pferguson | November 11, 2021
Private George Edwin Ellison L/12643 5th (Royal Irish) Lancers Son of James W. and Mary Ellison, George Ellison was born in York and raised in Leeds where today a memorial to him has been placed at Leeds Railway Station. The commemorative plaque, normally blue in colour, is olive green representing the British soldier uniform of […]
Category: November Series, Remember Them Well, Snapshots of the Great War |
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Tags: 11 November 1918, 309 Fatalities, 46th Canadian Infantry Battalion, 5th (Royal Irish) Lancers, 994, Armistice, Chatham Naval Memorial, Commonwealth War Graves Commission, Frederick Thomas Ellison, George Edwin Ellison, George Lawrence Prince, H.M. Trawler Towhee, John Parr, King George V, Known unto God, Middlesex Regiment, Silent Witnesses, St. Symphorien Military Cemetery, The King's Pilgrimage
pferguson | November 4, 2019
The Imperial War Graves Commission During the Great War the work of Fabian Ware and his associates in the registration of war graves did not go unnoticed. Ware and others also became concerned for what would become of their work post-war. In January 1916 the National Committee for the Care of Soldier’s Graves was formed. […]
Category: Remember Them Well |
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Tags: Cross of Sacrifice, Directorate of War Graves Registration and Enquiries, Edward (Prince of Wales), Fabian Ware, Forceville, Frederic Kenyon (British Museum), Gertrude Jekyll, Imperial War Conference, Imperial War Graves Commission, John Kipling, King George V, Known unto God, Le Treport, Louvencourt, Menin Road South Military Cemetery, National Committee for the Care of Soldier’s Graves, Rudyard Kipling, Sir Edward Lutyens, Sir Herbert Baker, Sir Reginald Blomfield, Stone of Remembrance, The King's Pilgrimage, Their Name Liveth for Evermore, Tyne Cot Cemetery