Film: IWM (IWM 572)

Object Details

Category
Film
Related period
First World War (production), First World War (content)
Creator
Admiralty (Production sponsor)
Production date
1918
Place made
GB
Dimensions

whole: Number Of Items/reels/tapes 1

Catalogue number
IWM 572

Our collections information

We have over 1.7 million object records online, and we are adding to this all the time. Our records are never finished. Sometimes we discover new information that changes what we know about an object, such as who made it or used it. Sometimes we change how an object is interpreted. We sometimes make mistakes in our spelling, transcription or categorisation, or miss information out of our records.

Read more about our collections and the information we hold. Developing our collections information

If you have concerns about the language in this record, or you have information to improve it, please share your feedback.

We receive a lot of comments and can't respond to each one, but we do read them all and will respond where we can.

Related content

Albert Ball was one of the United Kingdom’s highest-scoring air aces.
First World War

8 Celebrity Air Aces Of The First World War

Aviation was one of the most romanticised elements of the First World War. 'Air aces' in particular achieved celebrity status both during and after the war and their photographs regularly appeared in newspapers. Of the eight aces listed here, seven were killed in action between 1916 and 1918 or died in flying accidents during or after the war.

Wounded British soldier holding his steel helmet, which has been pierced by a piece of shrapnel, during fighting on the Somme Front near Hamel in December 1916.
IWM
First World War

Whizz Bangs And Wind-Ups: 10 Tommy Slang Terms

During the First World War, British soldiers used language in inventive and often humorous ways. The words and phrases they used reflected everything from the dull routines of service to the traumas of front line action, often tinged with characteristic black humour and irony.

 

A coiled snake covered with pink, white, amber, blue, black and brown beads. In its mouth a beaded mouse-like animal of green, orange, purple, white, pink and red beads.
First World War

5 Handmade Objects Crafted By First World War POWs

Within the first six months of the First World War, more than 1.3 million prisoners were held in Europe. Prisoners of war of all nations produced a wide variety of handmade items. Some of these filled practical requirements, some were a way of coping with the monotony of captivity, while others were intended as a means of earning money for cigarettes or other comforts.