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Plaque unveiled to mark achievements of influential Carmarthenshire suffragette
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The Suffragist, an Iowa-made musical, holds its long-delayed world premiere in Cedar Falls
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The image could be on a wall in a modern art gallery or a piece of mosaic pulled from Pompeii.
Mustard-brown, it could pass as an artistic interpretation of Australia’s arid inland where dry river beds hint at better times.
But the nitrate piece of film, held by the National Archives, is a piece of this nation’s disintegrating history.
The disintegrating image of Italian prisoner-of-war Leo Antonini. He served out the war in a West Australian camp. His image is one of potentially thousands slowly disintegrating as the Archives battles for more funding.
How the National Archives of Australia s underfunding is eating away the soul of a nation
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Professor Paul Salveson is a historian and writer and lives in Bolton. He is visiting professor in ‘Worktown Studies’ at the University of Bolton and author of several books on Lancashire history International Women’s Day on Monday was a reminder of the many Bolton women who have played an important role in society – not just locally, but on the national stage. Four of them are Sarah Reddish, Alice Foley, Alice Collinge and Susan Isaacs Sarah Reddish (centre) with the the Bolton Women’s Co-operative Guild around 1900
Sarah Reddish Sarah Reddish was born in Westleigh (as it was then called - now ‘West Leigh’) in 1849 and left school at the age of 11 to work at home with her mother, a silk weaver. Her father, Thomas, was active in the Co-operative Movement and the family moved to Bolton where he became librarian and secretary to the Bolton Co-operative Education Committee. His co-operative principles rubbed off on his daughter.