View allAll Photos Tagged c1919
I will soon discern if this is a wedding or Halloween party.
Album B Page 86
View the entire album of Aunt Lucy from the 1910s.
Bernard (1896 - 1972) was born in Winster.
Here he is photographed by H. Bateson, Photographer, Chesterfield, c1919. The photographer's imprint is embossed at bottom right. On Bernard's right lapel he displays his Silver War Badge.
This image is reproduced by courtesy of Ken Stinson.
Bottom right is the Ballard Locks. Bottom middle is probably Byron Bird and Lucy Phillips (soon to be Bird) kissing on the beach (just before they were wed).
I believe the other photos are members of Byron's extended family.
Album B Page 71
View the entire album of Aunt Lucy from the 1910s.
Costume party, perhaps Halloween.
Album B Page 84
View the entire album of Aunt Lucy from the 1910s.
Henry Browne Slaney- (father of Nan Mackintosh) with bird watcher friend, Dr Brooke Nichols c1919-20 in front of Nyora.
Chancel 14c misericord carvings on old choirstalls hidden behind a c1919 low screen - there were at least 2 priests (the rector and the chantry priest) in the late 1300s and by 1406 there were four.
- Church of St Andrew, Clifton Campville Staffordshire
Left : Pictures with thanks - copyright Michael Garlick CCL www.geograph.org.uk/photo/4943486 www.geograph.org.uk/photo/4943476` www.geograph.org.uk/photo/4943514
Right: Picture with thanks seearoundbritain.com/venues/st-andrews-church-clifton-cam...
Standing above the quiet township of Carcoar is the former Carcoar railway station on the now-closed Blayney to Demondrille railway line.
The railway line to Carcoar was completed and opened in 1888. The Great Western Railway had reached Blayney 12 years earlier, in 1876, and by 1888 Blayney had developed as an important rail centre while Carcoar’s growth had slowed.
By c1919 the railway yard at Carcoar included an engine dock, loop siding, goods siding and shed, stock siding and a stockyard. Services to Carcoar were suspended in December 1987 but the station building remains a prominent landmark above the historic town.
Taken: 16/12/2019
Information Source: NSW Office of Environment & Heritage
www.environment.nsw.gov.au/heritageapp/ViewHeritageItemDe...
Detail of the south aisle east window from c1919 by Shrigley & Hunt of Lancaster.
St Peter's at Dunchurch is an impressive red sandstone building dating largely from the 14th & 15th centuries, but rather restored in the 19th. It's impressive west tower changes colour in it's topmost stage and has a richly detailed parapet (sadly the carvings are worn, as is it's otherwise fine cusped west doorway).
The interior of the building is somewhat dark, due both to the colour of the stonework, and the mostly Edwardian stained glass (it's east and west windows are by Bryans, and often mistaken for Kempe's work). It feels like it has been stripped of much of it's antiquity, and this is attested to by the few fragments of the once fine medieval woodwork, stalls and benches all lost by the end of the Georgian period, with only five architectural panels worked into the more recent furniture in the chancel. otherwise the furnishings are all Victorian. There is an intriguing Baroque tablet in the north aisle with it's central inscription flanked by open marble doors, suggesting the entrance to a tomb.
A further ancient feature removed from the church has survived; the east window's fine 14th century geometric tracery remained in place until the late Victorian restoration when it was replaced with the present design. The old tracery was preserved and is now in the entrance hall of the Victoria & Albert Museum, London, where thousands of visitors walk past it each year, though likely very few ever notice it!
This church's tower is one of the most familiar anywhere to me, being a regularly seen landmark throughout my childhood, growing up in nearby Rugby. I even climbed to the top of it in 1992 via the scaffolding it was then shrouded in, whilst getting some experience cleaning the west window.
Author: Wilner, Merton M. (Merton Merriman),
Publisher:New York, F. F. Lovell, c1919.
Format: Map
Location:Special Collections, Floor 6: (Non-circulating) Annex
Call Number: G1037 .W48 1919a
I presume that this was taken after 1918 as Herbert Scott did not become demobilised until 19th December 1919 and he was in France all that year.
I thought the chap on the left was a German Officer but I now don't think he was.
Photographed in San Francisco near the marina. The Ghirardelli chocolate factory sign is visible in the distance at the extreme left of the picture.
Wow, I have been assuming that these were photos of Halloween, which was about the right time in the photo album. But, this is either a mock wedding or it's a real wedding. And Byron Bird married Lucy Phillips in November 26,1919. If their wedding was a costume ball, I am so so impressed. I'll need to do some newspaper digging. I should be able to identify this playfield if it's in Wallingford, as well.
Album B Page 85
View the entire album of Aunt Lucy from the 1910s.
Guessing Aunty Evie dressed in white, sitting second from left at rear. Guessing c1919 Bournemouth, Coach No. 11 fited with pneumatic tyres.
I'm most confused that the couple being wed in the left photo are not Byron Bird and Lucy Phillips. They got married in November 1919, so I'd expect that photo to be here in the album.
Album B Page 81
View the entire album of Aunt Lucy from the 1910s.
Based on other photos in the album (destruction of the old Mines Hall; apparent construction photos of the new Mines Buildings which later became Roberts Hall), I believe this is the excavation for the site of Roberts Hall on the University of Washington campus. Construction began in 1919. More photos of Roberts Hall from the album.
Album A Page 51
View the entire album of Aunt Lucy from the 1920s. (More albums to come.)
A line up of lorries owned by the carriers. W.Wingate & Johnstone Ltd.
L to R.
Thornycroft, Austin, Vulcan, and a model T Ford.
All are London registered so presumably the photograph was taken in London c1919.
Wingate & Johnstone were agents for the Pennsylvania Railroad. They are still in business trading under the name of Constantine Ltd.
Either Halloween, or the wedding of Lucy Phillips to Byron Bird on 11/26.
Album B Page 87
View the entire album of Aunt Lucy from the 1910s.
Back of photo:
'The house Joshua Snyder built northeast of Cloyne (north end of current Snider Road) as it looked when Henry and Anna Springer moved there from Syracuse. In the doorway are the two Springer girls: Doris in doorway and Vivian. Vivian was 1 year 8 months old and Doris would have been 4 years 8 months. Vivian was born Jan 4, 1917'.
This dates the photo about 1919.
From Howard and Sharon Price Collection.
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Detail of the east window of the chancel at Gedling, consisting of three lancets and a quatrefoil light above. The glass appears to be a fine late work by Henry Holiday c1919.
All Hallows at Gedling (immediately east of Nottingham) is a grand 13th/14th century building with a very tall north west steeple.
The interior is spacious and has several features of interest, including a strange 'flattened' effigy of a priest in the chancel, and a fragment of medieval sculpture in the north aisle.
There is some good glass in the east window that appears to be a late work of Henry Holiday, whilst the recent glass at the corresponding end of the church makes a more contemporary statement.
The church is normally open only on Wednesdays.
Atkinson Art Gallery, Lord Street, Southport, Merseyside.
Wren with Willow and Ivy, c1919.
By Edward Julius Detmold (1883-1957).
Watercolour over pencil with ink.
Detmold's intricate studies of nature were influenced by Japanese design. His work was often commissioned for book illustrations. Detmold's career ended prematurely in the 1920s due to ill health.
- Top left is Byron Bird (who married this photo album's assembler a few months later).
- Top middle is the 547th Engineers Service Battalion band. They had no official band, so these men got it done.
Album B Page 79
View the entire album of Aunt Lucy from the 1910s.
Moore Shipyard, c1919 • Shipley Company Victory Loan program
Shipley Company Victory Loan program
Workers at the Moore Shipbuilding Company During WWI, c.1919 A Liberty bond was a US war bond sold to support the allied cause in WWI. Subscribing to the bonds became a symbol of patriotic duty and introduced the idea of financial securities to many citizens. The Victory Liberty Loan was a fifth bond issue released in 1919. Consisting of $4.5 billion of gold notes at 4.75% interest, the bonds matured after 4 years but could be redeemed by the government after 3. Exempt from all income taxes, they were the last of the series of five Liberty Loans.
source image courtesy of collection of Port of Oakland,
Restored for exhibit program at the US District Courthouse- Oakland
blog post on Moore> eastbayyesterday.com/episodes/long-lost-oakland-chapter-2...
Archival Digital prints, framing, and canvas wraps are available through our partner ImageKind: worldwidearchive.imagekind.com/store/Images.aspx/ece50de5...
reference
John (Jack) Fitzsimmons was working at Moore Ship Yard (aka Moore Dry Dock) as a crane operator in 1917 (attn: Jaynie Thaler Moore) Moore Dry Dock didn't just build and repair ships -- they helped build some of the local bridges, and the main beam that holds up the balcony in the Paramount Theatre.
I believe these are some of the less extravagantly dressed guests of Byron Bird and Lucy Phillips' wedding.
Album B Page 89
View the entire album of Aunt Lucy from the 1910s.
My great grandparents, Sam and Mary Reed, are in the back row, toward the right. This is mainly their children (and their spouses) and grandchildren. My grandpa Reed is right in front of them and his wife, Mary Edmonds Reed, is in the front on the far left. Her mother, Ceceiia Davis Edmonds, is sitting beside her. My dad is the boy two rows in front of his dad and my uncle Donald is the little guy sitting next to Grandma Reed in the front row.
Greenwood collection, via Frank Palmos journalist (collected by Graeme Butler for Buln Buln Shire history, 1970s)
Stained glass by Paul Woodroffe in the south transept c1919, a memorial to parishoners who died in the First World War.
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Paul_Woodroffe
The church of the Holy Name in Manchester is one of the grandest Catholic parish churches in the country, a vast building considered to be one of the best works of architect Joseph Hansom and built 1869-71. The tower is a particularly distinctive landmark, it initially remained unfinished for some decades until the upper stage was added by Adrian Gilbert Scott in 1928, a remarkable design that evokes his brother's work in Liverpool. The interior of the church is hugely impressive, a vast open space under a vaulted ceiling and richly adorned throughout.
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Church_of_the_Holy_Name_of_Jesus,_M...
Soldier from an unidentified regiment of the British Army with a canine friend in India c1919 - 1920
North transept, north window, by Powell and Sons, c1919 - Alfred the Great and Hugh Paganis (founder of the Order of St John of Jerusalem). 'A thankoffering from two Red Cross men who served in France and Italy during the Great War'
Greenwood collection, via Frank Palmos journalist (collected by Graeme Butler for Buln Buln Shire history, 1970s)
Edgar Degas (1834-1917) - Dancer looking at the sole of her right foot, bronze, cast posthumously from a wax model, c1919
Opus sectile memorial to Mrs Bessie Henderson, mother of Lieut-Col J H Henderson (to whom the large window above by Karl Parsons was dedicated), c1919 : detail
The interior and exterior home photos are probably 3806 Woodlawn Ave N, Seattle. The deer is probably at Woodland Park Zoo.
Album B Page 94
View the entire album of Aunt Lucy from the 1910s.
Prince of Wales Road was certainly a more genteel place back then!
This view shows the Electric Theatre cinema which opened in 1912. After refurbishment in 1949, it was renamed the Norvic. It closed in 1959 - apparently the last film shown was Wild In The Country with Elvis Presley. I love the Rudge-Whitworth cycle shop next to the cinema.
Dien, Beppie, and Jopie(?) have some fun in the woods. There's a whole series of pictures from this shoot. Although none of these folks seem to smile very much in their normal family photos, I have a lot of Opa's pictures that are in less formal situations where they do actually seem to be enjoying themselves, or stifling a smile.
I don't recognize anything here. Not France. US?
- middle: "Dock Board Robin Street Landing"
Album B Page 66
View the entire album of Aunt Lucy from the 1910s.
- Left: Aunt Lucy under fruit in a greenhouse.
- Right: "East Pike St. Fuel & Transfer Co" as best as I can tell.
Album B Page 96
View the entire album of Aunt Lucy from the 1910s.
British Military personnel at an organised event of some kind, quite possibly a polo match.
Almost certainly taken in Karachi