Leonard Cheshire, Baron Cheshire; Norman Cyril Jackson
6 of 15 portraits of Leonard Cheshire, Baron Cheshire
© National Portrait Gallery, London
Leonard Cheshire, Baron Cheshire; Norman Cyril Jackson
by London News Agency
bromide press print, 13 November 1945
5 3/4 in. x 8 in. (145 mm x 202 mm) image size
Transferred from Evening Standard Library, before 1983
Photographs Collection
NPG x184310
On display in Room 27 on Floor 2 at the National Portrait Gallery
Sittersback to top
- (Geoffrey) Leonard Cheshire, Baron Cheshire (1917-1992), World War II hero and founder of Homes for the Disabled. Sitter in 15 portraits.
- Norman Cyril Jackson (1919-1994), Flight Sergeant; recipient of the Victoria Cross. Sitter in 1 portrait.
Artistback to top
- London News Agency (1893-1996), Photographers. Artist or producer associated with 16 portraits.
Events of 1945back to top
Current affairs
Despite Churchill's popularity during, and indeed after, the War, Clement Attlee wins a landslide Labour victory in the general election. Labour's success was due to its promise of a better society through the Welfare state, and was demonstrative of the public's desire for a new and better post-War society.Art and science
Noel Coward's Brief Encounter is released. The film, based on Coward's play, Still Life, is about the love affair between two married people who meet at a railway station. Conscious of the risk of being caught the couple decide to break off their relationship to protect their marriages.George Orwell publishes his satirical novel Animal Farm, as an allegorical critique of Soviet Totalitarianism.
International
A war on two fronts finally proves too much for Germany as allied forces push from the East and West. On the 30th April Hitler committed suicide and Germany soon surrendered to Soviet troops. Victory in Europe was announced on the 8th May. War in the Pacific continued until America dropped atomic bombs on Hiroshima and Nagasaki, killing 214,000 people, and ending the war with Japan.Comments back to top
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