Search results
All Items (30,763,770)
Gallery (2,424,266)
Map (142,057)
Related Topics
Showing 1061-1080 of 2,424,259 results for “”
i "Evening; Post" Photo. At the track and field championships at the Basin Reserve on Saturday, when New Zealand's leadingathletes assembled to contest Dominion titles. Top left, the Governor-General, Lord Galway, with the Hon. W. E. Parry and the Hon. P. Fraser. Above, past New Zealand champions who were the guests of the Wellington Centre and who took part in the parade of athletes. Extreme left, P. F. Sharpley, winner of the 120yds hurdles, on the victory stand with L. C. Woodward and C. R. Bradwell, who finished second and third respectively. Left, V. P. Boot taking the oath of amateurism from a dais on behalf of the assembled athletes. (Evening Post, 11 March 1940)
Gordon McCusker Photo. The Deputy Prime Minister (the Hon. P. Fraser) and Major-General J. E. Duigan, C.8., D.5.0., supported by ratings from H.M.S. Achilles, at a recruiting meeting in Blenheim on Friday. Also in ■ the group are Lieut.-Colonel W. T. Churchward, E.D., LieuL-Colonel L. C. Chaytor, M.C.9'V.D., Mr. F. B. Lloyd, R.S.A., and Mr. E.Meachen,M.P. (Evening Post, 11 March 1940)
Sport and, General" Photo. An underground tunnel built for Judge Jeffreys as a secret way of escape from his enemies has been turned into an air-raid shelter for a London girls9 college. It leads from the cellars of St. George's College, Red Lion Square, in which Judge Jeffreys lived 260 years ago. Jeffreys used this tunnel to: escape from London when William of Orange came to the throne, but was later caught. (Evening Post, 11 March 1940)
This picture was taken in the garden at No, 10 Downing Street after the signing of a new military agreement with the Polish Government. From the left, Lord Halifax, Secretary for Foreign Affairs, General Sikorski, Prime Minister of Poland, Mr. Winston Churchill, M. Zaleski, Polish Foreign Minister. Fox Photo. This picture shows the empty chairs on the promenade of an English south coast resort, usually crowded with visitors, but now banned as t a defence measure. (Evening Post, 11 September 1940)