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| | Architecture - 2004: Bicentenary of Tasmania |
 | | One of Tasmania’s most original, technically proficient and imaginative architects, examples of his designs are: Holy Trinity, Hobart, and the Congregational Chapels at Bagdad and Cambridge (Gothic Revival); St Mark’s, Pontville, St Matthew’s, Glenorchy, and Sorell Presbyterian Church (the earliest Australian examples of Romanesque); New Town Congregational Church and additions to |
 | | Hunter was extensively involved in community affairs, being a property valuation commissioner, a member of the Hobart Board of Health, the Tasmanian Board of Education, and a Commissioner to the Asylum for the Insane at New Norfolk and a Magistrate. |
 | | These entries are from The Companion to Tasmania History that is being published by the Centre for Tasmanian Historical Studies at the University of Tasmania. |
| www.bicentenary.tas.gov.au /print.php?id=78 (1048 words) |
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