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L Aw Collection (page 10)

From the historic halls of Middle Temple to the bustling streets of London, 'l aw' encompasses a world of justice and order

Background imageL Aw Collection: Union Workhouse, Doncaster, South Yorkshire

Union Workhouse, Doncaster, South Yorkshire
The Doncaster Union workhouse opened in 1900 at Springwell Lane, Balby, replacing the previous premises at Hexthorpe Lane

Background imageL Aw Collection: An Edwardian lawyer in judges wig

An Edwardian lawyer in judges wig
An unidentified Edwardian lawyer in a full-length judges wig

Background imageL Aw Collection: Wordsley Hospital, Stourbridge, Worcestershire

Wordsley Hospital, Stourbridge, Worcestershire
Main building and clock tower at Wordsley Hospital at Kingswinford, Stourbridge, Worcestershire, which was previously the Stourbridge Union workhouse

Background imageL Aw Collection: Union Workhouse, Ticehurst and Flimwell, Sussex

Union Workhouse, Ticehurst and Flimwell, Sussex
The Ticehurst Union workhouse on Union Street, Ticehurst and Flimwell, Sussex. A uniformed policeman stands at the gate. The workhouse, erected in 1835, was designed by Sampson Kempthorne

Background imageL Aw Collection: Bagthorpe Military Hospital, Nottingham

Bagthorpe Military Hospital, Nottingham
Soldiers and nurses pose in front of the Bagthorpe Military Hospital - the First World War guise of Nottinghams workhouse infirmary, now part of the City Hospital

Background imageL Aw Collection: Wayland Hospital, Attleborough, Norfolk

Wayland Hospital, Attleborough, Norfolk
Wayland Hospital, originally the Wayland Unions workhouse infirmary, erected at Attleborough, Norfolk, in 1912-13

Background imageL Aw Collection: Union Workhouse, New Cross, Wolverhampton, Staffordshire

Union Workhouse, New Cross, Wolverhampton, Staffordshire
Aerial view of the Wolverhampton Union workhouse at New Cross, Wednesfield (then Staffordshire, today part of the West Midlands district), opened in 1903 and designed by Arthur Marshall

Background imageL Aw Collection: St Lukes Military Hospital, Halifax, West Yorkshire

St Lukes Military Hospital, Halifax, West Yorkshire
St Lukes Hospital at Skircoat, Halifax, West Yorkshire, during its First World War occupation as a military hospital. It opened in 1901 as the Halifax Union workhouse infirmary

Background imageL Aw Collection: St Pancras Schools, Leavesden, Hertfordshire

St Pancras Schools, Leavesden, Hertfordshire
The St Pancras Schools at Leavesden In Hertfordshire. The schools were opened in by the St Pancras Board of Guardians in 1872 to house pauper children in the countryside away from the workhouse

Background imageL Aw Collection: Union Workhouse, Rugby, Warwickshire

Union Workhouse, Rugby, Warwickshire
The Rugby Union workhouse on Lower Hillmorton Road, Rugby, Warwickshire. The view, seen from the Guardians Board Room, shows the main workhouse building (right of centre)

Background imageL Aw Collection: Union Workhouse, Chard, Somerset

Union Workhouse, Chard, Somerset
The Chard Union workhouse, also known locally as Sunnylands, in Chard, Somerset. The people in front are presumably the master and matron (right) and porter and nurse (left)

Background imageL Aw Collection: Alexandra of Hohenlohe-Langenburg with her children

Alexandra of Hohenlohe-Langenburg with her children
Princess Alexandra of Edinburgh and Saxe-Coburg, Princess Ernst of Hohenlohe-Langenburg with her daughters and future son-in-law in 1915: (l to r) Princess Irma, Alexandra herself

Background imageL Aw Collection: Police Tea Break

Police Tea Break
A Metropolitan Police officer drinking a cup of tea break on Derby Day. In 1947 over 16 million cups of tea were drunk by the Metropolitan Police

Background imageL Aw Collection: Police Charge Room

Police Charge Room
Police charge room in a police station Metropolitan Police

Background imageL Aw Collection: Police in Uniform 1977

Police in Uniform 1977
WPC wearing Surrey cap and PC wearing Queen Elizabeth II helmet plate, EIIR Metropolitan Police

Background imageL Aw Collection: Mile End Old Town Workhouse, East London

Mile End Old Town Workhouse, East London
Previously part of the Stepney Union, Mile End Old Town in East London became an independent Poor Law Hamlet in 1857. The following year, work began on its new workhouse located on Bancroft Road

Background imageL Aw Collection: Boundary Park Hospital, Oldham, Lancashire

Boundary Park Hospital, Oldham, Lancashire
Arched entrance to Boundary Park Municipal Hospital, Rochdale Road, Oldham, Lancashire. The hospital began life in 1851 as the Oldham Union workhouse

Background imageL Aw Collection: Meharistes, Soldiers Of The Desert, annual camel race

Meharistes, Soldiers Of The Desert, annual camel race. A Mehariste on his camel ready for the the start of the race.All the jockeys are in traditional costume especially for the occasion

Background imageL Aw Collection: Newgate Prison Closed

Newgate Prison Closed
Newgate Prison closed down and auctioned off in pieces

Background imageL Aw Collection: Police Officer Uniform

Police Officer Uniform
Police officer in uniform. Metropolitan Police

Background imageL Aw Collection: Ark of the Covenant

Ark of the Covenant
Ceremonial objects : THE ARK OF THE COVENANT containing the tables of the Law; it was built by Belazeel and carried by the sons of Levi during the wanderings

Background imageL Aw Collection: Industrial School, Kirkdale, Liverpool

Industrial School, Kirkdale, Liverpool
The driveway of the Industrial School at Kirkdale opened in 1845 by Liverpools poor law authority. The School housed and educated more than a thousand pauper children away from the workhouse

Background imageL Aw Collection: Smithdown Road Workhouse, Toxteth Park, Liverpool

Smithdown Road Workhouse, Toxteth Park, Liverpool
The Smithdown Road Workhouse, built in 1859 by Liverpools Toxteth Park poor law authority. Date: 1925

Background imageL Aw Collection: NEWTON: CARTOON, 1763. Caricature satirizing Sir Isaac Newtons laws of gravity

NEWTON: CARTOON, 1763. Caricature satirizing Sir Isaac Newtons laws of gravity, showing nine men having their heads weighed at a weighing house

Background imageL Aw Collection: Trial of Roderick MacLean

Trial of Roderick MacLean
Roderick MacLean attempted to assassinate Queen Victoria and was tried for high treason at Reading Assizes. MacLean stands to the right and looks ahead to the judges

Background imageL Aw Collection: Harraby Hill House Band, Carlisle

Harraby Hill House Band, Carlisle
The boys band at Harraby Hill House, Carlisle - a home run by the Carlisle poor law union to house children away from the workhouse. The building was formerly St Cuthberts parish workhouse. Date: 1904

Background imageL Aw Collection: Young Woman from Muscat, Oman

Young Woman from Muscat, Oman Date: circa 1910s

Background imageL Aw Collection: Poor law childrens hospital ward

Poor law childrens hospital ward
A childrens hospital ward, though to be in a workhouse or poor law infirmary. In the scene are nurses, patients, cot beds, babys crib, and a playpen. Date: circa 1912

Background imageL Aw Collection: Highwaymen punished

Highwaymen punished
A new plan is proposed fo the punishment of highwaymen by hard labour on the roads. Date: 18th Century

Background imageL Aw Collection: Gregor Mendel, caricature

Gregor Mendel, caricature
Gregor Mendel (1822-1884). Caricature of the Austrian botanist and founder of genetics Gregor Johann Mendel. Mendel, the abbot of an abbey in Brno, Austria

Background imageL Aw Collection: CODE OF HAMMURABI. Detail of top of black basalt stele, c1792-1750. B. C

CODE OF HAMMURABI. Detail of top of black basalt stele, c1792-1750. B. C
CODE OF HAMMURABI. Detail of top of black basalt stele, c1792-1750. B.C

Background imageL Aw Collection: Marylands religious tolerance law, 1600s

Marylands religious tolerance law, 1600s
Religious Toleration Act of colonial Maryland, 1649. Printed halftone reproduction with a watercolor wash

Background imageL Aw Collection: PPRE2A-00060

PPRE2A-00060
John Quincy Adams in Congress defending the right of petition. Hand-colored woodcut of a 19th-century illustration

Background imageL Aw Collection: US Supreme Court hearing a Mississippi injunction case, 1867

US Supreme Court hearing a Mississippi injunction case, 1867
US Supreme Court under Chief Justice Salmon P. Chase hearing the Mississippi injunction case, 1867. Hand-colored woodcut of a 19th-century illustration

Background imageL Aw Collection: PPRT2A-00007

PPRT2A-00007
Andrew Hamiltons defense of John Peter Zenger, establishing freedom of the press in the American colonies, 1734-1735. Hand-colored halftone of a 19th-century illustration

Background imageL Aw Collection: Parade in Manhattan celebrating the new US Constitution

Parade in Manhattan celebrating the new US Constitution
" Ship of state" parade on Wall Street, honoring Alexander Hamilton and the new U.S. Constitution, New York City, 1787. Hand-colored woodcut of a 19th-century illustration

Background imageL Aw Collection: Ratification resolution by the Constitutional Convention, 1787

Ratification resolution by the Constitutional Convention, 1787
Resolution to ratify the U.S. Constitution, 1787. Woodcut reproduction with a watercolor wash

Background imageL Aw Collection: Reconstruction Committee meeting in Washington

Reconstruction Committee meeting in Washington
Joint House and Senate Reconstruction Committee, creators of the 14th Amendment, under Chairman Fessenden. Hand-colored halftone reproduction of a 19th-century illustration

Background imageL Aw Collection: PUSA2A-00050

PUSA2A-00050
Andrew Hamilton, lawyer who defended John Peter Zenger and helped establish freedom of the press in the US. Hand-colored woodcut of an illustration

Background imageL Aw Collection: PUSA2A-00059

PUSA2A-00059
Trial of William Penn as a Nonconformist, England, 1600s. Hand-colored woodcut of a 19th-century illustration

Background imageL Aw Collection: EVNT2A-00224

EVNT2A-00224
Angry citizens capturing tax collectors during the Whiskey Rebellion 1790s after the new federal government was formed. Hand-colored woodcut of a 19th-century illustration

Background imageL Aw Collection: Acquittal of John Peter Zenger, 1735

Acquittal of John Peter Zenger, 1735
John Peter Zenger celebrating his acquittal after trial for libel, colonial New York City, 1735. Hand-colored woodcut of a 19th-century Darley illustration

Background imageL Aw Collection: Lady Evelyn Guinness

Lady Evelyn Guinness (1883 - 1939), formerly Lady Evelyn Hilda Stuart Erskine. Wife of Walter Guinness, 1st Earl Moyne and mother of Bryan Guinness, and mother-in-law to DIana Mitford, later Moseley

Background imageL Aw Collection: Interior of cell block at Portland Prison, Dorset

Interior of cell block at Portland Prison, Dorset
Interior of a new wing at Portland, Dorset showing cell doors, iron stairways and corridors. Wire netting was placed between balconies to prevent inmates falling to the ground

Background imageL Aw Collection: Entrance to West London District School, Ashford, Staines

Entrance to West London District School, Ashford, Staines
Staff near the entrance to the West London District School on Woodthorpe Road, Ashford, near Staines, Surrey, opened in 1872 as the West London District School for workhouse children from Fulham

Background imageL Aw Collection: Bermondsey Union Infirmary, Lower Road, Rotherhithe, London

Bermondsey Union Infirmary, Lower Road, Rotherhithe, London
The entrance to the Bermondsey Union Infirmary, Lower Road, Rotherhithe, south east London. The infirmary, originally opened in 1876 as the St Olaves Union Infirmary, later became St Olaves Hospital

Background imageL Aw Collection: Aerial view of The Limes, Biggleswade, Bedfordshire

Aerial view of The Limes, Biggleswade, Bedfordshire
Aerial view of the former Biggleswade Union workhouse opened in 1836 on London Road, Biggleswade, Bedfordshire. In 1935 the site became known as The Limes

Background imageL Aw Collection: Hollingbourne Union Workhouse, Kent

Hollingbourne Union Workhouse, Kent
The union workhouse - later known as White Heath - at Hollingbourne, Kent, erected in 1836



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From the historic halls of Middle Temple to the bustling streets of London, 'l aw' encompasses a world of justice and order. Barristers are called to Bar at the prestigious Middle Temple Hall, their dedication shining through in every case they handle. In County Durham, Shotley Bridge General Hospital stands as a symbol of compassion and care within the realm of law enforcement. Even amidst snow-covered streets, a Police Public Call Box remains an iconic sight in London, reminding us that law enforcement is always ready to serve and protect. A stoic police officer patrols these very streets, ensuring safety for all. Step back in time to 1828 with a glimpse into a courtroom scene - where justice was sought and verdicts were delivered. Cid Officers take on yet another role as dockers, showcasing their versatility within the field. The Scales of Justice loom above the Old Bailey Law Courts in Inns of Court, London - an enduring symbol representing fairness and impartiality. H. M Prison in Peterhead serves as a reminder that even those who break the law must face consequences. A barrister swings into action with eloquence and expertise inside courtrooms across England. Meanwhile, echoes from Amsterdam's Night Watch remind us that maintaining order is not limited by borders or boundaries. Inscribed upon Carta Magna (1212), England's ancient manuscript holds principles that still guide our legal system today. And let us not forget the brave suffragette practicing Ju-Jitsu - fighting for equality within society while navigating through legal challenges. 'L aw' weaves together tales from various corners: history collides with modernity; duty intertwines with passion; rights meet responsibilities, and is an intricate tapestry that binds societies together under one common goal – justice.