Sunday, 30 September 2012

Scott of the Antarctic's Tomb

The Daily Mirror dated Wednesday May 21st 1913
 Click to Read
 Click to Read
Click to Read
We children of the 1950’s read about Scott of the Antarctica, Clive of India, Gordon of Khartoum, Livingtone, Nelson and Wellington in our Boys Own Book of British Heroes or in comic strip form in the Eagle.

Robert Falcon Scott had led a previous expedition to Antarctica using the ship Discovery (1901 – 1904) but the primary objective had not been to get to the South Pole. In June 1910 Scott set sail again, this time in the Terra Nova, and, after a stay in New Zealand, heavy storms and 20 days ice-bound, they arrived to set up a base at Cape Evans in January 1911. They were aware that the Norwegian explorer Roald Amundsen was camped along the coast and was preparing to head for the South Pole.


Scott and his party finally set out for the Pole on September 13th 1911 and reached their goal on January 17th 1912 only to find that Amundsen had beaten them by 34 days. They left for home the next day but never made it back to Cape Evans.


Click to Read
The remaining members of the expedition who had waited at Cape Evans set up a search party. They finally found the bodies of Scott, Wilson and Bowers on November 12th 1912 and erected the memorial shown on the front page. The Terra Nova arrived back in New Zealand in February 1913.

Click to Read
Click to Read
There is an obvious attempt here to salvage some glory from the failed attempt to beat the foreigner Amundsen to the Pole by claiming Scott’s party actually got to the real location and the Norwegians didn’t.

Click to Read
Captain Lawrence Oates was just 32 years old when he walked out into a blizzard with the words "I am just going outside and may be some time".
Aware that his ill health was compromising his companions' chances of survival he chose certain death. His body was never found.

 Click to Read
Click to Read
I can imagine Scott and his men huddled over cups of steaming Oxo and North Pole explorer Robert Peary scribbling away in his diary using a Koh-I-noor pencil but having Scott and Co laying Linola and admiring its pattern and hygienic qualities while a blizzard is trying to rip the roof off, is a bit harder to swallow.

Click to Read
The close relationship between the British and German Royal Families dates back to 1714 when, instead of a Stuart King James III, the Act of Settlement gave us George of Brunswick the 1st Hanoverian King.

Kaiser Wilhelm II was King George V’s cousin (Wilhelm’s mother was George’s father’s sister). The coming of World War I only 14 months after this visit strained the relationship and George, who had began his reign as a Saxe-Coburg thanks to his grandmother Victoria marrying Albert of Saxe-Coberg-Gotha, changed the family name to Windsor in 1917.

Click to Read
As Germany built up her Navy in opening decade of the 20th Century, the Royal Navy were worried and set about gathering intelligence. In 1910 Lieutenant Brandon and Captain Trench were two spies that got caught in Germany and were sentenced to 4 years in prison. Captain Bertrand Stewart was caught spying while travelling in Germany in 1911. He was sentenced to 3 years.


Click to Read
Click to Read
Surely these are just the sort of items that would have caught the attention of Sherlock Holmes if he hadn’t been too busy with his bees. The Adventure of the Clean Motor-Goggles and The Adventure of the Silk Hat. Read them first in The Strand Magazine.

Click to Read
Leo Maxse was the editor of the Right Wing magazine National Review and supporter of the National Party, a splinter group who broke away from the Conservatives because they were too ‘liberal’. Maxse was 49 in 1913 and had been brought up reading the old Victorian papers that were predominantly solid blocks of type and reported such items as hour long political speeches verbatim.


Click to Read
Wanna see the Bunny Hug, the Turkey Trot and the Tango? Not to mention the Castle Walk, Maxixe, Hesitation Waltz and The Toddle?  Are you prepared to be shocked by the outlandish behaviour of the young? Do you have the smelling salts ready? Watch this Youtube offering if you dare.





Friday, 28 September 2012

Random Ad - What's On (1933)

Click to Read
The week's film offerings at the Broadway Cinema in East Ham. Note the lack of a Sunday programme. Up until 1972 Local Councils could allow or disallow Sunday Cinema openings.

'I am a Fugitive from a Chain Gang' and '42nd Street' were nominated for Best Film and Paul Muni as Best Actor at the 1934 Oscars. 'It Happened One Night' and Clark Gable were the respective winners.

Wednesday, 26 September 2012

Blog News




I am starting another blog - Hold The Cover - in which I will be posting images of covers from my magazine collection. 

First post on Friday (28th) with new posts on subsequent Wednesdays, Fridays and Sundays. 

Have a look on Friday (you know you want to!)

Random Cutting - Royal Family Abolished!

Click to Read
From the front page of the George Orwell inspired spoof newspaper produced by Times journalists in 1984. It had no connection, other than the name, to the then successful TV sketch show 'Not the Nine O'clock News'

Sunday, 23 September 2012

Queen Mum is 100

International Express dated August 8th-14th 2000 
 Click to Read
 Click to Read
Click to Read
This is the overseas weekly edition of the Daily Express.

Elizabeth Angela Marguerite Bowes-Lyon married into the Royal Family in 1923 when she got hitched to Albert Frederick Arthur George Windsor the 2nd son of George V. When the 1st son, Edward Albert Christian George Andrew Patrick David Windsor abdicated before being crowned it was up to Albert to become George VI and Elizabeth to be his Queen. George VI died in 1952 and their eldest daughter Elizabeth Alexandra Mary became Queen Elizabeth II and her mother became (you’ve guessed it) The Queen Mum.

She outlived her husband by 50 years and died on 30th March 2002.

Click to Read
Porton Down, where the package of ‘germs’ should have gone, has been involved in secret research on chemical weaponry from as far back as 1916 and has, allegedly, carried out tests on humans. I don’t think Debenhams has.

Click to Read
Both my parents smoked like factory chimneys. I never have. One of my offspring smokes and the other doesn’t. So there may be something in this. Or not. 

Click to Read
This is from Peter Hitchens’ column and it comes as no surprise that he would support George W. 

Click to Read 
Click to Read
These items are side-bars to a larger article about the end of the News of the World’s Name and Shame Campaign, which encouraged the revealing of the names and addresses of sex offenders to the public and led to a lynch mob mentality. A classic example of a newspaper-provoked ‘moral panic’ that even led to a paediatrician being targeted by a mob of ignorant ‘concerned citizens’. 

Click to Read
This is a list of the 100 favourite films up to 1999 based on reviews on the Internet Movie Database (www.imdb.com). Having seen 79 of them I note that only 6 of my personal top 50 films of the 20th century appear in their top 50. Does this means that I have crap taste or does the rest of the World?

Click to Read
The Monument to the Women of World War II did materialize and was dedicated by the Queen in July 2005. There is a good photo of it here.

Click to Read
Having had a liver transplant in 2002 George Best died in 2005 at the comparatively young age of 59.

Click to Read
There are fewer celebrity biographies and cookbooks than these days, although the dreaded Jamie Oliver does appear (twice!). Nice to see Kathy Reichs, James Lee Burke and Thomas Harris representing the Crime writers and Bill Bryson the travel writers, even if ‘Down Under’ was, in my humble opinion, his least interesting travel book. 




Friday, 21 September 2012

Random Ad - Erecta Shoulder Brace (1910's)


There's nothing worse than a round shouldered shorthand-typist! The Erecta Shoulder Brace sent in a 'plain wrapper'. I could do with one now - I've been at this bloody keyboard for hours.

Wednesday, 19 September 2012

Random Cutting - Gandhi's Funeral (1948)

Click to Read

Following his murder on January 30th 1948 and in keeping with tradition, Mahatma Gandhi was cremated the following day. Estimates of the number of mourners vary from 250,000 to a million.