Not quite, Sir Sidney Kidman died in 1935.
No. The Australian equivalent of a homestead is "station", as in a sheep station or a cattle station. Only a very small proportion of Australians live on sheep or cattle stations.
No, Snowy Evans did not kill the Red Baron. The Red Baron, whose real name was Manfred von Richthofen, was a famous German fighter pilot during World War I. He was shot down and killed on April 21, 1918, likely by a combination of ground fire and the Australian pilot Arthur Roy Brown. Snowy Evans was an Australian pilot but was not directly involved in the Red Baron's death.
No, Billy Bishop fought with the Red Baron but did not shoot him down. The Red Baron was shot down later, probably by Australian anti-aircraft gunners on the ground but possibly by RAF pilot Roy Brown, a Canadian, who was attacking the Red Baron.
At the end of 1939.
The Australian Army is surely the Australian Army. The Australian Imperial Force (AIF) was their primary expeditionary force during WWI. At Gallipoli, the Australians and New Zealanders were referred to as ANZAC or Australia/New Zealand Armed Corps.
Sir Sidney Kidman would have come close with a 3% ownership of Australian Pastoral Leases.
Bluey. He was an Australian cattle dog that lived 29 years and 5 months old when he was euthanized in 1939.
The Cattle Baron's Daughter - 1910 was released on: USA: 20 December 1910
Take one Australian cattle dog.Place it on top of another.Repeat.
The Australian Cattle Dog is in the AKC Herding Group.
yes, blue healers are the same a Australian cattle dogs. red healers are Australian cattle dogs also. = =
The Australian Cattle Dog was bred as a working dog to herd large numbers of cattle in the harsh Australian environment and the hotter climate. View more about the breed history of the Australian Cattle Dog at the related link.
cattle muster
The use of the Australian Cattle Dog is actually cattling. They were used a lot to cattle sheeps and are sometimes still used to cattle sheeps in Australia.
James Taylor white
Australian cattle dogs are most commonly found doing what they were bred to do - rounding up sheep and cattle on dusty Australian sheep and cattle stations. However, they can also commonly be found in suburban areas, as house pets.
I named my Australian cattle dog "Foxy" because that's exactly what she looks like.