Media library
Search by keyword
1389 items found, showing page 14 of 116

Inspirational women plaques
Heather Paul, daughter of Gertrude Paul, with the plaque paying tribute to her mother which was unveiled in the council chamber at Leeds Civic Hall.

Inspirational women plaques
Heather Paul, daughter of Gertrude Paul, with the plaque paying tribute to her mother which was unveiled in the council chamber at Leeds Civic Hall.

Inspirational women plaques
Heather Paul, daughter of Gertrude Paul, with the plaque paying tribute to her mother which was unveiled in the council chamber at Leeds Civic Hall.

Inspirational women plaques
Heather Paul, daughter of Gertrude Paul, with the plaque paying tribute to her mother which was unveiled in the council chamber at Leeds Civic Hall.

Inspirational women plaques
Councillor Debra Coupar, Leeds City Council’s deputy leader and executive member for resources with Heather Paul, daughter of Gertrude Paul, in the council chamber at Leeds Civic Hall. Plaques honouring inspirational Leeds women have been unveiled in the chamber.

Hollie McNish and Maria Ferguson (photo of Maria Ferguson by Suzi Corker)
Two photographs of two different women. One is reading a book on a stage, the other is looking at the camera and titling her head.

The Lost Property Library (Photo by Lian Furness)
A man in a station master costume is looking through a small telescope.

Storytelling Festival 2025 Square by Kate Pankhurst
An illustration of four different children playing on a large, fantastical storytelling machine.

Polarbear (photo by Curtis Brown) and Testament (photo by Humans of Leeds)
Two photographs of two different men. One man is wearing a cap and the other is touching his head.

Poetry Takeaway
A group of people of different ages gather around the Poetry Takeaway mobile vehicle.

Microscope slides
Another slide contains a mote of dust from the infamous Krakatoa volcanic eruption of 1883, one of the most destructive events of its kind in recorded history, which was so loud it was heard more than 1,900 miles away.
The miniscule speck itself landed on the deck of a ship called the Arabella, which was sailing 1,000 miles to the west of the Indonesian island.