Summary
Black and white photograph which highlights the total destruction French and Belgian civilians encountered throughout World War I. The towns within North-eastern France and Flanders in Belgium were nearly almost all reduced to rubble. The severity of the damage to the countries' roads, infrastructure, coal mines and telegraph lines made the process of rebuilding and returning to some sort of functionality rather difficult. In France alone, 11% of the total French population were lost during the war, contributing significantly to the slow revival and recovery of towns and villages. Some towns and villages were so badly destroyed that many of the inhabitants became refugees.
It is one of 95 black and white, and, sepia toned photographs taken in France during World War I, attached to a photograph album. The album includes a few photographs of enemy prisoners, the war cemetery at Warloy, a wrecked German ambulance and images of the local French people.
Most photographs are of Albert and surrounds so it would seem probable that most were taken during and after the Battle of the Somme (1916). In addition there are also photographs dated 1917. The photographs were taken by Private John Edward Lord, 13th Field Ambulance, and brought back to Australia by him and compiled in an album at the end of the First World War.
The album is one of many souvenirs brought back to Australia after World War I by Lord, and is part of a larger collection of photograph albums, images, documents and World War I memorabilia donated by Lord to Museum Victoria.
Description of Content
The image shows a hollowed out two storied brick building. The facade of the building is still standing upright but the roof, windows and doors have all been removed. A lone man is visible through the doorway, observing the damage. In the foreground two stationary wagons are sitting. A small tin and wooden structure stands in the bottom left foreground. Tall, leafy trees surround the damaged building
Physical Description
Monochrome photograph, mounted in a small, grey photograph album.
Significance
This album appears to have been prepared to 'showcase' the war experiences of John Lord and the photographs associated with these. The album has been very carefully prepared and the quality of the photographs is generally good, in comparison to the album ST40491, also compiled by John Lord, which has a number of photographs which are of poor quality, many photographs removed and written in (mostly) illegible pencil. This suggests this album was most probably compiled after the war, with photographs probably gathered from other photograph albums of Lord's.
The subjects of the photographs are of trenches (both German and Allies), horses, camps, farms, graves and cemeteries, civilians, soldiers, churches and other buildings. Many of the photographs were taken around the town of Albert and are dated 1916 and 1917. From this information we can tell that Lord was involved with the Battle of the Somme when these photographs were taken.
The Battle of the Somme was fought from north of the Somme river between the towns of Albert and Arras. The Battle began on the 1 July and was called off on the 18 November 1916. The Battle of the Somme is famous for the loss of 58,000 British troops (one third of them killed) on the first day of the battle, 1 July 1916, which to this day remains a one-day record.
More Information
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Collection Names
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Collecting Areas
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Acquisition Information
Donation from J. Lord, 1986
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Place & Date Depicted
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Photographer
Sergeant John Lord, France, 1916-1917
Image may have been taken by Lord or collected by him for use in this album. -
Format
Photograph, Monochrome
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Inscriptions
Hand written in ink on matt directly below the photograph: 'taking three days - Dismounted personnel by'
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Classification
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Category
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Discipline
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Type of item
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Image Dimensions - Photograph
68 mm (Width), 45 mm (Height)
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Image Dimensions - Photograph album page
192 mm (Width), 146 mm (Height)
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Keywords
Australian Army, Militaria: Australian, Military Memorabilia, Souvenirs, Wars & Conflicts, World War I, 1914-1918