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  2. Railways

    https://www.utas.edu.au/library/companion_to_tasmanian_history/R/Railways.htm
    25 Jun 2012: Railways. A train crossing the bridge over the Jordan River, 1878 (W. L. Crowther Library, SLT). On 19 August 1869, passengers on ballast wagons hauled by a contractor's locomotive marked the dawn of mechanical transport in Tasmania, riding from
  3. Photographs - Andrew Inglis Clark - University of Tasmania

    https://www.utas.edu.au/library/exhibitions/clark/photos.html
    25 Jun 2012: This site provides information on the redevelopment of the University web site and an opportunity to provide comments and feedback. In future policies, protocols, guidelines and templates will be accessible via the site.
  4. Poppy industry

    https://www.utas.edu.au/library/companion_to_tasmanian_history/P/Poppy.htm
    25 Jun 2012: poppy industry. The Poppy or opiate alkaloid industry is based on a dry poppy plant process invented by Hungarian chemist, Janos Kabay, in 1931. Following CSIRO development work, pilot production began on the north-west coast in 1964. The first
  5. Scots Community

    https://www.utas.edu.au/library/companion_to_tasmanian_history/S/Scots.htm
    25 Jun 2012: Scots Community. An 1860 example of the Scots influence in Tasmania (W. E. Crowther Library, SLT). The Scots Community began to arrive in Tasmania from the 1820s, around the Clyde River and the northern Midlands, attracted by the land grant scheme
  6. Parks

    https://www.utas.edu.au/library/companion_to_tasmanian_history/P/Parks.htm
    25 Jun 2012: Parks. People's Park in Launceston, about 1880 (W. L. Crowther Library, SLT). Parks are plentiful in Tasmanian towns. Mostly managed by municipal authorities, they consist of land set aside by the state or federal government (for example, Hobart's
  7. Shops

    https://www.utas.edu.au/library/companion_to_tasmanian_history/S/Shops.htm
    25 Jun 2012: Shops. Staff outside Storrer's Furniture Warehouse, Launceston, about 1890 (Tasmaniana Library, SLT). Shops began in Tasmania in the earliest settlements, with people selling their own products and a range of imports from England. In about 1806
  8. Wages and Unemployment

    https://www.utas.edu.au/library/companion_to_tasmanian_history/W/Wages.htm
    25 Jun 2012: Wages and Unemployment. Walduck's woorkroom staff at Beaconsfield, 1900 (AOT, PH30/1/5938). In its formative years, Van Diemen's Land was a prison farm dependant on a publicly owned slave labour force, at once cheap and inefficient. Despite its
  9. Contact us - Andrew Inglis Clark - University of Tasmania

    https://www.utas.edu.au/library/exhibitions/clark/contact.html
    25 Jun 2012: This site provides information on the redevelopment of the University web site and an opportunity to provide comments and feedback. In future policies, protocols, guidelines and templates will be accessible via the site.
  10. Letters - Andrew Inglis Clark - University of Tasmania

    https://www.utas.edu.au/library/exhibitions/clark/letters.html
    25 Jun 2012: This site provides information on the redevelopment of the University web site and an opportunity to provide comments and feedback. In future policies, protocols, guidelines and templates will be accessible via the site.
  11. Clark as law-maker and jurist - University of Tasmania

    https://www.utas.edu.au/library/exhibitions/clark/clark_exhibition/jurist.html
    25 Jun 2012: While Attorney-General in the Fysh and Braddon Governments, Clark became the most productive and progressive Tasmanian Attorney-General of the nineteenth century. He introduced 228 Bills into the House of Assembly and, displaying superlative

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