May 1829. James d...
beautypointhotel.com.au
Beauty Point Waterfront Hotel | Local Attractions of the Tasmanian North Coast
https://www.beautypointhotel.com.au/attractions
Do NOT follow this link or you will be banned from the site! 116 Flinders Street (Cnr Wharf Road). Beauty Point, Tasmania. Ph: 03 6383 4363. E: info@beautypointhotel.com.au. Plenty to see and do at beauty point. An ideal location at the. Centre of the north coast. The Batman Bridge spans the Tamar River and a drive to the eastern shore will allow you to view:. Attractions within a 15-minute drive are:. Beaconsfield Grubb Shaft Gold and Heritage Museum (home of The Great Escape). Greens Beach Golf Course.
ontheconvicttrail.blogspot.com
On The Convict Trail: February 2015
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On The Convict Trail. Wednesday, 25 February 2015. The first known building on the site was constructed in the 1850's by Joseph Miller. Miller was the owner of a large orchard on the site that was said to be stocked with over 850 of the best apple trees among over 900 fruit trees. Miller appears to have been quite the business man and he also generated income through his ownership of brickfields and by making bricks. By 1950, land from the Warragul House estate was subdivided to create more housing devel...
ontheconvicttrail.blogspot.com
On The Convict Trail: April 2015
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On The Convict Trail. Wednesday, 29 April 2015. Private Secretary's Cottage, Hobart. In the late 1970s, a conservation study highlighted its significance and subsequent restoration works have partly reinstated the building's original form and materials. The cottage continues to stand majestically on its rise, a tribute to the original European settlement of Hobart. It can be seen via the TMAG museum. Main Text and Information Source –. Tasmanian Museum and Art Gallery website - TMAG. Sunday, 26 April 2015.
ontheconvicttrail.blogspot.com
On The Convict Trail: St John the Baptist Church, West Hobart
http://ontheconvicttrail.blogspot.com/2015/08/st-john-baptist-church-west-hobart.html
On The Convict Trail. Sunday, 2 August 2015. St John the Baptist Church, West Hobart. The church was completed in 1856 and consecrated that same year. Other buildings were added to the parish as it grew, such as a rectory and organ in 1864, a scout room in 1870, a new church organ in 1880, major additions and alterations to the church in 1902, and a kindergarten in the same year. Main Text and Information Sources –. West Hobart Heritage Review – Hobart City Council 2000. St John the Baptist Church. Since...