Looking Back: Temporal and Spatial Connections of Post-War Migration and Displacement Through the Eyes of the Toronto TelegramMain MenuLooking Back: Temporal and Spatial Connections of Post-War Migration and Displacement Through the Eyes of the Toronto TelegramBy Robyn LeLacheurTimeline of Publishing Patterns of Global Displacement between 1939-1964Photographs provided by the Toronto TelegramRefugees & Displaced Peoples: Where they came fromRefugees and MigrantsLocal Context: War Guests in TorontoTheir War Goes On: Opulence Hides Gray RefugeesArticle by Ron Poulton, Telegram Staff ReporterImage Representation of Refugees: An Analysis of Terence Wright's Article, "Moving Images: The Media Representation of Refugees"War Guests, (Im)migrants, and RefugeesThe Representation of War Guests, (Im)migrants, and Refugees Through Wartime Propaganda and IconographyAnna St.Onge25b2131b3bad72f47d55b2ab29f71ad3b83a7de6Robyn LeLacheur69764b2f71565fb3dfb6990b7c0672e799d40562
Children of Oxford University dons arrive in Connecticut
12018-04-17T14:22:59-04:00Robyn LeLacheur69764b2f71565fb3dfb6990b7c0672e799d40562153"These smiling, waving children, sons and daughters of Oxford University dons, are part of the first group of refugees to be moved out as a unit from bomb-threatened England. They're shown stepping down from a train July 24 at New Haven, Conn., after a trip from Montreal. They came across under the auspices of Yale University and Swarthmore College." (Caption on back)plain2018-04-17T15:19:47-04:0007/26/194041.574445, -72.735678Robyn LeLacheur69764b2f71565fb3dfb6990b7c0672e799d40562