Did you know that you can explore 1000s of materials (maps, photos, letters & all sorts of ephemera) by exploring our online catalogue: https://ow.ly/xSNg50YKtZQ
Here’s a short guide on how to search the National Library of Ireland's Digital Collections to get you started: https://ow.ly/18KX50YKtZP
Posts by Karin Lach is Reading the Franklins
Brilliantly researched and beautifully written. Thank you for your continued commitment to doing this work and sharing it with us.
I've put together some NEW notes on Francis Crozier’s name and career seen in the light of his father’s local (and not so local) connections - at
www.thethousandthpart.com/notes/george-croziers-choices
Such a very atmospheric and beautiful photo, Olga
Looks enticing but also dangerous.
A cover illustration of Roland Allen's The Notebook: a History of Thinking on Paper. The image is not nearly as exciting as the book!
Picked this up on a whim for light reading and finding it hard to put down. Recommended - it might make you cry, but it definitely will make you want to buy more notebooks... #HistBookChat
A cartoon of four images, representing a pre-sleep dialogue between a girl and her brain. Brain: “Did you enjoy that non-fiction history book?” Girl: “Yes, Brain. It was well written. It was a good story. Why?” Brain: “Did you notice it had a vague bibliography and NO referencing?” Girl: (says nothing, eyes open wide, all hope of sleep gone)
Reworked this old favourite, chiefly for amusement of sad people like myself - credit owed to the original author except I don’t remember their name and not even sure I ever knew it.
There’s still time to plan & submit a presentation proposal for #LILAC26. If you’re looking for inspiration, take a look at presentations from previous conferences: buff.ly/s4C8eln Our call for presentations closes in one week - Thursday 13 November (16:00 GMT) #infolit #digilit
Irish Antarctic explorer Ernest Shackleton’s silver tea service up for sale
www.irishtimes.com/life-style/f...
Greatly enjoying #ecil2025 #infolit #ecil in Bamberg except for the weather. Wish I had brought one of these ☂️☔🌂
This week @pammckinney.bsky.social and I will be liveblogging from the European Conference on Information Literacy ecil2025.ilconf.org - look out for our posts #infolit #ecil2025 #ecil
Brilliant talk on Eleanor Porden by @sampopewriter.bsky.social at National Maritime Museum tonight.
Handwritten page of a diary which reads "On our return we saw, on the site of the Bastille still surrounded by its formidable moat, the plaster model of the colossal Elephant, intended for a fountain, and the pedestal already built for its support. When finished I think it bids fair to be a good specimen of the sublime grotesque. There is to be a staircase in his leg, a saloon in his belly, and a terrace round the castle on his back! Le grand bête, he will swallow more Tom Thumbs then the great she cow or the horse of Troy!"
Typed transcript of the same text.
In honour of Bastille Day, here is an excerpt from the diary of Eleanor Porden from 22 August 1816 in which she describes the big elephant statue that is meant to be built on the site of the Bastille.
#BastilleDay #History #Paris #19thCentury
🎓 Call for Abstracts: Critical Arctic Studies Symposium 2025
📍 Rovaniemi, Finland
📅 Feb 7–9
🗓️ Deadline: June 15
Explore power, justice & representation in Arctic research. Hosted by @arcticcentre.
🔗 www.arcticcentre.org/EN/CAS-Sympo...
#CAS2025 #ArcticResearch #CriticalArcticStudies
@sampopewriter.bsky.social @thethousandthpart.com will also join today in my lunch break and in the afternoon after work today, so will also just be able to contribute a little - also curious about similarities and differences.
Passport photos are unflattering for most of us mortals. Perhaps a better form of identification is thro' written description. See how the French described William Porden in his passport in my latest post: eleanorporden.com/2025/04/10/w... & compare this to his portrait! @derbyshiredro.bsky.social
Two Rabbits, Probably by Aert Spiering, c. 1600-1620
(British Museum)
Shortly after midnight on the 13th March, 1842, HMS Erebus and HMS Terror collided just north of the Antarctic Circle.
On HMS Erebus: the Royal Navy's bright star, Captain James Clark Ross. On HMS Terror: his dearest friend of over twenty years, Commander Francis Rawdon Moira Crozier.
L: "The Erebus passing through the chain of bergs, 13 Mar 1842", J.E. Davis, 1842. R: "HMS 'Erebus' passing through the chain of bergs, 1842", Richard Brydgens Beechey, 1860.
Loved reading about what you are currently doing and planning. Looking forward to hearing more as you progress.
I meant to write this way sooner, but after 6 months here's the second Fitzjames newsletter. Reflections on media & fandom, plus an update on my research: what am I doing? #NavalHistory #FranklinExpedition #TheTerror
jamesfitzjames.substack.com/p/newsletter...
Fantastic work, Sam.