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Shortages Collection (page 2)

"From WWI to the present day, they have shaped our world

Background imageShortages Collection: Allotment studies by G. E. Studdy

Allotment studies by G. E. Studdy
No. I. - Back to the land and what it fills like! To tackle food shortages, people were given plots to grow their own vegetables, in this cartoon a man is in agonising back pain

Background imageShortages Collection: Blackout, meal by candlelight, 1949

Blackout, meal by candlelight, 1949
Once again the victims of an unofficial strike: the long-suffering public. Recalling the inconveniences of the long wartime blackout

Background imageShortages Collection: Women queue at a fruit and veg stall in London, June 1947 (b / w photo)

Women queue at a fruit and veg stall in London, June 1947 (b / w photo)
STC370043 Women queue at a fruit and veg stall in London, June 1947 (b/w photo) by English Photographer, (20th century); Private Collection; (add.info.: from Die ersten Funfzig Jahre des XX)

Background imageShortages Collection: Theres a long long trail awinding (colour litho)

Theres a long long trail awinding (colour litho)
2775226 Theres a long long trail awinding (colour litho) by English School, (20th century); Private Collection; (add.info.: Theres a long long trail awinding. Postcard, early 20th century)

Background imageShortages Collection: Life under Bolshevik rule in Russia: peasants batering clothes for food in a market, 1919 (litho)

Life under Bolshevik rule in Russia: peasants batering clothes for food in a market, 1919 (litho)
6015361 Life under Bolshevik rule in Russia: peasants batering clothes for food in a market, 1919 (litho) by English School

Background imageShortages Collection: The Coal Line, 1917 (pencil on paper)

The Coal Line, 1917 (pencil on paper)
3087841 The Coal Line, 1917 (pencil on paper) by Armington, Frank Milton (1876-1941); Canadian War Museum, Ottawa, Canada; eCanadian War Museum; Canadian, out of copyright

Background imageShortages Collection: Suez Crisis 1956 A billboard outside a petrol station vividly demonstrates

Suez Crisis 1956 A billboard outside a petrol station vividly demonstrates the severity of the petrol shortages

Background imageShortages Collection: London transport recruiting female bus conductors to replace men called up for national

London transport recruiting female bus conductors to replace men called up for national service. 1940

Background imageShortages Collection: Food Queues in London owing to shortages

Food Queues in London owing to shortages
Food Queues in London owing to shortage of supplies. People waiting to get 2 ounces only Date: 1918

Background imageShortages Collection: BAL04619022

BAL04619022
Pastiche of wartime Britain at a Great Central Railway station

Background imageShortages Collection: A Mound of Aluminium, July 1940

A Mound of Aluminium, July 1940
In response to the appeal for aluminium from Lord Beaverbrook, Minister for Aircraft Production, families hand in their spare pots and pans to aid the war effort. 1940

Background imageShortages Collection: In the Stretching Sheds of an Ox-Tail Soup Factory

In the Stretching Sheds of an Ox-Tail Soup Factory. War-Time Economies from William Heath Robinson including an ingenious idea for making the ingredients for oxtail soup go further. Date: 1918

Background imageShortages Collection: How to start an allotment during WW1

How to start an allotment during WW1
Diagram in The Sphere advising readers how to start work on a raw piece of ground in order to create an allotment. The Food Production Department was keen to get around 500

Background imageShortages Collection: WE DAREN T WASTE IT by W. Heath Robinson

WE DAREN T WASTE IT by W. Heath Robinson
A variety of ingenious inventions and machines designed to help people cope and keep cool during an August heatwave. Please note

Background imageShortages Collection: Robert Morrison, 1940

Robert Morrison, 1940
Robert Morrison, Labour MP for Tottenham, at a salvage depot amid a mass of waste-paper being put towards the war effort. Morrison was made Chairman of the inter-departmental committee on salvaging

Background imageShortages Collection: Ann Todd gives in her appliances for the war effort

Ann Todd gives in her appliances for the war effort
Actress Ann Todd photographed handing in her spare household appliances to the local W.V.S. office in Berkshire. In 1940, Lord Beaverbrook, Minister for Aircraft Production

Background imageShortages Collection: Households Encouraged to Give Aluminium for the War Effort

Households Encouraged to Give Aluminium for the War Effort
Woman from the Womens Voluntary Services hangs up pans and kettles from the W.V.S. centre to encourage people to hand in aluminium items to aid the war effort

Background imageShortages Collection: Wartime Hunting - a day with the suburban hounds (rationing)

Wartime Hunting - a day with the suburban hounds (rationing)
Humorous drawing by H. H. Harris commenting on rationing in Britain in 1918 using the metaphor of hunting. Lord Rhondda, who served as Food Controller, is Master of the Hounds

Background imageShortages Collection: Things We Vow We Will Do, When Peace Breaks out

Things We Vow We Will Do, When Peace Breaks out
Cartoon by George Studdy showing a gent purposefully indulging in wasteful behaviour, a welcome relief after years of food control, shortages and rationing. Date: 1918

Background imageShortages Collection: WW1 - Comment on the food shortage

WW1 - Comment on the food shortage
WW1 - To ensure food supply during shortages, National and local food control committees were established to ensure food distribution across the country

Background imageShortages Collection: Gas bag omnibus in Edinburgh, WW1

Gas bag omnibus in Edinburgh, WW1
An example of a coal gas powered vehicle in Edinburgh - in this case a bus which holds a voluminous rubber bag for the gas on its roof

Background imageShortages Collection: Become a subscriber to The Tatler, WW1 advertisement

Become a subscriber to The Tatler, WW1 advertisement
Advertisement in The Sphere encouraging readers to subscribe to its sister paper, The Tatler, to avoid missing out during wartime

Background imageShortages Collection: A Scent Evanescent by Wilmot Lunt - petrol shortages, WW1

A Scent Evanescent by Wilmot Lunt - petrol shortages, WW1
CHEMIST: " That, madame, is petrol - our dearest and rarest perfume." Cartoon in The Bystander commenting on the extortionate cost of petrol as it became increasingly scarce on the home

Background imageShortages Collection: New Fashions for 1918 by William Heath Robinson, WW1

New Fashions for 1918 by William Heath Robinson, WW1
New Fashions for 1918 - designed to meet the shortage of tweeds. A series of revealing menswear outfits suggested by Heath Robinson during the First World War. Date: 1918

Background imageShortages Collection: Romance - 1917 by Bruce Bairnsfather, WW1 cartoon

Romance - 1917 by Bruce Bairnsfather, WW1 cartoon
" Darling, every potato that I have is yours" (Engaged). Cartoon in The Bystander by Captain Bruce Bairnsfather showing a couple locked in an embrace having agreed to get engaged

Background imageShortages Collection: Graphic front cover - Sir Arthur Yapp

Graphic front cover - Sir Arthur Yapp
Sir Arthur Yapp (1869-1936), Deputy President of the YMCA and Director of Food Economy during the First World War. Responsible for encouraging the nation towards frugal

Background imageShortages Collection: Mr Asquiths Wolseley Landaulette with gas container, WW1

Mr Asquiths Wolseley Landaulette with gas container, WW1
Ex-Prime Minister Herbert Asquiths Wolseley Landaulette motor car equipped with the Lyon-Spencer gas container on its roof

Background imageShortages Collection: Typical menu at a communal kitchen, WW1

Typical menu at a communal kitchen, WW1
A blackboard showing a typical menu at a communal kitchen in 1918. Communal and National Kitchens were established to help combat food shortages during the First World War by catering in bulk

Background imageShortages Collection: Rationing of Food, February 1918, WW1

Rationing of Food, February 1918, WW1
Page from The Sphere reporting on the introduction of food rationing of meat and butter in London and Home Counties on 25 February 1918

Background imageShortages Collection: Food Protest in Hyde Park, WW1

Food Protest in Hyde Park, WW1
A crowd in Hyde Park, London, protesting about the high price of food and of profiteering during the First World War. Date: 1917

Background imageShortages Collection: The first National Kitchen, WW1

The first National Kitchen, WW1
The first National Kitchen in Britain, opened on 21 May 1917 by Queen Mary. The National Kitchens were opened during the First World War to provide one solution to food shortages

Background imageShortages Collection: Coal-gas powered delivery van of the Illustrated London News

Coal-gas powered delivery van of the Illustrated London News
An example of coal-gas powered vehicles during the First World War, this example being the delivery van of the Illustrated London News and Sketch Ltd

Background imageShortages Collection: Great Food Demonstration on Embankment, London, WW1

Great Food Demonstration on Embankment, London, WW1
A procession organised by the National Union of Railwaymen who marched to Hyde Park in order to demonstrate against rising food prices during the First World War. Date: 1914-1918

Background imageShortages Collection: Cartoon criticising dogs given luxury food in wartime, WW1

Cartoon criticising dogs given luxury food in wartime, WW1
One of the horrors of war. " And did ums tink their mumsie would waste her money on the horrid war and rob her popsy-wopsies of their ickle nicy-picie" An illustration by George L

Background imageShortages Collection: Commandeering meat for the army during World War I

Commandeering meat for the army during World War I
Cargoes of frozen meat were commandeered by the Government on arrival in the UK. On the eve of the war the prices of provisions shot up suddenly but the Government stepped in

Background imageShortages Collection: The Threatened Slump in Husbands: post WW1 polgamy imagined

The Threatened Slump in Husbands: post WW1 polgamy imagined
The Bystander takes a humourous look in 1915 at the marriage problems that may arise after the war is over. C.E Peto imagines the social consequences of polgamy becoming permissable in the wake of

Background imageShortages Collection: Jack Tar Tuna Fish advertisement, WW1

Jack Tar Tuna Fish advertisement, WW1
Advertisement for Jack Tar tuna fish, a new fish food, suggested as an alternative idea during food shortages of the First World War. Date: 1918

Background imageShortages Collection: Food shortages, WW1

Food shortages, WW1
London society finds that the only topic of conversation in 1918 is food, rationing and what there is available to eat. An illustration by Annie Fish to accompany the Letters of Eve gossip column in

Background imageShortages Collection: Eve talks to Lord Rhondda, the Food Controller, WW1

Eve talks to Lord Rhondda, the Food Controller, WW1
Eve, the fictional gossip columnist of The Tatler magazine, lectures Lord Rhondda, the Food Controller during the latter part of the First World War, on the fact that his economy campaign

Background imageShortages Collection: Munitions scandal, cartoon, WW1

Munitions scandal, cartoon, WW1
Cartoon from London Opinion reproduced in The Tatler in their Pictorial Politics, column, showing a British officer, representing the Army, talking to a shopkeeper, representing John Bull

Background imageShortages Collection: Growing vegetables for victory, WW1

Growing vegetables for victory, WW1
A page from The Graphic demonstrating the wide variety of ways the British population was growing vegetables during the First World War

Background imageShortages Collection: Society dinner party in wartime, WW1

Society dinner party in wartime, WW1
Illustration to accompany the Letters of Eve gossip column in The Tatler, showing a society dinner party, with guests wrapped in furs against the cold

Background imageShortages Collection: A blanket converted into an overcoat for British soldiers

A blanket converted into an overcoat for British soldiers
The blanket as overcoat. With the shortage of military overcoats, a suggestion for converting a blanket into a warm and practical coat

Background imageShortages Collection: Lady Kindersley as a waste paper merchant, WW1

Lady Kindersley as a waste paper merchant, WW1
Lady Kindersley, formerly Miss Gladys Beadle, pictured near her home in Abbots Langley, Hertfordshire, collecting waste paper with the aid of her children and two donkey carts

Background imageShortages Collection: Eve as a W. A. A. C, WW1

Eve as a W. A. A. C, WW1
Eve, The Tatler magazines gossip columnist (and author of Letters of Eve ) muses on the charm of a W.A.A.C (Womens Army Auxiliary Corps)

Background imageShortages Collection: Eve as a police woman, WW1

Eve as a police woman, WW1
Eve, gossip columnist of The Tatler (author of Letters of Eve ) contemplates the charming idea of wearing a police womans uniform with a very short skirt in order to save on material during the First

Background imageShortages Collection: Baking your own bread, WW1

Baking your own bread, WW1
First World War advertisement from the British Commercial Gas Association, suggesting that, with the reduction in the number of bakers throughout the country

Background imageShortages Collection: The Food Problem, WW1 cartoon by Fish

The Food Problem, WW1 cartoon by Fish
Professor of Economics (to Hostess): Pardon! - my bread, I believe. Polite society begin to squablle over portions as food shortages take hold in the latter part of the First World War. Date: 1917



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"From WWI to the present day, they have shaped our world. This Save Food Poster from the era reminds us of the scarcity faced during wartime and the need to conserve resources. The Apres la Guerre No. 3 postcard by George Ranstead captures the aftermath of war, where they were prevalent and rebuilding was necessary. In 1918, people had to cope with various shortages, as depicted in 'Some Shortages and How They Are Dealt With. ' Alfred Leete's iconic illustration 'Observed of all observers' highlights how rationing became a way of life during difficult times. Even beloved dishes like fish and chips were affected by shortages during wartime cuisine. Water shortage was also a concern, as seen in 'London's Water Stores' in 1921. Moving forward, we see satellite images revealing Korea at night, reminding us that even today there are regions facing scarcity. Advertisements like Crawford's Shortbread butter rationing statement demonstrate how businesses adapted to limited supplies. The housing shortage crisis of 1920 showcases innovative solutions employed to meet demand for shelter. Lord Beaverbrook's appeal for aluminium during World War II emphasizes how materials were repurposed for crucial aircraft production. Photographs capture women from the Women's Voluntary Service outside their town hall, symbolizing their contribution towards alleviating shortages through voluntary efforts. Lastly, William Heath Robinson introduces rational gadgets designed to make coupons stretch further during times of scarcity. " Overall, these hints provide glimpses into different periods where they have influenced society and prompted creative responses.