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The Gossip - How the Devil does She know all that? early 19th century
Mr and Mrs Claud Allister reading The TatlerClaud Allister and his wife (Barbara Fisher) pictured reading The Tatler magazine. Date: 1931
Gossip at the fountain - PortugalWomen gossip at the fountain - Portugal Date: 1909
Caricature of Edmund Yates and ? BeckerCaricature of Edmund Hodgson Yates (1831-1894), British novelist and dramatist, editor of The World society journal, and ? Becker. 1882
Cartoon, Bad Neighbourhoods. Two women stop in the street to pass the time of day, and comment on a nosy neighbour. Date: 1918
Social / Ladies GossippingSix ladies sitting round a table, indulging in gossip Date: early 18th century
Cartoon, Gossiping in the background. The older ones watch the younger ones dance. One of the men is still in uniform, for the war is only recently over. The other man is in evening dress
Whitechapel PubWhitechapel, London - women outside a pub Date: 1907
Tea and gossipA group of girls and their dolls enjoy a tea party at home. Artist: Ethel Parkinson Date: 1912
Vignette design, two Mexican women chatting. Date: circa 1910s
Four sewing cats on a Christmas cardFour sewing and gossiping cats on a Christmas card -- The School for Scandal. Date: circa 1890s
Cartoon, A false rumour, WW1Cartoon, A false rumour from the Western Front. Four market women talk about cannibalism among the troops. Date: 1916
Cartoon, At Deauville, WW1Cartoon, At Deauville, showing four fashionable French women gossiping about war rumours. Date: 1915
Doorstep Gossip. Middlesbrough 1970s Date: 1970s
Cartoon, Logic, WW1Cartoon, Logic. Two French women out for an autumn walk gossip about another woman who is working in a factory, making shells as part of the war effort. Date: 1915
The Quieter Side of AscotMusic and gossip behind the grand stand at Royal Ascot, with well-dressed spectators enjoying a break from the races. 1914
Cartoon, German women gossipping, WW1Cartoon, German women gossipping about a diner in a restaurant -- He must be a horrible French spy! Hes eating his veal without jam! Date: 1915
Cartoon, A Secret, WW1Cartoon, A Secret, showing two men bathing in the sea. One man tells the other a secret concerning the war, but warns him not to repeat it, as people will think him a coward. Date: 1915
Eve talks to Lord Rhondda, the Food Controller, WW1Eve, the fictional gossip columnist of The Tatler magazine, lectures Lord Rhondda, the Food Controller during the latter part of the First World War, on the fact that his economy campaign
Eve from The Tatler becomes a film star, 1918A sketch by Annie Fish to illustrate the Letters of Eve column in The Tatler magazine showing the fictional gossip columnist heroine in her new role - as a film star
Eve and her luxuries, WW1Eve, the fictional gossip columnist of The Tatler magazine, pictured surrounded by some of her favourite luxury items - hats, dresses and lingerie
Eileen Molyneux as Eve from The Tatler on filmEileen Molyneux (1893-1962), actress, pictured in 1918, in character, when she had been chosen to star in a series of twelve silent comedy films, called The Adventures of Eve
Eve as a W. A. A. C, WW1Eve, The Tatler magazines gossip columnist (and author of Letters of Eve ) muses on the charm of a W.A.A.C (Womens Army Auxiliary Corps)
Eve as a police woman, WW1Eve, gossip columnist of The Tatler (author of Letters of Eve ) contemplates the charming idea of wearing a police womans uniform with a very short skirt in order to save on material during the First
Eve charms and bracelet, WW1 jewelleryAdvertisement for the Eve charm, based on the Tatler gossip columnist illustrated by Fish. Charms of various designs were popular gifts to exchange during the First World War
Eve reading The New Eve Book, 1917Eve, The Tatler magazines gossip columnist, pictured reading The New Book of Eve based on her life, as illustrated by Annie Fish
Eve of The Tatler in the revue, Tina at the Adelphi, WW1Actresses, including Phyllis Dare, playing Eve, the fictional lead columnist, drawn by Annie Fish for The Tatler magazine
Barber and two passing gentlemen having a chatThe local barber having a chat outside the barbers with the local bakery delivery man and another local younger lad. They are photographed in The Horsefair, Malmesbury, Wiltshire. England
Olivia Maitland Davidson, writer and journalist, specifically author of Letters of Eve, the Tatler magazines weekly gossip column
Tatler Coat of Arms, WW1A symbolic coat of arms for The Tatler magazine from the First World War period. Its motto, The Unique Paper, is flanked by the image of the Tatler 18th century mascot in tricorn hat
Advertisement for The Eve Book, 1916Advertisement for The Eve Book, drawn by (Annie) Fish and designed by Fowl and published by Messrs. Constable & Co. Eve was the fictional gossip columnist of The Tatler
Tea Time in silhouetteTwo chic women of the 1920s enjoy a gossip over a cup of tea and a cigarette in a tea shop. Date: 1926
Sayings of Much-Recorded People by Eddie TathamSpread from The Bystander 1932 showing some of the scions of 1930s society, and revealing some unrecorded sayings of much-recorded people
Miss Margaret Whigham seeks sylvan solitudeExhausted from her relentless socialising (and appearances in society magazines like The Bystander!), Miss Margaret Whigham (1912-1993), later Mrs Charles Sweeny, then Duchess of Argyll
Cartoon, Studies in Leakage, or how the great secret of the Conference was given away. Showing how news of a Buckingham Palace Conference on Irish Home Rule was leaked to the press. Date: July 1914
Restaurant scene, The Unkept Appointment. Showing an elegant lady sitting alone at a table, watched by a waiter and three men at another table. Date: July 1914
WW2 - Comic Postcard - Here is the News! Three women gossip over a mid-morning cup of tea. Lets hope secrets of national importance are not being flagrantly shared! Date: circa 1942
Ladies complaining od bad language from the pubIt must have been awful. Mrs Baggs: (after receiving a tornado of abuse from over the road) " Well, I never eard sich langwidge in all my life.I never was called such names before
Two ragged street women disgust respectabilityIn the Bars and Streets. Cartoon drawing by Phil May depicting two poor ragged street women disgusting another who they describe, with no hint of the obvious irony, as " not respectable"
Two Cockney Costers having a jovial chat: " Wots th row up the Court, Bill?" " Bob Smith was kissing my Missus, and is Old Woman caught im!" Date: 1892
Cockney ladies discuss their romantic lifeTwo Cockney ladies discuss their romantic life - cartoon by Phil May. There appears to have been a muddle up between the word clandestine and the word incandescent
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
Girls on the telephoneFabulous illustration showing a number of teenage girls, all wearing 1950s style checked capri pants and boat neck sweaters while lounging around chatting on the phone. Date: 1950s
Enjoying Handel, 1868Ingenuous Young Lady: " I like the chorsuses best, because they make such a noise that we can talk as much as we like without anyone noticing." A gentleman with a top hat
Matchmaking in Ireland - two old women negotiate a match over a cup of tea as the potential bride and groom look on with keen interest Date: circa 1908
Two gentlemen
Chatting in the SnowGetting the gossip - two people stop for a chat on a snowy winters morning in a country lane in Essex, England. Date: 1950s
Fashionable ladies in designer outfitsA group of fashionable ladies in outfits by various designers. From left to right: a green, red and white outfit by Madeleine et Madeleine, a white