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Last modified on Thu 4 Feb 2021 04.14 EST
Grace Robertson, who has died aged 90 of a stroke, made her reputation in the 1950s as a freelance photojournalist on the weekly editorial magazine Picture Post.
One story, titled Mother’s Day Off, has become her signature. Early in her career, in 1954, she accompanied a group of Battersea “charladies” on their annual charabanc excursion to Margate in Kent. She accompanied them too, as she proudly recalled when she and I last met, in 2015, pint for pint (beer and cockles) and joke for joke, as she recorded their “exuberance”. An iconic image of the women having a laugh and a singalong – one seated on the lap of another, wearing outsized pantaloons over her skirt – was, according to Matthew Butson, director of the Getty Images Picture Post archive, “her most popular story … certainly the one she’ll be best remembered for”.
When former Director Dawn Jenkin left Teton County Library, she didnât provide much explanation for her departure.
In the wake of a tumultuous few months in which Director Oscar Gittemeier left the post and volunteer Dail Barbour was removed from the library board, Jenkin has given a much lengthier account. She was motivated, she wrote in a report to the Teton County Board of County Commissioners, by overreach from Teton County administration and a desire to bring to light an effort when she was director to have her publicly toe the county line.
âI fear that I did not speak loudly or clearly enough about the lack of community transparency and profound disagreement over the legal and ethical boundaries of public library governance that forced my resignation,â she wrote to the commissioners.
Ousted library board member sues the County Commission jhnewsandguide.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from jhnewsandguide.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
A couple who spent £13,000 on buying and renovating an old van to begin a new life together on the road have now started a van conversion business after discovering they enjoyed decorating vans more than travelling.
Former marketing executive Grace Robertson, 28, and camera assistant Charlie Hughes, 28, from Hastings, East Sussex, always knew they wanted to ditch their nine-to-five jobs to travel the world.
In order to cut costs, the duo purchased a van and converted it into a mobile home rather than paying out for planes and hotel rooms.
Grace and Charlie bought their first Ford transit van in June 2019 for £8,000 and then spent a further £4,850 transforming it into their new home.