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DUKAS_134458852_EYE
Family of Aberfan rescuer give stopped clock to Welsh museum. School clock recovered from the rubble 55 years ago will be put on display in Cardif.
Mike Flynn, whose father retrieved the clock from the school after the Aberfan disaster. It stopped on the time of the incident. Photographed at St Fagans ,Museum of Welsh Life, Cardiff.For more than half a century the modest clock has been respectfully protected – wrapped in dusters – by the family of the man who pulled it out of the rubble on that terrible day.
Now the Aberfan school clock, which stopped at 9.13am on 21 October 1966, the precise time an avalanche of coal waste crashed into classrooms and homes, claiming the lives of 116 children and 28 adults, is to go on display at a Welsh museum.
Mike Flynn, whose father was one of the rescuers who rushed to Pantglas junior school, handed the clock over to the permanent collection of Amgueddfa Cymru – National Museum Wales on Thursday.
The clock will be put on display in the “Wales Is” gallery at St Fagans National Museum of History in Cardiff from 16 February, a permanent, tangible reminder of one of the most tragic day in Welsh history.
Flynn described how his late father, also Mike Flynn, a postal worker and a paramedic in the Territorial Army, was among those who went to help as news began to emerge that slurry, coal waste and tailings had poured from the hillside into the village.
© Guardian / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
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(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
© Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_134458853_EYE
Family of Aberfan rescuer give stopped clock to Welsh museum. School clock recovered from the rubble 55 years ago will be put on display in Cardif.
Mike Flynn, whose father retrieved the clock from the school after the Aberfan disaster. It stopped on the time of the incident. Photographed at St Fagans ,Museum of Welsh Life, Cardiff.For more than half a century the modest clock has been respectfully protected – wrapped in dusters – by the family of the man who pulled it out of the rubble on that terrible day.
Now the Aberfan school clock, which stopped at 9.13am on 21 October 1966, the precise time an avalanche of coal waste crashed into classrooms and homes, claiming the lives of 116 children and 28 adults, is to go on display at a Welsh museum.
Mike Flynn, whose father was one of the rescuers who rushed to Pantglas junior school, handed the clock over to the permanent collection of Amgueddfa Cymru – National Museum Wales on Thursday.
The clock will be put on display in the “Wales Is” gallery at St Fagans National Museum of History in Cardiff from 16 February, a permanent, tangible reminder of one of the most tragic day in Welsh history.
Flynn described how his late father, also Mike Flynn, a postal worker and a paramedic in the Territorial Army, was among those who went to help as news began to emerge that slurry, coal waste and tailings had poured from the hillside into the village.
© Guardian / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
E: info@eyevine.com
http://www.eyevine.com
(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
© Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_134458854_EYE
Family of Aberfan rescuer give stopped clock to Welsh museum. School clock recovered from the rubble 55 years ago will be put on display in Cardif.
Mike Flynn, whose father retrieved the clock from the school after the Aberfan disaster. It stopped on the time of the incident. Photographed at St Fagans ,Museum of Welsh Life, Cardiff.For more than half a century the modest clock has been respectfully protected – wrapped in dusters – by the family of the man who pulled it out of the rubble on that terrible day.
Now the Aberfan school clock, which stopped at 9.13am on 21 October 1966, the precise time an avalanche of coal waste crashed into classrooms and homes, claiming the lives of 116 children and 28 adults, is to go on display at a Welsh museum.
Mike Flynn, whose father was one of the rescuers who rushed to Pantglas junior school, handed the clock over to the permanent collection of Amgueddfa Cymru – National Museum Wales on Thursday.
The clock will be put on display in the “Wales Is” gallery at St Fagans National Museum of History in Cardiff from 16 February, a permanent, tangible reminder of one of the most tragic day in Welsh history.
Flynn described how his late father, also Mike Flynn, a postal worker and a paramedic in the Territorial Army, was among those who went to help as news began to emerge that slurry, coal waste and tailings had poured from the hillside into the village.
© Guardian / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
E: info@eyevine.com
http://www.eyevine.com
(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
© Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_134458851_EYE
Family of Aberfan rescuer give stopped clock to Welsh museum. School clock recovered from the rubble 55 years ago will be put on display in Cardif.
Mike Flynn handing over the Aberfan clock to Sioned Williams, principal curator : Modern History. Photographed at St Fagans, Museum of Welsh Life, Cardiff.For more than half a century the modest clock has been respectfully protected – wrapped in dusters – by the family of the man who pulled it out of the rubble on that terrible day.
Now the Aberfan school clock, which stopped at 9.13am on 21 October 1966, the precise time an avalanche of coal waste crashed into classrooms and homes, claiming the lives of 116 children and 28 adults, is to go on display at a Welsh museum.
Mike Flynn, whose father was one of the rescuers who rushed to Pantglas junior school, handed the clock over to the permanent collection of Amgueddfa Cymru – National Museum Wales on Thursday.
The clock will be put on display in the “Wales Is” gallery at St Fagans National Museum of History in Cardiff from 16 February, a permanent, tangible reminder of one of the most tragic day in Welsh history.
Flynn described how his late father, also Mike Flynn, a postal worker and a paramedic in the Territorial Army, was among those who went to help as news began to emerge that slurry, coal waste and tailings had poured from the hillside into the village.
© Guardian / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
E: info@eyevine.com
http://www.eyevine.com
(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
© Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_134458849_EYE
Family of Aberfan rescuer give stopped clock to Welsh museum. School clock recovered from the rubble 55 years ago will be put on display in Cardif.
Mike Flynn, whose father retrieved the clock from the school after the Aberfan disaster. It stopped on the time of the incident. Photographed at St Fagans ,Museum of Welsh Life, Cardiff.For more than half a century the modest clock has been respectfully protected – wrapped in dusters – by the family of the man who pulled it out of the rubble on that terrible day.
Now the Aberfan school clock, which stopped at 9.13am on 21 October 1966, the precise time an avalanche of coal waste crashed into classrooms and homes, claiming the lives of 116 children and 28 adults, is to go on display at a Welsh museum.
Mike Flynn, whose father was one of the rescuers who rushed to Pantglas junior school, handed the clock over to the permanent collection of Amgueddfa Cymru – National Museum Wales on Thursday.
The clock will be put on display in the “Wales Is” gallery at St Fagans National Museum of History in Cardiff from 16 February, a permanent, tangible reminder of one of the most tragic day in Welsh history.
Flynn described how his late father, also Mike Flynn, a postal worker and a paramedic in the Territorial Army, was among those who went to help as news began to emerge that slurry, coal waste and tailings had poured from the hillside into the village.
© Guardian / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
E: info@eyevine.com
http://www.eyevine.com
(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
© Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_134458856_EYE
Family of Aberfan rescuer give stopped clock to Welsh museum. School clock recovered from the rubble 55 years ago will be put on display in Cardif.
The clock which was retreived from the school in Aberfan and is stopped on the time of the disaster. Photographed at St Fagans, Museum of Welsh Life, Cardiff.For more than half a century the modest clock has been respectfully protected – wrapped in dusters – by the family of the man who pulled it out of the rubble on that terrible day.
Now the Aberfan school clock, which stopped at 9.13am on 21 October 1966, the precise time an avalanche of coal waste crashed into classrooms and homes, claiming the lives of 116 children and 28 adults, is to go on display at a Welsh museum.
Mike Flynn, whose father was one of the rescuers who rushed to Pantglas junior school, handed the clock over to the permanent collection of Amgueddfa Cymru – National Museum Wales on Thursday.
The clock will be put on display in the “Wales Is” gallery at St Fagans National Museum of History in Cardiff from 16 February, a permanent, tangible reminder of one of the most tragic day in Welsh history.
Flynn described how his late father, also Mike Flynn, a postal worker and a paramedic in the Territorial Army, was among those who went to help as news began to emerge that slurry, coal waste and tailings had poured from the hillside into the village.
© Guardian / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
E: info@eyevine.com
http://www.eyevine.com
(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
© Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_134458855_EYE
Family of Aberfan rescuer give stopped clock to Welsh museum. School clock recovered from the rubble 55 years ago will be put on display in Cardif.
Mike Flynn, whose father retrieved the clock from the school after the Aberfan disaster. It stopped on the time of the incident. Photographed at St Fagans ,Museum of Welsh Life, Cardiff.For more than half a century the modest clock has been respectfully protected – wrapped in dusters – by the family of the man who pulled it out of the rubble on that terrible day.
Now the Aberfan school clock, which stopped at 9.13am on 21 October 1966, the precise time an avalanche of coal waste crashed into classrooms and homes, claiming the lives of 116 children and 28 adults, is to go on display at a Welsh museum.
Mike Flynn, whose father was one of the rescuers who rushed to Pantglas junior school, handed the clock over to the permanent collection of Amgueddfa Cymru – National Museum Wales on Thursday.
The clock will be put on display in the “Wales Is” gallery at St Fagans National Museum of History in Cardiff from 16 February, a permanent, tangible reminder of one of the most tragic day in Welsh history.
Flynn described how his late father, also Mike Flynn, a postal worker and a paramedic in the Territorial Army, was among those who went to help as news began to emerge that slurry, coal waste and tailings had poured from the hillside into the village.
© Guardian / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
E: info@eyevine.com
http://www.eyevine.com
(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
© Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_134458850_EYE
Family of Aberfan rescuer give stopped clock to Welsh museum. School clock recovered from the rubble 55 years ago will be put on display in Cardif.
Mike Flynn handing over the Aberfan clock to Sioned Williams, principal curator : Modern History. Photographed at St Fagans, Museum of Welsh Life, Cardiff.For more than half a century the modest clock has been respectfully protected – wrapped in dusters – by the family of the man who pulled it out of the rubble on that terrible day.
Now the Aberfan school clock, which stopped at 9.13am on 21 October 1966, the precise time an avalanche of coal waste crashed into classrooms and homes, claiming the lives of 116 children and 28 adults, is to go on display at a Welsh museum.
Mike Flynn, whose father was one of the rescuers who rushed to Pantglas junior school, handed the clock over to the permanent collection of Amgueddfa Cymru – National Museum Wales on Thursday.
The clock will be put on display in the “Wales Is” gallery at St Fagans National Museum of History in Cardiff from 16 February, a permanent, tangible reminder of one of the most tragic day in Welsh history.
Flynn described how his late father, also Mike Flynn, a postal worker and a paramedic in the Territorial Army, was among those who went to help as news began to emerge that slurry, coal waste and tailings had poured from the hillside into the village.
© Guardian / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
E: info@eyevine.com
http://www.eyevine.com
(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
© Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_133567783_EYE
Introducing our 10 best debut novelists of 2022.
We talk to the authors of the most exciting first-time novels of the year, exploring everything from the English civil war to Instagram, TV chefs to knife crime.
"With writing, you have to know the smells, the sounds"
When she was a child, Jo Browning Wroe and her family went to live in a crematorium in Birmingham where her father had got a job as superintendent.
Jo photographed in the Guardian Studio in London.
Jo's first novel is called "A Terrible Kindness" about a young enbalmer who f=goes to help in the wake of the Aberfan disaster in Wales. Jo Browning Wroe grew up in a crematorium in Birmingham. She has an MA in Creative Writing from the University of East Anglia and is now Creative Writing Supervisor at Lucy Cavendish College, Cambridge. Her debut novel, A Terrible Kindness, was shortlisted for the Bridport Peggy Chapman-Andrews award.
© Antonio Olmos / Guardian / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
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(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
© Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_133948118_EYE
Introducing our 10 best debut novelists of 2022.
We talk to the authors of the most exciting first-time novels of the year, exploring everything from the English civil war to Instagram, TV chefs to knife crime.
"With writing, you have to know the smells, the sounds"
When she was a child, Jo Browning Wroe and her family went to live in a crematorium in Birmingham where her father had got a job as superintendent.
Jo photographed in the Guardian Studio in London.
Jo's first novel is called "A Terrible Kindness" about a young enbalmer who f=goes to help in the wake of the Aberfan disaster in Wales. Jo Browning Wroe grew up in a crematorium in Birmingham. She has an MA in Creative Writing from the University of East Anglia and is now Creative Writing Supervisor at Lucy Cavendish College, Cambridge. Her debut novel, A Terrible Kindness, was shortlisted for the Bridport Peggy Chapman-Andrews award.
© Antonio Olmos / Guardian / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
E: info@eyevine.com
http://www.eyevine.com
(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
© Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUK10105567_018
PEOPLE - Die Dreharbeiten zu The Crown laufen auf Hochtouren
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Wales News and Pictures/REX/Shutterstock (9914524h)
Olivia Colman as Queen Elizabeth II filming a scene from the Aberfan disaster in the South Wales valleys.
'The Crown' TV series filming, South Wales, UK - 04 Oct 2018
(c) Dukas -
DUK10105567_017
PEOPLE - Die Dreharbeiten zu The Crown laufen auf Hochtouren
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Wales News and Pictures/REX/Shutterstock (9914524e)
Olivia Colman as Queen Elizabeth II filming a scene from the Aberfan disaster in the South Wales valleys.
'The Crown' TV series filming, South Wales, UK - 04 Oct 2018
(c) Dukas -
DUK10105567_016
PEOPLE - Die Dreharbeiten zu The Crown laufen auf Hochtouren
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Wales News and Pictures/REX/Shutterstock (9914524i)
Olivia Colman as Queen Elizabeth II filming a scene from the Aberfan disaster in the South Wales valleys.
'The Crown' TV series filming, South Wales, UK - 04 Oct 2018
(c) Dukas -
DUK10105567_015
PEOPLE - Die Dreharbeiten zu The Crown laufen auf Hochtouren
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Wales News and Pictures/REX/Shutterstock (9914524l)
Olivia Colman as Queen Elizabeth II filming a scene from the Aberfan disaster in the South Wales valleys.
'The Crown' TV series filming, South Wales, UK - 04 Oct 2018
(c) Dukas -
DUK10105567_014
PEOPLE - Die Dreharbeiten zu The Crown laufen auf Hochtouren
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Wales News and Pictures/REX/Shutterstock (9914524g)
Olivia Colman as Queen Elizabeth II filming a scene from the Aberfan disaster in the South Wales valleys.
'The Crown' TV series filming, South Wales, UK - 04 Oct 2018
(c) Dukas -
DUK10105567_013
PEOPLE - Die Dreharbeiten zu The Crown laufen auf Hochtouren
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Wales News and Pictures/REX/Shutterstock (9914524j)
Olivia Colman as Queen Elizabeth II filming a scene from the Aberfan disaster in the South Wales valleys.
'The Crown' TV series filming, South Wales, UK - 04 Oct 2018
(c) Dukas -
DUK10105567_012
PEOPLE - Die Dreharbeiten zu The Crown laufen auf Hochtouren
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Wales News and Pictures/REX/Shutterstock (9914524k)
Olivia Colman as Queen Elizabeth II filming a scene from the Aberfan disaster in the South Wales valleys.
'The Crown' TV series filming, South Wales, UK - 04 Oct 2018
(c) Dukas -
DUK10105567_011
PEOPLE - Die Dreharbeiten zu The Crown laufen auf Hochtouren
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Wales News and Pictures/REX/Shutterstock (9914524b)
Olivia Colman as Queen Elizabeth II filming a scene from the Aberfan disaster in the South Wales valleys.
'The Crown' TV series filming, South Wales, UK - 04 Oct 2018
(c) Dukas -
DUK10105567_021
PEOPLE - Die Dreharbeiten zu The Crown laufen auf Hochtouren
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Wales News and Pictures/REX/Shutterstock (9914535f)
Film crew working on Netflix series The Crown filming in Cwmaman, South Wales.
Scenes being shot are set around the time of the Aberfan disaster in October 1966.
Pictured are mourners during filming of a funeral procession.
'The Crown' TV series filming, Wales, UK - 03 Oct 2018
(c) Dukas -
DUK10105567_010
PEOPLE - Die Dreharbeiten zu The Crown laufen auf Hochtouren
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Wales News and Pictures/REX/Shutterstock (9914535a)
Film crew working on Netflix series 'The Crown' filming in Cwmaman, South Wales.
Scenes being shot are set around the time of the Aberfan disaster in October 1966.
Pictured is a convoy of hearses during filming of a funeral procession.
'The Crown' TV series filming, Wales, UK - 03 Oct 2018
(c) Dukas -
DUK10105567_009
PEOPLE - Die Dreharbeiten zu The Crown laufen auf Hochtouren
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Wales News and Pictures/REX/Shutterstock (9914535b)
Film crew working on Netflix series The Crown filming in Cwmaman, South Wales.
Scenes being shot are set around the time of the Aberfan disaster in October 1966.
Pictured is a convoy of hearses during filming of a funeral procession.
'The Crown' TV series filming, Wales, UK - 03 Oct 2018
(c) Dukas -
DUK10105567_004
PEOPLE - Die Dreharbeiten zu The Crown laufen auf Hochtouren
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Wales News and Pictures/REX/Shutterstock (9914535h)
Game of Thrones and Outlander actor Tobias Menzies, who has taken over from Matt Smith in the role of Prince Phillip in Netflix series The Crown, filming scenes in Cwmaman, South Wales.
The car is a 1961 Rolls Royce Phantom.
Scenes being shot are set around the time of the Aberfan disaster in October 1966.
'The Crown' TV series filming, Wales, UK - 03 Oct 2018
(c) Dukas -
DUK10105567_003
PEOPLE - Die Dreharbeiten zu The Crown laufen auf Hochtouren
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Wales News and Pictures/REX/Shutterstock (9914535i)
Game of Thrones and Outlander actor Tobias Menzies, who has taken over from Matt Smith in the role of Prince Phillip in Netflix series The Crown, filming scenes in Cwmaman, South Wales.
The car is a 1961 Rolls Royce Phantom.
Scenes being shot are set around the time of the Aberfan disaster in October 1966.
'The Crown' TV series filming, Wales, UK - 03 Oct 2018
(c) Dukas -
DUK10105567_002
PEOPLE - Die Dreharbeiten zu The Crown laufen auf Hochtouren
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Wales News and Pictures/REX/Shutterstock (9914535c)
Film crew working on Netflix series The Crown filming in Cwmaman, South Wales.
Scenes being shot are set around the time of the Aberfan disaster in October 1966.
Pictured are mourners during filming of a funeral procession.
'The Crown' TV series filming, Wales, UK - 03 Oct 2018
(c) Dukas -
DUK10105567_001
PEOPLE - Die Dreharbeiten zu The Crown laufen auf Hochtouren
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Wales News and Pictures/REX/Shutterstock (9914535d)
Film crew working on Netflix series The Crown filming in Cwmaman, South Wales.
Scenes being shot are set around the time of the Aberfan disaster in October 1966.
Pictured is a convoy of hearses during filming of a funeral procession.
'The Crown' TV series filming, Wales, UK - 03 Oct 2018
(c) Dukas -
DUKAS_23515134_GOF
Royal Visit To South Ways Final Day
27th April, 2012: The Queen and The Duke of Edinburgh officially opened Ynysowen Community Primary School in Aberfan, South Wales.
Credit: Ken Goff Rota/GoffPhotos.com Ref: KGC-22
**No UK Sales Until 28 Days After Create Date** (FOTO: DUKAS/GOFF)
DUKAS/GOFF -
DUKAS_23515122_GOF
Royal Visit To South Ways Final Day
27th April, 2012: The Queen and The Duke of Edinburgh officially opened Ynysowen Community Primary School in Aberfan, South Wales. Here, The Queen with leader of the council, Jeff Edwards, who was the last child pulled out of the school in the 1966 disaster.
Credit: Ken Goff Rota/GoffPhotos.com Ref: KGC-22
**No UK Sales Until 28 Days After Create Date** (FOTO: DUKAS/GOFF)
DUKAS/GOFF -
DUKAS_23507981_REX
Queen Elizabeth II official visit to Aberfan, Wales, Britain - 27 Apr 2012
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Tim Rooke / Rex Features (1704068t)
Queen Elizabeth II
Queen Elizabeth II official visit to Aberfan, Wales, Britain - 27 Apr 2012
Queen Elizabeth II and Prince Philip officially open Ynysowen Community Primary School in Aberfan. Queen Elizabeth II was presented a book about the Aberfan tragedy by Jeff Edwards one of the last children to be pulled from the school ruins in 1966.
(FOTO:DUKAS/REX)
DUKAS/REX -
DUKAS_23507976_REX
Queen Elizabeth II official visit to Aberfan, Wales, Britain - 27 Apr 2012
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Tim Rooke / Rex Features (1704068w)
Queen Elizabeth II
Queen Elizabeth II official visit to Aberfan, Wales, Britain - 27 Apr 2012
Queen Elizabeth II and Prince Philip officially open Ynysowen Community Primary School in Aberfan. Queen Elizabeth II was presented a book about the Aberfan tragedy by Jeff Edwards one of the last children to be pulled from the school ruins in 1966.
(FOTO:DUKAS/REX)
DUKAS/REX -
DUK10042120_051
NEWS - 60 Jahre nach der Katastrophe von Aberfan
Rescue workers still toil in the black slime 28 hours after it had slipped down the man made mountain of coal waste and engulfed the Pantglas Junior School and some houses of Aberfan, Wales, on Friday 21st October 1966
Ref: B196_095074_3108
Date: 16.08.2002
Compulsory Credit: UPPA/Photoshot
21st October 1966 – Aberfan disaster: A slag heap collapses on the village of Aberfan in Wales, killing 144 people, mostly schoolchildren. (FOTO: DUKAS/PHOTOSHOT)
(c) Dukas -
DUK10042120_011
NEWS - 60 Jahre nach der Katastrophe von Aberfan
Aberfan disaster - 1966
Mourning.
Aberfan, Wales : Some of the enormous crowd of mourners are pictured at the graveside during the funeral service and burial of 80 children and one adult here today, 27th October.
They perished in the 21st October avalanche of sludge which overwhelmed the village in general and the school in particular when the coal tip slipped.
27 October 1966 (FOTO:DUKAS/TOPFOTO)
(c) Dukas -
DUK10042120_066
NEWS - 60 Jahre nach der Katastrophe von Aberfan
AVALANCHE AT ABERFAN - At least 71 people, mostly children have been killed at Aberfan, near Merthyr Tydfil, South Wales, after a rain-soaked coal tip avalanched on an infants school, a farm and a row of houses. Eighty-five children are safe and 36 are in hospital. Photo shows: General view showing Wreckage after the disaster at Aberfan. Date: 22.10.1966. Ref: PAB598902 . COMPULSORY CREDIT: Bandphoto /UPPA/Photoshot
21st October 1966 – Aberfan disaster: A slag heap collapses on the village of Aberfan in Wales, killing 144 people, mostly schoolchildren. (FOTO: DUKAS/PHOTOSHOT)
(c) Dukas -
DUK10042120_065
NEWS - 60 Jahre nach der Katastrophe von Aberfan
AVALANCHE AT ABERFAN - At least 71 people, mostly children have been killed at Aberfan, near Merthyr Tydfil, South Wales, after a rain-soaked coal tip avalanched on an infants school, a farm and a row of houses. Eighty-five children are safe and 36 are in hospital. Photo shows: Rescue workers dig among the rubble. Date: 22.10.1966. Ref: PAB598904 . COMPULSORY CREDIT: Bandphoto /UPPA/Photoshot
21st October 1966 – Aberfan disaster: A slag heap collapses on the village of Aberfan in Wales, killing 144 people, mostly schoolchildren. (FOTO: DUKAS/PHOTOSHOT)
(c) Dukas -
DUK10042120_064
NEWS - 60 Jahre nach der Katastrophe von Aberfan
AVALANCHE AT ABERFAN - At least 71 people, mostly children have been killed at Aberfan, near Merthyr Tydfil, South Wales, after a rain-soaked coal tip avalanched on an infants school, a farm and a row of houses. Eighty-five children are safe and 36 are in hospital. Photo shows: Rescue workers dig among the rubble following the disaster at Aberfan. Date: 22.10.1966. Ref: PAB598905 . COMPULSORY CREDIT: Bandphoto /UPPA/Photoshot
21st October 1966 – Aberfan disaster: A slag heap collapses on the village of Aberfan in Wales, killing 144 people, mostly schoolchildren. (FOTO: DUKAS/PHOTOSHOT)
(c) Dukas -
DUK10042120_060
NEWS - 60 Jahre nach der Katastrophe von Aberfan
AVALANCHE AT ABERFAN - At least 71 people, mostly children have been killed at Aberfan, near Merthyr Tydfil, South Wales, after a rain-soaked coal tip avalanched on an infants school, a farm and a row of houses. Eighty-five children are safe and 36 are in hospital. Photo shows: One of the houses which was engulfed by the avalanche of the killer coal slagheap in Aberfan. Date: 22.10.1966. Ref: PAB598914 . COMPULSORY CREDIT: Bandphoto /UPPA/Photoshot
21st October 1966 – Aberfan disaster: A slag heap collapses on the village of Aberfan in Wales, killing 144 people, mostly schoolchildren. (FOTO: DUKAS/PHOTOSHOT)
(c) Dukas -
DUK10042120_059
NEWS - 60 Jahre nach der Katastrophe von Aberfan
AVALANCHE AT ABERFAN - At least 71 people, mostly children have been killed at Aberfan, near Merthyr Tydfil, South Wales, after a rain-soaked coal tip avalanched on an infants school, a farm and a row of houses. Eighty-five children are safe and 36 are in hospital. Photo shows: One of the victims is carried to an ambulance. Date: 22.10.1966. Ref: PAB598903 . COMPULSORY CREDIT: Bandphoto /UPPA/Photoshot
21st October 1966 – Aberfan disaster: A slag heap collapses on the village of Aberfan in Wales, killing 144 people, mostly schoolchildren. (FOTO: DUKAS/PHOTOSHOT)
(c) Dukas -
DUK10042120_058
NEWS - 60 Jahre nach der Katastrophe von Aberfan
AVALANCHE AT ABERFAN - At least 71 people, mostly children have been killed at Aberfan, near Merthyr Tydfil, South Wales, after a rain-soaked coal tip avalanched on an infants school, a farm and a row of houses. Eighty-five children are safe and 36 are in hospital. Photo shows: The search goes on inside the tomb of the school at Aberfan. Date: 22.10.1966. Ref: PAB598915 . COMPULSORY CREDIT: Bandphoto /UPPA/Photoshot
21st October 1966 – Aberfan disaster: A slag heap collapses on the village of Aberfan in Wales, killing 144 people, mostly schoolchildren. (FOTO: DUKAS/PHOTOSHOT)
(c) Dukas -
DUK10042120_057
NEWS - 60 Jahre nach der Katastrophe von Aberfan
AVALANCHE AT ABERFAN - At least 71 people, mostly children have been killed at Aberfan, near Merthyr Tydfil, South Wales, after a rain-soaked coal tip avalanched on an infants school, a farm and a row of houses. Eighty-five children are safe and 36 are in hospital. Photo shows: The search goes on inside the tomb of the school at Aberfan. Date: 22.10.1966. Ref: PAB598906 . COMPULSORY CREDIT: Bandphoto /UPPA/Photoshot
21st October 1966 – Aberfan disaster: A slag heap collapses on the village of Aberfan in Wales, killing 144 people, mostly schoolchildren. (FOTO: DUKAS/PHOTOSHOT)
(c) Dukas -
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Mandatory Credit: Photo by ITV/REX Shutterstock (509207ad)
PETER SELLERS AT 'THE ABERFAN CHARITY SHOW' - 1966
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(FOTO:DUKAS/REX)
Peter Sellers würde 90 Jahre alt werden
DUKAS/REX