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List view record 301: A view of the buildings of the Dunk Island resortList view anchor tag for record 301: A view of the buildings of the Dunk Island resort
List view record 302: A view of the Tully Show : cattle in the ringList view anchor tag for record 302: A view of the Tully Show : cattle in the ring
List view record 303: Aboriginal people of the Daradgee regionList view anchor tag for record 303: Aboriginal people of the Daradgee region
List view record 304: Aboriginal people of the Daradgee regionList view anchor tag for record 304: Aboriginal people of the Daradgee region
List view record 305: Aerial view of the Basilisk RangeList view anchor tag for record 305: Aerial view of the Basilisk Range
List view record 306: Aerial view of the Basilisk RangeList view anchor tag for record 306: Aerial view of the Basilisk Range
List view record 307: Aerial view of the Basilisk RangeList view anchor tag for record 307: Aerial view of the Basilisk Range
List view record 308: An aerial view of Dunk IslandList view anchor tag for record 308: An aerial view of Dunk Island
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An aerial view of Dunk Island

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Black and white photograph of Dunk Island from the air, probably in the 1940s. Edmund Banfield, the famous Beachcomber who lived on Dunk from 1897 to his death in 1923, recorded that the Aboriginal name for the isle was Coonanglebah. A resort was established here by Hugo Brassey in the 1930s. During WW2 Dunk Island was annexed by the RAAF and became home to secret radar equipment
List view record 309: Anzac Day at the El Arish RSL Memorial Hall, 1952List view anchor tag for record 309: Anzac Day at the El Arish RSL Memorial Hall, 1952
List view record 310: Anzac Day parade, TullyList view anchor tag for record 310: Anzac Day parade, Tully
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Anzac Day parade, Tully

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Photograph of the Anzac Day parade turning from Butler Street into Bryant Street towards the cenotaph near the Anglican Church. The Tully Stone of Remembrance was moved from the Tully cemetery, where it was erected in 1944, to Bryant Street near the Anglican Church in 1958, and then to Mitchell Park in 2002
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