Derry in the 1930s: treasure trove of old photos to go under the hammer
The hoard was discovered in 1969, shortly after the blast ripped through the empty house in the Waterside area of the city, blowing out a wall of the property and bringing down part of the roof.
A member of the British Army team sent in to search the wrecked property found the boxes of glass plates hidden under the floorboards.
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Hide Ad“The search team’s initial thought was that the boxes - which were sealed and tightly wrapped in plastic - might contain ammunition,” said auctioneer Paul Cooper.
“When it was found that the contents of the boxes were glass negatives, everybody lost interest. They were never claimed and eventually ended up back with the soldier who recovered them.”
The five boxes contain 68 quarter plate glass negatives covering almost every imaginable aspect of pre-war life in the in the city and district including public events, parades, marches, youth activities, factory scenes, harvest festivals, dances, celebrations, major funerals and even country sports activities.
Mr. Cooper, a director of Scunthorpe-based auctioneers, CJM Asset Management, which has been instructed to sell the collection, added: “They’re pretty clearly Press photographs and our research indicates that they are a missing part of the photographic archive of the ‘Derry Standard,’ a local newspaper that closed down in 1966. Much of the archive was famously rescued from a skip after being dumped by builders who were renovating the newspaper’s old premises a couple of years after the closure.
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Hide Ad“Those plates are now part of the Derry Library’s Heritage Collection. However, it is known that some negatives were lost before two local men, David Bigger and Terence McDonald, realised what was happening and mounted their skip rescue operation.”
Mr. Cooper said that, despite being binned, bombed and buried, the plates remain in astonishingly good condition. “We’ve had a number of them scanned and printed and we’re bowled over by the pictures,” he added.
The collection is to go under the hammer in an online auction on Tuesday next, December 5.