Mountain Tales: Issue 10
The Olinda Log Cabin reaches the ton!This year marks the centenary of another local log cabin of significance: the structure […]
Mountain Tales: Issue 10 Read Post »
The Olinda Log Cabin reaches the ton!This year marks the centenary of another local log cabin of significance: the structure […]
Mountain Tales: Issue 10 Read Post »
Bushfires: The Great Fires of 1926 in the hills.
Mountain Tales: Issue 09 Read Post »
Memorialising war: how the hills honoured their WW1 Diggers
How Australians memorialise wars and conflicts in a physical sense has shifted over the years and continues to change. In the hills after World War 1, as elsewhere, settling on an appropriate memorial sometimes itself became another deeply contested terrain.
This story, up to the early years of the 21st century, is told fully in the late Ken Inglis’s spectacular piece of scholarship, Sacred Places: War Memorials in the Australian Landscape, first published in 1998, with a third updated edition published in 2008.
Even before the Great War Armistice was signed, communities in Australia had set about the task of commemorating all those who had served and died in a war from which 60,000 Australians would never return.
Occasional Tales from the Mountain No. 07 Read Post »
Child welfareA battle between babies and bushland
Mountain Tales: Issue 08 Read Post »
TourismEarly guides to getting around the hills
Mountain Tales: Issue 07 Read Post »
Celebrating 130 years of education on One Tree Hill
Mountain Tales: Issue 06 Read Post »
Tram tracks into the forest (and other shattered dreams)
Occasional Tales from the Mountain No. 05 Read Post »
‘Driven to a diet of potatoes and water’: A cry for help from the forest in 1896
Occasional Tales from the Mountain No. 04 Read Post »
Outs: The Excursionists Guide from Melbourne 1868
Occasional Tales from the Mountain No. 03 Read Post »
Dr Harry Sloggett brought whiffs of sea air and scandal to the hills
Occasional Tales from the Mountain No. 02 Read Post »
A creek and a girl: How Olinda got its name
Mountain Tales: Issue 05 Read Post »
Love Letter to the Dandenongs: A charming letter from Mrs Gwynnivere (Vere) Frazer
Occasional Tales from the Mountain No. 01 Read Post »
Days of guesthouse grandeurIn its heyday, Bella Vista was a fashionable place to stay
Mountain Tales: Issue 04 Read Post »
Mt. Dandenong is the remains of an ancient super-volcano. It is quiet enough now, but it was once part of
The Mount Dandenong Volcano Read Post »