If the decline in reading newspapers could be reversed by printing on green, surely the London Standard would have tried this before becoming a weekly.
Independent publisher specialising in fiction, history and journalism
If the decline in reading newspapers could be reversed by printing on green, surely the London Standard would have tried this before becoming a weekly.
It was Saturday 14th September 1940 and the eighty or so Chelsea people packed into the crypt of the Roman Catholic Church of the Holy
Armistice Day- the eleventh day of the eleventh month symbolises the UK’s immeasurable losses to armed conflict in the Great War of 1914 to 1918.
This feature explores the rise and fall of a campaigning evening newspaper now long lost to history. It was January 17th 1938, and one of
The slideshow above offers two views of the plaque unveiled in 1998 in memory of the V1 casualties as well as one view of the
Overview The key day when the Blitz really came to Chelsea was Monday 9th September 1940. It began in the early hours of the morning-