This poster is the front cover of the Newspaper/Gazette, Rosta. Note: For citation purposes check full catalogue reference indicated in Finding aids field.
This poster displays numerous pie charts describing party composition at a regional level. Note: For citation purposes check full catalogue reference indicated in Finding aids field.
Scene showing children and nursery nurses in the garden of a children's creche. The children are all involved in group activities. In the distance, smoke is seen rising from the chimney of a red brick factory. The title appears above the picture. Under the picture is a lengthy quote from Lenin advocating the establishment of communal nurseries. Printer: Krasnyi proletarii (Red Proletariat) Publisher: Ogiz-Izogiz Place of Production: Moscow or Leningrad Note: For citation purposes check full catalogue reference indicated in Finding aids field.
Poster in two sections, joined down the middle. On one side, a crying baby sits beside a broom and bucket. In the second, a happy baby, sitting on a chair, plays with toys, while other children frolic in the background. Published at Moscow Note: For citation purposes check full catalogue reference indicated in Finding aids field.
A collection of posters drawn from four different collections held at LSE archives. The ‘Political and Tariff Reform Posters’ series includes a selection of political posters produced by various British political parties and the Tariff Reform League from 1892 – 1910. The ‘London County Council Election 1907’ series includes a selection of campaigning posters and papers produced for that election. The ‘British Labour Delegation to Russia’ series includes propaganda posters, papers, gazettes and newspaper articles collected by the Delegation during their visit to Soviet Russia in 1920. The ‘Russia Childcare Posters’ series includes posters produced by the Soviet Ministry of Health (Ministerstvo zdravookhraneniya) from 1930 – 1931, instructing parents on how to take care of their children’s health.
Bannerman and John Bull are shown walking arm in arm along a pleasant street. In the foreground, hidden from their view, an Irish nationalist is waiting with a gun and a club. He is unshaven, and wears a mask, a green jacket, and a hat with Home Rule written acorss the front. Artist: E Huskinson Printer: Hill, Sifken and Co. Publisher: Conservative Central Office Place of Production: London Note: For citation purposes check full catalogue reference indicated in Finding aids field.
Spoof on the fairy story Babes in the Wood, with two Radicals (Bannerman and John Morley) dressed as children, walking through the thorny undergrowth of Little England between trees with grim faces called Home Rule, Alien Question and Education. Colour panel with small text banner top and bottom. Artist: E Huskinson Printer: McCorquodale and Co Ltd Publisher: Printer Place of Production: London Note: For citation purposes check full catalogue reference indicated in Finding aids field.
Music hall style poster showing John Redmond as a ventriloquist with Bannerman as his mannequin, balanced on his knee. Artist: Unknown Printer: A White and Co Publisher: Conservative Central Office Place of Production: London Note: For citation purposes check full catalogue reference indicated in Finding aids field.
Scene outside a mine in the Transvaal, with Campbell-Bannerman addressing a British workman in a bowler hat and good suit. Cartoon Chinese workers are seen in the background. Bannerman is sympathising with the British man about the Chinese workers taking away all his work, but the workman disagrees, saying that "for every nine coolies, there's a white man gettin' a 1 a day to boss 'em. Artist: Unknown Printer: McCorquodale and Co Ltd Publisher: Printer Place of Production: London Note: For citation purposes check full catalogue reference indicated in Finding aids field.
Bannerman is shown in a brass bed, a Union flag hanging like a curtain to the left. He it sitting up, dressed in a nightshirt and night cap, staring at a realistically-portayed drowned black cat, which is walking across the bed towards him. It has red rolling eyes, and bricks attached to its paws reading 1886 and 1895. Artist: Unknown Printer: McCorquodale and Co Ltd Publisher: Printer Place of Production: London Note: For citation purposes check full catalogue reference indicated in Finding aids field.
Black ink on green paper, with a cartoon of John Redmond raising his fist, and a quote of Redmond's regarding home rule, produced for the Unionist Party. Artist: Unknown Printer: Dobson, Molle and Co. Publisher: Printer Place of Production: London Note: For citation purposes check full catalogue reference indicated in Finding aids field.
Campbell-Bannerman stands at the top of a flight of steps (called Radicalism, Inefficient Army and Navy, Home Rule, and Disunited Empire) that lead from the sunlight down into a dark and fetid pool called Ruin. He appears to be trying to persuade John Bull to walk down the steps in front of him. Artist: Unknown Printer: Hill, Sifken and Co. Publisher: Conservative Central Office PLace of Production: London Note: For citation purposes check full catalogue reference indicated in Finding aids field.