-
Most viewed posts & pages
-
Recent Posts
- A convent education
- Astérix and the lost streets of Montparnasse
- The boating party
- Up Stairs. Down Stairs.
- Beer and sandwiches from the Brasserie Dauphine
- A museum of images in a garden of peace
- Napoleon slept here
- Lorette
- Edward Hopper in Paris
- Paris Camino, part two
- Paris Camino
- Reviving the charms of the concert-promenade
- Passage St-Pierre
- Saving Mary
- Madame Mozart dies in Paris
- The writing on the wall, part two
- The writing on the wall
- Rondo Parisien
- A Penny for a Dancer’s Son
- Red children and foundling wheels
- The strange case of the disappearing hotel
- Asylum
- A taste of France
- How blind people learned to write: the truth can be told
- Islands
What our readers think
ejanehunter on A convent education Isabelle Cochelin on A convent education Parisian Fields on A convent education ejanehunter on A convent education Trish on A convent education Blogroll
- Armchair Parisian
- Bonjour Paris
- Buttes Chaumont blog
- Days on the Claise
- Decoding Paris
- French Girl in Seattle
- French Today
- Girls' Guide to Paris
- Invisible Paris
- One quality, the finest
- Paris (Im)perfect
- ParisPerdu
- Part-time Parisian
- Restauranting Through History
- Rue Rude
- Sound Landscapes Paris
- Spotted by Locals
- Taste of France
- The Paris Blog
Tags
- Champs Elysees
- Charles Marville
- Eugene Atget
- French Revolution
- Georges-Eugène Haussmann
- Gustave Eiffel
- Gustave Rives
- Jardin du Luxembourg
- Les Grands Magasins Dufayel
- les Halles
- Louis XIV
- Montmartre
- Montparnasse
- Napoleon
- Napoleon Bonaparte
- Napoleon III
- Parc des Buttes Chaumont
- Parc Monceau
- Paris flood
- Paris postcards
- Petite Ceinture
- postcards
- Stanley Loomis
- Turgot map
- Val de Grace
Categories
Most liked posts & pages
Archives
Tag Archives: John King Morrison Hardi
Some corner of a foreign field
To the memory of Raymond Hummel, 1886–1916, and John Sieber, 1893–1917, and to the 166 men and 1 woman of Perth Academy who died in the Great War. The remains of my great-uncle Raymond Hummel lie in France, in a … Continue reading
Posted in Family history, World War I
Tagged Colincamps, Commonwealth War Graves Commission, Dar-es-Salaam, First World War, Flowers of the Forest, John Hardie, John King Morrison Hardi, John Lonsdale Sieber, Perth Academy, Raymond Hummel, Royal British Legion, Sucrerie Cemetery, University of Leeds, War diaries, West Yorkshire Regiment
26 Comments