All posts by Ms Padgett

Jubilations!

Get ready for the Jubilee Bank Holiday and take a look back in time to 1950s Edinburgh with our special Whose Town? 1950s exhibition on Capital Collections.

1953 Coronation Street Party

Here a street party is in full swing in Gorgie. All over Edinburgh residential streets were decorated with balloons and bunting on Coronation Day, Tuesday June 2nd 1953. After months of fundraising, the big day for the street’s celebrations had arrived. Tables were set up in the streets and children wore paper hats and played games such as pitching a lucky ball through the porthole of a model ship. Food consisted of cold ham and salad for the adults washed down with tea, while children enjoyed buns and cakes with lemonade. Singing and dancing went on for many hours.

The city centre was decorated with flowers and banners and buildings were floodlit. For 48 hours leading up to the day, there was a programme of events, including a ball in the Assembly Rooms and a Youth Vigil Service. Coronation Day was a holiday for almost all citizens, with bus and train services reduced and shops closed and no mail deliveries. As well as street parties, those lucky enough to own a television, organised parties in their homes to watch the ceremony. The day ended with spectacular firework displays and bonfires lit on the surrounding hills of the city.

Visit Whose Town? and hear Bill’s memories of growing up in Edinburgh and how he got the day off school to join the Coronation celebrations.

1952 – the year a princess became Queen

With 60 years on the throne, Queen Elizabeth is second only to Victoria, the British monarch with the longest reign in history. In a couple of weeks time, there’ll be no escaping the union jacks, the commemorative tv programmes, tea towels and countless other memorabilia. A new online exhibition on Capital Collections gives a flavour of what life was like in Scotland’s capital back in 1952 and the chance to appreciate the nation’s constant figurehead in an ever-changing world.

Don’t forget you can get a fantastic feel for 1950’s Edinburgh from Whose Town?. Experience post-war Edinburgh through the eyes of 5 real people who lived and worked in the city at the time. You could even delve a little deeper and compare 1950s Edinburgh to Queen Victoria’s times.

Maps, maps and more maps!

You really can now navigate the world from your desktop with a fabulous new and freely available web resource:  Old Maps Online. Old Maps Online is a gateway to the historical maps held by libraries across the globe. Simply type in a location and then narrow your results by date to see how different cities and countries have developed through time.

To get an even clearer picture of bygone times, take a trip to Sepia Town where you’ll find a plethora of historical images pinned to a modern day map of the world. Again search by location to see life as it was in the city of your choice. Explore the map of Edinburgh and you’ll discover the fantastic images from Capital Collections which we’ve contributed to the map. Don’t miss the ‘Then/Now’ button to play spot the difference!


The Great Lafayette and the Empire Theatre Fire – 101 years on

Last year saw the 100th anniversary of the devastating fire that swept through Edinburgh’s  Empire Theatre. Remarkably, the entire capacity crowd escaped the theatre unhurt, but 10 performers caught backstage lost their lives in the blaze. The headline act and international celebrity, The Great Lafayette was among those who perished.  Find out more about the events of the fateful night with our online exhibition on Capital Collections.

Explore the Brave New World attic in Whose Town? and you’ll see how the Empire Theatre Fire unfolded through the eyes of the city’s Firemaster, Arthur Pordage. We worked with the Museum of Fire to bring Arthur’s story to life and his box contains unique imagery and fascinating ephemera from their collections.

It’s Shakespeare’s birthday… maybe…

Some people believe that William Shakespeare was born and died on the same day of the year, 23rd April.  However, the precise date of Shakespeare’s birth and death is unknown. Parish records show that he was baptized on 26th April 1564 and was buried fifty two years later on 25th April 1616. It’s left to guesswork really, to determine the exact dates.

Much of what we know of Shakespeare is from his writing. Did you know that you can access many of his greatest plays with Public Library Online – there’s no downloading or software required. You can just login and start reading. What better way to celebrate the great man than by reminding yourself of some of his immortal lines?

World Heritage Day 2012

April 18th is World Heritage Day –  a global celebration highlighting the significance of UNESCO World Heritage sites. Edinburgh’s Old and New Towns are one of five sites in Scotland officially recognised on Unesco’s World Heritage List.

There’s no better way to see how Edinburgh’s cultural and architectural landscape has changed than through images past and present on our own Capital Collections website.  A fascinating new online exhibition shows distinct changes in Edinburgh’s built environment. Step back into the 1960s and the 1990s with Dr Gordon Thompson’s record of Edinburgh.  Dr Thompson took photographs across the city in the 1960s and then returned some thirty years later to recapture the scene and his collections of images offer a unique and personal document of the city’s landscape.

We have struck iceberg.

SOS. We have struck iceberg. Require assistance. Position 41.46N  50.14W.  Titanic

One hundred years ago the world woke up to the shock news that catastrophe had hit the supposedly unsinkable ship, the Titanic. Read the news as it happened with free access to historical newspapers online and get beyond the melodrama of the films and the TV series.

On April 11th 1912, the Shipping Notes in The Scotsman reported on the Titanic’s fateful departure from Southampton Water the previous day. The event marked the “latest progress in shipbuilding” and was watched by large crowds who had gathered to speed the ship on her maiden voyage. An article in The Times following the disaster details how news reached shore in an age before Twitter and mobile phones, and speculates that loss of life would have been far greater had it not been for the recent introduction of Marconi’s wireless apparatus. The newspaper also gives lists of passengers from first and second class ranks. It would later transpire that the majority of casualties came from the crew and third class passengers. The Times relates the disaster to the global economy, with a business report on the New York Stock Market crediting it with the ‘gloom cast over the business world’. Another article on the Mansion House Relief Fund shows how the shock news resonated with people back home. It lists donors and the sums pledged to support the widows and orphans of the passengers and crew starting with His Most Gracious Majesty the King giving £525 to the fund.

Pictures from the Illustrated London News, held by the Reference Library, show the appeal of the Titanic as an opulent floating hotel. There were Turkish baths and swimming baths, a gymnasium, a Parisian-style café, and luxury apartments with private promenade decks. It is not hard to see why people were so eager to take the ship’s first voyage. Companies also wanted to associate themselves with the desirable Titanic brand. The Vinolia Otto Toilet Soap company used a full page advert to state its services to the luxury steamer, “By provision of Vinolia Otto Toilet Soap for first-class passengers the ‘Titanic’ also leads as offering a higher standard of Toilet Luxury and comfort at sea”. Craven tobacco with the unfortunate strapline, “Craven Mixture is a tobacco to live for”, advertised in The Times as being obtainable on the Largest Vessel in the World.

The Illustrated London News also recalls the human side of the story, with artist impressions drawn from survivors’ accounts of the moments after tragedy struck and pictures of the survivors who arrived safely back in Plymouth. One poignant reminder of a bygone era shows the engine room stokers calmly waiting their turn as women and children boarded lifeboats first as the boat was sinking fast. Dramatic pictures illustrate the catastrophic moment the enormous ship sank into two miles of water. Read a tribute to Wallace Henry Hartley, the ship’s bandleader, who together with fellow musicians played on deck throughout the evacuation. They played it is alleged until waist deep in water. All 8 of the musicians perished in the disaster, yet their part in the dreadful night is remembered still.

Of the 2224 passengers and crew on board, more than 1500 died. Find the true story behind the legend and read the news as it unfolded with The Scotsman Digital Archive and The Times Online. (The Scotsman Digital Archive is available from home. The Times Online is available to readers from the Reference Library at Central Library.)

Visit the Reference Library in April and see our fascinating display showcasing pictures and literature from our collections about the story of the Titanic.

Happy International Children’s Book Day!

Since 1967, on or around the birthday of master storyteller Hans Christian Andersen, International Children’s Book Day has been celebrated all over the world. The aim of the day is to inspire a love of reading amongst young readers.

If you’re quite familiar with the Ugly Duckling and the Emperor’s New Clothes why not try something new from a fantastic global selection of children’s fiction at the International Children’s Digital Library. Flick through beautifully illustrated books in a choice of many different languages. No downloading required, just click to read online. There really is something for everyone in this vast and growing freely available collection.

Whose Town? and the Brave New World

2012 seems to be the year for anniversaries. And just around the corner looms the shadow of a devastating iceberg bringing with it a commemoration of the lives lost and saved in the 1912 Titanic disaster. For a picture of how life was lived in Edinburgh at the time of the disaster take a look into the Brave New World attic within Whose Town? showing Edinburgh at the beginning of the nineteenth century (1900 – 1914). Discover what life was like in Scotland’s capital from three real people who lived here – the city’s firemaster, a young Suffragette and an immigrant ice cream entrepreneur.

As ever this material is available to all via our Capital Collections Brave New World online exhibition.

And keep a look out for further Titanic news on the blogging horizon.

Read all about it!

International Newsstand gives you the chance to get a fresh perspective on what’s happening around the world. Access International Newsstand from Your Library and if you ‘View the Title List’ you’ll see the full list of over 280 of the world’s top newspapers as well as detail of how far back coverage goes for each title.
Use International Newsstand to compare and contrast how different newspapers in different countries view and report the same news stories.  Edinburgh Zoo’s pandas have made headlines around the world. Canada’s Montreal Gazette labelled the news a ‘Giant fuss’ whilst Delhi’s Press Trust of India report focused on the fanfare and crowd of 600 animal lovers that welcomed the animals to Edinburgh. Back in August, Glasgow’s Evening Times announced the arrival with the attention grabbing headline ‘Pandas get bullet-proof glass in zoo with a view’. While the pandas continue to make news in Edinburgh’s own Evening News with a recent article reporting on an advertising watchdog enquiry to decide when is a panda gift not a panda gift.
International Newsstand is a great tool for helping to learn languages. You’ll find dozens of regional papers as well as the well-known national papers from across the globe (and right up to the current edition). If you’re reading a foreign language news article and want to check your linguistical skills you can simply click ‘translate’ to see a translated copy of the text. Although, as with most non-human translations, some things can end up getting lost. Or indeed added to, as in this rather poetic weather report from Berlin’s Die Tageszeitung:
Dense clouds determine the Saturday-heaven, it can rain again and again.