• About
    • La Perouse Museum and Headland Trust
    • Local Place Names
    • Major Sites
    • Stakeholders
      • Friends of the Laperouse Museum
        • Friends of the Laperouse Museum Executive Committee
        • Membership
        • Merchandise
        • Museum
          • Museum Collection
            • Gallery
          • Museum Establishment
            • Documents
            • Gallery
            • Laperouse Day
          • Museum Floor Plans
        • Newsletters
          • Newsletters 1990-1997
        • Past Presidents & Life Members
        • Patrons
        • Publications
        • Reports
  • Bare Island
    • Bare Island Marine Life
    • Bare Island Open Day
    • Bare Island Veterans
    • Botany Bay Batteries – Cape Banks, Henry Head, Bare Island
    • Shipwrecks of Botany Bay
  • Contact
  • Gallery
  • Laperouse Expedition
    • French First Encounters
      • Christian Services
      • Garden
      • Geological Observations
      • La Perouse Flora - French Connections
        • Banksia ericifolia collected by Lamartinière or Collignon
      • Laperouse Bottle
      • Mail
      • Observatory
    • Laperouse’s last documents
    • Memorials
      • Brest
      • Cape Soya
      • Carmel Mission
      • De Kastri - Siberia
      • Hawaii - La Perouse Bay
      • Petropavlovsk-Kamchatsky
      • Red Hill, Canberra
      • Sakhalin
      • Tamentfoust
      • Terney - Siberian Russia
      • Vanikoro
      • Vladivostok
    • References
    • The Disappearance of Laperouse
      • Final fate of the Laperouse Expedition
  • Laperouse Monument
    • Monument Plaques & Visits
      • Capitaine de frégate Jean-René Degans speech October 7, 2013
      • Plaques & Visits 1788-1900
      • Plaques & Visits 1901-1920
      • Plaques & Visits 1921-1940
      • Plaques & Visits 1941-1980
      • Plaques & Visits 1981-2000
      • Plaques & Visits 2001-2020
  • Laperouse Scholars
    • Ed Duyker
    • Ivan Barko
    • John Gascoigne
    • Margaret Sankey
    • Reece Discombe
    • Robert Clancy
    • William Land
  • Macquarie Watchtower
  • Receveur Monument
    • Receveur Tree Stump
  • Snake Shows
  • Sustainability Newsletters
  • Telecommunications
  • Tourism
    • La Perouse Loop
      • Guerrilla Gardeners blitz La Perouse bus shed
    • Sustainable Tourism
    • Timbery Boomerangs
  • Treasures of the Collection
    • Bronze Sculpture of Laperouse by Ante Dabro presented by Gough Whitlam
    • D’Entrecasteaux Mapping the South Pacific
    • Fragment of L’Astrolabe
    • John Winch Tapestry
    • L’Astrolabe Bilge Pumps
    • La Boussole Cannon
    • Laperouse Bottle
    • Lead Ignots
    • Millstone and pulley from L’Astrolabe
    • Robert de Lamanon’s Sword Hilt
    • Wrecks Room Mural

La Perouse Museum & Headland

La Perouse Museum & Headland

Tag Archives: Events

A New Lease of Life for the La Perouse Museum

07 Thursday Sep 2017

Posted by Admin in Uncategorized

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

Events, National Parks, Randwick City Council

Tuesday 5th September 2017 saw a new chapter unfold in the life of the Lapérouse Museum. Situated on the northern headland of Botany Bay, the Museum was established in 1988 to coincide with Australia’s bi-century and the landing of French Naval Officer Jean-Francois de Galaup, comte de Lapérouse in 1788.

The NSW Minister for Environment and Heritage, Gabrielle Upton and Randwick City Mayor, Councillor Noel d’Souza signed an historic agreement that will transfer management of the Lapérouse Museum, on a long-term lease (2 x 21 years) to Randwick City Council. The transfer, which is several years in the making, will result in the Museum’s maintenance and running assured by Randwick City Council. Much needed funds allocated in Council’s budget can now be released and directed towards repairs and restoration of the Lapérouse Museum, Lapérouse Monument, Père Receveur Grave and Macquarie Watchtower. A stakeholder’s advisory Trust will advise Council and a consultation process underway will decide the best uses for these significant assets that attract many visitors to the area from Australia and abroad each year. Randwick Council aims to elevate this important location to one of the nation’s principal cultural destinations.

This unique site is very important to France. It marks the beginning of the France-Australia relationship a 229 year long affair that continues to grow, strengthen and prosper. The establishment of the Lapérouse Museum in 1988, was the culmination of a joint four year Australia-France project for our nation’s bicentenary. Throughout the Museum’s life both the Royal Australian and French Navies regularly gather here to commemorate Lapérouse’s unprecedented visit and to pay homage to all Mariners past and present, who often serve far away from their homeland.

A ceremony conducted with dignity and respect accompanied the official signing of the new lease, presided over by Peter Hay, Executive Officer for the Greater Sydney Region of the NSW National Parks and Wildlife Service. Honoured guests and participants included Michael Wright CEO of the NSW Office of Environment and Heritage, NSW Member for Coogee and former Randwick Council Mayor the Hon. Bruce Notley-Smith, the Consul General for France Nicolas Croizer, Gary Ella representing the La Perouse Indigenous community, Randwick City Councillor Sima Truuvert, Director of City Planning, the Lapérouse Museum’s curator Elizabeth Broomhead, Nicole Forrest Green (President) and Tony Gentile (Secretary) representing the Friends of the Lapérouse Museum and the Principal of the French School, Maroubra the Lycée Condorcet, Philippe Courjault accompanied by Year 5 primary students who performed both the Australian and French National Anthems.

Minister Upton is to be commended for her efforts in taking charge of this project and assuring the transfer of the Museum’s management and other related sites, took place in a timely manner. This long awaited result will breathe new life into the area and will allow for greater access to facilities, and increased Museum operating hours. The management agreement will officially come into effect on Thursday October 26 2017.

(Pictured above: Schoolchildren from the French School at Maroubra including a descendent of the family of Pierre le Gobien with Minister Upton and Bruce Notley-Smith MP Coogee who as Mayor of Randwick first raised the possibility of the lease. Pierre le Gobien joined the expedition in the Philippines in May 1787, celebrated his 21st birthday in June aboard L’Astrolabe and was promoted to 2nd Lieutenant at Botany Bay, March 5th 1788).

The Friends of the Lapérouse Museum thank all parties who worked tirelessly across many years to ensure the result achieved today and look forward to the future with great anticipation.

Nicole Forrest Green, President

Advertisement

Ambassador’s visit to the Laperouse Museum

23 Sunday Apr 2017

Posted by Admin in Uncategorized

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

Events, French

Friday, 21st April 2017 His Excellency Christophe Lecourtier the French Ambassador to Australia was received by Nicole Forrest Green, President of the Friends of the Lapérouse Museum for an official visit and special ceremony.

In the presence of the Hon. Matt Thistlethwaite Federal Member for Kingsford Smith, Mayor of Randwick City, Councillor Noel D’Souza and Mme. Annick Antoine, French Consul General to Sydney, M. Nicolas Croizer, French Cultural Attaché, M. Philippe Platel and Mr. Gary Ella former Australian Rugby Union Player and Member of the Wallabies, representing the Indigenous Community of La Pérouse, Ambassador Lecourtier bestowed on our President on behalf of the French Republic, the insignia of the Ordre National du Mérite in the rank of Chevalier.

In his speech, the French Ambassador commended Nicole for her passion and commitment to the France-Australia relationship. Highlights included her Board Representation on the Alliance Française Sydney where she had hosted the Hon Malcolm Turnbull, Federal Member for Wentworth, whilst in Opposition, for a discussion around French culture, language, industry and technology; in journalism for her writing of the treasures of the South of France particularly the Luberon, a region she knows well, and in her capacity to bring the achievements of Lapérouse, a man of the French Enlightenment and his 18th century scientific expedition, to an English speaking audience with the publication of ‘Lapérouse Sailing through the Enlightenment’ and iconic promotional events held at the Lapérouse Museum that brought together the French and Australian Navies, academia and education.

The Ambassador acknowledged Nicole’s maternal grandfather a decorated AIF WWI veteran who had fought at Gallipoli and on the Somme in 1916 where he was gravely wounded. He had been the recipient of the French Medaille de Reconnaissance de la Nation awarded posthumously for his military service to France, that Nicole had received on his behalf in Nice in 1999. Ambassador Lecourtier also remarked on Nicole’s capacity to build momentum for the France-Australia relationship at all levels as the partnership enters a new phase of development and cooperation across many key sectors.

In her acceptance speech, Nicole expressed her condolences to the French Ambassador and to the French people for the previous night’s attacks on the Champs-Elysée which saw a Police Officer killed and several people injured – her thoughts were with all those affected by terrorism.

She also paid homage to General Charles de Gaulle (1890-1970) the creator in 1963 of France’s Ordre National du Mérite and arguably one of the most important French figures of the 20th century with a legacy that casts a long shadow across modern French politics.

In an impassioned speech, Nicole highlighted de Gaulle’s most notable achievements. A refusal to accept a French Armistice with Nazi Germany in 1940 and the establishment of the Free French Movement from London; a call to arms via BBC radio on 18th June 1940; resistance of oppression, safeguard and protection of France’s national interests and her strategic independence; the liberation of Paris in 1944, and leadership of the French Provisional Government, followed in 1946 by an early retirement but a return to glory in 1958 and ascendency to the nation’s Presidency of the newly created 5th Republic, a position he would hold for 10 years .

For de Gaulle a forward thinker, this was a time of modernization and development for France, particularly across industry, education, health, culture – and armed with new powers attributed to the French President under the constitution of the 5th Republic, de Gaulle sought to reposition France in a changing post-war world, where decolonisation and the Cold War presented new threats and challenges.

Often described as a political marvel, a master strategist, but above all a great Statesman, de Gaulle maintained throughout his life an immense pride and love for his country, combined with an innate understanding of the French people.

In this context and with a wealth of experience that crossed two major world wars, de Gaulle strove for policies that still hold much weight across the corridors of power in Paris - his renowned “Politics of Grandeur”, asserting that France maintain her sovereignty as a major power and not rely on other countries, for her national security and prosperity. To this end, de Gaulle pursued policies of “national independence” which led him to withdraw from NATO‘s military integrated command and launch an independent nuclear development program that made France the world’s fourth nuclear power.

In January 1963, Adenauer and de Gaulle signed a treaty of friendship, the Élysée Treaty with a view to restoring Franco-German relations.

Internationally, in January 1964, France was among the first Western powers to open diplomatic relations with the People’s Republic of China (PRC) established in 1949, but had been isolated on the international scene. De Gaulle justified this by “the sheer weight of evidence and reason.”

He also oversaw tough economic measures to revitalise the country, including the issuing of a new franc (worth 100 old francs) and reduced France’s dollar reserves, trading them for gold from the US government, to reinforce her economic independence.

France’s innate national pride, coupled with this and an insistence on remaining strategically independent in all matters of governance and notably defence, I am convinced did not go unnoticed by the Australian Government this time last year in choosing France as a strategic ally and defence partner in our region.

General de Gaulle also undertook a major reform and modernisation of France’s system of National Ordres targeting a younger, civilian population, including women and as a consequence the Ordre National du Mérite came into existence in 1963 in the midst of France’s post-war ‘trente glorieuse’ period (post-WWII boom). The average age of recipients of this great award is 54 and 50% are women.

I am honoured to be admitted to the ranks of the Ordre National du Mérite, and thank the French Ambassador and the French Republic for acknowledging my contribution to the France-Australia relationship.

Nicole thanked the entire Committee for their combined unrelenting efforts last night as they worked tirelessly to ensure the Ambassador’s visit to the Lapérouse Museum was a great success.

Photo I: Lapérouse Museum Sydney: H.E. Ambassador Christophe Lecourtier, French Ambassador to Australia with Nicole Forrest Green President FOLM before a copy of Nicolas-André Monsiau’s famous painting which hangs in the Château de Versailles, France of King Louis XVI handing his instructions to Capitaine de Vaisseau Jean-François de Galaup, Comte de Lapérouse for his ‘voyage d’exploration autour du monde.’

Photo II: General Charles de Gaulle

Laperouse Day 2017 celebrated with dignity and style

13 Monday Mar 2017

Posted by Admin in Uncategorized

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

Events

On Friday 10th March 2017 exactly 229 years to the day that French Naval Officer Real Admiral Jean-François de Galaup le Comte de Lapérouse left Australia never to be seen of again, Councillor Noel D’Souza Mayor of Randwick City on behalf of the La Perouse Museum and Headland Trust hosted close to 100 guests for an evening of remembrance and celebration at the Lapérouse Museum of Sydney.

His Worship the Mayor was accompanied by his partner Mme. Annick Antoine; in conjunction with Nicole Forrest Green, President of the Friends of the Lapérouse Museum, they received the Hon. Matt Thistlethwaite Federal Member for Kingsford Smith, the Deputy Leader of the NSW Opposition the Hon. Michael Daley Member for Maroubra, Councillor Geoff Stevenson Randwick City Council, Consul General of France, Sydney Mr. Nicolas Croizer, French Defence Attaché, Captain Yann Marboeuf (French Navy) Canberra and Captain Brian Schlegel representing the Fleet Commander of Garden Island Sydney, Rear Admiral Stuart Mayer AO CSC and Bar RAN.

Famous Australian sports champion, former Rugby Union XV Wallabies player, and proud local member of La Perouse’s Biidjigal people, Mr. Gary Ella performed the Welcome to Country complementing a diverse guest list with a distinctly French flavour.

In particular the surprise presence of a young French girl Alexia du Peloux, enhanced the occasion. Aged 22 years, from Brittany in North-Western France, Alexia is a descendent of the Astrolabe’s Commander Paul Antoine Fleuriot de Langle. She was welcomed by all in the context of closer relations with France and the importance of the Museum’s strong French heritage.

Lapérouse sailed into Botany Bay on January 26th 1788, set up camp on its northern headland where he and his crew remained for approximately 6 weeks. A scientific expedition, under the orders of the last King of France Louis XVI, he and his men took advantage of the opportunity to discover this strange southern land far from France with its unique vegetation, flora and fauna, as well as its aquatic life and original animal species, namely marsupials. Samples of ‘Hawkesbury’ sandstone were collected and his men met not only the site’s local indigenous people, but officers and crew of Captain Philip’s First Fleet anchored across at Sydney Cove, which had also just arrived.

En route to Australia tragedy had befallen Lapérouse. He lost his right hand man, close friend and naval technician Fleuriot de Langle in Command of the Astrolabe when an encounter with the people of Samoa at Maouna (today Tutuila Bay) went badly wrong and 11 of Laperouse’s men were killed as they attempted to retrieve drinking water for the next leg of their voyage from a remote inland location in small boats. Father Louis Receveur, a Franciscan aboard the Astrolabe, but also a naturalist and man of science - not uncommon at the time of the French Enlightenment - was gravely injured and died at Botany Bay in February 1788 where a catholic mass was conducted in his memory whilst he was buried. The esteemed philosopher-naturalist Robert-Paul de Lamanon also perished in the attacks of Maouna. Lapérouse was a man known for his humanity and insisted that no reprisals be taken against the people of the Island, despite France’s significant strength and technological advantage in weaponry.

French Defence Attaché, Canberra Captain Yann Marboeuf, French Navy, in his speech reminded the audience (LINK) that ……

Lapérouse was a great sailor open to the great discoveries of the 18th century, a century that we like to call in French le siècle des lumières (The Age of Enlightenment). He was always, and above all, a humanist, who never denied the values he believed in, when dealing with his enemies or facing populations he came across during his expedition in the South Pacific region and kept in mind what he had written before leaving France: “I shall make every effort to ensure that the inhabitants of the Islands we might visit will never be sorry for having welcomed us”.

Nicole Forrest Green as master of ceremony read a message received from her counterpart in Albi France, Lapérouse’s birthplace – from the President of the Association-Musée Lapérouse d’Albi France, Mr. Jean-Marie Pestel.

Jean-Marie is a descendant of the Lapérouse family. He paid homage to Alain Conan.

Alain was a giant in the context of the Lapérouse story and had just been reported missing at sea by the authorities in New Caledonia. Alain dedicated much of his life to unravelling the mystery surrounding the disappearance of Lapérouse and that of the expedition’s two frigates, the Astrolabe and the Boussole, which were found eventually wrecked on reefs off the Island of Vanikoro, part of the Santa Cruz archipelago in the Salomon Islands.

Alain, an experienced sailor and underwater diver, founded the Salomon Association in 1981. He was instrumental in working with France’s Navy and the Maritime Museum of New Caledonia to recover and collate a remarkable inventory of objects from the wrecked ships of Laperouse’s expedition now known to have met with a massive cyclone off the coast of the Salomon Islands for which the Pacific Ocean, above the Tropic of Capricorn, is famous for.

Alain had just finished a remarkable website - https://www.collection-laperouse.fr - a testimony to his dedication and life’s work that the Lapérouse Museum in Sydney will be joining. He is an irreplaceable loss and in many respects his disappearance is not dissimilar to that of Lapérouse himself.

Alain had taken his boat out alone in still waters one morning off Amédée Island with the aim of diving off one of Noumea’s many reefs – it would be a dive from which he never returned as currents on these reefs are notorious and can change rapidly.

Lost to the great vastness of the southern Pacific Ocean for all eternity, both Lapérouse and Alain Conan will be remembered with distinction and pride.

Photo 1: the Consul General of France, in Sydney Nicolas Croizer, Nicole Forrest Green President of the FOLM, Annick Antoine with RCC Mayor Noel D’Souza, Federal Member for Kingsford Smith, the Hon. Matt Thistlethwaite MP, French Defence Attaché, Canberra Captain Yann Marboeuf, French Navy

Photo 2: the late Alain Conan with Jean-Marie Pestel (descendent of the Lapérouse Family) Albi France

AGM 2016 with Annual Pierre Roussel Lecture from Professor Grant McCall

29 Tuesday Nov 2016

Posted by Admin in Uncategorized

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

Events, Pierre Roussel, Talks

friend-of-the-laperouse-26-11-2016-015The Friends of the Lapérouse Museum held their Annual General Meeting last Saturday November 26 at the Lapérouse Museum, Botany Bay at 11am. The meeting Chaired by our President Nicole Forrest Green returned to her role addressed the highlights of an active, successful year that was 2016 and included raising over $5000 at a dinner held in October at Parliament House Sydney for the benefit of the Lapérouse Education Fund. Also in attendance were The Hon. Matt Thistlethwaite, MP Federal Member for Kingsford Smith, Professor Ivan and Mrs. Barko, as well as Mrs. Carole Roussel founding Member of the Friends with her sister Mrs. Angela Raymond.

The meeting concluded with an animated talk from University of Sydney Anthropologist Professor Grant McCall who addressed the similarities and differences between French and English navigators of the 18th century with an emphasis on the Pacific and interesting idea that the Comte de Lapérouse and Captain Arthur Phillip did actually meet in secret whilst in Australia and as a consequence this resulted in Lapérouse handing official documents and records over to the English for safe passage back to Europe; another interesting observation Professor McCall made was that the English used Polynesian navigators on their ships which made a huge difference in rough or troubled seas, but that the French did not; had they done so the experiences encountered around the perilous Solomon Islands and in particular Vanikoro may have ended otherwise.

friend-of-the-laperouse-26-11-2016-038Professor McCall offered our President a wonderful donation for the Museum at the conclusion of his talk - a GRASSET DE SAINT SAUVEUR, Couloured Reproduction Print of the Pacific Discoveries of Captain Cook and M. de Lapérouse. The Museum’s curator Ms. Elizabeth Broomhead is in the process of assessing where this unique piece can be added to enhance its value and our wonderful French story that we’re proud of.

Refreshments were served at the conclusion of the meeting where Committee Members past and present were thanked by the President for their contribution, support and interest.

2017 looks to be an exciting year ahead with a proposed visit to the Museum (currently under discussion) by Australia’s Chief of Navy, Vice Admiral Tim Barrett AO CSC RAN.

Thus the French-Australian maritime partnership is alive and well.

aa-4-tableau-des-decouvertes-du-capitaine-cook
COOK & LA PÉROUSE EXPEDITIONS: GRASSET DE SAINT SAUVEUR, Jacques. Tableau des Découvertes du Captaine J Cook, & M. de La Pérouse Copper-engraved plate with contemporary hand coloring. 24 numbered costume plates of peoples of the Pacific, their artifacts, and homes set in landscapes, arranged in three panels, numbered key below, surrounded by narrow pictorial border.

The print is associated with Grasset de Saint Sauveur’s exceedingly rare two-part work, consisting (Histoire Abrégée des découvertes des Captaines Cook, Wilson, La Pérouse… Paris, 1797-1798; and a separately issued portfolio (Tableaux des principaux peuples… Paris, 1798; see Forbes 281 & Colas 1301). Five large-format plates (Europe, Asia, Africa, America, and the Pacific) appeared in the portfolio, the present engraving being the last. The print in its original state, never folded into a book and was never intended to be a piece of litterature. Later versions of the print were lithographed.

The image presents twenty-four separately identified groups of two, three, or four inhabitants from the different regions and islands of the Pacific Basin, including Hawaii, the Pacific Northwest Coast, Tahiti, New Zealand, South America, the Philippines, etc. This intriguing print was born out of the consuming European need to know and understand the new lands and new peoples of the Pacific explored by Cook, La Pérouse, and their contemporaries. Grasset de Saint Saveur satisfied that need by creating a virtual microcosm of the Pacific that is at once informative and aesthetically pleasing. The viewer is invited in to observe exquisite miniature scenes offering an intimate glimpse of the exotic people, clothing, material culture, landscapes, pastimes, and familial and social groups of lands newly discovered. The indigenous people are depicted as dignified and graceful. The sinuous pictorial border incorporates flora, fauna, human figures, and artifacts of the Pacific Basin.

Canadian artist, writer, and diplomat Jacques Grasset de Saint Sauveur (1757-1810), developed an abiding interest in indigenous people early in his life, leading him to initiate his encyclopedic series of illustrated works of all the people of the world. Born in Montreal at the beginning of the Seven Years’ War, he went to live in France after the conquest of New France by the British. He studied at Sainte-Barbe College in Paris, later embarked upon a diplomatic career, and died in Paris.

friend-of-the-laperouse-26-11-2016-087 friend-of-the-laperouse-26-11-2016-082 friend-of-the-laperouse-26-11-2016-079 friend-of-the-laperouse-26-11-2016-077 friend-of-the-laperouse-26-11-2016-058 friend-of-the-laperouse-26-11-2016-066 friend-of-the-laperouse-26-11-2016-068 friend-of-the-laperouse-26-11-2016-069 friend-of-the-laperouse-26-11-2016-047 friend-of-the-laperouse-26-11-2016-045 friend-of-the-laperouse-26-11-2016-028 friend-of-the-laperouse-26-11-2016-009

 

 

 

French Ministerial visit to the Laperouse Museum

19 Saturday Nov 2016

Posted by Admin in Uncategorized

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

Events, French, French Navy

photo-1Saturday November 19 2016, Nicole Forrest Green received the French Minister for War Veterans at the Lapérouse Museum, Sydney for an official visit. Accompanied by his delegation from France headed by Chief of Staff Jean-Robert Lopez, Préfet, Jean-Marc Todeschini holds the appointment within the Hollande Government of ‘Secrétaire d’Etat auprès du Ministre de la Défense, Chargé des Anciens Combattants et de la Mémoire’ the equivalent in Australia of our Minister for Veterans’ Affairs a position held in the Turnbull Government by the Hon Dan Tehan MP (VIC) represented today Major General (Ret’d) Dave Chalmers AO, CSC First Assistant Secretary Commemorations and War Graves at the Commonwealth Department of Veterans Affairs, Canberra.photo-2

Minister Todeschini has also visited New Zealand in an official capacity. 2016 marks 100 years since ANZAC troops fought on the Somme in 1916 where their courage and determination in the face of great hardship, has not been forgotten by France. Included in the Minister’s agenda today in Sydney was a visit to the War Memorial at Hyde Park, Sydney where the French Government awarded three Australian WWII Air Force
Veterans with his country’s highest decoration in a Military capacity, the
coveted Legion d’Honneur.

Signing the Visitor’s book, Minister Todeschini referred to the long standing history between France and Australia since the earliest days of European settlement in 1788; he thanked Nicole for her hospitality, presentation and explanation of the projects underway she had initiated including a new Memorandum of Understanding with the Musée de la Marine, Paris and referred to the strong symbolism the Lapérouse Museum provided in the context of the bilateral relationship.

Photo 1: Préfet, Directeur du Cabinet, Jean-Robert Lopez, French Defence Attaché Captain (FN) Yann Marboeuf, Minister Jean-Marc Todeschini, President FOLM Nicole Forrest Green, Consul General for France to Sydney, Mr. Nicolas Croizer, Major General (ret’d) Dave Chalmers DVA representative

Photo 2: Consul General for France Sydney, Mr. Nicolas Croizer, Warrant Officer Caroline Yvon (FN), Minister Jean-Marc Todeschini, President FOLM, Nicole Forrest Green, French Defence Attaché Captain (FN) Yann Marboeuf

← Older posts
Newer posts →

Bastille Day Celebrations

Bastille DayJuly 14, 2022

Enter your email address to follow this blog and receive notifications of new posts by email.

Blogroll

  • Consul-General in Sydney
  • E-Hive Laperouse Museum Calalogue
  • French Australian Chamber of Commerce
  • Friends of the Laperouse Museum
  • L'Association Salomon
  • La Perouse Aboriginal Land Council
  • Laperouse Museum in Albi
  • Laperouse Wiki
  • Lepetitjournal.com
  • National Parks & Wildlife Service
  • NSW State Library
  • Pamela Griffith Artist
  • Randwick & District Historical Society
  • Randwick City Tourism
  • Receveur
  • Silent World Foundation
  • St Andrew Malabar
  • Telstra Museum
  • Voyage Round the World

Contact

La Perouse Museum Anzac Parade
Museum open 10-2 Wed & Fri, 10-4 Sat-Sun
Monuments: access all hours
Telephone: 9093 6190 Email: [email protected] for further details

La Perouse Headland

La Perouse Headland

Randwick City Council

Randwick City Council

Randwick City Tourism

Randwick City Tourism

Friends of the Laperouse Museum Inc

Friends of the Laperouse Museum Inc

Lycee Condorcet

Lycee Condorcet

Archives

Meta

  • Register
  • Log in
  • Entries feed
  • Comments feed
  • WordPress.com

Tags

Albi Amenities Astrolabe Astronomy Banks Bastille Botany Botany Bay Boussole Bumborah Point Cable Station Cann Chinese Collection Treasures Collector Items Cook Developments Eastern Suburbs Banksia Scrub Encounters Enlightenment Events Exhibition Exhibits Expedition Exploration Flora & Fauna French French Navy French School Friends Golf Governance Heritage Jennifer Street Korea Laperouse Legacy Little Bay Local History major developments Massacre members Memorials Merchandise Military Alliance Monument Museum Napoleon National Parks Naval Pacific Paris Patrons Pierre Roussel Planning Plans Prince Henry Publications Randwick City Council Receveur Recreation Reece Discombe Refuge Research Restoration Science & Technology Snake Shows Talks Telecommunications Timbery Tours Vanikoro VISITORS WWI

Create a free website or blog at WordPress.com.

Privacy & Cookies: This site uses cookies. By continuing to use this website, you agree to their use.
To find out more, including how to control cookies, see here: Cookie Policy
  • Follow Following
    • La Perouse Museum & Headland
    • Join 107 other followers
    • Already have a WordPress.com account? Log in now.
    • La Perouse Museum & Headland
    • Customize
    • Follow Following
    • Sign up
    • Log in
    • Report this content
    • View site in Reader
    • Manage subscriptions
    • Collapse this bar
 

Loading Comments...
 

You must be logged in to post a comment.