Express & Star

Second World War photos to be preserved in Express & Star online archive

Hundreds of historic photographs dating back to the Second World War will be the next to be preserved for future generations as part of the Express & Star photo archive project.

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Wolverhampton senior archivist Heidi Mcintosh with some of the images at Wolverhampton City Archives

Volunteers are currently cataloguing around 800 images ahead of them being digitised and made available to the public via a free website.

Around 3,500 photographs showcasing the history of the industrial past of the Black Country as well as many from the First World War have already been published.

The project, which was set up back in 2008, is a partnership between the Express & Star, the University of Wolverhampton and Wolverhampton City Archives to ensure the printed photos taken throughout the 20th Century were made available to the public via an online platform.

GALLERY: View more of the images here

A bomb crater caused during raid on Wolverhampton on September 29 1940
This images captures the aftermath of a bomb dropped on Beckminster Special School in 1940
Ryle Street, Bloxwich, after bombing raid in 1940
A house wrecked by a bomb in Rowley Regis in November 1940
A house in Willenhall after bombing November 1940
Children evacuated from Smethwick in September 1939
Bridgnorth evacuees in September 1939
Children evacuees arrive at the Salvation Army headquarters in Broad Street, Bilston, in October 1940
Evacuees from London, were entertained to tea at the Congregational Church Hall, Tettenhall Wood
Land Army girls in their sitting room in Wombourne in April 1946
Cannock WVS members holding a picnic with their mobile kitchen at Teddesley Park
Wounded soldiers with their captured Nazi flag at Wordsley Emergency Hospital in 1943
Wounded soldiers arriving at Royal Hospital, Wolverhampton, in June 1944

Senior city archivist Heidi McIntosh said the Second World War photos provide a fascinating insight into the region's past.

"There are lots of great photos from the Second World War. They are local stories and local people. They include the Home Guard, buildings that were bombed, evacuees, local prisoners of war and injured soldiers in the Royal Hospital.

"They're also interesting because of the censorship policy. To keep morale up and to not let the enemy know what buildings had been bombed, names of pubs and buildings such as churches have been scrubbed out so unless you knew the area you wouldn't know what had been bombed.

"A lot of them have a stamp on to say they had been cleared for publication and others couldn't be published so people will be seeing these for the first time. It's going to be really exciting," she added.

The collection is expected to be followed by photographs showing streets scenes of Wolverhampton and local sports clubs.

It's hoped that by the middle of next year around 5,000 photos will have been digitised and made available to the public.

A public house in Tipton, in 1940, after bombing

The photo archive project was recently under the spotlight at the Discovering Collections, Discovering Communities conference organised The National Archives and Research Libraries UK.

Heidi, along with Scott Knight, of the Faculty of Arts at the University of Wolverhampton, who has worked on the project since the initial partnership discussions in 2008, gave a talk on the partnership at the event in Birmingham.

"It was certainly well-received. We didn't have too much information on our slides because we wanted to let the photos speak for themselves. We had lots of people coming up to us afterwards saying they wanted to replicate the project elsewhere," she said.

The first 3,000 images to be published on the website following support from the National Lottery Heritage Fund included photos from the 1960s taken at steel industry operations across the region.

Heidi Mcintosh takes a look through the images at Wolverhampton City Archives

There were also images from the final years of mining, and pictures of workers for brands with local heritage including Cadbury’s and Chubb.

These were followed by photos from the First World War and of local churches and war memorials.

They can be viewed at photo-archive.expressandstar.co.uk

The Express & Star photo archive has been described as one of the most important regional photograph collections in the country, as it includes photographs of royal visits and speeches by Prime Ministers, through to images of local ways of everyday life which have been replaced in the modern world.

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