Thursday, 3 November 2011

Unclaimed portraits of lost Diggers sent home

HUNDREDS of unclaimed portraits of World War I Diggers taken in London before they left to fight on the Western Front will be added to the National Archives collection today.
The 500 black and white portraits were found among 1600 photographs of Allied soldiers collected by the Imperial War Museum, London, after the war. The 500 are significant because they are not known to exist anywhere else, mainly because soldiers never returned from battle to collect them.
The Department of Veterans' Affairs historical researcher Courtney Page-Allen said the studio portraits were valuable because they were about the individual. ''The most important thing is that it reminds you that every one of these men was a real man with a life and a family,'' she said.



''Over the years I have seen literally millions of photographs from public and private collections. But these are different. They are not photos taken in the trenches or on the frontline where the story was the battle. These are about the individual.''
In contrast, Ms Page-Allen pointed to servicemen killed in Iraq and Afghanistan who are remembered as individuals - mainly possible because modern-day fatalities are comparatively low. But this was not possible during the First World War because the numbers were so overwhelming.
Among the portraits is Ballarat engineer William Robert Allen, who was killed in France in February 1917, six months after being promoted to lieutenant.


Also found was a photograph of Queensland farmer Irvine Barton, who was 19 when he joined the Second Lighthorse Regiment in 1914.
He died in France of wounds in April 1918 after being awarded the military cross for his ''coolness, dash and military judgment of the highest order'' a month earlier.
According to a report in the London Gazette, he was on patrol behind enemy lines when he allowed eight German soldiers to come within a few feet of his concealed position. After calling on the enemy to surrender, Barton was wounded in the gunfight. Within a month he had returned to the frontline, where he was fatally shot.


#familyhistory

Share/Bookmark

Monday, 31 October 2011

Logging on to town’s history

Twelve year old Joshua Fawcett who has created his own online Scarborough history page. 114306a. Picture Kevin Allen. 24/10/11.

A SCARBOROUGH school boy with a passion for history has created his own web page about Scarborough’s past.

Twelve year old Joshua Fawcett has set up a page on social networking site Facebook, where he collects and displays old pictures and stories about Scarborough.
The page, entitled Old Scarborough Photo Archive, has 444 ‘likes’ which is the amount of people who regularly log on.
Joshua, who has aspergers syndrome, is now appealing for more old photos of the town to add to his collection.
He said: “I started the page because I was researching my family history and enjoyed finding out about history. I thought it would be good to find out more about the history of Scarborough too, and the different areas.
“It has really gone well, and I have got quite a few people viewing it which is good.
“I’m always looking for more photos to add to it, and I’m hoping to start one on Filey, and different areas around Scarborough too.”
Joshua’s mother Natalie Fawcett is delighted with her son’s hobby.
She said; “I am just really proud of him and what he has done, especially considering he is only 12 and he has aspergers.
“He has a genuine love of history, and it is wonderful to see him doing something productive with his time, when most boys his age just use computers to play games.
“I am so pleased for him that the page is so popular. People are always commenting on his photos and sharing their own experiences and memories.”
If you would like to donate any pictures to Joshua for his page you can contact him via his facebook page, which is Old Scarborough Photo Archive.


#oldphotos

Share/Bookmark

Tuesday, 25 October 2011

Harold Pinter's forgotten sketch rediscovered after more than 50 years

Surprise find at British Library is the script of 'Umbrellas', part of a 1960 revue performed only once at the Nottingham Playhouse
Harold Pinter in the 1960s. Photograph: Hulton Archive

It was part of a 1960 revue at the Nottingham Playhouse called You, Me and the Gatepost, performed for one night only, and then promptly forgotten.
But the sketch, written by a 29-year-old Harold Pinter and lost for more than half a century, has re-emerged as a result of some diligent detective work and is published by the Guardian for the first time and in full.
The sketch, set on the sunbathed terrace of a large hotel and called Umbrellas, is very Pinter, and if there was any doubt who the author was, then the 12 designated pauses are something of a giveaway.
Pinter's widow, Lady Antonia Fraser, said she had been "completely unaware" of the existence of Umbrellas. "It's fun. We've all been quarrelling over acting it in the family. I want to act B, which is the better part, but so far I've only managed to act A, so we're waiting for some really good actors to do it."
The sketch was discovered by Ian Greaves, who works on the archive of the absurdist playwright NF Simpson. Simpson contributed to You, Me and the Gatepost.
Jamie Andrews, head of English and drama at the British Library, said once it was known the revue had been staged, the scripts had to be somewhere in the collections because every script was submitted to censors at the lord chamberlain's office – and the library holds them all.
The scripts were duly found and, to the amazement of everyone involved, there was Umbrellas, among 25 sketches performed that night. Greaves recalls feeling "astonishment. And wanting to get home and check every book I had on Pinter to try to get to the bottom of it. It is extraordinary that things like this can crop up." While archivists do not think there are many more Pinter surprises in the British Library, they are fairly sure more may emerge about other writers from the archive of something like 56,000 20th-century scripts submitted to the lord chamberlain's office, which finally lost its vetting role in 1968.
The sketch was performed in a good year for the young Pinter, with A Night Out getting a huge ITV audience in the Armchair Theatre slot while The Caretaker was taking the West End by storm. Quite why the revue in Nottingham got hardly any coverage is another question – although the London-centrism of national newspaper critics is as good a reason as any.
"It seems peculiar and incredible that a work by the West End's 'triumph' Harold Pinter was just passed by," said Greaves.
The scripts come with a short "reader's report" by someone called CD Heriot which recommends that the revue is allowed to go ahead without cuts. The report calls it "an excellent revue containing the best of all the fashionable 'off-beat' writers" – people such as Pinter, John Mortimer, Ann Jellicoe and Shelagh Delaney.
The sketch's existence was revealed as the theatre with which Pinter was most closely associated, the 130-year-old Comedy theatre, was officially renamed the Harold Pinter theatre. Fraser said she burst into tears when she heard of the plan at the end of the recent run of Pinter's Betrayal. "It is an extremely moving day for me. Harold would have been completely thrilled, there's no question at all about that."
Fittingly, the first play to be staged in the newly renamed theatre is Ariel Dorfman's Death and the Maiden, starring Thandie Newton, which had its first night on Monday night. Dorfman said Pinter was the play's mentor, using his influence to get it performed at the Royal Court after seeing a read-through at the ICA in 1990.


#oldphotos

Share/Bookmark

Saturday, 10 September 2011

Old Somerset photos need new light


This evocative photograph of an ice-cream seller and his faithful horse parked up and ready for business may stir distant memories for some readers.
The image has been printed from a glass negative, one of a number which have been saved from oblivion by retired farmer Horace Willcox, who acquired them from a dealer from near Glastonbury.

The Ice Cream Man, one of Horace Willcox's photographic glass plates

Mr Willcox received the box of old negatives as a thank you from a general dealer who stored goods at his farm at Westhay, near Glastonbury, some years ago. He has always wondered where they were taken and to whom they belonged. One shows three little girls, undoubtedly sisters from their similarity, possibly taken in the 1930s. Another shows a boy wearing button-up boots, a suit and bow tie, which may be 20 years older.
They were precious mementoes to some family, but was the ice-cream seller a friend, a relation, or simply a stranger whom the photogapher thought made an interesting image.
Captured in time he is the star of the show.Mr Willcox would like to hear from any reader who can throw light on the photographs.

If you have information email Tina Rowe at t.rowe@bepp.co.uk

Share/Bookmark

Wednesday, 31 August 2011

Christine Bleakley and fellow Daybreak stars reveal their old school photos

CHUBBY-cheeked and in pigtails, this snap of Daybreak host Christine Bleakley shows she hasn’t always had a sunny smile for the camera.

Christine and her fellow stars on the ITV show are going back to their old schools next week to mark the end of the summer holidays. And if Daybreak viewers wondered what the celebs were like before their big break, they dug out some old photos to put people in the picture.




Co-host Adrian Chiles joined reporters Kate Garraway, Tasmin Khan and Steve Hargrave to reveal how they looked as kids.

Share/Bookmark

Tuesday, 16 August 2011

Photos Reunited launches UK Home Collection & Delivery Service

Photos Reunited, the UK based Digital Photo Scanning and Legacy Photo Storage Company has teamed up with national courier service, Yodel (http://www.yodel.co.uk/) to become the UK's first Photo Scanning company to offer  its customers a dedicated Home Collection and delivery service using a fully tracked national courier.

Yodel is the new corporate identity for Home Delivery Network and Parcelpoint; a new business with experience and expertise in both the Business-to-Business and Consumer home delivery markets.


Photos Reunited customers now have the option to use a courier home collection service when they place their photo scanning order on the Photos Reunited website. Once the customer has placed their order they will receive by post a 'Legacy Photo Protect Pack' which is used to pack and send their photos, slides or negatives to the Photos Reunited Imaging Lab. The Legacy Photo Protect Pack will also include a pre-printed courier label attached to the outer postal package.


To arrange collection the customer simply contacts the Yodel Collection service, quoting their a unique order number to arrange a convenient time for home collection or they can arrange a collection time using the innovative Yodel Online portal.

Every parcel is fully tracked from the moment it is collected at the customer’s door step until it arrives safely at its final destination. Progress of individual tracked parcels can be monitored by the customer by entering the unique parcel number into the Yodel website.

“Photos Reunited is a totally service concentric company and so we are constantly looking for new ways in which we can improve our overall service offering and delivery” Pete Boswell, Founder, Photos Reunited Limited.

“First and foremost our customers need to trust the services we offer, which includes the methods by which they choose to send their precious and valuable photos to our UK Labs for processing. We believe that the Yodel home collection courier service sets our business apart from any other UK photo scanning services and provides our customers with a method of collection and delivery that they can trust and have complete confidence in”

The Photos Reunited home courier collection and delivery service costs only £6.50 with each order, a very small price to pay for that added confidence and peace of mind.

Further details about the home courier collection service can be found along with details of all the products and services offered by Photos Reunited on their website (www.photosreunited.com)

Share/Bookmark

Monday, 8 August 2011

Restore your Memories


Photographs are a brilliant way of keeping those treasured memories of bygone times. But like anything pictures can get damaged. When this happens they usually get thrown in a drawer or in a box never to see the light of day again.


Well all is not lost with today's technology it is possible to bring these treasured memories back to life. This process is known as Photo Restoration this can be done in various ways but the safest and most effective way is to have them restored digitally.


The process consists of of taking the original photo and scanning the image into a computer. Once this  has been done the original is no longer required and this gets stored away  in a container lined with acid free paper to prevent any harm coming to the picture. Then the creative process takes place.


Now there is a scanned fresh image to work on the photograph can start to be brought back to life. This is when the Restorer takes time to manually restore the elements of the picture. taking out all the damaged areas by hand and rebuilding the photograph back up to to a standard that often supersedes the quality of when it was first taken.


Once all repairs have been made it then possible to work even more magic and take the image a step further and introduce colour, if it was a black & white or sepia image. Items can be removed or added to the picture making family members appear as a whole when originally they were not present. To do this a second photo is needed so that the family members that are missing from the group shot can be added in all their full glory. There are many other things that can be done upon request.


For more information or if there are any treasured Photographs you want Restoring or Enhancing then visit
www.restor8designsolutions.co.uk


Share/Bookmark