Search results for ""Author Robert Gardner""
Alfred Publishing Co Inc.,U.S. American Patriotic Tunes for String Ensemble Cello
£8.32
Alfred Publishing Co Inc.,U.S. American Patriotic Tunes for String Ensemble Violin
£8.32
Alfred Publishing Co Inc.,U.S. American Patriotic Tunes for String Ensemble Bass
£8.32
The History Press Ltd Kensington to St Valery en Caux: Princess Louise's Kensington Regiment, France and England, Summer 1940
This is a story of summer 1940, of a little known territorial battalion and an almost forgotten British military disaster. In April 1940 the Princess Louise’s Kensington Regiment left England to join the British Expeditionary Force in France. It was attached to the 51st (Highland) Division which was moving to the Saar region to defend the Maginot Line. From May until mid-June the Kensingtons were in continuous action, first on the Saar, then on the Somme, and finally in a fighting withdrawal along the channel coast in an attempt to reach Le Havre. Outnumbered four to one the division was cornered at the little seaside town of St Valery en Caux and forced to surrender on 13 June. Three companies of the Kensingtons launched a daring escape through Le Havre to return to England and take part in the invasion defences on the Kent coast.
£14.99
Peabody Museum of Archaeology & Ethnology,U.S. Making Dead Birds: Chronicle of a Film
£27.86
Alfred Publishing Co Inc.,U.S. American Patriotic Tunes for String Ensemble Score
£22.95
Alfred Publishing Co Inc.,U.S. American Patriotic Tunes for String Ensemble Viola
£8.32
Pen & Sword Books Ltd Battle of Britain Broadcaster: Charles Gardner, Radio Pioneer and WWII Pilot
In 1936 Charles Gardner joined the BBC as a sub-editor in its news department. Shortly afterwards, he was joined by Richard Dimbleby and together they became the very first BBC news correspondents. They covered everything from shipwrecks to fires, floods to air raid precautions and, in Garner's' case, new aircraft. Their exploits became legendary and they laid down the first principles of news broadcasting - of integrity and impartiality - still followed today. With the outbreak of war Charles Gardner became one of the first BBC war correspondents and was posted to France to cover the RAF's AASF (Advanced Air Strike Force). He made numerous broadcasts interviewing many fighter pilots after engagements with the Germans and recalling stories of raids, bomb attacks and eventually the Blitzkrieg when they all were evacuated from France. When he got home he wrote a book AASF which was one of the first books on the Second World War to be published. In late 1940 he was commissioned in the RAF as a pilot and flew Catalina flying boats of Coastal Command. After support missions over the Atlantic protecting supply convoys from America, his squadron was deployed to Ceylon which was under threat from the Japanese navy. Gardner was at the controls when he was the first to sight the Japanese fleet and report back its position. Gardner was later recruited by Lord Mountbatten, to help report the exploits of the British 14th Army in Burma. He both broadcast and filed countless reports of their astonishing bravery in beating the Japanese in jungle conditions and monsoon weather. After the war, Gardner became the BBC air correspondent from 1946-1953\. As such, he became known as The Voice of the Air,' witnessing and recording the greatest days in British aviation history. But Perhaps he will best be remembered for his 1940 eye-witness account of an air battle over the English Channel when German dive bombers unsuccessfully attacked a British convoy but were driven off by RAF fighters. At the time it caused a national controversy. Some complained about his commentary being like a football match,' and not an air battle where men's lives were at stake. That broadcast is still played frequently today.
£22.50
Rethink Press Freedom: Earn It, Keep It, Grow It
£16.99
Peabody Museum of Archaeology & Ethnology,U.S. Michael Rockefeller: New Guinea Photographs, 1961
£27.86
Radius Books Stephen Dupont: Piksa Niugini: Portraits and Diaries
Stephen Dupont (born 1967) is an Australian photographer who has produced hauntingly beautiful images of fragile cultures and marginalized peoples since beginning his photographic career in 1989. Piksa Nuigini records Dupont’s journey through some of the most important cultural and historical zones in Papua New Guinea: the Highlands, Sepik, Bougainville and the capital city, Port Moresby. Through images and diary entries, Dupont captures the spirit of human life on one of the world’s last truly wild frontiers. This work was conducted with the support of the Robert Gardner Fellowship of Photography at Harvard’s Peabody Museum of Archaeology and Ethnology. The publication consists of two slipcased volumes: Piksa Nuigini: Portraits and Piksa Nuigini: Diaries. The former is a collection of portraits reproduced in luscious duotone; the latter a collection of the diaries, drawings, contact sheets and documentary photographs that Dupont produced as he created his work.
£53.00
Peabody Museum of Archaeology & Ethnology,U.S. Still Points
£39.56
Peabody Museum of Archaeology & Ethnology,U.S. Human Documents: Eight Photographers
£37.76