1,442,478 research outputs found

    8.06.013: 40th Birthday card from Vince Walsh, 1991

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    A birthday card to Don Walsh from his brother Vince, who enclosed a humourous poem

    Gil Walsh

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    "Gil. Walsh VX137228 8. B.T.N 1942-43".Gil. Walsh VX137228 8. Battalion 1942-43

    Desmond Walsh

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    "NX160273 Desmond Walsh 23 Aust Fd Coy R.A.E. [obscured]".NX160273 Desmond Walsh 23rd Australian Field Company Royal Australian Engineers [obscured]

    Clarrie Walsh

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    "[Gnr.] Clarrie Walsh NX134881 1st. Aust. Fld. Regt. A.I.F. 1943-1945 [Signature] C.Walsh [10].4.92"[Gunner] Clarrie Walsh NX134881 1st Australian Field Regiment Australian Imperial Forces, 1943-1945 [Signature] C.Walsh [10].4.92

    D. W. Walsh

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    "SX 18252 Cpl. D.W. Walsh HQ Coy 10/48 Battalion A.I.F. 1942-1945".SX 18252 Corporal D.W. Walsh Headquarters Company 10/48 Battalion Australian Imperial Forces 1942-1945

    UCL Art Museum Screening: Confessions To The Mirror + Q+A with Maria Walsh

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    Screening of Confessions To The Mirror (16mm, col, 68min, 2016) and Q+A with the filmmaker and Invited Speaker, Art Historian, Maria Walsh. 6.30pm, 22nd May 2018 Bloomsbury Studio, UCL, London WC1H OAH. A UCL Art Museum Event. Curated by Nina Pearlman

    Portrait of Don Walsh by Gerald Squires

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    Portrait of Don Walsh by Gerald Squires. Gerry Squires, Gail Squires, Sheila Lynch and myself did a trip to France, Belgium, Holland, England and Ireland in 1986. During that trip we visited Jean Claude Roy for a few days. Jean Claude was teaching a class with Gerry as his guest and I was choosen to be the model :-) This is the result

    4.03.003: Don and Des Walsh, [1975-1978]

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    Looseleaf note pages of songs myself and my brother Des Walsh did as a duo

    Oral History Interview with James Walsh, July 13, 2007

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    The National Museum of the Pacific War presents an oral interview with James Walsh. Walsh was born in Wheeler, Indiana on 19 October 1926. He quit high school in 1944 and joined the Navy. He went to the Great Lakes Naval Training Station in Illinois for six weeks of boot training followed by six months of amphibious training and gunnery training at Norfolk, Virginia. Upon completion of the training he went by troop train to Portland, Oregon. In September 1944 he went aboard Landing Craft Support vessel USS LCS(L)(3)-51. He describes the ship’s heavy armaments. In November 1944, Group 7, consisting of Walsh’s LCS and five other sister ships, sailed to Saipan before going to Leyte. They remained at Leyte until 19 February 1945 before participated in the invasion of Iwo Jima. Walsh led the first wave of Marine onto the beach and describes clearing the beach of disabled landing craft. The ship then participated in the invasion of Okinawa. Walsh tells of the ship being on picket duty and being attacked by kamikaze aircraft. Walsh saw the USS Laffey (DD-724) hit by several suicide aircraft while LCS-51 sustained damage caused by debris from a plane they shot down. The ship put in to Kerama Retto for repairs before proceeding to Leyte. While there Japan surrendered. Shortly thereafter, the ship went to Wakayama, Japan. Walsh describes his observations and the attitude of the Japanese people. During October 1945, after visiting Korea and China, LCS-51 returned to the United States and Walsh was discharged several months later

    Personal Papers (MS 80-0002)

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    Letter from D. W. Kempner to J. A. Walsh & Co. making an order for three hinges for deep freeze and asking for price of the same
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