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Crace, Australian Capital Territory
Crace () is a suburb of Canberra, Australia in the district of Gungahlin. It was named after Edward Kendall Crace an original settler in the Gungahlin area. Streets in Crace are named after parishes and land divisions from colonial times. It is bounded by the Barton Highway, Gundaroo Drive, Nudurr Drive and Gungahlin Drive. Located in the suburb is the Canberra Nature Park of Gungaderra Grasslands nature reserve. At the , it had a population of 4,459. History Development The suburb has finished development and construction. * Road construction commenced in July 2008. * The construction of 21 display homes was completed in May 2009. * By July 2012 more than half of the houses were complete. * The majority of homes were complete by 2015. The ACT government selected developers for the area as Defence Housing Australia and Canberra Investment Corporation. The developers were expected to make $60,000,000 but had to share half with the government. Some very small blocks were rele ...
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Crace From Percival Hill
Crace may refer to: People * Edward Kendall Crace (1844–1892), Australian pastoralist * Sir John Gregory Crace, KBE, CB (1887–1968), officer in Royal Navy and Royal Australian Navy * Jim Crace (born 1946), English writer * John Crace (writer) (born 1956), British journalist and critic * Lauren Crace (born 1986), English actress English interior designers * Edward Crace (1725–1799), English interior designer and Keeper of the King's Pictures * John Crace (designer) (1754–1819), eldest son of Edward Crace, English interior designer * Frederick Crace (1779–1859), English interior decorator and collector of maps and prints, eldest son of John Crace * John Gregory Crace (designer) (1809–1889), English interior designer and author, elder surviving son of Frederick Crace * John Dibblee Crace (1838–1919), English interior designer and author, eldest son of John Gregory Crace Places * Crace, Australian Capital Territory Crace () is a suburb of Canberra, Australia in the ...
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Edward Kendall Crace
Edward Kendall Crace (1844–1892) was an Australian pastoralist who owned extensive land holdings around Canberra. Crace was the son of the English interior designer John Gregory Crace (1809-1889) and his wife, Sarah Jane Hine Langley. Crace owned the properties of Ginninderra and Gungahlin and added Charnwood to his holdings in 1880. He arrived in Australia in 1865 on the '' Duncan Dunbar'' after being shipwrecked. In 1871 he married Kate Marion who had also been on the ''Duncan Dunbar'' and they had six daughters and two sons. One son, Everard Crace founded a farmers union to promote more scientific farming methods, and his other son, also named John Gregory Crace became a commander in the Royal Australian Navy. Edward Crace and his coachman died when trying to cross a flooded Ginninderra Creek Ginninderra Creek, a partly perennial stream of the Murrumbidgee catchment within the Murray–Darling basin, is located in the Capital Country region spanning both the ...
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CSIRO
The Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation (CSIRO) is an Australian Government agency responsible for scientific research. CSIRO works with leading organisations around the world. From its headquarters in Canberra, CSIRO maintains more than 50 sites across Australia and in France, Chile and the United States, employing about 5,500 people. Federally funded scientific research began in Australia years ago. The Advisory Council of Science and Industry was established in 1916 but was hampered by insufficient available finance. In 1926 the research effort was reinvigorated by establishment of the Council for Scientific and Industrial Research (CSIR), which strengthened national science leadership and increased research funding. CSIR grew rapidly and achieved significant early successes. In 1949, further legislated changes included renaming the organisation as CSIRO. Notable developments by CSIRO have included the invention of atomic absorption spectroscopy, ...
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Lyneham, Australian Capital Territory
Lyneham () is a suburb of Canberra, Australia in the North Canberra district. It is named after Sir William Lyne, premier of New South Wales from 1899 to 1901. The suburb name was gazetted in 1928, but development did not commence until 1958. The streets of Lyneham are named after artists and people associated with the development of early Canberra. Points of interest Lyneham has many attractions including nature parks and bushland, proximity to the centre of Canberra, the Old Canberra Inn (the earliest licensed pub in Canberra), popular cafes including the famous Tilley's Devine Cafe and Gallery as well as the Front Cafe and Gallery, and a number of sporting facilities including the National Hockey Centre, Canberra Racecourse and the ACT Netball Centre. Also located in Lyneham is Exhibition Park in Canberra (EPIC), which annually hosts Australia's best known car festival, Summernats, the Royal Canberra Show and the National Folk Festival. St Ninian's Uniting Church in ...
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Crace Hill
Crace may refer to: People * Edward Kendall Crace (1844–1892), Australian pastoralist * Sir John Gregory Crace, KBE, CB (1887–1968), officer in Royal Navy and Royal Australian Navy * Jim Crace (born 1946), English writer * John Crace (writer) (born 1956), British journalist and critic * Lauren Crace (born 1986), English actress English interior designers * Edward Crace (1725–1799), English interior designer and Keeper of the King's Pictures * John Crace (designer) (1754–1819), eldest son of Edward Crace, English interior designer * Frederick Crace (1779–1859), English interior decorator and collector of maps and prints, eldest son of John Crace * John Gregory Crace (designer) (1809–1889), English interior designer and author, elder surviving son of Frederick Crace * John Dibblee Crace (1838–1919), English interior designer and author, eldest son of John Gregory Crace Places * Crace, Australian Capital Territory Crace () is a suburb of Canberra, Australia in the ...
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Mix 106
Mix, mixes or mixing may refer to: Persons & places * Mix (surname) ** Tom Mix (1880-1940), American film star * nickname of Mix Diskerud (born Mikkel, 1990), Norwegian-American soccer player * Mix camp, an informal settlement in Namibia * Mix, Louisiana, an unincorporated community * Mix Run, Pennsylvania, village Audio * Audio mixing (recorded music), the process of combining and balancing multiple sound sources * DJ mix, a sequence of musical tracks mixed to appear as one continuous track * ''Mix'' (magazine), a periodical for the professional recording and sound production technology industry Music * ''Mixes'' (Kylie Minogue album), the 1998 remix album by Australian singer-songwriter Kylie Minogue * ''Mix'' (Stellar album), the 1999 debut studio album by New Zealand pop rock band Stellar * ''Mixes'' (Transvision Vamp album), 1992 * ''Mixes'', an album by C418 * Mixtape, a compilation of songs or tracks * Remix, a variation of a song * Mix, short way to refer to Mi ...
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1RPH
Radio 1RPH 1125 kHz Canberra (89.5FM Wagga, 99.5FM Junee) is a volunteer-staffed AM band radio broadcast station in the Australian Capital Territory serving all of the ACT and surrounding areas of NSW including Queanbeyan, Yass and Michelago, with FM repeaters at Wagga and Junee, and a streaming media on its web site. Radio 1RPH is a member of the Radio Print Handicapped Network. Its catch-phrases are, Your information station and Turning print into sound, and it is intended to serve all those who are, for any reason, handicapped from reading printed material. Newspapers, magazines, books, and other printed material are read to air. 1RPH used to have a frequency just outside the AM band on 1620 kHz, and so suffered little interference, and was heard as far away as the United States. Equipment Studios On-air and production *Two studios, each with 16 channel Ogenic broadcast mixers: **Audio channel sources: ***computer ***CD players ***satellite channels ***Tape-recorde ...
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666 ABC Canberra
ABC Radio Canberra (call sign: 2CN) is an ABC Local Radio station based in Canberra and broadcasting to the Australian Capital Territory as well as surrounding areas in New South Wales – this includes the cities and towns of Queanbeyan, Yass, and Bungendore. The station began as 2CN in 1953 originally broadcasting on 1540 kHz and from 21 December 1974 at 1440 kHz. On 6 December 1983, it changed to its current AM frequency of 666 kHz. The station first broadcast from studios based at the transmitter site at Gungahlin. In 1957, the station was relocated to the centre of Canberra, before finally moving to purpose-built studios in Dickson in 1964. ABC Radio announced digital radio services in Canberra, the simulcast of 666 ABC Canberra, ABC Radio National, ABC Classic FM, ABC News Radio and triple j launched in 2011. When local programs are not being broadcast the station is a relay of ABC Radio Sydney. Current presenters *Lish Fejer *Adam Shirley *Sabra Lane *R ...
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ABC Radio National
Radio National, known on-air as RN, is an Australia-wide public service broadcasting radio network run by the Australian Broadcasting Corporation (ABC). From 1947 until 1985, the network was known as ABC Radio 2. History 1937: Predecessors and beginnings From 1928, the National Broadcasting Service, as part of the federal Postmaster-General's Department, gradually took over responsibility for all the existing stations that were sponsored by public licence fees ("A" Class licences). The outsourced Australian Broadcasting Company supplied programs from 1929. In 1932 a commission was established, merging the original ABC company and the National Broadcasting Service. It is from this time that Radio National dates as a distinct network within the ABC, in which a system of program relays was developed during the subsequent decades to link stations spread across the nation. The beginnings of Radio National lie with Sydney radio station 2FC, which aired its first test broadcast on ...
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Crace Model Aircraft Landing Field
Crace may refer to: People * Edward Kendall Crace (1844–1892), Australian pastoralist * Sir John Gregory Crace, KBE, CB (1887–1968), officer in Royal Navy and Royal Australian Navy * Jim Crace (born 1946), English writer * John Crace (writer) (born 1956), British journalist and critic * Lauren Crace (born 1986), English actress English interior designers * Edward Crace (1725–1799), English interior designer and Keeper of the King's Pictures * John Crace (designer) (1754–1819), eldest son of Edward Crace, English interior designer * Frederick Crace (1779–1859), English interior decorator and collector of maps and prints, eldest son of John Crace * John Gregory Crace (designer) (1809–1889), English interior designer and author, elder surviving son of Frederick Crace * John Dibblee Crace (1838–1919), English interior designer and author, eldest son of John Gregory Crace Places * Crace, Australian Capital Territory Crace () is a suburb of Canberra, Australia in the ...
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Crace Shops Street Party March 2015 1
Crace may refer to: People * Edward Kendall Crace (1844–1892), Australian pastoralist * Sir John Gregory Crace, KBE, CB (1887–1968), officer in Royal Navy and Royal Australian Navy * Jim Crace (born 1946), English writer * John Crace (writer) (born 1956), British journalist and critic * Lauren Crace (born 1986), English actress English interior designers * Edward Crace (1725–1799), English interior designer and Keeper of the King's Pictures * John Crace (designer) (1754–1819), eldest son of Edward Crace, English interior designer * Frederick Crace (1779–1859), English interior decorator and collector of maps and prints, eldest son of John Crace * John Gregory Crace (designer) (1809–1889), English interior designer and author, elder surviving son of Frederick Crace * John Dibblee Crace (1838–1919), English interior designer and author, eldest son of John Gregory Crace Places * Crace, Australian Capital Territory Crace () is a suburb of Canberra, Australia in the ...
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Crace Housing 2015 2
Crace may refer to: People * Edward Kendall Crace (1844–1892), Australian pastoralist * Sir John Gregory Crace, KBE, CB (1887–1968), officer in Royal Navy and Royal Australian Navy * Jim Crace (born 1946), English writer * John Crace (writer) (born 1956), British journalist and critic * Lauren Crace (born 1986), English actress English interior designers * Edward Crace (1725–1799), English interior designer and Keeper of the King's Pictures * John Crace (designer) (1754–1819), eldest son of Edward Crace, English interior designer * Frederick Crace (1779–1859), English interior decorator and collector of maps and prints, eldest son of John Crace * John Gregory Crace (designer) (1809–1889), English interior designer and author, elder surviving son of Frederick Crace * John Dibblee Crace (1838–1919), English interior designer and author, eldest son of John Gregory Crace Places * Crace, Australian Capital Territory Crace () is a suburb of Canberra, Australia in the ...
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