BELL, ANIMAL - WITH COLLAR

c. 1900 - 1961
Overview

The bell has an oblong mouth with the body widening at the sides and flattening at the flanks to a flat narrow spine at the apex. The clapper is a nut suspended by wire.
The collar straps are attached to the bell by a rod welded to the spine and are composed of two wide pieces of leather through a flat boomerang shaped piece of wood.

Historical information

Livestock bell either collected by or owned by Mrs Lois Turner who was a member of the Armadale Kelmscott Historical Society and collected and donated a large amount of 'olden days' objects for the museum in the year before it opened in 1976. Some of those items were owned by her or her family when they first lived in Armadale and later on farms near Brookton.
Lois's father, William Tidbury Mills came to Western Australia in the 1890s to try his luck on the recently discovered Goldfields. In c1905 William returned to South Australia and married Victoria Maria Mason. The newly married couple then returned to Western Australia and settled in Armadale where they started their family. Their first child, George Hartly was born in Armadale in 1906. Lois Adelaide Turner was delivered by local midwife Mrs Bodicoat in 1908 at the family property on the corner of Eleventh Avenue and Gull Street. Lois would have spent her first few years of schooling attending the Armadale State School. While in Armadale the family had four other children, Avon William in 1909, Hartly Mason in 1911, Sydney Eric in 1913 and Victor Glenn in 1914
In 1915 the Mills family moved to Brookton. That same year Hilda Victoria was born and in 1918 Fred Mason was born. The family lived on a farm which they called 'Masonville' to the east of the Brookton
In 1932 Lois married Sidney John Turner a local farmer and lived in the district for the next thirty years. In 1961 Sidney passed away and Lois moved back to Armadale. Lois would later join the Armadale Kelmscott Historical Society. In 1975 as the AKHS prepared to open History House Lois donated a large number of items from her family.
Lois passed away in Armadale in 1988.

Details

Details

Registration number
cwa-org-33-AK1975.243
Material
Width
271 mm
Height or length
272 mm
Depth
75 mm
Inscriptions and markings

Letters on wooden collar [L D]

Statement of significance

This object is part of a significant collection that represents the important role agriculture, farming and horticulture have played in the development of the City of Armadale. For tens of thousands of years Noongar people have moved through the district harvesting food and game from the forests, waterways and plains. In 1830 British migrants established the town of Kelmscott and started farming the land and establishing the districts first orchards.

Comparative significance criteria
Interpretive capacity
Rare or representative
City of Armadale - History House

City of Armadale - History House

Organisation Details
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