How the world changed since WWII
HAUNTING photos that combine contemporary images with eyewitness photos have revealed key moments of history and the present day, 70 years after WWII ended.
HAUNTING photos that combine contemporary images with eyewitness photos have revealed key moments of history and the present day, 70 years after WWII ended.
HAUNTING photos that combine contemporary images with eyewitness photos have revealed moments of history and the present day, 70 years after WWII ended.
PROTESTS erupted after Japan was accused of failing to apologise to China and South Korea, as Australians joined the world on the 70th anniversary of the end of WWII.
A HUNDRED years on since the battle of Lone Pine and the place is picture postcard perfect but the scenery hides the true story of the place our Anzacs knew.
IF THESE 100-year-old binoculars could talk, it would give insight into the man who carried it from Gallipoli to the Western Front.
IF YOU tell a mate their “blood’s worth bottling” while getting “blotto” with them, you are speaking the language Aussie Diggers created in World War I.
FROM telegrams to tweets, we’ve come a long way in 100 years. Here’s how you can mark Anzac Day on social media.
A TASMANIAN nurse compiled an amazing record of World War I, writes ANNE MATHER.
ANNABEL Lane is in Turkey and will spend Anzac Day in Gallipoli after becoming the fifth girl from an Adelaide school in seven years to win the Premier’s Anzac Spirit School Prize.
DIRECT descendants of original Anzacs who will sing at the Gallipoli Dawn Service have rehearsed at Anzac Cove.
THE search is on to find the South Australian families of WWI soldiers identified from a collection of photographs described as one of the most important first world war discoveries ever made.
BRISBANE poet Mervyn Nielsen put pen to paper in a poem to mark the centenary of troops landing at Gallipoli.
AS thousands commemorate the bloody beach landings at Anzac Cove, further along the peninsula there is a site of even greater horror that lies almost deserted.
ROYAL John George Myren kept a promise to his best friend Dick Robinson, who died in his arms at Gaza during World War I.
Original URL: https://www.dailytelegraph.com.au/anzac-centenary/page/13