Charles Booth looks at the stories behind a group of graves of some men who died in the First World War at Bristol’s Canford ...
The last flying Bristol Scout aircraft returned to the scene of its first test flight, 103 years ago A World War One biplane has returned to the scene of its test flight, for the first time in ...
Curator Leona Roberts told Penguin News: “Those aircraft were one FE2d and two FE Bristol Fighters. “The photograph is of the FE2d aircraft named Falkland. The Royal Aircraft Factory FE2 was a ...
Bristol was officially founded in 1155 and known as Brigstow, or 'the place at the bridge'. The river Avon runs through the city, as well as several other rivers, so bridges are still a major feature ...
Perhaps the other major highlight at the show was the Bristol Mercury formation, seeing for the first time 5 Bristol Mercury ...
The artwork was included in an exhibition at the Bearpit highlighting historic Bristol social campaigners Public artwork celebrating a World War One conscientious objector - removed from a wall in ...
They apply their knowledge and skills to design the next generations of aircraft, spacecraft and renewable energy systems. Study at Bristol and watch your career take off! Learn from our ...
Its impact in WWI, given the timing and the number made, was minimal, but historic replicas have preserved its story. Burchette, who has worked at the museum for five years, has 30 years of ...
WW1: Did the machine-gun save lives? documentWW1: Did the machine-gun save lives? Despite the thousands of deaths attributed to the use of the machine-gun in WW1, did its awesome threat actually ...
As the U.S. military recruited young men for service, civilians were called upon to do their part by buying War bonds, donating to charity, or, if they worked in industry, going that extra mile for ...
The Museum’s collection of 30 World War II-era American military aircraft ranges from propeller-driven trainers, fighters, flying boats, and bombers to the nation’s first generation of jet-powered ...
Thanks for that. Ian McMillan reads and analyses Wilfred Owen’s poem Dulce et Decorum Est, and asks: do we misunderstand WW1 because we focus on poems like Owen's? WW1: Why was the first day of ...