Conversations
Here are conversations that have happened in the last week on Flickr Commons:
Adam Clayton Powell, 1908- (LOC)
- 7 older comments, and then…
- Greg - Just Another Day In Paradise... said:
The Hill of the French from the Year of the French taken by French
- 3 older comments, and then…
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Niall McAuley said:
Frenchill on my maps!
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Niall McAuley said:
Erected in grateful remembrance of the gallant french soldiers who died fighting for the freedom of ireland on the 27th august 1798
www.buildingsofireland.ie/buildings-search/building/31307... -
Niall McAuley said:
Reportage chez Google, hon hon hon.
maps.app.goo.gl/6eCDyJne4aXgQ3FK6?g_st=ac -
Niall McAuley said:
See also L_ROY_06047, L_CAB_07309
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beachcomber australia said:
27 August 1798 was a Monday ...
Brief history - www.castlebar.ie/Nostalgia_and_History/French-Hill-Monume... -
Suck Diesel said:
“Site of engagement between the Franco-Irish forces and English forces on 26th August 1798 following the defeat of English forces at Castlebar & the Races of Castlebar.
William Rooney was one of the main protagonists in establishing the National Commemoration to celebrate the centennial of the 1798 rebellion. Only one month after its inception nationalists in Mayo formed the "Castlebar Central and Barony of Carra '98 Centenary Association with James Daly appointed as president of the Connaught '98 Centenary Council.
On the 9th January 1898 a commemoration, which was presided over by James Daly, was held at Frenchill, near Castlebar. This was attended by Maud Gonne Mac Bride and addressed by James Rooney, who gave an address in the Irish language. James Rooney was regarded as the "Thomas Davis" of the 1890's and was much in demand at patriotic gatherings.
James Daly pointed out that the event was both about remembering dead patriots and undertaking "to abide by the principles of the men of '98 until their country was free again and took its place among the nations of the earth."
www.facebook.com/groups/413224152057476/posts/24712470011... -
beachcomber australia said:
Via Trove, Maud Gonne's June 1896 visit ...
"THE BEAUTIFUL PATRIOT.
The very handsome and very eloquent Maude Gonne, ' the beautiful Irish patriot,' as they call her in Paris, paid a visit to Castlebar during the first week of June, and was warmly and cordially received. She called on the Very Rev. Father Lyons, at the presbytery. The object of her visit was to go over the historic ground where the Irish rebels and French soldiers, in August, 1798, encountered and ran the English forces, who outnumbered their antagonists ten to one, and which resulted in what is known. in history as 'The Castlebar Races.' Miss Gonne visited the French. Hill Monument, which was erected twenty years ago, enclosing the graves of tho French soldiers who were shot down there while in pursuit of the English retreating army. Mr. James Daly, who showed Miss Gonne over the historic ground, and who was one of those instrumental in getting the monument erected by public subscription, presented her with a very ancient relic, namely, a French five-franc piece and a bullet that were found embedded in front of an old Danish fort close by where the French Hill encounter occurred. Maude Gonne, who has spoken and written so much for Home Rule, is a Protestant, and the daughter of an Irish Protestant clergyman."
See - trove.nla.gov.au/newspaper/article/111101590?searchTerm=%...
Freeman's Journal, Sydney -
Niall McAuley said:
Previously, on GonneView:

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Suck Diesel said:
Erected 1876, so there’s a start date
West gate at HMCS Cornwallis
- 3 older comments, and then…
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Halifax Municipal Archives said:
Thanks, Scott Bradley! It looks like someone's identified the photograph in a Facebook group, and I was able to find this website (www.forposterityssake.ca/SE/SE0000.htm) corroborating the identification as well. It is interesting to see how ChatGPT handled the photo identification!
Gun battery at HMCS Cornwallis
- 1 older comment, and then…
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Halifax Municipal Archives said:
Thanks for the identification, Abbie Hudson! I've done some digging online and it looks like they - and you - are right!
Identified! 378 Shore Drive
- 3 older comments, and then…
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Halifax Municipal Archives said:
Hi Jane De Luca - thank you for this identification, as well as the information about the property! I've updated the database description with the location and your additional comments about the property's history.
Belmore Markets
from Powerhouse Museum
- 1 older comment, and then…
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covid convict said:
trove.nla.gov.au/newspaper/article/71207910 - Town & Country Journal, 24th December, 1892...description, sketch, etc...
26_0015411 Rohr Collection Image
from SDASM Archives
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Chuck Walla said:
This looks like documentation for some defect spotted in the field?
Gambling with cigarettes, Stalag 383 prisoner-of-war camp, Donald Skelton, 1941-43
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Blue Mountains Library, Local Studies said:
Middle East - Recovered Prisoners of War Rolls, 1939-45 War
Donald John Skelton
Service number NX5055
Rank Private
Unit 2/3rd Australian Infantry Battalion
Places
Crete
Leeton, New South Wales
Oflag III-C [from 6/11/42]
Stalag 383 - [from 10/4/43 until liberated 12/5/45]
Stalag VII-A [from 5/11/41]
Conflict/Operation Second World War, 1939-1945
Fate Recovered
Place of Association Leeton, New South Wales
www.awm.gov.au/collection/R2821494
Donald's casualty form summarised above, which gives a date range for the image, shows he was posted missing 8 June 1941, when he was captured in the Battle of Crete. Beginning 20 May 1941 and named Operation Mercury (German: Unternehmen Merkur), this was a major Axis airborne and amphibious operation during World War II to capture the island of Crete.
Allied tactical hesitation, and determined offensive operations, enabled German land reinforcements to overwhelm the defensive positions on the north of the island. Allied forces withdrew to the south coast, where more than half were evacuated by the British Royal Navy and the remainder surrendered or joined the Cretan resistance.
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Battle_of_Crete
Donald John Skelton
Birth 26 JUN 1918 • Leeton, New South Wales, Australia
Death 8 JAN 2007 • Canowindra, New South Wales, Australia
Occupation - Corner Store Proprietor; Industrial Officer.
Donald's father Walter was Member for Newcastle in NSW Parliament 1922.
AncestryLibrary - Family tree -
Blue Mountains Library, Local Studies said:
The AWM has a photo of Stalag 383:
"THE CAMP AT HOHENFELS, STALAG 383, WHICH HOUSED SOME 8000 BRITISH ... IN MID-SUMMER. ITS ONE REDEEMING FEATURE WAS THAT THE GERMAN COMMANDER WAS A FREEMASON, WHO EXERCISED HIS HARSH DUTY WITH COMPASSION, AND WHATEVER SYMPATHY HE DARED." www.awm.gov.au/collection/C206805
Stalag 383
The camp comprised 400 detached accommodation huts, 30 feet (9.1 m) x 14 feet (4.3 m), each typically housing 14 men. More were built towards the end of the war as prisoners were moved in from other camps as the Russian front advanced from the east.
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stalag_383 -
State Library of New South Wales said:
Blue Mountains Library, Local Studies 👍
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Blue Mountains Library, Local Studies said:
"Money's No Good To You Here - Mate"
This was a true statement that I was aware of as soon as I entered a Prisoner of War Camp. I had often heard it said that money had no intrinsic value itself - it was only a means of exchange. It was what money could buy that was important and in a P.O.W. Camp Pounds, shillings and pence; Dollars; Francs and Guilders could buy very little.
BUT there was "money"in the camp, which could purchase many things. The "currency" in the camps was CIGARETTES, and this was the accepted means of exchange. There were a few wealthy men in the Camps - these were the cigarette "Barons". Men who accumulated thousands of cigarettes. I never found out how they did this - there was talk of con men and cardsharpers. No
doubt there was a sprinkling of such characters, as card games involving gambling went on at every possible occasion. Gambling schools took place in many parts of the huts - I often watched, but never played for "money".
The cigarette "Barons" could buy many things inside the camp - and it was said even outside the camp. Dealings with various camp guards went on all the time. The "Barons" purchased extra rations of Red Cross food from prisoners who had run out of their supply of cigarettes. Articles of clothing were also exchanged for cigarettes..."
www.bbc.co.uk/history/ww2peopleswar/stories/43/a5676843.s... -
Blue Mountains Library, Local Studies said:
I located Donald's military record at the NAA and found his 'Statement of Repatriated Prisoners of War', which shows his place of capture as 'Sparkia' and continues, "Withdrew from Suda Bay to Sparkia for evacuation, all troops capitulated". He then spent a month in Salonica in Greece before being transfered to 'Stalag VIIA (13 months), then Stalag 383 (32 months)".
He describes camp conditions in the following terms: "Accommodation - BAD; Rations - POOR; Clothing & footwear - None except for Red Cross issues; Bathing, washing and sanitary facilities - VIIA fair, other camps BAD; recreational facilities (sport, reading, news) - REASONABLE in VIIA and 383"
recordsearch.naa.gov.au/SearchNRetrieve/Interface/SearchS...
Sparkia is actually the Greek 'Sfakiá' in Wikipedia, which notes: "After the Battle of Crete during World War II, the locals helped many Australian and New Zealand soldiers escape from here on the night of May 31, 1941, suffering great reprisals. King George II of Greece had already escaped this way when the Germans invaded. "
"Sfakiá is notorious for the harshness of the environment and the warlike people. Sfakians themselves are still considered somewhat beyond the reach of the lawmakers and tax collectors of Athens, with vendettas over stolen sheep and women's honour still fought into the mid-20th century, with a whole village abandoned."
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sfakia -
Merryjack said:
"POW CIGARETTE STANDARD
A unique form of commodity money surfaced in the Nazi prisoner-of-war (POW) camps during World War II. Cigarettes came to fulfill all the functions of money: a medium of exchange, unit of account, standard of deferred payment, and store of value. The Red Cross furnished the prisoners with cigarettes along with food, clothing, and other goods.
The history of POW cigarette money furnishes examples of a wide range of monetary phenomenon. Gresham’s law could be seen in the tendency for inferior cigarettes to remain in circulation while prisoners hoarded higher-quality cigarettes. Sometimes prisoners debased the currency by removing tobacco in the middle of the cigarette and replacing it with inferior material. A diminished (or expectation of a diminished) influx of cigarettes caused a fall in the velocity of circulation as prisoners hoarded cigarettes, which were becoming more valuable as prices in cigarettes fell. An added infusion of cigarettes, or rumors of an added infusion, brought a rise in velocity, dishoarding, and rising prices in cigarettes."
More - encyclopedia-of-money.blogspot.com/2011/10/pow-cigarette-...
Operating a hand drill at Vultee-Nashville, woman is working on a "Vengeance" dive bomber, Tennessee (LOC)
- 249 older comments, and then…
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Rendell Keith said:
Rendell Keith
Rendell Keith—
raised where the mountains stand tall
and so did he.
West Virginia State sharpened his mind,
gave him the steel in his backbone,
taught him that discipline and destiny
can share the same classroom.
A Black man built from legacy—
not just surviving history,
but shaping it.
In DC Government halls,
where decisions echo through neighborhoods,
he moves with purpose.
Department of Youth and Rehabilitation—
not just a title on a badge,
but a mission in his chest.
He stands in the gap
for young brothers who almost lost their way,
for young sisters who needed someone
to see more than a mistake.
He understands them—
not from a desk alone,
but from lived truth.
He knows the difference
between punishment and potential.
Between statistics and second chances.
Entrepreneur in spirit,
builder in mindset,
he don’t wait for opportunity—
he drafts it, signs it,
makes it official.
Rendell Keith—
Black man with mountain roots
and city vision.
Professional polish with revolutionary heart.
Walking proof that excellence
is not an exception—
it’s inheritance.
He carries himself like a promise kept.
Like a prayer answered.
Like a future that refuses to fold.
West Virginia State in his foundation.
DC Government in his service.
Department of Youth and Rehabilitation in his calling.
Entrepreneurship in his bloodline.
Rendell Keith—
strength wrapped in purpose,
grace wrapped in grind,
a Black man building legacy
in real time. -
Rendell Keith said:
Rich4ever Designz Rendell Keith
Rendell Keith—
raised where the mountains stand tall
and so did he.
West Virginia State sharpened his mind,
gave him the steel in his backbone,
taught him that discipline and destiny
can share the same classroom.
A Black man built from legacy—
not just surviving history,
but shaping it.
In DC Government halls,
where decisions echo through neighborhoods,
he moves with purpose.
Department of Youth and Rehabilitation—
not just a title on a badge,
but a mission in his chest.
He stands in the gap
for young brothers who almost lost their way,
for young sisters who needed someone
to see more than a mistake.
He understands them—
not from a desk alone,
but from lived truth.
He knows the difference
between punishment and potential.
Between statistics and second chances.
Entrepreneur in spirit,
builder in mindset,
he don’t wait for opportunity—
he drafts it, signs it,
makes it official.
Rendell Keith—
Black man with mountain roots
and city vision.
Professional polish with revolutionary heart.
Walking proof that excellence
is not an exception—
it’s inheritance.
He carries himself like a promise kept.
Like a prayer answered.
Like a future that refuses to fold.
West Virginia State in his foundation.
DC Government in his service.
Department of Youth and Rehabilitation in his calling.
Entrepreneurship in his bloodline.
Rendell Keith—
strength wrapped in purpose,
grace wrapped in grind,
a Black man building legacy
in real time. -
Rendell Keith said:
Rendell Keith
Rendell Keith—
raised where the mountains stand tall
and so did he.
West Virginia State sharpened his mind,
gave him the steel in his backbone,
taught him that discipline and destiny
can share the same classroom.
A Black man built from legacy—
not just surviving history,
but shaping it.
In DC Government halls,
where decisions echo through neighborhoods,
he moves with purpose.
Department of Youth and Rehabilitation—
not just a title on a badge,
but a mission in his chest.
He stands in the gap
for young brothers who almost lost their way,
for young sisters who needed someone
to see more than a mistake.
He understands them—
not from a desk alone,
but from lived truth.
He knows the difference
between punishment and potential.
Between statistics and second chances.
Entrepreneur in spirit,
builder in mindset,
he don’t wait for opportunity—
he drafts it, signs it,
makes it official.
Rendell Keith—
Black man with mountain roots
and city vision.
Professional polish with revolutionary heart.
Walking proof that excellence
is not an exception—
it’s inheritance.
He carries himself like a promise kept.
Like a prayer answered.
Like a future that refuses to fold.
West Virginia State in his foundation.
DC Government in his service.
Department of Youth and Rehabilitation in his calling.
Entrepreneurship in his bloodline.
Rendell Keith—
strength wrapped in purpose,
grace wrapped in grind,
a Black man building legacy
in real time. -
Demian ejike ORIH said:
Hello
23_0031331 Convair Negative Image
from SDASM Archives
- 1 older comment, and then…
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So Cal Metro said:
T. A. O'Brien LOL. Documenting the wrecked company van for the insurance company; picked up a camera in a desk drawer and it had missile photos on the rest of the roll.
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T. A. O'Brien said:
So Cal Metro That's pretty much how I saw it!
A collection of Confections and connections
- 7 older comments, and then…
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beachcomber australia said:
What's going on? Is there madness in their Methodism?
Hats on (this photo) -
catalogue.nli.ie/Record/vtls000589969
Hats off -
catalogue.nli.ie/Record/vtls000589972
Also (another year?) Hats on -
catalogue.nli.ie/Record/vtls000589970
Hats off - catalogue.nli.ie/Record/vtls000589971 -
clive422 said:
Wonderful! "If you want to get ahead, get a hat!"
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Niall McAuley said:
Cliff House, Dunmore East
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Charles ODowd said:
catalogue.nli.ie/Record/vtls000032599
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National Library of Ireland on The Commons said:
Amazed here! Never suspected Dunmore East...
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National Library of Ireland on The Commons said:
Niall McAuley Charles ODowd Thank you both.
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beachcomber australia said:
My unscientific calculations think Cliff House used to be here and the photos were taken in the park across the road, near the tennis courts - maps.app.goo.gl/oVe7ZeBH29pAT5bf7
See also the second (actually third!) house from the left mid-distance here - catalogue.nli.ie/Record/vtls000329472 -
beachcomber australia said:
And on the left with a flagpole - catalogue.nli.ie/Record/vtls000329471
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Charles ODowd said:
beachcomber australia
Very interesting find, geohive would suggest it was demolished between 2001-2006.
Riotous roadblock repelling rebels at Delvin
- 11 older comments, and then…
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Dominic Wahl-Stephens said:
Great picture.
23_0027803 Convair Negative Image
from SDASM Archives
- 1 older comment, and then…
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So Cal Metro said:
Test flight over Camino de la Costa and Windansea Beach in Bird Rock, San Diego.
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Stig Jarlevik said:
So Cal Metro
👍
Stig
23_0083526 Convair Negative Image
from SDASM Archives
- 1 older comment, and then…
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So Cal Metro said:
Test flight over Coronado, California.
23_0082979 Convair Negative Image
from SDASM Archives
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So Cal Metro said:
Test flight over Point Loma, San Diego, with Shelter Island on the left.
23_0029571 Convair Negative Image
from SDASM Archives
- 1 older comment, and then…
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So Cal Metro said:
Stig Jarlevik Thanks for the great historical notes!
Irish Arms and Irish legs a-plenty
- 36 older comments, and then…
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beachcomber australia said:
Lord Lieutenant and Lady Aberdeen visiting and looking very vice-regal ??
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Hamilton-Gordon,_1st_Marquess_...
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ishbel_Hamilton-Gordon,_Marchioness... -
Suck Diesel said:
1903?
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beachcomber australia said:
Ms Connellan of the 'Irish Hotel' also has a full frontal, presumably the same day as the chairs are still there - catalogue.nli.ie/Record/vtls000317044
Ed. But the upper windows have been closed. -
Niall McAuley said:
I would guess Ms. Connellan is about 30. To the censusesessses!
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Suck Diesel said:
Tivoli Terrace
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Niall McAuley said:
In 1901, there is a Lucy Connellan, Shopkeeper, 27. Not in a Hotel though
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Niall McAuley said:
May have been fibbing a bit, birth record 1867 www.irishgenealogy.ie/files/civil/birth_returns/births_18...
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Niall McAuley said:
Don't see any Connellans in Lisdoonvarna in 1911. Don't see a marriage or death record for Lucy.
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Niall McAuley said:
L_ROY_08938, also of Tivoli Terrace but without the crowd, shows a rather dapper photographer in the doorway of the hotel.
26_0015380 Rohr Collection Image
from SDASM Archives
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Chuck Walla said:
The hammer has an accelerometer attached to it. He's doing something to evaluate the door. Comments and corrections are welcomed. Fixture may say, "304 stns" (stations?)
26_0015376 Rohr Collection Image
from SDASM Archives
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Chuck Walla said:
Probably also Bike-to-work day 1999. It looks like the Chula Vista store of Mission Cyclery opened about 2,000. There was a store in Bonita prior to that.
Dead letter office (LOC)
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Seuss. said:
Scriveners at the Dead Letter Office. I suppose I should point out which one is Bartleby, but I would prefer not to.
23_0070309 Convair Negative Image
from SDASM Archives
- 1 older comment, and then…
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So Cal Metro said:
GM "Silversides" coach.
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SDASM Archives said:
So Cal Metro Thanks for these comments!
26_0015351 Rohr Collection Image
from SDASM Archives
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Chuck Walla said:
I think this is Internet Explorer 4.
26_0015347 Rohr Collection Image
from SDASM Archives
-
Chuck Walla said:
I can't read the names of staff here.
26_0015332 Rohr Collection Image
from SDASM Archives
-
Chuck Walla said:
Image should be rotated 90 degrees clockwise.
23_0036774 Convair Negative Image
from SDASM Archives
-
So Cal Metro said:
Pacific Highway in San Diego, Old Town at left.
23_0036958 Convair Negative Image
from SDASM Archives
-
So Cal Metro said:
Test flight above Lemon Grove, California, just east of San Diego.
Central Railway Station, Sydney
- 22 older comments, and then…
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covid convict said:
trove.nla.gov.au/newspaper/article/165234515 - the Sydney Mail, 3rd August, 1901...also see this panorama
Portrait: Smith, Constance Stuart
from LSE Library
- 1 older comment, and then…
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LSE Library said:
Wonderful! 👍
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Roger said:
"Constance Smith (civil servant)" thanks
Identified! Windsor Opera House
- 1 older comment, and then…
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Halifax Municipal Archives said:
You are right, www.flickr.com/photos/202763587@N04/ . Our colleagues at West Hants Historical Society verified your identification. Thanks!
Cowie Falls dam?
- 1 older comment, and then…
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Halifax Municipal Archives said:
Incredible sleuthing, www.flickr.com/photos/202763587@N04/. Water levels do change a lot around dams, so a definite possibility. According to the Nova Scotia Water Control Structure Database, Cowie Falls dam was built in 1929. The clothes on these gentlemen look a little earlier than that, perhaps?
Identified! Liverpool Town Hall
- 1 older comment, and then…
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Halifax Municipal Archives said:
Thanks for that identification, www.flickr.com/photos/202763587@N04/ Liverpool's Town Hall was built in 1902, so we can narrow down the date too.
Second World War Royal Canadian Navy diver postcard
- 1 older comment, and then…
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Halifax Municipal Archives said:
Thanks Abbie Hudson. That is the same WWII post card. Wish we had a bit more info on who, why, when...
The Trinity Provost's Posh Pad
- 5 older comments, and then…
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Suck Diesel said:

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beachcomber australia said:
Mr Mason went inside ...
catalogue.nli.ie/Record/vtls000540449
catalogue.nli.ie/Record/vtls000540450 -
beachcomber australia said:
Earlier (1796) via Pau NG
And in 2014 via Hoodworld
And the splendid Saloon which stretches the whole five window width on the first floor, via eu2013ie
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beachcomber australia said:
Perhaps George Salmon was Provost at the time of the photo ?

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Bo Dudas said:
Straight out of the annals of 1860’s master photography. Amazing image making.
-
National Library of Ireland on The Commons said:
Do provosts live there now? In a part that is not all Splendid Saloons and suchlike?
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John Spooner said:
I made a post yesterday about a university election in 1903 and the winner being taken to Mr Stickybacks in Grafton Street. What I didn't mention was that the assembled students knew the announcement of the election was imminent when they spotted "the venerable form of the Provost" approaching the platform in the Examination Hall.
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National Library of Ireland on The Commons said:
John Spooner Presumably the "victorious champion was borne" up Grafton Street aloft on shoulders...
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Architecture of Dublin said:






Reflected glory of reflected shame
- 14 older comments, and then…
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John Spooner said:
I'm not sure what conclusions, if any, can be drawn from this series of small ads in the Irish Independent on Thursday 28th December 1905

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John Spooner said:
There was a Sticky-back establishment somewhere on Grafton St in 1903. It featured in the celebrations of the Dublin University Election in 1903, Mr. James Campbell, K.C., Solicitor-General of Ireland having been elected:
The objective a was the Sticky-Back photographic establishment in Grafton-street. With a rush and a whirl these premises were simply swamped by muscular students. The victorious champion was borne in, and amid tumultuous enthusiasm the features of the newly-elected of Trinity were stamped in the endearing glory of sticky-back.
(Evening Irish Times - Friday 6 March 1903) -
National Library of Ireland on The Commons said:
John Spooner That Mr Stickyback was a tad eccentic?
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Niall McAuley said:
You are Mr. Stickyback and I claim my five pounds
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John Spooner said:
Columnist "Murty" in the Weekly Irish Times of Saturday 26 March 1904 was temped by the offer of getting a dozen copies of his likeness for thruppence. After a lengthy ramble taking nearly a column, he or she eventually gets the experience of getting a stickyback.
So in I walked and the young whipper-snapper of a chap had me pushed into a chair, put in position and properly shaped before I had time to pass the time of day to him.
"Don't stir" sez another one lookin' chap at the machine, as I was goin' to pull out my pocket handkerchief to settle my features.
The whole thing was over in about three seconds by the clock.
I got my 3d worth about 10 minutes ago. Though I have a startled kind of look on my face and no wonder for they took me on a sudden and gave me no chance of puttin' on a proper demeanour.
Much later, the Londonderry Sentinel of Thursday 22 January 1920 reported on a court case in which a Mr Crowder, a photographer, brought a case against his his neighbour, a Mr Hamilton, and the report included thisThe defendant, in evidence, denied using offensive words, but admitted calling plaintiff "Mr. Stickyback" and "Sappyhead".
Mr Crowder seems to have taken great offence at having his photographic credentials maligned as to be called Mr Stickyback.
Others considered the term Stickyback a "vulgarism".
Morning Mail (Dublin) - Wednesday 10 May 1905
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vegetka said:
Robert Lewandowski on the right.
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Suck Diesel said:
Stickyback, E.Henry Lloyd, no. 30 in 1910 and no. 34 in 1912
Lawrence Henry at no. 30 in 1914 and 1917
According to Thoms -
Niall McAuley said:
Suck Diesel Latest 1912, so.
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Suck Diesel said:
Niall McAuley But no. 34 then
Ladies in Mayor Finch's box at Plainfield Horse Show (LOC)
- 1 older comment, and then…
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swanq said:
A Finch who made the newspaper was a Rufus C. Finch.
The Courier-News [Bridgewater, NJ], Mon Jun 1 1908, P. 1, Col. 2
- www.newspapers.com/article/the-courier-news-horses-arrivi...
Listed for Box No. 1 is Rufus C. Finch.
But I haven't found evidence that he was a mayor.
A 1951 obituary does not mention that Rufus Crane Finch was a mayor, only that he was a native of Plainfield and an active horseman.
See The Central New Jersey Home News, Jan 22 1951, P. 3, Col. 1.
- www.newspapers.com/article/the-central-new-jersey-home-ne...
Plainfield Horse Show, "Centennial", of Westchester Farms jumping hurdle, winner (LOC)
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swanq said:
This horse was sold later in 1908 for $1,260 when the Westchester Stables horses were sold by auction.
See www.nytimes.com/1908/11/17/archives/hunters-under-hammer-...
Horse Show at Plainfield with "Mayo", "Miss Ann", and "Poppy St. John", and riders (LOC)
- 2 older comments, and then…
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swanq said:
See
The Courier-News [Bridgewater, NJ], Fri Jun 5 1908, P. 1
- www.newspapers.com/article/the-courier-news-moore-string-...
Includes full list of results from the first day of the show (June 4, 1908) and extensive list of gowns worn by ladies in the private boxes.
"Class 33.--Saddle horses, ladies' saddle horses, 15.1 hands or under -- First, Miss Emily H. Bedford's b.m. Miss Ann; second. Otto H. Kahn's br. m. Poppy St. John; third, Udo M. Fleishmann's ch. m. Mayo; fourth, Rufus L. Patterson's ch. g. Durham."
The Star-Ledger, [Newark, NJ], Fri, Jun 5, 1908 , P. 1
- www.newspapers.com/image/889975198/
has a photo that includes a closer view of Miss Fleishmann, who is at the left in the Bain photo on her father's chestnut mare, Mayo.
Another page from same issue:
Plainfield Horse Show Attracts Jersey Society - Reginald C. Vanderbilt Holding Prize-winner Ribbons
The Star-Ledger [Newark, NJ], Fri Jun 5 1908, P. 4 with photo
- www.newspapers.com/article/the-star-ledger-plainfield-hor...
Includes "Among the costumes noted was that of Mrs. Reginald Vanderbilt, a tailored suit of black and white checked broadcloth, worn with a huge dark brown hat."
See the huge hat in the middle of
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swanq said:
For a view of the location, including the stands, see
The Star-Ledger [Newark,NJ] Fri Jun 5 1908, P. 7 with full-width photo of the scene with stands
- www.newspapers.com/image/889975287/
Sculpture "Grotto of Love", by Emil Derre, Square St. Pierre, Montmartre, Paris (LOC)
- 1 older comment, and then…
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swanq said:
leftinparis.org/tag/emile-derre/
indicates that the statue is still where it was, but the names of squares in the area have changed.
"the Saint-Pierre Square below the Sacré Coeur was renamed the Square Willette."
and
"A couple kissing. Émile Derré’s sculpted 1908 argument for life and love in the Square Louise-Michel is an antidote to the religious death cult celebrated 100 metres higher up the Montmartre Hill."
23_0070342 Convair Negative Image
from SDASM Archives
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So Cal Metro said:
Looks like Harbor Drive in San Diego. The Chevy Suburban at right is blocking the road so the F-102 can be towed across the street.
23_0073021 Convair Negative Image
from SDASM Archives
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So Cal Metro said:
I think this is in Hillcrest, San Diego, on 5th Avenue at Anderson Place - where the Atlas Apartments are now. The building at the left is still there.
Australia’s oldest contortionist David Mitchell, 1942
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bill doyle said:
wild!
23_0074896_2
from SDASM Archives
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So Cal Metro said:
Flying as Garuda Indonesian Airways Flight #892, unfortunately this exact aircraft would crash just five years later, killing all on board on a flight segment between Mumbai and Karachi. The cause was never officially found, though misfueling in Mumbai is suspected.
Ice cased Adelie penguins after a blizzard at Cape Denison, c. 1912, photograph by Frank Hurley
- 1347 older comments, and then…
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Lara Fieri said:
Fantastic 😍
Justice Harlan, three-quarters bust (LOC)
- 1 older comment, and then…
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Jon (LOC P&P) said:
Thanks swanq, we'll update the catalog record.