Four Photographic Postcards of Scenes of Le Havre France in Wooden Frame - Herbert Thomas HOWSON

c. 1920
Overview

Oblong wooden frame displaying horizontally four black and white postcards with a sepia tinge depicting scenes of Le Havre France. The frame is made of dark wood and the cards are displayed on a dark wooden board behind glass. The four postcards are mounted directly next to each other with no gap between them.
The rear of the frame is in good condition and shows the nails used to hold the display board in place together with the remnants of brown tape used to seal the back board. There is a central fixing under tape placed vertically in the middle of the frame from edge to edge, which appears was placed to add strength to the overall frame. There are the remnants of a picture framers sticker at the corner of the rear of the frame. To hang the frame there is gold coloured metal wire with a screw in metal eye hook at each end . These hooks show signs of rust.
The cards show different scenes of Le Havre. There are no military elements in the photographs and the pictures appear to have been taken before the First World War.

Historical information

Le Havre as a port dates back over 500 years. It became an estuary fortress during the reign of Louis XIV and it continued to develop during the industrial revolution, with a number of shipyards opening. The development of the railway under the leadership of Napolean III added to its importance and docks were built in the 1850s. The period 1850 to 1914 was the golden age for the port with new buildings and grand boulevards, a city hall, a courthouse and a new stock exchange. Le Havre was a starting point for potential immigrants and transatlantic voyages became common. Just before the war (1914) of the approximately 750,000 passengers who passed through Le Havre, 150,000 sailed to the United States.
During World War I, the port of Le Havre served as a crucial base for the British Expeditionary Force, with 1.9 million British soldiers passing through it, and it was designated as the primary base for troop and supply movements to the Western Front. The city served as a base for British warships with 1.9 million British soldiers passing through during the war.
The postcards were framed by Private Herbert Thomas Howson service number 3150 who enlisted on 21July 1915 and embarked for France on the HMAT Medic on 18 January 1916. Herbert was from Fremantle and was aged 22 when he enlisted. He served in France and was wounded in 1916 in the jaw. He returned to France for the remainder of the war was repatriated to Australia in April 1919.

Details

Details

Registration number
cwa-org-12-2012.6.3
Item type
Width
260 mm
Height or length
1225 mm
Depth
20 mm
Weight
3326 g
Inscriptions and markings

Postcards from RHS as viewed
Card 1: “C.V. – 18. – LE HAVRE. – La Gare Maritime et L’Avant-Port”
Card 2: “C.V. – 9. – LE HAVRE. – Vue generale, prise du Pain de Sucre”
Card 3: “C.V. – 17. – LE HAVRE. – Le Nice Havrais et l’Entrée du Port”
Card 4: “C.V. – 14. – LE HAVRE. – La Bourse et le Bassin du Commerce”
Back of Frame: “ The Gem Picture Gallery / (miss A.M. BOAM) / …INTS, MOULDINGS, M….., PAPERS / and GLASS IN ….. / ..8 CENTRAL ARCADE / PERTH”

Year
Primary significance criteria
Social or spiritual significance
Comparative significance criteria
Interpretive capacity
Google Maps search term / URL
https://maps.app.goo.gl/gWHZtRH1mm24SAjK8
Princess Royal Fortress Military Museum

Princess Royal Fortress Military Museum

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Four French Framed Photographic Postcards - front
Four French Framed Photographic Postcards - back

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