A few good overseas sourcing images I discovered:
Race won by Cpl. Kelly (Athletic Championships, Overseas Military Forces of Canada), Chelsea, England, 1914‒1919 / Le cpl Kelly au fil d’arrivée (championnat d’athlétisme des Forces militaires canadiennes outre-mer), Chelsea, Angleterre, 1914-1919
Image by BiblioArchives / LibraryArchives
Title / Titre :
Race won by Cpl. Kelly (Athletic Championships, Overseas Military Forces of Canada), Chelsea, England, 1914‒1919 /
Le cpl Kelly au fil d’arrivée (championnat d’athlétisme des Forces militaires canadiennes outre-mer), Chelsea, Angleterre, 1914-1919
Creator(s) / Créateur(s) : Unknown / Inconnu
Date(s) : 1914-1919
Reference No. / Numéro de référence : MIKAN 3387565
collectionscanada.gc.ca/ourl/res.php?url_ver=Z39.88-2004&…
collectionscanada.gc.ca/ourl/res.php?url_ver=Z39.88-2004&…
Location / Lieu : Stamford Bridge, Chelsea, England / Stamford Bridge, Chelsea, Angleterre
Credit / Mention de supply :
Canada. Division of National Defence. Library and Archives Canada, PA-022976 /
Canada. Ministère de la défense nationale. Bibliothèque et Archives Canada, PA-022976
Roshan Ali, 60, stands in front of the remains of his flood-broken residence, in Pakistan’s Sindh Province
Image by DFID – UK Department for International Improvement
Roshan, aged 60, stands in front of the remains of his residence in a remote village in Pakistan’s Sindh Province. His house was badly damaged by flood water that swept by way of the village in August 2010, and although it is nevertheless standing, it is structurally unsafe, with large cracks operating through the walls.
He and his family returned to their village when the water receded in October 2010, but have been sleeping outside their home in a tent offered by the NGO Concern, with funding from the UK government, since then, as they are scared that the property will collapse.
Ali’s beard and chest hair are dyed with henna, a conventional practice amongst muslim males in Sindh and across Pakistan.
Picture: Department for International Improvement/Russell Watkins
Find out far more about the UK government’s response to the Pakistan floods at www.dfid.gov.uk/pakistan-floods-six-months
DFID is the portion of the UK government accountable for major the UK’s efforts to meet the Millennium Development Ambitions and tackle global poverty.
Terms of use
This image is posted under a Inventive Commons – Attribution Licence, in accordance with the Open Government Licence. You are totally free to embed, download or otherwise re-use it, as extended as you credit the supply as ‘Department for International Improvement.
Mascot of the Royal Scots
Image by National Library of Scotland
A young soldier of the Royal Scots Regiment holding a black goat kid. As the French farmers have been forced to flee their homes several animals were inevitably abandoned. Some undoubtedly ended up in the cooking pot, but other folks like this kid appear to have been adopted as excellent luck mascots.
The Royal Scots raised 35 battalions throughout Planet War I, of which 15 had been on overseas service. The Regiment not only served in the Western Front, but also in the Dardanelles, Macedonia, Egypt and Northern Russia.
[Original reads: ‘The mascot of the Royal Scots.’]