Alfred Butterworth and Sons, Glebe Mills, Hollinwood 1901
A flood of Lancashire cotton workers and their children at the end of another shift.
A flood of Lancashire cotton workers and their children at the end of another shift.
This film is part of the Mitchell and Kenyon collection - an amazing visual record of everyday life in Britain at the beginning of the twentieth century.
Two Boers shoot and rob a sentry.
An Edwardian football match at Newcastle's St James' Park ground.
A group of miners (including a sole black worker) exits the colliery gates.
One long traveling shot through a sea front lined with tourists, workers, and sundry others.
The ornate pavilions of cinematographs, boxing booths and menageries at Hull Fair.
An epic tour of the places and people of Edwardian Bradford.
Edwardian workers react to the camera at one of Rotherham's major employers.
In 1901 people in Belfast paid their tram drivers in carrots.
Old film taken in Lancashire, North England in May 1904.
Athletes and acrobats wow the crowds at the annual Cycling Club carnival.
Evocative film of the passengers and crew of a ship docked at Liverpool.
A rare glimpse of early Edwardian Manchester when the horse-drawn tram still reigned supreme.
It is a dramatic film, with its colossal explosion and smouldering remains. Within seconds of the chimney's collapse, crowds swarm in to inspect the site; issues of the crowd's health and safety are clearly not a concern, as people smile, wave and salute the camera.
The Lillywhites take on the Wolves at Deepdale, watched by a large crowd and the club mascot.
Female graduates and gents sporting spectacular Edwardian whiskers take part in Birmingham’s first Degree Day ceremony.
Kidnapping by Indians is a 1899 British silent short Western film, made by the Mitchell and Kenyon film company, shot in Blackburn, England. It is believed to be the first Western film, pre-dating Edwin S. Porter's The Great Train Robbery by four years.
The biggest English comedy hit of the year. The scene is laid on an English estate at the edge of a pond. A couple of laborers discover, protruding from the water a pair of female legs. They hasten to the rescue, secure a bench and a long plank so as to get out over the water to the point where the legs are sticking up. Just as they complete their preparations a policeman runs up and insists on going out to the rescue of the female in distress.
These slightly weary-looking soldiers, just back from South Africa, were perhaps only temporarily housed in their Cork barracks before a well-earned return home. Despite Irish misgivings, some 30,000 Irish soldiers fought in the Boer War. In a neat lesson in colonial history, the barracks were named after Queen Victoria in 1849 and rapidly re-named 'Collins Barracks' after Irish independence.