Issue 18 features: * Housekeeping through history: Margaret Powling shows how housekeeping books can illuminate social history * Celebration of place: A new one-place studies conference * Wounded in WW1: Explore 1.3m casualty records online * Sea changes: Karen Foy on the many ways we can learn about our migrant ancestors * A walk in the park: The development of public parks * The slippery poll: 18th and 19th century poll books revealed * History in the details: Cloaks and mantles * Places in Focus: Norwich More Info
Product Code: DYAP018
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by Patrick Wiegand.. History of the orphanage written by the grandson of the Master & Matron & extensively illustrated.
by Paul Barnfield. Hermann Korf was interned in 1915 in Douglas, Isle of Man, but returned to Ongar, in Essex, after a short period. Based on Korf family papers
How a family kept in touch during and after WW2 by communicating through the Red Cross - fully illustrated with the letters. Edited by Jennifer Taylor. Occasional Issue No 1 (2015).
Anselm Ungar was a citizen of Bonn, one of Johann Gottfried Kinkel's Democratic Association there. After the failure of the 1848 revolution, he and others formed a Gesellschaft (Company) of like-minded people who wished to escape to North America.. Taken from Ungar's own notebook of the voyage. Translated and introduced by Eva Lawrence. Occasional Issue No 3 (2017).
Franz was born in London of A German immigrant father. He was interned in 1940 in Peveril Camp, Peel, on the Isle of Man, as he was suspected of fascist sympathies. From family papers and correspondence. Edited and introduced by Jennifer Taylor. Occasional Issue No 4 (2018)