CR Blog
The B-Line
Graphic Design, Magazine / Newspaper
Posted by Mark Sinclair, 11 November 2009, 15:20 Permalink Comments (7)

Issue 5, June 1943
Continued production of an independent publication is an achievement in itself, let alone in the time and places which played home to The B-Line office. This month's Monograph features images from Olie Kay's collection of his grandfather's magazine, created for the 48th Royal Tank Regiment B Squadron during WWII...
A few months ago, Kay came into the CR office with his precious collection of magazines; each one a little battered and faded, with staples showing signs of rust, but genreally in good condition considering they were all over sixty years old. Kay explained how The B-Line was the creation of his grandfather who used a duplicating machine to produce runs of 120 copies a month during active service in Tunisia, Algeria and Italy.
"In 1942 my grandfather, Geoff Thomason, created and edited The B-Line for the men of the 48th Royal Tank Regiment B Squadron," explains Kay, a graphic designer and junior fellow of graphic design at UWE in Bristol. "In this endeavour he was assisted by his tank commander, Capt Henry D Palmer and Alan Gilmore, who had been a Press Association reporter before the war."

Issue 9, October 1943
"Content was principally created by submissions of poetry, interviews, stories and articles from the men in the squadron," says Kay. "The monthly magazine would follow the men of B Squadron through to the end of the war for 30 issues and one ‘souvenir number'.
"As the B-Line Souvenir edition makes clear, ‘B-Lines have been produced in houses, in army huts, in tents, in tank bivouacs and in the open air; in the grounds of a Scottish castle, in a Tunisian orchard, in the arid wastelands of Algeria, in the ubiquitous vineyards of Italy, and in the Senio front line, less than a mile from the enemy.'
"The 120 monthly copies of The B-Line were printed by hand on a duplicating machine with all equipment and paper stock scrounged from wherever it could be found. Indeed the majority of the issues were produced on a portable French typewriter - a ‘present' from the Afrika Korps."

Issue 11, December 1943 – the "Christmas number", each was individually hand-coloured
"Of the 30 issues produced," Kay continues, "I hold 28. Unfortunately it is unlikely that I will ever manage to track down the missing two. Sixty-four years have passed since the last pages rolled out of a battered duplicating machine in Italy, and time moves on each day, eroding links with the past."
Geoffrey Guy Thomason (1916 - 2001) co-edited The B-Line with Alan Gilmore from 1943 - 1945. He returned from the war to become the editor of the family run newspaper, The Middlesex Chronicle, printed at the Cedar Press in Hounslow, until it was sold in 1972.
14 covers and one spread from Kay's collection of The B-Line feature in this month's Monograph, free with subscriber copies of CR November. Many thanks to Olie for contacting us about the collection. His own work is available to view at oliekay.com.

Issue 18, July 1944

Issue 19, August 1944

Issue 20, September 1944

Issue 21, October 1944

Issue 30, August 1945
7 Comments
I really like this. My Grandad served in North Africa with Monty - I wonder if he ever got his hands on a copy? Certainly nice to think so. Some welcome light relief between the heat and barbary of war.
2009-11-12 03:04:30
Love! Handmade trumps mass-produced, yet again.
2009-11-12 19:34:09
Absolutely wonderful. Out of necessity comes genius
David
2009-11-13 13:51:55
Is there anyway we can get the rest of the pages scanned..
Please.
2009-11-14 09:50:44
Works like this inspire me to do the same...I agree with Katy McDevitt, Love! it certainly is.
2009-11-14 11:32:44
I'll hopefully be spending some time documenting The B-Lines in more detail soon. I need to work on removing the staples from the magazines, as they are rusting and starting to degrade the paper. They can't really be scanned at the moment, as the paper is too brittle to be folded back like that. I'll be heading back into the studio to shoot some more of them and uploading the full collection onto my site soon.
2009-11-14 17:12:08
My dad served in the same regiment as your grandad and still talks about the B Line mags. He still has one copy of the mag and showed it to me , on showing me the mag he says he remembers reading the others. He remembers surving with your grandad as well . My dad is listed in the mag as Tpr Roberts also as Darky Roberts , he was a tank driver. I would be grateful if you could contact me by phone or E mail at 01695 725144 or peterjohnroberts@talktalk.net . Hope to here from you - Peter Roberts
2009-11-25 19:41:50
| Farrow designs Format for PSB (18) |
| Felicity Powell: Charmed Life (4) |
| Romain Gavras directs promo for M.I.A.'s Bad Girls (1) |
| Interbrand's spot of Cloak & Dagger (5) |
| Rapid Proto Type (2) |
| The £25 logo |
| A new identity for More4 |
| Penguin's beautiful new edition of Kama Sutra |
| Craig & Karl's colourful car park |
| Record sleeves of the month |
| Advertising | (1030) | |
| Art | (385) | |
| Books | (248) | |
| Digital | (406) | |
| Graphic Design | (1115) | |
| Illustration | (621) | |
| Magazine / Newspaper | (195) | |
| Music Video / Film | (704) | |
| Photography | (354) | |
| Type / Typography | (246) |
