Digitized images

Taxonomy

Code

Scope note(s)

  • Photographs or other images that are converted to digital form through scanning or another mechanism.

Source note(s)

  • AAT, accessed online 30-Apr-2025.

Display note(s)

Hierarchical terms

Digitized images

Equivalent terms

Digitized images

  • UF Digitised images

Associated terms

Digitized images

4 Archival description results for Digitized images

4 results directly related Exclude narrower terms

Photographs of construction of Cliffside Flats

  • F3769
  • File
  • 1936-1937.

Cliffside Apartments, also know as Cliffside Flats, is a heritage-listed apartment block located at Kangaroo Point, Brisbane. In 1936, goldminer and New Guinea expatriate Doris Regina Booth (nee Wilde) commissioned Cliffside Flats in South Brisbane, designed by local architect Ronald Martin Wilson. Her sister, Selma Dore, oversaw the construction and photographed the site at various stages throughout the project. The apartment block was added to the Queensland Heritage Register on 27 February 2004. This file comprises a DVD of high-resolution scans of 23 photographs, with proof sheet.

Dore, Selma

Photographs [1911?]-[1919?]

  • F3729
  • Item
  • [1911?]-[1919?]

Three digitised images of photographs from the early 1900s. Proof sheet printed and added to folder.

Cleary, James T.

Images documenting radical protest and street marches in Brisbane

  • F3400
  • File
  • 1960-1980

Images documenting radical protest and street marches in Brisbane comprising: 542 negatives and 332 digital scans.

Content advice: Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples are warned that this resource may contain images, transcripts or names of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people now deceased.

Garner, Grahame, 1928-2015

Photographs of Cribb Island

  • UQFL498
  • Collection
  • [197-]

Photographs of Cribb Island, circa 1980, taken by local resident John "Jack" Maxwell Ross.

The suburb was situated on Moreton Bay, west of Nudgee Beach, and was locally known as "Cribby". The Queensland Government compulsory acquired the entirety of the suburb between 1970 and 1980 for expansion of the Brisbane Airport. Cribb Island was the first Brisbane suburb to be entirely resumed for development.

Cribb Island had developed as a beachside holiday destination and was a forerunner of the communities of owner-built holiday shacks that would later spring up in many bayside areas. After World War One, a more permanent community emerged on Cribb Island. Historian Jack Ford records that at its height, Crib Island boasted a state school, a convent school, two churches, a post office, a police station, a medical clinic, a kiosk, a cinema and a private bus service.

The photographs document architectural styles, views and street scenes in the suburb's final days.

Ross, John Maxwell, 1914-1989