C1867

H.R.H. The Duke of Edinburgh’s Entrance into Adelaide

Scarce engraving of the Duke of Edinburgh’s carriage passing under the triumphal arch on the corner of South and West Terrace, Adelaide. Prince Alfred, Duke of Edinburgh, son of Queen Victoria, on the Galatea reached Adelaide on 31 October 1867 to … Read Full Description

$A 75

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S/N: IMP-SA-671127168–366777
(DRW 08)
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H.R.H. The Duke of Edinburgh’s Entrance into Adelaide South Australia - Adelaide

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Details

Full Title:

H.R.H. The Duke of Edinburgh’s Entrance into Adelaide

Date:

C1867

Condition:

In good condition.

Technique:

Engraving.

Image Size: 

240mm 
x 175mm
AUTHENTICITY
H.R.H. The Duke of Edinburgh's Entrance into Adelaide - Antique Print from 1867

Genuine antique
dated:

1867

Description:

Scarce engraving of the Duke of Edinburgh’s carriage passing under the triumphal arch on the corner of South and West Terrace, Adelaide. Prince Alfred, Duke of Edinburgh, son of Queen Victoria, on the Galatea reached Adelaide on 31 October 1867 to commence the first royal tour of Australia.

From the original edition of The Illustrated Melbourne Post.

Collections:
State Library Victoria: Accession no: IMP27/11/67/168

William Anderson Cawthorne (1825 - 1897)

William Anderson Cawthorne (1825 - 1897) Sketcher, watercolourist and schoolmaster, was born in London on 25 September 1824 [1825?], son of William Cook Cawthorne. He lived in England, Scotland and South Africa before migrating to South Australia with his parents on board the Ameliain 1841, aged seventeen. To support himself and his sick mother, he opened a school in Currie Street, Adelaide, andW supplemented his income with freelance surveying and sketching. Cawthorne married his cousin, Mary Ann Georgiana Mower, on 24 June 1848; they had two daughters and five sons. In 1852, after briefly and unsuccessfully joining the Victorian gold rush, he became the second headmaster of Pulteney Grammar School in Adelaide and remained in that position until 1855 when he opened his own Victoria Square Academy. In December 1855 he exhibited over 200 of his sketches at his academy – 'all having a colonial interest attaching to them’ – as well as collections of shells, fossils, minerals and precious stones. A reviewer noted equivocally that 'the greater number of the pictures have not … in any degree sacrificed truthful depiction to artistic feeling’. Greatest interest was 'excited by the department illustrative of the manners, habits and customs of the aborigines of this country’. About this time Cawthorne wrote a story of pre-colonial Kangaroo Island, 'The Islanders’, which was later published as a serial in the Illustrated Adelaide Post.

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