View allAll Photos Tagged Operative
Go to Page 57 in the Internet Archive
Title: Operative surgery, v.1
Creator: Bryant, Joseph D. (Joseph Decatur), 1845-1914
Publisher: New York : D. Appleton and company
Sponsor: Open Knowledge Commons
Contributor: Columbia University Libraries
Date: 1899
Vol: v.1
Language: eng
Description: Paged continuously
Plate printed on both sides
v. 1. General principles, anæsthetics, antiseptics, control of hæmorrhage. Treatment of operation-wounds, ligature of arteries. Operations on veins, capillaries, nervous system, tendons, ligaments, fasciæ, muscles, bursæ, and bones. Amputation, deformities. Plastic surgery.--v. 2. Operations on mouth, nose, and sophagus, the viscera connected with the peritonæum, the thorax and neck, scrotum and penis, and miscellaneous operations
If you have questions concerning reproductions, please contact the Contributing Library.
Note: The colors, contrast and appearance of these illustrations are unlikely to be true to life. They are derived from scanned images that have been enhanced for machine interpretation and have been altered from their originals.
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Kilwinning's parade of Co-op shops, June 1994- they had just been refurbished into a non-co-op brand called 'Abbey'
Pauline Green, president of the International Co-operative Alliance, address the UN General Assembly in New York City.
Photo Courtesy of the United Nations Photo Library
Go to Page 69 in the Internet Archive
Title: Operative surgery, v.1
Creator: Bryant, Joseph D. (Joseph Decatur), 1845-1914
Publisher: New York : D. Appleton and company
Sponsor: Open Knowledge Commons
Contributor: Columbia University Libraries
Date: 1899
Vol: v.1
Language: eng
Description: Paged continuously
Plate printed on both sides
v. 1. General principles, anæsthetics, antiseptics, control of hæmorrhage. Treatment of operation-wounds, ligature of arteries. Operations on veins, capillaries, nervous system, tendons, ligaments, fasciæ, muscles, bursæ, and bones. Amputation, deformities. Plastic surgery.--v. 2. Operations on mouth, nose, and sophagus, the viscera connected with the peritonæum, the thorax and neck, scrotum and penis, and miscellaneous operations
If you have questions concerning reproductions, please contact the Contributing Library.
Note: The colors, contrast and appearance of these illustrations are unlikely to be true to life. They are derived from scanned images that have been enhanced for machine interpretation and have been altered from their originals.
Read/Download from the Internet Archive
Co-operative store. 1886, the 5-bay Wellington Street section slightly later. Exposed cast-iron frame, part with dressed-stone cladding. Welsh slate roof. 3 storeys. 10 cast-iron bays to New Street. 2 bays, and one corner bay and 4 bays to right of this, all stone clad. 5 cast-iron bays to Wellington Street plus a lower 3-bay stone-clad part to the right. Wellington street facade: the main entrance is in the centre of the 5-bay cast-iron part which has C20 shop front to ground floor. The 1st and 2nd floors have superimposed orders of cast- iron engaged columns supporting a round arcade. The 1st-floor order has fluted, tapering columns with ornamental bases and capitals. The second-floor columns have tapering bases, plain shafts and Corinthian capitals. The 2 orders are separated at 2nd-floor level by a frieze decorated with close-set bosses. Elaborate spandrel treatment to the arcade which has frieze with widely spaced bosses and a cavetto cornice enriched with close intersecting blind tracery. Heavy cast-iron, arcaded parapet with delicate openwork crest and finials. Behind this is a pavilion roof with glazed lower part and fishscale slating. Delicate iron cresting and overthrows. The New Street elevation has 10 similar bays, but the ground floor is contemporary, with blinds, except for C20 glazing. The pitched roof has large ornamental cast-iron ventilators. The 2 + 1 + 4-bay stone corner section has some contemporary and some C20 ground-floor shop frontages, large 1st-floor casements with moulded surrounds and small cornices, and paired 2nd-floor windows. The deep frieze between 1st and 2nd floors has, in the 4 bay right section, in large raised letters "BARNSLEY BRITISH CO-OPERATIVE SOCIETY". Surmounting this stone part is a cornice and tall parapet behind which is a square ventilator/clock tower with pedimented sides and swept top with ball finial. The Barnsley British Co-operative Society was founded in 1862. The Barnsley British Co-operative Society Ltd., Coronation History of the B.B.C.S. Ltd., 1862-1902, 1903. EH Listing
An exhibition about the foundation of The North Thingeyjarsýsla Co-operative Society opened in June 2010 at the District Cultural Centre in Húsavík. The Co-operative Society was founded by local farmers in 1882. The organization played a leading role in all sectors of the Icelandic economy throughout the 20th century.
Gagarín's challenge was to present the history of the co-operatives through interactive media and make an interesting presentation for the museum's guests, with special focus on the younger generation.
Gagarín's solution was to create a timeline application to display highlights of the history of the co-operatives on a large touch screen (46”), using videos, photos, text and narration in both Icelandic and English. The application enables guests to browse through the history, get a quick overview and get detailed information of any item of interest.
My mother's union membership card from 1953. NATSOPA was the National Society of Operative Printers and Assistants
A Co-op bike parked up besides a phone box in a recreation of a 1950s street in the Lakeland Motor Museum.
The Lakeland Motor Museum sits in the Leven Valley, in Cumbria, not far from the south end of Windermere.
Under its roof, the museum contains a collection of hundreds of cars, bikes and other road transport-related artefacts covering the past century.
From old MGs, Hillmans and Fords, through Eastern European Bubble Cars and DeLoreans to modern rally cars, the collection is vast and wide-ranging.
formerly Dartford Society {Central Store and Registered Office} subsequently Invicta Society.
Closed February 2007 by tCG South East.
Grays Co-operative, Southend Road ,,RM17 5NH, since sold to McColls -2017
Co-op
assets.contentful.com/5ywmq66472jr/5ElEsq3FviWOGAG0gkCq2U...
Acquired 2009 ex Somerfield. Converted to The co-operative November 2009. Closed 2011 and sold to Waitrose.
Taken from the corner of Corporation Street and Cheetham Hill Road on Thursday 24th April 2008 (yes I have a HUGE backlog of photos and would like to put them on here in the order I took them...unless I took a pic of a major event that is ;) )
Co-operative House.
Photo taken on a tour of Corby with the Twentieth Century Society on 4th September 2010.
The Co Operative Central Hardware shop on East Street in Derby city centre. This opened in 1897 and is demolished now and replaced by new development.
This photo was taken between 1897 and 1900.
This photograph was taken from and kindly given permission from the website:
George Jacob Holyoake:
gerald-massey.org.uk/holyoake/index.htm
Royal Arsenal Co-operative Society 'Central Stores', Powis Street, Woolwich, built 1903.
Statue is of Alexander McLeod, one of the founders of the Royal Arsenal Supply Association, which became the Royal Arsenal Co-operative Society
Previously Portsea Island Mutual Society (name change).
Closed and trade relocated to new store accross the road 30/01/13.
Co-operative Wholesale Society Offices & Warehouse, Corporation Street, Manchester, 1903-09.
By Francis Eldred Lodge Harris (1864-1924).
Grade ll listed.
Detail - corner of Balloon Street & Federation Street.
Harris was born in the St Pauls district of Bristol the son of James Harris, master carpenter and his wife Sarah Ann. Originally employed as a builder’s clerk, F E L Harris commenced independent practice in Chelmsford, Essex in 1889, and moved to Manchester in 1897 as chief architect to the Co-operative Wholesale Society Limited.