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Suffragette Arson Wargrave. Crowds gather outside St. Marys Church, Wargrave, Berkshire to see the damage caused by fire on 1st June 1914
Suffragette Newspaper Seller and Cart. A suffragette stands beside a pony and trap with placard, advertising, The Suffragette newspaper. A note on reverse reads, Self & Press Cart 1912. Isabel Cay
Suffragette Selling The Suffragette Paper. A woman standing in the street, holding copies of The Suffragette newspaper with large placard also advertising the paper which was edited by Christabel
Suffragette, Baby sees Votes for Women paper. A baby looks at a copy of a Votes for Women newspaper, the organ of the WSPU it wonders. Whatever will they want next? Date: circa 1910
Suffragette Need Not Apply. Bachelor peruses the newspaper ads from a matimorial agency. One reads, Wanted A Wife cheap who can cook, sew, wash, nurse, eat little, drink less and keep quiet
Suffragette Who Said Rats. Baby reading newspaper asks, Who said Rats Date: circa 1908
Suffragette Baby Mamas a Suffragette. Baby girl holding a newspaper declares, Mamas a Suffragette Too! Date: circa 1909
Suffragette Votes for Women Christmas Card W. S. P. USuffragette Votes for Women Christmas Card W.S.P.U. Christmas card promoting The Suffragette newspaper, edited by Christabel Pankhurst, Design by Hilda Dallas
Suffragette Votes for Women Views. Stereotypical suffragette stands behind a VFW newspaper placard, which reads, Our Views At Bude contains concertina of photo views of Bude, Cornwall
Suffragette, Split Red Faced Man. A fat smiling red faced man reads the newspaper placard announcing Great Suffragette Split Remarkable Disclosures Wonder how she did that - at the skating Rink Is
Suffragette, Not a Vote - a Bloke. The newspaper boy heckles a suffragette campaigner, shouting, Its not a vote you want - Its a Bloke
Indian soldier stands guard during World War IIndian soldier stands guard outside a wire-enclosed British camp for Turkish prisoners in Mesopotamia during the First World War. Date: 1916
Reporters writing up their stories at the Daily ChronicleReporters just back from public functions, meetings, fires, accidents and so forth are seen transcribing their copy for press at the offices of the Daily Chronicle
Interior of a sorting car on a newspaper express trainLondon newspapers being sorted and packed in transit on board an express train in specially constructed cars, during the night journey
Receiving late news on the tape telegraph at Daily ChronicleA late news item received on the tape telegraph and telephoned at once down to the machine room at The Daily Chronicle to guarantee inclusion in that days edition. Date: 1914
Delivery of newspapers from the machineNewspapers coming off the printing press and gathered and counted by two men while the man on the right removes the bundles of papers to take to the publishing department. Date: 1914
The Wipers TimesA facsimile reprint of the trench magazine: The Wipers Times Date: 1916
Cartoon of the newspaper press, 1829A print by H. Heath representing symbolically the fearless and trenchant attitude of the Press in early nineteenth century
Touching up a photograph for use in a newspaperA specially-trained expert retouching photographs before reproduction in The Daily Chronicle newspaper - done by hand in the days long before Photoshop was available. Date: 1914
George William Childs - American publisherGeorge William Childs (18291894) - American publisher who co-owned the Philadelphia Public Ledger newspaper with financier Anthony Joseph Drexel. Date: circa 1880
Graphic cover featuring damaged statue of the KaiserFront cover of The Graphic newspaper featuring a photograph of a damaged and de-nosed statue of Kaiser Wilhelm II which had become dislodged, ironically, during a German air raid over London
Graphic cover featuring the Kaiser by Edmund SullivanFront cover of The Graphic newspaper featuring an illustration by Edmund Sullivan depicting Kaiser Wilhelm II as a brutal giant, marching across Europe
Canada in Khaki No 2Book entitled Canada in Khaki No. 2 - A Tribute to the Officers and Men now serving in the Overseas Military Forces of Canada
C J B Masefield, North Staffordshire RegimentNewspaper image and plaque of C. J. B. Masefield, North Staffordshire Regiment, died July 2nd 1917. Image within a wooden frame, the timber having come from H.M.S
Young soldier and friend seek to be aloneWe don t want to lose you, but we think you ought to go. A young soldier and his lady friend at one end of a bench seeking to remove a gentleman reading a newspaper from the other end of the bench
German Field Newspaper (Garde-Feld-Post), dated Berlin, 6th January 1917. Commemorative Art
Mr. Roy Thomson, sketched by Stephen Ward, 1961A central figure in the newspaper world: Mr. Roy Thomson(1894-1976), at the time of the Thomson-Kings-Odiham affair. Mr Thomson came to prominence with the announcement on 25th January 1961 that
Cartoon, The Two Extremes of Public Opinion, WW1Cartoon, The Two Extremes of Public Opinion, Optimism and Pessimism, during the First World War. On the left is a smiling, patriotic man reading the financial news
Edward VII and Alexandra silver wedding anniversary 1888Front cover of Christian Herald and Signs of our Times, showing portraits of Edward VII and Alexandra, on their silver wedding anniversary, with their five children
The massing of war columnsWhen the First World War broke out, newspaper readers thought there would be a constant stream of new information to keep them up-to-date with everything
Sensations of the Times We Live In by George StuddyWhat it feels like to read that another ship has been sunk. A metaphorical view of bad news received on the home front during the early months of the First World War
WW1 by Winston Churchill in the Sunday PictorialAdvertisement for the Sunday Pictorial and its series of articles by Winston Churchill, The Four Chapters of War in 1916. Date: 1916
Edward HultonSir Edward Hulton (1869 - 1925), British newspaper publisher and racehorse owner. Founded the Daily Sketch and bought and developed the Evening Standard
Advertisements for John Sinclairs tobacco by H. L. OakleyFour complementary advertisements for John Sinclairs Barneys and Punchbowle pipe tobacco, designed by H. L. Oakley and featuring men at work and leisure enjoying a quality smoke. Date: 1920s
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
American soldiers relaxing, Western Front, WW1American soldiers relaxing on the Western Front during World War One. Date: circa 1917-1918
Flower-seller in silhouetteA Flower Girl, although she looks more like a lady of a certain age, seated next to the flowers she sells to Londoners each day. Date: 1926
Cartoon, Men from The Moon, WW1Cartoon, Men from The Moon, commenting on three neutral powers in the early weeks of the First World War (Holland, America and Italy), and how they are regarded by the German government
The Gasper front cover, World War IFront cover of The Gasper, a trench newspaper during the Great War for the 18th, 19th, 20th and 21st Royal Fusiliers, with a humorous cartoon on the cover showing a Scottish soldier peering through
Woman reads the news of a great British victory, WW1A woman reads the news of what is described by the newspaper as a great British victory in the early days of the First World War
War Time in the Country in SilhouetteA page of three silhouettes depicting life in the British countryside during the First World War. The top picture shows a man reading out the newspaper and official news to eager neighbours
Cartoon, Russias Thorn in the Flesh, showing a scene in a typical Warsaw cafe on receipt of war news. Date: August 1914
National Coal Strike, 1912National Coal Strike of 1912. A man inspects an important notice of a coal strike which has closed Cannon Street Station, London. Date: 1912
Daily Mail newspaper artists officePhotograph of the art department of the Daily Mail, with illustrators working on pictures at large tables in the days when illustration was still as important as photography in newspapers
Cover design, German newspaper industryCover design for Das Plakat, an illustrated survey of German poster art, depicting men at work printing a newspaper. Date: March 1915
Piltdown Man: reconstructed skulls comparedApe-Man of Modern Man? The two Piltdown skull reconstructions. A page from the Illustrated London News, debating the merits of Dr. A
Piltdown Man: mandible and skull comparedApe-Man of Modern Man? The two Piltdown skull reconstructions. A page from the Illustrated London News, debating the merits of Dr. A
Piltdown Man: brain capacity comparedA page from the Illustrated London News, debating the merits of Dr. A. Smith-Woodwards reconstruction of the Piltdown Mans brain over the reconstruction proposed by Professor Arthur Keith s