History Challenge & Journal

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pharvey
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Re: History Challenge & Journal

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Dannie Boy wrote: Sat Jul 15, 2023 9:50 pm I thought it looked more like Mrs Harvey counting her husbands stash of £10 notes :duck:
A tad tall for both the LHG and my "stash of £10 notes" (or lack of).... I'm far sadder for the latter!! :(
hhinner wrote: Sat Jul 15, 2023 8:40 pm At a guess, stacks of punched cards. A database of days gone by.
Christ, that didn't last long!! :roll: :wink:

It's a collection of some 62,500 punch cards amounting to a whopping 4.5 Megabytes of information (circa 1955).

Or £625,000 DB :D

:cheers: :cheers:
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Re: History Challenge & Journal

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pharvey wrote:
Dannie Boy wrote: Sat Jul 15, 2023 9:50 pm I thought it looked more like Mrs Harvey counting her husbands stash of £10 notes :duck:
A tad tall for both the LHG and my "stash of £10 notes" (or lack of).... I'm far sadder for the latter!! :(
hhinner wrote: Sat Jul 15, 2023 8:40 pm At a guess, stacks of punched cards. A database of days gone by.
Christ, that didn't last long!! :roll: :wink:

It's a collection of some 62,500 punch cards amounting to a whopping 4.5 Megabytes of information (circa 1955).

Or £625,000 DB :D

:cheers: :cheers:
I’m sure your stash is bigger than that, you’re just shy!!

As for the punch cards, I remember using them in one of my first jobs at the beginning of the 70’s - fairly certain they were made by IBM.


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Re: History Challenge & Journal

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Dannie Boy wrote: Sat Jul 15, 2023 10:08 pm I’m sure your stash is bigger than that, you’re just shy!!
Oh for the "bigger" things in life.... !! :roll:
Dannie Boy wrote: Sat Jul 15, 2023 10:08 pm As for the punch cards, I remember using them in one of my first jobs at the beginning of the 70’s - fairly certain they were made by IBM.
Certainly can't remember Punch Cards, but how about "The Telex Machine", before the FAX took over and then the latter made obsolete by Email...?

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Re: History Challenge & Journal

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pharvey wrote:
Dannie Boy wrote: Sat Jul 15, 2023 10:08 pm I’m sure your stash is bigger than that, you’re just shy!!
Oh for the "bigger" things in life.... !! :roll:
Dannie Boy wrote: Sat Jul 15, 2023 10:08 pm As for the punch cards, I remember using them in one of my first jobs at the beginning of the 70’s - fairly certain they were made by IBM.
Certainly can't remember Punch Cards, but how about "The Telex Machine", before the FAX took over and then the latter made obsolete by Email...?

:cheers: :cheers:
Unfortunately I can remember those too - I worked for the Central Electricity Generating Board at their London HQ in the early 70’s and they had all “the latest technology”!!Image


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Re: History Challenge & Journal

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And you thought your job wasn't exactly "perfect"... Must admit, I wouldn't want to be the "Groom of the Stool"

https://www.historic-uk.com/HistoryUK/H ... b-96035078

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Re: History Challenge & Journal

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Not a challenge, but one for the "History Buffs..." Has been on the TV news today with it being a major discovery - though there is so much of Pompeii still to be uncovered/discovered for close to 2,000 years. Personally, I find it fascinating.

Pompeii: Breathtaking New Paintings Found at Ancient City

"Stunning artworks have been uncovered in a new excavation at Pompeii, the ancient Roman city buried in an eruption from Mount Vesuvius in AD79.
Archaeologists say the frescos are among the finest to be found in the ruins of the ancient site.
Mythical Greek figures such as Helen of Troy are depicted on the high black walls of a large banqueting hall.
The room's near-complete mosaic floor incorporates more than a million individual white tiles.
A third of the lost city has still to be cleared of volcanic debris. The current dig, the biggest in a generation, is underlining Pompeii's position as the world's premier window on the people and culture of the Roman empire.
Park director Dr Gabriel Zuchtriegel presented the "black room" exclusively to the BBC on Thursday.
It was likely the walls' stark colour was chosen to hide the smoke deposits from lamps used during entertaining after sunset.

"In the shimmering light, the paintings would have almost come to life," he said.

The black room is the latest treasure to emerge from the excavation, which started 12 months ago - an investigation that will feature in a documentary series from the BBC and Lion TV to be broadcast later in April.
A wide residential and commercial block, known as "Region 9", is being cleared of several metres of overlying pumice and ash thrown out by Vesuvius almost 2,000 years ago.
Staff are having to move quickly to protect new finds, removing what they can to a storeroom.
For the frescos that must stay in position, a plaster glue is injected to their rear to prevent them coming away from the walls. Masonry is being shored up with scaffolding and temporary roofing is going over the top."


Full story, pictures and video @ https://www.bbc.com/news/science-environment-68777741

https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/m001yczv - This is the link to details of the documentary mentioned in the above report - "Pompeii: The New Dig". However, news reports have mentioned another documentary to be broadcast in May which I can't seem to find details on - perhaps just an error by the newsreader (certainly can't be me!!!) :D

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Re: History Challenge & Journal

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France mourns nurse known as Angel of Dien Bien Phu

https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/cjrr2z4kjd1o. (Photos)

A French nurse dubbed the “angel of Dien Bien Phu” for her care of wounded and dying soldiers during the Indochina war in the 1950s has died at the age of 99.

Geneviève de Galard became a celebrated figure exactly 70 years ago when she was the only woman nurse tending French casualties inside the doomed redoubt of Dien Bien Phu in northern Vietnam.

She won the adoration of French soldiers for her unflinching dedication during more than a month of bloody fighting before the stronghold fell on 7 May.

Captured, then released, by the Communist Viet Minh, she featured on the front page of Paris-Match magazine. Later she was given a ticker-tape parade in New York and was decorated by US President Eisenhower.

In a message on X, formerly Twitter, French President Emmanuel Macron said that “in the worst moments of the Indochina war, Geneviève de Galard showed an exemplary courage and devotion amid the suffering of 15,000 French soldiers”.

Born in 1925 into an aristocratic family in Paris and raised as an observant Catholic, de Galard trained as a nurse after World War Two and joined the army medical service as a flight-nurse.

After several trips evacuating wounded men from Dien Bien Phu, she was marooned there at the end of March 1954 when her plane sprung an oil leak. In the following days, Viet Minh bombardments put the airstrip out of action.

In the last phase of France’s eight-year war in its then colony of Indochina, the French army was ordered to hold on to Dien Bien Phu at all costs, even though as a remote rural settlement its military significance was limited.

But after dragging artillery through mountainous jungle terrain, the Viet Minh under Gen Vo Nguyen Giap surrounded the encampment and in 50 days of shelling and infantry charges forced the French into submission.

In stifling heat and with rudimentary sanitation, de Galard helped the army surgeons carry out scores of amputations and emergency operations. She comforted the dying and promised to deliver last messages to loved ones.

Little did she realise that amid the gloom of the unfolding disaster, the world’s press was writing up the one positive news story about the “angel of Dien Bien Phu” administering selflessly to the wounded.

A Time magazine profile was typical: “In Dien Bien Phu’s underground hospital, amid the stench of death, antiseptics and rotting wounds, Nurse de Galard lost 18 pounds in work and worry.

“She cut her hair very short; she switched at last to green fatigues, changing sometimes to a paratrooper’s trousers and shirt. She had her own dugout with silk sheets, made from parachutes… but more often she would sleep on a cot beside the wounded.

“I am glad I am trapped," she once told GHQ. "I am proud to be here.”

Before the fall of Dien Bien Phu, de Galard was decorated with the Military Cross and the Legion of Honour, and she was made an honorary member of the Foreign Legion.

In her memoirs she said: “In Dien Bien Phu I was a little bit the mother, a little bit the sister, a little bit the friend. Simply my being there, because I was a woman, seemed to make the hell a little less inhuman.”

After the war, de Galard married a soldier and eventually returned to live in Paris. She always said she was astounded by the fuss made about her, because she had merely done her duty.
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