Thursday, 28 November 2024

City Scenes

 See It On A Postcard's Thursday Postcard Hunt is taking a look at multi-views

After the city's millennium the slogan "Wroclaw - The Meeting Place" started to be used in all sorts of promotional material, and of course postcards.  I think the invention of the slogan must derive from the reason the city was founded here by the Oder River, it was the meeting point of two trade routes.

The card shows Top - The City Hall, The Centennial Hall and the tenements Hansel and Gretel the bottom photos The Market Square, the Raclawice Panorama which houses the cycloramic painting of the Battle of Raclawice and for some relaxing downtime The Japanese Garden


The oldest town in Finland and once its capital - Turku. Located on the south west corner of Finland by the Aura River which makes its way through Turku and out into the Baltic Sea.

As a contrast a small place in the northern England formed on farming and making woolen garments.  Today it is popular for walkers of the Howgill Fells and book lovers (it is England's official Book Town).

The car shows Weavers Yard, Main Street, and the 12th century Parish Church of St Andrews

Sunday, 24 November 2024

Small Animals

 

1998: Endangered Species
It has  turned cold so little dormice will be curled up and fast asleep. Due to an active reintroduction scheme locally there are many more snoozing in the woods.
2014: Amphibians

A tiny yellow bellied toad, it displays its yellowness when under threat.  If that fails then the toxins it can expel are a useful addition to its defence.
2011: Europa - Amazon Alive
The Poison Dart frog also has colourful warning signals. The species range in size from 1.5cm (0.59inch) to 6cm (2.4inch). Not as small as the tiniest frog ever discovered found in Brazil this year which could sit on a stamp or as this article says it is smaller than a pencil eraser.
2013: Appenzell Ausserrhoden and Innerrhoden
Lets go up a size, small animals high mountains. A stamp marking the 500th anniversary of the Appenzell region's membership of the Swiss Federation.  It is a largely pastoral area so one of the big occasions of the year is in autumn when the farmers return their herds of cows, sheep and goats from the high altitude pastures.

Sunday Stamps theme - small animals - See It On A Postcard



Thursday, 21 November 2024

Docks

 See It On A Postcard's Thursday Postcard Hunt for - harbour and port views...

Sailing ship being towed by Edwin Beattie (1845-1917)

Preston Docks, painted in 1894 with a tug boat towing a three masted sailing ship into port. Preston Docks were located on the banks of the River Ribble 15 miles from the Irish Sea. It closed in 1981 and the whole area was redeveloped so little remains. Today there is a marina here and the heritage Ribble Steam Railway still uses the dockside tracks.

The port of Brest is very much still in business however in 1941 the Germans based their formidable fleet of ships and submarines here so it was almost entirely destroyed when liberated in  1944. Only photos remain of the past.  The Richelieu battleship shown was commissioned just days before the Germans won the Battle of France, it fled to French West Africa and would eventually be part of the force that liberated Singapore. You might think the yacht or schooner Notre-Dame d'Etel was from simpler times but despite being built in 1913 she ended up being a patrol boat for the Free French Naval Forces.
South Bay, Scarborough, North Yorkshire

Time to head to the peaceful harbour of the seaside town of Scarborough for a summer walk along the harbour walls or a laze on the beach.  It is a beautifully sunny day today but one would need to wrap up warm for these two activities especially on the North Sea coast.

Sunday, 17 November 2024

Postal Heads

 

1990: 150th Anniversary of the Penny Black Stamp
Roland Hill's idea of a uniform postage rate no matter what the distance introduced the penny stamp and opened the world of written communication to everyone
1974: 100 Years of the UPU
The story continued with the founding of the Universal Postal Union in Bern. Eugene Borel (who was head of the Swiss postal department) chaired a congress of 22 countries. As thanks he was gifted a silver tea set by the conference participants. The silver platter was engraved with the ideals of the new organisation. (The tea tray and other UPU history here). Borel visited
1997: Founder of the UPU - Heinrich Von Stephan

the well regarded German postal official Heinrich Von Stephan (general postal director for the German Empire) in Berlin ahead of the congress.  Stephan  is now considered the father of the UPU but had begun his illustrious career as a postal clerk in the Kingdom of Prussia, what a journey. He also introduced the postcard to Germany and the telephone.
1988: 300th Anniversary of the Postal Service
Here is a happy postal scene. The UPU turned 150 this years, Finland became a member in 1918 soon after they became an independent country in 1917.  

Sunday Stamps theme is - Headshots - See It On A Postcard


Thursday, 14 November 2024

Streets

 See It On A Postcard's Thursday Postcard Hunt is walking down urban streets

Charing Cross, Glasgow

and a pleasant day for a walk to the post office on the corner.
Eastgate, Lincolnshire

Early morning in Louth, Lincolnshire.  I had a look online and nothing much has changed here, the Pack Horse Hotel and bar is still there although not the Coffee Tavern but there is no doubt there will be a coffee shop on the street somewhere. Somehow the word 'tavern' does sound more fun.  The lower shop fronts and signage of course are now boringly modern and cars park on the left, yellow lines and no parking on the right.  The church spire is St James and the tallest medieval church spire in the country.
York Street, Albany, Western Australia

A clear blue sky in Australia, just like where I am today, except of course with summer rather than winter temperatures.  The card says - "York Street is Albany's main commercial area and overlooks the beautiful Princess Royal Harbour".  Pity we can't see it. I could have used it for next week's theme.

Sunday, 10 November 2024

Rememberance Sunday

 

2008: The 90 Years of Remembrance - Lest We Forget
The mini sheet shows the wreaths on the Cenotaph in London which, the national point of remembrance. The stamp shows the Isle of Man's National War Memorial in the village of St John's whose wreath laying ceremony is this afternoon followed by a service of remembrance at the Royal Chapel.
2015: Stories from the Great War (Design - Charlotte Barnes)
The confident "Home by Christmas" was said of the troops at the outbreak of World War One in 1914.  Philip Carré the postman on the island of Sark joined the Royal Guernsey Light Infantry and would return in 1919 when the regiment was demobilized. He would send more than one Christmas card.

The bottom stamp shows the postmen from the Bailiwick of Guernsey who joined the Post Office Rifles, originally a volunteer territorial unit.  That changed at the outbreak of the World War in 1914 when they were called up to serve abroad.  Lawrence Burridge was killed in May 1916, age 23 and Albert Smith died from gunshot wounds in December 1917, age 25. The other three, Privates JG Fowler, AW Smith and HF Taylor's fate is unknown, lets hope they made it home.  I think the reason for the uncertainty is that half the British army's service records were destroyed in 1940 when a German bombing raid struck the War Office in London.

Sunday Stamps theme - Military - See It On A Postcard 

Thursday, 7 November 2024

On High

 See It On A Postcard's Thursday Postcard Hunt is heading high for urban aerial views

Rheinau, Switzerland (1996)

On the bend of the Rhine River (which forms the Swiss-German border) is the small municipality of Rheinau most of which is forest (54.8%) or agricultural land (26.8%) but here is its perfectly placed village. Rheinau Abbey can be seen on an island, top right. One of Switzerland's many bright yellow postbuses runs a connection from Rheinau to the Marthalen railway station.
2014: Liechtenstein/Singapore Joint Issue - Modern Art
In contrast here are the bright lights of Singapore.  The stamp features a painting by Yens W Beyricht who creates inter-woven symmetries which he calls Hypersymmetrics. One of his themes is the City State.

Sunday, 3 November 2024

Explorers

 

1934: Jacques Cartier - 400th Anniversary of 1st voyage to Canada
Jacques Cartier setting out to eventually arrive and explore the St Lawrence River and in the process name a country Canada.
1963: Martin Frobisher

 Martin Frobisher set out to find the North West Passage to the Orient. Like Cartier he would try to finance his expeditions by finding gold but both would have been wise to take a geologist with them to avoid disappointment when they arrived back with little of value.

1982: Birth Centenary of Sir Douglas Mawson

Jumping forward in time enter a geologist Douglas Mawson but his motivation was adventure and scientific knowledge however the famous 1911 Australian Antarctic expedition turned into a horror show, of which he was the only survivor. His book 'The Home of the Blizzard'  gives a vivid account of this experience.

1983: Explorers and Discoverers

The interior of Australia is unforgiving. The German explorer Ludwig Leichhardt successfully travelled there twice but he and his companions disappeared on his third expedition never to be found. He is remembered for his extensive natural history collection and notes.

Robert O'Hare Burke and William John Wallis became the first Europeans to cross Australia north to south in 1861 however it was not the most professional of expeditions and they died during their return but entered Australian mythology as "heroic failures".

Sunday Stamps theme this week - Mustaches for movember - explore more at See It On A Postcard