World War, 1914-1918 World War, 1914-1918, collection.
1761-1968; predominant 1914-1918 . 4.5 m of textual records and
other materials.
Arrangement: alphabetical by personal name (Boxes 1-7), official files
(Boxes 8-11), the Carlow aviation collection (Box 12), artwork (Box
13), Parliamentary Recruiting Committee, London, leaflets (Box 14),
Ville Libre de Dantzig (Box 15), French and Belgian Generals
letters collection (Box 16), printed materials, maps, and other items
(Box 17), sound recordings and moving images (Box 18), photographs (Boxes
19-24), albums (numbered 1-73).
Boxes 1-7; arrangement by personal name. These boxes contain
correspondence, photographs, post cards, maps, manuscripts, typescripts,
orders, diagrams, programmes, souvenirs, song-sheets, artwork, and printed
materials. See also numbered albums at the end of this finding aid.
Box 1
F.1 Anonymous. An untitled manuscript about Gallipoli and
Constantinople, 51 pages. Possibly from the British Embassy, Constantinople.
F.2-3 William Bailey, 1914-1919. 2/15th Battalion, London Regiment.
Official correspondence, notification of being wounded, pay book, pocket
dairies, news clippings (file 2). Programmes, passes, tickets, greeting
cards, b&w annotated photographs (includes Alexandria, Egyptian
rebellion, Palestine, hospitals), b&w photograph postcards (Fleet
review, Spithead, 1914; various troop groups), personal correspondence.
Artwork by Sgt. Boddy: watercolour titled our bivouac on the Vardar
Salonica, 1917; pencil sketch, cartoon, orders, Turkish cigarette
papers, issue of The Grey Brigade, documents in Turkish marked
souvenirs. (file 3).
F.4 Admiral David Beatty, Commander-in-Chief, British Grand Fleet,
1918. Messages on signal forms to/from the Commander-in-Chief of the
German High Sea Fleet to arrange details for the Naval Armistice. Rear-Admiral
Meurer was authorized as the German representative and there are messages
from him as well. All text is in English.
F.5 C.W. Berry, 1917-1919. Personal and official correspondence,
2 b&w photographs, German and Belgian money, map in pencil, dated
13 September 1916, of the area around Rossignol Wood.
F.6 C.E. Bent, typed copy of letter to Mrs. Skene, from Bas Oba,
Belgium 28 January 1919.
F.7 Tom Burrow Bindloss, 1915-1919. Record of service,
b&w photographs (himself, Mudros, Lemos Harbour), 3 pocket diaries,
1915-1918, official correspondence, Leave / Duty ration book, mimeographed
poem Hospital 10.
F.8 A.C Bishop, Royal Marine Artillery, 19151920. Target
book with gun notation measurements, b&w annotated photographs
in Belgium and France (himself, guns, ruins, Ostend), post cards.
F.9 Charles H. Bowering, 1915-1919. Two postcards to his wife
Sarah and one postcard from her. Also Bowerings Comrades of the
Great War certificate, 12 May 1919. The remainder of the documents concern
HMS Roxburgh which on 20 June 1915 was damaged by torpedo from
German submarine U39. There are 4 handwritten pages about the events
of 20 June as well as a copy of a letter of 12 August 1915 concerning
services rendered by certain officers and men in connection with
the salvage of Roxburgh. There are two diagram sketches
of a ship convoy, including the Roxburgh, on 24 May 1917 after leaving
Hampton Roads. Also in this file is a document containing printed messages
from Naval, Military, and Civil Authorities of Estonia, as well as an
English translation of a leading article from a Finnish newspaper, 21
November 1919.
F.10 Sgt. George Bowyer, 118th M.G. Corps and Pte.
Charles Gilbert Bowyer, Cambridgeshire Regiment, 1914-1918. Pre-war
Recruitment leaflet and programme, Cambridgeshire, January 1914, personal
and official correspondence, an issue of The Balkan News, 4 December
1916, Christmas cards, 2 b&w photographs. The only documentation
concerning Pte. Bowyer is his death notice, 20 July 1916.
F.11 Doris Boyes, National Registration card, 1915
F.12 Fred Braggett, 1917-1918. Five postcards written to his wife
F.13 Major F.E. Buchanan, Royal Scots Fusiliers, mentioned in despatches,
13 July 1916 the certificate recording this issued on 1 March
1919.
Mrs. Byam-Grounds, Comité Britannique de la Croix Rouge Française
certificate, 1920; contains engraved border of nursing sisters, wounded
soldier, places. Oversize, Map Cabinet 38.
Box 2
F.1 L.E. Chirney, 15th Battalion London Regiment, 1917-1919.
Official correspondence, certificates, news clipping, 5 b&w postcard
photographs with signatures, religious pamphlet peace celebrations programme.
F.2 Robert Coe, Royal Engineers, 1916-1918. Autographed programme,
b& w photograph presumably of Coe, 4 ration books for Robert Coe
and other family members, 4 col. post cards, 4 b&w postcards, 12
b&w photographs predominately of ships (H.M.S. Lysander and
Emden, others not identified), 2 pages of notes taken at cadet
school, printed drawing of a horse with harness from the Training Depot
at Aldershot in August 1916, and other documents.
F.3 Ethel Cotton, 1915-1918. Three post cards written by her brother
to Miss Ethel Cotton and one written to Mrs. Cotton by her son Jack,
1915. Also 1 b&w photograph, a History of the Old Contemptibles
pamphlet, 1918; 3 col. post cards.
F.4 Miss Curzon. Autograph collection, 1916-1921, including Byng
of Vimy and Lloyd George. In addition to the autographs, there are six
letters from Lord Curzon to Milner and others, as well as several third-party
letters including Oliver Lodge, General Maurice, Robert Reid, W.P. Pulteney,
and others which have no apparent connection to the Curzons.
F.5 Capt. O.T. Daniel(s), Lincolnshire Regiment. Carrying case
for messages, several messages and signals forms with messages, one
order, lists, and letter to Capt. Daniels.
F.6 W.A. Ellington, 1917. Ellington was a POW at Spandau prison.
He received weekly packages paid for by Mrs. Stocks sent through the
Central Prisoners of War Committee. Receipt of parcel cards, 1 postcard
from Ellington to Carrie Stocks, 3 letters from the Committee to Mrs.
Stocks with receipts, standard and individual parcel lists, printed
documents.
F.7 Sister M.C. English (nursing sister, probably Canadian), 1915-1920.
War badge service certificate, issued in Victoria, B.C., 1919, which
indicated she served in France. Two Christmas cards from the No. 1 Canadian
Stationary Hospital, 1915-1916. Allied Women on War Service Dinner,
Paris, August 1918. Postcards, b&w photographs, most of them of
nursing sisters with soldiers and hospitals. There are 2 photographs
from 1915, one marked Turkish prisoners, and the other of
a field hospital, although the photograph depicts horses with a wagon
at a camp. There are two documents in German (one is a paybook issued
to Johann Rutert which indicates he was vaccinated by a British doctor)
and another document in Polish, 1920, issued to Sister English.
F.8 Susannah Mary Graham, National Registration Card, 1915. Also
one post card.
F.9 Evangeline Brandford Griffith, 1914-1919. Notes on Experiences
Amongst the War Refugees, ts., 14 pp., n.d. but concerns 1914
Griffith was in charge of transport. By 1915 she was in France.
Correspondence from the War Refugees Committee and the Friends Ambulance
Unit; also a autographed dinner programme and other documents, 3 b&w
photographs two of French nursing sisters and one of a VAD. Published
final report of The War Refugees Committee, 1919.
F.10 Commander A.W. Gush, Royal Navy, 1915-1915. Four passes belonging
to Gush; Bombardment of Dunkerque on 22 June 1915
typed list with notations by Gush; National Theatre at The
Front notice.
F.11 Colonel Hans Hamilton, 1917. Two official letters, 2 pages
of notes, Allied War Photographs Exhibition programme.
F.12 Lt. Col. C.F. Healey, Dublin Fusiliers, 1914-1919. Six b&w
photographs of the Fusiliers outside their barracks on parade
several of the photographs are annotated with names and whether they
were wounded or killed; one portrait of Healey. Also appointments, battle
order and other official documents. His Croix de Guerre certificate
issued by the Belgian King Royamme de Belgique is oversize,
in Map Cabinet 38.
Box 3
F.1 Pte. Frank Henbury, 1917-1919. Pay book, demob certificate,
service certificate, Out-of-Work Donation Policy book.
F.2 Squadron Commander T.G. Hetherington, 1916-1918. Letters re
the development of tanks; includes a copy of memorandum re a libellous
article published in The World about him, Commodore Murray Suetor,
and Wing Commander Briggs.
F.3 Pte. E.W. Hodgson, Royal Fusiliers, 1916-1920. Many letters
and post cards to different family members, 1916-1918; news clipping,
1920
F.4 J.W. Hunter, Heavy Battery R.G.A., 1915, 1917-1918. Orders,
messages, maps, 8 b&w photographs of the Driving Competition, 80th
Brigade, R.F.A. in Swanage, April 1915 (depicts horses pulling gun carriages
and then the setting up of guns); annotated lists of the sick and wounded,
1918. Not all documents in this file appear to pertain to Hunter.
F.5 Charles Bertram Jones, Royal Navy, 1916. His service record,
including list of ships he served on he joined the navy in 1911
and served until 1923. Unbound Diary of H.M.S. Marlboroughs
Firing off Jutland May 31, 1916, 4 handwritten pages (one page
is missing); b&w post card photographs, predominantly of the Marlborough.
F.6 Sir Alfred Keogh (1857-1936), Director-General, Army Medical
Services, War Office, 1916-1925. Two letters to John MacAlister (1856-1925),
Secretary of the Royal Medical Society, 1916 and 1925. The latter letter
which reflects back on the war notes MacAlisters illness which
resulted in his death later than year. Also in the file is a typescript
Friday, 8th. November 1918, Written from a train, in
Compiègne Forest, author not known; also 2 post cards of
the train.
F.7 Sgt. A Kilpatrick, Canadian Engineers; Capt. C.H. Kilpatrick,
1917-1918. Letter from E.W. to A. Kilpatrick, 1917; also a letter to
Miss Kilpatrick, 1918, from the War Office both
documents concern Kilpatricks bravery. C.H. Kilpatrick, orders,
passes, 1 official letter. The file also contains a b&w photograph
(1917, France, Riding School, AYR) the soldiers are
grouped before a building with the sign Royal Artillery School.
F.8 Peter Morton Sturges Latham, 1914 and 1921. His commission
and de-commission papers.
F.9 Lieut. D.G. Logan, R.F.A., 1915-1916. Field message book,
incoming official correspondence, advance pay book, Howitzer chart.
F.10 Muskatier Peter Ludwig (German), 1918; Lutheran military printed
songbook, 1897; six postcards, four of them are addressed to Ludwig
1918; printed cards of saints (the one of Loyola has the date 1831 written
on the verso).
F.11 Lieut. C. MacDonald, 1918-1919. Two printed song-sheets (The
Hielan Division and Good Old Fifty-First, both
published in 1918 by Paterson, Sons & Co. Ltd, Edinburgh with artwork
on their covers by Leonard J. Smith, and MacDonalds name); 2 printed
maps, one in French showing the Front from 1 March to 16 April 1917,
the other in German; b&w postcard photographs, many concern the
Black Watch places include Belgium, The Somme, Cambrai, Bethune,
Verdun; depictions include ruins, marches, German prisoners at work,
trenches. Also aerial photographs, postcard in German, news clippings.
John Monck. Decorative travel permit issued under Kaiser Wilhelms
name to John Monck, attaché at the British Embassy, in Berlin on
5 August 1914. The document appears to indicate that Monck had deserted
Germany and thus required protection. Oversize, map cabinet 38.
Box 4
F.1-4 William Newsam McClean, Royal Engineers, (assigned to the
Australian Corps for part of his service), 1916-1918; 1924. Letters
to his wife, Agnes (Aggie) Maude, 1916-1917 (file 1). Officers
record of service, commission, Some Notes on Trench Construction
written by McClean and published in 1916, passes, b&w photographs
of trenches three of the photographs are noted as being Russian,
a note with the photographs identifies some of them as the Billericay
trenches, 1915, 3 aerial photographs, 3 photographs of churches.
Also situation, trench maps, field service and sectional books (file
2). Official correspondence, messages, greeting card, orders, money
(file 3). Artwork (5 pen and ink cartoon / caricatures; 1 pencil drawing
of trench boards), letters from F.K. McClean and others, My War
Experience, a five- page manuscript for the war history with a
thank-you note to McClean from F.J.M. Stratton, 1924.
F.5 William Alan Menzies, 118 Abbey Road (and others living at
that address), 1915-1918. Rations books, registration cards, shopping
cards.
F.6 Elizabeth Jane Moore, Defence of the Realm permit book issued
in 1918 with photograph.
F.7-8 Major Sydney H. Morgan, East Lancashire Divisional Engineers,
and Lieut. Cyril F. Morgan, East Lancashire Royal Field Artillery, 1915-1918.
Commissions, 1915, official and personal incoming and outgoing correspondence,
1916-1918, messages and signals, railway vouchers, 1 b&w photograph,
3 copies (file 7). Programmes, menus, greeting cards, money, tickets,
officers record of service for S.H. Morgan, orders, gun registration
lists, range tables, notes on The Somme, part of a trench map, protractor
for plotting compass bearings, field notebook and other documents (file
8). See also Albums 60a-c (photograph album and notebooks) and Box 11,
F.11
F.9 J.E. Myzerall, 1918-1919, pass and leave books
Box 5
F.1 Capt. Charles John Spencer Nicholl, Welsh Regiment, 1914-1919.
Officers record of service book; also b&w photograph of Nicholl.
The book indicates that Nicholl re-joined the services in 1930.
F.2 Diana Katharine Robinson, 1915, 1917. Postcards from her father
and aunt; ration sheet, greeting cards mostly unsigned, blank postcards,
special Zeppelin Supplement, 1915.
F.2a Florence P. Robinson, 1917-1918; her Canada registration
card, 22 June 1918, field post card to her, 6 August 1917.
F.3 W.J. Russell, 1914-1916. Enrolment certificate in the Old
Contemptibles Association, 1914; photograph of the 5th
R.I. Lancers retiring from Mons, 1914; detail pencil sketch of 85 fire
trench, 1916, b&w photograph of the model of Old Contemptible.
F.4 Muskatier Friedrich Wihelm Karl Scharwächter
(German), 26 Jul.-4 Oct. 1918. Regimental documents, 4 pp. concerning
his Überweisungsnationale [assignment national] as well
as the document, which records him as being from Remscheid, Prussia,
1909-1915, 24 pp. [many pages with printed forms not filled out].
F.5 James Sharpe, 1914-1917. Registration card, trade card, Munition
Volunteer card and letter of appointment.
F.6 Lieut. Gerald
Caldwell Siordet, 13th Rifle Brigade. Privately printed book,
containing a photograph of Siordet, his poetry and artwork. A note indicated
he was killed on 1 March 1917 but The Times reports the date
correctly as 9 February 1917. Also an offprint of one of his poems To
the Dead it was published in The Times, 30 Nov.
1915, using the name Gerald Caldwell as was the first poem in the book
(13 Nov. 1914). Poems in ms., 1 official letter, letter from his sister
Vera to Archie, 1918. News clippings including a letter to the editor
of the Morning Post on the classics by Siordet, n.d. Biographical
information on Siordet was supplied by his great nephew James Ritchie
in 2008.
F.7 Brig.-Gen William H. Sitwell, 1917. Ts. The Situation
in the Present War, 26 July 1917; b&w portrait of Sitwell.
F.8 Major Isham Percy Smith, 1917, 1924. Photograph of his and
his fathers grave and marker, news clipping (death notice), letters
of condolence to his mother, Ethel Saunders, on the death of her son
from: Guy Beech, Chaplain to the Forces, Church of England, 17 Dec. 1917
and H.W.T. Phillips, Commander of the 6th Corps Heavy Artillery,
27 Dec. 1917. Smiths leather wallet, and other documents, b&w
portrait photograph of Smith, 2 portraits of his father, Maj.-Gen. Percy
Smith, letter to Ethel Saunders from the Royal Engineer Corps Committee,
1924. Also a scarf with the lyrics and music to Its a long,
long way to Tipperary, illustrated with flags, shamrocks, and
marching soldiers.
F.9 Cpl. W.G. Smith, 1914-1915. Postcards, messages, including
one from George V, which is annotated as being rare.
F.10 Robert Sturgeon, 1st K.G.S.B.
Headquarters runner. Field Message book, 1918.
F.11 Hermann Thomas (German), 1917. Two business cards identifying
him as Lehrer [a teacher or tutor], Lutheran military printed
songbook, 1897, b&w postcard photographs (three are family members),
b&w and col. postcards some are blank, four have messages
in German, blank notebook.
Box 6
F.1 Miss Thurstan (Red Cross nursing sister),1914- 1918. Letter
to her from Joint War Committee if something happened to her
while serving the Military Authorities would not provide any compensation.
Thurston has annotated this letter at the bottom and in a separate note.
Three postcards, all written to Miss Eden, National Union of Trained
Nurses. One postcard from the Russian Front, pmk. 1914 may be from
Thurston as the hand appears to match her annotations. B&w photograph
(General Ivanovs Army: A Russian ambulance train at the
front. Sisters having breakfast). There are 2 additional postcards
from Monk to Miss Eden, one of the postcards depicts an
exchange of Russian and German prisoners in Lapland. Five b&w Russian
postcards annotated in English on their versos, 1914-1915. Also a pamphlet,
The Volunteer Army of Alexeiev and Denikin, by Prince P.M. Volkonsy,
1918.
F.2 Lieut. John Frederick Turpie, 1916-1919. Commission, officers
record of services book.
F.3 Mayor W.F. Vint, Sunderland, 1917-1919. Letter from the Royal
Train ,15 June 1917, written by Clive Wigram, regarding the success
of the royal visit to Sunderland; two souvenir programmes, 1919.
F.4 Lt.-Col. Reginald Selby Walker, Royal Engineers, 1914-1918.
Walker was the son of Lieut-Col. J. Selby Walker and was married to
Ethel Bridget Walker; he was killed on 30 September 1918. Typed transcript
of his War Diary, 14 pages, field service book, pass, French
certificate. Letters to his mother, 1915-1916, letters and telegrams
of notification and condolence to his wife, 1918. News clippings (obituary
notices), b&w photograph of Walker. Also a letter to Miss B. Walker
from the military, thanking her for a gift of rugs for the Remount Hospital,
1914.
F.5 Capt. John Lucas Warry, 1915-1917. Four letters, two to his
aunt and two to Dorothy Killed in 1917. Photocopies of
obituaries notices.
F.6-9 Col. F.D. Watney, The Queens Royal West Surrey Regiment,
1902-1920; predominant 1915-1918. Four files of letters written to his
wife. Also news clippings about the Regiment, b&w photographs, one
taken in 1903 of Major Watney, and one taken in1920 of the 18th
Division Headquarters Staff in Mosul (including Watney), February 1920
; two letters and copies of telegrams to Watneys wife re a minor
injury sustained by Watney in 1916, copy of a menu, issue of The
Journal of The Royal Institute of British Architects.
Box 7
F.1 Lieut. J. Weddespoon, Royal Flying Corps, 1916-1917. Pilots
Flying Log Books (2), 1916-1917, map of Belgium, B Series, Sheet 38
S.W., order and official correspondence, news clippings. Letter from
Wedgwood Benn to Weddespoon, 1917. Pamphlet, Fighting in the Air,
1917. B&w photograph of a pilot, written on the verso: Brought
down at Vimy Ridge on a S.P.A.D., 25/3/1917, Baker, Canadian G.L. &
missing, brought down first time over the lines.
F.2 Lieut. Cyril J. Wentworth, Royal Sussex Regiment, 1913-1916.
Wentworth was sent by his mother to the Royal Naval Volunteer Reserve
Cadets in 1913-1914 there is some correspondence on his conduct
there; he was not accepted back into the reserves because of problems
at Dunkirk. Printed Field Service Book, 1915, orders, gas pamphlet,
letters to his family (not dated), two letters from Major C. Crawford-Stuart
in the Sudan, 1916; b&w photographs and postcard photographs (family
and military, including four of Sikhs and one happy one of soliders
heads peering out from a tent flap), bank book, greeting cards. There
are also two letters to the Wentworths from Jack Carne, a notice of
Carnes death, and a typed letter to Carnes mother notifying
her of his death.
F.3 Lieut. Melville Arthur White, Royal Flying Corps. White was
from New Zealand, his obituary notice (photocopy) contains the details
of his military career. He was killed over France on 23 April 1917.
Ts. carbon, 21 July 1915, written in Alexandra [Egypt], 6 pages. B&w
photograph of his aunt, Miss A.B. Weir at his grave in Jeancourt Cemetery,
copy of letter to Miss Weir about White, 2 b&w photographs of White.
F.4 Miss E. Wilde, 1917. British Red Cross certificate.
F.5 Pte. Bert Wood, 1916. Two letters to his parents and two letters
from; one envelope is annotated that Wood had been killed.
F.6 D.F. Woollan, Scots Guards, Second Battalion, 1918-1919. B&w
photographs and postcard photographs, many are annotated, most are military
scenes but there are a few theatrical ones. Three greeting cards, envelope
from D.F. Woollan to Mrs. Montgomery Woollan.
F.7 Lieut. J. Alexander Wright, 1916-1917. Field Message books,
notes and notebook, official correspondence. Also in the file is letter
in French, Department of The Somme.
F.8 Various, English: 8 postcards and a greeting card that could
not be identified as belonging to any of the files listed above or the
album collection. One is an embroidered design of flags and flowers
with the year 1915 on the verso is To Lousia with love
from her brother Harry. Another is embroidered flowers with "Yours
Always" also embroidered on the verso is "To my dearest
Maj with true love from Jack".
F.9 Various, German: 4 postcards described below:
1- Military postcard from [Fran?] [...] [Neikes?]
to Muskatier Volkenbarn of the Infanterie-Regiment 60, 3. Bataillon,
10. Kompanie, dated 26 Sept. 1918, postmarked Oberhausen, Rheinland,
27 Sept. 1918.
2- Military postcard from his friend [...] to
Füsilier Paul Deichsel of the Füsilier-Regiment 38, 3. Bataillon,
10. Kompanie, postmarked [-]gramsdorf [?], Oct. 1917.
3- Military postcard from [?] to Füsilier
Paul Deichsel formerly of the Füsilier-Regiment 38, 3. Bataillon,
10. Kompanie, postmarked Metschkau, [Silesia], 28 June 1917.
4- Military postcard from his friend Ignatz
to Bataillons-Tambour [Franz Opare?] of the Bataillon [Ersatz?] Regiment
10, dated Schweidnitz, [Poland], 10 Sept. 1917, postmarked the same.
F.10 Various, Dutch and French: 3 cards described below:
* Ration certificate from the Nationaal Hulps- en Voedingskomiteit [National
Committee of Aid and Provisions] to Joseph Van hutten of Square Gutenberg,
No. 25, Brussells, 5 Mar. 1918, 1 card.
Dutch and French.
* Card for purchasing shoes at Van Helmontstraat shoestore to Van Meertens
of Sq. Guttenberg, no. 25, Brussells, 8 Oct. 1917. Dutch and
French.
*- Coal card from ... to Gerard Hubert Van Meertens aka Vermeulen of
Square Guttenbeerg, no. 25, Brussells, [1917?], 1 card. Dutch
and French.
Official:
London Scottish: See also Robert Whyte (separate fonds) and Album
65
Box 8
2/14th Battalion, London Regiment (London Scottish).
F.1 Signaling instructions, cable and communications diagram and
notes, secret code words (file 1a). Transportation instructions, animal
allotment, cooking instructions for meat and potatoes, Farewell Order
to 60th (London) Division, Lewis Gun ammunition sheet, demobilization
procedures, musketry lecture notes, handwritten trench notes, Operation
Orders by Major R. Whyte, list of officers, Common Faults in Musketry,
officers posting, examination instructions, secret memos, disembodiment
notice, uniform list, mess kit diagram, Notes for Lecture on Trench
Warfare, official correspondence, notes on bombing, telegram from
R. Whyte, signaling notes, official notes, legend for markings of horse
drawn and motor vehicles, Battalion Orders, Proceedings of a Committee
of Officers to consider adoption of suitable headstones for battalion
members, court of inquiry into missing signaling equipment. Also includes
charge sheets and summaries of evidence (typed and handwritten) against
W. R. Tarranttheft and Sapper A. Kingdeserting (file 1b).
F.2 Instructions on foot care in the trenches, march table, National
Insurance Cards procedures, Personal and Camp Hygiene procedures, Operation
Orders by Col. J. W. Greig, Operation Orders by Act. Major Robert Crerar,
map of area around Royal Botanic Gardens, lists of troops (strength,
furloughs, discharges, transfers etc.), 2/4th London Infantry
Brigade Programme of Training, Operation Orders by Col. E. W. Baird,
Battalion Orders by Col. J. W. Greig, Battalion Orders by Lt. Col. A.
E. Rogers, Battalion Orders by Lt. Col. Robert Dunsmore (file 2a). Daily
Orders Part II lists of troops (file 2b).
F.3 Operation Orders by Lt. Col. R. J. L. Ogilby, orders for 179th
Infantry Brigade, memos, attack ideas.
F.4 Operation Orders by Major V.C. Egerton for 2/16th Bn., Transport
of an Infantry Battalion chart, observation post procedures, dress and
equipment procedures, battle standing orders for the 60th
division, organization operations with appendices, secret memos, relief
notice, departure procedures, camp standing orders, memo on baths, list
of offences and punishment, notes on discipline and saluting, defence
schemes with appendices, more observation post procedures, communications
scheme, special idea for aeroplane patrols.
F.5 Battalion 00 and Administrative Insts. Operation Orders by
Major R. Whyte, Lt. Col. R. J. L. Ogilby, and Captain R. M. Robertson.
F.6 Map of Belgium and Part of France Sheet 29 Ed
3, map of Belgium and Part of France Sheet 28 S.W., map
of Wervicq Sheet 28 S.E. 1, map of Hell Farm,
map of Enemy Defences Sheet 28 S.W., map of Ploegsteert
Sheet 28 S.W. 4, operation orders for 90th Infantry Brigade,
operation orders by Captain H. Buchanan, communication notes, notes
from preliminary examination of 5 O.R. prisoners, some memos, signal
instructions, operation orders by Lt. Col. N.G. Pearson, Very
Secret signal communications, diagram of communications, a march
table.
Box 9:
2/14th Battalion, London Regiment (London Scottish)
F.1 179th Infantry Brigade
Operation Orders by Brigadier General F. M. Edwards, Field Day ideas,
associated memos, transport and supply arrangements, march tables, march
orders, Programme of work to [be done at] night
F.2 179th Infantry Brigade
Operation Orders by Captain E. Sherston (?), march table.
F.3 Envelope full of Dispersal Certificates
(Soldier). Notebook containing: lists of troops, officers, cold shoers,
carpenters, shoemakers, tailors, butchers, vehicle signals, snipers,
men who speak French, trench life guidelines, Trench Mortars Anti-Aircraft
Position Finders, and transport notes. Associated memos, Billeting
Arrangements for the March, List of Duties Found by 2/4th
Oxf. & Bucks. L. I. in Etaples, Field Service postcard with side
filled in addressed to Robert Whyte, page torn from a notebook about
a proposed meeting point (above all in folder entitled Operation
Orders). Operation Orders by Lt. Col. R. J. L. Ogilby. Dispersal
Certificates, Operation Order by Major R. Whyte, 90th Infantry
Brigade orders. Preliminary operation orders with appendices and a map.
Report on body-snatching mission, including: a report by Wm. J. Bethune
2nd Lieut detailing their (the Body Snatching Party)
capture of German prisoners, a report on two missing Body Snatching
Party members, nominal roll of raiding party, notes on the raid, and
code for 2/14th Regt. Raiding Party.
F.4 Lists of honours and awards given for the 2/14th
Bn London Regt (London Scottish), including the Military Cross, Bar
to M. C., Distinguished Conduct Medal, Bar to M. M., Military Medal.
List of awards winners with justifications, handwritten lists, recommendations
for honours and accompanying justifications, a trench plan (?), requests
for award publication in the London Gazette, honour roll, and
associated memos.
F.5 Transfer procedures, trench orders and procedures, blank Daily
Work Table of Work to be Done, memos, correspondence between R.
Whyte and Capt. J. Peterson regarding typewriters, bugles, pipes, and
drums, handwritten Orders of Dress, handwritten transport
procedures, list of addresses and signal calls, Gum Boots, Use
Of, gum boot reparation guidelines and other associated correspondence,
specifications for drying sheds, blueprint entitled Details of
Nissen Fire Box, memos on iron rations, procedures for censoring
correspondence, correspondence regarding the Chief Censor and the importance
of secrecy, inventory lists, Medical Arrangements of Battalions,
Narrative of Work Done by Brigade Staff, censorship regulations.
In a separate folder: narrative of operations, Assault on Trenches
operation orders, schematics for barbed wire, trench sections, bomb
storage.
F.6 Conference minutes regarding routine
orders and associated appendices, a memo on football equipment and divisional
teams, revised battalion orders, daily intelligence summary orders,
report procedures, blank shell observation report table, Operation Orders
by Major C. H. Flower, relief instructions, provost arrangements, provisional
defence scheme, Administrative Instructions in the Event of Move
and associated memos and addenda, operation orders, Infantry Battalion/France/War
Establishment table of horses/mules and personnel, list of different
kinds of officers. There is a separate folder in the file entitled and
containing Divisional Admin Instrs.
Box 10:
15th Division, Corps of Royal Engineers
F.1 Divisional orders, printed map
of Auchy Lens dated 11 June 1915, and a hand-drawn map entitled Plan
shewing Cellars in 15th Div. AreaArras
dated 12 March 1917.
F.2 Hand-drawn maps (trenches and infrastructure) of Somme, Ypres,
and Arras. Also contains hand-drawn schematics entitled Block
Plan of CellarsRue de Donai, a traced map of Arras, an untitled
traced map showing Porte Baudiment (Arras), printed maps of Arras (?)
with hand-drawn details dated between 2 September 1916 and 25 April
1917, and a printed map labelled No. 3.
F.3 Divisional orders, defence scheme,
narrative of operations of the 15th Division, administrative
instructions (re: relief of 15th Division by 2nd
Australian Division), memos, Account of the 15th (Scottish)
Division on the Somme, notes on dugouts and shelters, cellar reports,
reconnaissance reports on The River La Scarpe (handwritten and typewritten),
Report on the part taken by the 74th Field Company
RE, and a list of casualties. Also contains several maps.
F.4 Original folder cover, To be handed over to C. R. E.,
15th Division. Divisional orders, including anti-aircraft
defence procedures, information obtained from refugees about infrastructure
(bridges, railways, etc), copy of Record of 15th (Scottish)
Division. Also contains several maps.
F.5 Original folder cover, C. R. E. Operation orders
plus associated addenda and corrections.
F.6 Printed maps with hand-drawn details
of Illies (France), Bois du Biez (France), The Scarpe Valley (France),
Martinpuich (France). Also contains printed trench maps of Belgium and
France (4), two printed maps entitled Cambrai Road and The
Triangle, a traced map of a dugout, and aerial photographs
(some with details drawn in) taken between 26 July 1915 and 8 April
1916.
Box 11 Various
F.1 Batallion Order Book 180th Infantry Regiment (German);
manuscript, 23 pages. Also a typed letter in English, 13 November 1916,
noting the capture of this document by Captain Hacker and a mimeographed
extract from the book translated into English (one page).
F.2 Historical Record of 125 Heavy Battery, R.G.A., in France;
ts. carbon, 13 pages.
F.3 Captain Arthur E. Hartzell, Inf., U.S.A., Meuse-Argonne
Battle (Sept. 26 Nov 11, 1918); mimeograph, 47 pages.
F.4 Lieutenant J.E.H. Neville, The Story of the 52nd
Light Infantry from the 20th to the 30th of March,
1918,; mimeograph, 27 pages, includes sketch map.
F.5 Lieutenant Colonel H.A. Robinson, Battalion Routine Orders
for the 26th (S) Bn. Royal Fusiliers; mimeograph and ts.
carbon, 25 pages, includes a map.
F.6 Commiques to the Troops, one dated, 26 January 1916 and the
other, 10 March 1916, both from Major General Charles Townshend, 6th
Division, both issued from Kut.
F.7 Scots Guards, 2nd Battalion, 1914, 1918. Mimeographed
letters and statements. Most of the material concerns escaping from
the Germans; one letter is written from prison camp by Pat Bolton, 1914.
Also an order by General Sir W.R. Robertson, Eastern Command, re conversations
between prisoners of war in Germany, 1918.
F.8 Royal Air Force, No. 41 Training Squadron, 1917-1918; 2 pieces
of correspondence, order sheet.
F.9 41st Infantry Brigade, Order and list of gas attacks,
1918.
F.10 208th Brigade Headquarters, handwritten letter,
24 April 1918, re airship over Doncaster.
F.11 Royal Engineers, 1917-1918; lists of military personnel and
their trades in Sections 2, 3, 4; also a description of stores in No.
2 Section.
F.11 Official History of the War, Military Operations: France
and Belgium1918, The German Offensive, Fifth Army, 21-23 March.;
first draft, chapters and sketches, mimeographed, slip-cased, with covering
letter from the Director of the Historical Section, Military Branch,
1928 to Major S.H. Morgan, asking him for corrections and additional
information.
Oversize: shelved beside Box 11. Celer et Audax. Being a Record
of the 9th Battalion of the Kings Royal Rifle Corps. 1914/1918,
by the Batallion I.O. Typescript carbon, 97 pages. Bound in red leather
the spine identified the author as Lieut. Eric Barlow. In a pocket
constructed as part of the binding are: maps, intelligent reports written
by Barlow, notes, correspondence with Barlow (1951-1966), photographs
(some of which are reproduced in the typescript), dinner menu and programme,
1936.
Fifty Royal Irish Lancers diary see Album 21.
Box 12
Richard Calow collection of letters about World War I aviation.
Most of the letters were written to Calow, an American, in 1966. Callow
also collected some earlier letters addressed to Rev. C. Greenway. Calow
presumably posed the following questions: most interesting experience,
who was the best pilot, air records. For some he only asked for an autograph.
Incoming letters, from former American servicemen; exceptions noted
F.1 Wainwright Abbott, 28 November 1966
F.2 Clifford W. Allsopp, 31 October 1966; also news clipping and
b&w photograph
F.3 R. Alex Anderson, 30 December 1966
F.4 T. I. Ardway, undated photograph only
F.5 Harry A. Batchelor, 7 November 1966
F.6 Charles J. Biddle, 9 August 1965; also b&w photograph
F.7 Lester Strayer Brady, n.d.
F.8 Arthur Raymond Brooks, 17 September 1966; also his war record
F.9 Harold Robert Buckley, undated war record only
F.10 Douglas Campbell, 9 November 1966
F.11 Leland M. Carver, n.d.
F.12 Alan A. Cook, 29 September 1966
F.13 Willy Coppens (Belgium), 20 April 1966, 23 September 1966;
2 letters and 1 postcard; angry letter about General Gallands
claims in World War II.
F.14 John E. Costigan, 18 July 1965
F.15 Edward P. Curtis, 18 October 1966
F.16 W. A. Curtis, 27 October 1966; mentions Billy Bishop
F.17 Andre de Meulemeester (Belgium), n.d.; letter, 2 col. photographs
of a painting of his house and neighbourhood; ink sketch of the house.
F.18 George Dock, 9 October 1966; discusses how thousands of Vietnamese
worked as labour troops for the French
F.19 H. Bradley Fairchild, 26 September 1966; discusses how he found
a way to shoot at German troops (shot at ditches) without hurting their
horses.
F.20 Fearchar Ian Ferguson, 26 September 1966
F.21 Henry Forster, 10 October 1966; describes flying a plane
untrained while in the navy
F.22 Fremont C. Foss, 3 November; describes 2 close shaves!
F.23 John E. Halligan, n.d.
F.24 Chas L. Heater (?), 31 October 1966; also a b&w postcard
photograph of Clemenceau visiting a French aviation camp near front
F.25 Alfred. Heurtaux (France), 10 October 1965; also b&w photograph;
refers Calow to Association Nationale des As du Communiqué
F.26 Thornton D. Hooper, 9 June 1967; also an autograph
F.27 Charles Dabney Horton, 2 October 1966; also b&w photograph;
describes weird adventures: story about firing at (and missing)
a white homing pigeon; releasing loose sheets of propaganda paper only
to have them clog the planes motor; forcing an emergency landing
only to have the wind destroy the plane later on in the night; crash-landing
on a beach close to a hospital, sustaining head injuries and briefly
losing his memory.
F.28 Frank OD. Hunter, 19 February 1968; also an autographed
Sky Birds col. card of himself, No 70, autographed. There were 144 bubble
gum cards in the set.
F.29 Earl Wedderburn Hutchison, 1 December 1966
F.30 Clinton Jones, 21 January 1966, 29 January 1966; his son and
grandson also became pilots; very detailed accounts of whom he considered
to be the best fighters; Bishop was a very sloppy flier and his
landings were terrible but he was the best gunner.
F.31 David Edward Judd, 28 September 1966
F.32 Chas W. Kerwood, 17 October 1966
F.33 Jim L. Kinney, 15 November, 1966
F.34 C. M. Kinsolving, 3 October 1966; also b&w photograph
F.35 W. C. Lambert, 23 August 1966; fan of Bill Claxton; also col.
picture of a Sopwith Camel printed on cardboard.
F.36 David W. Lewis, 19 October 1966. Some day I will answer
your letter at greater length. Meanwhile here is my signature as requested.
no follow-up letter extant.
F.37 Frederick Libby, 9 March 1966
F.38 Kenneth Littauer, 4 October 1966; only his autograph
F.39 E. L. Lussier, September 1968; also a Christmas card; writes
about his daughter, who flew in World War II, rather than about his
own experiences
F.40 Francis P. Magoun Jr, 7 August 1965. Here is the signature
you asked for but I cannot deal with any further communications.
F.41 Chas. P. McCormick, 29 September 1966; only 2 b&w photographs
(1, wreckage, 1918)
F.42 George C. Mosely, 27 September, 1966; notes he wrote a book
he published on his World War I experiences
F.43 Edwin C. Parsons, 22 June 1966, 14 February 1968; letters suggest
a dialogue between Calow and Parsons
F.44 George C. Philipoteaux, n.d.; 4 newspaper clippings (one reports
Philipoteauxs death), b&w photograph of his mother Lillian
N. Philipoteaux, May 1913; 2 b&w postcard photographs one
contains a message from George to his mother; the other shows a crashed
aeroplane in Germany, 28 June 1919, telegram re George passing a test;
letter to George from The Aero Club of America, 1917.
F.45 Donald S. Poler, 10 February 1968; also a tear-sheet with article
about Poler.
F.46 Lionel Wilmot Brabazon Rees (Great Britain), 16 January 1934;
letter is addressed to Rev C. Greenway, sent from a yacht in Nassau,
Bahamas; Rees received the Victoria Cross
F.47 Eddie Rickenbacker; 17 February 1936, 20 March 1959, 4 November
1959; 3 letters and a detailed account of shooting down some Fokkers;
1936 letter is addressed to Rev. C. Greenway; letters from 1959 are
addressed to Robert Liska.
F.48 Alexander de Seversky (Russia); autographed portrait dated
20 December 1963
F.49 Harry F. Slarb, 17 February 1969; in the post-script, Remember
we never had any parachutes. Also 3 b&w photographs
from a reunion of overseas pilots in 1966.
F.50 Homer I. Smith, 13 October 1966
F.51 Reg Soar (France), 18 January 1966;letter is in French and
English
F.52 Carl A. Spaatz, 20 July 1964
F.53 Elliot W. Spring, autograph only
F.54 Stanley Stanger, 4 October 1966; I do not consider that
shooting down another pilot is a memorable experience. I had the privilege
of meeting one of them who was wounded, and who subsequently died. He
was a young fellow just like me, and I never regretted anything more
than that I should have taken his life.
F.55 Joseph C. Stehlin, 20 October 1966; served in three wars
F.56 Alan P. Tappan, 6 December 1966; enclosures not extant
F.57 William P. Taylor, 21 January 1967; chosen as the official
historian for the 148th Aero Squadron
F.58 W. J. Tempest (Britain), 21 February 1932; addressed to Rev.
C. Greenway; names Capt. Albert Ball as his top ace, speaks warmly of
the American Army men he met, remembers Christmas dinner with the Americans.
Also an auction sales catalogue listing for this letter.
F.59 W. Turner-Coles, 13 March 1968; No. Unfortunately I was
not in the movie Hells Angels.
F.60 George Vaughn, n.d.
F.61 Arch G. J. Whitehouse, autograph only.
F.62 Paul R. Winslow, signed souvenir program for Winslows
guest appearance at the New York Chapter of Cross & Cockade, 28
October 1966
F.67 News clippings of photographs of aeroplanes, pamphlet published
in 1917, Silhouettes dAvions, typed notes about the collection.
Box 13:
Artwork
Arrangement is by artist and then date. Unknown artists
appear at the end. Artwork also appears in the boxed collection (1-7)
and the numbered albums.
1. Flouret, Eglise bombardée de Fresne-en-Woerre, watercolour,
n.d.
2. A. Fouet, Mont Saint Eloi Pas de Calais, watercolour,
Jul. 1915
3. A. Fouet, Tank named Sammy, watercolour,
16 Apr. 1917
4. A Fouet, Champagnes, watercolour,
Apr. 1917
5. A. Fouet, As datout tank française,
watercolour, 1917
6. A. Fouet, Ovillers Somme, watercolour, 1917
7. A. Fouet, Versailles, watercolour, 1917
8. A. Fouet, Arras, watercolour, 1919 (?)
8a,b. Hermkuhn, P.O.W.; 2 Dutch landscapes depicting windmills, sheep,
both with human figures; watercolours, 12 Dec. 1918 and 15 Dec. 1918
9. P.E. Lott, Battleship, watercolour, Oct.
1911; battleship is Centurion, Ajax, or Audacious
10. Howard Oulsnam (?), Gen. Maude, watercolour and pencil,
1918
11. Percy Smith, 15 Howitzer, etching, 1916
12. D. Snaith, The Wounded Soldier, pen and ink drawing
with water-colours, 1916; despite the title this is a charming image.
13. Trench, Ypres, watercolour, 27 May 1919
14. Trench, Amiens Cathedral, watercolour, 28 May 1919
15. Trench, Village on the Somme: Tout
à fait démoli, watercolour, 28 May 1919
16. Trench, Hotel de Ville Arras,
watercolour, 29 May 1919
17. Trench, Ruins of Arras Cathedral, watercolour, 29 May
1919
18. E. Verpilleux (Capt. RAF), Station Erection, print,
1919
19. A. Paul Weber, Grodova (?), pencil drawing, 18 Aug.
1918; oversize: M.C #38
20. A. Paul Weber, Grodova (?), railway bridge, gouache, 1918
21. Artist unknown, H.M.S. Hampshire, pen and ink drawing,
n.d.
22. Artist unknown, H.M.S. Thetis, pen and ink drawing,
n.d.
23. Artist unknown, The Cameronians; Scottish Rifles, pen
and ink drawing, June 1916 or later. Drawing of the regimental crest
with names of soldiers who received the Distinguished Conduct Medal,
5 August 1914 to 19 June 1916; a rifleman has been drawn in the centre.
Box 14:
Parliamentary Recruiting Committee, London, leaflets. See posters collection
for the posters issued by this Committee.
Folder I
Lists of Publications
1. September 1914. Folded leaflet, 3 pp. Lists 6 pamphlets, nos. 5,
1, 2, 3, 4 and 6.
2. October 1914. Folded leaflet, 4 pp. Lists 14 pamphlets, nos. 5, 9,
12, 1-4, 6-8, 10-11, 13-14.
3. November 1914. Folded leaflet, 4 pp. Lists 23 pamphlets, 5, 9, 12,
21, 1, 1a, 1b, 2-4, 6 - 8, 10-11, 14-20, 22.
Leaflet, unnumbered:
Separation Allowance / Rates For Wives And Children Of Soldiers
/ For the information of Soldiers Wives. [Revised
to 11 November, 1914]. Folded leaflet, 4 pp.
#1a Separation Allowance / Increased Rates For Wives And
Children Of Soldiers / For the information of Soldiers Wives.
With effect from 1st. October 1914. 2 sided leaflet, 2 pp.
Leaflet, unnumbered:
Allowances / To / Dependants Of Seamen / Marines And Soldiers.
[February 1915]. Single sided leaflet, 1 p.
Leaflet, unnumbered:
Separation Allowance / For / Wives And Children / Of Soldiers.
/ Revised to include the increased rates for/ children... March
1st. 1915. Folded leaflet, 4 pp.
[#1b] Separation Allowance / For / Dependants Of Unmarried
Soldiers / (Or Widowers) During The War. [Revised to 11th. November,
1914]. 2 sided leaflet, 2 pp.
[#1b] Separation Allowance / For Dependants Of Soldiers.
[Revised to 1st. March 1915]. 2 sided leaflet, 2 pp.
#3 Manifesto To The Trade/ Unionists Of The Country. /
Dated September 3rd, 1914, ... 2 sided leaflet, 2 pp. 2 copies.
[#4] Recruiting: / List Of Commands, Military Districts /
And Regimental Areas. [September 1914?], 8 pp.
#5 To a Victorious Conclusion! / The Prime Ministers
/ Appeal to the Nation / Speeches delivered at the / Guildhall, London,
on / September 4, 1914, by / Mr. Asquith, / Mr. Bonar Law, / Mr. Balfour
and / Mr. Churchill. Also another copy, not bearing No.5
in upper right corner.
#6 To The Men Of Great Britain / A Call To Arms. / Your Country
wants more men for her Army .... [September 1914], 2 sided leaflet,
2 pp.
#7 Who said Enough? / You have not yet enlisted,
perhaps because / .... 18/9/14, 2-sided leaflet, 2 pp.
[#8] To Welshmen / The Sound of War is abroad in the land
of Peace. Reverse side, in Welsh, begins At y Cymry,
9/14, 2 sided leaflet, 2 pp.
[#9] Through Terror to Triumph! An Appeal to the Nation/
by the/ Chancellor of the Exchequer. September 19, 1914, 16 pp.
#10 Just for a Scrap of Paper./ Below is a photograph
of the signatures ....10/14, 2 sided leaflet, with black and white
photograph, 2 pp. Also as above but dated 11/14, 2 sided leaflet, with
coloured (blue and red) photograph, 2 pp. 8 copies.
#11 Patriotic Song Sheet. Includes 10 songs: #1 is
God Save The King, #10 is MEN OF HARLECH, 10/14,
2-sided leaflet, 2 pp. Also as above but dated 11/14, 2 sided leaflet,
2 pp.
#12 How / The Great War / Arose. 11/14, 15 pp.
#13 The Kaisers Insult / to / The British Army.
10/14. 2 sided leaflet, 2 pp.
#14 A Just Cause to A Successful End / The Rally of
/ Our United Empire. 11/14, 8 pp. 2 copies.
#15 The United / Call To Arms. / The Kings Word.
11/14, Folded leaflet,4 pp.
#16 More Men! / In regard to the Army we must, ....
11/14, Single sided leaflet, 1 p.
#17 Young Men, / Your Country / Needs You!. November,
1914, Single sided leaflet, 1 p.
#18 Germanys Barbaric Treatment / Of The Belgian People.
With Punch cartoon entitled Unconquerable on verso,
14/11/14, 2 sided leaflet, 2 pp.
#19 A Message From The Front/ To The Womenfolk At Home.
With cartoon entitled Smiling Faces Everywhere on verso.14/11/14,
2 sided leaflet, 2 pp.
#20 The Glorious / British Army. 11/14, Single sided
leaflet, 1 p.
#22 Our Religious Leaders / on a / Just and Righteous War.
11/14, Folded leaflet, 4 pp.
#23 Women And The War. / The men of Britain have answered
....12/14, 2 sided leaflet, 2 pp.
#28 Be British. / These were the words of / the
late Captain Loxley / .... 1/15, Single sided leaflet, 1 p.
#29 5 Questions To Men Who / Have Not Enlisted. 1/15,
Single sided leaflet, 1 p.
#30 Three Questions/ To Employers. 1/15, Single sided
leaflet, 1 p.
#31 Four Questions/ To Women. 1/15, Single sided leaflet,
1 p.
#32 Scientific / Savagery. / The Official Handbook ....
1/15, 2 sided leaflet, 2 pp.
#33 Our Village and the War./ By Mrs. F.S. Boas. 2/15.
7 pp.
#34 A Reason Or An Excuse? / In The Great War / (the
greatest there has ever been) / Are You Doing / Your Share? 3/15,
Single sided leaflet, 1 p. 2 copies.
#36 Partners In One/ Great Enterprise./ An Appeal
for/ Sacrifice and Service. 3/15. Folded sheet, 4 pp.
#37 Lord Kitcheners / Appeal. / Unless the whole
Nation works/ with us and for us. 3/15. 2 sided leaflet,
2 pp.
#39 The Greatest Task. / The Prime Ministers
Appeal / to the Wholesale and Retail / Distributing Trades .....
5/15, 11 pp.
#40 Remember the Lusitania! / One mother lost all her three
/ young children .... 5/5/1915. Single sided leaflet, 1 p.
#41 Britons! / Remember The / Lusitanias / Last Message
/ Send / Out / Soldiers. 12/5/1915. Single sided leaflet, 1 p.
#43 The Truth About / German Atrocities / Founded on the
Report of the Committee / on Alleged German Outrages. 6/15. Blue,
soft-covered pamphlet, 24 pp. Also as above, but with pink cover, 24
pp.
#44 But Why Did You/ Kill Us? Headline surmounts
cartoon taken from New York World, Verso is headed How
the Germans murder Children, 2 sided leaflet, 6/15, 2
pp.
#45 Lord Kitcheners Appeal / for more Recruits / (From
a Speech at the Guildhall, London, July 9th., 1915.) Folded sheet,
8/15, 4 pp.
#46 Poisoning The Wells. With photograph of document
below. Verso headed Cold-Blooded Murder!. 2 sided leaflet,
8/15, 2 pp.
Folder II
Other Parliamentary Recruiting Committee Material
l. Circular, undated, from P.R.C. Hon. Secretaries to local
P.R.C.s - Horncastle Division written in pencil. Refers
to seven million envelopes containing the Householders Forms,1
p.
2. Blank request cards for posters and leaflets, addressed to
P.R.C., 4 printed 5/15, 4 printed 7/15.
3. P.R.C. Circulars, 1914-1916:
a) 1914. Enclosed leaflets and posters are now ready.
To avoid waste, please only ask for such quantities as can usefully
be dealt with .... 1 p. 5 copies.
b) February 1915. The Parliamentary Recruiting Committee
desires to bespeak your assistance in its publicity work by arranging
for the effective display of the enclosed posters .... 1 p.
c) 12 June 1915. Circular letter to accompany enclosure of two
pamphlets, The Truth About German Atrocities and The Great
War and How it Arose: This Committee and the War Office desire
that the former should have wide publicity and the latter is
invaluable to speakers, lecturers, and those who seek information on
the origin of the War .... Folded sheet, 2 pp.
d) 25 June 1915. It has come to the knowledge of this
Committee that various outside Organizations are approaching the Constituencies
.... Circular letter addressed to A.H. Beeton, Esq., 1 p.
e) 30 July 1915. Circular letter to accompany samples
of new Posters, Card and Post Stamp with stamp Take Up The
Sword of Justice affixed, 1 p. (Stamp is a small version of Poster
#106).
f) 20 November 1915. From Finance Sub-Committee to accompany
forms on which you are requested to make the Return of Expenditure
incurred in connection with the special canvassing campaign ....
1 p.
g) 12 February 1916. Circular letter to accompany samples
of more new posters to which my committee attach considerable importance.
1 p.
h) 16 February 1916. Circular letter to accompany samples
of two new posters to which my Committee attach considerable importance
.... Please note that these posters must not appear on the hoardings
earlier than February 21st, and that the accompanying slips should
be pasted across the posters on February 23rd. 1 p.
4. 2 P.R.C. Compliments Slips.
Folder III
Other Parliamentary Recruiting Committee Material
1. List of Recruiting Posters, October 1914. Lists as available
and provides illustrations of posters #1 - #10 and #12, 11/14, Folded
sheet, 4 pp.
2. Poster no.63 - The Veterans Farewell,
Instructions for Billposters, 2/15, Single sided sheet, 1 p.
3. Germanys / Dishonoured Army. / Additional records
of German / Atrocities in France./ by / Professor J.H. Morgan.
8/1915,12 pp.
4. Meetings Sub-Department ./ Digest Of Reports Of Work
/ Done By / 1. - A County Recruiting Committee/ 2. - A Borough Recruiting
Committee. Illustrated pamphlet, 11 pp.
Folder IV
Local Recruiting Leaflets and Posters Relating to Meetings held at Spilsby
under the auspices of the P.R.C.
[#1] For Your King / And Country. / As suggested by the Parliamentary
/ Recruiting Committee (London). / A Patriotic Public Meeting / will
be held at the / School, / Hutton, / Wednesday, March 3, 1915, / subject:-
/ The War. Poster with red and blue flag and red lettering.
[#2] For Your King/ And Country. / As suggested by the Parliamentary
/ Recruiting Committee (London). / A Patriotic Public Meeting / will
be held at the / School, / Hagworthingham, / Thursday, March 4th, 1915,
/ subject:- / The War. Poster with red and blue flag and red lettering.
[#3] For Your King And Country. / As suggested by the Parliamentary
/ Recruiting Committee(London). / A Patriotic Public Meeting / Will
be held at / The Rest, Walmsgate, / On Saturday, March 6th, 1915, /
Cinematograph / Display Of / War Pictures/ and an address. Leaflet
with red and blue flag and red and blue lettering.
[#4] A Patriotic / Public Meeting / (Under the auspices of
The Parliamentary Recruiting Committee) / will be held at / The School,
/ Old Bolingbroke, / On Wednesday, March the 17th, 1915, / in support
of Lord Kitcheners urgent appeal for more / Men to Fight for King
and Country. Leaflet with red lettering.
Also 5 smaller size envelopes and 26 large (foolscap) size envelopes,
all but one addressed to A.H. Beeton, Esq., Town Hall, Spilsby, Lincs.
from The Parliamentary Recruiting Committee, 12, Downing Street, London,
S.W. and postmarked during 1915. There is one return envelope, unused,
bearing the printed address of Sir Jesse Herbert, Parliamentary Recruiting
Committee, 12, Downing Street, London, S.W. The oversize envelopes are
in Map Cabinet 38.
Folder V
National War Aims Committee Leaflets.
[no number] Man Power. / A Speech Delivered By / General Sir
A. Hunter-Weston, M.P. / (In the House Of Commons, January 24, 1918.).8
pp.
#12 Gentlemen / Of / Germany .... The murder
of thirty-eight members of the crew of the / Belgian Prince on
July 31 1917 .... Folded sheet, 4 pp.
#14 Right And Might / A Lesson Which Germany / Must Be Made
To Unlearn / For more than fifty years Germanys rulers ....
2-18 [February 1918], Double sided sheet, 2 pp.
#15 A Kalendar / Of / Kultur. / Some outstanding
dates and facts to remember when /our German friends talk of a
German peace:-. 2-18 [February 1918], Double sided sheet, 2 pp.
#30 Germanys Two Voices/ .... Cartoon of the
Kaiser with a mask appears below this title. Cartoon by Wm. Stephen
Sanders, 1918. 12 pp. and cover.
#33 Our United War Aims / The Prime Minister declared Britains
War Aims in / an Address to delegates of the British Trade Unions at
the Central Hall, / Westminster, on January 5th, 1918. Folded
sheet, 4 pp.
#34 A World Peace. / President Wilsons Programme. /
President Wilson, in an Address to Congress / on January 8th, 1918,
outlined what he called The Programme Of The Worlds Peace.
2/18, Folded sheet, 4 pp.
Also an envelope printed: Pamphlets On National War Aims. / Gratis.
Folder VI
Parliamentary War Savings Committee.
[No number] Covering slip to accompany the enclosed leaflets which
deal, from different points of view, with the features of the War Loan
and the necessity for its support .... Refers specifically to
Leaflet #4 (below). 7/15, Single sided sheet, 1 p.
#1 Why You Should Save./ 1. Save in every way possible
for your Countrys sake and for your own good.. 7/15, Double
sided sheet, 2 pp.
#2 Why We Ought / To Save Now. / Because! Verso shows
a Punch cartoon entitled The New Capitalist, 7/15,
Double sided sheet, 2 pp.
#3 Help Your Country / And Yourself / By / Saving All The
Shillings You Can / And Putting Them Into / The War Loan.. 7/15.
Single sided sheet, 1 p.
#4 Silver Bullets / Will Win The War. / Why
We Must Save.. 7/15. Folded sheet, 4 pp.
#6 National War Loan. / How To Invest Small Sums In The
/ War Loan. / Investments of £5 and Upwards. 7/15. Double sided
sheet, 2 pp.
#7 National War Loan. / How To Invest Small Sums In The
War / Loan. / [Scrip Vouchers.] / Investment of Smaller Sums than £5.
7/15, Double sided sheet, 2 pp.
#9 We shall fight to the End. / Appeal to the Nation
/ for Thrift. / Speeches delivered at the / Guildhall, London, on/ June
29, 1915 .... 7/15, 10 pp. and 1 p. advertisement.
#13 How To Save / And / Why. / This pamphlet is meant to
illustrate the possibilities/ of saving by all classes .... 8/15,
8 pp.
[No number] Promotional leaflet to accompany Pamphlet #14. Pamphlet
No.14, Why We Must Save and / How is available in limited quantities
only, and it / is requested that care and discrimination be used / in
its distribution.. 8/15. Single sided leaflet, 1 p. 2 copies.
#14 Why We Must/ Save And How. Blue, soft covered pamphlet,
8/15. 47 pp.
Folder VII
Army Forms
B.218F Young Men, / Your Country / Needs
You! / More men are urgently required for the Regular/ Army....Signed
, in facsimile, Kitchener. Folded leaflet, 4 pp.
B.218M His Majestys Army / 10th. November, 1914.
/ This Leaflet is intended to take the place of any issued before this
date. / Weekly Rates Of Pay Of Private Soldiers .... Folded leaflet,
4 pp.
B.218P His Majestys Army. / 15th.
June, 1915. / This Leaflet is intended to take the place of any issued
before this date./.... Folded leaflet, 4 pp.
Folder VIII
Local Tribunals
1. Small buff-coloured card, designed to be folded to half size.
Right front side reads: R.39/ Military Service/ Act 1916./ Certificate
Of Exemption. The verso or inside section has spaces designated
for the name of the Local Tribunal, the certificate number, the name,
address, age and occupation of the holder and the type of and grounds
for the exemption. 2/16.
2. Register Of Cases. Loose sheets for the use of the Local
Tribunals in reporting claims for exemption from military service. These
sheets were intended for use by the Spilsby Tribunal, as this name has
been stamped in the upper right corner. The reporting sheets have spaces
for the entering of the name of the man and of his employer, a column
for the decision or recommendation of the tribunal and another for the
date when the papers were sent to the Central Appeal Tribunal in
cases of appeal or recommendation. 2/16, 18 copies.
Folder IX
Printed material materials acquired with this accession but not produced
by the PRC. See Box 17 for other printed materials.
[#1] The Tragic Scale / Loss Of Population. / ....When the
Unionists come into Power. Leaflet issued by the Small Ownership
Committee, [1911?], Folded sheet, 4 pp. 2 copies.
[#2] Map Of Industrial Ireland. Map reprinted from
the Belfast Newsletter of November 29th, 1912. Verso contains
an article headed Where Ulster Leads. Large, double-sided
sheet, 2 pp.
[#3] September, 1914. / List Of Publications / Issued By
His Majestys Stationery Office / In Connection With Events / Arising
From The State / Of The War. Pamphlet, 22 pp.
[#4] Have You Forgotten? Title is followed by a coloured
illustration of a soldier pointing John Bulls attention to a
poster. Caption underneath illustration reads: Shall British Troops
Be Used Against Loyal Ulster? Leaflet published by National Unionist
Association of Conservative and Liberal Unionist Organizations. [March?]
1914. Double sided sheet, 2 pp.
[#5] Have You Forgotten? As #4 above, but the soldier
is pointing to a different poster and the caption beneath the illustration
reads: Shall Irishmen Be Denied The Right Of Self Government?
Leaflet published by the Liberal Publication Department (in connection
with the National Liberal Federation and the Liberal Central Association).
16/3/14. Double sided sheet, 2 pp.
#6 Young Mens Christian Associations National Council.
Package of material appealing for funds for Y.M.C.A. camp centres.
(i) Will you be Host? Brochure with illustration of middle
aged couple and a Y.M.C.A. camp centre. Inside the leaflet is an appeal
for funds and a reply form which may be cut out in the bottom right
corner. Folded sheet, 4 pp.
(ii) Small card containing messages of support for the Y.M.C.A.
camps from the King, the Prince of Wales, the Queen and others. Double
sided card, 2 pp.
(iii) Circular letter from A.K. Yapp, General Secretary, dated
21 July 1915, referring to the enclosed card which invites subscriptions
to maintain the recreation rooms and shelters which the Y.M.C.A. has
established.
(iv) Reply forms 3 on one sheet.
(v) Reply envelope, addressed to Capt. R.L. Barclay.
(vi) Poster containing photographs of 2 Y.M.C.A. huts and illustrated
with a smiling soldier. The text begins You have heard them singing
/ Tipperary and concludes What will you give?
Mauve lettering and illustrations.
(vii) Subscription card, the one referred to in (iii) above. The
smiling soldier, in profile, heads an appeal which is followed by columns
where the name of the subscriber and an amount donated may be entered.
(viii) Also an envelope dated July 22 1915 addressed to The
Secretary, Horncastle Division, Central Conservative Assn., Town Hall,
Spilsby.
#7 Collection / Of / Pamphlets On The / Substitution Of
Women In Industry / For / Enlisted Men / Prepared By The / Home Office
And The Board Of Trade / Pamphlets Nos. 1-27. Second edition,
December 1917, 100 pp. and photographic illustrations.
#8 Calendar 1918. Card with 6 months in squares on
each side of an illustration (by Bruce Bairnsfather) of a soldier looking
down a ravaged road. The card is headed The Pilgrims Way.
Underneath the illustration is a poem by J.S.A., November 1917 which
begins The road is rough before his feet, 2 copies.
#9 Pamphlet. white stock cover reads: Not by / Bread /
Alone. Title page reads: With Englands Great Men ...
by Helen R. Macdonald. Compliments slip (from Judge Henry Neil),
newspaper cutting (July 1918) and a smaller pamphlet: Will America
Fight On? enclosed. Also another copy with buff coloured cover
enclosing a smaller pamphlet: Pensions For Mothers.
Folder X
Parliamentary Recruiting Committee.
Promotional Cards of the Great War.
[no number] If you want to know about / Germanys / Dishonoured
/ Army, / Ask within for a copy of the pam- / phlet, containing additional
records of/ German Atrocities In France, / issued Free Of Charge by
the / Parliamentary Recruiting Committee. Red and white card with
string loop for hanging at top.
Card #100 Come Along Boys! / Enlist Today. Shows a
smiling recruit with a pipe in his mouth against a white background.
Entire image framed in a brown border [November 1914]. 26 x 41 cm.
Card #101 England /Expects /Every Man / to Do His
/Duty /and Join the Army /To-day. Blue and red lettering
on a white background, framed with red and blue lines. [November 1914].
23 x 40 cm.
Card #107 Come And Do / Your Bit / Join Now. 5/15.
Black, yellow and red card showing a smiling soldier pointing to the
message.
Card #108 Your Country Wants / You /And 300,000 More Men
Like You / Dont Wait / But Join Now. Blue and red lettering
on a white interior square framed in brown. Printed by C.J. Faulkner,
no date. 27 x 40 cm.
Card #112 Its Our Flag. Underneath heading is
red, white and blue Union Jack. The message below the illustration reads:
Fight for it/ Work for it. White lettering on olive green
background.
Box 15:
Helmer Rosting and Vladimir Miselj, Ville Libre de Dantzig (Geneva,
League of Nations, 1926). Bound mimeograph ts. with Miseljs signature
on the flyleaf and a loose note from him to his co-author re draft chapters.
Placed into this bound volume in different locations are multiple typescript
and typescript carbon additions. Dantzigs name is now Gdansk in
Poland.
Box 16:
Letters from French and Belgian Generals.
All letters in French unless noted as English.
F.1 Général Berthelot, 2 letters, 30 May 1922 (to Crépy)
and 27 September 1927.
F.2 Général Degoutte, 31 January 1923.
F.3 Général Gourand, 4 letters, 22 October 1919 , 21
July 1921, and 12 December 1923 (to General Godley). Also a note in
English, 28 July 1921, indicating that Général Gourand thought
the British Government was behind his attempted assassination.
F.4 André Maginot, Minister of War. Telegram to General Godley,
2 May 1924, and typed translation into English; undated telegram to
Godley. Also handwritten card, 8 January 1924.
F.5 Général Maistre, 2 letters,13 September 1920 and
22 May 1920.
F.6 Général de Mitry, 6 June 1918.
F.7 Général Nollet, (19?) January 1927.
F.8 Général Ruquoy, 2 letters, 16 December 1923 and
21 August 1923.
F.9 Général Weygand, 29 (?) January (?) 1923.
F.10 Other French and Belgian Generals, Staff, and Liaison officers.
1) Bizard, 8 January 1919 and 4 March 1922. 2) Boquet, 31 July 1923.
3) Burguet, 13 June 1924. 4) Chevalier, 1 August 1923. 5) Crépy,
1 August 1923. 6) de Croÿ, 25 September 1918 and 15 April 1930
(both in English). 7) Heamish (?), 20 December 1929. 8) Commandant de
Malcissye-Meliy, 4 August 1923 (to General Godley in English). 9) de
la Panouie, 31 March 1922 (to Godley in English). 10) Rampont (?), 2
July 1924.
F.11 Original file folder for this collection, listing its contents.
Box 17
Printed materials: (see also Folder IX in Box 14)
F.1 Postcards and greeting cards:
Bound collections of cards: Cambrai, Doues, Ypres, Zeebrugge
4 postcards with German text, printed in Breslau and Dresden; images
of Flanders and an Infantry Regiment, accompanied by winged horsemen.
4 postcards with French text, images of Paris, The Somme, a Red Cross
dog; painting of a soldier
17 postcards with English text, images of tanks; William Leefe Robinson,
V.C; captured German submarine ; defenders of the Empire; caricatures
and cartoon; woman dressed in the Stars and Stripes with caption Ive
come to see you through it!; series 1 to 3 depicting an airman
attack.
Greeting card (col.) from the Australian Commonwealth Military Forces,
1917-1918, Somewhere in France, with caricature and greeting in French
inside. Also Christmas and New Year's greeting card from the Canadian
Cavalry Training Brigade, 1916-1917.
125th Canadian Infanty Battalion: Christmas Service card, 1917; Christmas
card from Withley Camp, Surrey, 1917-1918
F.2 Printed cards and exemption certificate; includes information
about bridges, roads and the water supply; also a programme for a military
concert, Fergus Unit, 153rd Battalion, 17 April 1916.
F.3 Publications:
Audibility of the Gun-Firing in Flanders over the South-East of England,
September 1914-1916; offprint from The Quarterly Journal of The
Royal Meteorological Society.
The Gunfire on the Continent During 1918: Its Audibility at Chignal
St. James Near Chelmsford; offprint from The Quarterly Journal
of The Royal Meteorological Society.
Americans at the Front, 32 pages, illustrated.
The Great Air Raid on England, September 3rd, 1916;
booklet of souvenir photographs.
The New Testament with Lord Roberts Message to the Troops
printed on the back of the front cover.
F.4 Charts numbered 1-6 of various revolvers and pistols. Chart
number six indicates it was from the 3rd Northern Division.
F.5 Women: The Alphabet of the Womens Legion
By one of them (with apologies); illustrated; blank enrolment
form for the Womens Army Auxiliary Corps.
F.6 Messages, information statements, propaganda, one page each:
* The Kings Message to the Royal Air Force, 11 November
1918
* A Proclamation by the King asking for a reduction in the consumption
of bread and the use of flour in pastry, 1917
* How to Invest Through the Post Office in the National War Loan
* Sketch Shewing Correct Method of Wearing Putties
* To the British Troops in Upper-Silesia. A plea from Upper
Silesians they are not rebelling against the Allies; 2 copies
* Last Will and Testament of the Kaiser, also printed on
the verso. Satirical.
F.7 Three printed b&w images issued by F.E. Lockwood, Argyle
Street, Derby: The S.S. Belgian Prince Tragedy; The
Llandovery Castle Lifeboat Murders; Once A German
Always a German, issued in conjunction with The British Empire
Union.
F.8 Other: 4 German stamps, 1 Hong Kong stamp; 3 German medical
tags; one blank Soldiers Small book. Also paper col. lapel pins
in support of various causes and associations Sailors Society,
Royal National Life-Boat Institution, Woolwich Hostel for Girls, Fund
for Wounded Soldiers, Seamens and Miller Hospitals; YMCA Hut Day,
Lord Roberts Memorial Fund, Help Russia, flags. Also two metal pins
with flags and 2 ribbons (red, white and blue combined); metal Machine
Gun Officers protractor with cord and case.
F.9 Material of German origin:
Alarm und Sprengungen
[Alarm and Explosions], n.d., 6 pp. German.
Order from J.V. von Rodbertus, Oberst [Colonel] of the Kaiserlich Deutsche
Kommandantur in Brussells, 20 Feb. 1917, 1 p. German, Dutch and
French.
Order to deliver unnecessary household articles to the collection point
at the Luxemburger Train Station on 6 Mar. 1917. Failure to comply with
order will result in forcible seizure of the articles. House searching
will be conducted.
F.10 News clippings, special issues, tear-sheets:
* Photographs: Canadians on the March in France, n.d.; The
South African Aviation Corps, 1915; publications not known
* Belgian newspapers (three), published 20 and 21 August 1914, two
in French (one annotated Copy of last newspaper issued in Brussels
before the Germans entered, one in Flemish
* French newspapers tear-sheets: Les Cinq Armes de larmée
Française with coloured drawings; Le Jeune France
with col. illustrations of Les Ravageuirs de lOise
and La Bataille Navale dHéligoland
* Illustrated London News: The War Pictorial, November 1917;
b&w photographs; insert of col. painting of ship, aeroplane, the
coast
* The New York Times, tear-sheet, 26 May 1918
* Cartoon, What Time do they feed the sea lions Alf; Drawing
of Mr. Poliu
* "Deeds that Stirred the Empire: The Canadians' Glorious Stand
at Ypres", reprinted by "The Daily Chronicle," London
by permission of the Acting High Commissioner of Canada. 1915
* Paintings: Pictorial Review, tear-sheet, July 1919: The
Battle Among the Clouds by John O. Todahl; on verso David
Lloyd George. Oversize, Map Cabinet 38
* The New York Times Magazine Mid-Week Pictorials: 29 June 1916,
7 September 1916, 1 February 1917. Oversize, Map Cabinet 38
*The Morning Post, Friday 29 October [1915]. "The King's
Visit to the Front ...". News agent's advertisement. Oversize,
Map Cabinet 38
*"Canada's Aid to the Allies and Peace Memorial", Montreal Standard,
ed. Frederic Yorston. Oversize, Map Cabinet 38
*Canadian Corps Fall Championship Athletic Meet Held in France, September
1917." Programme. Oversize, Map Cabinet 38.
F.11 Mons, France: Three leaflets of instructions
for the citizens, issued 1917-1918; two are in French, one is in French
with some German.
F.12 Victory Bond Campaign leaflet, London, Ontario.
Souvenir commemorations:
10 Souvenir commemorations 1915-1919, printed by S. Burgess, with coloured
decorative borders: (Oversize, Map Cabinet 38)
1a&b Souvenir in Commemoration of the King and Queens
Visit to St. Pauls Cathedral, August 4, 1915; 2 copies with
different borders.
2a&b In Commemoration of the First Anniversary of the
Anzac Landing in Gallipoli: Memorial Service at Westminster
Abbey, attended by the King and Queen. April 25, 1916; 2 copies
with different borders.
3 Souvenir in Commemoration of the Glorious Contemptible
Little Army
at the Royal Albert Hall, December 15, 1917.
4a&b In Commemoration of the Feed the Guns Campaign
in Trafalgar Square, October 1918; 2 copies with different borders.
5 Photo and Souvenir of Visit of the British Tank,
[October 1918]
6 Souvenir in Commemoration of the King and Queens
Visit to St. Pauls for the Great Peace Thanksgiving, Peace proclaimed
Nov. 11, 1918
7 Souvenir in Commemoration of The Womens Joy Loan
Day Celebrations in Trafalgar Square, Saturday 28 June 1919
Also:
8 Bow-Wow! Strafe the Kaiser Wow!, Sergeant Major of Canada
Text is printed around an image of a bull-dog.
Maps: (Maps listed below are located in Map Cabinet 38, exceptions are
noted)
British:
1 Diagram of the blocking operation at Zeebrugge harbour drawn
by Admiral Sir Stuart Bonham-Carter who was in charge of the Intrepid.
It was one of three old cruisers, the others being Iphigenia and
Thetis that were filled with cement and sunk in the harbour at
the entrance to the ship canal to Bruges on 23 April 1918. There were
problems with the Thetis which are shown on the diagram.
2 Printed map of Red Road; notes have been written
on the verso. Location: Box 17.
3 "Daily Mail Map of the British Front, Section 1",
[1914]. Extreme oversize. Location: Map Cabinet 34
German:
1 Merkblatter Zum Weltrieg, Die Schlacht von Hermannstadt,
26-29 Sept. 1916
2 Vier Jahre Weltkreig. 2. Osten. Three maps printed
on one sheet, 1915-1917, also charts.
Calendar:
Ontario Department of Agriculture calendar for 1918, "All Together Onward to Victory": Location Map Cabinet 38.
Moving Images and Sound Recordings
Box 18
Oh What a Lovely War in 2 acts,
Alan Bishop, 2 video recording tapes.
What Is for This The Clay Grew Tall? Richard Rempel and
Alan Bishop, September 1978; this copy made in May 1980
Drummond Wren, 4 audio cassettes, memoirs, including his youth in Scotland,
his emigration to Canada in 1912, First World War and the W.E.A., the
union-education link in the 1920s.
Boxes 19-24, Photographs
The numbers were placed on the photographs by archival staff many years
ago. Some aerial photographs have been transferred to the Trench Maps
and Aerial Photographs collection. No attempt to arrange photographs
by subject was made. For example, photographs taken in South Africa
are separated. Some photographs are captioned or annotated – this
explanatory text is indicated by quotation marks. Some photographs have
no clear connection to the War. Some photographs are postcard photographs.
They have been noted as such. The quality of this numbered grouping
of photographs varies from good to very poor. Other photographs are
located throughout this collection.
Box 19
Photographs 1-265
1 Men
posing with crashed plane (postcard)
2 Bodies
of German crew of Zeppelin shot down over castle (postcard)
4 Men
posing with R.E. 8 British aeroplane used to take aerial photos [E 90]
(postcard)
5 Officers
on stairs in front of American flag (postcard)
6 Two
Canadians in front of Airco plane with maple leaf (postcard)
7 Soldiers
lined up (postcard)
8 Soldiers
posing with walking stick (postcard)
9 German
soldiers with a Maschinegewehr machine gun (postcard)
10 Soldier
posing with a handgun (postcard)
11 German
soldier: addressed to Wilhelm Schafer of Hanover, Germany (postcard)
12 Soldier
posing in front of a rock formation (postcard)
13 E Co.
Imperial Service Battn. First Surrey Rifles. St. Albans Dec. 1914 (postcard)
14 Officers
on horses inspecting troops (postcard)
15 British
battalion at attention in a field (postcard)
16 Du Chasseur
Alpin – soldier in a Paris studio (postcard)
17 57th
Brigade Hdqts., Martin Eglise (postcard)
18 Royal
Flying Corps airmen in front of a four-blade propeller plane [E90?]
(postcard)
19 Maréchal
Foch; to Mrs. Morley St. Albans, May 16, 1919 (postcard)
20 Maréchal
Foch and Georges Clemenceau; to Mrs. Morley, May 26, 1919 (postcard)
21 Royal
Marines Light Infantry group [?] (postcard)
22 Leyland
truck #50115, Royal Flying Corps men on a (postcard)
23 Leyland
truck #50115, painted “Bing Boys - Louvre Terie” (postcard)
Leland trucks see also #69.
24 Royal
Flying Corps airmen sitting in front of a porch, with a dog (postcard)
25 Two soldiers
with a car, man on left, possibly a chaplain (postcard)
26 Royal
Flying Corps airmen in front of a plane in hanger (postcard)
27 Airco
D.H. 9a British bomber, I.F., 170/c3/11-10-18, with pilots (postcard)
28 Airco
D.H. 9a, I.F. (E-716) with pilots (postcard)
29 Airman
in the Royal Flying Corps, studio W.H. Christmas Bowes Park (postcard)
30 Soldiers
in snow with football, Caudry, France (postcard)
32 St. Albans,
Nov. 1914, Lord Roberts at head of group; to W. Morley (postcard)
33 Family
portrait, same airman as in #29 (postcard)
34 British
and French officers (postcard)
35 German
military funeral leaving a hospital (postcard)
Woolwich Arsenal, London (postcards)
37 Woolwich
Arsenal, Central Avenue
38 Wheeler’s
shop
39 Shell
Foundry
40 Shell
Turnery
41 Metal
Turnery
42 Maxim
Machine Shop
43 Making
cases to store cordite
44 Trimmer’s
Shop
45 Blacksmith’s
Shop
46 Bullet
Foundry
47 No. 1
Main Forge
48 Turning
50 ton gun
49 Camp
No. 15 Godford No. 2 (postcard)
50 German
incendiary bomb dropped at Maldon April 16, 1915 (postcard)
51 Coast
artillery gun and men; to Mrs. Fordhan, Kent from Tom 20/7/15 (postcard)
52 Woodford
Green - Air Raid over London, Oct. 13, 1915; annotated (postcard)
53 Gruss
aus Gremsdorf (Greetings) Germany, posted Sept. 13, 1916 (postcard)
54 Watching
the guns fire from Hohenzollen Bridge June 20, 1919 Cologne (postcard)
55 Guns,
Rhine Bank, Peace Day, June 28, 1919 [13 pounder CWT QF gun](postcard)
56 Guns,
Rhine Bank, Peace Day, [13 pounder CWT QF gun] Cologne, Germany (postcard)
57 Guns,
Rhine Bank, Peace Day, June 28, 1919 Cologne (postcard)
58 1st
gun to fire across the Rhine, June 28, 1919 [13 pounder CWT QF gun]
59 Guns
of Cologne signal the signing of peace June 28,1919, Germany
60 Albert
(Somme) Amienes after bombardment (postcard)
61 Albert
(Somme) Villa des Rochers - La Chapelle (postcard)
62 Aveluy
(Somme) - La place (postcard)
63 Vimy;
written in German, 8 April 1917 (postcard)
64 Group
of soldiers; written in German, 31 August [1916] (postcard)
65 Vimy;
written in German, March 1917 (postcard)
66 Royal
Flying Corps? Airman (postcard)
67 Seaforth
Highlander (postcard)
68 Royal
Flying Corps, dispatch rider? (postcard)
69 Soldier
driving Leland truck, #50114 (postcard)
Sunbeam Tours postcards
70 Meso.
1 Coast of Arabia
71 Meso.
2 Arab pilot
73 Meso.
4 Banks of Shat-el-Arab (postcard)
74 Meso.
5 Magil Light Railway (postcard)
75 Meso.
6 Magil-Basra Railway (postcard)
76 Meso.
7 Approaching Basra (postcard)
78 Meso.
10 Hospital Ship on Tigris (postcard)
79 Meso.
11 River front at Amara (postcard)
80-2 These numbers were assigned
to film containers no longer extant.
Royal Flying Corps
83 Corporal
84 corporal
85 Aeroplane
being pushed in background
86 de Havilland
DH9 plane
87 Pilot
(?) in front of bomber plane
88 Aeroplane
taking off
89 Aeroplane
in air
90 Tail
of aeroplane F929
91 Parachute
(?)
92 Row of
aeroplanes
93 Row of
4 aeroplanes with men in front
94 Four
aeroplanes, one with marking S. E5710
95 Four
aeroplanes, one with marking Y 926
96 Tail
ends of 3 aeroplanes
97 Zeppelin,
staaken RVI (?)
98 Aeroplane
in motion among row of aeroplanes
99 Aeroplanes
outside hanger
100 Aeroplane flying
over people on bicycles
101 Balloon hanger (?)
102 Balloon hanger and
observation tower
103 Corporal in aeroplane
with gun
104 Aeroplane tipped
forward
Royal Navy, Mobile Column
105 Hoisting artillery
gun
106 Military personnel
gathered inspecting gun
107 Funny pose
108 Man catching canister
on truck
109 Snow-covered truck
110 Group of marines
111 Men working
112 Men with just hoisted
artillery gun
113 Truck tire being
fixes
114 Men admiring anti-aircraft
(?) gun
115 Marines on truck
116 Snowball fight
117 Winter at the depot
118 S.J. Scown, 5.4.16
119 75 mm QF anti-aircraft
gun (?)
120 Gun inspection
121 arines and sentry,
shaking hands
122 Truck access beside
a pub
123 Sentry
124 Group of sailors
at depot
125 Three marines
126 Seating area of
mounted gun
127 Clinometer on gunner’s
level
128 Heavy gun (3 in
20cwt QF anti-aircraft gun?) on truck
129 Mounting gun (3in
20cwt QF anti-aircraft gun?) on truck
130 Machine gun (Colt
Browning?)
131 Shielded sighting
area on gun
132 Mounted gun
133 Mounted gun with
dispatch rider
134 Marines checking
gun sights (Vicker’s machine gun)
135 Marines rigging
gun to platform
136 Vicker’s 3-pounder
137 Mounted gun being
transported
138 Mounted gun ready
for transport
139 75mm QF gun (anti-aircraft?)
on mount, with civilian
140 Marines on Coaling
Gatigue
141 Transport convoy
ready to move
142 Truck with mounted
gun trailer
143 Marines at depot
144 Cricket game
145 Train in marshalling
yard
146 Train in marshalling
yard, different view
147 Train in marshalling
yard, yet another different view
148 Railway carriage
149 Truck transport
convoy along tree-lined road
150 Truck transport
convoy in field
151 View of truck ahead
on road
152 Truck convoy lined
up in field
Scenes probably near Cape Town, South Africa
153 Wave hitting rock
154 Coastline view
155 Sea spray on rocks
156 Rocks and mountain
157 View of town below
mountain
158 View of town from
beach
159 Hilltop view of
town and beach
160 Ship’s passengers
on deck
161 Ship’s officer
(captain?) with telescope on deck
162 Man leaning on ship
rail
163 Ship’s below
deck crew eating
164 Military personnel
on deck
165 Military personnel
in life jackets on deck
166 Ship at dock with
military personnel and family
167 People waiting at
dock
168 Truck transport
convoy at rest
169 View from a vehicle
of a tree-lined road
170 Two Royal Flying
Corps men standing on a rock in a wave
171 Soldier sitting
on tarps with a monkey
172 Bow of a ship
173 Ship underway, presumably
taken from another ship
174 Ships
175 Ship
176 Civilian and two
soldiers in front of Rhodes monument, Cape Town, South Africa
177 Earthen fortification
178 Village
179 Earthen fortification
180 Building on a hill
181 Cape Town, South
Africa
182 Gateway to the castle
of Good Hope, Cape Town, S. Africa
183 Cape Town, South
Africa
184 Pier at bottom of
Adderley St., Cape Town, S. Africa
185 Pier observation
tower, bottom of Adderley St., Cape Town, S. Africa
186 Cape Town, S. Africa
from Adderley St. Pier
187 Four soldiers outside
a wood building
188 Marines and women
sitting in the grass
189 Royal Navy depot
(?)
190 Soldiers on lawn
by a wrought iron fence
191 Table Rock, Cape
Town, S. Africa
192 Group of men in
turbans
193 Military personnel
dockside
194 Seven military personnel
in life jackets on deck
195 Soldier on sentry
duty
196 Rail transport convoy
197 Rail transport convoy
198 Soldier, with tea,
reading
199 African coastline.
Oversize, at back of box.
200 Unidentified equipment
201 Estate building
202 Estate building
203 Estate building,
in Cape Town, S. Africa
204 Building, possibly
used as barracks, Cape Town, S. Africa
205 Cape Town - Houses
of Parliament
206 Brick buildings
207 Cape Town City Hall
and Grand Parade
208 Cape Town City Hall
209 Theatre stage and
bench seating
210 Pub
211 Aerial view
212 Two soldiers in
front of a war monument
213 Soldiers and civilians
on a beach, Cape Town, S. Africa
214 Woman in white
with hat
215 Woman in a pin-striped
dress reading
216 Two women and three
children on the stairs of a home in S. Africa
217 Same group this
time with a young soldier
218 Officer in front
of a cannon at the Castle of Good Hope, Cape Town, S. Africa
219 Soldier wearing
an iron cross medal on his life jacket
220 Military funeral
221 Troops waiting to
move out
222 Soldiers washing
up
223 Two soldiers leaning
on ship railing looking at coast
224 Nine military personnel
posing against brick building
225 Two corporals (Royal
Flying Corps?) in front of sign “Longericher Haupisir” (Germany)
226 Military personnel
watching on the sidelines of field
227 Troops lined up
for roll call
228 Military personnel
in a truck
229 Royal Flying Corps
airman at the Castle of Good Hope
230 Airman with cigarette
at Castle of Good Hope earthen wall
231 Five military personnel
in front of wood building
232 Snowball fight
233 Soldier with a black
dog in front of a truck filled with men
234 “B. Howes
(?) and Seabrook lorry H.Q. Imbros [Turkey] 1915”
235 Constructing airship
hanger
236 Constructing airship
hanger
237 Aerial view of hanger
and tents
238 Airship in hanger
239 Airship being taken
out of its hanger
240 Airship ready for
flight
241 Airship in flight
242 Airship in flight
243 “[Air]ship
over lagoon No. 2 Wing 1915”
244 “Avro 2nd
wing Imbros [Turkey] 1915” (Avro 504B; Serial No. 1043)
245 Pilot sitting in
his airplane
246 Aerial view airship
hanger and camp
247 Aerial view of camp
248 “Turkish Fort,
Kastro Lemnos [Turkey]1917”
249 Ship convoy
250 Overhead view of
ship
251 Ships off Turkish
(?) Coast
252 “View at
Malta”, Old Navy Hospital, Kalkara, Malta (postcard)
253 Malta “peninsula”
(postcard)
254 “Malta”
Royal Naval Canteen, Grand Harbour (postcard)
255 “French battleship”
Grand Harbour, Malta (postcard)
256 “Ships rolling
to starboard” (postcard)
257 “Lowering
boat at sea, towing target” (postcard)
258 “Model aeroplane”
being towed by a rowboat (postcard)
259 “Zeppelin,
Salonika”, Greece shot down at mouth of Vardar May 5, 1916 (postcard)
260 “Zeppelin,
Salonika”, Greece shot down at mouth of Vardar May 5, 1916 (postcard)
261 Zeppelin wreckage,
Vardar marsh, Greece
262 Zeppelin wreckage,
Vardar marsh, Greece
263 “Destruction
of zepp”[elin] May 5, 1916; image depicts search at sea (postcard)
264 Tenedos island,
off the coast of Turkey (postcard)
265 “Malta”
Ricasoli Lighthouse, Grand Harbour (postcard)
Box 20
#266-422
266 Searchlights with
two sailors (postcard)
267 “French battleship,
Malta” (postcard)
268 “Getting in
ammunition” onboard ship (postcard)
269 “Ship lying
off [Malta] peninsula” (postcard)
270 “River Clyde”
(postcard)
271 “Ship skiffing
seas” (postcard)
272 Ship at “Imbros”
Turkey (postcard)
273 “Bombarding”
by ship’s guns (postcard)
274 Ship at “Malta”
(postcard)
275 Ship at “Imbros”
Turkey (postcard)
276 “Porst Bundjo
(?) N.B.” ship at lift bridge (postcard)
278 to 309, transferred to Trench maps and Aerial photographs collection.
310 Man painting a
dragon
311 Meeting of officers
and a civilian
Aerial photographs (312-13 and 315 transferred)
314 Coast
316 Aeroplane flying
over fields
317 Train track and
tunnel
318 “Railway blown
up by Huns near Cambrai”
319 Aerial; identifying
caption has been cut off
320 Two soldiers in
front of Nideggen rail station
321 German cross
322 German tank
323 Bomb damage to public
building
324 Farmhouse and barn
325 Bullocks in front
of cart
326 Bullocks in front
of cart
327 Stell Werk railway
line
328 Bombed damaged buildings
329 Grave of L.W. Stone
201squadron, RAF, August 9, 1918
330 German airplane,
JIII
331 Royal Flying Corps
airman
332 “B.G. Flemons
France, 1918”; airman
333 Two airmen Royal
Flying Corps
334 Royal Flying Corps
airman
335 Group of soldiers
and civilians outside a hut (postcard)
336 View of a large,
ornate stone bridge
337 “The top of
Bow St.” London
338 Transport vehicles
outside a large stone building
339 Red Cross and other
truck in front of buildings
340 Trucks outside same
buildings as 339
341 Damaged bridge over
a canal
342 Damaged bridge over
a canal
343 Damaged bridge over
a canal
344 Demolished metal
bridge
345 105 - Saint-Valéry-sur-Somme
(numbered, published postcard)
346 Truck convoy in
front of buildings
347 Truck convoy in
front of buildings
348 Truck convoy and
soldiers; lead truck number, 35377
349 Soldiers in truck
35377
350 Bombed large building
351 Military personnel
and a Leyland truck in a city
352 Men in front of
a German armoury
353 Farm house and well
354 Demolished bridge
and damaged building
355 Castle-like gate
with turrets
356 Children walking
through a gatehouse
357 Bombed church
358 Village scene
359 Village with signs
for Boich and Düren
360 Royal Flying Corps
airmen in front of a Nissen hut
361 View of a stone
bridge, houses and hill
362 Royal Flying Corps
air man standing in ruins; possibly related to #334
363 German military
funeral procession
364 Church nave facing
toward the altar
365 Book and paper supply
office with civilians
366 Damaged public building
corridor
367 Farm buildings and
waterlogged field
368 Field with buildings
in the distance
369 Two men in uniform
smoking; caption is illegible
370 Dead horses and
men
371 Dead horses and
wagons
372 Dead horse with
wagon
373 Bombed church with
red cross symbol on roof
374 Large field artillery
guns
375 Large field artillery
guns
376 Rail line in foreground
with battle-damaged terrrain
377 Damaged equipment
378 Damaged equipment
Aerial Photographs (380-84, 387 transferred)
379 Not identified
385 View of base?, France
1/6/18
386 City in Northern
France
388 Smoking battlefield,
France
389 Rail station in
a city, France?
390 Railyard outside
a town, France?
391 “Boat captured
from Huns ...” in East Africa.
392 “Fort Ikoma
where I recently spent a week”, East Africa
393 “Natives near
Fort Ikoma who gave trouble”, East Africa
394 Duplicate of #393
395 “War dance”,
East Africa
396 Africans in war
dress, East Africa
397 “Entrenchments
Belgian position”
398 “Kiduha Belgian
Camp showing Entrenchments”
399 Inspecting troops,
Africa
400 “Dismantled
Belgian position”
401 Army camp, East
Africa?
402 British soldier
with flag, 2 African men, small child saluting
403 Same place as #402
with same child
404 Soldier with Africans
405 African soldiers
406 Military patrol,
Africa
407 Large group of African
soldiers
408 “Belgian cal[vary]
and officer”’ one mounted soldier and dog, other soldier
on foot
409 “H.M. King
George V at Eastern Command Depot Shoreham by Sea, during the Grat War.
Also the commandant, Lieut. Col. Ritchie”. Other people are in
the photo, also 2 cars
410 “H.M. King
George V at Eastern Command Depot, Shoreham-by-Sea, during the Great
War. Also the commandant Lieut. Col. Ritchie”. Also other military
personnel, buildings.
411 “H.M. King
George V at Eastern Command Depot, Shoreham-by-Sea during the Great
War. Also Sir Wm. Robertson and the commandant, Lieut. Col. Ritchie”.
The 3 men are walking down stairs.
412 “H.M. King
George V at Eastern Command Depot Shoreham by Sea during the Great War.
Also the commandant, Lieut. Col. Ritchie” in foreground.
413 “Sir Wm. Robertson
at Eastern Command Depot Shoreham by Sea during the Great War. Also
the Second in Command Major Wellesley”. Other military personnel
and buildings in photo.
415 “Australian
Headquarters Statistical Department 1917”. A small photograph
album containing 13 photographs.
416 Seaplane carrier
H.M.S. Ben-my-chree (postcard)
417 “H.M.S. Temeraire
1909” “Yours very sincerely Leon H. Holliday” ; 7
sailors
418 Peace Conference
at Versailles 1919; stamped in French on verso as Army property
419 Peace Conference
at Versailles 1919; stamped in French on verso as Army property
420 Peace Conference
at Versailles 1919; stamped in French on verso as Army property
421 The ADC, Gen. Sir
Wm. Robertson, Lt. Col. Hetherington, Gen. Maurice inspecting wreckage
of Zeppelin L33 at Little Wigborough, Essex 24/9/1916
422 The ADC, Gen. Sir
Wm. Robertson, Lt. Col. Hetherington, Gen. Maurice inspecting wreckage
of Zeppelin L33 at Little Wigborough, Essex 24/9/1916
Box 21
This is a published series of photographs pasted on board by Realistic
Travels London. Each card has two photographs pasted on it. Most cards
are still in their original cases. Numbers 430 to 524 are in one case;
numbers 525-614 are in another case; numbers 615-632 do not have a case.
The first number below refers to the archival number assigned; the second
to the published number. Captions are printed on each card; quotations
marks have not been used as most captions have been condensed.
430 (1) Seaforths
watch through periscope for the Bosche.
431 (2) Enemy
sighted - Fire!
432 (10) A
battery of Royal Field Artillery snatching a few minutes’ rest.
433 (11) H.R.H.
the Prince of Wales at the Chateau in France.
434 (12) London
Territorials - La Bassee Road.
435 (21) French
Graves smashed by German shell fire.
436 (22) The
famous Gurkhas near Neuve Chapelle.
437 (24) Courage
Unsurpassed! Crawling through wire to rescue comrades.
438 (25) The
price of Victory! Brave lads killed during raid on Hun lines.
439 (27) Beury
Chateau, Festubert where the Prussian Guards were hurled back.
440 (28) A
battery of Field Artillery crossing a bridge at eventide.
441 (29) A
regiment of Allenby’s Cavalry recuperates behind the line.
442 (32) Inspecting
the Ruins of Richbourg Cathedral.
443 (33) Sappers
and miners at work on tunnel under Hill 60 at Ypres 1915.
444 (34) The
Labyrinth, Arras.
445 (35) The
battlefront along the Yser Canal - winter 1916.
446 (36) Dogs
with first-aid and stimulants search for wounded in no-mans-land.
447 (37) H.M.
King George V inspecting shells at Holmes & Co. Ltd. Hull.
448 (42) Belgian
Trenches at Nieuport in winter.
449 (48) Under
cover of gas and smoke we breakthrough to Serre and Theipval.
450 (50) Over
the Top at Somme.
451 (52) Moving
up with French 75s during attack on Thiepval Ridge.
452 (54) Delville
Wood shattered in fierce struggles by the South Africans.
453 (55) At
dawn in Tromes Wood, we carry the Hun entrenchments.
454 (57) The
Flanders mud hampers our artillery.
457 (58) Stretcher-bearers
rescue a comrade.
458 (60) Examining
a Jerry Prisoner.
459 (69) Incessant,
thrilling aerial combats secure us mastery in the air.
460 (70) A
battle squadron in fighting formation.
461 (78) Waiting
in trenches near Arras.
462 (79) Formidable
Hun Pillbox at Bullecourt.
463 (80) R.Es
mine and counter-mine Messines Ridge.
464 (81) Leaving
for a night raid at Messines.
465 (83) Zero
Hour! Over the Top to Wytschaete Wood.
466 (85) Our
Troops carrying supplies over destroyed bridges on Yser Canal.
467 (87) Huns
surrender at Pilken.
468 (89) Our
Troops charge forward into Berafay Wood.
469 (91) Victors
& Vanquished both happy after weeks of fighting for Minin Road.
470 (92) Attending
the wounded on the Menin Road, Ypres.
471 (93) Our
troops occupy Houthoulst Forest.
472 (97) Our
Troops advance to final assault of Passchendaele Ridge.
473 (98) Tenderly
carrying a “blighty” case to aid post at Passchendaele.
474 (100) Guarding
Sacred Ypres.
475 (101) British
destroyers on the track of a German Submarine.
476 (102) Trapped
German submarine driven inshore and blown out of the water.
477 (103) Ship
River Clyde grounded on V beach during landing at Sedd-ul-bahr.
478 (104) Beach
W: a Turkish death-trap rushed by Lancasters.
479 (105) Our
reserves awaiting orders on slopes of Cape Hellas.
480 (106) Our
Troops charge at Gallipoli despite shortage of ammunition.
481 (107) Australian
camp at Anzac.
482 (108) The
Anzacs land supplies near Gaba Tepe.
483 (109) Where
the Anzacs dug themselves in on the shelterless slopes of barren hills.
484 (110) Sinews
of war at Anzac for attack on Lone Pine and Sari Bair for the Narrows.
485 (111) Dreadnoughts
bombard the heights of Chocolate Hill and Lalu Baba.
486 (112) Turks
who fell on Chocolate Hill resisting our attack from Suvla Bay.
487 (113) On
the inhospitable Gallipoli hillsides.
488 (114) After
the desperate struggle for Lone Pine, Australians and Turks lay dead.
489 (115)
Entrenchments on crest of Table Top sealed by New Zealanders.
490 (117) Turkish
Emissary with white flag led blindfolded at Anzac beach, Gallipoli.
491 (118) Kitchener
- in happy mood, praises officers and men at the Dardanelles.
492 (119) Glorious
Vindictive - Pride of the Navy.
493 (120) Our
gallant defenders of the Nile awaiting orders.
494 (121) Mounted
Anzac troups force the Wadi Ghuzzee and outflank Saza.
495 (122) Spotting
the Turks, observation balloon ready to ascend.
496 (123) Under
the Star and Crescent - Infantry of the Sultan defeated by Allenby.
497 (125) Jerusalem,
the Holy City rescued forever from the Turks.
498 (126) Spoils
of War. Gun and stoves captured from Turks at Palestine.
799 (127) On
the long march to Bagdad.
500 (128) Early
morning camp fires and breakfast in the Persian Gulf.
501 (129) Machine
gun section & infantry crossing flooded river by pontoon bridge.
502 (130) Unique
sand block-house in the deserts of South-West Africa.
503 (131) Wit.
Rifles back from Windhoek entrain at Cape Town.
504 (132) Mounted
brigade under Gen. van Deventer.
505 (133) British
Troops refresh themselves at a waterfall.
506 (134) Scouts
cautiously feeling for the enemy in jungles of East Africa.
507 (135) South
African gunners with pet zebra in East Africa.
508 (136) In
touch with Von Voreck’s column.
509 (137) Our
monster tanks surprise the Hun at Cambrai.
510 (138) A
badly crippled tank in the battle-zone.
511 (139) Tank
disabled in our break-through near Moeuvres.
512 (140) French
75s returning to “Chemin des Names”
513 (141) German
prisoners carry our wounded at Bourlon Wood.
514 (142) Light
Railway pushed forward by R.O.D. through old canal at Lens.
515 (143) Ready
for the enemy in the thick of a gas attack.
516 (144) Our
fearless men mine the bridges and retire across the Crozat Canal.
517 (145) Gas
shells-most terrifying of all bombardments.
518 (146) We
valiantly resist the furious enemy onslaught at Morry.
519 (147) The
men who fell covering retreat of 5th Army at Albert.
520 (148) Listening
Post in shell-crater in No-Man’s land near Lagnicourt.
521 (149) Engineers
repair light railways near Hangard.
522 (150) Prisoners
after repulse at Hangard and Villers-Bretonneux in “Kaiser’s
Battle”
523 (151) British
tank amid ruins of Bapaume.
524 (152) Smoldering
Bethune, ignited by Bosche guns in payment for Festubert.
525 (153) Dead
Jerry found on wire after futile night raid at Givenchy.
526 (155) Soldiers
of King Albert defend the line of the Yser against the Germans.
527 (156) Belgian
stretcher-bearers carrying comrade through trenches at Dixmode.
528 (157) H.R.H.
The Prince of Wales discusses cinematography with Dr. H.D. Girdwood.
529 (158) Notre
Dame Armentieres, a mute witness to desperate fighting.
530 (159) Male
Tadpole tank, especially designed to cross the Hun trenches.
531 (160) Tanks
worsted in Battle of Tanks - Villers Bretonneux.
532 (161) Our
troops leaving by a sap to cut off Huns at Villers Bretonneux.
533 (162) On
eve of great battle, squadron of aviators reconnoitre.
534 (163) Squadron
of giant planes on moonlight raid beyond the Rhine.
535 (164) Aerial
photo over German lines, showing deep trenches, mine craters etc.
536 (165) Armour-plated
Hun plane, mounting seven machine guns.
537 (166) An
intrepid observer meets with mishap and makes a hurried descent.
538 (167) Trail
of smoke from burning remnants of enemy observation balloon.
539 (168) Ingenious
camouflage used to conceal lines of communications, etc.
540 (169) Our
l6-in. railway-guns demolish Hun concrete emplacements.
541 (170) The
bursting of our high-explosive shells shatter Hun defences.
542 (171) Column
of earth from explosion of British mine under a German position.
543 (172) Our
whippet tanks penetrate German lines at Morcourt.
544 (173) Tank
rescues comrade bogged down during advance on Rosieres.
545 (175) Bosche
prisoner escorted by French troops in front of Albert Cathedral.
546 (176) Shattered
ruins of Albert.
547 (177) Sappers
remove derelict tank obstructing the “corduroy road.”
548 (178) Australian
drivers gallop to move guns during battle for Le Transloy.
549 (179) The
battered sugar refinery at Le Transloy taken by Australians.
550 (181) With
dogged courage we break the Hun lines from Epehy to Bellicourt.
551 (182) On
the run! In hot pursuit we cross the Canal du Nord.
552 (183) The
Hun vandal, French village set on fire by retreating Germans.
553 (184) Our
cavalry pursues the defeated enemy through the ruined villages.
554 (186) 11-inch
shells abandoned by the Germans.
555 (187) Hundreds
of captured German guns in a gun park at Brussels.
556 (189) l2-inch
gun on a Monster German submarine.
557 (190) Under
the Sea in a “U” boat!
558 (193) His
Majesty reviews the “Young Guards” before departure for
Rhine.
559 (195) Field
Marshall Earl Haig arrives at Cologne on tour of inspection.
560 (196) F.M.
Douglas Haig, inspecting sailors .
561 (197) In
Cologne the martial tread of British troops reigns supreme.
562 (201) Our
dauntless men storm the Hun lines at Croisilles.
563 (202) Bosche
machine gun captured and gunner taken prisoner at Croisilles.
564 (203) Inch
by inch, our lads hack their way through tangled maze of wire.
565 (204) Following
close on our gas, we storm the Schwaben redoubt.
566 (205) “Kamerad”
Bewildered Huns give up near Martinpuich.
567 (206) Under
heavy shell-fire, our troops drive the enemy out of Trones Wood.
568 (210) South
Africans prepare to defend against a gas attack.
569 (2l2) Casualties
on embankment after assault of the Railway Triangle near Arras.
570 (2l3) Amid
the havoc of war, our troops carry on, passing Monchy.
571 (2l4) Ten
minutes to zero! Irish troops stand to arms before Wytschaete Wood.
572 (215) Hun
prisoners taken in underground defences on Pilckem Ridge.
573 (216) We
cross the Yser Canal & force the Hun out of Bixschoote.
574 (2l8) Interrogating
a Bosche prisoner taken after assault on the Hohenzollern redoubt.
575 (224) Pressing
the Hun rearguard, we cross the Canal and push on toward Cambrai.
576 (226) The
Sergeant calls for volunteers to go to No-Man’s-Land.
577 (227) Our
rapid advance near Cambrai compelled Germans to abandon ammunition.
578 (230) The
desolate rain-sodden battlefields.
579 (23l) The
first of a Squadron of giant bombing planes returns from successful
raid.
580 (232) Bird’s-eye
view of a French village taken from an aeroplane.
581 (233) Observation
balloon brought down in flames by a lucky shot.
582 (234) Skeleton
of a huge German bomber.
583 (235) Unlucky
hit brings down British plane but aviators land safely.
584 (236) Anti-aircraft
gun captured from defeated Germans.
585 (237) Field
Battery at rest, responds to urgent summons from Ypres.
586 (238) Our
hidden batteries prepare to put down a barrage for the infantry.
587 (239) One
of our l6-inch railway guns.
588 (240) An
ammunition column bringing up some of the endless stream of shells.
589 (243) A
gas attack threatened ready with S.O.S. at Rifle Ville.
590 (248) The
parapet of captured trenches hastily reversed and strengthened.
591 (249) Infantry,
equipped with H.P. gas masks fire on retreating enemy.
592 (250) Casualties
after the charge has swept over.
593 (252) Caring
for the wounded, after the storm and stress of battle.
594 (253) Arrival
of wounded at a base hospital.
595 (254) Dear
Mother this Hospital is “tres bon” and the nurses are Angels
596 (255) Interior
of the commodious hospital at Brighton.
597 (256) Her
Majesty visits R.N. Hospital at Hull.
598 (257) Lord
Kitchener’s magic appeal for men.
599 (258) The
answer to Lord Kitchener’s call. Kitchener’s men arrive
in France.
600 (260) Leicesters
passing a French canal on way to firing line.
601 (261) Guns
of the Royal Horse Artillery thundering through a French village.
602 (262) A
battalion of the Manchesters recuperate behind the line.
603 (263) An
Army field kitchen always ready with hot meals.
604 (264) Cavalry
coming up to support a hard pressed point of the line.
605 (265) Tommy’s
mount receives first attention.
606 (266) Huge
park of motor lorries waiting at railhead to load up with supplies.
607 (267) Surprise!
secret concentration of a huge fleet of British tanks.
608 (269) Enormous
propeller of wrecked Zeppelin.
609 (271) Examining
the fuse of an incendiary Zepp bomb.
610 (272) Millions
of pounds for sinews of war: busy day for Tank Bank.
611 (273) England’s
great welcome to first contingent of American troops.
612 (274) Army
lorries bringing up supplies on Italian front.
613 (275) Naval
gun landed at Walfisch Bay.
614 (276) Afternoon
tea under difficulties, invasion of bees.
615 (278) Transporting
wounded by hospital train during East African campaign.
616 (279) Auxiliary
Cruiser "König” sunk by Germans in attempt to block Dar-es-Salaam
harbour.
617 (280) EI-Kantara,
base for Egypt and Palestine as viewed from Suez Canal.
618 (283) Holding
a trench on the ridge of Lone Pine.
619 (284) Turks
lying as they fell on the slopes of Chunuk Bair.
620 (286) Our
gallant infantry charging the German position on a Balkan hillside.
621 (288) Anzacs
witness Commemoration of the End of War review in London.
622 (290) Captured
German submarine of the “Deutschland” type.
623 (291) “U”
boat has Saw-like cutters on prow of boat to aid escape from nets.
624 (292) Conning
tower on mine-laying German U Boat.
625 (293) Interior
of forward compartment of U boat 135.
626 (294) German
battle cruiser “Derfflinger” hauls down its flag to Admiral
Beatty.
627 (295) German
battleship Kaiserin surrendered at Scapa Flow.
628 (296) Officers
of 15th Btn., 48th Highlanders have last parade before demobilization.
629 (297) End
of the great adventure! Canadian troops return home.
630 (298) U.S.
troops arrive in New York, escorted by warships.
631 (299) Doughboys
remove wounded from ship on arrival at New York.
632 (300) Sailors
and soldiers of America in Victory Loan Procession, New York.
Box 22
Photographs 633-761
The captions below (633 to 710) are translations into English from text
in German pasted or typed on the versos.
633 “The installation
of the Polish Council of Regency in Warsaw, 27th October 1917. The festive
procession from the cathedral to the castle”
634 “Polish firemen
forming a cordon in front of the castle”
635 “A Polish
escort of Ulans on Sigismund Square”
636 “The crowd
during the festive procession on Sigismund Square in front of the castle”
637 “Russian negotiators
in discussions with German officers” 20 December 1917
638 “Russian deputies
which have come to the German Front because of armistice negotiations”
20 December 1917
639 “Russian deputies,
which went because of armistice negotiations to the German Front”,
20 December 1917
The treaty of Brest-Litovsk
640 “ The reception
of the Russian delegation at the railway station of Brest-Litovsk.”
20 December 1917
641 “The reception
of the Russian delegation at the railway station of Brest-Litovsk”.
642 “The armistice
of Brest-Litovsk. The reception of the Russian delegation at the railway
station of Brest-Litovsk”.
643 “ The reception
of the Russian delegation at the railway station of Brest-Litovsk: officers
of the Russian delegation talking to German officers. Left to right:
Captain of Russian General Staff Lipsky, (Captain von Trotha), Lt. Col.
of Russian General Staff Fokko, Maj. Gen. Skalan, Rear Adm. Altvater”.
644 “Members of
the Russian delegation after their arrival at the railway station of
Brest-Litovsk. Left to right: Maj. Brinkmann, Joffe, Chairman of the
Russian delegation, Mrs. Biecenko, Komeneff, Korachan, Secretary of
Delegation”.
645 “The building
in which the negotiations of the armistice took place”.
646 “At the Russian
telegraph office Brest-Petersburg”. 24 December 1917
647 “Col. Gantschew,
the Bulgarian plenipotentiary, on his way to the negotiations”.
24 December 1917
648 “Mrs. A.A.
Biecenko, a member of the Russian delegation”. 20 December 1917
649 “Members of
the Russian delegation on the way to the place of negotiations”.
650 “Members of
the Russian delegation on the way to the council chamber. Left to right:
Kameneff, Joffe, Rear-Adm. Altvater”.
651 “Members of
the German and Austrian Commissions in conversation before the reception
of the Russian delegation.”
652 “In front
of the conference building”
653 “Before the
entrance to the conference room”
654 “View of the
conference room during the negotiation”
655 “His Royal
Highness, Prince Leopold of Bavaria the commander- in-chief of the East
signing the armistice”. Also a mimeographed list of all participants.
Numbers have been written on them for identification purposes.
Suspension of hostilities on Eastern Front
656 “Suspension
of hostilities in a snow covered artillery position”, 25 January
1918
657 “Winter silence
on the German Quarters on the Eastern Front”
658 “ Winter silence
on the German Quarters on the Eastern Front”
659 “Winter silence
on the German Quarters on the Eastern Front”
660 “Winter silence
in a German shelter on the Eastern Front”, 2 February 1918
Between the positions before Dünaburg:
661 “ Return of
Russian emigrants from Switzerland to their homeland; arrival of emigrants
on the German light railway before their reloading onto Russian sleds”
662 “Return of
Russian emigrants from Switzerland to their homeland. Transfer of Russian
emigrants from German light railway to Russian sleds before trip to
Dünaburg”. 25 January 1918
663 “Return of
Russian emigrants from Switzerland to their homeland. Russian emigrants
at the point of transfer from German light railway to Russian sleds
before trip to Dünaburg”
664 “Return of
Russian emigrants at point of transfer from German light railway to
Russian sleds before journey to Dünaburg”
665 “Return of
Russian emigrants from Switzerland to their homelands. Transfer of Russian
emigrants from the German light railway to Russian sleds before journey
to Dünaburg”
666 “Russian emigrants
waiting for Russian sleds in the neutral zone”
667 “Return of
the Russian emigrants from Switzerland on the way to their homeland”
668 “Between the
positions before Dünaburg. Return of Russian emigrants from Switzerland
to their homeland. Arrival of Russian emigrants at the neutral zone
point of transfer, before the departure to Dünaburg”
669 “Return of
Russian emigrants from Switzerland to their homeland. German and Russian
soldiers in conversation with the emigrants”
670 “Between the
positions before Dünaburg. Return of Russian emigrants from Switzerland
to their homeland. Departure of Russian sleds to Dünaburg”
Between the lines before Dünaburg
671 “ German sentry
at the border of neutral zone”
672 “ German and
Russian sentries in the neutral zone on the railway Wilna-Dünaburg”
673 “ Issuing
German newspaper at the neutral zone”
674 “Transferring
mail for prisoners of war at a neutral junction”
675 “Labouring
to restore the railway line Wilna-Dünaburg”
676 “Labouring
to restore the railway line Wilna-Dünaburg”
677 “Labouring
to restore the railway line Wilna-Dünaburg”
678 “Before Dünaburg.
Building of the railroad connecting line to Dünaburg”, Feb.
1918
679 “Between the
lines before Dünaburg. Arrival of Russian soldier in the neutral
zone”
Armistice on the Eastern Front
680 “Life and
activity in front of the wire entanglements”, 12 January 1918
681 “Life and
activity between the lines : Russian purchasing consumer articles”
682 “Life and
activity between the lines: Russians purchasing consumer articles”
683 “Life and
activity between the lines: Russians purchasing consumer articles”
684 “Life and
activity between the lines: the daily exchange of ideas in front of
the wire entanglements”
685 “Life activity
between the lines: the daily exchange of ideas in front of the wire
entanglements”
686 “Life and
activity between the lines: peaceful gathering in front of the wire
entanglements”
687 “Life and
activity between the lines: Russian cigarette under German fire”
688 “Before Dünaburg
- German fire for a Russian cigarette”
689 “Between the
lines before Dünaburg. Life and activity in the neutral zone during
the concert of a German military band”
690 “Life and
activity in the neutral zone during the concert of a German military
band”
Before Dünaburg, February 1918
691 “Frolick between
the lines”
692 “Amusement
between the lines”
693 “Amusement
between the lines”
694 “German-Russian
soldiers dancing at the meeting place between the lines”
695 “Russian regimental
band at a recital on a meeting place between the lines”
696 “Concert at
a meeting place between the lines”
697 “Concert promenade
at meeting place between the lines”
698 “Russian soldiers
bartering at a meeting place between the lines”
Life and activity on the Yassyolda river:
699 “At the river
crossing”
700 German military
concert at a meeting place between the lines
701 German military
concert at a meeting place between the lines 13 February 1918
702 At a meeting place
between the lines 1 February 1918
703 German military
concert at a meeting place between the lines 13 February 1918
704 1 February 1918
705 13 February 1918
706 13 February 1918
707 At barter
708 At barter
709 At barter
710 At barter
712 “The Right
Hon. The Earl of Derby, Secretary of State for War, at the wedding of
his heir, Lord Stanley, Also Lt. Gen. Sir Francis Lloyd, and Earl Howe”
715 Rt. Hon. Arthur
J. Balfour, Prime Minister, autographed portrait
716 Rt. Hon. A. Bonar
Law, Prime Minister, autographed portrait
717 Brig. General E.
Allan Wood, autographed portrait
718 4 Squadron R.A.F.
Nov. 1918 France, without hats. There is also a glass plate negative
of this in Box 23.
719 4 Squadron R.A.F.
Nov. 1918 France, with hats
Note: 4 Squadron took some of the photographs in our Aerial photographs
collection
720 The Grenades, 1919;
theatrical group (?)
721 Tadcaster, aerial
view of military camp
722 6th Field Survey
Co. Royal Engineers (map makers)
723 “R.E. officers
33rd division724 “R.E.
officers 33rd division”
725 “R.E. officers
33rd division”
726 “The Great
Mystery Tower, Southwick”, Shoreham, U.K., built as a defence
tower against German submarines. (postcard)
727 “Central Section
of R.N. Mobile A.A. Bgde. In position on coast”. There is also
a glass plate negative of this in Box 23.
728 Royal Flying Corps
training camp?; aerial view
729 See Box 23
730 R.N. Mobile Column
9?
731 Royal Flying Corps
and aeroplane. (Cut-down postcard)
732 Aerial photograph
733 "Overlap Photographs";
table of exposure intervals for aerial photography
734 Officer (postcard)
735 Royal Engineers?
736 Royal Engineers?
737 “Jindman’s
(?) Todessturz” [Death fall] German soldiers and wreckage
738 H.M.S. Furious
(aircraft carrier)
739 “15.H.1312.
Doncaster A24c. 12.6.17”; aerial
740 “15.H.1314.
Doncaster A23b.12.6.17”; aerial
740a Soldiers marching, some with
guns and others with shovels
740b Women in uniform marching in
parade
740c Lord Kitchener portrait
740d “Noakes is officer on
left - photograph taken in the South of France where he was convalescing
after being wounded”. (postcard)
741-742 b, oversize aerial photographs, described as part of the Trench
Maps and Aerial photographs collection. Location is on top of Box 24
of this collection.
743 First Army panorama
No. P 110 from Hill 145 [Vimy Ridge]. (Oversize 8L)
744 First Army panorama
No. P53 made on 4.14.16 (between Dudley Lane and Stone St.); shows the
German Front Line. (Oversize 8L)
Box 23
Glass plate negative; aerial view
729 Supply Centre and
rail head in France
Glass plate slides; aerial views
745 Marquion railhead
France
746 Rail-head
747 Buried cable and
air line above Hombleres?, France
748 Temporary dump,
Sancourt France
749 Air line Sancourt,
France
750 AA 585 trenches
and wire H.6 France
751 N 37 DUP. P.P.6.
4905 Basra Docks, vertical and oblique of same area Iraq
752 342058 AC/2 Viner?
F.H. France?
753 Active and inactive
batteries in the snow
754 Spider wire batteries
in the snow, France
755 Spider wire, France
Glass plate slides
756 Drawing of officer
superimposed on a landscape with aeroplane above
Chatham (?), numbers 575-771a
757 Model trench
758 Shell exploding
759 Men on barrel dock
moving logs
760 Steamship along
the coast
761 Men building a floating
bridge
763 East Yorkshire Regiment
War Memorial
764 Two officers (?)
on a wood bridge
765 Men learning to
dig a trench
766 Barrel raft with
pulley (?)
767 Men building support
768 Cadets tying rope
around logs and barrels
769 Men on floating
barrel plank way
770 Wood bridge constructed
by tying logs with rope
771a Cadets building a wood bridge
over ditch
771b Wood bridges at training camp
772 Trench wall (?)
773 Finished wood and
rope bridge
774 Looking across wood
bridge
775 Soldiers building
a wall into a hill
776 Soldiers looking
at defence wall
777 Bridge over stream
778 Wood ramp before
bridge
779 Rail bridge over
a river
780 Practise trench
system (?)
781 Soldiers posing
on a bridge they built
782 Soldiers viewing
ditch trap
783 Constructing a bridge
784 Practise defence
positions
785 Stone wall (?)
786 Finished practice
trench
Note: There are also six glass plate negatives which have not been identified
or numbered
Box 24
Oversize items and photograph negatives, with numbers which fit into
the preceding sequence.
423 “55 Squadron
Royal Air Force, Mosul 20th May, 1921”, surrounded by signatures
424 “17th H.L.I.
Service Brigade taken in 1915 in England before proceeding to France”
425 Two photographs
(421, 422) pasted on board with names printed below. These photographs
are not larger in size.
426 “Canal Defence
Headquarters Ismailia, Egypt 1915”; group of military personnel
427 Army officers at
Colchester: Their names are written on the verso: 2nd Lieut. G. Lees,
Lieut. Robinson, Smart, 2nd Lieut. Molineux, Capt. E. Middlemiss, Major
M. Butler O.C.; Capt. Watson P.S.O.
428 “The officers,
Rushmoor group, Howitzer batteries, Royal Field Artillery Oct. 1916”.
Underneath this printed text, all the names are printed. Taken at Aldershot.
711 “5th (Service)
Battalion the Connaught Rangers. Basingstoke, 1915”
713 “Machine gun
course 1915 Bisley Camp ... Central Force School outside Canadian hut,
Brookwood”. The names of all the men in the photograph are recorded
on the verso.
714 “D. Lloyd
George”, Secretary of State of War, 7 July-7 Dec. 1916; portrait
Also 138 photographic negatives: Many have been matched to numbered
photographs.
Numbered
albums (photograph albums, scrapbooks, diaries / journals, notebooks);
68 albums
Note: The albums noted as oversize are filed
at the end of the sequence of albums.
1 Album of news clippings, 1917-1918, although the clippings
are not arranged chronologically. Also, loose: handwritten sheets of
lists killed, wounded, mentioned in despatches, commissions won
in the field, medals, foreign orders and medals, and others; printed
East Lancashire Regiment lists with dates and notations added by hand,
June 1916-Sept. 1918.
2 Album, The Fourth Armys Advance August-November
1918; 48 b&w photographs depicting the crossing of the Selle,
The Somme, the Hindenburg Line, the Oise Canal, the Bony Tunnel
landscapes only. There are no human beings in the photographs.
3a-b.Two albums, Col.-Comdt. Stuart Williams Hughes Rawlins (Tots),
Royal Artillery, 1880-1927. There is a loose typed note about his military
career which began in the South African War in 1902. Album 3a begins
with his engagement notice, n.d, and a photograph of him and his wife
(Dots), in 1919, followed by photographs from the
spring before the Great War, then Mobilization, August 4,
1914 at Lyndhurst; birth of his son (Bun) in 1915;
The Somme, 1916. The album contains personal correspondence (cards addressed
to baby), photographs (camps, military exercises, baby christening,
post cards (one written in German), news clippings, menus. Also loose:
personal correspondence, postcards, church program from 1910. Album
3b is noted as Book 2: The Great War and begins in 1917.
It has a postcard, Fleurs de France with flowers made from
fabric; pressed dried flowers, letter to Mrs. Rawlins, news clippings,
postcards, menus, b&w photographs (war gardens). Loose: letter to
his son, Christmas card, b&w postcard photograph of two men with
a horse and cart. Rawlinss French Legion of Honour certificate
(oversize) is in Map Cabinet 38, as is his award from Albert, Roi des
Belges (Belgium), his Order of the Bath from George V, and his six mentioned
in Despatches certificates, 1915-1919.
4a-f Three albums, and a memoir in three volumes, Lieut. C.H.
Lennox Ingall, Gordon Highlanders. Album 4a begins with instalments
from a newspaper of The Diary of Lord Bertie of Thame, 1914-1918,
published in 1924; the original war material only begins about halfway
through the album with documents concerning Lieut Ingall: orders, instructions,
certificates, tickets, programme, poem To my Mother, ration
book, officer cadet examination questions, 7 official b&w photographs;
aerial photograph (possibly German), 1914-1918; one later news clipping
The Lost Generation, 1930. Album 4b is noted as Letters
written between 1914 and 1919 while in the Army (containing one letter
from each camp etc. where I was stationed). Letters are still
in their envelopes. Album 4c contains news clippings, printed documents
including Notes on Chinese Labour and a booklet on The Gordon
Highlanders, official correspondence, New Years menu, 1918, illustrated
with artwork: water colour of witch, cauldron and cat. Memoir, volumes
4d-f: written in 1924. The volumes also contain photographs, postcards,
news clippings, maps and diagrams.
5 Album, C.G. Lacy of Womens Legion of Motor-Drivers, 1918-1937;
predominant, 1918-1923. B&w photographs of ambulances, cars, trucks,
peace procession in 1919, French battlefields after the war, Comité Américain pour les regions devasteés
de la France. There are also many loose documents: list of members,
casualties, orders, printed letter from George VI, news clippings as
well as photographs, negatives, and a Christmas card depicting an ambulance.
6 Album of 24 b&w photographs, n.d., unidentified military
personnel only activities depicted are digging trenches and shaving.
7 Album of 24 b&w photographs, n.d. Many of the photographs
are annotated in different hands: Argonne, Trench St. Mihel, Hindenburg
Line, Arras, and Paris. There are several photographs of dead or wounded
German soldiers, also German and French flame throwers, wrecked German
airplane, German gun, bombed out house and ruined Belgian village, a
British tank disguised by the Germans, German cemetery at Drancourt,
German trenches, American and French troop reviews. At the end of the
album are three photographs of nursing sisters. There are also four
loose photographs: Marshall Foch arriving at Victoria Station 27 February
1921; Italy, March 1918; granite pillar near Port Said; unidentified
ship.
8 Album, Lieutenant Gilbert H.C. Hawtrey, 1914-1930: personal
and official correspondence, military orders,
maps, artwork, postcards, photographs, passes and permits, pressed flower
from the Newfoundland Memorial Park dated 1920. Hawtrey served with
a variety of British regiments. Oversize.
9 Scrapbook, Col. H.P. Jones, 1917-1918. Jones was attached to the Intelligence
Section A General Staff Headquarters in France. Situation maps and b&w aerial photographs of bomb targets canals,
bridges (before, during and after) in Belgium, parade ground
and bridge building, machine gunners. Also translation of a German poster
(printed), Christmas card, entertainment and service programs, news
clippings. Oversize.
10 Scrapbook
of news clippings, b&w posters, col. postcard, Oct. 1914-Aug. 1915.
Oversize.
11a-e Album and
four journals, Francis Alleyne Marr, 1912-1932; 1943. Album 11a: certificates,
officer commission, orders, menu, b&w photographs, postcards. Marr
rose to the rank of Brigade Major in the Cambridgeshire Regiment. His
death notice and obituary, 1943, are also in the album. Journals b-e:
the journals contain handwritten transcriptions of 475 of his letters
home from 1915 to 1918. Some news clippings have been pasted into the
journals. Album11a is oversize.
12 Journal, Frederick Charles Edds, 1916-1927, sailor. The journal
begins with a few news clippings, including the notice of his wedding
in New Zealand in 1927 when he was a Leading Seaman, and an article
about the death of his brother, also in the service, in 1918, followed
by notes including the Sailors Ten Commandments, and a list
of his personal war events, 1915-1918. The journal begins in February
1916 with the commissioning of H.M.S. Narwhal, with trials following
in the Clyde. The journal takes the form of brief entries, mainly describing
where the ship went and other ships that were nearby. Submarine attacks
and deaths at sea are noted. This part of the journal ends on 16 December
1918, followed by a note that he was paid off Narwhal
on
April 7, 1919. The journal then continues with other ships that
he served on until 1927. Pasted in at the back of the journal are more
news clippings.
13
Album, Lieut. G.W.M. Grover, Royal Marines, 1915-1920; 1953. Lieut.
Grover belonged to B Company of the Deal Battalion which
landed in Gallipoli on 25-29 April 1915. He sailed on the Franconia.
Later the Deal Battalion left Egypt in the Almwick Castle for
Mudros and then Skyros. There are b&w photographs taken at Gallipoli,
on Stavros and Mudros in Greece, in Egypt, and Malta. Because Grover
remained in the service, there are photographs taken in the 1920s. There
are also two letters (loose) written in 1953 from Hugh Dalton, M.P,
about Rupert Brooke. Re Brooke not writing any of his poetry on Skyros
and Groves memories of Brookes burial. Also printed (col.)
British decorations; later research notes on Grover.
14 Album complied
by the Cane family stranded in Switzerland, August 1914. B&w photographs,
postcards, artwork, maps, and notices from the British Repatriation
Committee, Lucerne. There are two photographs of troop mobilization,
one in Lucerne, and one in the woods at Sonnenberg. Apart from these
two photographs and the notices, the album depicts an idyllic holiday.
15 Album of b&w
photographs taken in Middle East, 1915-1918. Arrangement of photographs
is not chronological. Album begins with photographs taken in Jordan
and Jerusalem as well as a group photograph of General Englefield (?)
of the 54th Division, General Wabon of the force in Egypt
and Lt. Col. Ward. The album contains photographs of dead Turkish soldiers;
the aftermath of the Battle of Beersheba; various scenes in Cairo; a
camp in the desert in Gaza; and other scenes in the region. There are
also four loose photographs including a military group beside a fence
with a life preserver which reads Bridge El Shatt and a
portrait of Col. Sir Arthur Henry McMahon, First High Commissioner to
Egypt, 1914-1916.
16 Album of b&w
photographs, 1914-1917. The album begins with sporting activities: lawn
tennis, golf, field hockey, croquet as well as family gatherings with
children and dogs. The first caption, several pages in is of the August
Bank Holiday weekend, 1914. This is followed by a holiday in Scotland
in June 1914. Next is a page of various men in military uniform, one
of whom has joined the Queen Victoria Rifles. Then photographs taken
outside military hospitals begin: Ottershaw Park, 1914-1915; St. Georges
Hill, 1914; Clandon Park, 1915-1916; Longleat, 1916 (has some interior
shots); Lady Evenly Mason, 1916-1917. A military wedding is also depicted.
The album concludes with photographs taken outside England (Malta?,
Turkey?) with patients outdoors.
17 Album, R.C.
Jenkins, Despatch Rider, Hdqts., Harwich Garrison. B&w photographs
taken by Jenkins and others, 1914-1915, including a photograph of Jenkins
on his motorcycle. At the end of the album there is a photograph of
Jenkins in a aeroplane. There are also the following loose items: news
clipping noting Jenkinss death he was then with the R.F.C.
and he died while flying; a divisional party programme; Christmas card.
18 Album, Capt.
E.A. Emmet, Gloucestershire Regiment, 1914-1931. B&w photographs
of military training and camps as well as family photographs taken on
leave, printed Bovril War Diary, certificates, officers
commission, programmes, Christmas and postcards, official correspondence,
news clippings, a history of the Gloucestershire Regiment, 1914, regimental
dinner menus, 1920-1931. The album is arranged chronologically; there
is also a chronology written on a loose sheet. Also loose are a memorial
programme for The Menin Road, 1928, a list of officers serving
with B.E.F., 1915-1916, and part of a letter.
19 Scrapbook
of news clippings, 1916.
20 Diary, Walter
Dennis who served on H.M.S Vengeance, 28 July 1914-30 July 1915.
B&w photographs of the ship and gun turret, col. maps done by hand
of Gallipoli; news clippings of other ships. A note in the beginning
indicates that he was keeping the diary at the request of his brother.
Also loose photographs of the gun crew with a sign The Dardanelles,
1915, printed A Sailors Prayer, photograph of
Dennis, ca. 1936.
21 Diary,
Fifth Royal Irish Lancers, written possibly by W.J. Russell, 1914-1915;
a description of Mons Pilgrimage Nov. 10th to Nov.
13th 1927; also news clippings about the Lancers to
1928
22 Diary, William
OSullivan Molony, 1913-1914. Correspondence (includes his American
cousin Charlotte with whom he fell in love) has been pasted into the
diary which also contains artwork and b&w photographs. Molony, a
British subject fluent in German, had been in Berlin since March 1914
where he was cramming for Oxford and was still there when war was declared
in August. He describes events in Berlin was well as news that he has
read or heard. There are no photographs of this time. The diary ends
on16 September when he was still in Berlin. Also loose correspondence,
b&w photographs, and col. postcards. Molony wrote Prisoners and
Captives in 1933 describing his time as a P.O.W. in the German internment
camp of Ruhleben. He also wrote an autobiography, New Armor for Old
in 1935 which includes a chapter on his repatriation with other prisoners.
23a-c Anonymous
diaries: Diary 23a is titled Copy of Rough Diary, 1916-1917,
written in point form. Diary 23b is titled Memories. 1914-1918,
69 pp. and was written ca. 1934. The diarist recollects his reluctance
to join up, several refusals, and then his acceptance into Queen Victorias
Rifles in June 1915. The memories are not complete. Diary 23c, 1917,
is written as a narrative, appears to be the continuation of 23b. Also
loose is a map of Belgium and part of France.
24 Diary, "My
Last Year of the War", Douglas James Valentine, Royal Army Medical
Corps, "Nov. 1917-Nov. 1918". This diary is on typed mimeographed
pages, later bound. Also contains maps (printed and drawn), menus, postcards,
messages, meal card, awarding of Military Cross, official correspondence,
news clippings. Loose are a news clipping, map, and a letter.
25 Album, Red
Cross food parcel dispatch labels; 51 labels pasted onto stiff pages.
26 The Lord
Roberts Memorial Fund Stamp Album, London: Fawcett & Co., n.d.
Pasted into this published album are news clippings about Lord Kitchener.
The col. portrait stamps are generally in good condition, although a
few have been damaged. The stamps depict royalty, officers, etc. with
mini biographies opposite the portraits.
27 Notebook,
P.D. Willcock, "Machine Gun Notes, taken at The Inns of Court O.T.C.
Machine Gun School, Lieut. Royser, Machine Gun Officer, June 1916, [by]
P.D. Willcock, No. 2 Company. The notes are preceded by an index.
Artwork the cover of the notebook has been illustrated in col.
with an image of a soldier with a machine gun.
28 Notebook,
12th Course Rifle. Eastern Command. School of Musketry,
Hythe, 28 May to 18th June, 1915
C.C. Duncum
Middlesex Regiment. The notes are preceded by an index. Illustrations
are pasted in.
29 Notebook,
Signalling Notes , J.R. Goldthorpe, 2nd Lieut.,
Northumberland Fusiliers, n.d. Illustrations are drawn.
30 Secret cypher
log for a ship; blank.
31 Notebook on
a variety of topics including: bombing and grenades, gas, musketry,
Hotchkiss gun. Most of the notes are on gas attacks.
32 Newspaper
clippings, 1914-1920. Also 2 b&w postcards, one of Ontario Military
Hospital, Orpington, and the other of a military funeral. Oversize.
33 Wireless
Telegraph Signal Log for H.M.S. Fantome, 1916. Most pages
are blank.
34 Scrapbook,
1914-1918. Newspaper articles and cartoons. The text of the address
(typescript carbon) of Mr. Wodehouse, the British Commission to Cyprus,
announcing the annexation of Cyprus by Great Britain in 1914 is pasted
on p. 29. Oversize.
35 Album, S.S.A.
(Section Sanitaire Anglaise) No. 16, British Red Cross. B&w photographs,
quality varies, some are captioned; b&w and col. postcards. Subjects
vary: they include tents, French war graves, cars and trucks, sporting
events, towns and villages, Zeppelin brought down at Ravigny (charred
bodies), wounded, German prisoners, downed French aeroplane, grave-stones.
Although there are pictures of the wounded, there are none of them being
treated. There is also a printed leaflet, S.S.A. 16, 1915-1919,
3 loose photographs and a negative.
36 Scrapbook,
Mesopotamia and Bombay, 1916, 1915-1919, compiled by H.
Wicks, Royal Naval Air Squadron. B&w photographs and postcards,
most with captions. Arrangement is not chronological or geographic.
Includes Basra, Bagdad, Enras Tomb, Amara, Orah, Kut, Mosul. Depicts
guns, planes, boats, camels, sports, hospital interior (Bombay), military
funeral (Bombay), wrecked Zepp at Cuffley. A wedding picture from 1918
appears fairly early in the album. Later in the album there are photographs
taken in England at Chingford in 1915, aeroplanes, Americans training
at Battersea. There are also 5 loose photographs, including one of H.
Wicks and a huge military parade (Bombay?).
37 Album, Norah
Speed,Womens Volunteer Reserve Corps; Womens Reserve Ambulance
(Green Cross Society); Green Cross Corps, 1915-1921; 1928. Begins with
a chronology for 1915. Includes news clippings, correspondence, W.V.R.
Marching Song, programmes, constitution and rules, informational brochure,
correspondence, list of activities, Thanksgiving Day Eagle Hut programme
cover illustration in col. is a turkey 1918, b&w photographs,
rifle targets. Also loose: b&w photograph, arm patch, 1916 concert
program Ten Years After, No. 3 Ypres programme, 1928.
38 Album, Major.
W.S. Sarsfield, 1st Bn Connaught Rangers and his son, Patrick,
1761-1934; predominant, 1888-1923.W.S Sarsfield was commissioned in
1888 at Sandhurst he was killed at The Aisne in September 1914.
His son Patrick was commissioned in 1917 and later served in India.
Commissions, certificates, orders, programmes, b&w photographs,
news clippings, maps. Also loose: 3 receipts all dated 1761, 2 letters
(one dated 1910), 2 b&w photographs of a regimental dinner, Royal
Military College certificate, 1888, news clipping. Oversize
39 Scrapbook,
Capt. Vincent Edward Green, North Staffordshire Regiment, 1916-1919.
B&w photographs, including a entire brigade on the steep slopes
of the St. Quentin Canal, postcards (includes Ceylon), maps, list of
battles, messages, money, tickets, news clippings, and correspondence.
The contents of this scrapbook have been removed and placed in file
folders; the covers of the scrapbook were not kept. A handwritten list
of the contents was begun. Oversize news clippings from this album are
in M.C. 38
40a-b Two scrapbooks,
Salmond family. Scrapbook 40a concerns Major-General J.M. Salmond, 1914-1916.
News clippings, programmes, stamps, b&w photographs including Australian
camps on the banks of the Suez, S.M.S. Emden on the rocks, 1914
(photographs and map), rationing instructions and cards; also 2 loose
photographs. The scrapbook is not complete; only some pages from 19
through 47 are extant. Scrapbook 40b concerns Mrs. H.B. Salmond. News
clippings, programmes.
41 Diary, Edward
C. Cruttwell, New Zealand and on Voyage to England, R.M.S.
Corinthic, August-September, 1915. In addition to the text,
there are news clippings, b&w photographs, col. postcards, programmes,
printed information on the ship and this voyage, menus, some of which
are dated earlier in 1915.
42a-b Diaries,
R. Cude, Diary of My Wanderings Both at Home and Abroad in the
War of 1914-1918; two volumes.
43 Diary, Sgt.
Bell, 16th Lancers, begun 1914.
44 Diary and
maps, Lieut. G. Frampton, Second Canadian Division, 18 April-27 Oct
1916; also reports and diagrams of buried cables (one is marked Ypres),
and maps of France in a case
45 Diary, Capt.
A.C. Elliott, 24 July 1914-April 1920. Also a Christmas menu, 15th
Scottish Division, 1917, and 3 letters of reference for Elliott, 1920.
46 Scrapbook,
B.M Ivison, 1918-1922. Contains b&w photographs, artwork: pencil
drawings of airplanes (one with a pilot), cartoons, best wishes with
autographs, printed German documents. One loose coloured pencil drawing
of a Sopwith Triplane.
47a-c Diaries, L.H. Jones, 376 D Company,
10th (S) Battalion, E.Y. RCT., British Expeditionary Force,
1916-1918. Three pocket diaries.
48 Notebook, March 1918, on the construction of missen huts by
the British Expeditionary Forces in France. Anonymous .
49 Diary, Maurice Marcel Frederic Condé-Williams, Royal Navy,
1914-1915, 1918. Entries begin 28 July 1914. Some entries for August
1914 are written on separate sheets of paper. There is also an exchange
of telegrams between King George and an admiral and an application from
Condé-Williams to join the Colonial service in 1918. It includes a listing
of his various naval appointments, beginning in 1902 until 1918 when
he was Paymaster Commander.
50 Autograph book, E. Cooke, nursing sister, 56 Gen. Hospital,
1917-1918. Begun 30 January 1917 containing best wishes from her patients
poems, and artwork (pencil and pen drawings and water colours
of regimental badges, landscapes, trenches); cartoons. Includes Vimys
Advance with an angel overhead, Ypres. There is one portrait.
51 Notebook, Pte. G.F. Morley, 1917. On machine guns.
52a-b Bound typescript, Salvage from a Derelict Ministry,
rescued by G.C. Duggan, 2 vols. The typescripts were bound in Belfast.
The inscription to Sir Ernest Julian Foley (Director of Transport, Admiralty
and Ministry of Shipping 1917) in Volume 1 notes that the manuscript
was completed in June 1920 and this copy was made in May 1924. The author,
George Chester Duggan (1887-1967), worked in the Transport Department.
53 Notebook of various typescripts, beginning with Notes
Prepared for the Guidance of Officers, Posted for or Under Training
For Administrative and Disciplinary Duties. Each typescript
is numbered separately. At the back are separate indexes for each typescript.
The typescripts are not dated but the inscription is, 21 November 1918.
The authors signature is not legible. Also loose are four b&w
photographs, two of Cardinal Bourne visiting Irish troops at the front,
two of a camp at Rochester, Northumberland, taken from a distance.
54 Scrapbook of news clippings, 1914-1915; some of the clippings
are loose. Also a photograph of Robert Love with a captured gun, 1918
and printed notebook, The Royal Engineers Field-Service Pocket-Book,
with some hand-written notes by Love, a note of distinction for Robert
Love, S.M.E. Fortification Circulars, . The last page of the scrapbook
has a photograph of a Miss Love at her wedding to Capt. W.M.L. Escombe.
55 Pilots Flying Log book, Lieut. F. Marlowe, 1915-1918;
1944. Pasted into the front of the log are a photograph of Marlowe in
Malta, 1917 and a typed list of aeroplanes flown. Also loose photographs
(Marlowe, Snow, aeroplanes, bombing of Goeben, The Dardanelles), officers
mess bill, two news clippings, one about the death of Edward Snow.
56 Diary, Capt. Dymoke White, Hampshire Yeomanry, 1917-1918.
There is a brief biography of White compiled by archival staff.
57a-c Three diaries, E.T. Rice, 1st Army Signals,
1917-1918. Two pocket diaries and a notebook. The 1917 pocket diary
ends in November 1917 and is completed in the notebook. Also a typescript
with information supplied by Rice. His Maintenance Party was in La Bassée
Sector of the Front Line and was responsible for the maintenance of
the buried cables in that area.
58 Notebook, T. Parkes, Royal Engineers, August 1917. Notes on
lectures about gas attacks the first lecture is not dated; the
third is dated August 13, 1917, the last is dated August 17, 1917. Also
a blank Bijou Pocket Calendar, 1917.
59 Scrapbook, M. Scarlett, Westminster Dragoons, 1915-1918. The
scrapbook no longer has its covers and is in sections; the first page
is printed The Great War, Memories of Egypt, Palestine, Gallipoli,
Cyprus, Belgium and France. B&w photographs taken in Palestine,
Egypt, Cyprus, and England with captions, including native omnibus
at Bethlehem, 1917; the burial of our spurs and mock funeral
on being dismounted April 1918, news clippings, Turkish money
picked up with a lance. Also loose: 1 b&w photograph of horses eating
from feed bags; manuscript Survey in Palestine, the M.E.F.,
8 pages; Red Cross certificate issued to his wife or mother, Mrs. M.
Scarlett. Scarletts name does not appear on the manuscript or
in the scrapbook.
60a-c Album and two notebooks, Major S.H. Morgan, East Lancashire
Divisional Engineers and Lieut. Cyril Morgan, East Lancashire Royal
Field Artillery. Album 60a none of the b&w photographs are
dated or captioned they depict cavalry, artillery guns, a motorcycle,
a dog pulling a large wagon, and other scenes. Because of the subject
matter, the photographs probably were taken by Cyril. Album 60b
Notebook, stamped Lecture Notes, S.H. Morgan, 15 December 1915-1916.
Album 60c Notebook, different hand and thus by Cyril, begins
August 1916 with course on gunnery See also Box 4, Files
7-8.
61 Album, Lieut. Wilfrid Alexander Parr, Royal Fusiliers, 1913-1918.
The album was compiled by his friends after his death during the Battle
of Arras in 1917. It contains photographs of training and camps, marches,
his commission (he came up from the ranks), situation map, official
correspondence including accounts of his death, news clippings. Also
loose: additional official correspondence, 1918.
62 Anonymous diary, 1916-1917. Although found in the same file
as the Parr album, it cannot be Parrs. The diarist joined the
Surrey Yeo[men?] in 1914 and was trained in mounted infantry, cavalry,
as a cyclist, and then infantry. The diary begins when he sails for
France in September 1916.
63 Six diaries, Clifford Thompson, F.R.A., 1915-1918. The diaries
have been numbered by the author, 1-6. Also loose: Thompsons record
of service book, 4 b&w annotated photographs of Clifford and others
with horses, 1915; postcard of church plaque, ink (blue and red) drawing
of battle honours, December 1918; identification tags, one issue each
of The Buzzer and Bradford Daily Telegraph.
64a-b Two diaries, Pte. C.T. Kemmis, 1917-1918; 1924. Kemmis
notes that on 9 August he joined the Independent Labour Party (ILP).
Pasted into the first diary are three cards issued by the ILP
strangely enough the membership is not made out to Kemmis but to Ed
Clinton (an alias?). Also a published booklet is the National Federation
of Discharged
Soldiers. A news clipping about the appointment
of the new C.I.D. chief in 1924 has also been pasted into the diary.
Some of the diary entries (e.g. March 1918) indicate that Kemmis was
spying on pacifists.
65 Scrapbook, London Scottish, 1914-1918, news clippings. See
also Robert Whyte (separate fonds) and London Scottish history (Boxes
8 and 9 in this collection).
66 Field Message Book for the use of Dismounted Regimental Officers
and Non-commissioned Officers of Cavalry and Infantry. The book contains
one page of notes. Anonymous.
67 Lt. R. Booth Scott, Machine Gunners Pocket Book, 1918
68 Page 22 from an album; it has not been possible to identify
which one. One side of the page is a mimeographed drawing by Bruce Bairnsfather,
Spring Dream, 1916; on the other side is a note about a trench map.
69 Four pages from an album: b&w naval
photographs with captions, 1912-1917: includes H.M.S. Kangaroo,
1912; airship picked up in the Channel in 1915; Ajax and King
George V; H.M.S. Munster, April 15th 1916; H.M.S. Warsprite
May ("sunk by the Hun May 31st 1916"); the sinking of the German
Raider Grief Feb. 29th, 1916; Erin and Centurion;
Munster, Mary Rose, Diligence; Rosyth, 1916. H.M.S. Ajax
("hoisting out one of a turret's guns damaged at Jutland");
H.M.S. Repluse 1917
70 Five pages from an album:b&w
photographs with captions taken in post-war France, 1920-1926, also
a few undated photographs taken in Fiji. Includes American cemetery
at Romaigne, Fort Faux at Verdun, tanks, trenches, dug-out, mostly near
Prompelle, ruins of buildings (includes Rheims Cathedral)
71 Five pages from an album: b&w
photographs of 25th Cavalry (Frontier Force), 1917-1918, in German East
Africa, Portuguese East Africa, arrival in Bombay, Almora, Kumaon. Includes
the Mbemkuru Valley Raid in 1917 where German food stores were destroyed.
72
Notebook on a variety of topics including: camouflage, emplacements,
German mortars and ammunition, missiles, observation, ranging, high
explosives. The cover is no longer extant. Anonymous. A printed document
pasted into the notebook is dated 1918.
73 Lieut. G.R.E.
Hayter, R.F.C., scrapbook of aerial photographs with corresponding photographs
of trench maps, including areas around Vis-en-Artois, Haucourt, Hendecourt,
Cagnicourt, and Queant.
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