Pictures

After 1950, Australia, Cold War, Film, Games and simulations, Maps, Nuclear, biological, chemical, Pictures

A strange game

This week is the 25th anniversary of the Australian cinematic release of WarGames, which is mainly significant because I missed the anniversary of the US release a few weeks ago! There were a few retrospectives floating about then, which focused on the movie’s importance as an early popularisation of the hacking and phreaking subcultures, and

1940s, Pictures

Paternosters

What a difference two-thirds of a century makes. This photo was taken from the dome of St Paul’s Cathedral some time after the devastating air raid on the night of 29 December 1940, looking north-north-west. I think the street running diagonally from the lower-right hand corner is Paternoster Row, which had long been the centre

1900s, 1910s, 1920s, 1930s, 1940s, Air defence, Aircraft, Art, Books, Civil defence, Conferences and talks, Disarmament, Film, International air force, Maps, Nuclear, biological, chemical, Phantom airships, mystery aeroplanes, and other panics, Pictures, Plots and tables, Thesis, Videos

Facing Armageddon

This is the talk I gave at Earth Sciences back in May. It’s long and picture heavy and much of it will be be familiar to regular readers, but some people expressed some interest in it so here it is. I’ve lightly edited it, mainly to correct typos in my written copy. I’ve put in

1900s, 1910s, Art, Before 1900, Phantom airships, mystery aeroplanes, and other panics, Pictures, Rumours

Mowing devils, old hags, and phantom airships

[Cross-posted at Revise and Dissent.] Nick at Mercurius Politicus has an excellent post up on the The Mowing-devil, an English pamphlet from 1678 which is famous among forteans because it contains an illustration of something that looks a lot like a crop circle, three centuries before the term was coined. If it is an account

1900s, 1910s, 1930s, Archives, Art, Ephemera, Pictures

Keep that shadow from them

A poster from the 1935 general election, showing, quite literally, the shadow of the bomber. The National Government was a coalition comprising the Conservatives and two splinter parties, National Labour and the Liberal Nationals. With Stanley Baldwin at its head, the National Government went to the people on a platform of peace and prosperity. The

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