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'On the Terrace of the House of Commons' (including Sir James Fortescue-Flannery, 1st Bt and Sir Ernest Francis Swan Flower)

4 of 10 portraits of Sir Ernest Francis Swan Flower

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© National Portrait Gallery, London

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'On the Terrace of the House of Commons' (including Sir James Fortescue-Flannery, 1st Bt and Sir Ernest Francis Swan Flower)

by Benjamin Stone
platinum print, July 1899
6 1/8 in. x 8 in. (157 mm x 204 mm) image size
Given by House of Commons Library, 1974
Photographs Collection
NPG x134982

Sittersback to top

Artistback to top

  • Sir (John) Benjamin Stone (1838-1914), Politician and photographer. Artist or producer associated with 1436 portraits, Sitter in 28 portraits.

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Events of 1899back to top

Current affairs

George Nathaniel Curzon, Lord Curzon, is appointed Viceroy of India, pursuing a mixed policy of forceful control and conciliation. Curzon's inquiries into Indian administration result in legislation in areas including education, irrigation, and policing. The Board of Education is created to co-ordinate the work of higher grade elementary schools, county technical schools and endowed grammar schools, also setting up a register of teachers.

Art and science

The Italian Guglielmo Marconi transmits the first wireless telegraph, between France and England across the English Channel, a distance of 32 miles. Marconi's production of waves over long distances lays the foundations for the development of the radio. Later this year, Marconi demonstrates his invention in America, at the Cup yacht race, and for the American navy.

International

Outbreak of the second Boer war, fought between the British Empire and the two independent Boer Republics of the Orange Free State and the Transvaal. Despite a disastrous start, Britain quickly won the war, although guerilla warfare continued until 1902, leading to the introduction of concentration camps by British commander Lord Kitchener, a measure which contributes to the British public's growing disillusionment with the campaign.

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