mail_outline sales@mediastorehouse.com
Two women police officers, LondonTwo women police officers (Jessica Penfold or Leach and Barbara Melham or Bissell) leaving a building in London to go on duty. Date: circa 1950s
Three police officers on duty in London, one of them WPC Elly Macon, holding a crowd of children back. Date: circa 1960s
Woman police officer in street, LondonWoman police officer (Aileen Dunseath) walking along a busy shopping street, London. Date: 1967
Three women police officers in a gardenThree women police officers (Iris Walker, Connie Hobbs(?) and Joan Strangleman) posing for their photo in a garden. They are in the Bather style uniform which was worn from 1946 to 1968
Woman police officer on traffic duty, LondonWoman police officer on traffic duty in a London street, helping a schoolboy and schoolgirl cross the road safely. (2 of 3) Date: circa 1960s
Two women police officers on duty in LondonTwo women police officers on duty in a London street, one of them on a police telephone reading from a notebook, the other one (Annette Payne) in the background with a member of the public
Woman police officer on duty in Central LondonWoman police officer (Sylvia Cloake) on duty in Central London, with the National Gallery and St Martin in the Fields in the background. Date: circa 1950s
Woman police officer W Gould at Woolwich, SE LondonWoman police officer Winifred Gould (joined August 1931) photographed outside Woolwich Police Station, SE London. She is wearing the recently updated Stanley uniform -- a white shirt
Group photo, women police officers, London, WW2Informal group photo of women police officers on a balcony at the Met Polices WEC. They are M Pascoe (joined March 1942), Shirley Jennings (joined May 1941, later Becke)
Woman police officer K M Boyd in uniform, LondonWoman police officer Kathleen Mary Boyd (joined October 1931) in uniform, London, 22 October 1934. Date: 1934
Woman police officer posing in uniform, LondonWoman police officer Ivy Cook (joined December 1930) posing in the recently updated Stanley uniform. A white shirt and tie were introduced, the jacket had four buttons and a matching material belt
Woman police officer posing in uniform, London, WW2Woman police officer Sergeant Ivy Cook (joined December 1930) posing in uniform, 18 June 1940. Date: 1940
Woman police officer holding hands with children, LondonWoman police officer holding hands with a girl and a boy on a London street -- perhaps she has just guided them across the road. Date: circa 1930s
Woman police officer in studio photoWoman police officer in a studio photo, wearing double-breasted overcoat (for winter wear), white shirt and tie, helmet with badge and duty armband. Date: circa 1931
Male and female police officer on a street, LondonA male and a female police officer on a street in London, reading something in a notebook. Date: circa 1930s
Woman police officer guiding little girl across the road and holding up her hand to an oncoming car, on the corner of Vincent Square, London SW1. Date: circa 1930s
Three women police officers in uniform, LondonThree female Metropolitan Police officers pose in their uniforms (winter dress, with overcoats) -- an inspector, a sergeant and a constable
Woman police officer, Elsie G Hutchinson, LondonAn early woman police officer, Inspector Elsie G Hutchinson, who joined the Metropolitan Police in 1919. Date: 1919-1920
Superintendent Stanley and three women police officersSuperintendent Sophia Stanley (served 1918-1922, seated), the first Superintendent of Women Police, and three women police officers (left to right: Elinor J Robertson, served 1919-1922)
Woman police officer in new Stanley UniformWoman police officer in the new Stanley Uniform, introduced in 1919, and named after the first Superintendent of Women Police, Sophia Stanley
Two women police officers and a policeman, LondonTwo early women police officers and a policeman, London. They are (left) Beatrice Wills (nee Wakefield), (right) Alice Foscoe (nee Wills) both wearing the Stanley Uniform introduced in 1919
Woman police officer on duty, LondonWoman police officer in London, wearing a helmet, a double-breasted coat and a duty armband. Date: circa 1920s
Woman police officer with small boys, LondonWoman police officer on duty in London, tying the shoelace of a small boy as his friends look on. Date: circa 1920s
Two women police officers, Bow Street, LondonTwo women police officers outside Bow Street Police Station, London. They are WPC Ivy Ellis (left) and Inspector Alice Bertha Clayden (right)
Woman police officer Beatrice Wills on duty, LondonBeatrice Wills (nee Wakefield), an early woman police officer, seen here on duty in a London street. She joined the force in January 1919, and is wearing the Stanley Uniform, introduced in that year
Early woman police officer, WW1Early woman police officer, member of a special womens patrol set up at the start of the First World War. Date: circa 1914-1915
Early woman police officer, Mrs M B CrowleEarly woman police officer, Mrs Mary Beatrice Crowle, one of the first members of a special womens patrol set up at the start of the First World War
Women recruits for police jobs lined upWomen recruits for jobs with the Metropolitan Police in London lined up in uniform wearing armbands with the initial WPSR (probably standing for Women Police Service Recruit). Date: circa late 1910s
King George V and others at first Armistice anniversaryKing George V and other royal mourners taking part in the first Armistice anniversary (first Remembrance Day), 11 November 1919. Date: 1919
Funeral of Governor General Lee Stack, CairoFuneral cortege of Governor General and Sirdar of the Egyptian Army, Sir Lee Oliver Fitzmaurice Stack (1868-1924), passing through Opera Square, Cairo, in Anglo-Egyptian Sudan, 22 November 1924
Red Cross quartermaster in his office, WW1A Red Cross quartermaster in his office, used as a Christmas greetings card in 1918. Date: 1918
Group photo with soldiers and dog in yardGroup photo with soldiers, civilians and a dog in a back yard. Date: circa 1914-1918
Cartoon, The Good Alphabet, WW1Cartoon, The Good Alphabet. Two Frenchmen with different initials on their armbands meet on a country road. The main thing is that they are on the same side. Date: 1915
Finnish boy scout as ARP warden, Helsinki, WW2Finnish boy scout as ARP warden at the headquarters of the Finnish Boy Scouts Association, Helsinki. Date: circa 1940s
AFS woman in double-breasted greatcoat, WW2AFS woman in double-breasted greatcoat, beret, white scarf and armband (back view). Date: 1940s
Green baize armband of City of London Motor VolunteersA green baize armband of the 4th/23rd Squadrons, City of London Motor Volunteers and a dress uniform metal belt buckle with the badge and lettering of the Motor Volunteer Corps. Framed as one
Senior Scout helping during CoronationOne of the Senior Scouts who helped during the Coronation of Queen Elizabeth II on 2 June 1953, carrying out Messenger duties for the Lord Chamberlains Office. Date: 1953
APM inspecting men, Western Front, France, WW1An APM (Assistant Provost Marshal) inspecting his men before going on duty, on the Western Front in France during World War One. Date: circa 1916
Two civilian scenes in Berlin, WW1Two civilian scenes in Berlin in the early part of the First World War, asking the question: Has Germany Also Her Slackers? Above, an afternoon crowd in Unter den Linden
German Red Cross soldiers in Berlin, WW1German Red Cross soldiers marching along a Berlin street in the early stages of the First World War. Date: September 1914
Sanitary Department on parade, WW1The newly formed Sanitary Department on parade at the start of the First World War. Date: August 1914
People collecting for War SavingsPeople on a street, encouraging War Savings to help the war effort. Date: 1939-1945
WW2 - Russian Propaganda - Repelling Germans in the BalticWW2 - New Years greetings to the Baltic - a Soviet propaganda postcard from 1942 showing a Russian soldier finishing off an Invading German in the Baltic
WWI - Wearing a Derby Armlet - Comic PostcardBow-wow! I wonder what group shes in?! The first of the two things this postcard refers to is the Derby Armlet. In 1915, it was obvious that volunteers alone would not be enough to fill the armys