Liverpool, Merseyside. L/S of the ship "Mauretania". C/U of Field Marshal Bernard Montgomery on the ship bound for Canada. People wave from the dock. M/S of cyclists Reg Harris and Lou Bond walking down railway station platform towards camera. M/S of them...
Liverpool, Merseyside. L/S of the ship "Mauretania". C/U of Field Marshal Bernard Montgomery on the ship bound for Canada. People wave from the dock. M/S of cyclists Reg Harris and Lou Bond walking down railway station platform towards camera. M/S of them together, camera pans across other cyclists preparing to leave for Switzerland.
M/S as amateur snake fancier, Brian Smith of Fulham, takes a fully grown python snake from a glass case in his sitting room. C/U of Smith with the python entangled round his arms and body. C/U of the head of the python held in Smith's hand.
Sussex. M/S of car driving down towards pub. C/U of the sign 'The New Inn'. M/S interior as Pathe's John Parsons meets 96 year old Mrs Bodle, Britain's oldest licensee. They chat about the beer and drink a toast.
Hampshire. M/S of Mrs Odette Sansom and her three daughters in a garden in Hampshire. She is the first Frenchwoman to receive the George Cross, the Gestapo seared her back with a red hot iron and pulled her toenails out but she didn't give them any information. John Parsons interviews her about the achievement and she says she wants to dedicate it to her comrades. Johns Parsons shakes her hand and says goodbye.
The death penalty has been carried out in almost all societies and although these images from WWI and WWII are unsettling, they still provide a raw account of events from a certain time.
On June 4 1913, suffragette Emily Wilding Davison made her way in to the history books when she fell under the hooves of George V’s horse at the Epsom Derby. But was it intentional?
From well-constructed and contrived quips to completely natural and seemingly spontaneous comments, there's something fascinating about people's last words.
The great politician and orator Winston Churchill left behind a sea of humourous quips and discerning quotes. We remember some of his finest epigrams and witty ripostes.
WW2 accounted for over 60m deaths and innumerable lives shattered. Pathé cameras took to land, sea and air to record the bloodshed. Here are the 10 bloodiest battles that were caught on film.
Life before health and safety laws; men worked at huge heights, balancing on girders and cranes all in order to help build the world's tallest skyscrapers.
Terrorism is nothing new. The Pathe archive has a vast collection of material related to terrorist attacks dating back to 1919 right through to the 2005 London bombings.
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