Sepia Saturday 80: Service on the Home Front
For this week's Sepia Saturday post, I'm going to do something a little different, although still keeping broadly within Alan's theme. This will be an opportunity for readers to do a little detective work. Regular Photo-Sleuth readers will have a slight advantage, but it's not exclusive. Anyone is very welcome give it a go, and there is a small prize for the winner!


Click images to enlarge
These two images are scans of photographs from my aunt's family collection - not acquired images.
1. Who is the person depicted in the passport-style photo and standing at third from left in the group photo (full name, please), and what is his relationship to me?
2. When were these photographs taken? An approximate year or date range is sufficient.
3. What group(s) or organisation(s) did the other people in the second photograph belong to, and at what kind of place was the photo taken?
I don't think I need to give you any more clues than I have already, but if nobody's getting close by the end of the weekend, I may provide a nudge in the right direction.
The first reader to post all three correct answers as comments at the end of this blog post will win a free professional photohistorical evaluation of a Victorian or Edwardian portrait of their choice from their own family collection - see this sample report for an example. If nobody has answered all three correctly by the time the following Sepia Saturday goes to air (No 81 on 2 July), then I will judge the closest - or cleverest - answer to be the winner. Obviously, the more details you can provide in your answers, the better.
Good luck.
Click images to enlarge
These two images are scans of photographs from my aunt's family collection - not acquired images.
1. Who is the person depicted in the passport-style photo and standing at third from left in the group photo (full name, please), and what is his relationship to me?
2. When were these photographs taken? An approximate year or date range is sufficient.
3. What group(s) or organisation(s) did the other people in the second photograph belong to, and at what kind of place was the photo taken?
I don't think I need to give you any more clues than I have already, but if nobody's getting close by the end of the weekend, I may provide a nudge in the right direction.
The first reader to post all three correct answers as comments at the end of this blog post will win a free professional photohistorical evaluation of a Victorian or Edwardian portrait of their choice from their own family collection - see this sample report for an example. If nobody has answered all three correctly by the time the following Sepia Saturday goes to air (No 81 on 2 July), then I will judge the closest - or cleverest - answer to be the winner. Obviously, the more details you can provide in your answers, the better.
Good luck.
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