Summary

Glass negative stereograph showing the NSW Bushmen returning from a procession. It is part of the G. H. Myers Collection which consists of 73 photographs taken by Godfrey Henry Myers, an electrician and amateur photographer, in Melbourne during May 1901. 72 of these photographs depict preparations for the celebrations that surrounded Federation; all but one are glass stereographs. This collection represents Myers' one venture into commercial photography. It is significant for its images of the crowds, which do not feature so prominently in commercial photographs. The remaining photograph is a family portrait.

The opening of the Australian Parliament on May 9 1901 was an occasion for great celebrations in Melbourne. Ten days of festivities (from 6-16 May) were planned to mark the Federation of the new nation and honour the Royal visitors, the Duke and Duchess of Cornwall and York. The city was transformed with decorations - flags, bunting, colourful lights and festive arches - and a series of public events were held, including a military tattoo and several street parades. Unprecedented numbers of people arrived in Melbourne from the rest of Victoria and throughout Australia to take part in the celebrations.

Description of Content

NSW Bushmen, Federation Celebrations, Spring Street, Melbourne, May 1901. The Bushmen are returning from an event so they are ambling along, teenage boys walk amongst them. They are walking past the Grand Coffee Palace, once known as the Grand Hotel (later to be known as the Windsor Hotel). Being a cool day with the possibility of rain, some women wear capes with collars up, one carries an umbrella. The helmeted police are also wearing their wet weather capes.

Physical Description

NSW Bushmen, Federation Celebrations, Spring Street, Melbourne, May 1901. The Bushmen are returning from an event so they are ambling along, teenage boys walk amongst them. They are walking past the Grand Coffee Palace, once known as the Grand Hotel (later to be known as the Windsor Hotel). Being a cool day with the possibility of rain, some women wear capes with collars up, one carries an umbrella. The helmeted police are also wearing their wet weather capes.

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