The site has been given a new look, with the option of commenting on the clips. Some of the descriptions are horribly misinformed, and I've been going along doing a bit of correcting/improving. Feel free to join in. It's well worth a trawl through.
Some items that have emerged:
A parade for the Shah of Persia in 1919, allegedly. A couple of pleasant surprises towards the end:
"Sometimes things that are not true are included in Wikipedia. While at first glance that may appear like a very great problem for Wikipedia, in reality is it not. In fact, it's a good thing." - Wikipedia.
Oh, for shame James, you old crutch-kicker you. Made by disabled veterans at the Lord Roberts Memorial Workshops. They, like the members of Impey Barbicane's Baltimore Gun Club, having
"Crutches, wooden legs, artificial arms, steel hooks, caoutchouc jaws, silver craniums,
platinum noses, were all to be found in the collection; and it
was calculated by the great statistician Pitcairn that throughout
the Gun Club there was not quite one arm between four persons
and two legs between six."
Ah. I have subsequently discovered that, and am embarrassed. My only mitigation is that the archivist does not seem to have realised that it isn't an actual Tank, whereas one might hope that someone in that line of business would.
Anyhoo, moving on; in the turn-out for the Shah, it is interesting that the rear is brought up by a Medium Mk C and what looks like a pair of U.S. artillery tractors, 10-ton and 5-ton. Never occurred to me that some might have ended up in British hands. Someone was kind enough to quote the figure for tractors shipped to France - over 1,000 IIRC, so it makes sense. Whether they were an official purchase or some other arrangement, couldn't say.
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"Sometimes things that are not true are included in Wikipedia. While at first glance that may appear like a very great problem for Wikipedia, in reality is it not. In fact, it's a good thing." - Wikipedia.