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(Australian Institute of Health and Welfare, Australia)
AIHW is Australia's national agency for health and welfare statistics. Most AIHW publications are available in paper copy and online.

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The Australian Libraries Gateway is a directory of Australian libraries. Entries include library contact details, information about services and online catalogues. Use this site to find libraries in a geographical area, libraries of a particular type (for example public, university, health), and cultural heritage via on-line exhibitions, events and image collections. View record page
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The Australian Library and Information Association is the national professional organisation for the Australian library and information services sector. 

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This pathfinder site provides links to sites relating to Australian literature. Links to online journals, organisations and associations, resources available in Australian universities and information about the National Library of Australia's literary seminars are included.

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A database of over 3000 pioneer doctors from the 1700s through to 1875. The site covers Australian medical history with a database of medical pioneers and educational background material. It includes doctors who were registered or qualified in Australia, were resident in Australia, or visited here in a professional capacity, before 1875. Ships' surgeons, convict doctors, general practitioners and medical specialists are included. View record page
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A register of documents vital to Australia's history. This is one of 40 similar programs run by UNESCO for various countries of the world. It aims to preserve key documents in archives and library collections around the world and ensure that they are always available. View record page
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The Australian Museum is Australia’s first museum, with over 21 million scientific specimens and cultural objects in it's collections, which span Australia and the Pacific region.

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The National Archives has created the Bringing Them Home (BTH) name index which aims to help Indigenous people find information about themselves, their families and their country from National Archive records relevant to Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people and their history. This index was created in response to the recommendations of Bringing Them Home, the report of the National Inquiry into the Separation of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Children from Their Families, released in 1997. The BTH name index index contains: names of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people; names of non-Indigenous people related to or associated with Indigenous people; names of missions and institutions where Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people were placed; and places where Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people have lived or visited. The index does not contain information about the people named. To see this information you will need to view the original records (files, papers and photographs) or photocopies of them. If the reason for seeking access is to obtain information for the purpose of re-establishing family and community links, under the Memoranda of Understanding between the Archives and Northern Territory, Victorian and South Australian Indigenous communities you may look at information normally restricted from public access. For further information see Fact Sheet 114  Memorandum of Understanding with Northern Territory Aboriginal people, Fact Sheet 205  Memorandum of Understanding with the Victorian Aboriginal Child Care Agency or Fact Sheet 209  Memorandum of Understanding with SA Indigenous people. You can ask for the BTH name index to be searched by contacting the Archives National Reference Service at ( ph:1300 886 881; fax: 1300 886 882; email : ref@naa.gov.au ). To assist reference officers undertake a thorough search, it helps if you provide as many details as possible, including: name of the person you are researching  this includes any variations in the spelling of given names, nicknames, forgotten names, or Indigenous names; family connections  the names of any siblings, children or other relatives; language group, country or homeland  which were sometimes used to identify people; place  where the person was born, lived, worked, or was sent to; date of birth, age at events, or date of death of the person; date ranges  year or period the person was in a certain place or area, such as the period they worked on a particular cattle station; and significant events that may have occurred in the persons life, such as being evacuated because of natural disaster or war. You can find out more about the BTH index in the National Archives at Fact Sheet 175  Bringing Them Home Name Index The BTH name index is not the only information resource available to researchers of Indigenous family history. While most government records relating to Aboriginal affairs before 1970 were created and maintained by state governments, the National Archives holds large quantities of records relevant to Northern Territory and Victorian Indigenous people. The National Archives holds many Northern Territory records because from 1911 until self-government in 1978, the Commonwealth administered the Territory. Northern Territory records are held in the Darwin and Canberra offices. National Archive holdings on Victoria are large because the Victorian government handed the responsibility for Aboriginal affairs and associated records to the Commonwealth in 1975. Victorian records dating from 1860 are held in the Melbourne office. Finally, the National Archives holds more recent records for all states because in 1967 the Constitution was amended to allow the Australian Government to legislate for all Aboriginal people. There are a number of other online National Archive fact sheets concerning records on Indigenous people, including : Fact Sheet 113  Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people; Fact sheet 150  The 1967 Referendum; Fact sheet 108  The pastoral industry in the Northern Territory; and Fact sheet 112  Royal Commission into Aboriginal Deaths in Custody. Go to Fact sheets on Indigenous Australia. View record page
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Major holdings include records for the Australian Army, Navy, Merchant Navy and Air Force, conscription and national service and records relating to the Boer War, WW1, WW2 and the Vietnam War. The ANA also holds Victorian colonial defence force personnel records which were transferred to the Commonwealth following Federation in 1901. The National Archives has a number of fact sheets on its military records which are available on thier website. View record page
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Research guides on topics such as 'Australian and New Zealand Built Ships', 'Child Migration', 'Coastal Shipping', 'Convict Ships', 'First Fleet', 'Immigration - Steamships and Passenger Liners', 'Seafaring Ancestors', 'Shipwrecks' and more. View record page
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Naturalisation had been a responsibility of the individual colonies until 1903 when it was taken over by the Commonwealth. As a consequence, the National Archives holds citizenship records for all states from 1904. However, the National Archives also holds naturalisation records for the Colony of Victoria and the Province of South Australia for the period from 1848 to 1903. Naturalisation records for New South Wales, Queensland, Western Australia and Tasmania before 1904 are held by the respective State government archives. View record page
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Documents may include application forms, passenger lists, entry permits and accommodation records and naturalisation. Records are available if they are more than 30 years old. For arrivals by sea betwen 1926 and 1950, you can search the Freemantle passenger lists. Most passenger vessels from Europe made Fremantle, Western Australia, their first port. View record page
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An alphabetical index to all the microfilm shipping registers the National Archives hold. The most important of these registers are the Australian Registers of British Ships (1834-1982). The online index is searched by entering the whole or part of a ship's name and/or year of voyage and basic information is then provided about the ship, namely, the official number, the year built, the port number, the National Archive microfilm roll number and which National Archive office in Australia holds the record. View record page
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The Australian National Shipwrecks Database covers all known shipwrecks in Australian waters and can provide details of the ships voyage, the wreck location, the features of the vessel, crew and passengers. The number of shipwrecks listed totals 7664 including: NSW (2047), VIC (797), TAS (1116), QLD (1244), SA (774), WA (1466), NT (153) and Cocos Islands (2). View record page
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The Noel Butlin Archives Centre (NBAC) collects business and labour records from:

  • Australian companies, e.g. the Australian Agricultural Company, Burns Philp, CSR Ltd and Tooth and Co.
  • trade unions, e.g. the Australian Council of Trade Unions (ACTU), the Construction, Forestry, Mining and Energy Union (CFMEU)
  • industry bodies, e.g. the National Farmers Federation
  • professional organisations, e.g. the Institute of Public Affairs
  • personal papers of prominent individuals associated with industrial organisations, the labour movement, businesses, professional associations and industry bodies

 

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Prepared by the Parliamentary Education Office of the Australian Parliament to provide background, commentary and web links on current topics and about Parliament.

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Provides election results for state lower houses of parliament since 1890, and for Commonwealth Parliament since 1901. It also provides information about politicians and political parties and how they performed in elections. Produced by the University of Western Australia. View record page
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Images and information about prints and printmaking, posters, and book arts from Australia, Aboriginal Australia, the Torres Strait Islands, Papua New Guinea, Maori and Pakeha Aotearoa New Zealand and the Pacific region including Nuie, Samoa, Kiribati, and the Solomon Islands. View record page
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Established in 1978 and based in Melbourne, AQuA is Australia’s largest collection of LGBTIQ+ research material. 

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Compiled by Phyllis Wilson of the Returned Service Nurses Club of Victoria, this website lists 102 Australian nurses who died as a result of war service in the Boer War (1), World War 1 (24), World War 2 (76) and the Vietnam War (1). View record page