33,521 research outputs found

    Carter, I? W. J? (per W.W. Handy), letter, Franklin County, Ala., June 25, 1855, to Peter Still, Burlington, New Jersey

    No full text
    Carter, whose letter was postmarked at Tuscumbia, Alabama, acknowledges the receipt of Peter Still’s letter; relays his amazement that Still’s immediate family is free; sends greetings from himself and others; provides requested details concerning Still’s now healthy grandson Peter (born March 11, 1854); and reports on a fish trap that Still had owned

    Filling canteens, Wild Dog Fence, 1963 [picture] /

    No full text
    Title supplied by photographer.; Part of collection: Jeff Carter collection of photographs, 1952-2002.; Also available in an electronic version via the Internet at: http://nla.gov.au/nla.pic-vn3106243. "Horse tailer Barry McKell fills packsaddle canteens at Starvation Bore. This was probably the last packsaddle droving trek in Australia, when boss drover Peter Hood walked cattle from the Channel Country south to the railhead at Cockburn in SA. Peter died in 2003 in Charleville. His team included son Eric, Barry Kerr and Afghan cook Azzi Fuzulla. Azzi now lives in Victoria and continues to attend the annual rodeo in Tibooburra (where I photographed him last year)." -- Description supplied by photographer

    Letter re: cane sent to Carter

    No full text
    Letter from Peter Eidsvaag of Pan American Airways on Canton Island to Amon Carter with information about a cane presented to Carter and sent separately

    Breakfast sans flies, Starvation Bore, Western Australia, 1963 [picture] /

    No full text
    Title supplied by photographer.; Part of collection: Jeff Carter collection of photographs, 1952-2002.; Also available in an electronic version via the Internet at: http://nla.gov.au/nla.pic-vn3105731. "Horse tailer Barry McKell from WA takes refuge from the myriad flies in the smoke of the breakfast fire. He was part of a packsaddle droving outfit under the charge of Peter Hood, from Charleville, bringing cattle down the Wild Dog fence from the Channel country to the S.A. railhead at Cockburn, near Broken Hill. Peter died in 2003 in Charleville." -- Description supplied by photographer

    Letter re: Amon Carter, Jr.

    No full text
    Letter from Peter Murphy to Amon Carter regarding Amon, Jr.'s liberation as a prisoner of war. Enclosing article entitled, "Reunion in the Reich.

    Foreplay, Tibooburra, New South Wales, 1996 [picture] /

    No full text
    Title supplied by photographer.; Part of collection: Jeff Carter collection of photographs, 1952-2002.; Also available in an electronic version via the Internet at: http://nla.gov.au/nla.pic-vn3108199. "The younger set getting to know each other outside the Family Hotel on the weekend of the annual gymkhana and rodeo. Barney and Joss Davie ran the historic pub for some 25 years before selling to artist Clifton Pugh, whose murals still adorn the walls. Current owner (since 1994) is Peter Petravich. The Davies, now retired, live in a house opposite the hotel."--Description supplied by photographer

    Telegram re: Amon Carter, Jr.

    No full text
    Telegram from Arthur Lawrence and Peter Murphy to Amon Carter expressing joy at the news that his son, Amon, Jr., had been reported safe as a prisoner of war in Germany

    Cat's cradle, Foxground, New South Wales, 1968 [picture] /

    No full text
    Title supplied by photographer.; Part of collection: Jeff Carter collection of photographs, 1952-2002.; Also available in an electronic version via the Internet at: http://nla.gov.au/nla.pic-vn3109265; Exhibited:"Child's Play, Visitors Centre, National Library of Australia, 9 June 2006 - 2 October 2006 AuCNL. "Elizabeth was brought from Arnhemland to our home in Foxground as a safe haven following having broken tribal law by fraternising with someone of the wrong skin and/or refusing to marry an elder chosen for her. Her mentors were folklorist Peter Hamilton and anthropologist Annette Hamilton, later professor of anthropology at Macquarie University in western Sydney. While at Foxground, Elizabeth demonstrated her skills at making string from chewed Illawarra fig trees, making bamboo spears bound with the string, spearing birds and making intricate "cat's cradles" with the string she had made." -- Description supplied by photographer

    Restored Order

    No full text
    The concept of subordination plays a prominent role in the paranesis of 1 Peter, and it appears too in the context of Christ’s victory over the cosmic powers. It seems to presuppose some kind of given natural and social order in which people must live in their allotted place. But the author also sees his readers’ subordination as conditioned by their status as free people, which he expounds in several passages. This investigation aims to clarify the meaning and relationship of the concepts of subordination and freedom in 1 Peter, with reference to the related idea of order. After an introduction that sets out the issues in detail, the first main section examines the three themes in the wider thought of the first century CE, and the second provides detailed exegesis of the key Petrine texts. A final chapter synthesizes this evidence and draws conclusions regarding the conceptuality of subordination and freedom expressed in the letter. The study presents the idea of "restored order" as a new interpretive key to the teaching and paranesis of 1 Peter and the significant New Testament tradition to which it belongs. It clarifies the important Petrine concepts of subordination and freedom, with that of order, within the letter as a whole and its constituent parts, and it illuminates the exegesis of various disputed texts and passages. Scholars and research students of 1 Peter and the wider New Testament will find here a compelling proposal to stimulate and inform their own engagement with the text

    Author Peter FitzSimons speaking at the National Library of Australia, Canberra, 13 November 2012 /

    No full text
    Title from acquisitions documentation.; Part of the collection: Portraits of author Peter FitzSimons speaking at the National Library of Australia, Canberra, 13 November 2012.; Acquired in digital format; access copy available online.; Mode of access: Online.; Photographed by a staff member of the National Library of Australia
    corecore