Only the identities of the front row (mostly), plus one other, are known. Seated, left to right are: unknown student; L. Wright; W. Morris Jones; E.J. Evans; E.S. Keeping; F. Homeyard; Phyllis Jones. The person standing on the extreme right is D. Owen Jones who, with Phyllis Jones, is explicitly identified on the rear of the original framed photograph as a researcher.
On the occasion of the Autumn 1958 Conference of the Physical Society of Great Britain. Shown outside the Physics Department are, from left to right: Dr C.G. Morgan; Professor H.S.W. Massey FRS [23], who delivered the inaugural address to the meeting; Dr. H.T. Miles; Professor J.M. Somerville; the Society President Professor J.A. Ratcliffe FRS; Mr. D. Harcombe; Dr A.C. Stickland, the Society Secretary; Professor F.M. Bruce; Professor F.L. Jones and Dr J. Dutton.
Photograph of the visit of Professor Sir G.P. Thomson FRS, seated on the right hand side of Professor Llewellyn Jones who is third from the left in the front row. Also pictured are, according to Colyn Grey Morgan, in the back row left to right: Glyn Clement Williams (shoulder only), Sid Haydon, Colyn himself, Melville Rhys Hopkins, Jack Dutton and Roy Griffin; front row: in addition to the above, Percy Maurice Davidson on the far left and Leonard Wright on the far right.
The photograph is of academic staff and guests and (likely) Student Officers of the Society. Certainly Colin Evans, here on the extreme left, was then the Chair.
Photograph of a remarkable portrait of Frank Llewellyn Jones,
commissioned by his colleagues in the Physics Department upon his appointment as College Principal [35].
Peter Thonemann (on the left), at Culham in the late 1950s with the Leader of the Labour Party, Hugh Gaitskell, and the (probably at the time) Shadow Foreign Secretary, Aneurin Bevan (second and third from the right, respectively). The identity of the fourth person in the photograph is not known [44].
The arrival of the Particle Physics Theory Group in Swansea in 1992. From left to right are Professors Ian Halliday, Brian Clarkson (the College Principal), Albert Einstein and David Olive.