Pictures

Art.IWM PST 12220
1910s, Archives, Australia, Ephemera, Pictures

The fine print

FREE TRIP TO EUROPE; INVITATIONS ISSUED TO-DAY or ALL ELIGIBLE MEN Will be Given FREE CLOTHING, FOOD, MONEY, STEAMER AND TRAIN ACCOMMODATION, AND A TRIP FULL OF ADVENTURE AND INTEREST, FORMING THE GREATEST EVENT OF THEIR LIVES, TO DO THEIR DUTY AT THE PLACE WHERE EVERY FIT AUSTRALIAN SHOULD BE — STANDING SHOULDER TO SHOULDER

U-9
1910s, Conferences and talks, International law, Interviews, Pictures, Radio, The road to war

The road to war — IX

Today I made my ninth contribution to ABC New England’s Road to War series, talking about U-boats (AKA ‘the Zeppelins of the sea’) and their advantages and disadvantages in warfare. More specifically, I spoke about the German declaration on 4 February 1915 of unlimited submarine warfare in the seas around Britain, switching from their previous

Zeppelin L3
1910s, Air defence, Conferences and talks, Periodicals, Phantom airships, mystery aeroplanes, and other panics, Pictures, Radio, Rumours, The road to war

The road to war — VIII

For my eighth contribution to The Road to War on ABC New England, I spoke about the first Zeppelin raid on Britain, on the night of 19 January 1915; certainly more consequential than the first air raid on Britain as it actually killed people in Great Yarmouth and King’s Lynn in Norfolk. I talked about

Pictures, Travel 2013

Paris

Paris has, unfortunately, been in the news lately, which has made me think back to my visit in December 2013. Happier days. I never got around to posting any photos from that trip, so now seems like a good time to rectify that. But because you can find far more beautiful pictures of Parisian landmarks

Middlesex and Buckinghamshire Advertiser, 24 October 1914, 7
1910s, Archives, Periodicals, Phantom airships, mystery aeroplanes, and other panics, Pictures, Rumours, Travel 2015

Secret Zeppelin bases in Britain — IV

Yesterday was the last research day proper of my big trip. Actually, I was supposed to be having a holiday, but instead I spent it in Aylesbury at the Centre for Buckinghamshire Studies, trying to see if I could get to the bottom of the Great Missenden affair of 18 October 1914, when villagers decided

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