You go ahead Steve, I just thought I'd add a couple, nice pics your postingI'll post a couple of wartime RSPCS, PDSA, NARPAC photos as planned then I'll let you take over Jonny, we don't want to go doubling up on stuff now do we.
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The Terrier looks as staunch as the elderly gentleman...
Perfect spot to soak up some Barcelona sun while waxing fascists...Marina Ginesta, a 17-year-old militiaView attachment 87407, overlooking Barcelona during the Spanish Civil War, 1936
"Have Captain Rickson report to my office right away!!!"This is a low res version of a scan of an original proof print that was affixed to the original negative envelope [note sticky tape marks in the corners] showing somewhere where I used to spend countless hours - the control tower at Bassingbourn - shown here in silhouette with Fortresses off in the distance.
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Same place. A proper buzz job! Photo taken from the roof of the photo lab.
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This is an example of the awesome in war. Horrifying, mesmerizing, beautiful in its terrifying way. Great photo.Sorry about the size of the pic but an incredible one nonetheless...
Napalm strike in 1966 after being called in by the patrol in the photo.
I can vouch for that Steve, raised on the coast of North East Yorkshire, Hull, your bloody nithered in the winter, temperature can go to minus 14 I remember this one winter 2010Original wartime caption: Working in leather jackets and woollen caps as protection against the stinging winds of North-East Yorkshire, men of an R.A.F. Works Squadron transformed muddy grassland into part of an airfield in a few weeks. They tackle any airfield construction job in the shortest time, working long hours to break records and increase the Allied air striking power. Here they extended a runway by 300 yards so that it could be used by four-engine as well as two-engine bombers, and to make a new perimeter track around it. The land was first levelled and drained. Then the huge concrete mixer got busy dealing with more than three thousand tons of material each day. In twelve hours fifty men had laid two thousand square yards of concrete six inches thick. The Works Flight with its bulldozer, concrete mixer, tractors and giant trenching machine is part of an Airfield Construction Wing. There are many such Wings working all over Britain speeding up the building and improvement of airfields. Picture (issued 1943) shows - Planning the job, the officer in charge of the project, Warrant Officer A.E. Fisk, of Swansea [second from left] talking with Sergeant E.P. Howell, of Leeds, and Corporal G.L. Dundas of Sheffield, who are on his left.
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