Recovering from a severe illness (likely typhoid), W.K.L. Dickson received word from London that the audience's enthusiasm for the military was lessening. He sent back this celebration of the expanding empire in response, capturing the annexation ceremony of 28 May 1900. "Thanks to the Biograph, which faithfully recorded this magnificent scene," Dickson later wrote, "the people of the world who were not as fortunate as those present will see what it saw, and doubtless sing 'God Save The Queen'".
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British Mutoscope and Biograph Company
Le village de Namo - Panorama pris d'une chaise à porteurs
20,000 Employees Entering Lord Armstrong's Elswick Works, Newcastle-upon-Tyne
Expérience du ballon dirigeable de M. Santos Dumont. I. Sortie du ballon