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Read more about the article The water of remembrance
Jack Parsons in WW1 (left), WW2 (right) and the fountain in Gregson Park

The water of remembrance

In Gregson Park, Hamilton (Newcastle, NSW), a drinking water fountain stands near the large war memorial. On one side is a plaque that reads: Dedicated to the memory of John William Parsons who made the supreme sacrifice on the 12th July 1945 while prisoner of war in Ranau, Borneo. 2/3rd Motor Ambulance Corps 2nd AIF Also member 8th Field Co Engineers AIF 1914-1918. Age 49 years Erected by his wife and daughters.” In truth, the fountain memorialises Jack Parsons and his wife Doris, both profoundly affected by the world wars of the 20th Century. The story…

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Read more about the article A pencil flashlight on the past
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A pencil flashlight on the past

Shining a pencil flashlight into an enormous dark barn. That's how I once heard searching the internet described. It's also how I feel when I think about historical blog posts for this website. The past is vast and poorly illuminated, and writing about bits and pieces of it - chosen near-randomly - makes me feel like I'm just flashing a pencil torch into the darkness, hoping to see something interesting to describe. Author L.P. Hartley famously observed in the 1953 book, The Go-Between, that "the past is a foreign country: they do things differently there". And…

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Seeing double again: more stereo viewers

As I have written before, stereoscopy and stereo-photography are part of a popular niche in photography and collecting. Some people, for example Ron Blum, of South Australia, have collected vast libraries of stereo images and are experts in the field. For myself, it's a peripheral interest, but that hasn't stopped me from accumulating a few hundred traditional stereoview cards and also a handful of different stereoscopes. One with particular resonance for me is the bright red plastic "View-a-Scope" issued by the Sanitarium food company in the 1960s to view a couple of series of stereo cards…

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