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Regions of Britain - The Fens | Shell Historical Film Archive 

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Fen is the old English and North European word for bogland and swamp. The fens comprise south-east Lincolnshire, north Cambridgeshire and north-west Norfolk, taking in the lower basins of the rivers Witham, Welland, Nene and Great Ouse. It is a plain: 75 miles north-west to south-west and 36 miles west to east, totalling some 700 square miles. The only remaining area which shows a fen as it once was is at Wicken. In this 1970 documentary, part of the Regions in Britain series, you will discover landmarks such as the church in West Keal, Tattershall Castle and Ely Cathedral.
Attempts had been made to drain the fens before 1630, but in that year fourteen “Adventurers” who were merchants and under the leadership of the Earl of Bedford, all risked their fortunes nad employed Cornelius Vermuyden to do the job properly. This man-made country, won back from the swamps, is now the richest agricultural land in England; the land of corn, sugarbeet, potatoes and, since the beginning of the 20th century, the centre of England’s bulb growing industry.
For more information about Shell’s Historic Film Archive please contact: filmservices@shell.com
#Shell #ShellFilmUnit #HistoricFilmArchive #Documentary #History #Fen #Lincolnshire #Cambridgeshire #Norfolk #TheFens #England #Ely #Agriculture
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Shell’s surprising and captivating Historic Film Archive dates from 1934 and covers a rich mix of topics from technology, science and engineering to craftsmanship, motorsport and travelogue.
The Shell Film Unit, responsible for the content, was a highly celebrated part of Britain’s Documentary Movement. Key figures from that movement were involved, including: Jack Beddington, Edgar Anstey, Arthur Elton, John Grierson, Kay Mander, Stuart Legg and Douglas Gordon.
Its films were wide reaching, often screened in cinemas and through the non-theatric film distribution circuit, which brought film to educational establishments and organisations across the UK. While many films covered technological themes related to Shell’s activities, others were entirely unrelated and served purely to educate the general public.
As Shell innovated in technologies that would provide oil and gas products for the world, the Shell Film Unit also innovated in the technological advancement of film, incorporating graphics and different forms of animation as early as the 1930s.
During WW2 the Shell Film Unit was co-opted into war effort, making films for the Ministry of Information’s film division. Its prowess in technological documentary suited the MoI’s need for technical training films.
While the name and the medium has changed many times over the years, the documentary tradition lives on at Shell. Its contemporary film team is part of Shell’s multi-disciplinary in-house agency, Creative Solutions. It continues making award-winning factual content that informs and educates the public, now usually released on social media platforms.

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23 фев 2024

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Комментарии : 11   
@Lord-DJ
@Lord-DJ 5 месяцев назад
I could easily cry for my British heritage.
@richardruda369
@richardruda369 5 месяцев назад
What a beautiful part of England! Henry Thorold, who wrote the script for this film, was the author of several of the wonderful old Shell Guides to the English counties that were mainly published in the 1950s, 60s, and 70s. Fittingly, he was the co-author of the Shell Guide to Lincolnshire.
@rover790
@rover790 Месяц назад
I would like to see the Lincolnshire films too. My husband's ancestors came from the fens areas of Norfolk as well as from Lincolnshire
@geoffcrisp7225
@geoffcrisp7225 4 месяца назад
The Fens and East Anglia were my area when was a computer field engineer from the 70's to the 2000's. Until recently it was little changed from this film, but sadly its no longer so. Driving through the area at all times of the day and night over many years it had its own special magic and as they say "big skies".
@FenlandOnFilm
@FenlandOnFilm 5 месяцев назад
Lovely piece of film - any chance of having it digitised in HD if you have the original reel?
@dannymiester5825
@dannymiester5825 5 месяцев назад
Nice, I live in sutton 😊
@vanessamanihera2088
@vanessamanihera2088 14 дней назад
Subscribed!
@stevejones4275
@stevejones4275 5 месяцев назад
It's a massive plane which the industrial revolution missed, since there is only mud, no coal or iron. Or anything of that kind, in the north, near Peterborough there is clay, the Industrial revolution noticed that part and despoiled it immediately with huge brickworks, and railways to bring in the coal to make the bricks. It was all spoiled and the factories are all shut now so it did no good in the long run.
@hasanakdag6447
@hasanakdag6447 4 месяца назад
😊❤❤❤😊
@ZINZIN77
@ZINZIN77 3 месяца назад
FENLAND Here in an area acknowledged as below the national average in wages, educational attainment, and access to good health care and with huge pockets of deprivation still to be tackled....a ‘Conservative paradise’ [quote]
@oisindillon4412
@oisindillon4412 5 месяцев назад
Does anyone know how efficient shells SAF fuel is for a school project?
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