1886, Photograph, B 43150Ĭrowds gathered and view of horses and buggies waiting in Flinders Street during the funeral for Alexander Russell, Dean of Adelaide, who died in 1886. 1886, Photograph, B 43149įuneral procession exiting St Paul's Church and crowds gathered for the funeral for Alexander Russell, Dean of Adelaide, who died in 1886. Dean Russell's funeral procession from St Pauls Portrait of Samuel White Sweet, seated with his left hand resting on a table. A large collection of his work is held in the South Australian Archives. He travelled through South Australia in his horse-drawn darkroom photographing landscapes, outback stations and homesteads.
He was a sea captain who retired from the sea in 1875 and opened up a photographic studio in Adelaide. He wears a double breasted jacket and a colourful cravat and sports mutton chop whiskers. Head and shoulders portrait of Samuel White Sweet. He left his career as a Master Mariner in the British Navy to become one of Australia's first great outdoor photographers.
He is wearing a cap and double breasted jacket and holding a furled umbrella in his left hand. A full-length portrait of a bearded Samuel White Sweet, standing with his right hand resting on an elaborately carved table. Additional photographs in Folder 6 can be viewed by taking the browse album link attached to the record B 72483/6. By searching on Collection: Sweet Collection, these records can be drawn together. Each photograph in Folders 1-5 and some in Folder 6 have separate records in the catalogue and have been previously digitised. Volume 6 in a collection of photographs by Captain Samuel Sweet, arranged in six folders. The show window displays framed photographs taken by Captain Sweet Landscape Photographer Sweet Collection folders, volume 6 1886, Photograph, B 12564Ĭaptain Sweet's premises in the Adelaide Arcade, off Rundle Street, south side. This project was successfully completed.Sweet, Samuel White, c. Wingate appointed Deloitte as receivers of Ralan’s Arncliffe apartment project in Sydney, which was under construction at the time of the developer’s collapse. This repaid most of the funds owed to non-bank lender Wingate, which held secured mortgages over the property and was the developer’s main funding partner.Ī month earlier, Wingate said it would partner with developer Tim Gurner on a new, redesigned multi-tower project on a repossessed former Ralan site in overlooking Budds Beach. In March this year, the Bellevue Hill mansion he owned with his wife Joanne sold for $9.26 million. Mr O’Dwyer’s bankruptcy filing gives his address as a luxury apartment in Bondi in Sydney’s Eastern Suburbs and his occupation as a property manager. “My absolute focus has been to achieve the best possible outcome for the creditors,” he said. In January last year, after he struck a deal with Sydney developer Jean Nassif to offer discounted apartments to Ralan buyers who lost their deposits, Mr O’Dwyer told The Australian Financial Review he had not run away or declared himself bankrupt, but had faced his creditors and had worked hard to come up with a solution to recoup their losses. Mr O’Dwyer could not be reached for comment via mobile or email. These include investigating bitcoin purchases made by Mr O’Dwyer before Ralan’s collapse. All these loans were personally guaranteed by Mr O’Dwyer.Ī spokeswoman for Grant Thornton told The Australian Financial Review the liquidators were aware of Mr O’Dwyer’s bankruptcy, but would continue to pursue different avenues and work with his bankruptcy trustee to recoup monies for creditors.
When he is automatically discharged from bankruptcy – due to occur on J– his obligation to repay most unsecured debts will end,Īccording to a separate bankruptcy notice sent to creditors, Mr O’Dwyer owes 1749 creditors $349,997,904.Īt least $230 million of this came from about 1600 Ralan apartment buyers, who agreed to release their off-the-plan deposits to the developer as unsecured loans on the promise of returns as high as 20 per cent. At the time of its collapse Ralan had a development pipeline of more than 3000 residential units and debts of more than $560 million. Mr O’Dwyer, was made bankrupt on July 28 following a debtor’s petition he made, according to the Australian Financial Security Authority’s National Personal Insolvency Index. Two years after his Ralan Group collapsed leaving apartment buyers about $230 million out of pocket, founder William O’Dwyer has been declared bankrupt.