View allAll Photos Tagged Relatable
This lantern slide relates to a photograph taken by Clement Lindley Wragge (b.1852, d.1922), date unknown.
The slide shows an image of Lunar Apennines with craters visible.
Inscription Details: Handwritten in blue ink on recto, top of plate, "Snow, S.W. of Lunar Apennines.", [illegible]. Inscibed in pencil on recto, top of plate, "Nov '21". Printed on paper on verso, top of plate, "7543". Words crossed out in blue ink on recto, bottom left.
Credit: Shared by Auckland War Memorial Museum, Tāmaki Paenga Hira, as part of the Clement Lindley Wragge collection.
Rights: No known copyright restrictions.
Reference: 235778|PH-1984-1-LS78-2-2
For more details, please visit: www.aucklandmuseum.com/discover/collections/record/1033435
This lantern slide relates to a photograph taken by Clement Lindley Wragge (b.1852, d.1922), likely dating between 1890-1922.
The slide is an orange/yellow tinted plate depicting an image of a dark mass on the surface of sun.
Inscription Details: Handwritten in black ink in top left and right corners of plate, '7'. Handwritten in blue in at top of plate, 'Giant 'Sunspot'. Handwritten in blue ink in lower left corner of plate, 'G 45'. Handwritten in blue ink at bottom of plate, '[illegible] CLW Aug'22'. Printed in black ink on the lower right edge of plate, '69406'.
Credit: Shared by Auckland War Memorial Museum, Tāmaki Paenga Hira, as part of the Clement Lindley Wragge collection.
Rights: No known copyright restrictions.
Reference: 235954|PH-1984-1-LS78-3-25|45
For more details, please visit: www.aucklandmuseum.com/discover/collections/record/1033261
Image from '[Historical Collections of the State of New Jersey ... relating to its history and antiquities, with geographical descriptions of every township in the State. [With illustrations.]]', 000194808
Author: BARBER, John Warner and HOWE (Henry)
Page: 482
Year: 1852
Place: Newark, N.J
Publisher: J. H. Bradley
Following the link above will take you to the British Library's integrated catalogue. You will be able to download a PDF of the book this image is taken from, as well as view the pages up close with the 'itemViewer'. Click on the 'related items' to search for the electronic version of this work.
20th March 2024
Read the report and its recommendations in full here.
The Committee recommends that the Government introduces legislation allowing for assisted dying, in certain restricted circumstances as set out in the recommendations in this report.
The remit of the Joint Committee on Assisted Dying was to consider and make recommendations for legislative and policy change relating to a legal right to assist a person to end their life and a legal right to receive such assistance.
The Committee also agreed that it could recommend that no legislative or policy changes be made. It has looked at the topic of assisted dying in general, rather than at draft legislation.
The Committee was established in early 2023 to consider and make recommendations for legislative and policy change related to a statutory right to assist a person to end their life and a statutory right to receive such assistance.
The Committee Members did not agree on any one form of wording on the topic, so the terms of assisted suicide and euthanasia are also used. The Committee recognises that the use of certain terms is contested.
Speaking on the launch of the report, Committee Cathaoirleach Deputy Michael Healy Rae said; “This report is the result of the work of the Committee over the past nine months. I was privileged to be Cathaoirleach for the Committee. I would like to thank the Committee Members who devoted their time and attention to this very complex issue. We did not always agree with each other, but all views were listened to and respected.
“The Committee has agreed that it could recommend that no legislative or policy changes be made and that the issues raised in this report be the subject of a debate in both Houses of the Oireachtas.”
“We worked cooperatively and collegially in order to give this important topic the attention it merits. The Committee Secretariat was extremely diligent in its work and the Office of the Parliamentary Legal Adviser provided us with clear and detailed background information. We are very grateful to the national and international experts and other witnesses who engaged with the Committee to examine end-of-life care, dying and assisted dying in detail.”
“This included experts in law, ethics, medicine, disability, palliative care, and psychiatry. A special thanks must go to the other witnesses who shared very moving personal stories about their experiences of end-of-life care. These heartfelt stories were difficult to tell and difficult to hear but they helped to inform the Committee Members and deepened our understanding of this sensitive topic.”
The report makes 38 recommendations, some of which are outlined below:
The Committee recommends that the Government introduces legislation allowing for assisted dying, in certain restricted circumstances as set out in the recommendations in this report.
The Committee recommends that the Optional Protocol to the United Nations Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities should be ratified as a precondition of the commencement of assisted dying legislation.
The Committee recommends that the right to conscientious objection of all doctors and health workers directly involved in the provision of assisted dying should be protected in law.
The Committee recommends that any potential legislation on assisted dying uses clear and unambiguous terms and definitions, to avoid scope for uncertainty.
The Committee recommends that a person inquiring about assisted dying, following a terminal diagnosis, should be informed of, and assisted in, accessing all end-of-life care options, including palliative care.
The Committee recommends that palliative care and the operation of assisted
dying should operate completely separately and independently of each other.
The Committee recommends that resources and funding for, and information about, palliative care services should be substantially increased, to ensure consistent and accessible services of the highest quality are provided throughout the country.
The Committee recommends that funding for assisted dying and palliative care be separate and distinct from one another, provided for in separate votes in the Department of Health budget.
The Committee recommends that research be carried out on the relationship between economic disadvantage and health inequalities, and the question of people feeling a burden.
This Committee recommends that where any person has failed to adhere to relevant statutory requirements governing assisted dying, he or she will have committed a criminal offence.
The Committee recommends that any potential legislation on assisted dying provides that where a person has been proven guilty of coercion, they will have committed an offence under the Act.
The Committee recommends that doctors and healthcare workers involved in the provision of assisted dying be trained to the highest level possible to identify coercion when assessing or treating a patient.
The Committee recommends that if a medical professional has been proven to have acted outside of the permitted regulations or has attempted to coerce an individual, they will have committed an offence under the potential legislation and may be held liable.
The Committee recommends the inclusion in any legislation on assisted dying of mandatory reporting to An Garda Síochána of any information or evidence concerning the issue of possible coercion in relation to assisted dying.
The Committee recommends that where capacity is in doubt, a functional test for decision-making capacity should be part of the assessment for eligibility for assisted dying.
The Committee recommends that any doctor involved in determining eligibility for assisted dying must have professional training in assessing capacity and voluntariness.
The Committee recommends that following an initial successful assessment for assisted dying that finds a patient eligible, if the patient temporarily loses decision-making capacity, then that eligibility is suspended for the duration of their incapacity.
The Committee does not recommend that advanced healthcare directives allow for individuals to make requests for assisted dying. However, consideration of the issue may be included in any review of assisted dying legislation.
The Committee recommends that the updated palliative care strategy should be published by the Department of Health without delay and that palliative care and the operation of assisted dying should operate completely separately and independently of each other.
The Committee recommends that if assisted dying is introduced, an assessment by a qualified psychiatrist should be required in circumstances where the patient is deemed eligible but there are concerns about whether the person is competent to make an informed decision.
The Committee recommends that eligibility for assisted dying should be limited to Irish citizens or those ordinarily resident in the State for a period of not less than twelve months.
The Committee recommends that assisted dying should be limited to people aged 18 or over.
The Committee recommends that only a person diagnosed with a disease, illness or medical condition that is: a) both incurable and irreversible; b) advanced, progressive and will cause death;
c) expected to cause death within six months (or, in the case of a person with a neurodegenerative disease, illness or condition, within 12 months); and d) causing suffering to the person that cannot be relieved in a manner that the person finds tolerable, is eligible to be assessed for assisted dying.
The Committee recommends that two formal requests for assisted dying must be made, with a set specified interval between. At least one of these requests must be recorded in writing, and before two independent witnesses.
The Committee recommends that any potential legislation for assisted dying should establish a national body with sole responsibility for assisted dying services and related supports.
The Committee recommends that all assisted dying applications and related processes should be overseen and governed by the independent national body.
The Committee recommends that family members, carers, guardians or holders of an enduring power of attorney cannot request assisted dying in the interest of another person.
The Committee recommends that any potential legislation for assisted dying should provide a means of access to treatment for individuals who require assistance during the administration.
The Committee recommends that if assisted dying is legislated for, a doctor or nurse practitioner must be present for the duration of the assisted dying process and must remain until after the patient’s death and must account to the responsible authority for any remaining substances.
The Committee recommends that any assisted dying legislation include a provision for a formal review after three years of the operation of the legislation.
The Committee recommends that any assisted dying legislation must include definitions for terms used, including, but not limited to, medical descriptions of the methods permitted under the Act.
ENDS
One of a group of items which relate to a performance by Dickens’s Amateur Theatrical Company at the Theatre Royal, Birmingham, 6 June, 1848, to raise funds for the endowment of a curatorship of Shakespeare's House in Stratford-upon-Avon. Following performances in Manchester and Liverpool, the bill commenced with Ben Jonson's Everyman in his Humour, in which Dickens played the swashbuckling braggart, Captain Bobadil, (captured by C.R. Leslie R.A.) followed by Elizabeth Inchbald's comedy, Animal Magnetism.
For a detailed insight into these papers see Killeen, M.* ‘High prices, big posters, and great confidence … Town very much excited on the subject’: Charles Dickens on the Birmingham stage in 1848 (CLiC Fiction blog post, 12 March, 2018), ‘Dickens took full responsibility for running the tour in the provinces and making all the administrative and publicity arrangements. Characteristically, he shouldered responsibility for all matters relating to running this theatrical venture in the provinces. He planned and directed all the rehearsals and liaised with theatre managers and musical conductors. In addition, he prepared the schedule and itinerary and organized the publicity arrangements.’
Dickens went as far as designing the form and content of the tickets for the performance. The text, in Dickens’s handwriting, provides the copy for the printer.**
Caption text ©️ Dr. Caroline Radcliffe, 2024.
Reader in Drama and Performance, Department of Drama and Theatre Arts, University of Birmingham, UK.
*Martin Killeen, Honorary Research Fellow, University of Birmingham (Emeritus Rare Books Librarian, Cadbury Research Library).
**See the printed ticket for this performance:
www.flickr.com/photos/cadburyresearchlibrary/53201998959
Handwritten note from Charles Dickens with the text for the printed ticket for the Amateur Performance at Birmingham Theatre Royal, 6 June 1848.
Cadbury Research Library
Finding number: MS147/2
Find this item on the online catalogue:
20th March 2024
Read the report and its recommendations in full here.
The Committee recommends that the Government introduces legislation allowing for assisted dying, in certain restricted circumstances as set out in the recommendations in this report.
The remit of the Joint Committee on Assisted Dying was to consider and make recommendations for legislative and policy change relating to a legal right to assist a person to end their life and a legal right to receive such assistance.
The Committee also agreed that it could recommend that no legislative or policy changes be made. It has looked at the topic of assisted dying in general, rather than at draft legislation.
The Committee was established in early 2023 to consider and make recommendations for legislative and policy change related to a statutory right to assist a person to end their life and a statutory right to receive such assistance.
The Committee Members did not agree on any one form of wording on the topic, so the terms of assisted suicide and euthanasia are also used. The Committee recognises that the use of certain terms is contested.
Speaking on the launch of the report, Committee Cathaoirleach Deputy Michael Healy Rae said; “This report is the result of the work of the Committee over the past nine months. I was privileged to be Cathaoirleach for the Committee. I would like to thank the Committee Members who devoted their time and attention to this very complex issue. We did not always agree with each other, but all views were listened to and respected.
“The Committee has agreed that it could recommend that no legislative or policy changes be made and that the issues raised in this report be the subject of a debate in both Houses of the Oireachtas.”
“We worked cooperatively and collegially in order to give this important topic the attention it merits. The Committee Secretariat was extremely diligent in its work and the Office of the Parliamentary Legal Adviser provided us with clear and detailed background information. We are very grateful to the national and international experts and other witnesses who engaged with the Committee to examine end-of-life care, dying and assisted dying in detail.”
“This included experts in law, ethics, medicine, disability, palliative care, and psychiatry. A special thanks must go to the other witnesses who shared very moving personal stories about their experiences of end-of-life care. These heartfelt stories were difficult to tell and difficult to hear but they helped to inform the Committee Members and deepened our understanding of this sensitive topic.”
The report makes 38 recommendations, some of which are outlined below:
The Committee recommends that the Government introduces legislation allowing for assisted dying, in certain restricted circumstances as set out in the recommendations in this report.
The Committee recommends that the Optional Protocol to the United Nations Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities should be ratified as a precondition of the commencement of assisted dying legislation.
The Committee recommends that the right to conscientious objection of all doctors and health workers directly involved in the provision of assisted dying should be protected in law.
The Committee recommends that any potential legislation on assisted dying uses clear and unambiguous terms and definitions, to avoid scope for uncertainty.
The Committee recommends that a person inquiring about assisted dying, following a terminal diagnosis, should be informed of, and assisted in, accessing all end-of-life care options, including palliative care.
The Committee recommends that palliative care and the operation of assisted
dying should operate completely separately and independently of each other.
The Committee recommends that resources and funding for, and information about, palliative care services should be substantially increased, to ensure consistent and accessible services of the highest quality are provided throughout the country.
The Committee recommends that funding for assisted dying and palliative care be separate and distinct from one another, provided for in separate votes in the Department of Health budget.
The Committee recommends that research be carried out on the relationship between economic disadvantage and health inequalities, and the question of people feeling a burden.
This Committee recommends that where any person has failed to adhere to relevant statutory requirements governing assisted dying, he or she will have committed a criminal offence.
The Committee recommends that any potential legislation on assisted dying provides that where a person has been proven guilty of coercion, they will have committed an offence under the Act.
The Committee recommends that doctors and healthcare workers involved in the provision of assisted dying be trained to the highest level possible to identify coercion when assessing or treating a patient.
The Committee recommends that if a medical professional has been proven to have acted outside of the permitted regulations or has attempted to coerce an individual, they will have committed an offence under the potential legislation and may be held liable.
The Committee recommends the inclusion in any legislation on assisted dying of mandatory reporting to An Garda Síochána of any information or evidence concerning the issue of possible coercion in relation to assisted dying.
The Committee recommends that where capacity is in doubt, a functional test for decision-making capacity should be part of the assessment for eligibility for assisted dying.
The Committee recommends that any doctor involved in determining eligibility for assisted dying must have professional training in assessing capacity and voluntariness.
The Committee recommends that following an initial successful assessment for assisted dying that finds a patient eligible, if the patient temporarily loses decision-making capacity, then that eligibility is suspended for the duration of their incapacity.
The Committee does not recommend that advanced healthcare directives allow for individuals to make requests for assisted dying. However, consideration of the issue may be included in any review of assisted dying legislation.
The Committee recommends that the updated palliative care strategy should be published by the Department of Health without delay and that palliative care and the operation of assisted dying should operate completely separately and independently of each other.
The Committee recommends that if assisted dying is introduced, an assessment by a qualified psychiatrist should be required in circumstances where the patient is deemed eligible but there are concerns about whether the person is competent to make an informed decision.
The Committee recommends that eligibility for assisted dying should be limited to Irish citizens or those ordinarily resident in the State for a period of not less than twelve months.
The Committee recommends that assisted dying should be limited to people aged 18 or over.
The Committee recommends that only a person diagnosed with a disease, illness or medical condition that is: a) both incurable and irreversible; b) advanced, progressive and will cause death;
c) expected to cause death within six months (or, in the case of a person with a neurodegenerative disease, illness or condition, within 12 months); and d) causing suffering to the person that cannot be relieved in a manner that the person finds tolerable, is eligible to be assessed for assisted dying.
The Committee recommends that two formal requests for assisted dying must be made, with a set specified interval between. At least one of these requests must be recorded in writing, and before two independent witnesses.
The Committee recommends that any potential legislation for assisted dying should establish a national body with sole responsibility for assisted dying services and related supports.
The Committee recommends that all assisted dying applications and related processes should be overseen and governed by the independent national body.
The Committee recommends that family members, carers, guardians or holders of an enduring power of attorney cannot request assisted dying in the interest of another person.
The Committee recommends that any potential legislation for assisted dying should provide a means of access to treatment for individuals who require assistance during the administration.
The Committee recommends that if assisted dying is legislated for, a doctor or nurse practitioner must be present for the duration of the assisted dying process and must remain until after the patient’s death and must account to the responsible authority for any remaining substances.
The Committee recommends that any assisted dying legislation include a provision for a formal review after three years of the operation of the legislation.
The Committee recommends that any assisted dying legislation must include definitions for terms used, including, but not limited to, medical descriptions of the methods permitted under the Act.
ENDS
www.bodhielements.com/1077/meditation-of-the-day/meditati...
can you relate to others as they really are without the usual labels?
Relates to Adaptation Fund-financed UNDP-supported project 'Ecosystem-Based Adaptation at Communities of the Central Forest Corridor in Tegucigalpa' www.adaptation-undp.org/projects/ecosystem-based-adaptati...
Quotes and inspiration about Love
QUOTATION – Image :
As the quote says – Description
CUTE LOVE QUOTES FOR HER TAGALOG image quotes at relatably.com
- #LoveQuotes
quotesstory.com/love-quotes/love-cute-love-quotes-for-her...
This picture, relates to the poem below.. the poem is called "seen from above"...
I took this picture from a height, thus names it seen from above
A dead beetle lies on the path through the field.
Three pairs of legs folded neatly on its belly.
Instead of death's confusion, tidiness and order.
The horror of this sight is moderate,
its scope is strictly local, from the wheat grass to the mint.
The grief is quarantined.
The sky is blue.
To preserve our peace of mind, animals die
more shallowly: they aren't deceased, they're dead.
They leave behind, we'd like to think, less feeling and less
world,
departing, we suppose, from a stage less tragic.
Their meek souls never haunt us in the dark,
they know their place,
they show respect.
And so the dead beetle on the path
lies unmourned and shining in the sun.
One glance at it will do for meditation—
clearly nothing much has happened to it.
Important matters are reserved for us,
for our life and death, a death
that always claims the right of way.
*Please comment, Thank you*
Natural light from a candle emphasizes the similarities between the natural appearance of leather and the light surface texturing applied to the plastic. With the flowing curves of its inherent geometry engaging the luxurious, protective and womb like qualities of leather in its juxtaposed cultural position in time.
This lantern slide relates to a photograph taken by Clement Lindley Wragge (b.1852, d.1922), likely dating between the 1890s and the 20th Century.
The slide shows the surface of the Moon with details of craters and lunar mountain ranges.
Inscription Details: Handwritten in black ink on recto of slide, "Archimedes, Appenines [sic]. [Sinus Est]". Handwritten in pencil on recto, top edge, "Searle".
Credit: Shared by Auckland War Memorial Museum, Tāmaki Paenga Hira, as part of the Clement Lindley Wragge collection.
Rights: No known copyright restrictions.
Reference: 235792|PH-1984-1-LS78-2-63
For more details, please visit: www.aucklandmuseum.com/discover/collections/record/1033421
Kaitlyn
Blog relating to this story .... peterjemmett.blogspot.com/2018/08/the-year-that-was-part-...
Image from 'A Lytell Geste of Robin Hode, with other ancient & modern ballads and songs relating to this celebrated yeoman. To which is prefixed his history and character, grounded upon other documents than those made use of by ... “Mister Ritson.” Edited by J. M. Gutch', 001726444
Author: HOOD, Robin.
Volume: 02
Page: 190
Year: 1847
Place: London
Publisher: Longman, Brown, Green & Longmans
Following the link above will take you to the British Library's integrated catalogue. You will be able to download a PDF of the book this image is taken from, as well as view the pages up close with the 'itemViewer'. Click on the 'related items' to search for the electronic version of this work.
Image from 'Tracts and other papers, relating principally to the origin, settlement, and progress of the Colonies in North America, from the discovery of the country to the year 1776. Vol. 1-4', 001267232
Author: FORCE, Peter.
Volume: 03
Page: 203
Year: 1836
Place: Washington
Publisher:
Following the link above will take you to the British Library's integrated catalogue. You will be able to download a PDF of the book this image is taken from, as well as view the pages up close with the 'itemViewer'. Click on the 'related items' to search for the electronic version of this work.
This lantern slide relates to a photograph taken by Clement Lindley Wragge (b.1852, d.1922), likely dating between the 1870s and the 20th Century.
The slide shows trees framing either side of a river that is positioned in the middle of the photograph.
Credit: Shared by Auckland War Memorial Museum, Tāmaki Paenga Hira, as part of the Clement Lindley Wragge collection.
Rights: No known copyright restrictions.
Reference: 235739|PH-1984-1-LS78-1-9
For more details, please visit: www.aucklandmuseum.com/discover/collections/record/1033474
Relates to Adaptation Fund-financed UNDP-supported project 'Ecosystem-Based Adaptation at Communities of the Central Forest Corridor in Tegucigalpa' www.adaptation-undp.org/projects/ecosystem-based-adaptati...
Image from 'Historical Collections of the State of New York ... relating to its history and antiquities, with geographical descriptions of every township in the State', 000194809
Author: BARBER, John Warner and HOWE (Henry)
Page: 614
Year: 1846
Place: New-York
Publisher: S. Tuttle
Following the link above will take you to the British Library's integrated catalogue. You will be able to download a PDF of the book this image is taken from, as well as view the pages up close with the 'itemViewer'. Click on the 'related items' to search for the electronic version of this work.
Secretary for Defence and Military Veterans; Dr. Sam Makhubu Gubule during a media briefing reporting on the relating Government's decision to procure transportation for the country's VVIP's at a media briefing held in Pretoria on the 06/07/2012.
The hatchments relate to the Rabett family (pun intended) who lived at Bramfield Hall for 300 years.
Relates to Adaptation Fund-financed UNDP-supported project 'Ecosystem-Based Adaptation at Communities of the Central Forest Corridor in Tegucigalpa' www.adaptation-undp.org/projects/ecosystem-based-adaptati...
This photo relates to The Remembrancer, an artists' book I produced several years ago, with the assistance of Richard Asplin, who salvaged these photos, (along with the invitation to the Lord Mayor's Banquet, 1933) from the trash.
Image from '[Authorized American edition, with supplement relating chiefly to American topics, and a copious biographical Index, by G. P. Putnam.]', 001625020
Author: HAYDN, Joseph of Carey Street, Lincoln's Inn
Page: 879
Year: 1868
Place: London
Publisher:
Following the link above will take you to the British Library's integrated catalogue. You will be able to download a PDF of the book this image is taken from, as well as view the pages up close with the 'itemViewer'. Click on the 'related items' to search for the electronic version of this work.
Image from 'Historical Collections of the State of New York ... relating to its history and antiquities, with geographical descriptions of every township in the State', 000194809
Author: BARBER, John Warner and HOWE (Henry)
Page: 406
Year: 1846
Place: New-York
Publisher: S. Tuttle
Following the link above will take you to the British Library's integrated catalogue. You will be able to download a PDF of the book this image is taken from, as well as view the pages up close with the 'itemViewer'. Click on the 'related items' to search for the electronic version of this work.
The title relates to the late sixteenth or early seventeenth-century song of lost love, ‘Willow Song’, by an anonymous composer and used, with alterations, by Shakespeare in Othello. Dr Warwick Edwards of Glasgow University has commented on the passage of music at the bottom as follows:
'The source... is probably W. Chappell, Popular Music of the Olden Time, 1855– 9, i, 207–8 (or Woolridge's revision of this, 1893). The extract begins at the upbeat to bar 11 and the words are from the 2nd. stanza. The text has been modified. (“she” for “he”) and “improved” (e.g. “my garland must be” for “must be my garland”).
‘Chappell's source is BM Add MS 15117, f.18 (before 1616), a setting for voice and lute of the famous Willow Song beginning “The poor soul sat sighing”. He has transposed the melody, modified it, and supplied a 19th century harmonization.
Alexander Ballard has suggested (letter to the compiler of 10 July 1975) that the face of the young man is that of Norman Wilkinson ‘of Four Oaks’ (1882–1937), the painter and stage designer, who studied at the Birmingham College of Art from 1900–1902 where he met Maxwell Armfield, with whom he went to Paris in 1902 where they shared a studio. Armfield and Wilkinson were particularly close friends until about 1910. Armfield painted a portrait of Wilkinson in watercolours in Paris in 1904 .
Source: Tate
www.tate.org.uk/art/artworks/armfield-oh-willo-willo-will...
Brasília 28/03/2017 Relator da reforma política na câmara, Vicente Cândido, durante entrevista para agência PT.
Foto: Lula Marques/Agência PT
Relator do Orçamento 2025, senador Angelo Coronel (PSD-BA), concede entrevista.
Foto: Edilson Rodrigues/Agência Senado
This lantern slide relates to a photograph taken by Clement Lindley Wragge (b.1852, d.1922), date unknown.
The slide shows a circular image; within this circle, there is a symbol similar to a Star of David, with a venus symbol in the centre against a black background. Text reads on the slide reads "There is no Religion higher than TRUTH!". The slide is tinted blue.
Inscription Details: Handwritten on recto in blue ink, bottom of slide, "U.45a", "C.L.W. Aug '22".
Credit: Shared by Auckland War Memorial Museum, Tāmaki Paenga Hira, as part of the Clement Lindley Wragge collection.
Rights: No known copyright restrictions.
Reference: 235908|PH-1984-1-LS78-4-53|U45a
For more details, please visit: www.aucklandmuseum.com/discover/collections/record/1033305