Showing 1954 results

Authority record
Corporate body

Douglas, Daly and Bottger

  • AU QU
  • Corporate body
  • 1978-1988

In 1955 Bill Douglas commenced private practice in Brisbane as William L. Douglas Architect and joined in partnership with Barry Barnes, as Douglas and Barnes, in Brisbane and the Gold Coast in 1957; until dissolution in 1972, when the practice returned to sole ownership of Bill Douglas. In 1972 the practice became William L Douglas and Associates. In 1978 Douglas Daly Bottger Architects Pty Ltd (DDB Architects) - Peter Daly and Ray Bottger joined with Bill Douglas as Directors to form DDB Architects. In 1998 Douglas, Daly, Bottger Architects merged with Woodhead International to form Woodhead International DDB in Queensland. Bill Douglas and Ray Bottger continued as Principals in that firm. When Douglas retired, the firm resumed operating as Woodhead International.

Conrad Gargett

  • AU QU
  • Corporate body
  • 1890-2023

In 1890 HW Atkinson founded the firm which has been known successively as: HW Atkinson (1890-1907); HW Atkinson & Chas McLay (1907-1917); HW Atkinson & AH Conrad (1917-1939); AH Conrad & TBF Gargett (1939-1965); Conrad, Gargett & Partners (1965-1972); Conrad, Gargett & Partners Pty Ltd (1972-1982); Conrad & Gargett Pty Ltd (1982-2004); and from 2004 to 2023 as Conrad Gargett. In early 2023 Conrad Gargett merged with Architectus.

The architectural work of the firm includes Trades Hall, McWhirter and Son, Craigston Apartments, the Courier Mail Building, and the Empire (later St. James) Theatre in Albert Street.

Australian Institute of Landscape Architects

  • US DLC n 89623813
  • Corporate body
  • 1966-

A non-profit professional association for Australian landscape architects established in 1966, with a chapter in every Australian state and territory. Foundation members include Malcolm Bunzli, George Williams, Harry Howard, Ray Margules, Bruce MacKenzie, Lindsay Pryor, David Steane, Jean Verschuer, Gavin Walkley, Ellis Stones and Alistair Knox. Peter Spooner was the inaugural National President.

University of Durham

  • US DLC n 80050517
  • Corporate body
  • 1832-

Collegiate public research university located in Durham, England. Founded in 1832 and incorporated in 1837.

La Trobe University

  • US DLC n 80034940
  • Corporate body
  • 1964-

Established in Melbourne in 1964 under the La Trobe University Act 1964. Officially opened in 1967.

Abschol (University of Queensland)

  • AU QU
  • Corporate body

Abschol was the Aboriginal Affairs Department of the National Union of Australian University Students. Its activities became wider than its stated objectives especially when the Australian Government began a secondary school scholarships scheme. The national Australian Union of Students (the continuation of N.U.A.U.S.) dropped the name ABSCHOL in favour of "Race Relations Department".

In 1977 the name of Abschol (University of Queensland) was Abschol – University of Queensland Race Relations Office but it was known as Abschol. Its aims were to promote and aid higher education, including secondary, technical and tertiary education, for Aborigines; to inform university students and the community about the problems faced by Aborigines in furthering their education; to give scholarships to eligible students. Membership was open to all Australian Indigenous people, and to staff and students at the University of Queensland. The University of Queensland group retained the name ABSCHOL. Its activities emphasized close links with the Brisbane black community. It became inoperative in the late seventies. Since 1981 attempts have been made to revive it. Publicists for Abschol (University of Queensland) included: Budger Davidson, Jenny McLean, Denis Walker.

Dreamtime Cultural Centre

  • AU QU
  • Corporate body
  • 1985-

The Dreamtime Cultural Centre is located just outside Rockhampton on the Bruce Highway near Limestone Creek. It was the brainchild of Kathleen Nola James (1933–1993), founding member and coordinator of the Central Queensland Aboriginal Corporation for Cultural Activities (CQACCA), which was registered in 1980. Nola envisaged a cultural centre for Rockhampton and publicised and raised funds for the venture. In 1985 the Rockhampton City Council and CQACCA reach an agreement that led to the Dreamtime Cultural Centre's establishment. Funding was sourced from Commonwealth Bicentennial and Department of Aboriginal Affairs grants. The land on which the Cultural Centre is located was originally occupied by the Darumbul Tribe and still contains their traditional ceremonial rings. The Centre was officially opened in April 1988 by former Prime Minister of Australia Robert (Bob) James Lee Hawke, with subsequent expansions in November 1988 and March 1992 for the Torres Strait Islander and Dugong complexes, respectively. The main building of the Centre is named after Nola James, who served as the Centre's Cultural Director from 1984 to 1993.

Women and Development Network of Australia

  • US DLC n 85154061
  • Corporate body
  • 1981-199-

The Women and Development Network of Australia (WADNA) was established in 1981 following a conference in Melbourne that same year, where a gathering of women representing Australian Council for International Development (ACFID) member agencies convened and issued the Lowanna Declaration on Women and Development. The purpose of WADNA was to promote public awareness of issues concerning women internationally. It received funding from the Australian Development Assistance Bureau, Australian Catholic Relief, Australian Council of Churches, Australian Freedom from Hunger Campaign, Community Aid Abroad, World Vision Australia and the Women's Film Fund, as well as donations from members and supporters. The national office was located in Melbourne but WADNA had regional groups in every capital city in Australia. Wendy Poussard was the National Coordinator of the Women and Development Network of Australia between 1983-1985. WADNA had largely collapsed by the 1990s after some key people, including Poussard, left the network to form the International Women’s Development Agency (IWDA) in 1985.

March 88 Committee

  • AU NLA 66525235
  • Corporate body
  • 1986-198-

A special committee established to help organise a march for land rights and to protest the celebrations for Australia's bicentenary. Planning for the march launched nationally on 4 July 1987. Aside from acting as a counterpoint to the bicentenary celebrations, the aim of the march was to draw national and international attention to the ongoing impacts of colonisation and issues regarding the health, education, welfare, imprisonment rates and deaths in custody of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples. The resulting march was attended by more than 40,000 Aboriginal and Torres Strait Island peoples and non-Indigenous supporters. It was, at the time, the largest march ever held in Sydney since the Vietnam moratoriums. The march arrived in Hyde Park, Sydney, on Australia Day, 26 January 1988. Reverend Charles Harris was a leading figure of March 88 Committee. The Committee was connected to the Uniting Aboriginal and Islander Christian Congress (UAICC) through Reverend Harris. Unable to determine when the Committee disbanded.

Uniting Aboriginal and Islander Christian Congress

  • AU NLA n 2003110984
  • Corporate body
  • 1985-

The Uniting Aboriginal and Islander Christian Congress (UAICC) formed in 1985, after the Assembly of the Uniting Church in Australia agreed to officially support the formation of the Congress. Reverend Charles Harris was the founding President. The UAICC consists of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander members of the Uniting Church in Australia, though members can also come from any other Christian denomination. The March 88 Committee - a special committee formed to organise the 1988 March for Justice, Freedom and Hope - was connected to the UAICC.

Results 1 to 10 of 1954