‘The old street looks just the same’
Reg Maurice created the scene on the front of this postcard, captioned ‘The old street looks just the same’. His name can be seeen in the bottom left-hand corner. The artist has depicted a soldier who has returned home, his steel helmet on his back, rifle over his shoulder and duffle bag in his hand. He is surveying a street scene in which children are playing and fighting and people are going about their daily business. Apart from ‘Printed in England.’ and ‘Regent Series’, the typeset details on the reverse have been obscured by a message written in black ink, which reads, ‘Dearest Freda / I received letter alright. Glad to hear you are all pretty well. I have a little cold. a dear it is. but am thinking of pawning it. My mate ? had a cold and he tried to drown it and when he came back I had to take his boots off he tried beer, but it was no use. Well Dear, heaps of love to you all, your ? Freddie ? xxxxxxxx’. The postcard is addressed to ‘Miss F Parsons / Kestle Farm / St Columb Minor / Cornwall’. The postmark is partially legible: ‘GT YARMOUTH in Norfolk / 11 / 10 OCT 18’.
A British sentimental postcard
Postcard
Front
CONTRIBUTOR
The Army Children Archive
DATE
1918-10-10
LANGUAGE
eng
ITEMS
1
INSTITUTION
Europeana 1914-1918
PROGRESS
METADATA
Discover Similar Stories
'. . . the old | old story.'
1 Item
This black-and-white postcard has faded over the years, rendering part of the caption illegible. Our best guess is that it reads ‘Telling the old, old story’. Pictured below are a boy dressed as a British army officer and a girl wearing a nurse’s outfit. The printed details on the reverse include ‘(91)’ and ‘Entirely British Manufacture.’. || A British sentimental and patriotic postcard || || Postcard || A British sentimental and patriotic postcard.
Rhineland occupied just after the war
1 Item
Photograph of Section of Lancer Regiment || Seated in the front row, slightly to the right tallest man is Robert Francis Kinnimont born in 1896 in County Down, Ireland. Like a lot of Irishmen he rarely spoke about his time in the British army. We think he was a Captain. He wore white or cream Jodphurs (trousers) and riding boots. The men are seated by rank, there are two officers seated in the middle and two non-commissioned officers either side of them, and all the privates are standing. The second officer is holding a riding crop - again an indication of Cavalry perhaps? The privates are wearing puttees, which cover the boots like a sock on the outside. He was a member of one of the Lancer Regiments we don't know based on the hat badge which is a skull and crossbones. The street name appears to be Brauerei which is Brewery. It is in Aschaffenburg which is a small town in Rhineland near the frontier imposed on the Germans after the war. As you see from the writing of her grandfather the men are part of the Rhine Bridge Guard There are two Vickers machine guns and an ammunition box in the photograph. We don't know what the Franz Ludwig on the wall signifies!! Maybe somebody could help us with that. This period of Robert's life would have been Peacekeeping, as hostilities ended in 1918. He had participated in fighting before that. Robert spoke some German, probably learned in his time here and was able to sing in German. He was a career soldier and went on to be posted to Palestine, Malta and possibly Africa based on the other pictures in the collection alongside this one. He returned to Ireland and got married and lived the remainder of his life in Ballinteer Gardens, Wales, Stillorgan, and Dalkey. He worked as a Civil Servant.
Postcard Amiens Cathedral - The Old and The New Testament
1 Item
Front || Postcard Amiens Cathedral - The Old and The New Testament