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  2. Physiotherapy

    https://www.utas.edu.au/library/companion_to_tasmanian_history/P/Physiotherapy.htm
    25 Jun 2012: Physiotherapy. Physiotherapy, initially called massage because this was the main component, appeared in Tasmania in the early 1890s. At first masseurs were male, but the profession became the province of women, the first female 'masseuse' beginning
  3. Homosexuality

    https://www.utas.edu.au/library/companion_to_tasmanian_history/H/Homosexuality.htm
    25 Jun 2012: Homosexuality. Because we know virtually nothing about the place of same-sex relationships in indigenous Tasmanian culture, the island's homosexual history begins with early explorers like Matthew Flinders, who, with George Bass, circumnavigated
  4. Thumbnail for Amateur Radio Clubs - Australian Maritime College

    Amateur Radio Clubs - Australian Maritime College

    https://amc.edu.au/industry/amateur-radio/amateur-radio-clubs
    19 Jul 2021: Amateur Radio Clubs. Amateur Radio Clubs. Amateur Radio Clubs. A list of current Amateur Radio Clubs throughout Australia can now be found here: List of Amateur Radio Clubs (PDF 126. 6 KB). Whether you are new to the hobby or have been on the
  5. George III

    https://www.utas.edu.au/library/companion_to_tasmanian_history/G/George%20III.htm
    25 Jun 2012: George III. Monument to those who lost their lives in the wreck of George III, 1928 (ALMFA, SLT). George III, convict ship of 394 tons, was wrecked on reefs at the south-eastern entrance to the D'Entrecasteaux Channel on 12 March 1835 near the end
  6. Point Puer

    https://www.utas.edu.au/library/companion_to_tasmanian_history/P/Point%20Puer.htm
    25 Jun 2012: Point Puer. Point Puer from the Isle of the Dead, photographed in 1880 (AOT, PH30/1/1203). Point Puer operated from 1834 to 1848 on the Tasman Peninsula, the first British purpose-built reforming institution for criminal boys. It predated Parkhurst
  7. St Virgil's College

    https://www.utas.edu.au/library/companion_to_tasmanian_history/S/St%20Virgils.htm
    25 Jun 2012: St Virgil's College. St Virgil's College, about 1950 (AOT, PH30/1/4641). St Virgil's College, a Catholic boarding and day school for boys, was established by the Christian Brothers in 1911 in Barrack Street, Hobart, on a central site overlooking St
  8. John Henry Keating

    https://www.utas.edu.au/library/companion_to_tasmanian_history/K/JH%20Keating.htm
    25 Jun 2012: John Henry Keating. John Henry Keating (1872–1940), politician, came of a Hobart family which combined a carpentry business with funeral management. An early law graduate from the University of Tasmania, Keating worked hard for Federation and, now
  9. Dick Baker

    https://www.utas.edu.au/library/companion_to_tasmanian_history/B/Dick%20Baker.htm
    25 Jun 2012: Dick Baker. Lenah Valley in 1920, when Dick Baker was beginning to build up his business (AOT, PH30/1/2640). Richard David (Dick) Baker AO (1908–94), the 'Milk King', as a teenager helped his father in their Lenah Valley dairy. An excellent
  10. Pam Clarke

    https://www.utas.edu.au/library/companion_to_tasmanian_history/C/Pam%20Clarke.htm
    25 Jun 2012: Pam Clarke. Pamela (Pam) Clarke (b 1942), 'the chook woman', began in 1978 to campaign against conditions in battery farms, after her children came home upset after a school excursion. Hens were debeaked, kept in tiny cages and never saw daylight.
  11. Ben Lomond

    https://www.utas.edu.au/library/companion_to_tasmanian_history/B/Ben%20Lomond.htm
    25 Jun 2012: Ben Lomond. f. Emily Bowring, 'Ben Lomond', 1859 (ALMFA, SLT). Ben Lomond was named after the Scottish mountain by Colonel Paterson, following settlement in Northern Tasmania in 1804. The first European ascent on to the plateau, known to Tasmanian
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