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Agents in every city of the world

Roaming around the British Newspaper Archive today, I came across some adverts from the London Standard which do feel a little bizarre by today's standards! Personals: B*****. De W – You have been traced. Write and give E.P. an explanation, also W., or immediate proceedings will be taken. – F.D. Green Bushes. – Dangerously ill. Mind unhinged. Shop closed: not take sufficient pay rent. Pray  help before Tuesday or will lose all. Ruined. Mother cannot help. What will become our darling. I.V.O.R – I know there is an impassable gulf between us now. Don’t throw across a relic of happier time when you loved and trusted me. It was given on certain conditions and I can only take it from your hand. If you will not see me call for letter. Perhaps your turn has come. Be generous and spare me. Slater's Detective Agency:   Before commencing Divorce proceedings consult Henry Slater, who will obtain all available reliable evidence. Consultations free. Successful in ever

Visting the former Aldwych tube station

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I had read a lot about the secret side of ‘underground London’ for a while without tasting too much of the real thing: the odd surface remnant of a disused tube station being the height of it. So I was delighted then to stumble across news that London Transport Museum were again hosting visits inside the disused Aldwych station, which had closed to passengers in September 1994. The tours sold out sharpish but I managed to get a couple of tickets in time! There is definitely a sense of excitement about getting a glimpse of something that has been ‘hidden’, even in relatively recent history. Even when in use, Aldwych (which opened as the Strand station in November 1907 on the site of a demolished theatre) had an aura of sadness about it, and not just because the ghost of a theatre actress allegedly haunts one of the platforms!. Despite bigger plans on several occasions, it only ever existed as a small branch line from Holborn and was under-used by passengers throughout its hi

Churches: How to read them

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Green man , a photo by bishib70 on Flickr. I've just spotted in the Radio Times that Dr Richard Taylor's excellent Churches: How to Read Them series is getting a repeat run on BBC4. (Tonight, Nov 30, is episode 2 Medieval Life - try to tune in if you haven't seen it. There's also a DVD or iPlayer!). In a (very) little nod to the series I'm blogging this photo of a carved Green Man from All Saints Church, Cuddesdon, Oxfordshire! (The church was built in the late 12th century although includes later additions.)

11/11/11

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On the family history trail , a photo by bishib70 on Flickr. Last year I did a little research into my dad's family history and came across details of a great uncle of his who was killed in the First World War. In fact, he was killed in what must have been one of the very first skirmishes of the war, in France on 27 August 1914. My dad knew nothing of this ancestor, and was amazed to discover his family link to a name on the cenotaph in Bessbrook village.

Kilburn Grange Cinema

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Kilburn Grange Cinema , a photo by bishib70 on Flickr. Wanting to indulge in some first-hand historical sources, I once bought an old photo album off a well known online auction site. I still have no idea to whom it originally belonged - frustratingly, there are no names attached and I can't identify most of the places in the photographs. A couple of images immediately stood out however: the Radcliffe Camera in Oxford, and this shot of Kilburn Grange cinema in London. I scanned the image to try to establish what films were showing - the only title I can identify is Passions of Men , a short film released in 1914, the very year the cinema actually opened! I have also scanned and posted the Radcliffe Camera photo to my Flickr account, but hopefully I will soon find the time to look through and possibly publish some of the other photos from the album - my contribution to Flickr Commons, hopefully with the blessing of whomever originally took the photos!

Bricked up conduit

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Bricked up bunker , a photo by bishib70 on Flickr. This bricked up bunker in Greenwich Park is possibly something to do with an old underground water system, a conduit for Greenwich Palace.

Inside Greenwich foot tunnel

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The Greenwich Foot Tunnel was opened in 1902. This photograph shows a section that was bomb damaged during World War 2 and then repaired with large steel walls, but further down the tunnel you can see original walls and the tunnel's original breadth.