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1st Battalion Rifle Brigade" Pleased to meet you!" Photograph showing some men of the 1st Battalion Rifle Brigade " standing-to" in their trench in anticipation of an attack by Germans January 1915
The Charge of the Light Brigade - then they rode back, but not - not the Six Hundred ! Date: 25 October 1854
Scarisbrick, Halsall & Downholland Fire Brigade Tender The Countess, Burscough Street, Ormskirk, Lancashire, England. Date: 1930s
Firefighting at Eccleston Place, Victoria, London SW1Firefighting at the Scripture Gift Mission, Naval & Military Bible Society, Eccleston Place, Victoria, London, on 23 April 1956, where there had also been an explosion
Firefighters in costume for an entertaining eveningMen and women in costume for an entertaining evening at Stoke Newington Fire Station, 17 March 1920. Date: 1920
Salvage operation in Victoria Park Road, East London, WW2Salvage operation in Victoria Park Road, East London, following a flying bomb explosion, 19 June 1944. Date: 1944
LFB fire appliance on the road, LondonAn LFB fire appliance on the road, London, 16 April 1955. Date: 1955
Steam engine with crew, Southgate, North LondonSteam-driven fire engine with crew -- SDFB, Southgate District Council fire service. The date on the vehicle is 1894. The driver standing on the appliance is D Gibbons. Third from right is G Walton
Firefighters receiving knots instruction
Blitz in London -- burnt-out incendiary device, WW2Blitz in London -- incendiary device which burnt itself out on an asphalt roof. Date: 1940s
London Fire Brigade in Victoria Park, East LondonLondon Fire Brigade personnel with horse-drawn and motorised vehicles in Victoria Park, East London. Date: 1902
Engraving of Newshams fire engine, patented in 1725. Date: 1725
Wedding of Captain La Touche Congreve V. CMarriage of Captain (later Major) William La Touche Congreve to Miss Pamela Maude, the daughter of actor Cyril Maude. Major Congreve was awarded the Victoria Cross for his actions at at Longueval
LCC-LFB battery-electric pump-escape at SouthwarkAn early electric wheeled escape ladder vehicle, Cedes battery-driven pump/50ft escape, based at Bow fire station, seen here in the drill yard at Southwark Headquarters
LCC-LFB battery-electric pump-escape at Southwark HQAn early electric wheeled ladder escape vehicle, a Cedes battery-driven pump/50 foot escape, based at Bow fire station, seen here in the drill yard of Southwark Headquarters
Firefighters at scene of commercial premises fireFirefighters working at the scene of a commercial premises fire, South Woodford, London
Metropolitan Fire Brigade Christmas Card, With the Seasons Greetings
LCC-LFB Bayswater fire station, West LondonReplacing the former Bayswater fire station in Queens Mews, this station was opened in 1904 at 210 Queens Road (later renamed Queensway)
LCC-MFB Bethnal Green fire station, East LondonBuilt and opened in 1899, Bethnal Green fire station was located at 51 Roman Road E2. The station was closed in 1969, replaced by a modern Bethnal Green fire station
LCC-MFB East Greenwich fire station, SE LondonBuilt by the London County Council in 1902, East Greenwich fire station still stands at 2 Tunnel Avenue SE10. The station was closed in 1985 when the new East Greenwich fire station was opened
LCC-MFB Kennington fire station, London SE11Built by the Metropolitan Board of Works (the forerunner of the London County Council) and opened in 1870, Kennington fire station was located in Refrew Road, Lower Kennington
LCC-MFB Battersea sub-fire station, London SW8Battersea sub-fire station, at 32 Battersea Park Road, one of only a few London stations not actually built as a fire station
LCC-MFB Battersea Bridge river fire station, SW8Built by the London County Council, Battersea Bridge river station was located by Battersea Bridge on the River Thames. It was one of four Metropolitan Fire Brigade river stations and, from 1904
LCC-LFB Tooting fire station, SW LondonBuilt by the London County Council, Tooting fire station is located at 91 Trinity Road SW17 and remains operational today
LCC- MFB Blackheath fire stationBlackheath fire station, located at Brigade Street, Tranquil Vale, SE3 (very near the Mary Evans Picture Library), with the escape ladder stored at the side
LCC-LFB Great Marlborough Street fire station, W1Built by the London County Council, Great Marlborough Street fire station was located at 53 Great Marlborough Street. The widespread adoption of motorised fire engines by the LFB led to a reduction
LCC-LFB Brigade marching band at the Annual ReviewThe Fire Brigade Band performing at the 1929 Annual Review in Victoria Park, East London. Formed after the First World War
LFDCA-LFB Vintage fire engine in a Clapham streetA former Middlesex Fire Brigade pump escape which was visiting Clapham fire station. Middlesex was absorbed into the enlarged London Fire Brigade in 1965 with the creation of the Greater London
LCC-LFB Motorised pump escape at Southwark HQThe pump escape of No 1 station, the Brigade Headquarters fire station located at Southwark Bridge Road SE1. The adoption of motorised fire engines by the LFB would lead to a reduction in the number
LCC-MFB Kensington fire station, W LondonThe appliance room of the former Kensington fire station which was located in King Street, W8. It was built in 1871 and closed in 1905 when the new Kensington fire station was opened
British troops in action against Turks near Kirkuk, WW1British troops of the 7th North Staffordshire Regiment, 39th Infantry Brigade, 13th Division, in action against the Turks at an outpost near Kirkuk, Mesopotamia (now Iraq) during the First World War
Canadian Fire DepartmentCanadian fire services and engine Date: 1950s
Queen Elizabeth II leaving Southampton with 5th Infantry BriOne of six colour photographs of The Queen Elizabeth II leaving Southampton with 5th Infantry Brigade, 12 May 1982. From a collection of photographs relating to the South Atlantic (Falklands War)
Belsize Fire Station Date: 2009
Woman patient, St Marys Hospital, Paddington, LondonLFB Special Services trying to help a woman patient at St Marys Hospital, Paddington, London, on 15 April 1959. She has climbed out of a ward window at fifth floor level
LCC-LFB firefighters with old hose cartFour LCC-LFB firefighters with a 60-year old hose cart, 17 August 1938. The cart was housed in the HQ in Cherry Garden Street
Crew of the Bexleyheath Fire Brigade, Kent, with fire engine and hose
Firefighters with their dog mascot, WW2Firefighters with their dog mascot during the Second World War. Date: early 1940s
Sir Henry MaxseSir Henry Fitzhardinge Berkeley Maxse, who died in 1883 while in office as Governor of Newfoundland, having previously been Governor of Heligoland
Motorised appliance with crew
LCC-MFB Dulwich fire station and horse steamerA seven man crew from Dulwich fire station pose on the forecourt with their Merryweather steam pump. One member of a firemans family peers through the lace curtains of the accommodation at first
Massey Shaw fireboat demonstrates pumpingMoored at its Blackfriars river station on the Victoria Embankment, the newly commissioned Massey Shaw fireboat demonstrates its massive pumping capacity by discharging a vast amount of water
LCC-LFB Dennis petrol pumpSupplied by Dennis of Guildford, Surrey, the latest in the range of petrol driven pumps supplied to the London Fire Brigade
LCC-LFB in Lord Mayors Show, City of LondonLondon firefighters and Auxiliary firefighters with appliances taking part in the annual Lord Mayors Show through the City of London. A Bedford heavy pump unit with crew leads the LFB contingent
LCC-MFB Fulham fire station, SW LondonFulham fire station, which remains operational over 100 years after it was first opened (1895). Located at 685 Fulham Road SW6
LCC-MFB Hammersmith fire station, West LondonLocated at 1-3 Brook Green Road W6, Hammersmith fire station opened in 1877. It was it closed in 1914 with the opening of a new Hammersmith fire station in Shepherds Bush Road
LCC-LFB Herne Hill fire station, Brockwell Park SE27Built by the London County Council, Herne Hill fire station was located at Milkwood Road, Herne Hill. The widespread adoption of motorised fire engines by the LFB led to a reduction in the number of
LCC-MFB Greenwich fire stationLocated at 9 Lindsell Street on the corner of South Street SE10, Greenwich fire station was built by the Metropolitan Board of Works (a forerunner of the London Council)