mail_outline sales@mediastorehouse.com
Richard King, writer for The TatlerRichard King, who wrote the weekly column, With Silent Friends, in The Tatler magazine. Pictured in the magazine at the time a selection of his writings were being published by Jordan Gaskell with
Olivia Maitland Davidson, writer and journalist, specifically author of Letters of Eve, the Tatler magazines weekly gossip column
Ellis Ashmead-Bartlett writing a despatch, Dardanelles, WW1Ellis Ashmead-Barlett (1881-1931), British war correspondent, pictured at his typewriter resting on ammunition boxes after the landing at Anafarta, writing a despatch
E. H. Shepard & Bruce Ingram, Royal Garrison Artillery, WW1Some officers of the Royal Garrison Artillery, self-styled The Press Gang. Standing left to right is Sec.-Lieutenant E. H. Shepard of Punch (best-known for drawing Winnie-the-Pooh), Sec. Lieut. D. C
Canadian journalists visit France, Western Front, WW1Canadian journalists visiting the Western Front in France during World War One. Seen here with Lord Lovat at a Canadian sawmill. Date: circa 1916
King Alfonso photographed talking to a womanWho Would Be King? Photograph of King Alfonso XIII of Spain, captured by snapshotters during a trip to San Sebastien, talking to an unidentified young woman
Keble Howard aka John Keble Bell (1875 - 1928), author, novelist and playwright. The third son of the Rev. G. E. Bell, he joined The Sketch magazine as Assistant Editor in 1899
Pres(s)tige by Leo CheneyA bored socialite or actress lies languidly in a luxurious bed blowing smoke rings and stroking her pet dog as she holds court with a group of journalists
Victor Bulla, special correspondentVictor Bulla of St. Petersburg, one of the special correspondents of The Sphere and The Tatler, who gained permission to accompany the invading Russian forces en route to Manchuria during
St Brides ChurchSeen from Fleet Street, thanks to a gap caused by a fire : the church has affiliations with printers and journalists. Date: 1825
Joseph Chamberlain as a Lion Tamer, taming his various opponents and enemies, named as the Radicals, the opposition Press and the Boer African Lion (bearing a suspicious likeness to Paul Kruger)
The Womens Press Club of London - founded in 1948. Members in the bar lounge of the club premises in Carey Street, close to Fleet Street, London
PORTUGAL. Lisbon. Journalists work at the NATO International Media Centre on November 19, 2010 in Lisbon, during a NATO (North Atlantic Treaty Organization)
Representative journals & journalists of America. Date c1882 Oct. 6. Representative journals & journalists of America. Date c1882 Oct. 6
War Correspondents fly to France, 1939British and American war correspondents prepare to fly to France in the early weeks of World War II. All wear officers uniform but without the usual distinguishing marks of rank
Bruce Ingram, editor of the Illustrated London NewsSir Bruce Stirling Ingram (1877 - 1963), journalist and newspaper editor. The grandson of the papers founder, Herbert Ingram, he edited the Illustrated London News from 1900 to 1963
A Literary Letter - 70th anniversary of illustrated journaliA page from the Sphere, offering congratulations to the Illustrated London News, the pioneer of illustrated journalism, celebrating its 70th anniversary in 1912
Special artists working for The Illustrated London NewsPortraits of Melton Prior and H.C. Seppings appear in the Illustrated London News with their sketches in the background; the title reads, Our Special Artists in Africa
Melton PriorThe English artist and war correspondent for the Illustrated London News from the early 1870s until 1904. He was noted for his ability to sketch scenes quickly
HRH Prince of Wales - Royal Cornwall ShowHRH Charles, Prince of Wales, being photographed at the RoyalCornwall Show
Review of Japanese troops by AtaturkConstantinople - Japanese troops being reviewed by Ataturk
Reporters Room / MailThe reporters room at the Daily Mail showing journalists busy at their typewriters
The Reporters Gallery in the House of Commons
Journalists ProtestJournalists meet to protest the stricter censorship imposed by Charles Xs government