A national project recording and mapping the repatriated grave markers of the Great War. Running on coffee and hope. Currently hibernating. Please send cake.
@johncopse@JefferzWilli@sommecourt From my book Polo and the Great War. As a polo player he gained a fair reputation,
being one of the successful Oxford team 1901, and appeared subsequently at the London
Clubs and in County polo occasionally. His weight, however, was somewhat against him, and he
took up breeding.
Coming soon, and fully told for the first time ever, the story of Princess Mary’s Christmas Gift, 1914.
Pre-Register now for news of special editions
https://t.co/c8Mh8gMymz
THE CONNECTION OF EMPTY SPACES
I've written something. It's about returned crosses, ghost cemeteries and the missing. Please do take a look.
https://t.co/OMOicncruh
#ww1#memory#place#landscape
During WW1 shared graves were used to dispose of the dead where indiv. burial wasn't possible
Grave of 24 men of the 2nd East Lancs Regiment who were killed by one shell on 14 March 1915 during a rifle inspection at the Rouge Croix Cross Roads on the La Bassee Road.
IWM Q 56181
Original #WW1 battlefield cross for Major C H Mallock DSO who died at the 46th (1st/1st Wessex) Casualty Clearing Station at Proven after a gas attack . He is buried in the @CWGC cemetery at Mendingham. New record added to @WarMemorials https://t.co/8qfPV85NC2
He never could go home. So this little partial grave marker is making the journey home for him. Found by myself in a field at Courcelette some years ago. Earlier this year I made contact miraculously with his living relatives in Montreal, Canada. More.....
Remembering Norman. KIA on this day in 1916. A little part of him got home and is now lovingly cared for by his family. He is at Regina Trench Cemetery near where he fell on 8/10/1916.
@AStreetNearYou@MaxBrady1@carl_liversage@CWGC Max did a radio interview about it very early in the project, privately owned crosses are comparatively rare, especially still in the family.
@CGAnatomy@butchers_mind @nomilubin The 11th of November 1918 is Armistice Day, when the war ended. I think they deliberately marked his birthday on it because of this.
Excited to have a new website -
https://t.co/DUJeJ8ZUE3
(especially so because it has been designed by @typejunky - I know, right?)
(Do drop in if you have a moment)
This has blown my mind. It’s taken over 6 months and quite a lot of Canadian dollars, but Private Goddard is back in Blighty, and will soon be finishing the final leg of his journey to @GreatWarHuts where he can rest again. Thanks especially to Gary Blakeley for his work on this.
This has blown my mind. It’s taken over 6 months and quite a lot of Canadian dollars, but Private Goddard is back in Blighty, and will soon be finishing the final leg of his journey to @GreatWarHuts where he can rest again. Thanks especially to Gary Blakeley for his work on this.
Thanks also to everyone who donated to help both acquire this and get it shipped. We more or less managed to cover everything, I think I had to stump up an extra 20 quid to pay customs, but it’s been worth every drop of sweat.
The original memorial cross for 2Lt John Bernard Pye Adams of the 1st Battalion Royal Welch Fusiliers, it now resides at #cobham church #RWF#ww1#memorialcross@ReturnedFTF
@gibbsemanning @ReturnedFTF ALSO:
A 1st Battalion cross in Double Bay Uniting Church in Ocean Street Woollahra AND
A replica cross for a WA battalion in St Anne's Anglican in Ryde (the original was returned to WA).