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Ford Sports and Social Club Membership Card: Swimming

A Member's Card from the Ford Sports and Social Club Swimming Section, issued for the 1969 season. It is printed on green card. On the reverse of the card are the rules of membership. Companies often ...

Ford Sports and Social Club Membership Card: Swimming

Member's Card from the Ford Sports and Social Club Swimming Section, issued for the 1970 season. It is printed on blue card. On the reverse of the card are the rules of membership. Companies often provided ...

Ford Sports and Social Club Membership Card: Swimming

A Member's Card from the Ford Sports and Social Club Swimming Section, issued for the 1970 season. It is printed on green card. On the reverse of the card are the rules of membership. Companies often ...

Ford Sports Club General Rules and Bye-Laws

A buff coloured booklet entitled Ford Sports Club General Rules and Bye-laws. The booklet was issued on 1st May 1936 and contains revisions made in 1945. It belonged to Jackie Cameron who ran the Sports ...

Ford Sports Club Letter

A letter sent to Mr L.P James from the General Secretary of Ford Sports Club on 1st March 1956. The letter was attached to the Rules and Bye-Laws of Ford Sports Club - 1952, but has since been torn off. ...

Ford Sports Club Rules and Bye-Laws

A printed document giving the rules and bye-laws of Ford Sports Club, 1952.

Ford Sports Fixtures Card: Cricket

A fixtures card from Ford Sports (Leamington Spa) Cricket Section for the 1963 Season. The fixtures are printed on pale blue card and there is an image of a cricketer in the centre. Members of the Committee ...

Ford 'Your Communications' Handbook

Ford Motor Company Limited Handbook entitled Your Communications. The handbook has a beige coloured cover and is printed in red ink. The Royal Coat of Arms is printed near to the bottom of the front cover. ...

Georg Braun and Franz Hogenberg, Londinium, c. 1572 - detail - decorative title panel

'Londinium': ancient capital of Shakespeare's England. London had been founded on the banks of the River Thames when the Romans established their fortress at what became the Tower of London. The Latin ...

Georg Braun and Franz Hogenberg, Londinium, c. 1572 - detail

A merchant’s wife and her companion in Shakespeare's London. Shakespeare's leading ladies frequently reflect contemporary practice by having a companion, or housekeeper, who is not a servant ...

Georg Braun and Franz Hogenberg, Londinium, c. 1572 - detail of a citizen and his servant

An alderman and his servant in Shakespeare's London. The Londoner's fashionable gown with hanging sleeves is 'guarded' [edged] with fur. His servant carries a sword and buckler as a sign that he will ...

Georg Braun and Franz Hogenberg, Londinium, c. 1572 - detail of city walls on the north-west.

London's City walls and the fields beyond in Shakespeare's time. Close beyond the city walls lay fields and orchards. The engraving shows the wooden frames on which laundresses would hang fabric to ...

Georg Braun and Franz Hogenberg, Londinium, c. 1572 - detail of descriptive panel

A printer describes his map of Shakespeare's London. The French printer of this map of London used a corner to describe the city and the River Thames. Although it is in Latin this description would ...

Georg Braun and Franz Hogenberg, Londinium, c. 1572 - detail of London Bridge

London’s bridge in Shakespeare's time. London Bridge was lined with houses and shops, and was a route regularly travelled by Shakespeare from his lodgings in the city to his work across the river ...

Georg Braun and Franz Hogenberg, Londinium, c. 1572 - detail of Londoners

Townsfolk of Shakespeare's England. For country merchant class people such as the Shakespeare family the fashions of the city were slow to be adopted. Shakespeare was swift to comment in his plays ...

Georg Braun and Franz Hogenberg, Londinium, c. 1572 - detail of Southwark district

Southwark: site of Shakespeare’s Globe Theatre. When Shakespeare arrived in London, aged about eighteen, he found work, possibly as a tender of horses outside a playhouse known as The Theatre ...

Georg Braun and Franz Hogenberg, Londinium, c. 1572 - detail of Southwark district

Southwark: a place for entertainment in Shakespeare's time. The southbank of the river Thames in London was reached from the city only by boat, or across London Bridge. This area, called Southwark, ...

Georg Braun and Franz Hogenberg, Londinium, c. 1572 - detail of St Paul's and the 'city'

Shakespeare's city home. Shakespeare lodged in Bishopsgate in the 1590s, and later on the corner of Silver Street in Cripplegate. He would have been familiar with the many printers and bookshops in ...