Showing posts with label Australia. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Australia. Show all posts

Wednesday 8 May 2024

Victorian Wall Letter Box of 1857

Although pillar boxes are the most common, they are not the only type of letter box. In 1857, to provide a more affordable, lower-capacity option for smaller towns and rural areas, wall-mounted boxes were introduced. These were initially small, rectangular boxes that could be mounted into existing walls or specially constructed brick pillars. This particular box is from the 1880s, you can tell this by the style of it. 

Read More: Niccolò Piccinni: Famous Italian operatic Composer

Victorian Wall Letter Box of 1857

 

 

Sunday 27 March 2022

Cpt Percy Cherry, Australian Imperial Force

27 Mar 1917, Cpt Percy Cherry, Australian Imperial Force, died, aged 21. Buried Queant Rd Cemetery. Born Drysdale, Victoria. Grew up in Tasmania. Enlisted March 1915, served Gallipoli. Day before he died, he engaged in action at Lagnicourt, for which awarded Victoria Cross.

 

Tuesday 11 February 2020

MAURICE’S WOODS, ca. 1900.

Maurice’s Woods was the name given by Maspeth old-timers to a 72-acre forested tract bounded by what was to become Maurice Avenue, 66th Street, Jay Avenue, and the Long Island Expressway.
James Maurice, a very prominent New York lawyer, moved to Maspeth in 1840 and built a mansion on the south side of Maspeth Avenue about 800 feet west of the railroad tracks.
In 1850 he was elected to the Assembly and in 1852 to Congress. In 1882 he donated the Woods to the Episcopal church as a site for a seminary, but the moving of the diocesan see to Garden City put an end to the project.
For years the woods were enjoyed as a park and nature preserve by Maspethites, while houses grew up on all sides. Finally, in October 1920 the church sold off the track for development, and by 1922 streets and houses had wiped out all traces of the former green oasis. (Courtesy of The Queens Borough Public Library, Long Island Division.)
MAURICE’S WOODS, ca. 1900.
MAURICE’S WOODS, ca. 1900.