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  • Royal Ascot racegoers picnic on the grass of an event car park, on 18th June 1992, in Ascot, England. Trays of food and two bottles of Champagne have been consumed during a break from betting and socialising. They are dressed in formal morning dress of top hat, waistcoat, tails with two of the men wearing red roses in their lapel button holes, all traditional and obligatory dress code in the Royal Enclosures which can be seen by visitors in the public car parks near the famous Berkshire race course. Royal Ascot is held every June and is one of the main dates on the sporting calendar and social season. (Photo by Richard Baker / In Pictures via Getty Images)
    ascot01-18-06-1992.jpg
  • Carrying three yellow branded shopping bags, a lady emerges the Selfridges department store on London's Oxford Street, and passes by a themed window display that includes some cartoon-esque characters wishing the public a happy new decade, on 7th February 2020, in London, England.
    selfridges_shopper-01-07-02-2020.jpg
  • A portrait of a mother in her 41st year has been gathering heather in handfuls and holds up her young child who grins towards his father who is taking the picture at a park near the Essex seaside town of Southend. It is the summer of 1960 and the mum's dress is styled from the previous decade: blue with white spots and pearl necklace. She too is smiling as she grasps the flowers and her child on a warm day. Oddly, the boy looks as though he is wearing a girl's dress which may have been a hand-me-down from an older sibling or just the trend then.
    family_archive2315-06_1960.jpg
  • Carrying three yellow branded shopping bags, a lady emerges the Selfridges department store on London's Oxford Street, and passes by a themed window display that includes some cartoon-esque characters wishing the public a happy new decade, on 7th February 2020, in London, England.
    selfridges_shopper-02-07-02-2020.jpg
  • The still-semi derelect Butler's Wharf, 19th century Thameside warehouses, before its renovation and redevelopment later that decade, on 11th September 1993, on the River Thames, London, England.
    butlers_wharf-19-06-1994.jpg
  • The still-semi derelect Butler's Wharf, 19th century Thameside warehouses, before its renovation and redevelopment later that decade, on 11th September 1993, on the River Thames, London, England.
    butlers_wharf-11-09-1993.jpg
  • A detail of old advertising for a cigarette brand from decades ago called Will's whose product was 'Goldflake', on 19th July 2020, in Whitstable, Kent, England. W.D. & H.O. Wills was a British tobacco importer and manufacturer formed in Bristol, England. W.D. & H.O. Wills was founded in 1786 and was the first UK company to mass-produce cigarettes. It was one of the founding companies of Imperial Tobacco along with John Player & Sons.
    whitstable_shops05-19-07-2020.jpg
  • A middle-aged businessman looks up from paperwork during a working day in his 1970s Brussels office. The executive wearing a white shirt and tie pauses writing with a pencil to look over his glasses, past the In Tray and towards the viewer. There is no computer or electronic devices that describe this decade towards the end of the 20th century. The calendar shows us today's date of July 5th 1971. The picture shows us a memory of nostalgia in an era from the last century.
    70s_family14-13-06-1971.jpg
  • A solitary person walks over wasteland in Liverpool, England, left after housing was demolished decades ago - its impoverished population having moved out for a better life elsewhere. the sign tells us the name of this road but paint has been daubed over it in an attempt perhaps, to erase its identity now that the community has gone too. Billboards for consumer goods are on show for  non-existent shoppers.
    liverpool_dereliction04-08-08-1991.jpg
  • Three bygone era dockside cranes stand motionless in early morning fog, redundant after decades of handling shipping freight
    river_business325-12-02-2008 .jpg
  • A detail of old advertising for a cigarette brand from decades ago called Will's whose product was 'Flag Empire Blend', on 19th July 2020, in Whitstable, Kent, England. W.D. & H.O. Wills was a British tobacco importer and manufacturer formed in Bristol, England. W.D. & H.O. Wills was founded in 1786 and was the first UK company to mass-produce cigarettes. It was one of the founding companies of Imperial Tobacco along with John Player & Sons.
    whitstable_shops04-19-07-2020.jpg
  • A detail of old advertising for a cigarette brand from decades ago called Will's whose product was 'Goldflake', on 19th July 2020, in Whitstable, Kent, England. W.D. & H.O. Wills was a British tobacco importer and manufacturer formed in Bristol, England. W.D. & H.O. Wills was founded in 1786 and was the first UK company to mass-produce cigarettes. It was one of the founding companies of Imperial Tobacco along with John Player & Sons.
    whitstable_shops06-19-07-2020.jpg
  • Dressed in typical overalls for the area, traditional Alpine farmer Peter Eberle works in the courtyard of his dairy and goat farm in Balzers, Liechtenstein, on 8th February 1990, in Balzers, Liechtenstein. Liechtenstein is a landlocked Principality bordered by the Alpine countries of Austria and Switzerland and is a winter sports resort, though best known as a tax haven, attracting companies worldwide to register their assets in complete secrecy. Its agricultural output is mainly wheat, barley, corn, potatoes, livestock and dairy products though technology companies have been eroding the traditional ways of life such as Peter's for decades.
    liechtenstein_farmer03-08-02-1990.jpg
  • Dressed in typical overalls for the area, traditional Alpine farmer Peter Eberle works in the courtyard of his dairy and goat farm in Balzers, Liechtenstein, on 8th February 1990, in Balzers, Liechtenstein. Liechtenstein is a landlocked Principality bordered by the Alpine countries of Austria and Switzerland and is a winter sports resort, though best known as a tax haven, attracting companies worldwide to register their assets in complete secrecy. Its agricultural output is mainly wheat, barley, corn, potatoes, livestock and dairy products though technology companies have been eroding the traditional ways of life such as Peter's for decades.
    liechtenstein_farmer02-08-02-1990.jpg
  • A goat belonging to traditional Alpine farmer Peter Eberle in the courtyard of a dairy and goat farm in Balzers, Liechtenstein, on 8th February 1990, in Balzers, Liechtenstein. Liechtenstein is a landlocked Principality bordered by the Alpine countries of Austria and Switzerland and is a winter sports resort, though best known as a tax haven, attracting companies worldwide to register their assets in complete secrecy. Its agricultural output is mainly wheat, barley, corn, potatoes, livestock and dairy products though technology companies have been eroding the traditional ways of life such as Peter's for decades.
    liechtenstein_farmer01-08-02-1990.jpg
  • An elderly 1990s Polish lady struggles along a street and past a cafe whose walls are crumbling - the heritage of polluted communist decades, on 15th July 1990, in Krakow, Poland. (Photo by Richard Baker / In Pictures via Getty Images)
    poland_elderly-15-07-1990.jpg
  • From the side of a road in south London, we see a group of naked female mannequins, standing and sitting with furniture on the forecourt of an office supplies business. A clearance sign stands partly-obscured but one's attention is to the physiques of each model that tends to signify whichever the fashion industry has decreed is the 'look' of the decade - whether buxom or skinny - and shop windows are therefore occupied with the clothing shapes of the day. Some women stand in that classic fashion pose, with arms at the side and one leg in front of the other, or sitting with one leg elegantly crossed: All designed to make the clothes they wear look attractive.
    street_mannequins-21-05-1999.jpg
  • Three bygone era dockside cranes stand motionless in early morning fog, redundant after decades of handling shipping freight
    river_business343-11-02-2008 .jpg
  • A Loyalist wall and rubbish-strewn wasteground shows the dereliction of 1990s Belfast, northern Ireland. Rubbish and missing brickwork tell us of a city a decade after the Troubles when protestant fought catholic causes, a clash of religion and ideology with poor investment by a London-based government.
    belfast_dereliction-26-09-1996.jpg
  • A week after the 9-11 terrorist attacks on the Twin Towers and the Pentagon, a rain-spattered poster sends a 'United We Stand' message to American patriots, on 19th September 2001, New York, USA.
    united_stand-19-09-2001.jpg
  • 1990s rush-hour commuters cross London Bridge from Southwark on the south bank to the City of London (aka The Square Mile), the capital's financial centre, on 18th February 1992, in London, England.
    90s_commuters-20-11-1993.jpg
  • In Europe's largest currency trading floor at National Westminster Bank, a 1990s female banker works at her computer at  in the City of London (aka The Square Mile), the capital's financial centre, on 20th May 1993, in London, England.
    90s_banker-20-05-1993.jpg
  • The kitchen of an abandoned in the former Russian Soviet army camp in occupied East Germany (ex-GDR/DDR), on 16th June 19990, on Halb Insel Wustrow, near Rostock, Germany. The occupants appear to have left in a hurry - or were careless enough to leave possessions and fresh fruit, now rotting on the kitchen table.
    soviet_village-16-06-1990.jpg
  • A nineties sweet shop keeper makes a phone call and works out a price using a store calculator, in a shop called The Sugar Boy, on 18th May 2000, in Canterbury, Kent, England.
    shop_keeper01-18-05-2000.jpg
  • Spanish ladies dance Flamenco into the night at a private party in a marquee called a Caseta during the annual Feria de Abril, on 11th June 1999, in Seville, Andalucia, Spain. Rows of temporary marquee tents, or casetas, host families, corporations and friends into the late hours during the April Fair which begins begins two weeks after the Semana Santa, or Easter Holy Week in the Andalusian capital.
    seville_feria_party-11-06-1999.jpg
  • A royal warrant crest located at the entrance of a business in the wealthy Mayfair district of the capital, on 16th March 1997, in London, England. Royal warrants indicate that a shop or supplies the royal household with goods and services - a highly sought-after position guaranteeing quality for a business around the country.
    royal_warrant-16-03-1997_1.jpg
  • East End crowds flock at the funeral of notorious gangland brother Ronnie Kray, on 29th March 1995, in Bethnal Green, East London, England.
    ronnie_kray's_funeral-29-03-1995_4.jpg
  • A waiter serves a pot of tea at his outdoor cafe in the Italian capital, on 3rd November 1999, in Rome, Italy.
    rome_cafe_people-03-11-1999.jpg
  • Crews from around the UK and Ireland compete in the annual Great River race on the river Thames, on 23rd September 1995, in London England.
    river_race-23-09-1995_1.jpg
  • A portrait of a tough-looking local authority worker whose winter job is snow removal, on 11th January 1999, in Quebec City, Quebec, Canada.
    quebec_canada-11-01-1999_2.jpg
  • A villager lays fresh straw over the roof rafters of a building with the backdrop of Himalayan foothills and snow-tipped mountain peaks, on 10th November 1995, in Ghorepani, Himalayas, Nepal,
    nepal-10-11-1995_2.jpg
  • An physical education instructor tests an army recruit for concussion after a bout of Milling, a test of aggression that  recruits must pass before qualifying as a paratrooper in the Para Regiment of the British Army, on 23rd July 1996, at Aldershot, England. The controversial Milling tradition unique to the Paras is a test for young men to prove they have a killer spirit by a timed gloved one-to-one boxing fight. Within that time, they have to punch as fiercely as possible, often resulting in blooded noses and temporary concussion.
    milling_paras-23-07-1996.jpg
  • An elderly Apache lady patient receives specialist care from a dedicated air ambulance service for Arizona's Native Americans, on 25th August 1998, at Phoenix Native American reservation Hospital, Arizona, USA.
    native_american-25-08-1998_1.jpg
  • A wealthy Latino couple enjoy the beach as a man carrying possessions walks past, on 15th May 1996, in Miami Beach, Florida, USA.
    miami_beach-15-05-1996_4.jpg
  • Children playing inside the Miami post office with safety deposit boxes, on 15th May 1996, in Miami Beach, Florida, USA.
    miami_beach-15-05-1996_2.jpg
  • A young girl plays with Mahjong tiles at a night-club, on 10th August 1994, in Macau, China. The Macau Special Administrative Region is one of the two special administrative regions of the People's Republic of China (PRC), along with Hong Kong. Administered by Portugal until 1999, it was the oldest European colony in China, dating back to the 16th century. The administrative power over Macau was transferred to the People's Republic of China (PRC) in 1999, 2 years after Hong Kong's own handover.
    macau-10-08-1994_2.jpg
  • A Hungarian lady in deep thought peers through a 1990s window of a hairdressing salon in the Hungarian capital, on 18th June 1990, in Budapest, Hungary.
    hungary_woman-18-06-1990.jpg
  • Hong Kong Chinese walk beneath the ImmigrationTower in Central, a year before the handover of sovereignty from Britain to China, on 29th March 1996, in Hong Kong, (then a British colony but latterly, China).
    hong_kong_immigration-29-03-1996_2.jpg
  • Large corporate banners about the future of Hong Kong hang over the entrance of the HSBC bank in Central, the day after the Handover of sovereignty from Britain to China, on 30th June 1997, in Hong Kong, China. Midnight signified the end of British rule, and the transfer of legal and financial authority back to China. Hong Kong was once known as 'fragrant harbour' (or Heung Keung) because of the smell of transported sandal wood.
    hong_kong_handover-30-06-1997_4.jpg
  • Police officers look at the large corporate banners about the future of Hong Kong hang over the entrance of the HSBC bank in Central, the day after the Handover of sovereignty from Britain to China, on 30th June 1997, in Hong Kong, China. Midnight signified the end of British rule, and the transfer of legal and financial authority back to China. Hong Kong was once known as 'fragrant harbour' (or Heung Keung) because of the smell of transported sandal wood.
    hong_kong_handover-30-06-1997_3.jpg
  • A wide aerial view of the European Parliament's new headquarters of the EU and an administrative home to the Members of European Parliament (MEPs), at the time of its opening, on 16th October 1993, in Brussels, Belgium.
    european_parliament-16-10-1993.jpg
  • Six months after the fall of the Berlin Wall, a Trabant car sits wrecked on the corner of Mollstrasse and Hans-Beimler-Strasse in east Berlin (former DDR), on 1st June 1990, in Berlin, Germany. The DDR-produced Trabant suffered poor performance, but its smoky two-stroke engine regarded with affection as a symbol of the more positive sides of East Germany. Many East Germans streamed into West Berlin and West Germany in their Trabants after the opening of the Berlin Wall. It was in production without any significant change for nearly 30 years. The name Trabant means "fellow traveler" in German.
    DDR_trabant-01-06-1990.jpg
  • A businessman pauses beneath one of the symbolic Griffin marking the southern limit of the City of London, at the Southwark side of London Bridge, on 21st June 1997, in London, England.
    city_businessman-21-06-1997.jpg
  • A detail of a priest's Alb (outer garment) after Mass was held held in a local rural Catholic church, on 15th October 1997, in Neubourg, Normandy, France
    catholic_church-15-10-1997_3.jpg
  • A landscape of rooftops and palm trees on the Cote d'Azur, on 13th April 1996, at Cap-d'Ail, France.
    cap_d'ail-13-04-1996.jpg
  • 1990s traders look stressful on a city trading floor, on 29th March 1996, in London, England.
    cable_and_wireless-29-03-1996_4.jpg
  • Low tide mud and silt with old wharves on the River Neckinger that once flowed from south London into the Thames at Bermindsey and once the inspiration for the end scenes of Oliver Twist by Charles Dickens, on 19th June 1994, in Bermindsey, London, England. During subsequent redevelopment, the warves became expensive riverside apartments, the waters once again freed from 20th century dereliction.
    butlers_wharf-19-06-1994_1.jpg
  • Sunbathers and a lifeguard enjoy the poolside during the August heatwave, on 20th August 1995, at Brockwell Lido, Herne Hill, London, England.
    brockwell_lido-20-08-1995.jpg
  • A 1990s Hungarian gentleman snoozes in the shade of trees at the Szechenyi spa hotel, on 13th June 1990, in Budapest, Hungary.
    budapest_spa-13-06-1990.jpg
  • A little boy wearing a blue jump suit stands on the pavement outside his house holding the handlebars of a favourite matching blue coloured tricycle. He looks upwards towards the viewer slightly bemused about having his picture taken by his father who looks down from a standing position. Meanwhile, the boys sister towers above him dressed in a bright red coat and clean white gloves and short white socks. Alongside her is a friend also wearing gloves and a knee-length skirt but we see only their lower bodies and not their faces so they are unrecognisable - an older sibling and a girl friend. It is the summer of 1960 and while the red is vibrant, the blues and greens are more muted in this Kodachrome film which has a wonderful magenta colour cast in the mid-tones reminiscent of the classic days of early photography when shifts in color gave a faded look
    family_archive2420-11_1960.jpg
  • A family wedding party stands for a historical photo at the bottom of the steps on 24th April 1962 , in Londonderry, Northern Ireland, UK.
    wedding_group-24-04-1962.jpg
  • The day after its catastrophic blaze, firefighters continue to assess fire damage from their ladders, to the Queen's official residence at Windsor Castle, on 20th November 1992, in London, England. The most northerly corner of this old building that caught fire in a private chapel on the first floor of the north-east wing. Spreading quickly, damaging St George's Hall, which is often used for banquets. In all, one hundred rooms were damaged in the fire and intense public debate was sparked about whether the taxpayer should foot the repair bill, as the castle is owned by the British Government and not the Royal Family. But the Queen agreed to meet 70% of the costs, and opened Buckingham Palace to the public to generate extra funds. The £40m restoration took five years. Windsor is the largest inhabited castle in the world and partly dates to the time of the Norman King William the Conquerer.
    windsor_fire-20-11-1992.jpg
  • 1990s British customs and immigration officials and a French Gendarme await the arrival of the first people to have crossed from France to the British mainland on the occasion of the Channel Tunnel bores breaking through, on 1st December 1990, in Folkestone, Kent England.
    tunnel_customs-01-12-1990.jpg
  • Months before the new Millennium of 2000, women shoppers walk along a sunlit Oxford Street, outside the Selfridge's department store, on 19th September 1999, in London, England.
    selfridges-19-09-1999.jpg
  • A detail of home-made posters by residents from Kent over the planned high-speed (TGV-style) rail link from London to the south-east coast, on 5th August 1989, in London, England. Locals from the Darenth Valley in rural Kent, against the forthcoming Channel Tunnel rail link organised their own campaign to reverse decisions by British Rail to cut a new rail link through their community. British Rail announced that 150mph TGV trains would travel through their rural Kent countryside, forcing residents to sell their homes within a 240 metre corridor to the rail line, at great loss while splitting up the community.
    rail_link_protest02-05-08-1989.jpg
  • Riot police officers stand firm nearTrafalgar Square at the height of the Poll Tax Riot on 31st March 1990, in Westminster, London, England. Angry crowds, demonstrating against Margaret Thatcher's local authority tax, stormed the Whitehall area and then London's West End, starting fires and overturning cars, looting stores up Charing Cross Road and St Martin's Lane. The anti-poll tax rally in central London erupted into the worst riots seen in the city for a century. Forty-five police officers were among the 113 people injured as well as 20 police horses. 340 people were arrested.
    poll_tax_riot07-31-03-1990.jpg
  • Riot police officers stand firm in Trafalgar Square at the height of the Poll Tax Riot on 31st March 1990, in Westminster, London, England. Angry crowds, demonstrating against Margaret Thatcher's local authority tax, stormed the Whitehall area and then London's West End, starting fires and overturning cars, looting stores up Charing Cross Road and St Martin's Lane. The anti-poll tax rally in central London erupted into the worst riots seen in the city for a century. Forty-five police officers were among the 113 people injured as well as 20 police horses. 340 people were arrested.
    poll_tax_riot09-31-03-1990.jpg
  • A week after the 9-11 terrorist attacks on the Twin Towers and the Pentagon, an NYPD police officer cop wears a face mask covering nose and mouth - protection from Ground Zero pollutants rumoured to be toxic, on 21st September 2001, New York, USA.
    police_mask-21-09-2001.jpg
  • A week after the 9-11 terrorist attacks on the Twin Towers and the Pentagon, a Liberty busker drinks in front of a crowd in Union Square, on 21st September 2001, New York, USA.
    liberty_busker-21-09-2001.jpg
  • Local 1990s kids on bikes watch an event on Venice Beach, on 18th May 1996, in Los Angeles, California, USA.
    LA_kids-18-05-1996.jpg
  • A sixties portrait of a mother holding the family pet hamster, on 13th July, in North Rhine-Westphalia, Germany.
    hughes_family02-13-07-1968.jpg
  • While still a British colony, a 1990s Chinese man stands in prayer near family vaults in the Muslim and Catholic cemetery, on 21st April 1995, in Hong Kong, China.
    hong_kong_cemetery-21-04-1995.jpg
  • 1990s evening rush-hour traffic at the junction of the 400 to Buckhead and the 401 highway, on 5th November 1995, in Atlanta, Georgia USA.
    atlanta_freeway-05-11-1995.jpg
  • Women watch other ladies arriving from London to attend Royal Ascot Ladies' Day, the annual event on the English sporting and social calendar in June, on 18th June 1992, in Ascot, England.
    ascot03-18-06-1992.jpg
  • Months after the fall of the Berlin wall and the collapse of the communist GDR state (the German Democratic Republic), the wreckage of a Trabant car still remains, on 15th June 1990, in Berlin, Eastern Germany. (Photo by Richard Baker / In Pictures via Getty Images)
    GDR_trabant01-15-06-1990.jpg
  • Months after the fall of the Berlin wall and the collapse of the communist GDR state (the German Democratic Republic), a Trabant is worked on at the company factory, on 15th June 1990, in Berlin, Eastern Germany. The East German auto maker VEB Sachsenring Automobilwerke was at Zwickau in Saxony. The Trabant was the most common vehicle in East Germany - Like the Beetle in the West, its Peoples' Car with a 595 cc, two-cylinder air-cooled engine. It had space for four, was compact, light and durable with its distinctive body shape constructed from Duroplast panels attached to a galvanized steel shell. It was in production without any significant changes for about 34 years, becoming a symbol for the cheap, cheerful and polluting possessions for Communist Europeans. When the Berlin Wall eventually fell, Trabants coughed and spluttered onto West German roads for the first time. (Photo by Richard Baker / In Pictures via Getty Images)
    GDR_trabant02-15-06-1990.jpg
  • In Windsor Great Park's Long Walk across the landscape a hose gallops during a 3-day cross-country event, held annually on Her Majesty the Queens's property, on 16th June 1994, in London, England. The Long Walk was commenced by Charles II from 1680-1685 by planting a double avenue of elm trees. The park was, for many centuries, the private hunting ground of Windsor Castle and dates primarily from the mid-13th century. Now largely open to the public, the parkland is a popular recreation area for residents of the western London suburbs. The Copper Horse is a statue marking the end of the Long Walk at Snow Hill in Windsor Great Park in the English county of Berkshire. The walk begins at the George IV Gateway at Windsor Castle. The Copper Horse is a statue of George III on horseback, and is said to represent George as an emperor in the Roman tradition riding without stirrups, along the lines of the Equestrian Statue of Marcus Aurelius.
    windsor_great_park-16-06-1994.jpg
  • The launch of Microsoft's Windows 95 operating system software, sold at midnight on 23rd August 1995, in Croydon, London, England.
    windows_95-23-08-1995.jpg
  • Display boxes at the launch of Microsoft's Windows 95 operating system software, sold at midnight on 23rd August 1995, in Croydon, London, England.
    windows_95-23-08-1995_1.jpg
  • As traffic zooms past, the art installation called 'House' stands alone on a now-empty and house-less East London street, on 2nd December 1993, in London, England. The contours of the structure have been inverted to reveal an inside-out version of the original building. It is a concrete cast of the inside of an entire Victorian terraced house completed in autumn 1993 and exhibited at the location of the original property -- 193 Grove Road -- in East London (all the houses in the street had earlier been knocked down by the council). Created by the artist Rachel Whiteread CBE (born 1963) this is her best-known sculpture. It won her the Turner Prize (the first woman to do so) for best young British artist in 1993 before being controversially demolished by the council in January 1994.
    whiteread's_house-02-12-1993.jpg
  • The floral memorial shrine in memory of two young victims killed by an IRA bomb in the centre of Warrington, Cheshire, England, on 27th February 1993, in Warrington, England. Two small bombs exploded in litter bins outside a Boots store and a McDonald's restaurant, killing two children and injuring many other people. Although a warning or warnings had been sent, the area was not evacuated in time. Both attacks were perpetrated by the Provisional Irish Republican Army (IRA). Three-year-old Johnathan Ball died at the scene, while his babysitter survived. The second victim, 12-year-old Tim Parry, who received the full force of the blast, was gravely wounded but died weeks later.
    warrington_bombing-27-02-1993.jpg
  • The floral memorial shrine in memory of two young victims killed by an IRA bomb in the centre of Warrington, Cheshire, England, on 27th February 1993, in Warrington, England. Two small bombs exploded in litter bins outside a Boots store and a McDonald's restaurant, killing two children and injuring many other people. Although a warning or warnings had been sent, the area was not evacuated in time. Both attacks were perpetrated by the Provisional Irish Republican Army (IRA). Three-year-old Johnathan Ball died at the scene, while his babysitter survived. The second victim, 12-year-old Tim Parry, who received the full force of the blast, was gravely wounded but died weeks later.
    warrington_bombing-27-02-1993_1.jpg
  • Judges measure giant marrows at the annual Vegetable Olympics, on 30th September 1994, at Spalding, Lincolnshire, England. Sponsored by Garden News Magazine and hosted by a nursery owner, these vegetables have their growth accelerated by special fertilizers and genetic hormones.
    vegetable_olympics-30-09-1994.jpg
  • Judges measure giant runner beans at the annual Vegetable Olympics, on 30th September 1994, at Spalding, Lincolnshire, England. Sponsored by Garden News Magazine and hosted by a nursery owner,  these vegetables have their growth accelerated by special fertilizers and genetic hormones.
    vegetable_olympics-30-09-1994_1.jpg
  • A portrait of Tate Director Nicholas (Nick) Serota during the redevelopment phase of the Turbine Hall at the former power station now known as Tate Modern art gallery, on 6th March 1998, on London's Southbank, England.
    tate_construction-06-03-1998_1.jpg
  • Old Soviet parade ground murals show the physical style of Russian marching techniques in the former Russian Soviet army camp in occupied East Germany (ex-GDR/DDR), on 16th June 19990, on Halb Insel Wustrow, near Rostock, Germany. Wustrow was once a WW2 German anti-aircraft artillery position then housing civilian refugees before the eventual Soviet occupation of the former DDR during the Cold War, up until 1990 and the fall of communism and the Berlin Wall. The camp was ransacked and all its assets stripped before its desertion that summer and is a reminder of a fallen ideology
    soviet_village-16-06-1990_3.jpg
  • Old Soviet parade ground illustrations show self-defence positions for Russian soldiers in the former Russian army camp in occupied East Germany (ex-GDR/DDR), on 16th June 19990, on Halb Insel Wustrow, near Rostock, Germany. Wustrow was once a WW2 German anti-aircraft artillery position then housing civilian refugees before the eventual Soviet occupation of the former DDR during the Cold War, up until 1990 and the fall of communism and the Berlin Wall. The camp was ransacked and all its assets stripped before its desertion that summer and is a reminder of a fallen ideology
    soviet_village-16-06-1990_2.jpg
  • Before the area was completely redeveloped with a pleasure fairground, 1990s sunbathers stretch out on bare grass on the seafront that still shows its heyday landscape, on 2nd August 1993, at Southend-on-Sea, Essex, England.
    southend_landscape-02-08-1993.jpg
  • An inspection by the Thames Water Utilities sewer cleaning team looks closely at Victorian-era brick wall linings of the Fleet River's Victorian-built storm sewer of Blackfriars, beneath the streets of the City of London, on 19th June 1994, in London, England. Discarded fats from restaurants congeal in sewer networks leading to blocked pipework. Sewer men shovel the deposits and bring them in vats to the surface. In the early 19th century the River Thames was practically an open sewer, with disastrous consequences for public health in London, including numerous cholera epidemics with the The Great Stink of 1858 a turning point. Intercepting sewers constructed between 1859 and 1865 were fed by 450 miles (720 km) of main sewers that in turn conveyed the contents of some 13,000 miles (21,000 km) of smaller local sewers using 318m bricks, 880,000 cubic yards of concrete and mortar and excavation of over 3.5m tonnes of earth.
    sewer_inspection-19-06-1994.jpg
  • Spanish ladies feast at a private party in a marquee called a Caseta during the annual Feria de Abril, on 11th June 1999, in Seville, Andalucia, Spain. Rows of temporary marquee tents, or casetas, host families, corporations and friends into the late hours during the April Fair which begins begins two weeks after the Semana Santa, or Easter Holy Week in the Andalusian capital.
    seville_feria_party-11-06-1999_3.jpg
  • Spanish ladies party at a private party in a marquee called a Caseta during the annual Feria de Abril, on 11th June 1999, in Seville, Andalucia, Spain. Rows of temporary marquee tents, or casetas, host families, corporations and friends into the late hours during the April Fair which begins begins two weeks after the Semana Santa, or Easter Holy Week in the Andalusian capital.
    seville_feria_party-11-06-1999_2.jpg
  • A young boy looks carefully at the many saucy postcards on sale outside a seaside shop, on 19th July 1993, in Scarborough, North Yorkshire, England. Telling jokes to send back to friends and family, they using cartoon characters of buxom women, hen-pecked husbands or sexually-frustrated young men, the humour is bawdy and cheeky - the epitome of seaside holiday kitsch. The best-known saucy seaside postcards were created by Bamforths (founded 1870) and despite the decline in popularity of postcards that are overtly tacky, postcards continue to be a significant economic and cultural aspect of British seaside tourism. In the 1950s, Bamforth postcards were among the most popular of the 18 million items purchased at British resorts.
    saucy_postcards-21-08-1993.jpg
  • Six months after the fall of the Berlin Wall, a young man sells memorabilia and merchandise from the former DDR (DGR) at a market stall near the Brandenburg Gate, on 1st June 1990, in Berlin, Germany.
    selling_DDR-01-06-1990.jpg
  • A royal warrant crest located at the entrance of a business in the wealthy Mayfair district of the capital, on 16th March 1997, in London, England. Royal warrants indicate that a shop or supplies the royal household with goods and services - a highly sought-after position guaranteeing quality for a business around the country.
    royal_warrant-16-03-1997.jpg
  • The Sovereigns passing-out parade at the Sandhurst Royal Military Academy, on 16th June 1996, at Sandhurst, England. The Royal Military Academy Sandhurst (RMAS), commonly known simply as Sandhurst, is the British Army officer initial training centre. Sandhurst is prestigious and has had many famous alumni including Sir Winston Churchill, King Abdullah II of Jordan, Sultan Qaboos of Oman and, more recently, Prince Harry and Prince William. All British Army officers, and many from elsewhere in the world, are trained at Sandhurst. RMA Sandhurst was formed in 1947, from a merger of the Royal Military Academy in Woolwich (which trained officers for the Royal Artillery and Royal Engineers from 1741 to 1939) and the Royal Military College at Sandhurst.
    sandhurst_horse-16-06-1996.jpg
  • Notorious gangland sibling Reggie Kray wears handcuffs during his day-release from prison for the funeral of his twin brother Ronnie, on 29th March 1995, in Bethnal Green, East London, England.
    ronnie_kray's_funeral-29-03-1995.jpg
  • Floral tributes at the graveside of notorious gangland brother Ronnie Kray, on 29th March 1995, in Bethnal Green, East London, England.
    ronnie_kray's_funeral-29-03-1995_3.jpg
  • East End crowds flock at the funeral of notorious gangland brother Ronnie Kray, on 29th March 1995, in Bethnal Green, East London, England.
    ronnie_kray's_funeral-29-03-1995_2.jpg
  • East End crowds flock at the funeral of notorious gangland brother Ronnie Kray, on 29th March 1995, in Bethnal Green, East London, England.
    ronnie_kray's_funeral-29-03-1995_1.jpg
  • A Catholic priest shades his eyes from the sun while walking through St. Peter's Square with St. Peter's Basilica in the background, on 3rd November 1999, in Vatican City, Rome, Italy.
    rome_priest-03-11-1999.jpg
  • A long-exposure shows the headlights of night-time traffic of scooters and cars on Via Cavour in the Italian capital, on 3rd November 1999, in Rome, Italy.
    rome_traffic-03-11-1999.jpg
  • A plastic drinks bottle hangs from a food kiosk opposite ancient Roman archaeology in the Italian capital, on 3rd November 1999, in Rome, Italy.
    rome_drink-03-11-1999.jpg
  • A cafe customer reads his copy of the English language Herald Tribune newspaper in the Italian capital, on 3rd November 1999, in Rome, Italy.
    rome_cafe_people-03-11-1999_4.jpg
  • A cafe couple read a copy of Correre della Sera newspaper and a womens' magazine in the Italian capital, on 3rd November 1999, in Rome, Italy.
    rome_cafe_people-03-11-1999_3.jpg
  • A cafe couple read a copy of Correre della Sera newspaper and a womens' magazine in the Italian capital, on 3rd November 1999, in Rome, Italy.
    rome_cafe_people-03-11-1999_2.jpg
  • A cafe customer reads his copy of the English language Herald Tribune newspaper in the Italian capital, on 3rd November 1999, in Rome, Italy.
    rome_cafe_people-03-11-1999_1.jpg
  • A scooter rider gets close to a traffic policeman during an altercation in the Italian capital, on 3rd November 1999, in Rome, Italy.
    rome_argument-03-11-1999.jpg
  • Rubbish and litter in the 1990s blocks the waterways of a canal, on 10th September 1994, in Stratford, east London, England. Algae and household pollution lies on the surface of the waters dug by navvies of the Victorian era when canals around Britain helped supply the industrial revolution with the raw ingredients to power the furnaces, mills and wharves of the transport age. This is a small outlet of the River Lea where the future 2012 Olympic Park would eventually be built - the waters once again freed from 20th century dereliction.
    river_pollution-10-09-1994.jpg
  • Crews from around the UK and Ireland compete in the annual Great River race on the river Thames, on 23rd September 1995, in London England.
    river_race-23-09-1995.jpg
  • The detail of diagonal rope that holds a ship in winter ice, on the Saint Lawrence River, on 11th January 1999, in Quebec City, Quebec, Canada.
    quebec_canada-11-01-1999.jpg
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