Sunday, 5 May 2013

Rhineland Evacuation signed

Daily Mirror dated Saturday August 31st 1929
Click to Read
Click to Read
At the end of the First World War the Treaty of Versailles stipulated that the Rhineland would be off-limits to the German military and up until 1935 a combined force of British, American, Belgian and French soldiers would police the area. In fact the Americans evacuated their troops in 1923 and the last to leave were the French in 1930. The idea of the occupation was to ensure that Germany could not use the Rhineland industrial infrastructure to re-arm. In March 1936 Hitler ordered the remilitarization of the Rhineland. 

Click to Read
Jewish access to the Wailing Wall in Jerusalem was at the root of the violence that broke out in August 1929 between Arabs and Jews in Palestine. From the 23rd to the 29th of that month 133 Jews were killed by Arabs and 339 Jews injured, 110 Arabs were killed and 232 Arabs injured.  Many of the Arabs were shot by the British Police who were trying to restore order. The nasty massacre at Safed marked the end of this particular outbreak of Arab/Jewish hostility.

Click to Read
Movietone pioneered sound newsreels from 1928 onwards.
Ramsay MacDonald and Herbert Hoover met at the President’s retreat in Virginia in October 1929. They didn’t solve the World’s armaments problems.  

Click to Read
After the fire, which gutted Dorset’s Lulworth Castle on August 29th it was left empty and exposed to the elements until the 1970’s when English Heritage started a restoration effort that was finally completed in 1998.

Click to Read
Not exactly the Great Train Robbery but literally a wages snatch.

Click to Read
Click to Read
I think the photo is of the new Morris Isis-Six, which replaced the Morris Six, which had been around since 1920.

Click to Read
Lots of bargains here if only one had a time machine.

Click to Read
Rather than get married, surely it would have been easier for this 84 year-old woman to just leave all her property to the young man in her will.

Click to Read
I know little or nothing about fashion but the lady on the left of the top picture looks suspiciously like a time traveller from the 1980’s to me. Maybe she was there house hunting.

Click to Read
The U.S. Steamboat Inspection Service Board’s investigation found that the ‘San Juan’ had changed course in the fog and had cut across the oil tanker Dodd therefore causing the collision, which claimed the lives of 72 people.

Click to Read
Click to Read
The race for the Schneider Trophy was a competition for seaplanes and was run (or flown) in 1913 and annually from 1919 until 1931. In 1929 Richard Waghorn in the Supermarine S6 won with an average speed of 328.64 miles per hour. Sadly Waghorn was killed 3 years later after parachuting out of a Hawker Horsley biplane test flight at Farnborough.
R J Mitchell, who is most famous as the designer of the Spitfire, designed the Supermarine S6.  

Click to Read
Mary Learoyd was strangled in Sedbergh Park, Ilkley, Yorkshire on August 25th. Nobody was ever convicted of the murder. It seems that the man arrested in London was actually on his way to Scotland Yard to present an alibi and clear his name.

Click to Read
This is something that I think is lacking from modern newspapers – nicely drawn headers for articles and columns.

Click to Read
I include this because it reminded me that I used to frequent Gamages’ Store in High Holborn many years ago and once used their recording booth to create a vinyl record – now long lost - both the record and the booth.









No comments:

Post a Comment