Periodicals

1910s, 1930s, Periodicals, Phantom airships, mystery aeroplanes, and other panics

Two mystery aeroplanes

Flight reported on 16 March 1912 that ‘A “Mystery” Aeroplane’ was recently seen flying over Warmley, near Bristol: MANY of the residents of Warmley were considerably excited, says a local paper, at the imposing spectacle of a splendidly illuminated aeroplane passing over the village at a tremendous rate. Certain other people at Bristol and neighbouring

Yorkshire Post, 1 June 1942, 1
1940s, Periodicals, Pictures, Reprisals

After Millennium — II

Picking up where I left off nearly a month ago, let’s turn to the reaction of the provincial press to the thousand bomber raid on Cologne on the night of 30 May 1942. The Yorkshire Post‘s main front page story on 1 June 1942 (above) concentrated on the operation itself. It claimed that ‘CONSIDERABLY more

Daily Mirror, 1 June 1942, 1
1940s, Periodicals, Pictures, Radio, Reprisals

After Millennium — I

Operation Millennium was the RAF’s first ‘thousand bomber raid’, on Cologne on the night of 30 May 1942. By making a maximum effort and by using aircraft and aircrews from training units (since the Admiralty did not consent to the diversion of Coastal Command aircraft), Air Vice-Marshal Harris was able to scrounge a total of

1910s, Books, Periodicals

Gotha vs Saxe-Coburg-Gotha

On 17 July 1917, the London Gazette published a proclamation by George V: We, out of Our Royal Will and Authority, do hereby declare and announce that as from the date of this Our Royal Proclamation Our House and Family shall be styled and known as the House and Family of Windsor, and that all

1910s, Australia, Before 1900, Books, Periodicals, Phantom airships, mystery aeroplanes, and other panics

Fear, uncertainty, doubt — VII

If the threat from Germans outside Australia during the First World War was small, the threat from Germans inside Australia was non-existent. There is no credible evidence at all of any espionage, subversion or sabotage activities by German-Australians. But you wouldn’t know it from the way the Australian people and their government behaved. It’s not

Norman Lindsay, ?
1910s, Art, Australia, Books, Ephemera, Film, Periodicals, Phantom airships, mystery aeroplanes, and other panics, Pictures

Fear, uncertainty, doubt — VI

It’s been more than two weeks since I’ve posted anything on my current mystery aeroplane research, but it’s not because I haven’t been working on it. In fact it is coming along pretty well. There are still some frustrating gaps in my understanding of the archival records, but the writing is coming along. I’ve written

1910s, Australia, Books, Periodicals, Phantom airships, mystery aeroplanes, and other panics, Rumours

The war and Arthur Machen

It has happened before that while I’m focused on some research topic but read something seemingly unrelated, that unanticipated connections serendipitously appear between the two. In this case it was while reading a collection of short stories by Arthur Machen, an influential writer of supernatural horror who wrote his greatest, and most disturbing, works in

Scroll to Top