pferguson | April 30, 2022
Mother…Film… It takes a while…the penny drops…the pictures produce the synapses (the passing of messages to communicate). Having returned to 2005 I find my file of images for the 9.2 inch dazzle painted “gun” at the Imperial War Museum. Surely, at the time, I will do something with these? And surely I did…mind 17 years […]
Category: Snapshots of the Great War |
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Tags: Aeroscope Camera, Clarendon Film Company, Edward Tong, Film History, Garrick Film Company, Gaumont Film Company, Geoffrey Malins, Hawthorn Ridge, How I Filmed the War, Howitzer, Imperial War Museum, John McDowell, Kinematograph Manufacturers Association, Medal of the Order of the British Empire, Mother, The Battle of the Somme, The British and Colonial Film Company
pferguson | May 19, 2015
Always Time to Remember One cannot help but reflect on so many Great War anniversaries as each day passes some 100 years later. Today though I have had a think about a few posts that really must develop and though perhaps the “On This Day” approach has passed, there is always time to remember…always…time…to remember. […]
Category: Our Thoughts |
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Tags: 1916, 52nd Battalion CEF, Albert Patrick Niven Service, Albert Service, Alexander Service, American Red Cross, August 18, Bard of the Yukon, Joseph Service, Mother, Munitions Plants, R.W. Service, Remembrance, Rhymes of a Red Cross Man, Robert W. Service, Silver Cross, Songs of a Sourdough, The Convalescent, Toronto Star, War Memorial