Director
Archive footage, recently discovered, shot by the Edwardian documentary film-makers Sagar Mitchell and James Kenyon. Selected from a total of 28 hours of material, this compilation is grouped into five sections: 'Youth and Education'; 'The Anglo-Boer War'; 'Workers'; 'High Days and Holidays' and 'People and Places'. It includes footage of ordinary people going about their everyday business, from the factory gates to football matches, and is set to a specially commisioned score by the Shieffield-based duo In the Nursery.
Director
Scenes from a fair.
Director
Horse and cart racing in Wigan.
Director
Footage from a football match.
Director
Turn of the century rugby league.
Producer
The biggest English comedy hit of the year. The scene is laid on an English estate at the edge of a pond. A couple of laborers discover, protruding from the water a pair of female legs. They hasten to the rescue, secure a bench and a long plank so as to get out over the water to the point where the legs are sticking up. Just as they complete their preparations a policeman runs up and insists on going out to the rescue of the female in distress.
Producer
Footage from the dawn of film taken by Mitchell and Kenyon in North England, 1901.
Director
Footage from the dawn of film taken by Mitchell and Kenyon in North England, 1901.
Director
Exciting scenes of amateur cycling's 'Race of Champions' at Manchester's Fallowfield track.
Director
A filmed record of the AAA Championships at Fartown, Huddersfield, 1901.
Director
University Procession on Degree Day, Birmingham
Producer
University Procession on Degree Day, Birmingham
Director
Alfred Butterworth and Sons
Producer
Alfred Butterworth and Sons
Director
Manchester Band of Hope Procession
Director
A group of miners (including a sole black worker) exits the colliery gates.
Director
Passengers and crew boarding the SS Saxonia.
Director
Early footage of the Lucania passenger liner.
Producer
Shot at the intersection of Holy Corner in Liverpool, this street is a hive of people and traffic. Arguably during the first part of this century most trade was being conducted on the streets. When this was being filmed Liverpool had become a wealthy city, and the shop fronts are filled with items for sale.
Producer
This film is part of the Mitchell and Kenyon collection - an amazing visual record of everyday life in Britain at the beginning of the twentieth century.
Producer
Kidnapping by Indians is a 1899 British silent short Western film, made by the Mitchell and Kenyon film company, shot in Blackburn, England. It is believed to be the first Western film, pre-dating Edwin S. Porter's The Great Train Robbery by four years.