Conversations

Here are conversations that have happened in the last week on Flickr Commons:

Operating a hand drill at Vultee-Nashville, woman is working on a "Vengeance" dive bomber, Tennessee (LOC)

  • 257 older comments, and then…
  • Flickr said:
    Congrats on Explore! ⭐ January 16, 2025
  • Sigurd Krieger said:
    Congrats on Xplore!!
  • Ian Betley said:
    Lovely shot! ❤

Vogue - Didi Abreu, Details thru Didi (LOC)

  • Flickr said:
    Congrats on Explore! ⭐ January 16, 2025
  • Sigurd Krieger said:
    Congrats on Xplore!!
  • gato-gato-gato said:
    Sehr schönes Bild, mag ich.
  • marinela 2008 said:
    Congrats on Explore !
  • Ian Betley said:
    Wonderful photography 💜

Déanta in Eirinn

  • Suck Diesel said:
    The 1893 Chicago World’s Fair?
    This photo and similar on this site, but subscription only

    www.manchesterhive.com/display/9781526157270/978152615727...
  • Suck Diesel said:
    Lady Aberdeen?
  • National Library of Ireland on The Commons said:
    Suck Diesel Lady Aberdeen appears in the album alright, de réir na Krazy Kataloguers.
  • O Mac said:
    The boys were dress ganged
  • beachcomber australia said:
    Another of Ishbel -
    megazoom - catalogue.nli.ie/Record/vtls000593036


    See - en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ishbel_Hamilton-Gordon,_Marchioness...
  • John Spooner said:
    I'm sure I don't need to remind anyone that it was Chancellor & Sons who had a movable boudoir for the conveyance of sitters to the Galleries, thus obviating the trouble of ascending the stairs.
  • National Library of Ireland on The Commons said:
    O Mac *standing ovation*
  • National Library of Ireland on The Commons said:
    John Spooner Maybe you don't need to remind us, but it is ever a delight nonetheless, as it obviates the trouble of us having to remember for ourselves!
  • Bernard Healy said:
    This account of Lady Aberdeen - mentioning her promotion of Irish industries - squares with the idea of her wearing that outfit. www.irishtimes.com/culture/heritage/an-irishman-s-diary-o...
  • beachcomber australia said:
    Via Trove from March 1907 -
    trove.nla.gov.au/newspaper/article/25699180?searchTerm=la...

    " ... Just at present Dublin's gayer than London, and all the fun of the fair seems to have been in Erin's capital, where Lady Aberdeen proves a most popular and delightful hostess at the Castle. Indeed, she has entertained so lavishly that she has been obliged to appoint four pages instead of two, as these young gentlemen are quite unable to stand the late hours unless relieved in turn by others. A new and, I hear, unpopular rule has been introduced at the Viceregal Court by which no gentleman is allowed to be present at a drawing-room unless accompanied by a lady. This is turning the tables with a vengeance on the stronger sex, who must resent it. Hitherto, anyone could go who had attended a levee, and the gay young bachelors looked forward to a drawing-room, where they met the debutante and other fair friends. The presence of these gallant young swains in their various smart uniforms and Court dress undoubtedly added considerably to the brilliancy of the scene. This no-admission rule has of late been in force at Buckingham Palace in order to economise the space. The Dublin Courts have been less formal and partook more of the character of an evening party, where the intercourse between the guests is much freer and more unrestrained. ... ...
  • National Library of Ireland on The Commons said:
    Suck Diesel And I should have said properly earlier, thank you for identifying Lady Aberdeen. That gives us a great foundation.
  • John Spooner said:
    Leeds Mercury - Monday 21 January 1907:
    The first Levee is to be held on the 29th of this month, and the first Drawing Room on the following day. Lady Aberdeen has chosen as her pages the two younger brothers of last year’s pages, the Hon. Gerald Plunkett, son of the Earl and Countess of Fingall, and Sir John and Lady Arnott’s youngest son, Master Tom Arnott.
  • John Spooner said:
    Yorkshire again. Halifax Daily Guardian - Wednesday 17 March 1909
    LADY ABERDEEN'S ROBE. Lady Aberdeen’s full Court robe was magnificent. The rich splendour of the materials made a substantial background for the masses of needlework applied to the old gold poplin of which the dress itself was composed. Across the skirt the Irish trademark was emblazoned in cream and §old threads with borders and bands of Kells embroideries. A wide train of cream-coloured poplin fell from the shoulders, and upon this was wrought in gold a heavy interlaced border made from a design to be found among the illuminated pages of the Book of Kells. Her Excellency wore Irish ornaments, with her superb emeralds.
  • National Library of Ireland on The Commons said:
    Found a snippet in the Freeman's Journal from 15 January 1907, saying:
    With a view to giving some protection against fraud, an Irish Trade Mark has just been registered. The mark, which is an old Irish design, 2ith the motto "Deanta in Eirinn" (made in Ireland), can now be legally fixed to all Irish goods, and is a guarantee that they come from that country.

    In London, a suggestion was sent to the Board of Trade that England should do something similar, with a rose design.
  • National Library of Ireland on The Commons said:
    John Spooner To borrow from beachcomber australia, you're always amazing! So it was St. Patrick's Day Eve in 1909.

    Was it still Gerald Plunkett and Tom Arnott, or had other boys been "dress ganged"?
  • John Spooner said:
    Daily Mirror - Tuesday 16 March 1909. Are these the same pages? Daily Mirror - Tuesday 16 March 1909
  • John Spooner said:
    The 1909 pages were named in Lady of the House - Monday 15 February 1909 - "Lady Aberdeen's pages this year are Master Alick de Burgh (senior page) and Master Pim (junior page)."

    Edit: The Illustrated London News says they are Tom Arnott and Cecil Pim. (caption of the same photo as the Daily Mail)
  • beachcomber australia said:
    John Spooner Thinking that is this dress, also described via Trove in February 1909 - trove.nla.gov.au/newspaper/article/126572486?searchTerm=l...

    " ... Beautiful embrolderies were the salient feature of the gowns seen at the second Dublin drawing-room. Lady Aberdeen's gown of the palest shade of silver-grey chlffon velvot created a furore of admiration. The embroidery expreasod a Celtic design taken from 'Tho Book of Kells, and was the work of tho Royal Irish School of Art. Needlework. The sleeves of this attractive gown were of exquisite Limerick lace, the manluru de cour being of velvet of a deeper shape outlined with embroidery and draped with Irish lace. ..."
  • National Library of Ireland on The Commons said:
    John Spooner Have squinted through my pince-nez, and I think they're the same. So Pim on the left, and de Burgh on the right, assuming senior is taller/older?
  • John Spooner said:
    London Daily Chronicle - Thursday 11 February 1909. Sounds like there was some squad rotation going on:
    " The Court train was carried by three pages, who have recently been appointed to the office of Viceregal trainbearers. They were Masters Alick de Burgh, Cecil Pim, and Peter Burton. "
  • John Spooner said:
    The Queen - Saturday 13 February 1909 gives a fuller name for Peter Burton - Master Peter Denys-Burton (son and heir of Sir Francis Denys-Burton)
  • beachcomber australia said:
    Here she is at The Peerage - www.thepeerage.com/p2473.htm#i24723
  • National Library of Ireland on The Commons said:
    N.B. Off topic, but today's your last day to enter our Caption Competition! Winner will be announced tomorrow...
  • John Spooner said:
    National Library of Ireland on The Commons I'm not convinced of the March 15th date. The Daily Mirror picture is credited to Lafayette, not Chancellor, and the dress (and pages) appeared to have been used on other occasions.
  • National Library of Ireland on The Commons said:
    John Spooner Boooo! But you're right. I got over-excira! Amended to just 1909? now
  • Suck Diesel said:
    National Library of Ireland on The Commons Only half right, correct lady but wrong location.
    They sure lived the life of Reilly in those days.
    Good find by John Spooner.
  • Suck Diesel said:

    Couldn’t miss the opportunity to include a pic of the ’Irish Village’ at the Chicago World Fair, complete with a reproduction of Blarney Castle and its stone, in which Lady Aberdeen was involved
  • National Library of Ireland on The Commons said:
    Suck Diesel Marvellous! And apparently, in true Irish tradition, there was The Split! Read in a newspaper that another Lady Somebody ( sorry, can't remember her name) launched a rival Irish Village. Finally, peace broke out when the rival was renamed Donegal Irish Village.
  • John Spooner said:
    (Charles) Peter Denys-Burton at thepeerage www.thepeerage.com/p71500.htm#i714991

    and Tom Arnott who had a distinguished military career www.thepeerage.com/p3270.htm#i32698

    both born 1899.
  • John Spooner said:
    National Library of Ireland on The Commons Mrs Hart
  • Foxglove said:
    The boy on right has an expression that suggests "jesus! if any of me mates sees me dressed like this I will never live it down :-)"
  • John Spooner said:
    Most of the other pictures in the album (specifically those of debutantes and not of Lady A at no 46) have the same unconvincing backdrop including a small balustrade(?bannister). I assume these were taken in Chancellors' studio (just round the corner from the Gunpowder Office) where the M B would have obviated the need for them to use the stairs in their impractical ensembles.

    Number 56 shows two pages, and has the caption "Lady Aberdeen's Pages, Master Tom Arnett and the Hon Gerald Plunket". They don't look like the two with Lady Aberdeen on No 46.
  • National Library of Ireland on The Commons said:
    John Spooner Shaking my metaphorical at Lady Aberdeen's consideration for her pageboys, ensuring they rotated duties and didn't become overtired!
  • beachcomber australia said:
    [Aside]
    Reminded of an awful old quip with literary pretensions:
    In the days of Good Queen Bess, the Queen liked to curl up with a good book; her lady-in-waiting was happy with one of the pages.
    😲
  • beachcomber australia said:
    What is she saying in Fan Language ? ...

    Open wide ........ Wait for me

    via - www.tonyamitchellauthor.com/post/the-not-so-subtle-art-of...
  • Suck Diesel said:
    ..the dress she wore at a Pageant of Irish Industries, held in St Patrick's Hall, Dublin Castle, in 1909. She arrived in splendour, wearing most stately and becoming gown of pale saffron Irish poplin ... the bodice draped with most beautiful Clonmacnoise lace, fastened with gold Celtic ornamel and diamonds; the graceful sleeves were the same lace?..'" Attached to the gown was her official court train, made by Mrs Sims of Dublin, and embroidered by the Royal Irish School of Art Needlework during her previous period as vicereine in the Castle in 1886. Most significant, however, was the embroidered detail, presumably by the Royal Irish School of Art Needlework, that had been added to the front of the dress. Featuring raised gold embroidery on a white poplin ground', the emblem displayed was, in fact, the Irish national trademark, upon which was inscribed, in the Irish language, the words Déanta in Eirinn, meaning 'made in Ireland'

    Vicereines of Ireland
    Campbell, Myles
  • Suck Diesel said:
    beachcomber australia She was the "Queen of John Bull's Other Island"
  • Suck Diesel said:
    Pages on other occasions included “…The Countess and her pages are shown in full Court dress. At the time, Lord Killeen was the nine year old son of the Earl and Countess of Fingall. Master Robert Arnott, who was the same age, was the third son of Sir John and Lady Arnott, and was a page for two seasons under the late Lord Lieutenant.

    www.cat-o-pedia.org/ashtaroth-of-haddo.html
  • Suck Diesel said:
    Do I see a pattern here?
    More pages, this time in Canada

    www.tfcg.ca/history-of-pointe-gatineau
  • National Library of Ireland on The Commons said:
    Suck Diesel Jeepers. Cosmo Gordon is not happy about that ruff!

Enterprise on Main Street

  • Suck Diesel said:
    Same town, different bus, looks prosperous
  • Niall McAuley said:
    Poster at left seems to be for a Tit Bits issue (no laughing at the back!) How King George Saved (my) Life

    King George means 1910 onwards.
  • beachcomber australia said:
    A few minutes before ('Enterprise' is stopped in a queue}. Sadly I cannot read the clock in either - catalogue.nli.ie/Record/vtls000322755
  • Niall McAuley said:
    IJ 401 is registered to Thomas Heston & co. In the 1914 motorist thingy.

    In 1914, the IJs go to 1000, so 400 is at least 1907.
  • Niall McAuley said:
    On the Spectator window, if the AND is centred, there are 5 letters before -----AMPER
  • National Library of Ireland on The Commons said:
    Niall McAuley And I think the AND is indeed centred. I got exhausted after camper, decamper, clamper, glamper. None of which would be good money spinners back around 1907.
  • beachcomber australia said:
    No help with Lawrence 1914 latest date, but the Medical Hall middle distance was replaced by an Ulster Bank in 1920 - www.geograph.ie/photo/3888719#
  • beachcomber australia said:
    Nearly everything has been rebuilt, except the courthouse which has lost its cupola; or is it a belvedere?
    Bangorview - maps.app.goo.gl/hTW7UjDyCtPMiBSk7
  • National Library of Ireland on The Commons said:
    beachcomber australia Don't believe that after all these years, you can't tell the difference between a cupola and a belvedere!
  • DannyM8 said:
    I see a black dog.
  • Niall McAuley said:
    Census no help on AMPER, Photographer and... is usually Retoucher
  • Foxglove said:
    Well done Danny, I missed that one while trying to solve the amper anagram
  • beachcomber australia said:
    National Library of Ireland on The Commons Just testing to see if anyone is awake/alive !

    How about REVAMPER ? www.wordunscrambler.net/words/ends-with-amper
  • National Library of Ireland on The Commons said:
    Foxglove It's a headscratcher, isn't it?
  • DannyM8 said:
    National Library of Ireland on The Commons beachcomber australia Foxglove it might not be Photographer could be Lithographer? Spectator Office is probably a newspaper?
  • National Library of Ireland on The Commons said:
    DannyM8 I sit corrected. You may well be right. I was so focused on the ...AMPER, I assumed Photographer. I will amend in the description above, thanks.
  • beachcomber australia said:
    PRINTER AND BINDER ?? Or even BOOKBINDER ?
    catalogue.nli.ie/Record/vtls000040705

    Edit - As you were; that's an earlier photo.
  • National Library of Ireland on The Commons said:
    beachcomber australia I have been having a nagging notion about [some sort of]STAMPER? Making rubber stamps used to be allied to printing.
  • Niall McAuley said:
    Could be 2 words, like BOOK LAMPER (not a thing)
  • Niall McAuley said:
    I found a dictionary of old occupations page which says KEY STAMPER used to be a thing.
  • National Library of Ireland on The Commons said:
    Niall McAuley Hmm, KEY STAMPER might be a runner, or at least a walker...
  • John Spooner said:
    The County Down Spectator and Ulster Standard regularly advertised the services available at the Spectator Office in Bangor (and Newtonards). This was in the form of a list (which has lost the formatting of the original advert as it appeared) , which took up a whole column. I can't see anything obvious, but here is the list from Friday 23 February 1906:
    PRINTING. PRINTING of every description in BLACK AND COLORED INKS Any Variety of Style, Ornamentai and Plain Executed with rapidity, accuracy, and punctuality, and at Moderate Prices. THE GENERAL PRINTING WORKS, THE “Spectator” Office PLACARDS. POSTERS, WINDOW BILLS, AND HANDBILLS OF EVERY SIZE, IN EVERY COLOR AND AT MODERATE PRICES. COMMERCIAL PRINTING Headings, Catalogues, Memorandun Trade Circulars, Lists of Goods, Account Forms, Invoices, Returns and Statements, Cards, Tickets, and Labels, Handbills, Circulars, Billheads, Delivery Books, é&c. BOOK PRINTING IN ALL STYLES REPORTS, PAMPHLETS AND CATALOGUES, SERMONS AND LECTURES, ESSAYS, POEMS. &C. LEGAL PRINTING OF ALL KINDS. INDENTURES, SCHEDULES, DEEDS, NOTICES, 4TS AND CATALOGUES, SERMONS AND LECTURES, ESSAYS, POEMS. &C. LEGAL PRINTING OF ALL KINDS. INDENTURES, SCHEDULES, DEEDS, NOTICES, 4&C. COUNTRY ORDERS. receive Prompt Attention. Orders sent in from the Country will receive Prompt Attention. &C. COUNTRY ORDERS. l PROGRAMMES, BOOKS OF WORDS, CARDS OF ADMISSION TO CONCERTS, LECTURES, AND PUBLIC AND PRIVATE ENTERTAINMENTS. THE “SPECTATOR” OFFICE, BANGOR. > Possesses a Large and Assorted Supply of Type, the Proprietor being therefore enabled to give the Public guarantee a’ every satisfaction to all Orders receiver
  • National Library of Ireland on The Commons said:
    John Spooner Well, that'd drive you demented! They list everything bar the kitchen sink, but not a whiff of any ...AMPERing.
  • John Spooner said:
    The Spectator's first edition was Friday 3rd June 1904, and its last was in 1915. The advert was soon shortened to the last bit about the Large and Assorted Supply of Type, so no clues there.
  • Niall McAuley said:
    1910-1914, rather than 1907
  • National Library of Ireland on The Commons said:
    Niall McAuley Amended.
  • John Spooner said:
    County Down Spectator and Ulster Standard - Friday 15 July 1910County Down Spectator and Ulster Standard - Friday 15 July 1910

    The Mr Morrow mentioned is likely Matthew Morrow, County Down Spectator and Ulster Standard - Friday 29 April 1910 in a report of an election meeting at Donaghadee:
    Mr Matthew Morrow kindly conveyed a large party from Bangor in his fine new passenger motor.


    On Friday 28 April 1911 it was reported that "Mr Matthew Morrow has already his two motor cars doing daily service to Donaghadee, and he will have a third on the road within a fortnight." (new motor confirmed in July)

    And on 16th May 1913
    New Bangor Motor
    On Saturday the new motor char-a-banc, built by Messrs Hugh Burrows and Son. Newtownards, to the order of Mr Matthew Morrow, Bangor, will start running. From what we have seen of the machine, it is a credit to all concerned, and says much the workmanship of the local engineers by whom It has been built. Mr Morrow's enterprise is certainly very creditable, and as he believes in supporting local industry It Is a pity that more reciprocity In this direction is not extended to him by our local councils/
  • John Spooner said:
    By the 1930s, Mr Matthew Morrow of Bangor was a director of the Belfast Omnibus Company. ( North Down Herald and County Down Independent - Saturday 08 December 1934 )
  • John Spooner said:
    If the building numbers are the same, this is the "motor Garage" seen in the distance (County Down Spectator and Ulster Standard - Friday 03 May 1912) County Down Spectator and Ulster Standard - Friday 03 May 1912

    Matthew Morrow opened a motor garage in 1910, but that was in Holborn Avenue.
  • Suck Diesel said:
    John Spooner Were there also electric cars then?
  • Suck Diesel said:
    Pollocks Jewellers are in the 1912 Lennon Wylie

    www.lennonwylie.co.uk/PT1912.htm
  • Suck Diesel said:
    National Library of Ireland on The Commons No Pollock Jewellers, Main St., in the 1910 Lennon Wylie.
    So 1911 onwards?
    www.libraryireland.com/UlsterDirectory1910/Bangor-4.php
  • National Library of Ireland on The Commons said:
    Suck Diesel Thank you, Mr Diesel. Happy to change the date to 1911-1914.
  • John Spooner said:
    Suck Diesel The wikipedia page on automotive batteries says
    Early cars did not have batteries, as their electrical systems were limited. Electric power for the ignition was provided by a magneto, the engine was started with a crank, headlights were gas-powered and a bell or bulb-horn was used instead of an electric horn. Car batteries became widely used around 1920 as cars became equipped with electric starter motors.

    However, a 1911 advert for the Bangor Motor & Electrical Works says that one of their services is "accumulators charged", and as I understand it accumulator is another term for a lead-acid battery.
    Perhaps the accumulators were used just for powering lamps, and had to be charged periodically.

    There are no doubt many people who, unlike me, know what they are talking about in these matters.
  • Suck Diesel said:
    John Spooner The very earliest cars in the US were a mix of petrol and battery powered, but not in Ireland that I know off.
    More likely the “accumulators” referred to the rechargeable battery commonly used then to power the wireless.
    This being the days before mains radios were available.
  • beachcomber australia said:
    Mr Matthew Morrow seems to have chosen uplifting names for his fleet of charabancs; 'Enterprise', 'Reliance', and ?Wing??. Can't quite read the middle one (here we go again!). Possibly Mr Morrow standing on the right, looking proprietorial, as if he commissioned Mr French / Lawrence to take a series of publicity photos - catalogue.nli.ie/Record/vtls000322755
  • National Library of Ireland on The Commons said:
    Thanks everyone for trying to solve the ...AMPER puzzle today. I'm not giving up yet. As beachcomber australia always says: "Someone will know".
  • Niall McAuley said:
    beachcomber australia I think the middle bus is Invincible
  • beachcomber australia said:
    Niall McAuley Good call !

    If they are the three Morrow 'motors', that would put the photos after 16 May 1913 (via John Spooner's "New Bangor Motor" find above).
  • Suck Diesel said:
    beachcomber australia Probably more than anybody wants to know, but here’s a history of the early days of Bangor buses.
    No mention of “wings”, alas
    Mr. Morrow’s Enterprise service started in 1909.

    “The first road service from Bangor was started in 1906 by Arthur Stringer and was a summer only service to Donaghadee, and in 1909 a similar service was operated by Matthew Morrow with a solid-tyre charabanc. The normal fare was 1/d., but during the 1914-18 War competition was so intense that at one time it was reduced at 2d.
    On the 6th of June, 1924, Mr. Morrow's "Enterprise Bus Company" started a service to Belfast, still with solid-tyred charabancs. At the outset there were four runs a day - three by Clandeboye and one via Crawfordsburn - and the return fare was 1/6d. compared with the third class railway fare of 2/4d., and in March, 1925, the "Bangor Queen Company" started a rival service.
    In the summer of 1925 the "Enterprise" Company introduced the first solid-tyred bus, and it was not until 1926 that pneumatic tyres were used.
    In 1926, to encourage further traffic, the return fare to Belfast was reduced to 1/-d., when the outward journey was made before 10.0 a.m.
    About the same time the "Enterprise" Company withdrew its service to Donaghadee so as to concentrate all its vehicles on the Belfast Road.
    Services between Bangor and Newtownards were also started in the early 1920s, the "Ards Transport Company" running via Conlig, and Coey's service running via Six-Road-Ends,
    This latter service was later taken over by John O'Neill of the "Tonic Company."
    Still another company operating from Bangor was the "Pioneer Company" run by Jacob O'Neill.
    In 1927 the "Belfast Omnibus Company" took over the Enterprise, Bangor Queen and Ards Transport Companies, while in 1935 it, in its turn, was taken over by the Northern Ireland Road Transport Board”

    lennonwylie.co.uk/BangorC5.htm#Coach
  • Suck Diesel said:
    beachcomber australia Looks like ‘Invincible’
    Not mentioned in that bus history
  • CASSIDY PHOTOGRAPHY said:
    Lithographer and Damper. It is a process.
  • VladimirovaS said:
    Suck Diesel 👍
  • VladimirovaS said:
    John Spooner 👍
  • VladimirovaS said:
    Very interesting and useful comments on the photo! 👍👋
    Greetings 😊
  • National Library of Ireland on The Commons said:
    CASSIDY PHOTOGRAPHY This is very helpful, thank you! As the lettering in the window appears to be centred, and you know about this process, could there be another very short word before Damper?
  • National Library of Ireland on The Commons said:
    VladimirovaS Hello there.
  • CASSIDY PHOTOGRAPHY said:
    Just researching lithography, the reference also informed on a "damper" process . . . but the word could also be stamper.

    There would not be many words containing "amper". Most do not make sense, when combined with lithography. So, damper or stamper would serve. I cannot find 5 letters preceding"amper".

    www.flickr.com/photos/gnmcauley/
    en.wikwik.org/m/a/5/wordswithamper.htm
    www.flickr.com/photos/adambangor/2811888712
    www.geograph.ie/photo/717181
    www.findmypast.co.uk/newspapers/northern-ireland/county-d...
    "Earliest issue: June 3, 1904"
    www.irishnews.com/notices/livesremembered/2019/01/26/news...

    Well, that's the limit of my research. Ask the current owner of the "Spectator". Surely, they would know their own history and may even have photos.
    www.medialive.ie/index.php?option=com_sobipro&pid=338...
    countydownspectator.co.uk/

Suffragette meeting in gymnasium, London (LOC)

  • Seuss. said:
    Emmeline Pankhurst on the left. Christabel Pankhurst on right?


Suffragette speaking from cart, London (LOC)

  • swanq said:
    I think the back of the cart says, "GEORGE REED, Newton Abbot."
    - en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Newton_Abbot
    "Newton Abbot is a market town and civil parish on the River Teign in the Teignbridge District of Devon, England. "
  • Seuss. said:
    I don't think this is London. I don't see that cart traveling the 200 miles from Newton Abbot to London in the age of steam trains.

    Devon Live suggests that the woman speaking is local Suffragist Edith Splatt campaigning in Newton Abbot in 1908. This photo actually appears on the Edith Splatt wikipedia page but the speaker is identified as Mary Gawthorpe which seems more likely. The lady with the hat is identified as Nellie Martel


[Worker installing a chandelier in the House of Representatives Dining Room] (LOC)

  • Edmund said:
    "I'm dustin' the bulbs, Miss Daisy".

Mrs. Sauer hanging up oil lamp. Cavalier County, North Dakota (LOC)

  • clive422 said:
    My aunty had oil lamps in her home in Cornwall during the 1960s. Nice picture.

Garfield Assassination Site

Captions, please! Enter our Caption Competition to celebrate 10 years of Volunteer Takeover of NLI Flickr...

  • 27 older comments, and then…
  • Johnny Doyle said:
    Delighted with the success of their attempts at stuffing the Turkeys for Christmas, Mary and Edith decided to expand their skills.
  • Dorota Rawicz-Lipinska said:
    'I hope to God that this string is strong enough!'
  • Charlotte Kelly said:
    ‘The Great Barn Robbery’
  • Mary Kelly said:
    Edith, will you not get rid of that drab and unbecoming hat. It makes you look quite eccentric.
  • Dún Laoghaire Micheál said:
    Lady on right: "Here's one we made earlier. Now we're going to show how you too can make a stuffed toy. All you need is some feathers and fur . . ."
  • Rita Dolan said:
    I said I was ‘partial to animals’, Edith - not ‘a party animal’!
  • una faller said:
    that face you make when you remember what they say about working with animals...
  • dermot byrne said:
    The smile that tells you, "All is well in hand ".

Cafe Cathay at night featuring its neon facade containing two large Chinese dragons

  • Michael Lehmann said:
    Many thanks for adding The Surfers Paradise Cafe Cathay to CRWDP!

    Have tagged for the pool-index :-)

William Street from corner near College Street, Sydney, 1934, by Sam Hood

02_H-00478 Susan Hardy PSA Image

  • Mitch Barrie said:
    My god, those wigs.
  • CASSIDY PHOTOGRAPHY said:
    How times and Cabin Crew have changed.

02_H-00477 Susan Hardy PSA Image

  • Giovanni Massa said:
    I know what happened next.

This Cold and Flu Season Nothing to Sneeze at

  • k said:
    Yes we can!!!

Lane off George Street North, Sydney, c. 1906,

  • covid convict said:
    I'm not sure when this pic was taken...possibly during the demolitions that took place in ca. 1908 for the widening of George St North...if you zoom in on the original, at the top of the stairs you can see the 'Sailors Welcome' signage painted on the wall of the Ocean Wave Hotel...this doesn't appear in the pics taken in [1901], so it's later than then...the Ocean Wave Hotel was evidently demolished in 1908, so that's a latest date...

    Also see the comments and links at these pics
  • geoff.barker285 said:
    i checked the poster re subdivision sale in Manly which was in 1906 so am presuming around that date.
  • covid convict said:
    geoff.barker285 Good! I didn't see it!

A13_0042 Oxygen Tank Serial

  • 1 older comment, and then…
  • Bill Abbott said:
    Very valuable photo. How in world the wiring was damaged, then it was dropped, then bolted into SM 109 and became part of Apollo 13, with documented test anomalies, is a complete mystery. The through-line to the Challenger disaster, then Hubble Space Telescope being launched without an end-to-end test of the optical system, and with more than one heavily used fine positioning gyroscope installed, followed by the loss of the first Ariane 5, the Mars Climate Orbiter, and then the Columbia Shuttle suggest that "moving fast and breaking things" is exciting for uninhabited vehicles when you have a fat bank account, but not good advice in general. Just sayin'.

Six Sheehans? Some shyly smiling, some simply serious...

  • beachcomber australia said:
    10 June 1947 was a Pouffeday ...
  • National Library of Ireland on The Commons said:
    beachcomber australia Sounds legit. Amended above, thank you.
  • Niall McAuley said:
    Here is a Nicholas Sheehan of Dunmore getting married in 1935 to a Mary Brigid Power of Corbally More.

    brother? William a witness
    civilrecords.irishgenealogy.ie/churchrecords/images/marri...
  • National Library of Ireland on The Commons said:
    Niall McAuley I bet that's him. Married Mary Brigid Power on 11 June 1935. Was this photo a sort of anniversary celebration? Almost 12 years to the day?
  • Niall McAuley said:
    Here is a Nicholas with brother William in the 1911 census, Leperstown:

    www.census.nationalarchives.ie/pages/1911/Waterford/Kille...
  • Niall McAuley said:
    Too late for birth records for the children, 100 year rule.
  • National Library of Ireland on The Commons said:
    Niall McAuley Both Nicholas and his brother William aged 2. Twins or "Irish Twins", do you think?
  • John Spooner said:
    A Nicholas Sheehan was a member of Dunmore East Parish Council (report of meeting in Waterford Standard - Saturday 2 August 1941)
  • beachcomber australia said:
    Wow! ...
    www.legacy.com/ca/obituaries/theglobeandmail/name/mary-el...

    It is with profound sadness that the family of Mary Ellickson announces her passing from this world on Monday, February 26, 2024. Mary was born in Leperstown, Dunmore East, County Waterford, Ireland, on October 14, 1936, and was the eldest of six children of the late Nicholas and Bridget (Lil) Sheehan. Mary was raised in the Catholic faith, and she remained devoted to those beliefs throughout her life. Mary was a true example of a person whose life was shaped by her Christian beliefs. Mary immigrated to Canada in 1957, joining her soon to be husband, Peter Ellickson. ... ...
  • National Library of Ireland on The Commons said:
    ɹǝqɯoɔɥɔɐǝq Wow indeed, and hello Mary! 10 years after this photo was taken, Mary was off to Canada...
  • beachcomber australia said:
    Another site has these two photos of Mary -


    From - www.kearneyfs.com/obituaries/mary-catherine-ellickson
  • Michaelkelly Kelly said:
    I want to know more about Leperstown
  • John Spooner said:
    Political ambitions beyond the Parish Council
    Waterford Standard - Saturday 18 October 1947
    Fine Gael, the chief opposition party in the Dail, in selecting Mr. Nicholas Sheehan, farmer, Leperstown. Dunmore East, as their candidate, have made a wise and popular choice. He is a man of fine character who will work in the' national interest faithfully and constructively. In the city and county he is receiving the support of all who wish to rid the country of the present political sham. A monster meeting will be held at Broad Street, Waterford, to-night in support of his candidature.
    Alas, after coming 2nd to John Ormonde (Fianna Fail)
    Mr. Nicholas Sheehan said that he prided himself the fact that they had put up a goad fight, and he believed they would do better in the near future.
    (Waterford Standard - Saturday 01 November 1947
  • beachcomber australia said:
    Yikes!

    "The Leaving of Leperstown"
    The Story of the Sheehans of Leperstown, Dunmore East, Co. Waterford
    By Catherine Floe · 2005

    www.google.com.au/books/edition/The_Leaving_of_Leperstown...
  • beachcomber australia said:
    Michaelkelly Kelly - Here you are ... www.waterfordtreasures.com/the-leper-hospital-and-church-...

    ... According to tradition, the leper hospital was founded in 1185 by Robert le Poer [Power] who endowed it with almost 800 acres of land for its upkeep. King John granted a further 900 acres to the leper hospital when he visited Waterford in 1210 on condition that the lepers prayed daily for him. Most of this land was located near Dunmore East and in an area still known as Leperstown to this day. King John’s grant also included the land stretching from John’s Bridge through Johnstown and John’s Hill to Ballytruckle. All that remains of the leper hospital on the site now is a two-storey house with a limestone fireplace bearing the date 1632. ...
  • Swordscookie said:
    The current Morning Mary is setting a very high standard of alliteration today!
    Throwing down the gauntlet for those who might replace her
  • Niall McAuley said:
    National Library of Ireland on The Commons Nicholas and William were regular twins, both born on 14th September 1908, William the elder by 20 minutes.
  • Niall McAuley said:
    beachcomber australia From that first obit: settled for the rest of their lives in Vancouver joining our Aunt Catherine (Kate) and were soon to be joined by the rest of the Sheehan clan.

    So more of the family may have emigrated.
  • John Spooner said:
    In September 1933 Nicholas Sheehan of Leperstown and eight other farmers (including John Sheehan of Dunmore East) were arrested and charged "that being members of an unlawful association, they did promote, encourage, and advocate the non-payment of local taxation". There was a second charge , "that they conspired with others to compel persons to join the Farmers' and Ratepayers' League , and did also compel those persons to sign a document which said that the League adhered to its resolution , stating that owing to the economic war with Great Britain farmers in the Irish Free State were deprived of their means of livelihood and consequently were unable to meet their liabilities".

    After 3 weeks (or 4 weeks depending on who you believe) in Mountjoy prison, the were tried by a military tribunal at Collins barracks. The hearing lasted several days, from 5th October to 10th October 1933, on which day all nine farmers were acquitted of all charges. There was debate on the final day as to whether remarks by Mr de Valera had prejudiced the trial.

    The hearing was reported widely.
  • John Spooner said:
    Lil's death was reported in the Irish Independent on 3rd December 1993
    SHEEHAN - Lil - Dec. 1. 1993 in Vancouver Hospital. late of Leperstown. Dunmore East: deeply regretted by her sister. brother-in-law. nieces. nephews and ail her relatives and friends.
  • Liam Cheasty said:
    Michaelkelly Kelly
    Leperstown is in the Electoral Division of Killea, in Civil Parish of Killea, in the Barony of Gaultiere, in the County of Waterford

    The land was once gifted and belonged to the Leper Hospital in Waterford City as a source of income. Some of the land was once comanage.
    The barony was established in 1672 post Cromwell. The name Gaul Tier means Land of the Foreigners, specifically the Vikings who were ousted from Waterford City with the Norman Invasion of 1171, King Henry 11. Ballygunner and Ballytruckle are place names of the Vikings Gunnar and Truckle, both would have been outside the city walls and were in Gaultier.
  • Michaelkelly Kelly said:
    Liam Cheasty Thanks! Super interesting.
  • Michaelkelly Kelly said:
    beachcomber australia Thanks!

The Bishop's daughter from the Shannon's waters

If a tree falls in a forest, will it end up in a sawmill?

  • 12 older comments, and then…
  • Foxglove said:
    several so young that schooling was basic and an an apprenticeship was gold.. several early teens in the rows

NMRTC Beaufort Sailor of the Year Hospital Corpsman Second Class Caleb Ellis 250106-N-CQ135-6002

  • k said:
    Great photo of the person!!!!

Soiscel Molaise

  • O Mac said:
    It's the lid of an 8th century box

    en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Soisc%C3%A9l_Molaisse
  • National Library of Ireland on The Commons said:
    O Mac "... carrying case for a holy book." So not to far off with my ornate book cover guesstimate.
  • beachcomber australia said:
    Flickr is sometimes amazing! In 2018 via Marten Kuilman
  • National Library of Ireland on The Commons said:
    beachcomber australia Glorious in colour. So the book itself is no more.
  • Suck Diesel said:
    And another one
  • National Library of Ireland on The Commons said:
    Suck Diesel Thank you.
  • John Spooner said:
    Irish Times - Friday 06 May 1898 reports on the some newly carved oak work in the chancel of Clonmel Clonfert Cathedral. The new bishop's throne comes in for high praise, and on it "the emblems of the four evangelists are taken from the Soiscel Molaise" (on the advice of scholar Miss Margaret Stokes).

    Could it be that the photograph was taken in order that the woodcarvers could make accurate copies?
  • National Library of Ireland on The Commons said:
    John Spooner Absolutely lovely to think so! A little more evidence is needed though...
  • John Spooner said:
    National Library of Ireland on The Commons Since the neighbouring Mason images in the catalogue seem to be an unrelated (but possibly exhaustive) assortment of religious artefacts, I think it's unlikely.
  • Suck Diesel said:
    Pop in next door to see the real thing, where it is catalogued as NMI R4006


    “The book was lost sometime in the late 18th century, and almost nothing of its content or style was recorded”

    en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Soisc%C3%A9l_Molaisse
  • John Spooner said:
    Here's the bishop's throne from Clonfert Cathedral, with the c. 1898 carvings of the evangelists based on the Soiscel Molaise figures, surrounding local hero St Brendan.

    roaringwaterjournal.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/06/bishop...
  • beachcomber australia said:
    The Basic Bibliophile's Limerick

    It's not very hard to discover
    When repeated by every book lover,
    And the wise old powers
    Of Library Towers
    Say, "Don't judge a book by its cover!"
  • National Library of Ireland on The Commons said:
    beachcomber australia Delira and excira with our first Limerick by beachcomber of 2025! Here's to many more...
    (though less of the "old", if you please)

Unidentified dancer, possibly an Elizabeth Duncan dancer (LOC)

  • 16 older comments, and then…
  • Luc said:
    Félicitations pour avoir été exploré!

    Congratulations for being explored!

    🎉

Chimchimeny Chimchim Chiree at Lough Rynn House or Castle

  • 21 older comments, and then…
  • Mohill History said:
    Read about the history of this estate – Lough Rynn – and the Clements family, including Lord Leitrim at mohill.com or www.loughrynn.net. Also more history of Mohill and Leitrim!
  • National Library of Ireland on The Commons said:
    Mohill History Thank you very much!

2014-72-p28

  • Ryan O'Malley said:
    just a dam, not sure which one
  • Community Archives said:
    Ryan O'Malley Thanks!

Reifschneider "Balloon shop" (Streator) (LOC)

  • swanq said:
    See description for a group of Bain prints (not digitized)
    - www.loc.gov/item/2005675310/
    which includes " interior of William Reifschneider's "balloon shop" at Streator, Illinois"
  • swanq said:
    From thefirstairraces.net/stuff/breguet/pre1914index.html
    "William Reifschneider (or Reiferscheid?) "Eagle" airship (USA, 1903-1904)
    A contrivance consisting of two major parts, a cigar-shaped balloon, to which was attached a frame, on which were six propellers. Four propellers were used for ascending and two for steering. The power was supplied by a gasoline engine. The Streator, Illinois inventor declared that his ship could be driven from Chicago to New York at the rate of 100 miles an hour, and that it could be sailed around a tower with its side touching the structure at all times. It was planned to construct the machine at an expense of $ 10,000. "
    Pictures at thefirstairraces.net/stuff/breguet/images/720bis.jpg and thefirstairraces.net/stuff/breguet/images/720bisa.jpg
  • Jon (LOC P&P) said:
    Thanks swanq, we'll update the catalog record.

    I did want to point out that the collection you linked to has photos from the Bain collection. In many cases they are duplicates of the negatives, but occasionally there are some that we don't have negatives of. They are also helpful sometimes when the negative is damaged, sometimes the photo is still in good shape.

Work on submarines, winter, Brooklyn (LOC)

  • swanq said:
    From ussnautilus.org/submarines-at-the-brooklyn-navy-yard/
    "While no submarines were ever built in the Yard, the dry docks were a frequent home for repairs and short stays. The USS Porpoise and the USS Shark, built in 1903, spent time being refitted in the Navy Yard dry docks. It was also here that they were disassembled in 1908 to be transported to the Philippines where they served until 1919."
  • swanq said:
    See
    - www.ibiblio.org/hyperwar/OnlineLibrary/photos/images/n0-0...
    which appears to be from the reverse direction and is dated Jan 25 1908.
  • Jon (LOC P&P) said:
    Thanks swanq, I think you're right. We'll update the catalog record.

Belin receiving a telephotograph (LOC)

New York - Paris race - Godard in motobloc leaving Paris with moving picture camera, Paris (LOC)

  • 1 older comment, and then…
  • 1hr photo said:
    Godard was quite the character. He competed in the 1907 Peking - Paris race, in a Dutch 'Spyker', where after several set-backs, he made unbelievable time to get back in the race. It was revealed many years later by his co-driver that he had pulled the same train stunt as he later got caught doing in the NY - Paris.

    You can read much more about Godard (and a cast of other motoring adventurers) in Kassia St Clair's wonderful book, "The Race To The Future":

    uk.bookshop.org/p/books/the-race-to-the-future-peking-to-...

Suffragettes, London (LOC)

  • swanq said:
    The meeting was to be at Essex Hall, Essex St. Strand on Monday Nov 25, which means that this photo is from Nov 25, 1907 or a few days earlier.

    Speakers to be:
    1. Mrs. Despard -- en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Charlotte_Despard
    "Charlotte Despard (née French; 15 June 1844 – 10 November 1939) was an Anglo-Irish suffragist, socialist, pacifist, Sinn Féin activist, and novelist. ... Despard was imprisoned four times for her suffragette activism, and she continued campaigning for women's rights, poverty relief and world peace into her 90s.
    Also www.suffrageresources.org.uk/database/1783/mrs-charlotte-...
    "Her father was a naval captain. Her mother was committed to a 'lunatic asylum'. She married a wealthy radical Liberal, Maximilian Despard, in 1870. He died in 1890. Her sister Katherine Harley was an NUWSS member."

    2. Miss Irene Miller -- www.suffrageresources.org.uk/database/2232/miss-irene-fen... "Daughter of suffragist Florence Fenwick Miller. ... In October 1906, she was arrested and imprisoned for her part in a demonstration in the lobby of the House of Commons. In September the following year, she was one of those WSPU members who disagreed with Emmeline Pankhurst's resolution to make the WSPU, in effect, 'undemocratic' by forcing through her will on how the party would be run. Irene was therefore among the group of women who split to form the Women's Freedom League (WFL)."

    3. Mrs. Edith How-Martyn -- www.suffrageresources.org.uk/database/2019/mrs-edith-how-...
    "Edith was an early member of the WSPU, and in 1906 was jointly appointed, with Charlotte Despard, as honorary secretary of the WSPU. She gave up her job as a mathematics lecturer to devote herself to the cause. She was arrested in 1906 in a scuffle with police in the lobby of the House of Commons, and served one month of a two-month sentence. Together with Charlotte Despard, she broke away from the WSPU in 1907 to form the Women's Freedom League (WFL). She had come to believe that violent militancy would not win women the vote, but that law-breaking in the form of passive resistance would better win over politicians and members of the public. Edith was thence honorary secretary of the WFL from 1907 until 1911"

    4. Miss Alison Roberta Noble Neilans -- www.suffrageresources.org.uk/database/2271/miss-alison-ro...
    "Alison was an organiser for the Women's Freedom League (WFL) and was a member of its executive committee by 1910. She was arrested and imprisoned a couple of times in 1908 and again in 1909, and sentenced to an average of one month in prison."
    - en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alison_Neilans
    "Alison Roberta Noble Neilans (19 June 1884 – 17 July 1942) was an English suffragette. Neilans was a member of the executive committee of the Women's Freedom League, a member of the Church League for Women's Suffrage and the East London Federation of Suffragettes, where she worked with Sylvia Pankhurst. She was also a member of the board of the International Woman Suffrage Alliance.
  • swanq said:
    See Despard and Neilans in this photo from the London School of Economics Library (LSE Library)
    Women's Freedom League caravan tour
  • swanq said:
    Essex Hall is in a photo by www.flickr.com/photos/ak-74/ that has a description of its history.
    Essex Hall

Reconnaissance Photo Aerial View Toulon, France

  • 1 older comment, and then…
  • Anciens Aérodromes said:
    Saint-Mandrier

Reconnaissance Photo Aerial View Cannes France

  • 1 older comment, and then…
  • Anciens Aérodromes said:
    Fréjus

Assembling books for blind (LOC)

  • swanq said:
    The booklet "Books for the blind : finding list. Supplement, May, 1906-December, 1908," produced by the California State Library, is available at
    - babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=uiuo.ark:/13960/t04z0x33n&...
    Sub-lists include "Books in New York Point" [ see www.nyise.org/apps/pages/index.jsp?uREC_ID=444368&typ... ] and "Books in American Braille."

    See also
    Blind man reading magazine (LOC)

    See "War of the Dots"
    - www.afb.org/about-afb/history/online-library/war-dots
    for the history of different technologies used for generating books that blind people could read with their fingers.
  • swanq said:
    See "A Short History of the Andrew Heiskell Braille and Talking Book Library" at New York Public Library.
    - www.nypl.org/node/29573
    "The New York Free Circulating Library for the Blind was established in 1895 by Richard Randall Ferry, a wealthy hat manufacturer who suddenly became blind. When this budding braille collection was formally incorporated into The New York Public Library in 1903, it was housed in a Manhattan neighborhood parish house. The collection was moved to the St. Agnes Branch at 444 Amsterdam Avenue in 1906, and was again relocated to a larger site in the Central Building at Fifth Avenue and 42nd Street in 1911. Library staff provided home braille instruction and free delivery of books to those persons who were unable to travel to the Central Building's Reading Room."
  • swanq said:
    New-York Tribune. Jan 8, 1908, p. 4
    - chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn83030214/1908-01-08/ed-...
    has a piece titled, "A Circulating Library That Could
    Use More Books to Advantage," which makes it clear that the New York Public Library branch at 444 Amsterdam Avenue, NYC has books in a number of different "types" for reading with fingers and that most of the delivery and return was done by mail.

    An interesting piece on the state of training and employment for the blind in 1908 is:
    "The Technical Training And Industrial Employment Of The Blind In The United States"
    By S. M. GREEN, Superintendent of the Missouri School for the Blind: 1908
    available at: socialwelfare.library.vcu.edu/issues/technical-training-i...
    "Twenty-nine states have schools for the young blind, the usual age limits for admission being six to twenty years. In addition to these, ten states have dual schools which have the deaf taught in the same school with the blind, and under the same management."

Thaw jury, New York (LOC)

  • 2 older comments, and then…
  • swanq said:
    According to en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Harry_Kendall_Thaw
    "Harry Kendall Thaw (February 12, 1871 – February 22, 1947) was the son of American coal and railroad baron William Thaw Sr. Heir to a multimillion-dollar fortune, he is most notable for murdering the renowned architect Stanford White in front of hundreds of witnesses at the rooftop theatre of New York City's Madison Square Garden on June 25, 1906. ... Thaw was tried twice for the murder of White. Due to the unusual amount of publicity the case had received, it was ordered that the jury members be sequestered. The trial proceedings began on January 23, 1907, and the jury went into deliberation on April 11. After forty-seven hours, the twelve jurors emerged deadlocked. Seven had voted guilty, and five voted not guilty. ... The second trial took place from January 1908 through February 1, 1908. ... At the second trial, Thaw pleaded temporary insanity."

    An example of coverage of the second trial on Page 1 of many newspapers, see Quad-City Times [Davenport, Iowa] Jan 17 1908. P. 1, top right
    - www.newspapers.com/article/quad-city-times-evelyn-thaw-to...
  • swanq said:
    See also:
    Thaw trial - crowd at Tombs [prison,] New York (LOC)
    Mrs. Clare C. Lowerie, Thaw case witness (LOC)

Mrs. Catherine Wentworth in her art studio, 15 W. 67th St., New York (LOC)

  • swanq said:
    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Catherine_D._Wentworth
    "Matilde Catherine Denkmann Wentworth (1865 – March 3, 1948) was an American artist known for her portraits of women and a benefactor of New York City's Metropolitan Museum of Art."

    See Former Tri-City Girl Wins International Fame as a Portrait Artist in Quad City Times [Davenport, Iowa], Aug 25, 1925
    - www.newspapers.com/article/quad-city-times-former-tri-cit...
    "Was Previous to Her Marriage Miss Catherine Denkmann, Daughter of the Rock Island Lumber King; Took Her First Lesson in Drawing at St. Katharine's School in Davenport; Her Recent Exhibition of Portrait Paintings Featured the Present Art Season in Paris; Praised by the Leading French Critics."

    www.rogallery.com/artists/catherine-denkman-wentworth/?pa...
    "She was born in Rock Island, Illinois to Frederick C.A. Denkmann and Catherine [Bloedel] Denkmann. She was one of seven children born to this influential family. Her father was president of Weyerhaeuser & Denkmann Company ... She went to Wellesley and the Art Institute of Chicago, then moved to Europe to study with several artists in Holland, Munich and Paris."
    "In 1898 she married Edward Spencer Wentworth, an opera singer. In 1910 they moved to Paris where they would live for many years."
  • swanq said:
    Exposition des oeuvres de Mme Catherine Wentworth : 6 février au 20 février, Hôtel Jean Charpentier, Paris. Publisher: Paris : Hôtel Jean Charpentier, 1925.
    available online at:
    - bibliotheques-specialisees.paris.fr/ark:/73873/pf0000066367
    Includes several portraits, but not the two seen on stands in this Bain photo. The catalog lists some sculptures as part of the exhibit, but they are not shown in the catalog.

    More biographical information at
    - issuu.com/noauction/docs/july_29-30_estates_auction/s/280...
  • swanq said:
    Related photo in Bain Collection
    Catherine Wentworth studio  (LOC)

Catherine Wentworth studio (LOC)

  • 2 older comments, and then…
  • swanq said:
    See also
    Mrs. Catherine Wentworth in her art studio, 15 W. 67th St., New York (LOC)

PBY Catalina seaplane undergoing maintenance at RAAF base at Rathmines

  • John Kohnen said:
    A PBY "Catalina"
  • State Library of New South Wales said:
    John Kohnen 👍

Fietsster glijdt uit door ijzel / Glazed frost: girl falls over with her bike

  • 2 older comments, and then…
  • Olof Fredrikze said:
    Tim Boric Dreef, hoek Florapark.

B-25J

  • 2 older comments, and then…
  • Margaret Kincannon said:
    My father, TSgt. James H. Mills, flew several missions that included rocket-equipped B-25J-2 A/C #718 near the end of the war. One that he clearly recalled (3BS mission #145 on July 20, 1945) was against a spinning mill used as a warehouse in Wuchang. It was protected by searchlights that locked onto his plane as it approached the target. He flew as tail gunner aboard A/C #715, another B-25J-2, that hit the target just after 2130, and then A/C #718, with an all-Chinese aircrew, arrived about two hours later to finish the job.

Dirigible balloon, "La Ville de Paris" (LOC)

  • swanq said:
    See comments with
    Dirigible balloon, "La Ville de Paris", built by Henri Deutsch (LOC)

Dirigible balloon, "La Ville de Paris", built by Henri Deutsch (LOC)

German fire engine, Germany (LOC)

  • swanq said:
    See also
    German fire engine, Germany (LOC)

    German fire engines, Germany (LOC)

Migrant Mother, Nipomo, California

  • 377 older comments, and then…
  • GJ Brown said:
    Born and raised in California - Unfortunately never visited Nipomo

To-night you may need one of these articles: Kemp's Balsam, Lane's (a tea) Family Medicine, Lane's Cold Tablets

  • james burton said:
    wonderful

Unidentified house, Washington?, Wilkes County, Georgia (LOC)