Posts

Stockings run in our family

This article tells the tale of William Brown, our great-great-grandfather who escaped the poverty that Nottinghamshire framework knitters experienced during the Industrial Revolution.

Ring Out, Wild Bells

This article describes how Daniel Jewson truly found himself within earshot of Bow Bells. Image: Dougsim, CC BY-SA 4.0 , via Wikimedia Commons

Shipwrecked in the Furious Fifties

This article describes the fate of the Min-y-Don – a clipper destined for Lyttleton, New Zealand in 1882. Among the crew was our Great Great uncle Thomas Finch. Min-y-Don, translates from Welsh to mean ‘At the edge of the waves’. Image Source: Wikipedia

The ‘first’ Princess Alice disaster

It’s often called the “forgotten” tragedy of the 19th century – the loss of nearly 700 lives aboard the Princess Alice steamer on the River Thames, following its collision with a coal ship. But this article describes another truly forgotten collision involving the SS Princess Alice seven years earlier. On this occasion it was our…

The anonymous lighterman

The life of the 19th-century lighterman was both enthralling and dangerous. This posting looks at a ‘letter to the editor’ on the subject of lightermen. (Featured image: British School, 19th Century Upper reaches of the River Thames with a lighter to foreground and barges and masted vessels, 1913)

Colourise my past

This article looks at colourisation and how that fits with the ‘authentic’ historian. It suggests that a simple knowledge of colour theory can help in avoiding historical inaccuracies.

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