Wednesday, April 01, 2009

The Donald Bradman Collection

~ The Bradman Collection Museum at Adelaide Oval...

SIR DONALD BRADMAN

Australia’s greatest cricketer and the world’s greatest batsman begins when Donald George Bradman is born in Cootamundra, New South Wales in 1908. It follows with him growing up in Bowral and moving to Sydney at the age of 18 where he represented his state the following year and then Australia at the age of 20. He moved again to South Australia in 1934 to further his business and cricket opportunities and remained here until his death in 2001. The Bradman Collection Museum follows his progress from club cricketer on to the interstate and international stage. It notes his rise to hero status in the 1930s and how that status has been maintained. It explores his major role in cricket administration and provides glimpses of the family man and all-round sportsman.

THE HISTORY OF BRADMAN COLLECTION

In the late 1960s Sir Donald Bradman was persuaded to place much of his personal material in the State Library of South Australia. Fifty-two scrapbooks documenting his playing career were organised by library staff over several years as photographs, menus, newspaper cuttings and telegrams were copied and mounted in chronological order. In return Sir Donald donated a significant number of personal items of memorabilia to the library including various bats, balls, trophies, clothing and other pieces which became known as the Bradman Collection.

Some were originally displayed at the Mortlock Library of South Australiana from 1986 before a larger selection of pieces was moved to a permanent exhibition site in the library’s Institute Building in 1998. It was originally Sir Donald’s wish that a home for the collection might one day be found at Adelaide Oval and this took place in August, 2008 to coincide with the centenary of his birth.

The South Australian Cricket Association is now the custodian of the collection in conjunction with the Premier’s Department, State Library and the Bradman Family. The State Library retains the archival materials and management of the Bradman Collection website.

THE BRADMAN COLLECTION MUSEUM

The museum, now housed at Adelaide Oval, is built around various periods of Bradman's life and career, including his career as a cricketer at Club, State and International level.
In the Theatrette visitors can watch key film footage of Bradman’s career including a lesson from the master on playing different strokes. Other artefacts include books by and about Bradman, some of the thousands of letters from fans from all over the world; an interactive display, and a reconstructed lounge room depicting how listeners in Australia would have sat around their radios listening to Bradman playing thousands of miles away in the 1930s.

OPENING TIMES
Monday to Friday 9.30am–4.30pm
Closed Saturday & Sunday

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Wednesday, March 11, 2009

Things to do around Port Adelaide

~ Things to do in and around Port Adelaide

Only 30 minutes or so from the centre of Adelaide, is historic Port Adelaide. At its heart is a series of museums that house an amazing collection of historical artefacts showcasing the states long history. Its nearest beach is Semaphore.

Fast becoming the area’s favourite location for rest and relaxation, Semaphore has all the old world charm of a seaside town. It’s broad main thoroughfare, Semaphore Road, stretches for more than a kilometre and is home to a wide selection of cafés and restaurants, small galleries, and all manner of other local businesses.

Of course, no self respecting seaside town would be without its fish and chip shop – and Semaphore has several of them. What better way to end a day at the beach than with a bag of fresh, hot fish and chips, the seagulls wheeling overhead, and a golden sun setting over the ocean. Ah, perfect.

Here is an incomplete list of some of the Port’s many treasures:

  • Discover the Port Adelaide State Heritage Area
  • Indulge yourself in Semaphore Road’s boutique shops and cafés
  • Enjoy informative Guided Walks
  • Fly high at the South Australian Aviation Museum
  • Cruise for dolphins on the Port Princess or Dolphin Explorer every Sunday
  • Relive your childhood at Semaphore’s foreshore attractions
  • Explore the Port Adelaide Enfield Museum Trail
  • Fish for Snapper and King George Whiting off Semaphore Jetty
  • Exercise your mind and body with Blue Water Sea Kayaking
  • Examine the trains at the National Railway Museum
  • Feast on Fish-N-Chips while a golden sun dips below the horizon
  • Amaze yourself at the Seahorse Farm
  • Checkmate your Chess opponent, Monday nights at McGowan’s Café (Semaphore Rd)
  • Unearth a bargain at the Sunday Fisherman’s Wharf Market (Queens Wharf)
  • Delight in the SA Maritime Museum
  • Thrill at the miniature steam train ride along the foreshore at Semaphore
  • Enjoy an ice cold beer at the Port’s oldest building (Port Admiral Hotel, 1849)
  • Climb the Lighthouse (built in 1869) now located on Queens Wharf
  • Catch a movie at the Semaphore Odeon Star (just $7.00 all sessions)

Whew! Are you tired yet? There is so much to discover and enjoy in and around Port Adelaide, that you will need several days to visit even just a few of the places listed above – and that is by no means a full list.

Make sure your first stop is the:
Port Adelaide Visitor Information Centre:
66, Commercial Road, Port Adelaide, SA, 5015
Open 7 days a week – 9am to 5pm (closed Christmas Day)
Telephone: (08) 8405 6560
Freecall: 1800 629 888 (country callers)

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