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William Storie posing outside his shop with the signboard that marked ‘Hellfire Corner’, 1920 circa...

IMAGE number
NAM5927428
Image title
William Storie posing outside his shop with the signboard that marked ‘Hellfire Corner’, 1920 circa (b/w photo)
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Artist
Unknown photographer, (20th century)
Location
National Army Museum, London
Medium
black and white photograph
Date
1914 AD (C20th AD)
Image description

William Storie posing outside his shop with the signboard that marked ‘Hellfire Corner’, 1920 circa. Photograph by ‘The Daily Mirror’, Edinburgh, Scotland, 1920 circa. Hellfire Corner was a busy junction on the Menin Road, which ran from Ypres in Belgium to the frontline trenches. It was a very dangerous place, being within easy range of the German guns. As a result of constant heavy shelling it was given this nickname by British troops. Storie served as a second lieutenant with the Royal Army Service Corps and brought the sign back to Britain after the First World War (1914-1918). He displayed it in his shop window on Prince’s Street, Edinburgh. The evocative name ‘Hellfire Corner’ was instantly recognizable to the generation who lived through the war, which is why Storie used it to attract crowds to his shop. This photograph was published in the Daily Mirror on 11 March 1920, with the caption: ‘Do you recognise it? The shell-scarred board which used to stand at Hell Fire Corner, Ypres. Like many a “demobbed” it has found its way to “Blighty” and is now exhibited in a Prince’s Street shop’.

Photo credit
© National Army Museum / Bridgeman Images
Image keywords
Ypres / Belgium / Europe / journalism / media / signpost / commercial / shop / building / trench warfare / portrait / Photograph / Photography / Mzphoto
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Copyright status
No Additional Copyright
Largest available format 3282 × 5064 px 14 MB
Dimension [pixels] Dimension in 300dpi [mm] File size [MB]
Large 3282 × 5064 px 278 × 429 mm 14.1 MB
Medium 664 × 1024 px 56 × 87 mm 811 KB

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