The History of the University Unit

Bibliography for the History of the University of Melbourne: F to L

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F: Bibliography for the History of the University of Melbourne
Author Title Description
  F. Maurice-Carton with French Class 1903 Including Dr. Muirheads Mother (Martha Bergin Tipping) Third from Right. 1903. 1 photograph, 20 x 16 and negative Original inscribed on the back Mes meilleurs souhaits de bonne anne F.I.M.C.
Factor, June ‘June Factor’. In More Memories of Melbourne University: Undergraduate Life in the Years since 1919, edited by Hume Dow. Melbourne: Hutchinson, 1985. Factor is an authority on children’s culture and folklore and has been heavily involved in supporting the Australian Broadcasting Corporation. Her books for children include Far Out Brussel Sprout and she co-edited Cinderella Dressed in Yella.
Fairley, Neil Hamilton Papers [in the Basser Library Australian Academcy of Science.] Fairley (1891-1966) was Director of the Walter and Eliza Hall Institute 1920-22. Collection includes biographical material and photographs.
Falk, Barbara ‘Margaret Blackwood’. In 200 Australian Women: A Redress Anthology, edited by Heather Radi. Sydney: Redress Press, 1988.  
Falk, Barbara ‘The Unpayable Debt’. In The Half-Open Door : Sixteen Modern Australian Women Look at Professional Life and Achievement, edited by Patricia Grimshaw and Lynne Strahan. Sydney, N.S.W.: Hale & Iremonger, 1982. Falk was Principal of Mercer House before lecturing in Education at Melbourne University and becoming foundation Director of the Centre for the Study if Higher Education. Books published after her retirement include Caught in a Snare and No Other Home and a biography of Dorothy Ross.
Falk, Barbara Recorded Interview. Melbourne, 1991. With Carolyn Rasmussen for the History of the University Unit. Inquiries to the History of the University Office.
Fallows, Terri ‘John Neill Greenwood: Man of Steel’. In Melbourne University Portraits: They Called It the Shop, edited by Paper-Clip Collective. Melbourne: University of Melbourne Department of History, 1996. Greenwood (1894-1981), was appointed to the new Chair of Metallurgy in 1924, which he held until 1945. In 1946 he was appointed Research Professor of Metallurgy, and from 1957- 1959 was Dean of Applied Science. In 1960 he was appointed to a Personal Chair, retiring in 1964. In 1962 Greenwood participated in the Royal Commission to enquire into the failure of Kings Bridge, Melbourne.
Falvey, J. Lindsay Land and Food: Agricultural and Related Education in the Victorian Colleges and the University of Melbourne. Parkville, Vic.: Institute of Land and Food Resources University of Melbourne, 1997. By J. Lindsay Falvey and J. B. Bardsley.
Faust, Beatrice ‘Eggshell Psyche’. In The Half-Open Door : Sixteen Modern Australian Women Look at Professional Life and Achievement, edited by Patricia Grimshaw and Lynne Strahan. Sydney, N.S.W.: Hale & Iremonger, 1982. Faust is a founder of the Women’s Electoral Lobby, critic and journalist. Her books include Sex and Pornography (1981).
Featherstone, R. E. University. Melbourne: RE Featherstone, 1972. The University’s first Staff Architect was Rae Featherstone, a student of Architecture and Building at the West Melbourne Technical College and at Swinburne Technical College, the University of Melbourne Atelier, who had in 1930 obtained the Diploma of Architectural Design. He practised with various firms here and overseas, became part-demonstrator in Architectural Design in 1939 and after working on military hospitals during the war, became Lecturer in Charge of Condensed Courses in Architectural Design for ex-servicemen in 1946 and in 1947 Senior Lecturer to Architectural Students at the Mildura Branch. After further study and travel he became Acting Professor of Architecture for a year in 1954 and in November 1957 Staff Architect while Honorary Senior Lecturer. He retired in 1972.
Featherstone, R. E. University of Melbourne, 1963. Melbourne, 1963. 1 map; 74 x 46 cm. on sheet 90 x 59 cm  
Featherstone, R. E. Building Committee Minutes of Meetings, Correspondence, Notes and Reports 1961-1967. 36 cm. (3 archives boxes), 1961-1975.  
Federation of University Staff Associations March to the Trades Hall. SBS, 1988. 1 videotape. Copy of SBS Television video news tape with assembly of academic staff and teachers at the Grattan Street Gate of the University of Melbourne, 12.30 pm, the March to the Trades Hall and meeting in the Council Chamber there, ending 2pm.
Federation of University Staff Associations Papers. 48 cm. (4 archives boxes), 1962-1988. Minutes and agendas 1973-1975; correspondence; FAUSA memoranda to secretaries 1974; FAUSA circulars 1973-1975; FAUSA papers including constitutional drafting committee report 1974-1975; FAUSA statistical information; FAUSA newsletters 1973-1975 (incomplete); FAUSA Committee on Status of Women Academics; MUSA working papers; Australian Universities Review Vestes 1962-1982 (incomplete).
Federation of University Staff Associations Submission to A.U.C. April 1957. 1 cm, 1957. Australian Universities Commission.
  ‘Female Medical Students’. Australian medical gazette. August 1887.  
Ferguson, Arthur John Neill Greenwood. University of Melbourne gazette. v.37 no.4(1981).  
Ferguson, Max Notes of Discussion: HUU Taped Interview, 1991. University Accountant interviewed by J. R. Poynter for the History of the University Unit. Inquiries to the History of the University Office.
Ferguson, Max Recorded Interview. Melbourne, 1999. Interviewers: J.R. Poynter and Carolyn Rasmussen for the History of the University Unit. Inquiries to the History of the University Office.
  Fighting the Attacks on Student Unions: Interview with AUS President. Direct action. 4 May 1978.  
Fink, Theodore Papers. 17 archives boxes, 1855-1930s. Papers relating to Fink’s activities as a businessman and newspaper proprietor, solicitor, politician and Educationalist. Includes: correspondence; writings; autobiographical accounts; legal documents.
Fink (1855-1942), attended the Flinders National Grammar School and then Geelong Grammar. In 1871 the family moved to Melbourne and Fink entered Melbourne Grammar School where he befriended Alfred Deakin, and won the school prize for poetry. Fink joined Henry J. Farmer as an articled clerk and studied law at the University of Melbourne. In 1877 Fink was admitted as a solicitor. He became a highly regarded constitutional and mercantile lawyer and in 1886 entered a legal partnership with R.W. Best and P.D. Phillips. A friend of many renowned artists, writers and intellectuals, Fink became the youngest member of the Yorick Club. During the late 1880s, Finks fortune was destroyed by land speculation and the ensuing depression. Subsequently he became the owner of the Herald newspaper, in addition to a parliamentary career. He also began an extensive review of the Education Department where he initiated important reforms and chaired a commission of Melbourne University. After Fink retired from parliament he served on the University Council and Council of Public Education.
Firm Friends of the Graduate Union Graduate House: Record of Past Residents. Melbourne: Firm Friends of the Graduate Union, 1992. Compiled chiefly from back issues of The Melbourne Graduate between 1962 and 1984
Fitzgerald, Alexander File on a Project to Revise Fitzgeralds Organization of Accounting Information 1962-66. 4 cms. 1962-1966. Fitzgerald was appointed lecturer in Accounting in 1925 (the Faculty of Commerces first year), also becoming a foundation student, graduating B.Comm. in April 1927. He assumed responsibility for the teaching of Accounting in 1928, and became the first Gordon L. Wood Professor of Accounting in 1954. He retired in February 1958.
Fitzgerald, Alexander Papers. 24 cms. (2 archives boxes), 1947-1958. Correspondence in folders titled Professor J.V. Vatter School of Business, Chicago, 1955-1957; F.K. Wright 1956-1957; Fullbright Lecturer in Accounting 1953 (Dr. Mary Murphy); Study Leave (1955-1956); The University of Tasmania (1956-1957); N.S.W. University of Technology (1955-1958); Accounting - Teaching of, (1947-1958); Canberra University College (1955-1958); University of Western Australia (1955-1956); Accounting Research (1955-1956); General 1955-1956.
Fitzgerald, Deirdre ‘A Woman in Law’. In The Half-Open Door : Sixteen Modern Australian Women Look at Professional Life and Achievement, edited by Patricia Grimshaw and Lynne Strahan. Sydney, N.S.W.: Hale & Iremonger, 1982. Fitzgerald was the first registrar of the Family Court and Chair of the Equal Opportunity Board in Victoria.
Fitzpatrick, Brian ‘Student Life: the Twenties’. Melbourne University magazine. Spring 1961.  
Fitzpatrick, David Interview with David Fitzpatrick, 1982. Fitzpatrick speaks with John Leslie of his family background; family religion; school and childhood memories; experiences at Melbourne University; employment experiences as a doctor; the Depression; marriage; children; family life; home, lifestyle and living conditions; recreation; contact with migrants; the future in 1938; memories of the 1930s. Recorded by the Australia 1938 Oral History Project as research for the book Australians 1938 from the series Australians, a historical library. Inquiries to the National Library of Australia.
Fitzpatrick, Kate ‘Mother Francis Frewin: A Woman of Vision and Serenity’. In Melbourne University Mosaic: People and Places, edited by Three-Four-Eight. Melbourne: University of Melbourne Department of History, 1998. Frewin was foundation Principal of St Mary’s College (University of Melbourne).
Fitzpatrick, Kathleen ‘A Cloistered Life’. In The Half-Open Door: Sixteen Modern Australian Women Look at Professional Life and Achievement, edited by Patricia Grimshaw and Lynne Strahan. Sydney, N.S.W.: Hale & Iremonger, 1982. Fitzpatrick tutored in English, lectured in History, and was appointed Associate Professor in 1948. She retired in 1962. As president of the Council for Women in War Work during WWII, she negotiated with employers on behalf of women students working at Shepparton under Manpower regulations.
Fitzpatrick, Kathleen Historical Studies Presented to Kathleen Fitzpatrick; an Unauthorized Anthology from the Works of Her Friends. Typescript, 30 pp. 1962. On verso of fly-leaf: Kathleen Fitzpatrick Monday 17 December 1962. Inside back cover is taped an envelope containing letters written to her on the occasion of her retirement, together with two sheets of signatures of those at the presentation dinner, and labeled in her hand On my death, please deliver book and contents to The Archivist
Fitzpatrick, Kathleen Papers. 2 cm. (One thin folder), 1941-1964. Professor R.M. Crawford’s recommendations that she be promoted to Senior Lecturer (1941) and to Associate Professor (1945, 1948), and testimonial supporting her application for a Research Fellowship at the A.N.U. (1946); Registrar’s letter conveying Councils Minute of Appreciation on her retirement and her reply (1963); letter from University House advising of her Honorary Membership (1963); her 3 pages on La Trobes claim to have a university named after him for J.R.A. Glenn and J. Bloomfield’s thanks for serving on the L.T.U. Committee (1964).
Fitzpatrick, Kathleen Papers. 1 cm. 1942-1943, 1966. Correspondence and reports concerning student employment, 1942- 1943; W.E. Hearn Historical Lecture, Ernest Scott and the Melbourne School of History, 1966.
Fitzpatrick, Kathleen Personal Papers. 72 cm. (6 archives boxes), 1923-1990. Student essay, 1923; personal and academic correspondence; lecture notes; broadcasts; book reviews; newspaper cuttings; research material on Sir John Franklin and Governor La Trobe 1930-1974; funeral eulogy by Manning Clark, 1990.
Fitzpatrick, Kathleen ‘Ernest Scott and the Melbourne School of History’. Melbourne historical journal. v.7(21968).  
Fleming, Daniel ‘1858: Archibald Gilchrist’. In Students, Scholars and Structures: Early Tales from the University of Melbourne, edited by The Special Collection. Melbourne: History Department, University of Melbourne, 2002. Inspector of Schools in Victoria.
Flesch, Juliet ‘Which library is mine? The university library and the independent scholar’. Australian academic and research libraries. v.28 no.3(Sept 1997). Edited version of a paper presented to Scholars Libraries Collecting Policies and Archives Policy Conference convened by the Independent Scholars Association of Australia in association with the Centre for Australian Cultural Studies, 1997, Canberra.
Flesch, Juliet 150 Years: 150 Stories: Brief Biographies of One Hundred and Fifty Remarkable People Associated with The University of Melbourne. Melbourne: History Department, University of Melbourne, 2003. Co-author: Peter McPhee. Each biography is accompanied by an image of the subject.
Flesch, Juliet La Chanson de la Rue: Annotated Catalogue of the Robert Brcy Collection on French Popular Music. Melbourne: History department, University of Melbourne, 1998. Co-authors: Charles Sowerwine and Michael Adcock.
Flesch, Juliet ‘Cambridge in Carlton: Dr Pierre Gorman and the Collection of Books on Cambridge’. University of Melbourne Library journal. v.3 no.1(1997).  
Flesch, Juliet Not Just Housewives and Old Maids. Collection building. v.16 no.3(1997).  
Flesch, Juliet ‘Paper, Plastic & Film: the University of Melbourne Library French History Collection’. In Revolution, Society and the Politics of Memory: the Proceedings of the Tenth George Rud Seminar on French History and Civilisation, Melbourne 1996. Melbourne, University of Melbourne Department of History, 1997.  
Flesch, Juliet ‘A Labour of Love? The Story behind the Compilation of Love Brought to Book’. Australian academic and research libraries. v.27 no.3(1996).  
Flesch, Juliet ‘John Foster: a Recollection’. University of Melbourne Library journal. v.2 no.1(1996).  
Flesch, Juliet ‘Materials for Jewish History at the University of Melbourne Library’. University of Melbourne Library journal. v.2 n.1(1996).  
Flesch, Juliet ‘O Sont les Neiges dAntan? French History Collections in Australian Academic Libraries’. In Revolution, Politics and Society: Elements in the Making of Modern France. Canberra: Politics Department, University College UNSW, Australian Defence Force Academy, 1994.  
Flesch, Juliet ‘University Library: Multicultural resource?’ Multicultural libraries. v.15 no.1(1995).  
Flesch, Juliet The Henry Arthur Pitt Memorial Bequest. Acquisitions. v.9 no.2(Dec 1992).  
Flesch, Juliet ‘The History of Book Publishing in Australia: Conference to Commemorate the Seventieth Birthday of the Melbourne University Press, 30-31 October 1992’. Publishing history. v.33(1993).  
Flesch, Juliet ‘Primary sources for the Study of Nineteenth Century History in the University of Melbourne Library’. Multicultural libraries. v.9 no.3.4(1989).  
Flesch, Juliet ‘Collection Development at Melbourne University Library’. Australian academic and research libraries. v.14 no.2(1983).  
Flockart, Ruth Papers Relating to Music in Schools. 0.05 cm. 1937. Roneoed documents in grey folder inscribed Property of R. Flockart: Music in Schools. Report by J. Sutton Crow of the Proceedings leading to the Formation of the Special Committee; Music in Schools Committee 12 Nov. 1937; Summary of Replies to the Music in Schools Questionnaire with notes by W.N. McKie, 26 May 1937 J. Sutton Crows Memo to Special Committee members of the Conservatorium Old Students Association, 22 Nov. 1937; Comments and Suggestions for Discussion; Victorian School Music Association Proposed Constitution.
Flockart earned a high reputation as a music teacher at the Methodist Ladies College, Hawthorn, where she taught from 1911 to . She was a member of the Special Committee appointed by the University Conservatorium Old Students Association to take up in Victoria the promotion of music in the school curriculum in response to a resolution of a Conference of the Australian Music Examinations Board in 1934. The Committee circulated a questionnaire among non- departmental schools on the results of which Biddy Allen produced a report. A Victorian School Music Association was proposed, with draft constitution and rules, but whether it proceeded is unknown.
Foley, Christopher Andrew Manufacturing Student Organisations: A Study with Particular Reference to Melbourne University, 1880 to 1914. M Ed, University of Melbourne, 1995.  
Foley, Christopher Andrew ‘The University Transformed: a Study of the Early Development of the University of Melbourne’. Melbourne studies in education. v.39 no.1(1998).  
Ford, Harold Arthur Two Speeches Given at the Dinner Commemorating Professor Ford’s Retirement in December 1984. 1 cm. 1984. By Harold Arthur Ford and F. K. H. Maher A graduate of the University of Melbourne and Harvard University, Ford was briefly employed in a private legal practice until he served in the Royal Australian Naval Reserve from 1939 to 1946, achieving the rank of Lieutenant-Commander. After the war, Ford was appointed Senior Lecturer in Law at Melbourne in 1949, Robert Garran Professor of Law at the Australian National University in 1960 and Professor of Commercial Law at Melbourne in 1962. During his career he published widely on the principles of law. Ford retired from Melbourne University in 1984.
Ford, Edward ‘Frederic Wood Jones’. In Harold Attwood and Geoffrey Kenny, Eds. Festschrift for Kenneth Fitzpatrick Russell. Melbourne: Queensberry Hill Press, 1978.  
Forster, Howard Carlyle Papers. 3.5 metres. (26 archives boxes), 1946-1979. Correspondence; reports; memoranda; lecture notes; subject files; publications; Marcus Oldham Farm Management College reports and salaries; Royal Agricultural Society minutes and reports; Australian Institute of Agricultural Science minutes, reports, correspondence, addresses; Nuffield Foundation correspondence and minutes; Australian Freedom from Hunger Campaign minutes, projects, correspondence.
A graduate of the University of Melbourne and Iowa State University, Carlyle was employed as an agricultural research officer for several government departments until 1949 when he was appointed executive officer at the CSIRO. In 1956 he became Professor of Agriculture at Melbourne University until his retirement in 1969. He was also involved in a number of organisations and committees, notably the Australian Institute of Agricultural Science, Australian Freedom from Hunger Campaign, Royal Agricultural Society, Marcus Oldham Farm Management College and various scholarship trusts. In 1959 he chaired a committee enquiring into the prospects of agriculture in the Northern Territory.
Forster, John The Union Theatre Repertory Company and the Development of an Australian Indigenous Theatre. 4th year thesis, University of Melbourne, 1978.  
Foster, George. W. E. ‘Hearn: a Laissez-faire Economist in Parliament’. Australian economic papers. v.10 no.6(1971).  
Foster, John F. Papers. 24 cm. (2 archives boxes), 1937-1939. Australian Vice-Chancellor’s Committee files organised by Foster according to subject and including: expenses; Adelaide conference papers; grants; research; correspondence; National Union of Students; minutes; British Council; Commonwealth Public Service appointments.
Foster was the Survey Officer in 1937 and 1938 and Acting Registrar in 1939 at the University of Melbourne. During the same period, he was the secretary of the Australian Vice-Chancellor’s Committee.
Foster, John Harvey Personal Papers. 8 archive boxes, 1970-1994. Correspondence, 1970s-1994; material relating to Juan Cespeds; drafts and other items relating to John Fosters Take me to Paris, Johnny, photographs. Correspondence relating to Jewish Affairs, Council of Christians and Jews.
Foster (1944-1994), was born in Melbourne. After undergraduate studies at the University of Melbourne and postgraduate studies in Britain and Germany, he returned to Melbourne University in 1970 to lecture in modern German and Jewish history until illness forced his early retirement in 1993. Editor of Community of Fate: Memoirs of German Jews in Melbourne, he was prevented by illness from completing his major study of German-Jewish industrialists between 1880 and 1940. Gardening was one of his passions (he was a descendant of Taylor gardeners) and he wrote about garden design. Foster was also author of Take me to Paris, Johnny, a book that paid tribute to his partner Juan Cespeds who died in 1987. The book was shortlisted for the 1993 Age Book of the Year.
Foster, John Harvey The University Landscape. Paper presented at the Open to View; Historic Gardens and the Public, Melbourne, November 1988. Proceedings of the Ninth Annual Conference of the Australian Garden History Society.
  Frank Gladish on His Retirement. 1925. 1 photograph. Gladish (1847-1929), was a member of the University of Melbourne staff from August 1876. He was appointed the Medical School Library Clerk in 1902 and retired in 1925.
Funder, John ‘John Funder’. In More Memories of Melbourne University : Undergraduate Life in the Years since 1919, edited by Hume Dow. Melbourne: Hutchinson, 1985. Funder has been President of the Australian Society for Medical Research and the Endocrine Society of Australia and Director of the Baker Institute as well as holding the equivalent of a personal chair with the National Health and Medical Research Council.
G: Bibliography for the History of the University of Melbourne
Author Title Description
Galbally, Ann Redmond Barry : An Anglo-Irish Australian. Carlton, Victoria: Melbourne University Press, 1995. Barry was the founder of both the University of Melbourne and the Melbourne Public Library, now the State Library of Victoria.
Galbally, Ann Redmond Barry and the Anglo/Irish in Australia. Sydney papers. v.8 no.1(Summer 1996). Address to the Sydney Institute 21 November 1995.
Gallagher, Robin ‘Thomas Francis Bride: Librarian at the University of Melbourne and the Public Library’. In Melbourne University Mosaic: People and Places, edited by Three-Four-Eight. Melbourne: University of Melbourne Department of History, 1998. Bride graduated in Law from the University of Melbourne and served as Librarian for eight years, subsequently becoming State Librarian and later Curator of Deceased Estates.
Garden, Donald S. Centenary Garden Party Papers and Photograph. 1 cm. 1988-1991. Centenary Garden Party papers and Photograph (group in front of the 1888 Building, one in colour, two black and white; key with most people identified (4 pp.). The gryphon device photocopied. Time Line - Teachers College compiled by Don Garden (1855 - 1 Jan. 1989. Sheets of centenary stickers. Contact prints of buildings and grounds. Environment committee minutes 1989-1990 with letters 1991 concerning the appearance of the Alice Hoy Building, now belonging to the University’s Institute (later Faculty) of Education. From separate origins in the 1850s and 60s the Melbourne Teachers College and the Secondary Teachers College amalgamated in 1972 to become the Melbourne College of Advanced Education. The MCAE amalgamated with the University of Melbourne on 1 January 1989. Garden, a graduate of the University of Melbourne, was Head of the History Department of the College and author of The Melbourne Teacher Training College; from Training Institution to Melbourne State College 1870-1982, Melbourne, Heinemann, 1982. When the MCAE amalgamated with the University he joined the staff of the University’s History Department and in 2003 the Department of History and Philosophy of Science.
Garden, Donald S. College Environment Sub-Committee Minutes and Agenda. 2 cm. 1978 - 1981. College Environment Sub-Committee minutes and agenda, 31 January 1978 (first meeting) to 7 December 1982. One folder, labeled to Dec. 1981. This Committees scope of reference was to make recommendations to the Buildings Committee concerning the Melbourne State College environment. Garden appears as a member since 1979.
Garden, Donald S. The Melbourne Teacher Training Colleges: From Training Institution to Melbourne State College, 1870-1982. Richmond, Vic.: Heinemann Educational Australia, 1982.  
Garden, Donald S. Teacher Training in Carlton: The Predecessors of the Institute of Education. PhD, University of Melbourne, 1992.  
Garden, Donald S. Theodore Fink: A Talent for Ubiquity. Carlton, Vic.: Melbourne University Press, 1998.  
Gardiner, Lyndsay Janet Clarke Hall 1886-1986. South Yarra: Hyland House, 1986. Janet Clarke Hall was the first college in Australia to admit women to residence.
Gardner, Julian Recorded Interview. Melbourne, 2002. Gardner was Public Advocate in Victoria in 2000. Involved in the foundation of the Fitzroy Legal Service in 1972, he became Legal Co-ordinator in 1975. Founding Director of the Fitzroy-Collingwood Rental Housing Association and first Director (1980-1989) of the Victorian Legal Aid Commission. Interviewer: Carolyn Rasmussen. Inquiries to the History of the University Office.
Gardner, G. ‘Passive Politics: A Survey of Melbourne University Students’. Politics v.5, no, 1 (1970).  
Gardner, W. J. Chronological List of Graduates of the University of Melbourne, 1858-1883. np: The Author?, 1972?  
Gardner, W. J. Colonial Cap and Gown: Studies in the Mid-Victorian Universities of Australasia. Christchurch: University of Canterbury, 1979.  
Garner, Helen Conversation with Helen Garner, 1982. Garner speaks with Hazel De Berg of her childhood, growing up in a suburb of Geelong; her Melbourne University years; the influence of Glen Tomasetti on her writing career; her introduction to unionism while teaching; how she began writing her novel Monkey Grip and her method of work; her thoughts on the film based on that novel; living in Paris and writing her second book Honour, and Other Peoples Children; problems encountered when writing on matters very close to her. Transcript available from the National Library of Australia (15 p.)
Garner, Helen The First Stone: Some Questions about Sex and Power. Sydney: Picador, 1995. An account of a an allegation of sexual harassment against Alan Gregory, Master of Ormond College and the University’s response.
Gascoigne, John ‘The cultural origins of Australian universities’. Journal of Australian studies. no. 50/51(1996).  
Geason, Susan Vice Chancellor’s Firm New Voice. National times. 22-28 Nov 1981.  
Genser Shepherd & Associates Architects Pty Ltd Plans for Proposed Alterations to Existing Premises at the Corner of Ferrars Street and Douglas Street, South Melbourne for the Melbourne Theatre Company. 1977. Cylinder 81 cm. x 6 cm.  
  George Henry Neighbour. 18-? 2 prints. Neighbour (1848-1915) graduated in Arts and Law at the University of Melbourne before teaching and founding Carlton College in Fitzroy, practising at the Bar and lecturing in the law of obligations, equity and insolvency at the University until appointed chief clerk of the Supreme Court of Victoria. He became K.C. in 1901. He had briefly served as Assistant Librarian at the University (i.e. had carried out the duties of Librarian for the Registrar who formally held that title) and in 1877 married Mary James, eldest daughter of John Frederick James, former Registrar.
Giblin, L. F. Australia, 1930; an Inaugural Lecture, M.U.P. Economic Series, No.8. Melbourne: M.U.P. in association with Macmillan & Co. 1930. Giblin was born in Hobart, the son of a former Premier of Tasmania. He was educated at the Hutchins School, Hobart, University College, London, and Kings College, Cambridge. After taking his degree he left England for British Columbia, to join the Klondike gold rush, and worked there for 8 years. He returned to Tasmania in 1906 and grew apples and taught secondary mathematics. He accepted a commission in the Commonwealth Military Forces and was elected as a Labor member for Hobart in State Parliament. During World War One he served in the AIF and attained the rank of major. After the war he returned to his farm, but soon became Tasmanian Government Statistician. He held this position from 1920-28, and then accepted a professorial post at Melbourne University which he held until 1940. When World War Two broke out, Giblin went to Canberra at the service of the Commonwealth Government, and remained there till the war ended. For seven years, until 1946, he was Chairman of the Commonwealth Advisory Committee on Financial and Economic Policy. At the age of 72 he undertook the compilation of the history of the Commonwealth Bank, and the volume, The Growth of a Central Bank, was published shortly after his death in 1951.
Giblin, L. F. Papers of Lyndhurst Falkiner Giblin 1885-1965 [in National Library of Australia]. 1885-1965. Letters from Giblin to his wife, to his sisters Edith and Ella, and his brother Allan; to A.G B. Fisher et al. Letters from Melbourne University, the ANU, the Commonwealth Bureau of Census and Statistics, to Mrs. Giblin. Correspondence between J.M. Garland and Rupert Scheider. Canberra diary of Mrs Eilean Giblin. 31/8/1940-13/8/1941; 1/1/1942-18/10/1943. Descriptive list available (10 p.)
Gibson, A. Boyce ‘The Australian Universities and Public Opinion’. Paper presented at the A Symposium on the place of the Australian university in the community, and, Post-graduate studies in Australian universities, [Canberra, A.C.T.] 1955. Lecture delivered in the Public Lecture Theatre, University of Melbourne, 28 April 1930, The Chancellor, Sir John MacFarland, presiding.
Gibson, Aubrey Papers. 24 cm. (2 archives boxes), 1949-1971. Melbourne University Rifles Association material 1949-1961; budgets; Australian Elizabethan Theatre Trust board meeting minutes and various material 1969-1971. The Melbourne University Rifles was raised 5 March 1910 to provide military training for members of the University and Public Schools of Melbourne and Geelong. Prior to this, after 1884, the University had provided the base for a company of the Mount Alexander Battalion of Volunteer Rifles. The present unit was raised 1 April 1948.
Gifford, Helen ‘Raison Dêtre’. In The Half-Open Door : Sixteen Modern Australian Women Look at Professional Life and Achievement, edited by Patricia Grimshaw and Lynne Strahan. Sydney, N.S.W.: Hale & Iremonger, 1982. Gifford’s compositions include Myriad, Of Old Angkor and the opera Jo Being.
Gillbank, L. Into the Land of the Mountain Cattlemen: Maisie Fawcetts Ecological Investigations on the Bogong High Plains. In On the Edge of Discovery, edited by Farley Kelly, xii, 348 , [8] of plates. Melbourne: Text Publishing, 1993.  
Gilruth, John Anderson. Papers [in the Basser Library Australian Academy of Science.] Gilruth was Professor Veterinary Pathology and Director of the Veterinary Research Institute at the University of Melbourne 1908-12. He was Admonistrator of the Northern Territory 1912-20 and later Chief of the Division Animal Health, CSIR. Collection includes photographs of Gilruth and of the Parkville Veterinary Science Building and other biographical material.
Gittins, Jean Sergei: A Memorial. Melbourne: University of Melbourne Pathology Department, 1966. The booklet documents the life and death of Sergei Hohlov (1921-1966), Technical Officer and Laboratory Manager in the Pathology Department, University of Melbourne.
Gladman, Frederick J. Family Correspondence. 24 cm. (2 archives boxes), 1853-1939. Family correspondence including papers of his daughter Edith, wife of Professor T. Cherry, and mother of Professor Sir Thomas Cherry 1859-1939; certificates 1853-1891; notes and pamphlets 1878-1916; photographs (undated); writing desk and materials.
Gladman was a schoolmaster in England prior to coming to Victoria in 1877 to take up the position of Superintendent at the Central Teaching Institute (later Melbourne High School). He is remembered for his text School Method which became a standard authority for teachers.
Glenormiston College The University of Melbourne. Open Day - Handbook. Terang, Victoria: Glenormiston College, 1996.  
Goad, Philip Architecture on Campus: a Guide to the Buildings of the University of Melbourne. Parkville: MUP, 2003. Co-author: George Tibbits.
Gobel, Barbara ‘Bill Tickner: Making a Splash’. In Melbourne University Characters and Controversies, edited by Chiaroscuro: Department of History, University of Melbourne, 2001. Tickner was Sub-Registrar of the University’s Mildura Branch 1947-1949; worked in the Accounts Branch 1949-1953; Secretary to the Sports Union 1954 until his retirement in 1977. He died in 2001.
Goh Kwee, Tin, and Chee Kim Li Janet Clarke Hall. Undergraduate thesis, University of Melbourne, 1969.  
Goldberg, Louis ‘Each His Own Man: the Memorable Fitzgerald Brothers’. Accounting history. v.6 no.1(1994). Co-authors: Geoff Burrows, Barbara Syme.
Goldberg, Louis Papers on Melbourne University Staff Association,. 1 envelope, 1939-1945. Various notices from University and from Melbourne University Staff Association, including Appeal to former Commerce School students, 1939.
A Melbourne graduate, Goldberg was a research scholar and part-time tutor in 1931-1932 and combined part-time tutoring with public accounting throughout the 1930s. After war service he was appointed lecturer in accounting and G.L. Wood Professor of Accounting in 1958. He retired in 1973 but continued to give research seminars in the Department until 1987. He published numerous works on accounting education. He died in 1997.
Goldberg, Louis Papers Relating to the Orr Case. 4 cm. 1966-1968. Papers relating to the Orr case including correspondence; reports on the Orr family’s finances; details of the family plans for the future; article by Louis Goldberg on John Scoutter.
A Melbourne graduate, Goldberg joined the staff as a tutor in 1931, and became Professor of Accounting in 1958. He retired in 1973. In 1966, Goldberg and David Allan agreed to act as FAUSA representatives on the Joint Committee to determine the financial conditions of the Orr family. The Committee was expected to make recommendations to the Executive on a financial settlement after Sydney Orrs death.
Goldberg, Louis Souvenirs. 2 items, 1959-1972. The Melbourne University Commerce Graduates Association Unveiling Ceremony of the Portrait of Sir Alexander Fitzgerald, O.B.E. B.Com. Souvenir Programme of unveiling and presentation to the Vice-Chancellor Professor Sir George Paton, 17 November 1959. Reproduction of portrait is included. Invitation to a dinner being held by the Faculty of Economics and Commerce to honour Professor Prest on his retirement, with invitation to make a donation towards a portrait of Prest to be commissioned by the Commerce Students Society, the Faculty and the Economic Society of Australia & New Zealand (Victorian Branch).
Goldmann, Maurice David Papers. 6 cm. 19. Including circulars, invitations, etc. to do with Jewish affairs and the University of Melbourne, 1937-1946; blank postcards, photographs, map of Melbourne, publications including program for 1939 SRC revue ‘Getting the Bird’ and for the Tin Alley Players production of Sartre’s The Flies (Les Mouches).
Goodman, David ‘Fear of Circuses: Founding the National Museum of Victoria’. Continuum. v.3 no.1(1990).  
Goldsworthy, Kerryn ‘Needing his signature: gender inequality in universities’. Australian humanities review. no.9(Feb/April 1998).  
Goonan, Ruth ‘Dancing Dogs, Fat Boys and Bearded Ladies: The First Female Medical Students at the University of Melbourne’. In Melbourne University Mosaic: People and Places, edited by Three-Four-Eight. Melbourne: University of Melbourne Department of History, 1998. The campaign to have women admitted to the University of Melbourne Medical School began in 1887. The first women to graduate did so in 1891.
Gorman, Pierre Patrick Papers on the Cambridge Collection. 3 archive boxes (0.5 m.), 1987-2001. Correspondence surrounding Gorman’s collection of books on Cambridge: correspondence with UK booksellers and other collectors, 1987-2001; correspondence with Baillieu Library staff, 1991-2001; book orders and invoices.
Grainger Museum (University of Melbourne) Papers. 11 archives boxes, 1972-1982. Grainger Museum minutes; general files; accounts; petty cash forms; receipts; finance budgets; correspondence; reports; correspondence regarding the organisation of the Grainger centenary celebrations.
Grant, James Perspective of a Century: A Volume for the Centenary of Trinity College, Melbourne, 1872-1972. Melbourne: Council of Trinity College, 1972.  
Grant, Kerr ‘Sir Thomas Ranken Lyle’. Australian journal of science. v.6 no.6(1944). Lyle (1860-1944) was Professor of Natural Philosophy, University of Melbourne 1889-1914, chaired the Board of the Melbourne Observatory 1903-1944, served as scientific adviser to the Naval Board 1914-1918 and as President of the Australian National Research Council 1929-1932.
Grant, Kerr ‘Thomas Ranken Lyle’. Obituary notices of Fellows of the Royal Society. v.5 no.14(1945).  
Grayson, Henry Joseph Papers Relating to the Grayson Diffraction Ruling Engine and University of Melbourne Natural Philosophy Laboratory. 12 cm. (1 archives box), 1917-1972. Correspondence; records of the Australian Academy of Science, volume 12, no. 3 1972 including the article by J.J. McNeill Diffraction Grating Ruling in Australia: The Grayson Diffraction Ruling Engine. The Machine and its Products; Physics RAAF Academy: Function and extension of premises for the Natural Philosophy School for the University of Melbourne 1857-1918; programme of the opening of the new laboratory and exhibition of the Physical Apparatus, 15 August 1923; Natural Philosophy Laboratory, University of Melbourne inspection of the new wing and exhibition of physical apparatus experiments, 25 August 1939.
In 1909 and 1910, Henry Grayson built a diffraction grating ruling engine. He was awarded the Syme Prize and his findings and achievements were published the Royal Society of Victoria. After Grayson’s death in 1916, his papers, the grating ruling engine, the microscope and a Zeiss microscope specifically constructed by Zeiss for Grayson were left in his widows custody. The papers were later destroyed and the equipment was sold. The grating ruling engine was purchased by Sir Thomas Lyle, the microscope bought by the Natural Philosophy Department and the Zeiss objective purchased by the Pathology Department.
Greenwood, John Neill Development of the School of Metallurgy, University of Melbourne, 1924-65. 10 pages foolscap, 1979. Roneoed. Address by Greenwood on receiving Honorary Fellowship of the Institution of Metallurgists
Greenwood, John Neill Papers. 12 cm. (1 archives box), 1924-1981. Commemoration meeting, 1981; memoirs 1924-1934; newspaper cuttings 1935 and 1968; correspondence 1945-1974; talks and addresses 1934-1979; publications and reports 1940-1963; photographs.
Gregory, Alan Papers. 24 cm. (two archives boxes), 1956-1965. Lecture notes, Trade and Development, 1959 (for B.Comm.), and for Dip.Ed. and B.Ed. courses 1961-1965; Teaching Practice books 1960, including criticism and observation lessons. N.U.A.U.S. Delegation report on Indonesia, Dec. 1956 - Feb. 1957 (Gregory a member) with loose paper Indonesia An Economic Impression [by Gregory]. Newspaper cuttings, photographs, etc. relating to the Indonesian students visit to Australia, March-April 1959; Djembatan, Vol.1,No.1. July 1957, Quarterly Newsletter of the Volunteer Graduate Association for Indonesia, Union House, also June 1958, Sept. 1959, [Nov.?] 1959, Sept. 1961 and Dec. 1961. A Journey to India by R. Rockman, R. Castan and R Merkel, Nov. 1960 - Feb. 1961 (to participants in the Australian Indian Student Exchange Scheme); Notes of discussion with M. Rubbo, Sydney, October 1961, on extending volunteer graduate activity especially in South-East Asia; Volunteer Graduate Scheme News circular from Gregory, V.G.A. Representative, n.d. and other circulars on overseas service, 1961; History of the Scheme for Graduate Employment in Indonesia [1950-1956]; Reports on China visits 1956 and n.d; Council, Conference reports 1960-1961, etc.; Council photographs, 1960-1961. Student Liberal, Lent 1957 (A.U.L.F.); Orientation Handbooks 1959-1960.
Gregory, Alan ‘Getting the College on the Ground’. In Margaret Campbell. University Women’s College, a Record of Events of 1937, the First Year. Parkville, Vic: University College Association, 1988.  
Gregory, Beryl Papers Relating to Mrs. Gregorys Service as Councillor of the University College, 1972-1981. 12 cm. 1972-1981. Gregory was a member of the University College Council from 1972? until 1981.
Gregory, C. J. J.W. Gregory; a Sketch: Chelmsford, 1977. J.W. Gregory D.Sc. F.R.S. was formerly Professor of Geology at the University of Melbourne. He was subsequently appointed Professor of Geology at the University of Glasgow.
Gregory, J. S. Teaching and Learning in the Victorian Education Department 1940-50. [Brunswick, Vic]: Learningguild, 1997. Much of this memoir, which was substantially written in 1994, was read to fellow members of Learningguild ... on 3rd November 1995. It is also published in 1997, as a supplement to the issue of Learningguild Letter numbered 2, 1995 but delayed.
Greig, Alfred Woolley Newscuttings Books. 24 cm. (2 archives boxes), 1882-1942. 1. Contributions to the Australiana page of Every Saturday by A.W.G. May 1905 - July 1907; 2. Inscribed A.W. Greig/ Lyndhurst Street Brunswick E., containing Greigs articles on various aspects of Melbourne and Victorian history and an account of rock pictures, the Glenelg District, W.A. 2 November 1908 - 16 May 1914. 3. Book containing articles by Greig including articles on London 1930-1931. 13 June 1914 - 27 June 1942. 4. Inscribed To Father from Jean, Xmas 1927, containing articles by others and especially photographs etc. of streetscapes, buildings, vehicles etc. showing changes which have taken, or are about to take, place in Melbourne. 1926-1940 (some reproductions of earlier images). University history: two files (Greig) of extracts from Professorial Board and Council minutes to 1942 under subject headings; a suggested classification of correspondence with categories for destruction; passages on various topics pre-1900, including an unpublished article on The Infancy of the University, etc.; printed reports etc. relating to the University including the Final Report of the Fink Commission 1904; years of founding of departments, 1962. Draft History 1900-1920 (Scott); 1920-c. 1932 (Addison). Letters to Scott re History.
Greig, born 1873, became a clerk in the Registrars Office in 1913 and in 1920 Chief Clerk. He became Registrar in 1937 but went on leave and retired in 1938, returning briefly in 1940 for special duties. Having written for many years for the press on historical topics, he commenced with Leigh Scott, University Librarian, and S.S. Addison, Assistant Registrar and Director of the Melbourne University Press, a history of the University. This was abandoned when Chancellor Sir John MacFarland requested Professor Ernest Scott to undertake a History for the University. The material gathered by Greig, Scott and Addison was however made available to Scott, and added to after the publication of A History of the University of Melbourne (1936).
Grieve, Norma Papers Relating to Dr. Grieve’s Membership of the University’s Advisory Committee on Equal Opportunity, Etc. 12 cm. 1977-1985. Copies of minutes and reports on various aspects of academic life as they affected women students by Shalini Reilly. 1983-1985. Papers on the establishment of the Interdepartmental Programme in Arts, Women in Society (Joint Co-ordinators Norma Grieve, Psychology, an and Patricia Grimshaw, History). Course outlines in other universities, reading guides, submission etc. 1977-1983.
From 1957 a member of the Psychology Department, in which she rose to be a Reader, Grieve retired in 1990.
Grieve, Norma ‘A Relatively Simple Affair’. In The Half-Open Door: Sixteen Modern Australian Women Look at Professional Life and Achievement, edited by Patricia Grimshaw and Lynne Strahan. Sydney, N.S.W.: Hale & Iremonger, 1982.  
Grimshaw, Patricia The Half Open Door [Manuscript]. 36 cm. (4 archives boxes), 1978-1983. By Patricia Grimshaw and Lynne Strahan.
Grimshaw, Patricia The Half-Open Door: Sixteen Modern Australian Women Look at Professional Life and Achievement. Sydney, N.S.W.: Hale & Iremonger, 1982.  
Grimwade, Gwendolen Ada Recorded Interview and Transcript, 1927-1999. Gwendolen A. Carnegie was born in 1905, and educated at Ruyton Girls School and the University of Melbourne. Intending initially to study for a Science degree, in the event she enrolled in Arts; however, since at the time it was necessary to take one Science subject, she chose Zoology, and was awarded the Baldwin Spencer Prize for 1927. She married F.S.Grimwade, and is the mother of Andrew Grimwade and an aunt of Roderick Carnegie. Interviewer: Julie Tester. Inquiries to the History of the University Office.
Grimwade, Gwendolen Ada Recorded Interview. Melbourne, 1999. Interviewer: Carolyn Rasmussen, for the History of the University Unit. Inquiries to the History of the University Office.
Grimwade, Mabel Photographs Relating to Miegunyah and Other Subjects. 36 cm. (3 archives boxes), 1901-1966. By Mabel and Russell Grimwade. The Grimwade’s property Miegunyah was purchased in 1910 by Russell Grimwade. It was bequeathed to the University and subsequently sold to Robert Holmes a Court.
Grimwade, Russell Papers. 8cm. (one archives box), 1926-1966. Correspondence relating to Grimwade’s art collection; Batman letters; Felton Bequest; impressions of Daryl Lindsay; a few letters to and from Poynter relating to his biography of Grimwade. 1926-1966. Manuscript, some typed, of Flinders Lane: Recollections of Alfred Felton (published 1947). WRG. Biographical notes, ms. and ts.
Grounds, Roy Conversation with Roy Grounds, 1971. Grounds speaks with Hazel De Berg of his background; his decision to work in architecture; studying overseas on a scholarship; working in Hollywood (U.S.); his involvement in World War II (New Guinea); readjusting to university life as a teacher; going back into practice as an architect; designing the Arts Centre in Victoria; buildings as an extension of nature.
Grounds was educated in Melbourne and articled to the firm of Blacketts and Forester After war service with construction units of the RAAF, he resumed practice in 1948, also assisting in developing the curriculum of the University’s School of Architecture, where he lectured in Design. At the same time, he took a degree course in Architecture, graduating in 1953. Grounds was awarded the gold medal of the Royal Australian Institute of Architects in 1968 and made a Life Member the following year.
Grove, Robin ‘Crossing the Interface with Guide, Book and Writing Tackle’. Critical review. no.32(1992). Teaching Shakespeare at university.
Grover, Susan ‘The First Stone in retrospect: an outsiders observations on the book and its critics’. Law Institute journal. v. 70 no.12(Dec 1996).  
Gunner, Donald Lawrence Address to a Meeting of Undergraduates Called by the President of the S.R.C. On 29 April 1965, Held to Protest at the Rejection of Dr. F. Knopfelmacher’s Application for the Position of Senior Lecturer in the Department of Philosophy, University of Sydney. 5 pp. 1965. On 28 April 1965 and by the invitation of the President of the Students Representative Council, Donald Gunner, Senior Lecturer in Philosophy, at the University of Melbourne, spoke to a meeting of undergraduates called to protest against the rejection of Dr. Frank Knopfelmacher’s application for the position of Senior Lecturer of Philosophy at the University of Sydney. The rejection was deemed a violation of Knopfelmacher’s academic freedom. Gunner, however, argued that universities should make appointments freely and without external pressure.
H: Bibliography for the History of the University of Melbourne
Author Title Description
H.S. ‘Afternoon with Scientists: Laymen’s Impression of Nat. Phil.’. The Argus, 6 May 1920 1848.  
Halford, George Britton Papers. 12 cm. (1 archives box), 1860-1894, 1928-1949. Paper on heart action and sounds 1860; notes, correspondence and newspaper clippings relating to snake venom antidote 1867-1894; correspondence of the Australian Institute of Anatomy concerning the Halford Oration, with texts 1928-1949.
After medical training and research in England and Scotland, Halford was appointed to head the first Australian medical school in 1862. Prior to his retirement in 1903, Halford investigated the effects and treatment of snake bite. In 1928 his family established the Halford Oration as a memorial.
Halford, George Britton Scrapbook [in the State Library of Victoria] 1 v, 1973. Scrapbook compiled by George Button Halford and members of his family.
Hamann, Conrad Modern Architecture in Melbourne [Microform]: The Architecture of Grounds, Romberg and Boyd, 1927-1971. PhD, Monash University, 1979.  
Hammond, S.B. The Students and the University in Melbourne. Melbourne studies in education (1962).  
Hancock, Leith Learning Skills for Life at a Tertiary Institution. Australian and New Zealand Student Services Association. Conference. Papers. 1982. Co-author: John Bowden.
Hannan, Bill ‘Bill Hannan’. In Memories of Melbourne University: Undergraduate Life in the Years since 1917, edited by Hume Dow. Richmond, Vic.: Hutchinson of Australia, 1983. Hannan, a playwright and critic, taught at various State schools, editing and contributing to the magazine of the Victorian Secondary Teachers Association. He also wrote theatrical reviews for the Observer and Bulletin. He was a founding member of the Australian Performing Group
Hanrahan, John ‘Three Perspectives on Helen Garner’s The First Stone’. Australian book review. no. 174(Sept 1995). Co-authors: Marilyn Lake, Graham Little.
Hansen, Martin Peter Public Examinations and Approval of Secondary School Courses in Victoria : A Report. Melbourne: Melbourne University Press, 1928.  
Hansen, Rani ‘Carrying the Spirit of Friendship: The Melbourne University Staff and Distaff Association, 1928-1993’. In Melbourne University Mosaic: People and Places, edited by Three-Four-Eight. Melbourne: University of Melbourne Department of History, 1998. Social club formed first for wives of University academics, but soon including women academic members of staff. In the 1960s membership was further broadened. This society was established in 1928, based on the precedent of a similar organization at Edinburgh University The final meeting was 19 October 1993.
Harding, Luke ‘Ian Ramsay Maxwell: the Man of Action in the Scholars Chair’. In Melbourne University Mosaic: People and Places, edited by Three-Four-Eight. Melbourne: University of Melbourne Department of History, 1998. Maxwell (1900-1979), was educated at Scotch College, University of Melbourne and Balliol College, Oxford. He lectured at the University of Copenhagen from 1934 to 1936 and the University of Sydney from 1936 to 1945. In the following year Maxwell was appointed Chair of English at the University of Melbourne. He lectured and wrote on Old Norse as well as English, and was made a Chevalier of the Order of the Icelandic Falcon for his services to Old Norse literature in 1966 by the Icelandic government. He retired in 1968 .
Hargreaves, Maxwell Edgar Papers..65 m. (5 Archives boxes and some oversize materials), 1926-1980. Biographical items, 1923, 1942-1980; Scientific Publications and Ph.D. thesis 1948-1963; subject files (correspondence, publications, circulars, diary) 1942-1976; photographs 1926-1976; graphic materials 1959.
Hargreaves was the first Professor of Physical Metallurgy, appointed in 1964. He occupied the Chair until his death in 1976.
Harman, Kay Maree The Symbolic Dimension of Academic Organization: Academic Culture at the University of Melbourne. PhD, La Trobe, 1988.  
Harms, Louise Kay Making Connections: Expectations and Experiences of Orientation into an Australian University Residential College. M.S.W. University of Melbourne, 1997.  
Harper, Jan Survey of Academic Staff. [Parkville, Vic.]: Equal Opportunity Unit University of Melbourne, 1987.  
Harper, Jan Survey of General Staff, 1985: Report. [Parkville, Vic.]: University of Melbourne Equal Opportunity, 1986. By Jan Harper and Deirdre Pinto.
Harper, Marjorie Melbourne’s Economists in the Public Arena. In Victoria’s Heritage, edited by A.G.L. Shaw. Sydney: Allen & Unwin, 1986.  
Harper, Norman Denholm Papers. 83 archives boxes, 1920-1986. Correspondence - personal, academic, general and administrative. Lecture notes (Melbourne High School, University of Melbourne), research material, conference notes, reference notes, articles, addresses. Subject files, material relating to many professional organizations, including ANZAAS, Australian Institute of International Affairs, Foreign Affairs, Victorian Baseball Association and miscellaneous committee material. School broadcasts, publications and books. Also some personal papers including family, school and travel documents.
Harper was a graduate of Melbourne High and University of Melbourne. He became the Senior History Master at Melbourne High School in 1927 and in the same year lectured in history at the University on a part-time basis. In 1930, Harper resigned from the School to concentrate on his academic career as a full-time member of the History Department. He was appointed Senior Lecturer in American History in 1943 and Professor in 1966 and was the author of many books on American History and international relations. Harper was also involved in numerous committees and public works. He retired from the University in 1972 and died in 1986.
Harper, Norman Denholm Memorabilia. 12 cm. (1 archives box), 1927-1960s. Photographs taken at Ernest Scott’s farewell dinner, 1936, of the Melbourne University baseball team and of the student rag of 1927; letters from Professor Hutchinson of Chicago, dealing with academic matters, civil rights, art, baseball, the economy, the Vietnam War etc. One letter by R.M. Crawford.
Harris Lange and Partners Preliminary Parking and Traffic Study: University of Melbourne. Melbourne: Harris Lange and Partners, 1970.  
Harrison, D. J. Solar Pool Heating: Beaurepaire Pool, University of Melbourne. Melbourne: Victoria Solar Energy Council, [1985] By D.J. Harrison, M. H. Hall and P. J. Quinn.
Harrison, Ford Carl ‘The Threatened Future of University Presses: Author’s Week 1986’. National times. 28 Feb/6 March 1986.  
Harrison, Hubert Compton Recollections of Student Days: The Blue Room, Wartime Degrees, Chemistry for Engineers. 1939-1942. After graduating at the University of Melbourne Bachelor of Engineering Science H.C. Harrison served in the R.A.A.F. for three and a half years before joining the State Electricity Commission in 1946. He remained there until his retirement.
Hart, Alfred, and John Latham University Reform and Finance: What Is and What Should Be. Carlton [Vic.]: Melbourne University Press, 1936.  
Hartkopf, Albert E. V. Cutting Album on Albert Hartkopf’s Sporting Career, with Some Further Items on His Medical Career. 3 cm. 1909-1981. Photocopy. After attending Scotch College, Hartkopf studied medicine at The University of Melbourne between 1911 and 1915. At school and university Hartkopf pursued an interest in sports which led to a long career as both an Australian Rules footballer and an all-round cricket player in both Sheffield and Victorian state teams.
Hartley, Mary Anne Recorded Interview. Melbourne, 2002. Interviewer: Carolyn Rasmussen for the History of the University Unit. Inquiries to the History of the University Office.
Hartung, Ernst Johannes Correspondence Regarding Hartung’s Astronomy Telescope. 1 cm. 1979. Copies of correspondence between the Registrar and the Depts. of Surveying, History and Philosophy of Science, and Physics in regard to the acceptance by the University of Hartungs astronomy telescope. 26 February - 5 April 1979.
After teaching in the department since 1914, Hartung held the Chair of Chemistry between 1927 and 1954. During WWII he chaired the Advisory Committee on Optical Munitions, and led research leading to production in Australia of optical glass and graticules for gunsights.
Hase, Janet Recorded Interview. Melbourne, 2002. Janet Hase (ne Buck) co-edited a Fabian Society compilation Socialist & Traditional Songs. Interviewer: Carolyn Rasmussen. Inquiries to the History of the University Office.
Haughton, Joan Margaret Papers Relating to Surveys of the Availability of Agricultural Education for Women. 12 archives boxes + 2 cartons, 1965-1980. Questionnaires completed by agricultural high schools and colleges and by graduates in Agricultural Science and Veterinary Science; correspondence; newscuttings; reports by public bodies; leaflets and prospectuses etc. from agricultural colleges; copy of her preliminary report on A Survey of the Demand and Opportunities for Agricultural and Veterinary Education for Women in Australia and incomplete manuscript of a final report. 1957-1980. Haughton, nee Ferguson, entered the University in 1931 and graduated B.Ag.Sci. in December 1936. In 1953. Haughton traced the careers of fellow women graduates in Agricultural Science and maintained her interest in the situation of women, and especially young, women farmers through her association with the Young Farmers movement, where her attention was drawn to the lack of training opportunities for girls other in the Universities.
Hawthorn Institute of Education Staff Association. Minutes and Associated Correspondence. 3 archive boxes, 1973-1976. Files of the Staff Association of the Hawthorn Institute, together with memoirs of some association officials and historical notes concerning the development of the association. The Technical Teachers College, established in 1954 first in Toorak, formed part of the State College of Victoria in 1973, when the Staff Association of the State College at Hawthorn (SASCOVAH) was formed under the State College of Victoria Staff Associations Council. In 1980 the SCV association amalgamated with the Victoria Institute of Colleges Staff Association Council to form the Council of Academic Staff (CASA), and in 1982 when Federal awards replaced State awards a federal body of staff associations was set up in Canberra (FSAACAE). When the Victorian Post-Secondary Education Act passed the Hawthorn Institute of Education became independent but later merged with Melbourne University.
Hayes, Helen ‘The Distributed National Collection: a University Perspective’. University of Melbourne Library journal. v.1 no.1(Autumn/Winter 1993).  
Hayes, Helen ‘Lifelong Learning’. Ex Libris. no. 27(Dec 1993).  
Healy, Guy ‘Veterinary Science: Small Animal, Big Network’. Campus. v.2 no.48(10/16 Dec 1992). Ivan Caple, Chairman of the Australasian Deans Committee in the series The Dean’s Deans.
Healy, Sianan Among the Happy Few: Women at the University of Melbourne, 1925-1929. 4th year thesis, University of Melbourne, 2000.  
Hearn, William Edward ‘Our Half-yearly Retrospect’. Melbourne monthly magazine. October 1855.  
Hearn, William Edward To the Members of the Senate of the University of Melbourne. 1886.  
Hearn, William Edward On the Proposed Course for the Degree of Bachelor of Arts in the University of Melbourne. Melbourne: Government Printer, 1855. Co-author: W.P. Wilson.
Hearn, June M Interview with Professor June Hearn, 1992. Hearn talks with Ann Turner about her family background; religion; father’s business enterprises and her parents’ political activities. She then describes schooling at Cambridge St, Collingwood; scholarships to University High School and University of Melbourne to do Arts and her experiences at University such as involvement with Melbourne University Labor Club. Hearn then talks about her teaching experiences and various appointments at University and CAE and her achievements as 1st woman president of Staff Association of Melbourne University, 1st woman dean, 1st female at Technical Teachers College and 1st full-time female appointment at the Business School, University of Melbourne. Hearn also talks about her involvement with the Australia-USSR Society. Corrected transcript available (typescript, 47 leaves) from the National Library of Australia.
Hearn, William Edward Papers. 24 cm. 1861-1887. Correspondence 1861-1887; notices and reports concerning the University Council and Senate 1881-1886; notes on legal matters including revision of the Legal Code 1877-1887. Land legislation material.
Hearn (1826-1888), was born in Ireland and educated at Trinity College, Dublin. In 1849 he was appointed Professor of Classics at the Queen’s College, Galway, and later held office of Examiner to the Queen’s University of Ireland. In 1854 he was one of the four Professors appointed at the opening of the University of Melbourne. His field covered modern history, modern literature, political economy and logic. When the Professor of Classics, Henry Erskine Rowe, died less than a month after arrival in Melbourne, Hearn conducted classes in classics until Professor Irving arrived in July 1856. In January 1859 Hearn offered himself as a candidate in a by- election for the Murray District in the Legislative Assembly but was defeated, and the University Council afterwards passed a statute to prevent Professors from sitting in Parliament. He was a member of the University Council 1882-1886, and Chancellor May-October 1886. He became Dean of Law in July 1873, resigning his professorship in other subjects at the end of the year. After a defeat at the polls in 1874, he was elected to the Legislative Council in 1878.
Heinze, Bernard Papers [in the State Library of Victoria]. Melbourne, 1900-74. Heinze (MA 1948) won a scholarship from the University of Melbourne to the Royal College of Music, London in 1912. After five years in the Royal Artillery, followed by studies in Paris and Berlin, he toured Europe as a violinist in a string quartet. In 1923 he returned to the Melbourne Conservatorium and was appointed Ormond Professor of Music in 1925, a position he held until 1956. He was the first Australian to be knighted for services to Music.
Henderson, Norman K. What Chance Has Your Child? Melbourne: Research Group of the Left Book Club of Victoria, 1942. Education and opportunity in Victoria. -- Cover. Includes bibliography. Spine title: Australian education pamphlets.
Henderson, Norman K. Your Child and His Future. Melbourne: Research Group Left Book Club of Victoria, 1946. Cover has sub-title: Education and opportunity in Australia. Bibliography: p. [48] Spine title: Australian education pamphlets.
Henry, Kathleen Professor A.R. Chisholm: An International Intellectual. In Melbourne University Characters and Controversies, edited by Chiaroscuro: Department of History, University of Melbourne, 2001.  
Hercus, Eric Oswald Papers. 12 cm. (1 archives box), 1913-1968. Pocket diary 1924; summaries of papers and issues dealt with in weekly classes, 1913; miscellaneous correspondence 1934-1961; lecture notes on Dimensions and Principle of Dynamical Similarity, 1928; reprints of publications by Hercus and others.
Hercus was born in 1891 in Dunedin, New Zealand and educated at Otago Boys High School, Otago University and Trinity College, Cambridge. He served as Lieutenant in the R.N.V.R. staff of Vice-Admiral, Dover Patrol from 1916 to 1918. Hercus joined the Department of Natural Philosophy at the University of Melbourne in 1922 and was appointed Associate Professor of Physics in 1931. For the duration of the Second World war he served as a member of Optical Munitions Panel for the Ministry of Munitions. Hercus published several books and papers, notably as a co-author with T.H. Laby on thermal conductivity.
Herrick, Catherine The University of Melbourne and the Chair of Education. M Ed, University of Melbourne, 1995.  
Herschel, John Frederick William Papers Relating to the University of Melbourne, Victoria, (Late Port Phillip), Australia. London: J. F. W. Herschel [etc.], 1854.  
Hewat, Tim. The Florey: The Story of the Sheep Hilton. North Ryde, N.S.W.: Angus & Robertson, 1990.  
Hewett, Andrew Papers. 60 cm. (5 archives boxes), 1970-1983. Files compiled by Hewett while working in Melbourne University Students Representative Council, Vietnam Moratorium Committee, Communist Party of Australia, CICD, Australian Union of Students, Victorian Secondary Students Union, People for Nuclear Disarmament 1981-1983, including documents written by him.
Hibberd, Donald James Council and Committee Papers. 24 cm. 1978-1982. Annotated Council and Committee papers: Council, meetings 1981-1982; Working Group on Research Funding;1982; Students Representative Council 1978; Rhodes Scholarship Selection Committee 1978, Finance Committee 1981-1982 including Pensions Sub-Committee 1979, Residential Centre Sub-Committee 1979 and Review of University Union Catering Operations 1981.
Director of Consolidated Zinc Pty Ltd from 1958 and Managing Director Comalco Industries since 1961, Hibberd had previously risen through the public service to First Assistant Secretary Banking, Trade and Industry Commonwealth Treasury, 1953-57 and Director Commonwealth Aluminium Corporation, 1957-61.
Hibberd, Jack ‘Jack Hibberd’. In Memories of Melbourne University: Undergraduate Life in the Years since 1917, edited by Hume Dow, xvii, 221 , [8] of plates. Richmond, Vic.: Hutchinson of Australia, 1983. Hibberd’s professional life has alternated between Medicine and the theatre. After graduating in 1964, he worked as a doctor until 1973, when he won and Australian Council Literature Fellowship and for some years wrote fulltime. A foundation member of the Australian Performing Group at La Mama and the Pram Factory, his plays include Dimboola (1969), A Stretch of the Imagination (1971) and A Toast to Melba (1976).
Hicks, J. D. The Wilson Hall Fire from the Roof of the Walter and Eliza Hall Institute. 1952. Kodachrome colour transparency. The original Wilson Hall was destroyed by fire on 25 January, 1952.
Hill, Dorothy ‘Edwin Sherbon Hills: 1906/1986’. Historical records of Australian science. v.7 no.1(Dec 1987). Includes bibliography of his publications.
Hills, E. Sherbon. Conversation with Edwin Sherbon Hills. 1 cassette (ca. 50 min.) : 1 7/8 ips. 1973 July 18. Hills speaks with Hazel de Berg of his overseas studies in science; about the stimulus that one gets in going abroad; about his researches in physiography and his many publications; his geological views on Australia; his duties as Deputy Vice Chancellor of the University of Melbourne (1962-71); his interest in hydrology; his background in general. Transcript available (19 p.) Copies available on cassette from the National Library Of Australia. Research professor of Geology and Deputy Vice-Chancellor, University of Melbourne, 1962-71; Professor of Geology and Mineralogy, University of Melbourne, 1944-62. Publications include Elements of Structural Geology (1963) and Physiography of Victoria (1940).
Hills, E. Sherbon. Papers [in the National Library of Australia.] 8.4 m.1844-1988. Includes biographical and family documents, reprints of articles, appointment diaries, sketchbooks, notebooks, lectures, correspondence, reports, geological and family photographs, slides of overseas trips, maps, minutes, index cards and subject files. The papers relate to Hills career from the 1920s to the 1980s and include field work and research material for Hills books and projects; university material associated with the Dept. of Geology; correspondence with Australian and international earth scientists; papers relating to UN consultancies as an expert on arid lands and other consultancies concerning petroleum exploration in Gippsland and elsewhere; and correspondence and reports relating to mineralogical discoveries and their development in Northern Australia. Major correspondents include Dan Asthana, Emile den Tex, E.J. Heidecker, Hari Narain, E.S. Tim ODriscoll, C.D. Ollier, R.L. Stanton, Rowlie Twidale and Bryan Wells.
Hills, E. Sherbon A Guide to the Records of Edwin Sherbon Hills. Parkville, Vic.: Australian Science Archives Project, 1992. Compiled by Gavan McCarthy and Tim Sherratt.
Hince, Kenneth. Papers [in the National Library of Australia.] 23 boxes 1855-1969. Hince (1926- ) studied Medicine and later Arts at the University of Melbourne, later becoming a secondhand bookdealer and music critic. The collection includes files on Percy Grainger, James Barrett, Ivy Brookes , Bernard Heinze and G. W. L. Marshall-Hall as well as the Lady Northcote Permanent Orchestra Trust and the Melbourne University Conservatorium.
Hird, Frank J. R. Autobiographical Statement. 1 cm. 1986. Hird’s autobiographical statement - a view of himself and the University (26 pp.); photocopy of ms. statement of his view of religion (1 p.); photocopy of typescript on Victor M. Trikojus. Hird was born in 1920 and at the age of 14 left school and worked in a series of mundane jobs. He later attended night-school, Melbourne Teachers College and graduated from the University of Melbourne in biochemistry. Hird took his Ph.D. from Cambridge University and returned to Melbourne where he became Senior Lecturer in Agricultural Biochemistry and subsequently won a Fullbright Scholarship to Yale. In 1964 Hird was appointed Professor of Biochemistry and in 1985, the year of his retirement he became Emeritus Professor. Photocopy of typescript
Hirshorn, Mike. ‘The Bionic Ear: from Research to Clinical Trials’. Ascent. no.3(Jan 1984).  
Hoban, Eileen Ruth Papers. 37 archives boxes, 8 cartons, 1850-1988. Notes made by Ruth Crawford towards a biography of Sulina Sutherland, nurse and child welfare worker; subject files regarding immigration, welfare, hospitals; correspondence; reports; University of Melbourne Department of Social Studies lectures and courses; reading references; reports.
Hoban was educated at M.L.C. and the University of Melbourne where she graduated B A, B.Comm, Dip. Ed. In 1932, Hoban taught at Melbourne Girls College until she resigned in 1937 to embark on studies at the University of London. Hoban returned to Melbourne with a Certificate of Social Sciences and Administration in 1940 and was appointed social worker for the International Refugees Council and Victorian Housing Commission. In 1942 Hoban resigned and became a lecturer in Social Studies at the University of Melbourne until 1944 when she was became Director of the Department. Hoban was promoted as Associate Professor in 1957. She resigned from both positions in 1963 and became Associate Professor of the Institute of Applied Economic and Social research in 1971 to 1973. Hoban then embarked on private research which included research on Sulina Sutherland which was published in the Australian Dictionary of Biography. Hoban married the historian, R.M. Crawford in 1958.
Hobcroft, Rex Papers of Rex Hobcroft, [in the National Library of Australia]. 10.98. (79 boxes). Canberra, 1934-1996. Files relating to Hobcrofts early life and various stages of his career. The bulk of the files date from 1961 and contain correspondence, notes and a large collection of printed material in the form of programs, brochures and flyers. There is also a collection of reports on music related issues, music school handbooks and brochures and a copy of Hobcrofts unpublished autobiography entitled Australia’s Con man (380pp). A number of the files relate to Hobcrofts time as Director of the Sydney Conservatorium of Music (1972-82) and as Artistic Director of the Sydney International Piano Competition (1976-90). They contain correspondence, programs, reports, voting sheets and cuttings. There are also scrapbooks for the 1977, 1981, 1985 and 1988 competitions. Correspondents include Don Banks, John Brodie, Don Burrows, Stuart Challender, Miriam Hyde, Wilfrid Lehmann, James Penberthy, William Primrose, Harold Schonberg, Peter Sculthorpe, Larry Sitsky, Storry Walton and Roger Woodward. There is also a large collection of letters and cards from the poet Gwen Harwood to Hobcroft (1962-95), which include a number of manuscripts and typescripts of poems by Harwood, some of them dedicated to Hobcroft. Papers in the collection document the various phases of Hobcrofts career in music and the organisations and projects with which he has been associated. They provide a good insight into the musical infrastructure in Australia from the late 1960s to the early 1990s, musical politics and the staging of piano and other musical competitions.
Hocking, Gregory Leaflets Chiefly from Student Organizations. 1 cm. 1965-1971. M.U. Labour Club, Shop; M.U. Social Youth Alliance; Students for a Democratic Society; M.U. Amnesty; M.U. Australia Party Club; M.U. A.L.P. Club; M.U. Revolutionary Left; Melbourne Anarchists; ABSCHOL; United Arab Progressive Associated; M.U. Liberal and Country Party Club; La Trobe Communists; M.U. N.L.F.; M.U. D.P(R?).U.; M.U. Pacifist Society; M.U.S.I.; Trial Notes: Extracts from Albert Langers pre-trial transcript); etc.
Hodgart, Alan The Faculty of Economics and Commerce: A History, 1925-1975. Melbourne: A. Hodgart, 1975.  
Hohne, H. H. The Prediction of Academic Success: An Investigation into the Academic Careers of Students Entering the University of Melbourne in 1943 and 1944 ... In the Faculty of Arts. Melbourne: Australian Council for Educational Research, 1950.  
Hohne, H. H. Success and Failure in Scientific Faculties of the University of Melbourne: An Extended Follow-up of 901 Students Who Had Entered the Faculties of Science, Engineering, Medicine, Dentistry and Agriculture in 1943 and 1944. Melbourne: Australian Council for Educational Research, 1955.  
Holmes, Edward McL. Papers. 55 archives boxes, 1953-1982. Teaching materials and papers 1953-1971; lecture notes; Faculty of Economics and Commerce papers and reports 1974-1981; Deans Committee material; accounts; Public Bodies Review Committee; C.S.L. Working Party papers; miscellaneous accounting conference papers 1961-1970; personal submissions; University of Melbourne library material; ANZAAS reports; research reports; Australian Society of Accountants papers; publications.
Holmes was a Senior Lecturer in Accounting from 1961 until 1984, and a member of the Assembly from 1974 until 1977. In retirement he became a Performance Management Adviser.
Holmes, Edward McL. ‘Participation by Academics in University Government: A Case Study at the Departmental Level in the University of Melbourne’. Vestes: the bulletin of the Federal Council of University Staff Associations of Australia 1978, no. 3 & 4 (1978).  
Holmes, Edward McL. A Tribute to the University Assembly and Its Contributions to Melbourne University and Beyond. 2 sheets, 1989.  
Holt, Stephen ‘Deconstructing Manning Clark: Was He Meant to Be a Historian?’ National Library news. v.5 no.9(June 1995).  
Home, R. W. Papers. 12 cm. (1 archives box), 1974-1981. Files on Michelson of the speed of light 1975-1981; Chair of Melbourne 1974-1976; Physical Science 1975-1977; Museum - Science and Technology at University submission 1974 (made on behalf of J. Radford); M A seminar 1974-1975; comments on N.Botus early papers with information and notes by Home.
Home was born in 1939 and educated at the University of Melbourne and Indiana University where he gained his Ph.D. On his return, he was the Physics Master at Haileybury College from 1960 to 1964, Lecturer in History and Philosophy of Science from 1967 to 1970 and later Senior Lecturer. In 1975 Home was appointed Professor of History and Philosophy of Science. Home is a prolific author of historical and scientific publications and the editor of Historical records of Australian science since 1984.
Home, R. W. Personal or Confidential Files. 12 cm. 1983-1985. Personal or confidential 1983-1985; references written for students and staff, 1983-1985
Home, R. W. Physics in Australia to 1945: Bibliography and Biographical Register. Melbourne: Dept. of History and Philosophy of Science University of Melbourne and National Centre for Research and Development in Australian Studies Monash University, 1990. By R. W. Home and Paula J. Needham.
Hone, Effie Interview with Effie Hone, 1982. Hone speaks with Sheena Grant of her family background; religion; childhood and school memories in Melbourne; family life and lifestyle; attending college of domestic economy; travel; experiences studying medicine at Melbourne University; employment experiences and conditions; courtship and marriage; home and living conditions; domestic servants; her children; health care; family lifestyle; entertainment and recreation; class; politics; Perth in the 1930s; overseas travel; Australia in 1938; England and Australia.
Recorded by the Australia 1938 Oral History Project as research for the book Australians 1938 from the series Australians, a historical library.Inquiries to the National Library of Australia.
Hooper, Carole Female Candidates at the University of Melbournes Matriculation Examination, 1871-1881. Melbourne studies in education. v.42(2001).  
Hopper, V. ‘Flashback’. Assemblage: a journal of university events & opinions published by the assembly for members of the university 1985, no. December (1985).  
Hopper, Victor David Papers. 23 archives boxes, 1939-1981. Notes on physics 1939-1951; correspondence regarding physics, RAAF Academy, research, university 1951-1981; research regarding the environment, S.S.T. emissions, balloon flights, astronomy, cosmic ray events; newspaper clippings; optical glass samples photographs.
Hopper was born in Wales in 1913. He gained a scholarship to attend Neath County School where he remained until 1927. In that year Hopper emigrated to Australia under the Little Brother Movement and a year later continued his school studies at Horsham High School in Victoria. In 1930 Hopper won a teaching scholarship and trained at Melbourne Teachers College. He attended the University of Melbourne on a part-time basis while he taught in a succession of schools. He gained his B.Sc. Degree in 1937 and embarked on a Masters and later D.Sc. Degree. After winning a series of scholarships and awards and completing his D.Sc. Hopper joined the staff at Melbourne University. He also began to acquire an international reputation as a research physicist. In 1962, Hopper was appointed to the Chair of Physics (RAAF Academy). From 1966 to 1967 he served as Dean of the Science Department.
Hordern, Louis Photographs Taken in University Grounds,. 1935-1937. Cedric Louis [now Louise] Hordern enrolled in several subject in 1st Year B.E. in 1934, passing in four and resubmitting for a fifth which he passed in December 1935. He enrolled for 2nd Year B.Sc. subjects in 1935 and 1936, failing three and being absent for the fourth in December 1935, and being absent from the November 1936 examinations in all four of the subjects. While an undergraduate, he took a number of photographs of student activities in the grounds, especially in the lake and its precinct, including a mock Italo-Abyssinnian war (April 1936 a yabbying contest, and an Engineering student rag.
Horne, Colin J. Papers. 3 cm. 1930-1934. Newspaper reports of University Extension lectures in Bendigo by Ian Maxwell, 1930-1931, with Hornes tribute to Maxwell and the lectures. Memorabilia relating to Hornes Melbourne Teachers College days and later: programmes for sporting and theatrical events; newscuttings recording College and University student activities; memorandum for prospective students 1931; notice of Initiation; 1930-1932. Notices of reunions 1984, 1987, 1988. Horne graduated B A (Hons) in 1934 and Dip.Ed. in 1935 at Melbourne, where he had studied since 1931, residing at the Melbourne Teachers College. Invited by Professor Cowling to be a tutor in English he worked off his bond to the Education Department by teaching part-time at the University High School before leaving to study at Oxford. After teaching at Queen’s College, Belfast and the University of Leicester, he accepted the Chair of English at Adelaide in 1957. He retired in 1977.
Horwood, E. K. Papers. 19 archives boxes, 1945-1973. Lecture notes; teaching manuals; correspondence files; material regarding the teaching of foreign languages; material regarding the teaching of technical and scientific courses; publications brochures; travel diaries; dictionaries; administrative files; correspondence regarding books, films; petty cash books; note books.
Howard, Nick ‘Wired’. In Melbourne University Characters and Controversies, edited by Chiaroscuro: Department of History, University of Melbourne, 2001. Examines the University’s adoption of computers, e-mail and the internet between 1980 and the end of the century.
Howe, Brian Recorded Interview. Melbourne, 2002. Howe was Housing and Regional Development, etc. and is a Minister in the Uniting Church. He has been a Professorial Associate in the Centre of Public Policy, University of Melbourne, since 1996. Interviewer: Carolyn Rasmussen. Inquiries to the History of the University Office.
Howes, John. Papers. 72 cm. (6 archives boxes), 1939-1972. Correspondence; lecture notes; reports; essays; University of Melbourne administration files including Faculty of Arts papers; copies of Crux 1962-1968; Australian Quarterly, 1939; Australian Presbyterian Life, 1972; files regarding editorship of Crux; minutes of Prince Hill Primary School meetings; newspaper clippings. Howes was educated at the University of Melbourne. He was a Rhodes Scholar and completed his Ph.D. in Philosophy. He lectured in Philosophy at the University of Melbourne and edited Crux.
Howes, John Papers. 24 cm. (2 archives boxes), 1967-1973. University of Melbourne examination papers for Philosophy of Religion; correspondence; material regarding Crux; newspaper cuttings; newsletters.
Hoy, Alice Papers. 4 cartons, 1923-1970. Correspondence, lecture notes (e.g. W.A. Osborne), publications (inc. Teaching of History and Civics). Secondary Teachers Training College: Annual Reports 1950-1957; administrative files concerning staff, students, etc.
Graduating at Melbourne, B A 1914, Dip.Ed. 1915, M A 1916 Alice Hoy was appointed to the University High School (a practising school for trainee teachers) in 1915. In 1924 she became Mistress of Method of History at the Melbourne Teachers College and was from 1926- 1957 part-time Senior Lecturer in Education in the University, though transferred from the College to the staff of the University High School as an economy measure in 1933. However, she remained chiefly engaged in University work. When a Secondary Teachers College was established in 1950, she became its first Principal. She retired from the University and the College in February 1958. She was a foundation member of the Monash University Council 1958-1971, and of the Australian College of Education, 1959-1971, and was a council member of the University Women’s College, 1936-1964. Her Civics for Australian Schools ran to many editions, and she published a history of University High School, A City Built to Music, in 1961.
Humphreys, L. R. Clunies Ross: Australian Visionary. Carlton, Vic.: Miegunyah Press, 1998. Clunies Ross (1899-1959), is best known for his pioneering work in veterinary science. He greatly advanced parasitology and disease control in animals and spanned the gap between Eastern and Western scientific cultures. Foundation Chief of CSIROs Division of Animal Health, and in 1949 Chairman of the new CSIRO.
Humphreys, L. R. Wadham: Scientist for Land and People. Carlton, Vic.: Melbourne University Press, 2000. Wadham (1891-1972), was born in London and studied Botany at Cambridge University before serving in the First World War. Upon his return he worked as a research student in the British Ministry of Agriculture later returning to Cambridge as a Senior Demonstrator in Botany. In 1926 he accepted the appointment as Professor of Agriculture at the University of Melbourne where he remained until he retired in 1956. Wadham was always committed to his academic and public obligations and he was a member of many government and agricultural committees and numerous commissions. He was also a regular newspaper columnist and ABC broadcaster.
Humphries, Barry Conversation with Barry Humphries, 1981. Humphries describes his years as a student in Melbourne; his attraction to the modern school of painting; the Dadaist movement and other surrealist painter; studying painting under George Bell; his disappointments while at Melbourne University; his theatrical debut in the early 1950s. Interviewer: Hazel De Berg. Inquiries to the National Library of Australia.
Humphries, Barry More Please. 1st ed. London; New York: Viking, 1992. Actor and writer. Humphries left the University of Melbourne in 1954, having made a considerable impact with stage performances and exhibitions of surrealist art.
Humphries, Vincent Student Activism and the Vietnam War. The Escalation of the Anti-Vietnam War and Anti-Conscription Movements on Melbourne Campuses, 1968-72. 4th year thesis, University of Melbourne, 1984.  
Hurley, Tom Papers. 13 archives boxes, 1913-1977. Australian Union of Students campaigns and general matters, council minutes 1972-1974, executive minutes 1973, University Assembly 1972; S.R.C. minutes 1972-1974 and general material 1972-1977; Melbourne University Buildings Disposal Plans for Buildings Proposal Report on Present and Future requirements 1913-1918.
Hurley, Tom Papers. 8 archives boxes, 1968-1977. University of Melbourne SRC subject files correspondence 1970- 1974, publications 1971-1976; Australian Union of Students subject files: correspondence, circulars, minutes 1971-1973, minutes and budget 1976, loose papers 1976-1978, conference and council documents 1973- 1977, submissions 1973-1976, publications 1968-1976; Law Students Society minutes, circulars, notes, publications 1976-1977; miscellaneous 1972.
Hutchings, M. Functional Study of the Engineering School Library, 1958, 1959. By M. Hutchings and K. R. Thom. Issued for the information of the Engineering Library Committee, University of Melbourne.
Hutton, Geoffrey ‘Geoffrey Hutton’. In More Memories of Melbourne University : Undergraduate Life in the Years since 1919, edited by Hume Dow. Melbourne: Hutchinson, 1985. Hutton worked as a journalist on the Argus and the Age, and saw service as a war correspondent during the Second World War.
Hutton, Geoffrey It Wont Last a Week!: The First Twenty Years of the Melbourne Theatre Company. Melbourne: Macmillan, 1975.  
Hyams, B. K. Teacher Preparation in Australia: a History of Its development from 1830-1914. Melbourne: Australian Council for Educational Research, 1979.  
Hyde, B.J. ‘John Stuart Anderson, 1908-1990’. Historical records of Australian science v. 9, no. no. 2 (1980): 127-49. Co-author: P. Day.
I: Bibliography for the History of the University of Melbourne
Author Title Description
  Improved Traffic Management Saves Fuel and Reduces Pollution. University of Melbourne Gazette. v.34 (June 1978).  
Inagaki, Mowsey Registrar’s Correspondence Relating to the Internment of Mowsey Inagaki. 2 cm. 1937, 1941-1942. Registrar’s correspondence relating to the internment of Mowsey (Moshi) Inagaki. Also Vice-Chancellor’s letters regarding leave for Inagaki to visit Japan in 1937.
Inagaki was appointed instructor in Japanese at the University of Melbourne in 1919. In 1939 he travelled to Japan as a guest of the Society for International Cultural Relations. After the Japanese attacked Pearl Harbour and war was declared, Inagaki was interned at Tatura. His wife appealed to the University of Melbourne for assistance with no result.
Inaugural John Perry Oration. 5 cm. 1976. Graduating from the University of Melbourne in 1939 and after two years at the Royal Melbourne Hospital, Perry (1917-65), was appointed Senior Lecturer in Pathology at the University. From 1942 to 1946 he served with the Australian Army Medical Corps. After the war Perry became the first Pathologist to the Clinical Research Unit of the Walter and Eliza Hall Institute prior to his appointment to the Royal Childrens Hospital, where he became Medical Director in 1960.
Inchley, G. T. Entrance to University : Special Concessions for Mature-Age Students. M Ed, University of Melbourne, 1981.  
Ingleton, Suzanne ‘Suzanne Ingleton’. In Memories of Melbourne University : Undergraduate Life in the Years since 1917, edited by Hume Dow. Richmond, Vic.: Hutchinson of Australia, 1983. Ingleton graduated in Architecture and worked with the Australian Performing Group 1971-79.
Ingham, Sidney ‘Gwynned Francis James 1912/1994’. Australian Historical Studies. no.104(April 1995).  
Inglis, Kenneth Stanley Papers, 1954-1977 [in the National Library of Australia]. 41 boxes. Canberra, 1954-1977. Summary of contents: A history of the Royal Melbourne Hospital. Thesis submitted for the degree of Master of Arts, University of Melbourne, 1954. Correspondence, reports, minutes, and other documents concerned with the University of Papua New Guinea together with press cuttings relating to Papua-New Guinea over the period 1966-1977.
  Installation of Emeritus Professor R.D. Wright as Chancellor. 1980. Photographs. Colour-prints mounted on loose-leaves in green plastic folder. Prices of photos inside front cover. 9 sheets
  International House (University of Melbourne). Films and Photographs. 20 cm. (one over-sized box and over-sized photographs), 1952-1982. Photograph slides of International House buildings and student groups etc. (unidentified). Prints of group photographs: Foundation members (students and staff), 1957, and groups 1969, 1971 and 1977, sporting teams, committee, tutors, 1964-1969 (identified); photographs of people, events, buildings including interiors, aerial views etc. (unidentified). Three reels of audiotape: opening ceremony 1958, 10th anniversary dinner and dinner for Mrs. Ghandi, 1968. Six reels of film on International House and overseas students generally; three newscutting books, 1952-77.
This Hall of Residence, founded to foster international understanding and friendship among students at a time of increasing numbers of overseas students coming to the University, arose from student and staff interest, the support of the Council, and the assistance of the State Government which passed the amending Act necessary to allow the University to provide accommodation for students in 1951. An Appeal was launched in June 1952 and the first residential (Clunies Ross) wing and central block built in 1956. Intended to house equal numbers of overseas and Australian students, it opened in 1957 with 42 students.
International House (University of Melbourne) International House Building Fund. 36 cm. (3 archives boxes), 1953-1966. International House Building Fund, minutes and papers, July 1953- November 1966. Papers relating to the organisation of an appeal inaugurated by the International House Council in 1961 to fund the expansion of International House: management, executive, International House Council, publicity and women’s committees minutes and correspondence; speeches, brochures and form letters requesting funds, photographs, correspondence with donors, information on student activities connected with the appeal, account books and receipts for donations.
International House (University of Melbourne) Papers. 5 cm. 1981-1983. Budget Work Papers 1982-1983; Self-help 1983 (book showing household duties undertaken by students). Bundle of cards recording names of students, addresses, fees paid, 1962 (1 card for 1961); cards recording domestic staff leave, c. 1969-1973.
Iremonger, Duncan S. ‘Ronald Frank Henderson: 1917/1994’. Economic record. v.71 no.214(Sept 1995). Obituary. Co-author: Jim Perkins.
Iremonger, Duncan S. ‘Ronald F. Henderson, AO CMG: Obituary’. Australian economic review. no, 1(Jan/March 1995).  
Irvine, Irene Australian International Office Benchmarking Survey : Report and Results for the University of Melbourne. October 1997. Parkville, Vic.: University of Melbourne, 1997. By Irene Irvine and Australian International Education Foundation.
J: Bibliography for the History of the University of Melbourne
Author Title Description
Jackson, Christopher Melbournes Principles & Practice of Final Year. 1st edition. ed. Melbourne: University of Melbourne Medical Students Society, 1991. By Christopher Jackson, Michael Yeoh, and University of Melbourne. Medical School. Major sponsor: The Medical Defence Association of Victoria.
Jackson, Sue Papers. 72 cm. (6 archives boxes), 1971-1986. Articles; badges; cassette tapes; National Homosexual Conference papers, maps, leaflets, registration forms, discussion papers, minutes, discussion papers, agenda; Socialist Feminist Conference maps, notes; minutes; newspaper clippings; posters; notes; contract lists; posters; periodicals; articles; monographs; newsletters; forms; calendar; questionnaires; discussion papers; budgets; subject files; invitations; submissions, songsheets; invitations; membership forms; correspondence. This collection is part of the Victorian Women’s Liberation and Lesbian Feminist Archive.
Jagan, L. A. Education and Social Structure 1958-1960. M.Ed. Monash University. Based in part on an analysis of matriculation entry forms and results.
James, Gwynydd Francis Papers. 7 archives boxes, 1900-1978. Photographs etc. concerning Walhalla; files relating to James work on the history of Stokes (A/asia) Ltd.; documents relating to the Melbourne University Press; notes on the history of the National Gallery, 1978, by Lucy Kerley, etc. After graduating from Birmingham University with a M A in history, James worked as a Research Assistant at London University from 1935 to 1937 and as a Lecturer at St Andrews College in NSW from 1938 to 1939. In the following year James was appointed Lecturer in History at the University of Melbourne and was selected first Editor of Historical Studies of Australia and New Zealand In 1943 James resigned as Lecturer and became the Manager of Melbourne University Press. He retired in 1962.
James, Gwynydd Francis Papers. 12 cm. (1 archives box), 1900-1962. Correspondence and research papers 1939-1942; A Homestead Story: the Reminiscences and Letters of Alfred Joyce 1843-1864 with notes and introduction by G.F. James (M.U.P. 1942); M.U.P. catalogues and announcements 1944-1962; brief unpublished history of M.U.P. by Leigh Scott, 1960; photographs of University 1900-1952.
James, Gwynydd Francis. Recorded Interview, 1992. One audio cassette tape recording interview of G.F. James by Cecily Close, covering the period between his arrival in Australia and the early 1950s. One file of material collected by James in the course of writing an entry on Stanley S. Addison (Managing Director of the Melbourne University Press 1921-1931) for the Australian Dictionary of Biography. Interviewer: Cecily Close. Inquiries to the History of the University Office.
James, Richard Tutoring and Demonstrating : A Guide for the University of Melbourne. Melbourne: Centre for the Study of Higher Education University of Melbourne, 1997. By Richard James and Gabrielle Baldwin.
Jansen, Elizabeth ‘Politics, Passion and Poetry: An Epitaph to Enid Derham’. In Melbourne University Mosaic: People and Places, edited by Three-Four-Eight. Melbourne: University of Melbourne Department of History, 1998. Derham, a Melbourne graduate, lectured in English between 1922 and 1941. In 1912 she published The Mountain Road and Other Verses and Empire ( a childrens play).
Janson, Susan ‘Jessie Webb and the Predicament of the Female Historian’. In Stuart Macintyre and Julian Thomas, Eds. The Discovery of Australian History, 1890-1939. Carlton, Melbourne University Press, 1995.  
Jenkin, Coralie E. J. The Collection for the Saints : Collection Development at the Joint Theological Library. Monash, 1987.  
Jenks, Edward ‘The Government of Universities’. Centennial magazine, v.2 no. 10(1890).  
Jennings, Margaret Papers [in the Noel Butlin Archives ANU]. 2.25 m, 1973-1993. Papers relating to her professional life. Working files re Australian Society of Archivists, Business Archives Council, Records Management Association of Australia (Victoria), Melbourne University Records Management. Papers, cassette tapes on appraisal.
Jennings, Vera Biographical Notes on Gaye Tennant 1907-1980 by Her Friend and Mentor, Vera Jennings. 9 8to sheets. 19. Photocopies. Biographical notes on Gaye Tennant 1907-1980 by her friend and mentor, Vera Jennings. Also, letter from Dinny OHearn to Jennings, 26 March 1982, concerning her part in having Tennant mentioned in Faculty.
A South African by birth, Gaye Tennant received her later education in London and at the University of Melbourne. Early crippled by poliomyelitis, she graduated B A (Hons) in 1930 and M A in English with a Dip. Ed. in 1934. She became a school teacher and later in turn a tutor at Janet Clarke Hall, Vice-Principal at Women’s College and Tutor and Lecturer in the University English Department.
Jennings, Vera ‘Vera Jennings’. In Memories of Melbourne University : Undergraduate Life in the Years since 1917, edited by Hume Dow. Richmond, Vic.: Hutchinson of Australia, 1983. A graduate in Arts of the University of Melbourne, Jennings was from 1929 a tutor, from March 1942 Acting Lecturer, from 1947 Lecturer and from 1951 Senior Lecturer in the English Department. She retired on 28 February 1965.
Joel, Louis Memorabilia. 12 cm. (1 archives box), 1919-1927. Two photographs; degree certificates MB and BS, 23 December 1926 signed by John Monash; copies of photographs of Wilson Hall taken from North Eastern access lake, photograph of Dr. Joel, photograph taken from a car; certificates for the Degree of MB and BS in a black covered booklet (apparently issued to graduates going abroad), 1926-1927.
  ‘John Walter Gregory 1864-1932’. In Obituary Notices of Fellows of the Royal Society Volume 1 1932. London: The Society, 1932.  
Johnston, Carol ‘Collaborative learning of economics in a peer tutoring context at the University of Melbourne’. Australian economic papers. Special issue. Sept 1997.  
Johnston, Frank Horace Accountants Correspondence Files. 3 boxes, 1931-1960. Born in Sunbury, Victoria, in 1902, Johnston was educated at the Melbourne High School and the University of Melbourne, where graduated B A, B.Com. in 1933. After four years as a public accountants clerk, he joined the University as University Accountant in 1928, and was appointed Registrar in 1947. He served in this position until he retired. Johnston died in 1978. These correspondence files were compiled by Johnston when he was the University accountant.
Johnston, Robert An Alternative to Government Funding for the Graduate School of Management, the University of Melbourne. MBA, University of Melbourne, 1987.  
Jones, Barry Recorded Interview. Melbourne, 2002 Quiz champion, teacher, member of the Victorian and federal parliaments, federal president of the Australian Labor Party. Minister for Science and author of Sleepers Wake (1982). Interviewer: Carolyn Rasmussen. Inquiries to the History of the University Office.
Jones, Claire Patient Outpatients the Non-Resident Women of Queen’s College 1919-1959 and Their History. 4th year thesis, University of Melbourne, 1989.  
Jones, Shar ‘Portraits of Redmond Barry in the Librarys Collections’. La Trobe Library journal. v.7(Oct 1980).  
  Joseph Proctor Bainbridge, Registrar 1909-1936, Taken with His Family. 19. Photograph. Includes a woman with four children, presumably his daughter and grandchildren, in front of a house.
Joske, Enid Recollections of Janet Clarke Hall : Hoc Collegium Primum Feminarum. Heidelberg, Vic.: Nala Press, 1964. The Hostel for Women University Students, Trinity College, later named Janet Clarke Hall was established in 1886.
Joubert, P. N. Interview with Professor Peter Joubert, Professor in Mechanical Engineering at Melbourne University and Part-Time Yacht Designer, 1977. Transcript available (typescript, 26 leaves) from the National Library of Australia. Written permission required for research use and public use during the lifetime of the interviewee. Recorded in Mosman, New South Wales. Joubert speaks with Neil Bennetts about the Joubert family background in France and Australia; his childhood in Manly and Vaucluse; studying at Sydney Technical College; serving as a fighter pilot in the RAAF, in the Pacific, during World War II; sailing and building boats; and studying engineering at Sydney University.
Judd, Barry A Policy Evaluation of the Aboriginal Education Strategy of the University of Melbourne. MA, University of Melbourne, 1997.  
Juhasz, Rachel ‘Who Does the Wizard Think He Is and What on Earth Is He Doing?: Ian Brackenbury Channell’. In Melbourne University Characters and Controversies, edited by Chiaroscuro: Department of History, University of Melbourne, 2001.  
Jupp, James Interview with Dr James Jupp, Political Scientist and Academic, 1988. 10 tape reels (ca. 9 hrs) : 7 ips 2 track stereo; 10 inch. Transcript available (289 p.) Transcript and cassette open access for research, written permission required for public use. Recorded at National Library of Australia, Parkes ACT. Jupp speaks with Barry York of his family background and childhood in England being evacuated during WWII, being a scholarship student at a Public School; early involvement in Labour Party Politics; his intellectual development and influences on him; studying at the London School of Economics and involvement in student politics; his first jobs; travelling through Yugoslavia in 1953; why he moved to Australia in 1956; his voyage to Australia; first impressions of Australia; involvement in the ALP after the DLP split; academic life at Melbourne University and involvement in university politics; his books; involvement in establishing the journal Dissent; moving back to England and intellectual work there; Sri Lanka & travel elsewhere; interest in Development Politics; marriage and moving back to Australia, to Canberra CAE: minority parties; difference between the CAE and university systems; academic freedom; research on Vanuatu; editing The Australian People, and controversies that arose during its compilation; access and equity policy; immigration policy and research and multiculturalism.
Jupp, James Interview with Dr James Jupp, Political Scientist, 1996. This is a follow-up of an earlier interview conducted in 1988. Inquiries to the National Library of Australia.
A: Bibliography for the History of the University of Melbourne
Author Title Description
Kazi, Abdul Khaliq A Presentation to the Review of Asian Studies at Melbourne University. Parkville, Vic.: The University, 1991. Presentation by A. K. Kazi and other members of the University of Melbourne, Department of Asian Languages.
Kellaway, Frank Interview with Frank Kellaway, Poet, Author and Painter, 1991. 5 sound tape reels; 10 in. + Accompanying materials: transcript (98 leaves). Kellaway talks to Heather Rusden, about his family background; childhood memories of home and school and shares his memories of his father; meeting and painting with Arthur Boyd and his memories of Manning Clark. He talks about WWII and joining the navy after 1 year at University; gives his reasons for joining the Communist party. He then describes his return to University on Commonwealth Reconstruction Trainees Scheme; discusses his novels and influences on his writing etc. Inquiries to the National Library of Australia.
Kelly, Farley ‘Learning and Teaching Science: Women Making Careers, 1890-1920’. In On the Edge of Discovery, edited by Farley Kelly, xii, 348 , [8] of plates. Melbourne: Text Publishing, 1993.  
Kelly, Farley On the Edge of Discovery. Melbourne: Text Publishing, 1993.  
Kelly, Farley University Photograph Collection. 1890-1930. Reproductions of photographs chiefly of University women graduates, together with some of University buildings etc. from various sources including magazines and the University Archives, gathered by Kelly for her book, Degrees of Liberation; a short history of women in the University of Melbourne, published by the Centenary Committee of the University of Melbourne, 1985. Final editing was done by Trevor Wigney.
Kelly, Farley. Women Graduates Centenary Committee Degrees of Liberation : A Short History of Women in the University of Melbourne. Parkville, Vic.: Women Graduates Centenary Committee University of Melbourne, 1985.  
Kendall, David. Papers. 120 cm. (10 archives boxes), 1973-1980. Production files; correspondence and subject files; reports; photographs; posters; scripts; cinema stills; Theatre Board minutes 1977-1980; Performing Arts Committee minutes; Union Theatre Sub- Committee papers. Kendall was Director of the Melbourne University Student Theatre for several years during the 1970s
Kendall, William Tyson Newspaper Cuttings Concerning W.T. Kendall 1889-1896. 2 cm. (1 volume), 1889-1896. Following training and private practice in England, W.T. Kendall arrived in Melbourne in 1880. The Veterinary Surgeons Act of Victoria was passed in 1887 and Kendall, a prime mover of the Act, established the Melbourne Veterinary College at his business premises in Fitzroy in 1888. When Melbourne University opened a Veterinary School in 1908 it took over from Kendall who had conducted the College at his own expense. Prior to his retirement in 1918 he lectured in Veterinary Medicine and Obstetrics. His son Ernest taught at both the College and the school between 1897 and 1910, served in the Boer War and W.W.I. and later became Chief Veterinary Officer in the Department of Agriculture.
Kendall, William Tyson Papers. 36 cm. (2 archives boxes and 1 flat-box), 1860-1936. Reminiscences of W.T. Kendall circa 1920; newspaper cutting 1889- 1899; reports; account of his career in Kendall Memorial Lectures by Ernest Arthur Kendall 1936; E.A. Kendalls letters and testimonials 1901-1933; newspaper cuttings concerning work of the Milk Board 1933-1936; photographs 1894-1936.
Kendall, William Tyson Notes on the Early History of the Veterinary Profession in Victoria. Report of the Fourteenth Meeting of the Australasian Association for the Advancement of Veterinary Science. Melbourne: Government Printer, 1914.  
Kennedy, Paul Michael Did Australian Science Suffer a Tyranny of Distance? : A Reconsideration. MA, University of Melbourne, 1998.  
Kentish, Gertrude F. Fritz Duras, the Father of Physical Education in Australia. Kingswood, S. Aust.: Australian Council for Health Physical Education and Recreation, 1984. Duras was born and educated in Germany where he graduated in medicine. He came to Australia by invitation in 1937 to create the first University course in physical education in Australia. Duras remained at the University of Melbourne as the Associate Producer and Director of the department until his death in 1962. He was also the pioneer and first president of the Australian Physical Education Association, a foundation member of the Australian Sports Medicine Association and the first director of the International Physical Education Conference in Australia.
Kerley, Lucy Frances Old Chemistry School. 1930-1939. 7 sheets. Rough sketches of layout of the old Chemistry School by Kerley, drawn from recollection.
Kerley, Lucy Frances Science Club Annual Exhibit Night Programme, 8 October 1930, 1930. Kerley graduated B.Sc. in 1934 and received a Diploma in Analytical Chemistry in 1935. A part-time Demonstrator in the Chemistry Department from March 1937, she became Assistant Lecturer in 1957. and She retired on 31 December 1973.
Kernot, William Charles ‘In Memoriam: Henry Martin Andrew’. Melbourne University review, v. 4 no. 3(1888).  
Kernot, William Charles ‘The New Engineering Laboratory’. In Report of the Eighth Meeting of the Australasian Association for the Advancement of Science. Melbourne, 1900.  
Kernot, William Charles Letter on University Letterhead, 11 Nov. 1880, Registrar to W.C. Kernot, Inviting Him to Act as Officer in Charger of the Ordinary Examination at the Times Stated (A.M. 19 and 20 Nov. 1880). 1 sheet, 1880.  
Kernot, William Charles Some Anomalous Circumstances Connected with Education by W.C. Kernot. Melbourne: Australasian Schoolmaster Office, 1897.  
Kerr, Jean St G. Essays in Honour of Louis Goldberg. Parkville, Vic: Department of Accounting and Business Law University of Melbourne, 1989. By Jean St G. Kerr and R. C. Clift. A Melbourne graduate, Goldberg was a research scholar and part-time tutor in 1931-1932 and combined part-time tutoring with public accounting throughout the 1930s. After war service he was appointed lecturer in accounting and G.L. Wood Professor of Accounting in 1958. He retired in 1973 but continued to give research seminars in the Department until 1987. He published numerous works on accounting education. He died on 18 October 1997
Kerr, Jean St G. ‘Louis Goldberg: Educator and Scholar’. In Essays in Honour of Louis Goldberg, vi, 313. Parkville, Vic: Department of Accounting and Business Law University of Melbourne, 1989. By Jean St G. Kerr and R. C. Clift
Kiddle, Margaret University of Melbourne Plans Posters. 1 large folio, 1897-1929. University of Melbourne Plans Posters containing parish plans, diagrams of property, real estate and agent advertisements, estate plans, subdivision sale plans, annotated plans. Also National Council of Woolselling Brokers of Australia map 1923-1924.
A graduate of the Melbourne History School, Kiddle joined it as a tutor in 1946. By 1950 she had published Caroline Chisholm and had begun work on Men of Yesterday; a social history of the Western District. Despite severe illness she brought this to completion but not to publication. It was edited and seen through the press by Professors La Nauze and Crawford. The University of Melbourne plans poster was probably acquired by Kiddle for the purpose of research for Men of Yesterday. It was probably originally compiled by a real estate agent in the Western District.
Kilpatrick, James William No Place in a Community of Scholars : Axel Lodewycks and the University of Melbourne, 1956-73. Monash, 1994. Lodewycks (1910-1990) was Deputy Librarian at the University of Melbourne 1948-1956; and University Librarian 1956-1973.
Kincaid-Smith, Priscilla Professor Priscilla Kincaid-Smith Interview: Australian Academy of Science in conjunction with Oxford Brookes University Video Archive (United Kingdom) and C & W Optus. 1998. 1 videocassette (VHS) (68 min.) : sd. col.; in. Interview with Max Blythe recorded in Melbourne on 2 April 1998 Director of Nephrology of Epworth Hospital in Melbourne. In this interview she talks about her childhood, family and days as a student in South Africa and England. She was appointed as the University of Melbournes first woman professor in 1975. The interview focuses on her research in the field of nephrology and hypertension. Inquiries to the National Library of Australia.
King, Bill ‘The Return of the Students’. Arena. no.87(Winter 1989). Co-author Guy Rundle. Rebirth of the student radical in the occupation of Melbourne University Student records Office on 8 March 1989.
King, Edgar Samuel John Papers. 12 cm. 1928-1940. Correspondence with former students and colleagues, including Professor MacCallum, 1934, reporting on the Cancer Research dispute involving Professor Laby and others and departmental news; with medical colleagues on clinical matters; with the Masseurs Board for whom King lectured; testimonials written for King and by King for others 1928-1940 testimonials written for King and by King for others, etc. 1928-1940 (most of the 1930s). Only half of the original sequence survives: the above correspondence is filed alphabetically by name of correspondent, M-Z. King, a medical graduate of this University and later F.R.C.S. and D.Sc. was Surgeon Outpatients and Clinical Tutor in Surgery at the Melbourne Hospital from 1931, Stewart Lecturer in Pathology at the University of Melbourne 1928-1932, Senior Lecturer from 1932 and, in 1934, Acting Professor. He won the Jacksonian Prize of the Royal College of Surgeons on three occasions (1930, 1933 and 1938) and other distinctions. In 1951 he followed Sir Peter MacCallum as Professor of Pathology, a post he held until his death in 1966.
King, Edgar Samuel John ‘The Story of the Melbourne School of Pathology’. Medical journal of Australia. 28 July 1951.  
Knopfelmacher, Frank The Role of the University Administrator. Paper presented at the University Administrative Staff Course. [Melbourne] 1972. Knopfelmacher was born in Vienna and brought up in Czechoslovakia. Virtually all his family died in the Holocaust. Having fled to Palestine and subsequently served in a Czech Legion of the British Army, Knopfelmacher returned home in 1948 only to flee once again, this time from the repression of the communist takeover of his country. He went to Britain, taking his PhD. from London University. In 1955, he was appointed to the Melbourne University Department of Psychology, where he taught until his retirement in 1988. He reached a wider audience through his lectures on social theory at the Council for Adult Education.
Korszniak, Natalia Vera Department of Pharmacology, the University of Melbourne, 1953-1995. Melbourne: Limited Edition Media Services, 1996.  
Kostezky, Aurora ‘Miss Portia, LL. D.: Australia’s first female lawyer’. Law Institute journal. v.71 no.10(Oct 1997).  
Kreltszheim, Leander ‘Walking through History: a Guide to the Early Architecture and Grounds of the University of Melbourne’. In Students, Scholars and Structures: Early Tales from the University of Melbourne, edited by The Special Collection. Melbourne: History Department, University of Melbourne, 2002.  
Krongold, Jeanette ‘Dr Frank Knopfelmacher, Psychologist, Cold Warrior: Setting the Cat among the Pigeons’. In A Chequered Past: Pieces of Melbourne University, edited by Millennium Scholars. Melbourne: University of Melbourne Department of History, 2000.  
Kyi, Anna ‘Child-Care on Campus: A Student Need?’ In Melbourne University Mosaic: People and Places, edited by Three-Four-Eight. Melbourne: University of Melbourne Department of History, 1998.  
L: Bibliography for the History of the University of Melbourne
Author Title Description
La Nauze, J. A. Papers of John Andrew La Nauze, 1888-1984 [in the National Library of Australia]. 60.9 cm (105 boxes and 2 cartons) + Accompanying materials: 4 folio boxes. 1888-1984. Correspondence, research notes, draft manuscripts, photographs and secondary source material chiefly related to La Nauzes published studies including Alfred Deakin: a biography (1965), The making of the Australian constitution (1972) Walter Murdoch: a biographical memoir (1977). The papers include sequences of original correspondence with fellow historians, including Manning Clarke, and R.M. Crawford and prominent Australians such as H. C. Coombs, Paul Hasluck and A.D. Hope. Historian. Professor of History, University of Melbourne, 1956-65; Professor of History, Research School of Social Sciences, Australian National University, 1966-76.
Laby, Betty Recorded Interview. Melbourne. Betty Laby worked on the Optical Munitions Panel and embarked on a career in statistics, working at the University, the British Tabulating Machine Company, the CSIRO and Alcoa. She was awarded an honorary M.Sc. in 1985. Interviewer: Carolyn Rasmussen for the History of the University Unit. Inquiries to the History of the University Office.
Laby, Betty Snapshots Taken of the University Grounds and Buildings. 1960 ?  
Laby, Jean Recorded Interview. Melbourne, 2002. Laby was brought up in the University grounds, her father being Professor of Natural Philosophy. She worked with her father on the Optical Munitions Panel during World War II. She was appointed Senior Lecturer at the RAAF Academy, Point Cook in 1961, a position she occupied until 1982. During the 1970s she collaborated on Climate Assessment Program of the US Department of Transportation, funded by the Office of Naval Research and undertaken with the University of Wyoming. Interviewer: Carolyn Rasmussen. Inquiries to the History of the University Office.
Laby, Thomas Howell. Papers. 13 archives boxes, 1908-1970. Journal; correspondence 1937-1944; lecture notes; testimonials; diary and notes recorded during the trip to Cambridge, 1908; 1919 trip abroad; 1925 trip abroad; 1936 trip abroad; application to Chair; Congress of University material 1936; subject notes; visiting cards; newspaper cuttings; photographs; glass plates; publications.
Laby (1880-1946), was born in Creswick and was educated at the University of Sydney and Cambridge University where he graduated M A Sc.D. and was awarded a Science Research Scholarship and won distinction for research work under Professor Sir Joseph Thomson. In 1901 Laby returned to Australia and worked as a Demonstrator of Chemistry at the University of Sydney until his appointment as Professor of Physics at Victoria University College in 1909. In 1915 Laby returned to Melbourne when he became Professor of Natural Philosophy at the University of Melbourne. He subsequently held office in numerous organisations including as a member of the Melbourne University Council (1927-1931) and Chairman of the Optical Munitions Panel 1940; Member of the Army Inventions Directorate 1943. Laby retired in 1944.
Laby, Thomas Howell, Ed. Cancer Research in the University of Melbourne. 1934.  
Lack, John ‘Obsequies for Sir Redmond Barry: a Man for All Seasons’. Victorian historical journal. v.58 no.3/4(Sept/Dec1987).  
  Lady Masson Lectures, 1949-2001. Melbourne: University of Melbourne, School of Chemistry, 2003. Valda McRae, Editor.
Contains biographical information and a photograph of each lecturer in a booklet in addition to the text of each lecture on cd-rom.
Mary Masson (1862-1945), wife of David Orme Masson, was active in the Victoria League, the New Settlers League, the Country Women’s Association of Victoria, the Women of the University Fund and the University Branch of the Australian Red Cross Society. She regularly attended meetings of the University Chemical Society.
  Larf or Die : A. R. 80. Parkville, Vic.: University of Melbourne, 1980. July 30-Aug. 9 Prince Philip Theatre Melbourne University Cover. Archi Revue 1980.
Lahey, John ‘Fortieth Anniversary of the Melbourne Theatre Company’. Stages. July/Aug 1993. Includes a profile of John Sumner.
Lang, John The Victorian Oarsman and Rowing Register. Melbourne: Massina, 1919.  
Laslett, G. M. ‘Encounters with Statistical Inference: an Interview with Evan Williams’. Australian journal of statistics. v.36 no.2(Aug 1994). Co-authors: C. J. Lloyd and G. K. Robinson.
Latham, John Papers [in the National Library of Australia]. 18.4 m. 1868-1964. Correspondence, notes, speeches, diaries, minute books, account books, cuttings, photographs, pamphlets, official publications, invitations, menus, programs, receipts, bills, tourist publications and other material relating to Lathams career, family, early life and numerous non-vocational activities.
Born in Melbourne, Latham was called to the Bar in 1904, taught at Melbourne University, and became a Kings Counsel in 1922. He entered politics in 1922 as Progressive Liberal for the Federal Seat of Kooyong, becoming in 1931 Deputy Prime Minister, Attorney-General, Minister for External Affairs and Minister for Industry. He was appointed Chief Justice of the High Court in 1935, held many other offices during his career and was involved in a large number of organisations.
Laver, William Adolphus, and Grant W. Laver The Consummation of a Youthful Dream; the Origins and Establishment of the Ormond Chair and the Conservatorium of Music in the Melbourne University. Based on the Writings of W.A. Laver, Ormond Professor Music, 1915-1925 and Other Records Collected by Him Arranged and Edited by His Second Son Grant W. Laver. 44 pp. typescript, carbon copy. 1974.
Law, Phillip Papers [in the National Library of Australia]. 14.6 m (78 boxes and 7 folio boxes) 1870-1999 Includes personal papers and papers relating to Laws career as an academic, his work with ANARE and other research. They include diaries, drafts for lectures, talks, articles and books, photographs, correspondence, scrapbooks, fieldnotes, video tapes, papers relating to Laws biography by Kathleen Ralston, Laws recordings of cosmic rays and papers of his wife, Nel Law. The correspondents include N. Hudson, P. H. Karmel, A. S. Buchanan, G. J. Allen, J. K. Davis, John Bechervaise, Sir Archibald Grenfell Price, Sir Mark Oliphant, Lord Casey, W. Lorimer, G. Robin, D. Styles, F. Jacka, Sir Douglas Mawson, G. M. Budd and Sir Rupert Hamer. Scientist and Antarctic explorer. Lecturer in physics, University of Melbourne (1943-48), leader of the Australian National Antarctic Research Expeditions (ANARE, 1949-66) and established Mawson, Davis and Casey stations. Descriptive list available (192 p.).
Law, Phillip Papers. 12 cm. (1 archives box), 1940-1966. Papers; minutes; correspondence; notes regarding the Committee of Investigation into University Administration Working Party of which Law was convenor; minutes of Scientific Instruments and Optical Pane; 1940-1945; article A Future Policy for the Antarctic by P.G. Law; draft outlines of staff handbooks.
Law, Phillip Recorded Interview. Melbourne, 1992. Interviewer: J. R. Poynter for the History of the University Unit. Inquiries to the History of the University Office.
Law Students Society of Victoria Res Judicatae : The Magazine of the Law Students Society of Victoria. Vol. 7 v.; 22-24 cm. Melbourne: Butterworth & Co, 1935-1957.  
Lawler, Ray ‘Interview with Ray Lawler’. Mask. v.16 no.1(Autumn 1993). Interviewer: Domm Camenzuli.
Lawson, Kerrie A ’A Sea Change in Australian Medical Education‘. Medical journal of Australia. v.169 no.11-12 (7-21 December 1998). Deans of Australian medical schools say Deans live in interesting times.
Lay, Maxwell Gordon Recorded Interview. Melbourne, 2002. Transport engineer, Independent Reviewer of Melbourne City Link Project. Interviewer: Carolyn Rasmussen. Inquiries to the History of the University Office.
Lee Dow, Kwong The Social Composition of Students Entering the University of Melbourne in 1969 and 1970. Melbourne studies in education 1957/58- (1972): v.  
Leeper, Alexander Leeper Family Papers. 99 archives boxes, 1890-1980. Papers of Alexander Leeper and two of his children, Geoffrey Leeper, and Valentine Leeper.
Leeper, Geoffrey Papers. 12 cm. (1 archives box), 1937-1971.  
Legge, Jack Papers. 2 metres, 1940s 1960s.  
Legge, Kate ‘Kate Legge’. In More Memories of Melbourne University : Undergraduate Life in the Years since 1919, edited by Hume Dow, xviii, 198. Melbourne: Hutchinson, 1985. Legge is a journalist who worked during her student days on Farrago and the Melbourne Times. Since graduation she has worked for the Age.
Leser, David ‘Generational Gender Quake: Helen Garner’s New Book, The First Stone’. Sydney morning herald. Good weekend. 18 March 1995.  
Lewis, David Bannatyne Undergraduate Selection in the University of Melbourne : An Analysis of Issues. MBA, University of Melbourne, 1985.  
Lewis, J. B. ‘John Monash’. Melbourne University magazine. July 1920.  
Lewis, Miles The Development of Architectural Teaching in the University of Melbourne: a report. Melbourne: Department of Architecture and Building, University of Melbourne, 1970.  
Liege, Kate Postera Crescam Laude: the Ambitions and Ideals of the Founders of the University of Melbourne’. In Students, Scholars and Structures: Early Tales from the University of Melbourne, edited by The Special Collection. Melbourne: History Department, University of Melbourne, 2002.  
Little, Frank Graham Faces on the Campus : A Psycho-Social Study. Carlton, Vic.: Melbourne University Press, 1975.  
Little, Frank Graham Tapes, Etc. Relating to the University Experience.  
Little, Frank Graham The University Experience: A Study of 120 Third-Year BA and BSc Students in the University of Melbourne, 1967. PhD, 1969.  
Little, Frank Graham The University Experience : An Australian Study. [Carlton, Vic.]: Melbourne University Press, 1970.  
Littlejohn, Evan Photograph Taken of Dr. Clive Disher and Sir Kingsley Norris by the Verandah, Strathfieldsaye. Taken Just Prior to World War Two. 1939?  
Lloyd, Brian E. Engineers in Australia: a Profession in Transition. Melbourne: Macmillan, 1991.  
Loder and Bayly Parking and Traffic Study University of Melbourne. [Melbourne, Vic.]: Loder and Bayly, 1975.  
Lodewycks, Karel Axel Essentials of Library Planning. Melbourne, 1961.  
Lodewycks, Karel Axel Files Concerning the University Library. 72 cm. (6 archives boxes). 1954-1986.  
Lodewycks, Karel Axel The Funding of Wisdom : Revelations of a Librarys Quarter Century. Melbourne: Spectrum, 1982.  
Lodewycks, Karel Axel ‘My Recollections of the Library’. University gazette (1974).  
Loewe, Fritz Papers. 0.5m. 19 1984. Subject files (with correspondence etc.) re year 1958 spent as UNESCO adviser on Meteorological training at Nanga Parbat in Pakistan. Journals (e.g. issue of Neue Pforte with article re his old school in Berlin), books e.t. on various aspects of mountaineering, including a mountaineers cookery book (all in German), books on gymnastics, venereal disease, eugenics and a Disabled Men’s Association gardening book; University of Melbourne Calendar, Science handbook; copy of George Loughlin’s autobiography Cities of Departure (1984) etc.
Loewe (1895-1974) was educated at Knigliches Joachimthalsche Gymnasium 1904-1913; he then studied law and languages in Grenoble and Berlin 1913-14. Following war service he returned to Berlin taking up geography, physics, oceanography and meteorology 1919-23, gaining a first class Ph.D. He participated in a number meteorological research projects during the 1920s including the 1920 Wegener expedition to Greenland, becoming acting leader on Wegeners disappearance. Losing his position in 1934, Loewe was able to leave Germany with his family, initially researching at the Scott Polar Research Laboratory Cambridge 1934-7. Contact with the Vice Chancellor Sir Raymond Priestley led to his emigration to Australia where he founded Australia’s first University meteorology department. His time at Melbourne was largely devoted to the establishment of the department and teaching, however he was involved in a number of research expeditions to Antarctica, including the aborted 1947 Wyatt Earp expedition and the 1950-51 Commandant Charcot expedition where he wintered in Adlie Island.
Loewe, Fritz Papers. 65 archives boxes, 3 flat boxes, 1896-1975. Diaries, daybooks and notebooks 1927-1961; research notes, measurements and data 1913-1965; professional and personal correspondence 1920-1975; newspaper clippings; lectures and papers 1908- 1975; maps 1896-1912; photographs 1899-1930s; glass negatives 1928-1932; lantern plates of Greenland, Ireland and general expeditions; slides and lantern slides; certificates and awards; permits; booklets; publications.
Long, Harcourt Hilton Mildura Miscellany. 2 cm. 1940-1947. Front page of Sunraysia Daily 10 April 1947: STUDENTS MAKE HISTORY AT VARSITY BRANCH (lead article and two photographs); loose issues of Branch magazine Primo Anno, v. l, No.1, 14 May 1947 v.2,No.11 21 Nov 1947 (missing v.2, No.8); magazine of M.U.E.S.C.M. (Engineering Students Club Mildura) SNAFU, v.1. No.1, Aug 1947 v.1, No.3, 17 Oct 1947; programme for Official Opening of Mildura Branch 17 May 1947 (3pp) cutting from Farrago, 24 June 1947 Mallee Round-Up; An Addendum to the Students Song Book, n,d, single sheet 8vo, printed; list of MUESCM Committee members 1947, TS and MS (Long is named as Architecture Representative on the Union Sub-Committee) Minutes, Mildura Branch Sub-Committee Meetings Nos.1-5, 29 Apr-13 Oct 1947 (roneoed); SRC Regulation 1 Affiliated Societies, 30 Apr 1947 (5pp. foolscap, roneoed).
Long b.1922, studied Architecture at University of Melbourne 1946-52 (grad. 1953, later M.Arch.) He was at Mildura Branch in 1947.
Love, Harold James Edward Neild: a Victorian Virtuoso. Melbourne: Melbourne University Press, 1989.  
Lovering, John Francis Papers. 32 archives boxes, 1960-1979. ANZAAS files; Australian Atomic Energy Committee material 1920- 1983; Australian Mineral Foundation files 1979-1983; Committee on Research and Graduate Studies; miscellaneous university committees 1979-1983; subject files including Rusden College, 1970-1983.
Lovering, John Francis Papers. 17 archives boxes, 1920-1983. Correspondence; proceedings; administration files; research including papers on meteorites.
Educated at the University of Sydney and the California Institute of Technology, he was a Research Fellow and Senior Fellow in the Department of Geophysics at the University of Sydney before taking the Chair of Geology and Chairmanship of the School of Earth Sciences in 1969. In 1985 he became also Deputy Vice-Chancellor. In 1987 he resigned to take up the vice-chancellorship of Flinders University in Adelaide.
Lovering, John Francis Papers. 36 archives boxes, 1959-1969. Correspondence; reports; subject files; lectures 1969-1976; committee minutes and papers e.g. Victorian Institute of Colleges 1970-1976, International Association of Geo Chemistry and Cosmo Chemistry, Victorian Institute of Earth Sciences, Geographical Society of Australia 1979; general assembly correspondence; research; study leave; administration files; American visit; publications; Australian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy Membership Committee papers.
Lovering, John Francis Papers Relating to Various Bodies with Which Lovering Has Been Connected. 17 cartons, 1987-1994. Natural Resources Council of South Australia, 1994; Bond University Advisory Council; Adelaide Multi-Function Polis; Australian Ionising Radiation Advisory Council; Antarctic Science Advisory Committee; Unesco International Geological Co-ordination Programme; Australian Geoscience Council; Resources of Earth Science Departments in Australian Tertiary Institutions (Lovering & Semmens) Geotrack International Pty. Ltd.; Comlabs; Review of the Geology Department, Melbourne University.
Lovering, John Francis Private Papers Relating to University Appointments, Etc. 1962- 1987. 1.44 m. 12 archives boxes, 1962, 1979, 1982-1990. Papers relating to the Antarctic Science Advisory Committee and related organizations 26 September 1985 to 1987 (9 boxes); Papers relating to the restructuring of the Higher Education System of South Australia and other items on higher education 1987-1988; Private papers relating to University appointments, etc. 1962- 1987.
Lucas, A. H. S. W. A. Setchall, and Ida Curtis Jones. Letters between A.H.S. Lucas, and W.A. Setchall, Professor of Botany 24 January 30 November 1936. 2 cm. 1929-1936.  
Lugton, Mary E. George McArthur of Maldon : His Life and His Book Collection. M.Lib, Monash, 1989. The collection of George McArthur of Maldon forms the basis of the University of Melbourne Library collections. His Maldon bakery, established in about 1854, can still be seen.
Lugton, Mary E. The Library of a Victorian Pioneer, George Mcarthur, 1842-1903 : An Exhibition of Books Selected from His Bequest to the University of Melbourne : The Opening by the Right Honourable Sir Zelman Cowen, on Wednesday, 4th September, 1985. [Parkville, Vic.]: University of Melbourne, 1985.  
Lugton, Mary E. Books by Women Graduates of the University of Melbourne, 1883-1983 : A Check List. [Parkville, Vic.]: University of Melbourne Library, 1983. By Mary E. Lugton and Margaret C. Murphy
Lumley, Judith ‘Woman Confined’. In The Half-Open Door : Sixteen Modern Australian Women Look at Professional Life and Achievement, edited by Patricia Grimshaw and Lynne Strahan. Sydney, N.S.W.: Hale & Iremonger, 1982. Lumley is an obstetrician involved in community health.
Lyle, Thomas Photographs by Sir Thomas Lyle. 1892. Twenty-one glossy prints, 5x7, with negatives, from original photographs owned by Mr. Thomas Lyle, grandson of Sir Thomas Lyle, Professor of Natural Philosophy 1889-1914. The photographs, taken by Professor Lyle in 1892, show the new Natural Philosophy School interior and exterior, the Biology School and other buildings and parts of the grounds. Some have been labeled by his daughter, the labels appearing in the prints. The quality of the prints varies, and some appear to exclude the top portion of the original.
Lynch, Arthur My Life Story. London: J. Long, 1924. Includes a chapter on the author’s time at the University of Melbourne. He took his BA in 1885 and MA in 1887.
Lynch, Philip Reginald Papers. 105 archives boxes, 1940-1983. Correspondence; press releases; speeches including debating material 1940, NUAUS 1955-1956; Liberal Party material; ministerial files; briefing material; Department of Labour and National Service public addresses; electoral files 1972-1981; Flinders electoral newsletters 1967-1982; Frankston Community Hospital 1976-1982; Parliamentary reports and speeches; ALP material and speeches; Liberal Party policy papers; subject files; resignation 1977-1982; political notes; press cuttings; material regarding ALP dismissal.
Lynch was educated at Xavier College and Melbourne University. At the age of 22 he began his career in politics, later gaining the Federal seat of Flinders in 1966. After four ministerial positions, he became Treasurer and Deputy Leader of the Liberal Party in opposition and in the governing party from 1972 to 1982. Lynch was active in the investigations leading up to the exposure of the so-called Khemlani loans affair that led to the downfall of the Whitlam government in 1975. Lynch retired from Federal politics in 1982 and was appointed Director of the Reserve Bank of Australia in the following year. He died in June 1984.
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