Three Wise Stormtroopers
See no evil, hear no evil, speak no evil.
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Three Wise Stormtroopers
See no evil, hear no evil, speak no evil.
The “Fis(h)cal” Question
Raphael Tuck “Oilette” “Fisher Studies” Series No. 6685.
http://justoldpostcards.blog/2023/07/28/the-fishcal-question/
Formation & Early Training
The history of No. 76 Siege Battery is to a large extent bound up with that of the Essex and Suffolk R.G.A. Half the personnel of Officers and men were drawn from this unit; the Battery was formed at Harwich; and the Commanding Officer, Major R. H. Brent Clark, had acted as Adjutant to the Essex and Suffolk R.G.A. (T.) for a considerable period prior to the War.
The history of No. 76 Siege Battery is to a large extent bound up with that of the Essex and Suffolk R.G.A. Half the personnel of Officers and men were drawn from this unit; the Battery was formed at Harwich; and the Commanding Officer, Major R. H. Brent Clark, had acted as Adjutant to the […]
2/4th (City of London) Battalion The London Regiment Royal Fusiliers – 6th July 1915
The following letter was received by the Commanding Officer from Mr. A. Brigg, Church Army, at St. George's Barracks. "Please allow me to express my warmest thanks to you for the great interest and sympathy you so kindly showed in my work in Camp. I assure you I shall long remember your kindnesses and the way in which you gave me every facility.
The following letter was received by the Commanding Officer from Mr. A. Brigg, Church Army, at St. George’s Barracks. “Please allow me to express my warmest thanks to you for the great interest and sympathy you so kindly showed in my work in Camp. I assure you I shall long remember your kindnesses and the […]
Blackburn Rovers F.C.
Postcard of the Blackburn Rovers F.C. squad. Circa 1910.
http://justoldpostcards.blog/2023/07/04/blackburn-rovers-f-c/
A Fair Look-out
Shurey’s Publications Postcard. “A Fair Look-out”.
Bexley United
Postcard of the Bexley United Football Team, 1919-20.
Toll of Attack
We climbed the little white road which led through the battery positions now almost silent, topped the crest, and dipped into Sailly-au-Bois. The village had been very little shelled since the night before, and appeared the same as ever, except that the intense traffic, which had flowed into it for the past month, had ceased. Limbers and lorries had done their work, and the only objects which filled the shell-scarred streets were slow-moving ambulances,…
We climbed the little white road which led through the battery positions now almost silent, topped the crest, and dipped into Sailly-au-Bois. The village had been very little shelled since the night before, and appeared the same as ever, except that the intense traffic, which had flowed into it for the past month, had ceased. […]