2018 ANZAC DAY SERVICES SA/NT/Broken Hill 25 April 2018

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

2018 ANZAC DAY SERVICES SA/NT/Broken Hill 25 April 2018 2018 ANZAC DAY SERVICES SA/NT/Broken Hill 25th April 2018 TOWN/SUBURB LOCATION TIME Adelaide South Australian National War Memorial, North Terrace 6:00am Adelaide Light Horse Memorial, Cnr North & East Tces 8:00am Adelaide Cross of Sacrifice, after the ANZAC March 11:30am Aldgate RSL Monument 6:30am Alice Springs ANZAC Hill 6:00am Alice Springs ANZAC Hill 10:30am American River Remembrance Reserve 6:15am Ardrossan Clifftop 6:15am Ardrossan Memorial 11:00am Arthurton Memorial Arch 6:30am Auburn WW1 Memorial 6:15am Barmera Garden of Memory 6:00am Blackwood Soldiers Memorial Garden, Main Road 6:30am Bordertown RSL, Cannawigara Rd 6:15am Brighton Arch of Remembrance, Brighton Jetty 6:00am Brinkworth RSL, Main St 6:30am Broken Hill Cenotaph 6:00am Broken Hill Garden of Remembrance 7:45am Broken Hill Memorial Oval 8:30am Broken Hill Church Service 9:00am Broken Hill Cenotaph 11:00am Burra Market Square 6:30am Cadell Memorial Garden 6:15am Ceduna 1 O’Loughlin Tce, Eyre Highway 7:00am Cherry Gardens War Memorial 8:30am Clare WW1 Memorial 6:30am Clarendon War Memorial, Grants Gully Rd 9:30am Colonel Light Gardens Memorial, Doncaster & The Broadway 5:45am Corny Point Memorial garden 9:00am Coromandel Valley War Memorial Gardens, Weymouth Recreation Grounds, Main Road 9:00am Cowell Cenotaph 6:45am Cowell Cenotaph 11:00am Crystal Brook Adelaide Square 6:15am 2018 ANZAC DAY SERVICES SA/NT/Broken Hill 25th April 2018 TOWN/SUBURB LOCATION TIME Cummins Garden of Remembrance, Tumby Bay Rd 7:30am Curramulka Memorial Gardens 11:00am Darwin Cenotaph, Bicentennial Park 6:00am Darwin St Mary’s Cathedral 7:30am Echunga Gardens of Remembrance 6:30am Edithburgh Memorial, Anstey Tce 6:00am Edwardstown Memorial Garden, Raglan Ave 6:30am Elizabeth RSL, 70 Midway Rd, Elizabeth East 5:45am Enfield RSL, Fitzgerald Ave 6:15am Eudunda Memorial Gardens 6:30am Forest Range WW1 Memorial 10:00am Freeling Cenotaph 6:30am Gawler Pioneer Park 6:15am Glenelg Memorial, Moseley Square 6:00am Glenside Jamie Larcombe Centre, Eucalyptus Lane 7:00am Glynde St Andrew’s Lutheran Church, 22 Avenue Road 7:00am Goolwa RSL Memorial Garden, Cutting Rd 5:45am Gumeracha Oval 6:30am Gumeracha Soldiers Memorial Hospital 10:45am Hallett Cove Memorial, Herron Way Reserve 6:00am Hawthorn Soldiers’ Memorial Gardens, cnr Angas & Belair Rds 6:10am Henley Beach Memorial, Seaview Road 6:30am Hilton Memorial Gardens, 6:00am Houghton Village Square 6:00am Jamestown Memorial Arch 6:15am Kadina Memorial Arch, Victoria Square 6:00am Kangarilla War Memorial, Kangarilla Recreation Ground 6:30am Keith Cenotaph 6:30am Kensington Gardens Kensington Gardens Reserve 6:30am Kilburn RSL, Way Street 6:00am Kimba Institute 10:00am Kingscote Memorial Park 6:15am Kingscote Memorial Park 10:45am 2018 ANZAC DAY SERVICES SA/NT/Broken Hill 25th April 2018 TOWN/SUBURB LOCATION TIME Kingston SE Memorial, James Street 6:30am Largs North RSL, Carnarvon Tce 6:45am Laura Cenotaph 7:00am Lobethal Cenotaph, Uniting Church, Main St 6:15am Loxton Cross of Sacrifice 6:15am Magill The Gums, Shakespeare Avenue 6:30am Maitland War Memorial 6:30am Mallala Monument 6:15am Manningham RSL, Bennett Ave 6:15am Manningham RSL, Bennett Ave 12:00pm Mannum Memorial, Randell Street 5:50am Marion Cenotaph, RSL, Norfolk Road 6:15am McLaren Vale Memorial Park, Valley View Dr 6:00am Meadows Memorial Gardens, Mawson Road 6:30am Meningie Memorial Park 6:30am Middleton Memorial Gardens 11:30am Millicent Cross of Sacrifice 6:30am Millicent Cross of Sacrifice 11:00am Minlaton War Memorial 6:30am Moonta War Memorial, Blanche Terrace 6:30am Morgan RSL 11:00am Morphett Vale City of Onkaparinga Memorial Gardens, corner Main South & Flaxmill Roads 6:00am Mount Barker Soldiers’ Memorial, Mann Street 6:00am Mount Gambier Vansittart Park War Memorial 6:15am Mount Gambier Boer War Memorial, Bay Road 9:00am Mount Gambier Airmen’s Service, Cemetery 9:00am Mount Gambier Combined religious service, Vansittart Park War Memorial 10:30am Mount Pleasant Soldiers Memorial Hall 6:15am Murray Bridge Sturt Reserve 5:50am Mylor War Memorial, corner Strathalbyn Road & Stock Road 6:30am Myrtle Bank War Veterans’ Home, Ferguson Avenue 6:00am Nairne Cenotaph, Main St 6:15am Naracoorte Cenotaph 5:30am 2018 ANZAC DAY SERVICES SA/NT/Broken Hill 25th April 2018 TOWN/SUBURB LOCATION TIME Northfield RSL, Peter Brown Dr 6:15am Norwood War Memorial, corner The Parade & Osmond Tce 6:15am Palmerston Memorial park 6:00am Parndana War Memorial 8:30am Payneham Cross of Sacrifice, Memorial Gardens 6:15am Penneshaw War Memorial 9:00am Penola War Memorial Park, Church Street 7:30am Peterborough Rotunda 6:00am Pine Point Memorial 6:30am Pinnaroo Cenotaph 7:00am Port Adelaide Naval Assoc, Quebec Street 6:00am Port Broughton Monument, Foreshore 6:30am Port Broughton Community Hall 11:00am Port Clinton Clifftop 6:30am Port Elliot War Memorial, The Strand 6:00am Port Lincoln War Memorial, Eyre Park 6:00am Port MacDonnell 68 Sea Parade 6:15am Port Noarlunga Memorial Gardens, The Esplanade 5:00am Port Victoria Main Street 6:00am Port Vincent War Memorial, corner Way & Parsons Streets 7:00am Prospect Memorial Gardens, Willcox Ave 6:15am Renmark Cross of Sacrifice, Ral Ral Ave 6:15am Renmark Cross of Sacrifice, Ral Ral Ave 10:40am Richmond TPI House, 171 Richmond Road 6:00am Riverton Scholz Park 6:30am Robe War Memorial 6:45am Robertstown Community Centre 9:00am Rose Park Memorial, cnr Prescott Tce & Alexander Ave 6:20am Salisbury Memorial, Orange Avenue 6:00am Seaton RSL, 255 Tapleys Hill Road 6:30am Semaphore Cenotaph 5:30am Stansbury Foreshore Memorial 6:30am Stirling Library Lawns 6:30am 2018 ANZAC DAY SERVICES SA/NT/Broken Hill 25th April 2018 TOWN/SUBURB LOCATION TIME Strathalbyn Soldiers Memorial Garden 6:00am Strathalbyn Parade of Veterans, Oval 6:00pm Streaky Bay Jetty 6:45am Swan Reach Memorial 6:30am Tailem Bend Memorial, Railway Tce 5:45am Tanunda Garden of Remembrance 6:15am Tanunda Soldiers Memorial Hall 11:30am Tea Tree Gully Memorial Garden 6:15am Tennant Creek RSL 6:00am Tennant Creek RSL 10:00am Tumby Bay Cenotaph 6:45am Two Wells Memorial 6:20am Unley Soldiers Memorial Gardens 5:45am Uraidla War Memorial, Swamp Rd 6:30am Victor Harbor Soldiers Memorial Gardens, Flinders Parade 5:45am Waikerie Memorial Gardens 7:45am Walkerville Memorial Rose Garden, Church Tce 6:15am Wallaroo Memorial Arch, Town Hall 7.00am Wallaroo Cemetery 7:30am Warooka Council Offices 6:30am Wasleys Institute 9:00am Watervale WW1 Memorial 5:00pm West Croydon RSL, Rosetta Street 6:15am Whyalla Cenotaph, cnr Wileman & Bradford 6:15am Whyalla Cenotaph, cnr Wileman & Bradford 10:45am Williamstown Memorial Drive 6:30am Willunga Monument, Main Road 6:15am Wirrabara Institute 9:30am Yorketown Memorial, Stansbury Road 6:30am List as at 16/4/18. Subject to additional entries as they are advised. For locations not listed please check with local organisers. .
Recommended publications
  • A Brief History of War Memorial Design
    A BRIEF HISTORY OF WAR MEMORIAL DESIGN War Memorials in Manitoba: An Artistic Legacy A BRIEF HISTORY OF WAR MEMORIAL DESIGN war memorial may take many forms, though for most people the first thing that comes to mind is probably a freestanding monument, whether more sculptural (such as a human figure) or architectural (such as an arch or obelisk). AOther likely possibilities include buildings (functional—such as a community hall or even a hockey rink—or symbolic), institutions (such as a hospital or endowed nursing position), fountains or gardens. Today, in the 21st century West, we usually think of a war memorial as intended primarily to commemorate the sacrifice and memorialize the names of individuals who went to war (most often as combatants, but also as medical or other personnel), and particularly those who were injured or killed. We generally expect these memorials to include a list or lists of names, and the conflicts in which those remembered were involved—perhaps even individual battle sites. This is a comparatively modern phenomenon, however; the ancestors of this type of memorial were designed most often to celebrate a victory, and made no mention of individual sacrifice. Particularly recent is the notion that the names of the rank and file, and not just officers, should be set down for remembrance. A Brief History of War Memorial Design 1 War Memorials in Manitoba: An Artistic Legacy Ancient Precedents The war memorials familiar at first hand to Canadians are most likely those erected in the years after the end of the First World War. Their most well‐known distant ancestors came from ancient Rome, and many (though by no means all) 20th‐century monuments derive their basic forms from those of the ancient world.
    [Show full text]
  • Cannock Chase War Cemetery
    OUR WAR GRAVES YOUR HISTORY Cannock Chase War Cemetery Points of interest… Commemorations: 379 First World War: 97 Commonwealth, 286 German Second World War: 3 Commonwealth, 25 German In the autumn of 1914, the British Army began constructing camps at Brocton Casualties from the following and Rugeley on Cannock Chase. Housing up to 40,000 men at any one time, the nations camps were used first as transit camps for soldiers heading to the Western Front. Cannock Chase subsequently became a training facility for various Commonwealth Germany units, and as many as 500,000 troops were trained here during the First World Poland War. New Zealand UK A hospital serving both Brocton and Rugeley camps was established at Brindley Heath in 1916. The hospital had a total of 1,000 beds as well as housing convalescing soldiers from the Western Front. The cemetery was created in 1917 Things to look out for… to serve as the final resting place for men who died while being treated in the hospital. The majority of the Commonwealth burials are New Zealanders, many of Boy soldier – Albert Urell of whom died in the flu pandemic that broke out toward the end of the war. the Royal Garrison Artillery Aircraftman 1st Class, In April 1917, part of the camp at Brocton was turned into a prisoner of war George Edgar Hicks who was camp and hospital for captured German soldiers and the cemetery was also used run over and killed by a bus on for German burials. Sandon Road Stafford, in the blackout. A coroner’s verdict of accidental death was recorded.
    [Show full text]
  • Jacqueline's Visit to the WW1 Battlefields of France and Flanders
    Jacqueline’s Visit to the WW1 Battlefields of France and Flanders, 2004 An essay by Jacqueline Winspear The skylarks are far behind that sang over the down; I can hear no more those suburb nightingales; Thrushes and blackbirds sing in the gardens of the town In vain: the noise of man, beast, and machine prevails. —From “Good-Night” by Edward Thomas Thomas was killed in action at the Battle of Arras in 1917 Standing in a field close to the town of Serre in France, I heard a skylark high in the sky above and closed my eyes. They wrote of the skylarks—in letters, and some, in poems—those soldiers that lived and died in France during the Great War. The point at which I had stopped to listen was in the middle of a field that had been, in 1916, the no-man’s land between British and German front lines at the beginning of the Battle of the Somme. It was a terrible battle, one of the most devastating in a war that became, perhaps, the first defining human catastrophe of the twentieth century. I had finally made my pilgrimage to the battlefields of The Somme and Ypres, to the places where my grandfather had seen action in the First World War, and where, in 1916 he was severely wounded during the Battle of The Somme. Though the losses during the first few days of The Somme beggar belief—some 20,000 men from Canadian and Scottish regiments died during the first hour of fighting at the Beaumont Hamel/Newfoundland Park battlefield alone— the “battle” actually lasted 142 days, with a loss of more than 1,200,000 men from Britain, France, Australia, New Zealand, South Africa and Germany.
    [Show full text]
  • Dumfries and Galloway War Memorials
    Annandale and Eskdale War Memorials Annan Memorial High Street, Annan Dumfries and Galloway DG12 6AJ Square base surmounted by pedestal and Highland Soldier standing at ease with rifle. Applegarth and Sibbaldbie Parishoners Memorial Applegarth Church Applegarth Dumfries and Galloway DG11 1SX Sandstone. Two stepped square base surmounted by two stepped plinth, tapering shaft and Latin cross. Brydekirk Memorial Brydekirk Parish Church Brydekirk Dumfries and Galloway DG12 5ND Two stepped base surmounted by square pedestal and small cross. Surrounded by wrought iron railings. Canonbie Memorial B7201 Canonbie Dumfries & Galloway DG14 0UX Tapered base surmounted by pedestal and figure of a serviceman with head bowed, rifle over shoulder. Cummertrees Memorial Cummertrees Parish Church Cummertrees Dumfries & Galloway DG1 4NP Wooden lych-gate with tiled roof mounted onto a stone base. Inscription over entrance. Dalton Memorial Dalton Parish Church Dalton Dumfries & Galloway DG11 1DS Tapered square plinth surmounted by tapered shaft and Celtic cross. Dornock Memorial B721 Eastriggs Dumfries & Galloway DG12 6SY White marble. Three stepped base surmounted by double plinth, tapering pedestal and column which narrows at the top. Ecclefechan, Hoddom Memorial Ecclefechan Dumfries & Galloway DG11 3BY Granite. Tapered stone base surmounted by two stepped granite base, pedestal and obelisk. Surrounded by wrought iron railings. Eskdalemuir Memorial Eskdalemuir Parish Church B709 Eskdalemuir Dumfries & Galloway DG13 0QH Three stepped square stone base surmounted by rough hewn stone pedestal and tapered top. Ewes Memorial Ewes Parish Church A7 Ewes Langholm Dumfries & Galloway DG13 0HJ White marble. Square base surmounted by plinth and Latin cross mounted on a rough hewn base. Gretna Green Memorial Gretna Green Dumfries & Galloway DG16 5DU Granite.
    [Show full text]
  • Monuments As Symbol
    Monuments St John’s NFD Beaumont-Hamel • 1 July 1916, first day of the Somme offensive – British suffer 57,470 casualties • 1st Newfoundland Regiment virtually annihilated: – lost 700 men trying to advance over 500m of open ground St Johns NFD 1 July in Newfoundland • The anniversary of the Beaumont-Hamel slaughter • Canada Day • Conflicting memories Monuments • Landscape symbols • Sites of memory • Make claims about history – What and how to remember • Monument must endure changes in meaning Monuments and Power • Monuments help to project cultural power? Monuments and Memory • Monuments attempt to – Promote a way of looking, thinking – Promote a public memory • But culture, politics change – Monuments of one era may become embarrassing to the next WWI War Memorials • Landscape elements • Allied ones tend to be grand in scale, dominating • Mostly built in the 1920s • Become places of official memory Lutyens: Thiepval cenotaph WWI War Memorials • May sanitise war – noble sacrifice remembered, brutal horror forgotten – Confer purpose and meaning on often senseless slaughter Fred Varley 1918 • For What? WWI War Memorials • Product of official culture: – selected architects, sculptors, artists – officially-sanctioned symbols • cross of sacrifice • sorrowing angels Vimy Memorial • Designed by Walter Allward – Sorrowing angels, mothers, fathers Vimy unveiled 1936 Monuments and Monuments • Grand schemes for monuments displaced earlier attempts to erect monuments • Even at Vimy Ridge Canada’s National Cenotaph • Peace tower intended as a war memorial • Temporary cenotaphs on Parliamentary steps • National Cenotaph unveiled by King George VI in 1939 1946 Vancouver • Unveiled April 1924 London UK • National cenotaph • Designed by Lutyens Commonwealth War-Graves Commission • Began building WW1 cemeteries in 1919 • Each has: – Standardized grave stones – Sir Reginald Bloomfield’s Cross of Sacrifice (in 3 sizes) – Lutyen’s altar-like stone of remembrance Their name liveth ..
    [Show full text]
  • Documents in the World and Is the Second-Oldest Public Museum Dedicated to Preserving the Objects, History, and Experiences of the War
    Nos. 17-1717, 18-18 In the Supreme Court of the United States _____________________ THE AMERICAN LEGION, et al., Petitioners, v. AMERICAN HUMANIST ASSOCIATION, et al., Respondents. _____________________ MARYLAND-NATIONAL CAPITAL PARK AND PLANNING COMMISSION, Petitioner, v. AMERICAN HUMANIST ASSOCIATION, et al., Respondents. ______________________ On Writs of Certiorari to the United States Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit ______________________ BRIEF FOR AMICI CURIAE VETERANS OF FOREIGN WARS OF THE UNITED STATES, NATIONAL WWI MUSEUM AND MEMORIAL, THE NATIONAL TRUST FOR HISTORIC PRESERVATION AND PRESERVATION MARYLAND IN SUPPORT OF PETITIONERS ______________________ PAUL D. CLEMENT Counsel of Record ERIN E. MURPHY KIRKLAND & ELLIS LLP 655 Fifteenth Street, NW Washington, DC 20005 (202) 879-5000 [email protected] Counsel for Amici Curiae December 21, 2018 TABLE OF CONTENTS TABLE OF AUTHORITIES ............................................ ii STATEMENT OF INTEREST ........................................ 1 SUMMARY OF THE ARGUMENT............................... 4 ARGUMENT ...................................................................... 9 I. The Peace Cross Originates From One Of The Most Widely Recognized World War I Symbols Of Military Sacrifice ................................. 9 A. Contemporary Literature, Poetry, and Art Reflect the Widespread Use of the Gravemarker Cross as a Symbol of Battlefield Sacrifice in WWI ......................... 10 B. The Use of Gravemarker Crosses in WWI Memorials Was Ubiquitous ...............
    [Show full text]
  • Understanding the Cemeteries and Monuments
    147 ADDITIONAL INFORMATION There could be no truer measure of the impact of the First World War and its shocking death toll than the efforts made to commemorate the fallen. More than a thousand war cemeteries cluster along the old Western Front, while no fewer than seventeen memorials listing the names of the missing stand in mute testimony to the destructive power of the Great War. One hundred and fifty war cemeteries dot the landscape in the Ypres Salient, two hundred and forty house the dead on the Somme battlefields – each of the battlefield tours will lead you past these “silent cities,” and the monuments preserving the memory of Canada’s efforts and sacrifice in the Great War. We have therefore included two appendices outlining the Canadian battlefield memorials and the principles which guided the design and construction of the Commonwealth war cemeteries. ADDITIONAL INFORMATION The Brooding Soldier. [Matt Symes] 148 Official First World War Canadian Memorials The Canadian Battlefields Memorial Commission (CBMC) was established in 1920. Based on the recommendations of senior officers the Commission selected eight sites (listed below) on which to commemorate the achievements of Canadian soldiers in the Great War. The CBMC launched a national architectural and design competition in December of 1920 and out of the 160 submissions chose seventeen finalists who were then asked to produce a plaster maquette of their design. There was some indecision at first, as it was unclear whether the CBMC wanted eight identical monuments or wished to give certain battles greater significance; but eventually, as Jonathan Vance has noted, “in many ways the outcome of the CBMC’s deliberations was governed by the designs submitted...two stood far above the others.” What became known as the Brooding Soldier, proposed by Regina sculptor Frederick Clemesha, was selected for St.
    [Show full text]
  • Dedication of the Cross of Sacrifice by the President of Ireland, Michael D
    Dedication of the Cross of Sacrifice by the President of Ireland, Michael D. Higgins and centenary commemoration of the First World War attended by HRH Prince Edward, Duke of Kent, President, Commonwealth War Graves Commission 31 July 2014 The Last Absolution of the Munsters at Rue du Bois by Father Francis Gleeson Chairman’s Address The dedication of the Cross of Sacrifice and the centenary commemoration of the outbreak of the First World War is a hugely significant event for Glasnevin Trust. This is one of a number of major commemorations taking place in the Cemetery during the “Decade of Centenaries”. Already this year we have had a very important commemoration to mark the centenary of the founding of “Cumann na mBan” led by President Higgins and featured the first all female personnel guard of honour in the history of the state and possibly in the world! The decade we are remembering is complex. As Europe and much of the rest of the World prepares to commemorate the start of World War 1, it is noticeable, even after one hundred years, that there is no consensus on what actually caused the outbreak. This period of history on this Island is even more complex as we must not forget that the decade ended in independence and retention of the Union. This commemoration and the exhibition opened in our museum will, hopefully, push back the door further on this intricate part of our history. It should remind us of our shared history amongst the two traditions on this Island. One in six of those eligible enlisted, at least 210,000, and of those one in five perished.
    [Show full text]
  • SACRIFICE and REMEMBRANCE Mr Jeremy Prescott Former Army Officer and Retired Charity CEO Lecture Delivered on 26Th November 2018
    Transactions of the Leicester Literary & Philosophical Society. SACRIFICE AND REMEMBRANCE Mr Jeremy Prescott Former Army Officer and Retired Charity CEO Lecture delivered on 26th November 2018 In this 100th Anniversary period of World War1 (WW1), the thoughts of the nation are not just on the scale of the sacrifice made in that war and subsequent conflicts but how that sacrifice is now commemorated. The Literary and Philosophical Society has a proud tradition in remembering the fallen emanating from the then President of the Society 1912-13, Dr Astley Clarke, who advocated the establishment of a University in Leicester. His idea was initially rejected on the grounds that it would be difficult to attract the numbers required to sustain a university but it gained increased support during WW1 when it was decided to establish a university to remember the fallen in that war. Dr Clarke made the first donation of a £100 to the appeal to found the university. Although the sacrifice made in both world wars is Lutyens who designed amongst many memorials the mainly associated with men, women have made Thiepval memorial to the missing on the Somme, the sacrifices both on the home front and behind the front Cenotaphs in London and in Victoria Park Leicester. line and most recently in conflicts on the front line. The words of the CWGC were provided by Rudyard The Battle of the Somme encapsulates the scale of Kipling in particular on the Stone of Remembrance that sacrifice. On the first day of that battle (1st July “Their name liveth for evermore” and for those who 1916) 19,240 British soldiers were killed.
    [Show full text]
  • Weatherman Walking Flanders Fields
    bbc.co.uk/weathermanwalking © 2016 Weatherman Walking Flanders Fields Location: Ypres (Leper) in Belgium 4 Locations are given in latitude and longitude. 5 6 7 8 3 10 9 N 11 W E S 50.70616, 2.92768 2 1 12 The Weatherman Walking maps are intended as a guide to help you walk the route. We recommend using a detailed map of the area in conjunction with this guide. Routes and conditions may have changed since this guide was written. The BBC takes no responsibility for any accident or injury that may occur while following the route. Always wear appropriate clothing and footwear and check 1 weather conditions before heading out. bbc.co.uk/weathermanwalking © 2016 Weatherman Walking Flanders Fields The small Belgian town of Ypres was a key battlefi eld throughout World War One. It was where the British stopped the German advance in autumn 1914 and was the site of a series of battles, the most famous being at the nearby village of Passchendaele. By the end of the war in 1918 the town had been virtually destroyed. The places Derek visited are both in the town and in the surrounding area. While the town of Ypres is easy to walk around the other locations are several miles away, so we recommend going there by car or coach. All are open to the public and easily accessible. Note that the spellings of place names are in both French and Flemish. We’ve listed both here. 1 Geluveld (Gheluvelt) and the First Battle of Ypres (50.83455, 2.99447) Geluveld is situated on the Menin (Menen) Road (N8) approximately 5 miles (8km) from the centre of Ypres.
    [Show full text]
  • Discovering Local Cwgc War Graves in the Uk
    Introduction DISCOVERING LOCAL CWGC WAR GRAVES IN THE UK Harrogate Stonefall Cemetery 1 The Commonwealth War Graves Commission Foreword FOREWORD The Commonwealth War Graves Commission is I am delighted to be writing a foreword for a delighted to support Never Such Innocence in its brilliant and important resource – Over the last ground-breaking arts initiative for schools. We two years my charity Never Such Innocence has have been supporting NSI’s events for the last worked closely with our partners the CWCG. two years, but this is the first time that we have provided practical resources for schools. Our vison is to ensure that young people, nationally, are given the opportunity to play their part, engage Our objective is to encourage schools to take an and feel important during this centenary period. interest in war graves here in the UK. CWGC’s war We want to help you understand the complexities graves are not just on the Western Front, they are of war and the vital importance of the sacrifices our here in the towns and cities – where the hospitals forces made 100 years ago and today. This resource were. They are also here in village churchyards, when will help you to do just that. the families managed to bring their boys home. The CWCG is an organisation very close to my heart. I was privileged to go to the battlefields as a 13 year This resource pack tells you how to use our website old girl, I was humbled by what I saw, and inspired by database to track down the details for the area where the extraordinary work of the CWGC.
    [Show full text]
  • Our War Graves Your History
    OUR WAR GRAVES YOUR HISTORY Glasgow Western Necropolis Points of interest… Commemorations: 492 First World War: 350 Second World War: 124 Casualties from the following nations; A number of recruiting depots were based in Glasgow during both world wars, Australia most notably the Royal Scots Fusiliers and the Highland Light Infantry. Today you Canada will find a number of soldiers of these distinguished Scottish regiments buried France here. During the First World War several military hospitals opened in Glasgow. Germany Stobhill Hospital became the 3rd and 4th Scottish General Hospitals, which South Africa combined housed a total of 2,400 beds, while the Western District Hospital was New Zealand taken over for military use, as was Springburn Hospital (now North Glasgow UK College), and the facilities in Govan which became Merryflats War Hospital. Those USA who did not recover were buried in cemeteries in the city, if their families did not request otherwise. Things to look out for… Glasgow Western Necropolis is located on the same site as a number of other cemeteries. In addition to the 492 CWGC burials in this cemetery, there are 240 Lieutenant Commander in Lambhill, 333 in St Kentigern’s, and four in Garnethill. As a result, this tour is Charles Head, RN who died in available in a short version (based solely at Western Necropolis) and a longer the Gretna train disaster (Grave version which takes in the other sites. P.2907) 15 year old Boy Soldier – Gunner William Booth (Grave H.1444A) Clifford Cummings – an RAF Key CWGC features to look out for: Air Cadet (Grave N.2995) The badge memorial at the entrance located with the Cross of Sacrifice The CWGC Cremation Memorial which The CWGC Cremation Memorial commemorates 73 individuals Discovering CWGC graves at Glasgow Western Necropolis 5 4 3 2 1 Glasgow Western Necropolis contains more than 350 First World War burials, many of them grouped together in Section P.
    [Show full text]