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  2. Tree of Knowledge (Australia) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tree_of_Knowledge_(Australia)

    Large sheep stations were like small townships with their own working facilities, stores, worker's accommodation and tradesmen such as blacksmiths. The owners and managers of these stations had considerable power to dictate terms to an itinerant workforce of sheep shearers recruited for the shearing season. Poor working conditions, low pay and ...

  3. Sheep shearer - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sheep_shearer

    In most countries like Australia with large sheep flocks, the shearer is one of a contractor's team that go from property to property shearing sheep and preparing the wool for market. A workday starts at 7:30 am and the day is divided into four “runs” of two hours each. “Smoko” breaks of a half hour each are at 9:30 am and again at 3 pm.

  4. Australian Shearers' Union - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Australian_Shearers'_Union

    The Australian Shearers' Union (also known as the Australasian Shearers Union, sometimes referred to as the Creswick Shearers' Union) was a significant but short-lived early trade union in Victoria and southern New South Wales.

  5. Sheep shearing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sheep_shearing

    The largest group of Linear B tablets is the great archive principally of shearing records though also of sheep breeding. [4] The medieval English wool trade was one of the most important factors in the English economy. The main sheep-shearing was an annual midsummer (June) event in medieval England culminating in the sheep-shearing feast.

  6. William Smith (shearer) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/William_Smith_(shearer)

    shearing 1430 sheep in one week with a broken right thumb. Deucem's shearing prowess is touted in the essay Champion Shearers of Australia ( D'Arcy Niland , February 1943): Rated as one of the greatest shearers in the world, who time out of number has eclipsed records and cleaned up the best of his natural competitors...

  7. Frederick Wolseley - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Frederick_Wolseley

    Frederick Wolseley, unassisted, went to Melbourne from Ireland, arriving in July 1854, [5] aged 17, to be a jackaroo on his future brother-in-law's sheep station.His sister Fanny's husband, Gavin Ralston Caldwell, they married in Dublin in 1857, held Thule, on the Murray River, and later added nearby Cobran near Deniliquin; both stations were in New South Wales.

  8. Shearing shed - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shearing_shed

    In the shearing shed the woolly sheep will be penned on a slatted wooden or woven mesh floor above ground level. The sheep entry to the shed is via a wide ramp, with good footholds and preferably enclosed sides. After shearing the shearing shed may also provide warm shelter for newly shorn sheep if the weather is likely to be cold and/or wet.

  9. Jondaryan Woolshed - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jondaryan_Woolshed

    Jondaryan Woolshed, 1894. Jondaryan Woolshed is a heritage-listed shearing shed at Evanslea Road, Jondaryan, Queensland, Australia.It was built in 1859-60 to replace an earlier, smaller woolshed on the former Jondaryan pastoral station, which was at one stage the largest freehold station in Queensland.