Recent Posts - page 7
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CoI RIP, but Joe and Petunia live on
The Central Office of Information (CoI) passed away on March 31 – virtually unnoticed. It had a long and eventful life – nearly a century if you include its early years as the Ministry of Information. Thousands of talented journalists,… Read More ›
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The Hebrides and Goebbels
This British Council film is fascinating in many ways. It’s visually sumptuous – the first time I think the Hebrides, previously captured by sharp-eyed photographers like Werner Kissling in monochrome, was portrayed in glorious Technicolor. It weaves a simple dramatic… Read More ›
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A treasure chest of oral histories
A key feature of digital history is its capacity to surprise. My good pal and cycling buddy, Iain Monk, who’s from Benbecula in the Western Isles, never knew his paternal grandfather, who died before Iain was born. But looking on… Read More ›
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The Headline that Never Was
More myths surfaced with the sinking of the Titanic than were poor souls lost with the ill-fated liner. Digital history has fuelled an explosion of interest – with a lot more source material available to examine online.Titanic is the focus… Read More ›
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Red Sails in the Solent
An anniversary can be a prompt for a total revamp of a company’s website. This has some merit both in saving costs and integrating historical content into the main corporate story. And it is what Red Funnel, the original ferry operators… Read More ›
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The Women of Royaumont – a unique film
This gem from the Scottish Screen Archive shows the work of some extraordinarily brave women – click on the picture to view. It is intriguing in many ways – as one of the earliest documentaries, perhaps the only moving image… Read More ›
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More Bosch – and no tosh
An update from my earlier Bosch post ….there is also some fascinating written material produced for its 125th anniversary. It isn’t that easy to find on Bosch websites but if you have an interest in the development of the automotive… Read More ›
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Bish Bash Bosch – the first vital spark
Ignorance about the history of Germany abounds in the UK, although at least Misha Glenny’s series on Radio 4 is now redressing the balance. School history largely focuses on Hitler and the Nazis and far fewer children are choosing to… Read More ›
Featured Categories
history on the web ›
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The Genesis of Geriatrics
May 26, 2026
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An exceptional Irish nurse
May 18, 2026
digital history ›
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Carnage at Paris Olympics (in 1924)
August 8, 2024
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Women and Edinburgh banks – a New Town daunder
June 6, 2024
gems from the archive ›
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Dundee’s Pioneering Female Journalists
January 14, 2025
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Women’s golf 125 years ago
August 5, 2022
