Queen Mary University of London Archives

The Long and Winding Way

The Long and Winding Way, by Percy Smith from the Drypoints of War series, 1916-1919.

Percy Smith served until 1919 in France and Belgium as a gunner and experienced trench warfare. He was not an official war artist, so he had copperplates sent to him, concealed in magazines. He used them to make etchings from sketches made on the front line.

Image Courtesy of Percy Smith Foundation.

Circa dates: 
1916-1919
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Fifteen Inch Howitzer

Fifteen-Inch Howitzer, by Percy Smith, 1916-1919.

Percy Smith experienced the newest most powerful naval gun, the 'fifteen inch Howitzer'۪, popularly known as 'Granny'. His attempts at sketching the gun were met with opposition and he was reported to his superiors as such sketches were 'suspicious'۪ and considered to be tantamount to a spying activity. Successive appeals at last reached General Aston, himself interested in etching, and Percy was allowed to continue unofficially.

Image Courtesy of Percy Smith Foundation.

Circa dates: 
1914-1918
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Life of a Field Telephonist

From the 'Life of a Field Telephonist' a series of 6 postcards by Fritz Lindshoeft, 1917.

Field telephones were first used in the First World War to direct troops. They replaced flag signals and the telegraph as an efficient means of communication. The first field telephones had a wind-up generator, used to power the telephone's ringer and batteries to send the call, and call the manually operated telephone central.

Images Courtesy of Queen Mary University of London Archives.

Date range: 
1917
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