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Note: This post was recovered from the Sh.org archive.
Username: jd755
Date: 2019-10-18 17:14:59
Reaction Score: 0
If you look at the ladder behind his legs there's his shadow.Just to make sure that I’m not loosing my mind here. Are we supposed to see his shadow or not? If the sun was shining from above, we probably shouldn’t, right?
A bit more info from here;
When, in 1855, the Colonial Architect Edmund Blackett insisted that the stone for the replacement steps and entrance to the Australian Museum had to come from the best bed of the Pyrmont quarries', Pyrmont's quarries were placed 'on the map'. Blackett gave up his job to build Sydney's new university at Grose Farm, Over half of the 44 quarry men registered as working the Pyrmont sandstone were kept busy for the best part of the decade supplying stone for the Great Hall, Library, Lecture block and early colleges of the university. The rest of Pyrmont's quarry men were by no means idle.
Saunders began working the cliffs above what is now Wentworth Park, supplying railway ballast as a supplement to his income from the Quarryman's Arms, an inn which he operated with his wife. As his quarry was one of the closest to Blackett's University construction site, he became the main supplier of stone for the project.