"Help her fill a pipe". Another mind boggling poster where the need for men at the front to have tobacco was a real priority. The nurse helping the poor wounded solider so he can relax with a pipe, genius.
This is a poster created at the end of WW1. It's again pretty shocking to us now but I bet in its day people wouldn't think anything wrong with it. Never employee Germans, do not buy anything remotely German looking!
Really like this poster, pushing the image of the Crusades from 100's of years ago! Well in WW1 they still do use horses so its not too far from the truth right? Did America have a poster generation department where they would spend days thinking of the right themes to get those poor sods to sign up to?
Well just as you think you seen most WW1 themed posters I found this one where the War effort requested more eggs. Shiploads of Eggs sent by the Canadians to feed us British during the long war. Looking at the size of the Chicken in the poster I don't think we had have much problem lol.
I have updated the blog with how I feel the site is going and future plans. Nothing too exciting but hey its all about the photo's not me.
Random photo I like from the past is from Ellis Island 1891, opened pretty much to this day all those years ago. It is where all immigrants entered into the good o'ld US of A.
In 1914 in the middle of WW1 a famous truce was called. The above photo is of the troops from both sides talking on Christmas day. Very few first hand documented accounts of this remain, Leeds University special collections has a fantastic book, letters, collections from this and 1st hand memories of the football they played on the muddy battlefield.
WW2 Bunker, looks like one that is in a residential garden. Kid asleep with all the Christmas decorations around them. I am guessing with the effort of the decorations its a place they spent alot of time! avoiding those raids that were so frequent in the bigger cites across England.
Having now found a large collection of WW1 posters from around the world its time to start placing them up on the blog. Funny one the first, anti-conscription from Aussie. Maybe they knew what Gallipoli would be like?
Very nice one above, they did like to use stereotypes back in the day! Joan of Arc used to buy war saving stamps.
This must have been a local Irish hero, slaying 10 Germans for the cause and others can be like him too. Did Michael O'Leary do the rounds at recruitment fairs for years to come? or did they send him back to the Somme?
The USS Akron over San Francisco, California in the early 1930's. The Akron carried 4 Curtis F9C-2 Sparrowhawk aircraft inside, to be launched or retrieved by means of a trapeze. Look closely and you can see a Sparrowhawk approaching the trapeze. Below the lower fin is another Sparrowhawk waiting to hook on to the trapeze.
There are many movies I like but one of my all time favorites is 'The Deer Hunter'. Not only does is have some of best actors in history in it but its about War and in this case Vietnam. We all know how much of a failure Vietnam was for America but The Deer Hunter gave you a real insight into the minds of those that made it back alive. A deeply disturbing film and for me very sad worth a watch!
A photo from the Vietnam war. A downed chopper, men digging in and sorting out their packs. Maybe one or two getting medical attention. Many of the American troops were just young men, it reminds me so much of WW1 and the Somme, little did they know the horror that awaited them, to be lead by idiots into that hell.
Mark Shaw’s photographs of the lovely Audrey Hepburn. The photos were taken circa 1953 in miss Hepburn’s house in Los Angeles and on the back lot of Sabrina. This entire collection have lingered forgotten for more than fifty years in a box at the home of Mark’s first wife and were rediscovered again in 2008.
A view taken from Dresden's town hall of the destroyed Old Town after the allied bombings between February 13 and 15, 1945. Some 3,600 aircraft dropped more than 3,900 tons of high-explosive bombs and incendiary devices on the German city. The resulting firestorm destroyed 15 square miles of the city center, and killed more than 22,000.
Very clever (for the time) play on words here. They do like their cartoon images of the enemy dont they?
Hey I only wanted to get something from the shops and the wife was asleep! Dont lay a guilt trip on me. Every single thing in those days was targeted for the war effort.
Interesting photo in the way it shows you how many soldiers filled the boats on the D-Day landings. The more famous photos and movies show smaller boats holding 30 max soldiers getting out, here its around 400 Canadian men ready for the invasion ahead. Posing for the picture waving looking rather happy!
Group photo of some British troops from the trenches in WW1. Very interesting photo as it seems they all wearing various types of headwear, including a german helmet!
Pretty standard WW2 poster, fighting in the Pacific meant alot of racial slurs on Asians and poster like this were common.
Looks appealing right? recruiting fellow Aussies ANZACs calls (Australian New Zealand Army Corps) Gallipoli,Turkey 1915. If only they knew of the bumbling idiots that would be leading them into certain death there.
Leeds has alot of history surrounding it but not many folks realise its the place where the 1st films in the world were recorded by Louis Aimé Augustin Le Prince using the Le Prince single-lens camera made in 1888. It was taken in the garden of the Whitley family house in Oakwood Grange Road, Roundhay, a suburb of Leeds, Yorkshire, Great Britain, possibly on October 14, 1888. It shows Adolphe Le Prince (Le Prince's son), Mrs. Sarah Whitley, (Le Prince's mother-in-law), Joseph Whitley and Miss Harriet Hartley. The 'actors' are shown walking around in circles, laughing to themselves and keeping within the area framed by the camera. It lasts for less than 2 seconds and includes 4 frames.
This is very close to where I live!
Filmed on paper filmstrips, this is Louis Aime Augustin Le Prince's second known film, produced in October 1888. Only photographic copies of it survive today. The Leeds Bridge was filmed because it provided action.