Early 1900s view northeast from the Peak - part 2
We first looked at this photo a few weeks ago (see the newsletter for 20th August).
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We first looked at this photo a few weeks ago (see the newsletter for 20th August).
Yvonne Foley introduces a little-known piece of UK-Chinese history, in the hope of hearing from the families who were involved.
At the beginning of the Second World War there were 20,000 Chinese mariners in the port of Liverpool, England. Many were there to replace the British merchant seamen who had gone to join the Royal Navy. A significant proportion of these men were from Hong Kong, Singapore, Ningbo and Shanghai and became trapped in the UK when in late 1941 and early 1942 the Japanese took each of these places.
With typhoons and hurricanes in the news recently, here's a photo of one that made the news just over 90 years ago.
Issue 1 of History Notes was compiled by the late Phillip Bruce, and published as a printed booklet in the late 1980s. It covers topics ranging from prostitutes to poems, pirates to policemen:
I've looked at this photo many times over the last few months, as it's one that's going into the Gwulo book. It got me thinking about how the cloth baby carrier has gone in and out of fashion.