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Date of death Age at death Cause Frederick Thomas Sargood Free Trade: Victoria: 2 January 1903 [1]: 68 William Russell Labor: South Australia: 28 June 1912
Major James William Henry Walch (died 1852) and family [a] left England for Hobart Town, Van Diemen's Land, (later known as Hobart, Tasmania) by the barque Royal Saxon, arriving in November 1842, and was attached to Her Majesty's 54th Regiment. [1]
"Obituary: A Life Cut Short: Large Gathering At Funeral Of Dr A W Shugg", The Mercury, Hobart, 23 July 1941, p 4 "Obituary: Dr A W Shugg, of Hobart", The Examiner, Launceston, 21 July 1941, p 4 "Shugg, Albert William". Record of Active Service of Teachers, Graduates, Undergraduates, Officers and Servants in the European War, 1914-1918. p 252 ...
Simmonds returned to Australia at the invitation of Sir George Davies and C. E. Davies as editor of the Hobart Mercury, taking up his position in November 1912. In 1918 he was selected as member of an Australian press delegation, sponsored by the Imperial government, which toured America, Great Britain, France and Canada, to gain an ...
The Mercury is a daily newspaper, published in Hobart, Tasmania, Australia, by Davies Brothers Pty Ltd, a subsidiary of News Corp Australia, itself a subsidiary of News Corp. The weekend issues of the paper are called Mercury on Saturday and Sunday Tasmanian .
On the organisation of the Church in Australia The Mercury Office, Hobart 1896 Ancient and modern church law : a short historical sketch Hobart, 1910 William Grant Broughton, Bishop of Australia : with some account of the earliest Australian clergy Sydney, 1936.
Eric John Chancellor Stopp (10 June 1933 – 19 April 2014 [1]) was an Australian politician.. He was born on Norfolk Island in 1933 and moved to Tasmania as a boy. He attended The Hutchins School, in Hobart.
The Courier is a newspaper founded in 1827 in Hobart, Tasmania, as The Hobart Town Courier. It changed its name to The Hobart Town Courier and Van Diemen's Land Advertiser in 1839, settling on The Courier in 1840. By 1830 the newspaper was printing 750 copies per issue. [1] In 1859 it merged with The Hobart Town Daily Mercury. [2]
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